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iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 3 25 I A Gold Lined BonBon Dish Free! I On Saturday afternoon, June 27, we will sell you a-, pound box of Vogue Chocolates for 39 cents, and give you free of chargre a beautiful gold lined bon bon dish. The Vogue Candy Co.,*of New York City, offers this bon bon dish free in order to get you acquainted with their candies. Spend 39 cents with us on Sat urday afternoon and see if you ever got any better value for your money. 1 J. CHRIS SCHUTZ 5 The Old Reliable Druggist and Jeweler Phone 270 5 nilllllllllllllllllllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII THE CITY UEATHKR FOR£OAil. Unsettlpd tonight and Saturday probably local showers cooler west i'ortifttt tonight. LOCAL NEWS Hat at Jack's. (ret your outing hats at Hn. KnoerVs. Get your ice cream at the Sugar Bowl, 30 cents a quart, delivered to any part of the city. Eat at Jack's. Closing out sale of Jewelry now on at Ueo. Cook's. l\r Kent. Five room cottage.— C,. Abbott. Furnished room for rent—W. S. Damuth, phone 102. For Rent. Seven rooms over Os- My entire stock of jewelry is being closed out at cost. Make your pur chases while you have a good assort ment to select from.—Geo. Cook. Coats at half price. Special sale on huts.—Mrs. K. Knoeri. For Sale. Beautiful residence site^ in Glatz Bros, sub-division of Lak r.irk, three blocks from the heart ol !'n city. Inquire of Glatz Isro*. N'orris Peirce was an arrival from Huron by the morning train. Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Holdridge re turned from Hot Springs, Mr. Hold rM|ge very much improved in health. S. P. Seierson, president of the Da kota State bank, returned by the north train, having attended th« bankers convention at Aberdeen. Bell boy wanted at the Lake Park. Don't forget the ex^ur.^on to the Mo Grande valley Ot Texas on the Tth day of July. Wanted. To rent !«0-acre farm and. move onto it this fall.—John Mitchell, phone 139* yellow. Huy a box of Martins for your tfaveling bag to go on your outing. Porter Pharmacy. Ladies, get some of those fl.lfl v..lists at J. A. Johnson's. On sal' Friday and Saturday. The B. Y. P. IJ. will hohl a bake sale at Soule's store Saturday, June 27. Say, who sells the Martin? The Porter Pharmacy, with the big long elgar case with 75 standard brands But the Martin for mine. Let's go and get a good cigar. Where are you going? Over across the street to Porter's Pharmacy to get a Martin. It's worth the money A great big assortment of ladies •hirt waists on sale at the Big Store Friday and Saturday, at only fl.lf each. Howard people are mighty proud of their ball team and will visit Mad son in large numbers next Tuesday to witness the game with Luverne Mrs. Voorhes, aged 26 years, died last night. The faimly reside south Of the Garfield school and Mr. Voor st, \a employed as a railway brake- s iiictii. XJteX c4 i/l iVl 1 A1 Russell. The funeral will be held from the home tomorrow at 11 a. m. Wentworth Enterprise: Thieves entered the Zimtnermann & Harm^ store last Thursday night and helped themselves to a change of clothing, a dollar or two which happened to be left in the till and a few razors and other articles. They gained entrance by breaking in a window at the rear of the store. No clue or trace of their whereabouts could be found. Madison baseball fans will be en tertained Tuesday, June 30, at 3 p. m., at Athletic park by a game be tween Luverfie and Howard teams. These teams have made line records during the season and will no doub! put up a fine game for the benefit of Madison people who enjoy the sport. Wentworth Enterprise: The body of Mrs. Isaac Deiumerssmen of A1 pha, Minn., a former resident and one of our pioneers, was brought here bom's drug store. Call at the store For Sale. Five passenger^ touring Tuesday for burial in the Hose Hill Tbe In- car in first class running order. quire at this office. Eat at Jack's. appeased with her husband, homesteaded southeast of Wentworth years ago and afterwards n ived to town where they engaged n the hotel business for some years I'hey removed to Minnesota several trs ago. The deceased is survived by husband and seven children, all of whom were present at the burial ervices. Short services were con iucted in town by Rev. J. A. McAl iion. when the remains were taken to the cemetery and laid to rest. ('has. Howard, transient, had a hearing before Judge Sponholz this morning, charged with holding up Julius Kerstein Tuesday night and relieving him of his watch. The hold-up occurred a short distance st of the depot. Howard estab bed the fact to the satisfaction of the court that he was present at s beer party near the chautauqua road east of the creamery, that a quarrel arose among the guests and he left (he party to come to the city and up on reaching the creamery bridge he crawled under the bridge and made his bed for the night. Howard an swers the description of the bare headed man who hailed several au tomobiles returning from the lake as he entered a saloon early the next morning bareheaded and was given a cap by the barkeeper. The case against Howard was dismissed. o FIREMEN, ATTENTION! There will be a meeting of the fire department tonight. Important business. All firemen are requested to be present.—C. J. Simpson, Chief o NOTICE TO CONTRACTOR*. Notice is hereby given that tilt? board of directors of the Lake County Agricultural society will receive bid for the erection of three barns on the fair grounds, according to the plans and specifications now on file Saturday. June 27, 1014. at 8 o'clock p. m. A certified check for $100 must accompany each bid. The board reserves Ule fight to reject any and all bids. —A. C. Schmidt, —Wm. Curtis, —Frank Krug, Building Committee. Any Coat or Suit at $9.98 Your choice of any Coat or Suit in our store at $9.98 Suits worth up to $37.50, at $9.98 Coats worth up to $25.00, at $9.98 OUR LOSS IS YOUR GAIN IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIHIIUIllPIISMIIIlflllllUlMnHtlllllUlllfVMaailllinailUIIIIIIHUIIMUMiatMMMIHIMMMIIMMIIi THE ASSLMSLY IM ADDITION TO CHALTAl'QVA ROUTINE, HI\i:SK ACR0» BATH KNTI IITAIN. Yesterday at the lake was a profit able day for the assembly. Much In terest was taken in the chautauqua routine during the day by tho?e who are located at the lake to take in the full course. The evening was de lightful from a weather standpoint and a large number of people went to the lake by automobile and train to witness the evening entertain ment. The Royal Pekinese acrobats gave an exhibition at thp auditorium lasting an hour, and it was fine. This was followed by a lecture by S. L. Krebs, subject, Psychology of Sales manship. The acrobats are superior to professionals in their line and ac complished feats that were extraor dinary. They gave a performance this afternoon and will close their engagement with a performance at 8:15 this evening. Tomorrow will be a big day at the lake—set apart as W. C. T. IT. day. Many prominent state W. C. T. U. workers and suffragists-are on the ground, ready for the big day There will be parades, lectures and a general awakening of the subject of votes for women. Conspicuous among the speakers will be Miss Marion Drake of Chicago, who was a candidate for alderman against "Bathhouse" John Coughlin at the recent election. She was beaten for the place, but it is regarded a heroic undertaing for Miss Drake to enter the most infamous ward of the city and become a candidate against s man who has long occupied the posi tion of alderman by the votes of the lowest element of his ward. Mi Drake will speak at the auditorium tomorrow afternoon and evening. The Chicago Male Quartet is listed to appear in two entertainments to morrow afternoon and evening They will remain over Sunday, giv ng afternoon and evening entertain ments on that day, closing their en gagement Monday evenine. ALMA TffllWN IIUBITE OF A FRIEND TO MADISON VOCNU WOMAN WHO DIED IN NOR WAT. Christ Thompson, of whose mis fortune in losing his daughter. Alma while they were visiting in Norway trief mention has been made, re turned a few days ago. His daugh ter's remains were buried in the old •eioetery near the church in which Mr. Thompson, when an infant, re i eh ed the sacrament of baptism and also later took the vows of confirma tion. How mysterious are thy ways, O Lord, and thy councils past human understanding! Here is a young woman of superb i'lisique. perfect health and in the bloom of youth, having attained he twenty-first birthday in New York t'ity the day before embarking for Norway, with all reasonable promise of a full share of life's allotment stricken a few days after their ar rival there with a deadly disease cer^bro spinal meningetis. resulting fatally in three days, though medi cal aid was early obtained. We turn to another, an 86-year-old bed-ridden mother and grandmother tired of life no doubt, apparently only a burden now, but lingering on as i overlooked by the harvester. The two meet for the first time. A joy f-.il realization of oft recurring hope and longing the fulfillment, perhap of many a silent prayer. The one with reasonable expectancy that the treasured memories of this meeting would ever brighten the path of he future, and the other breathing the prayer, "Now take me hence, Father for I am satisfied." But, alas, hoW soon the scene is to change from that of joy to one gloom and sorrow, and the seeming unreasonableness of it in taking the budding plant and leaving the over ripened grain, prompts the query, it is all by chance, without design We repel the thought and answer: When God decrees each sparrow fall. We trow likewise he cares for all, And know full well what e'er he does Will show, some day, was best for us So wise it is when we propose His counsel weigh, who doth dispose Miss Thompson was born and raised in Madison. She was of unlet and reserved nature and sus tained an unblemished character. She was a faithiul membfer of th« ailed Lutheran church, the mem •rs of which extend to the grief stricken father, five brothers and a gister, their heartfelt sympathy in their hour of bereavement. UNDER ADVISEMENT JUIMirE JONES HI AKN THh WENT- WORTH LlQl Oli LICENSE CASE. Hans Urdahl returned from Sioux •"alls, where he appeared as attorney or the applicants in the Wentworth aloon license case. This is a case where the drys at ick the sufficiency of the petition on hich the election which carried for icense was voted. There were twen ty-seven names to the petition, when he law calls for but twenty-five. Prior to the spring election the drys attacked the sufficiency of the peti tion and set up that there were more than enough illegal names on the pe ition to brine it below the required wenty-five. Judge Jones would not erant the injunction asked to pre ent a vote on the license question and stated that by doing so he would not deprive the drys of any of their rights as they could renew their at tack after election and prevent the granting of licenses if the petition was found defective. On the other hand if he held with the drys and prevented an election and after wards it was found that the petition was legal the wrong could not be remedied. The citizens of Wentworth voted in favor of license, and now the ques ion reverts to the sufficiency of the petition on which the election was based and the taking of testimony on this point was heard by the court esterday. After the conclusion of taking tes timony, Judge Jones took the case under advisement. —o MOVIES NOT BARR® L»«r Prescribes Claw of Picture# Not To Be Shown on Sunday. Sioux Falls, June 26.—There was case before Judge Jones in chain bers this morning which has for it object the closing of the moving pic ture house at Salem on Sundays The legislature at its last session passed a bill which prescribes what class of films can be exhibited. John Cox, proprietor of the Salem moving picture house was arrested for running his show on Sunday. won his case in the local courts when States Attorney Clyde King took an appeal and the case was heard before Judge Jones In this city this morning fudge Jones holds that there is no law preventing the exhibition of four ertain classes of moving pictures on Sunday. The law of 1913 spicirie what ciass of pictures are prohibited mm Mr. Cox was represented by Attor ney E. H. Wilson, and both attor ney and client returned hoiue greatly lated over the decision of Judge Jones. THE BANKERS Early Day History of Banking South Dakota. In Aberdeen, Jnne 26.-:-Olie of the interesting features of the stat bankers' association meeting here was the report of Secretary J. E Piatt of Clark. The report show* that when he was first elected secre tary of the association there was total of eight-two banks in Sout Dakota. At the date of his late compilation on June 1, there were 620 tanks in the state, of which ix are state banks, 102 national banks 14 private banks, nine trust cor punks and 10 banking corporations The bankers who died during th year were E. C. Stearns of Warner Charles L. Johnson of Agar, Georg U. Freeman of Elk Point, H. J. Men del of Beresford, E. It. Keneflck of Dell Kapids, A. K. Wood of Wood Robert It. Roberts of Langford, P. Ueebe of Ipswich and Elbert W Morse of Faulkton. Secretary Piatt has discovere that the Dakota Bankers' associate held a convention in Aberdeen i June, 1885. The journal of tha inerting was preserved by the lat M. P. Beebe, and geeins to establu that the two Dakotas have the honor jointly, of organizing the first stat bankers' association in the Fnit States. The third annual convention was held at Watertown in 1887, and from the journal of this convention it is learned that the first person to open a bank in the Dakotas was Mark H. Palmer, 23 years of age, who opened a bank on Second street in Yankton in 1869, with a capital of $1,000. The second bank was or ganized by C. E. Prentice on Septem ber 21, 1871, at Vermilion, and the third bank was started at Elk Point in the spring of 1872 by W. Hoff man. In the fall of that year P. P. Wintermute started a bank at Yank ton. Wintermute afterward killed Gen. Edwin McCook, then secretary of the territory, at a meeting at Yankton to consider the proposition to encourage the coming of the Da kota Southern railway. Wintermute was tried, convicted and sentenced to ten years in prison, but later got a new trial and was acquitted. BellevM Bladder Distress and Weakness Irregular, p-inful bladder weaknesses disappear when the kidneys are strong and healthfully active Take Foley Kidney Piils for that burning, scalding sensation-irregular, painful actlon ht-avy, sore-feeling and bladder distress. You will like their ton! restorative ef fect—the relief from pain—quick good results. Contain no harmful drugs. Try wm MI* w antgmm WAlUtfUWS SIM THE INJURED Will, ALL RI COVER—ASSIST WE FOB THE LOSERS. Watertown, June 26. Repor from the most seriously Injured 1r Tuesday night's tornado are optimi tic, and all are said to have a chan to recover. When daylight this morning brol over the trail of devastation left the tornado which injured 20 peopl wo of them very seriously, wreck* I 00 buildings and left hundred horn ess in Watertown, the city, realizirc he full extent of the destruction, :r once began the work of caring fei he destitute and repairing the dar age. All charitable organizations in tl ty united in providing a relief fur which will probably aggregate flf *•00. The city commission in speela I session appropriated $1,000 and Col ngton county is expected to dupl ate this sum. The Commercial clH ave $300. The remainder is beir \idily subscribed by public spirit# 1 itizens. OtTers of aid from oth ities have been received, but it ws he expression of the commission and ommercial club that Watertown would be amply able to take care of ts homeless. Destruction wrought by the cyclone today proved far greater than estimated. Men who made a careful canva the stricken district found 115 re iences wrecked, the damage runnir ill the way from total demolition to he loss of a few shingles. This li-t does not include the wreckage of barns and garages of which a full hundred were shattered, turned up ide down, blown against houses ami trung along as splintered wood in the path of the storm. The tornado hit a section of Watertown built ui largely with modern cottages ai owned, as a rule, by salaried men Most of them were built within tin last four years. As a rule the storm ripped the roofs off of this class of dwellings, sucked out the window and the torrential rain which follow ed ruined household effects. In many instances the loss repre sents the savings of several years ami the families are left with little sav the clothes they wore at the tint" Such as those, Watertown plans to help get another start. Observers of the storm declare it was a typical tornado. The funm-1 formed just to the southwest of the city. Its forward movement w t: slow, but the rotary movement w terrific, the noise made as the stoi n dvanced through the city Is descriii as a grinding, groaning sound and ould be heard for several miles News from Goodwin, 12 miles east of Watertown, is to the effect that tin storm had lost much of its tornado character by the time it reached that town, only out buildings and barn were destroyed in that neighborhood IUO GRANDE VALLEY OF TEXAS. Owing to the favorable report just received from Ed Smith ami John Kreuger, who have been in tin valley for some time investigating conditions there and find them mo favorable, we are planning an excm sion for the 7th day of July, as tb it are a large number wishing to this valley during the warm sunin o n s I v e a a I s e e o w o weeks and he wishes to see a lant number make this trip. He has t!n promises of four men and is in hojx of getting enough irom Lake count o i e a e a s s u e s y o u a i of sight seeing and pleasure of eif-tn or ten days. Come and make iln trip with us on the 7th day of JuK See Raad or call at cur office at t::y time. ——Schmidt & Robe k Ball FMllsf—Swollen Stadi and iMt —Dm to Kidney Tronbl*. Your kidneys ne»d help when your hands and fe«'t thicken, swell up. and you feel dull and alunKlsh. Take Foley Knln-y I'illn. They are i«nic, Htimulat iri£ and utrennthenlnu and restore your kidneys to healthy normal action. Try thorn Knr ml1 hv «ll druvrtlta UHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiimiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHMUJ! The Home of Haft Schaffner Marx 1T1 Clothe. HI The world is full of cheap clothes and so long as there are plenty of men willing to pay real money for them, the crop will continue to be large. Look at our Hart Schaffner Marx suits and overcoats at $25 if you think $12.50 *or $15 is all you can afford, pay the price of two suits at one time—$25—and get more real value than the two cheap suits would give. HACKETT SUTTON Madison, South Dakota diMtmmiMtmMmtmMiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiMiittmiiittmftttfitiiiiiir Sunday, June 28th *AT Two Concerts by the Chicago Male Quartet Lecture by Charles E. Russell This will be a feature day. The Chicago Mate Ouartet is worth going miles to hear. Concerts Afternoon and Evening Special Sales at McKinnons Lecture by Dr. Russell at 3:00 o'clock Children's White Dresses in ages 2 to 14 years, these dresses have been re duced in price V4 the original cost. They are made of embroidered flouncing lace trimmed, some dot!», ted swiss lace trimmed, justright for the warm days. Cheney's Foulard Silk Do not fail to spend Sunday I at the Lake |. TillllllllfllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliS!HIIIIIIIIII!llllllllll!!M!!ll||!l1S Conghad for Yaara "I am a lover of your godsend to humanity and acience. Your medicine, Dr. Kind's New Discovery, cured my cough of three years standing." says Jennie Klemming. of New Dover, Ohio, l^ave you an annoying cough? Is It We have a good assortment still in stock to select from. Former price $1.00, sale price Silk Poplins in plain and foulard patterns, 27 im colors blue, tan, green and tango. Former price 50c, sale price per yard 39c D. McKINNON & CO. Get a r.Oc bottle of Dr. King's New Dis covery today. What It did for Jennfl Fleniming it will do for you, no niattqp how stubborn or chronic a eough mi, be. It stops a cough and stops throi and lung trouble. Kellef or money baclj 50c and $1.00, at your druggist. Buclfct v i'» Arnica Salve for Plmiles. w. y s a, a A Y -Siii *y "i I* -fP I 89c es Wl( v l,