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V /IV"« ty Jm 'p'K OVEN MOORE —IN—- p. a. "Pfcadtfly Jim" Pueh! Pep! rwnjiHtfl flt camdy BU8Q0SS8 LOCALS MiMM TONIGHT AND TUESDAY MS -WTI GO" tot ahom T:M ,, ioe-4(!te ULCC HOAGLAND So Of* li» WL B^wianSsld •ttod to dlasasse and sur ra, Bar, NOM and Throat id ttd glasses accurately eC aU of Dr. Frnden- CITY. POBBCAAT toaiiht and Tuesday warmer ioaftsfct *ad extreme west portion] Waijlii,. Lo of good potatooo, but*. Phone 2193. Bleating aad the election evening, Oct. 6. is urg laerotary. VMdsr afternoon Oct. 1, wart 4 years old aad one ..lid# h«y folding 9 years old. about 1350. Phone ited to real. Two or three foe light honaekeepiag.—Ted Parrell a Kanneman boae ins. 01 ttasp dreaamaktng or any 301 Second Street l«. fpwy Twenty yafdi of nearly Vtf»et. Phone 317R. |«dy» brown pocketbook rkey. II Uli aad at Ik hand- A.R. ltaleeth. Jjiillt. Suite of three rooms pais* over Porter drug stoce. B. Porter or oatl S38. Wesson's Home Jtlasionary so. tfco M^hoMst Church will »**fl« supper at the church ^jPP- Heat* Modern sleeping room Ua. Phaa# ifti* kid gauntlet glove, leave at Mr*. K. INtwr mfumjMied JPfet** 38ti.- tIMHMUIIHIIIItMlllllttHnillllllflllllHIIIinilllllfllllllll LYRIC THEATRE MARSHALL NEHAfTS Mile-A-Minute Melodrama of Newspaper Life "Go and Get It" A Stantional Photoplay of the Romance, Exdtcaiat, Thrills and Dangers Of Newspaper Life. RUBY Abo comedy—Topics Review RIALTO ORCHESTRA SUNDAY ADMISSION -'H\ 15 and 30 cento •lock •M-the J. wane a*a«to«r lor- daughter and sister, Sophia, also for the beautiful flowers.—Mr. and Mrs. Steve Stephenson and family* ^J,r. and Mrs. Severin Meragtr. LOCAL NEWS Charles Sullivan and wife Sunday with relatives in Ramona. Claude Mallory and wife are now,, occupying their recently purchased home on Egan avenue S. A. C. Schroeder, of the Nash Auto mobile company, spent Saturday night and Sunday in Sioux Falls. The trip was made overland. Miss Grace Fluger arrived from Oldham this morning to begin a course of study at the Madison high school. The W. C. T. U. will meet Wed nesday at 3 p. m. with Mrs. Hart wich. All the members are asked to come and hear the report from the Mate convention. John Hegdahl has moved his fam ily to the house recently vacated by Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stellzmiller on Washington avenue N. Attorney Hans Urdahl departed yesterday for Akron, Iowa, for the transaction of legal business. He returns on Monday afternoon. Thomas Meredith and wife have moved to this place from Ramona. They now occupy Mrs. E. G. Sims residence on Second street, N. E. J. R. Raney and little granddaugh ter returned this afternoon from'Mit chell where they spent several days last week visiting the corn palace. Mrs. B. W. Clapper who was the guest of her sister. Mrs. ClaVton Ball, and other relatives for more than a week returned on Saturday to her home at Sioux Falls. Miss Helen Lowe accompanied a gentleman friend, Mr. Hayes to Ver million yesterday. The journey was made overland by auto. Miss Lowe Is expected home this afternoon. The volume of financial business transacted by the banks in this city for the six day period ending on Sat urday, Oct. 2, amounted to $150, 307.86, or la excees of the week prior by |tll.27. Sometime Saturday night Cftalrle^ Backhaus new Ford car was stolen' from the garage on his premises five miles northwest of town. The car was insured but no trace of It has yet been found. The annual meeting of the com mercial club occurs at 8 o'clock to morrow-evening. There should be a large attendance owing to the fact that election of officers will take place at that time. George Finch haa taken over the hotel business formerly conducted, by Lillian Backadahl at Juntos. The latter was in charge of the hotel for several pears. The change in management occurred just recently. The infant child of Mr. and Mrs. Nick Wadden passed away during the earlier hours of Saturday even ing. The funeral services were con ducted at 2 p. m. today from St. Thomas Catholic church. The little form wait laid to rest in the Catholic cemetery south of the city. Clerk of Courts, P. L. Burnett this afternoon issued a license to wed to Bert Kruger, assistant cashier in the State hank at Junius, and Miss Sena Dirken, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. Dlrksen. After their marriage these young people will reside at Junius. Undertaker A. G. Hallenbeck drove hit hearse to Nunda this after noon to direct the funeral obsequies for tfce late Arnold Mlkkelsen. Fun eral aarr*8s were held at the fam ily inlisaai i., Ml 1(11 *1HULJSS rf? NATIONAL ATTRACTIdit THE MOST ASTOUNDING! AMAZING! FAS CINATING AND EXTRAORDINARY PICTURE EVER FILMED! »t 1:30 p. m., and from at two o'eloek. la Prairie tbers of the Woman's Relief w«ih to tfuuUt all friends for patronage thotr sale and lewdly afternoon. They are grateful to the Flrgt Na use of th«- •S* tMval* Wrlfht Thompson's premises near Lake Ma dison, and, while using a gun too in differently, killed a valuable colt be longing to Mr. Thompson. He feels cut up enough about the trespass but the loss of the animal is simply un pardonable. Conrad Dochnahl, aged 96 years, passed away at the county farm at 9:30 p. m., yesterday after having been an inmate there for the past six years. Death was due alone to old age. Relatives of the deceased aro making arrangements for the funeral which will be held from St. Thomas Catholic church at 9:30 a. in. tomor row. The remains will be shipped to Howard for interment County Superintendent Miss Flor ence Northrop states that practically all of the rural schools in the county are now in session. All prospective teachers In the state now come under a new state law requiring at least six week's summer school training before they appear for examinations for any grade of certificate. Thin would naturally bar high school graduates as teaching experience is also called for uricler the late ruling. It will also disqualify those now leaching on permits as soon as those permits expire. The purpose of the law is to bring up the standard of qualifications. o StatcToHavt Sugar Factory Belle Fourche, Oct. 4.- There is reason to believe that the Great Wes tern Sugar company is preparing to build a sugar refinery on the Bul lock ranch, near here, which wan purchased by the company some years ago. The plant would cost about $500, 000. This year there has been a big in crease in the sugar beet acreage of the Belle Fourche territory, and the construction of the refinery would re sult In the sugar beet acreage being greatly increased in^ this territory from jwar to year. i MONEY PROBLEM IS UNSOLVED German Reichsbank Director Says No body Can Predict When Improve ment May Be Expected. Berlin.—All the currency theorists In the world would be nnable to give a definite, positive, answer to the ques tion when an Improvement might be expected In Germany's huge paper cir culation, Director Von Glasenapp of the Reichsbank has told the Associat ed Press correspondent. The bank statement showed that the paper in circulation July 15 totaled 53,447,000,000 marks. This was a de cline of 198,000,000 marks as com pared with the previous week. "We shall certainly do all in our power tp prevent further undue Infla tion of currency," he said. "As for Germany, there are only two ways and none other will avail. They are expressible in two words—work and thrift Increased production will benefit both exchange and exportation. From that and a nation-wide return to fragal habits alone is an improvement in the paper money situation expect able." HELD DEAD, RETURNS RICH pentist Surprises His Maryland'Rela tives After 23 Years' Ahttnct |n Alaska. Cunflnrtttufl. Md—Dr. Thomas Mrfr flsh, dentist, who left for Alaska 23 years ago and was given up for dead, surprised relatives by appearing, a vig orous, wealthy man. Doctor McElflsh at one time prac ticed in Martlnsburg, W. Va. He went to Alaska with Mr. and Mrs. C. Gilpin Lashley in search of gold. The Lash leys soon returned. Doctor McElflsh prospected and ac cumulated wealth, which was lost In an investment. Since then he has ac quired a fortune in trapping. He la so enamored of outdoor life that he haa pitched a tent near Flintstlne, where he will remain several weeks before returning to Alaska. BLAME DISASTER TO CARL Austrian Collapse Charged to Emper •r's Conflicting War Ordera, Says Com mission. TtetWia.—Chief blame for lapse of the Austrisn forces on the Piave river, in the Austro-Itallan cam paign, to placed on the former Em peror Carl by the report of a commis sion appointed Jo investigate war de llnqnendea. On the fateful November 2,1918, the says, the then emperor Issued conflicting orders within a few The first was for the conclo of an armistice. Forty-five mln ates later this was revoked and 95 wtnttf afterward It waa issued again. Dwtttg thla period. It waa said, the emperor coosnlted no one on the mat tor. "Wo must aak," the report says, "Wkother the emperor and his advisers w#t not folded by the fear of the back oo Vienna rather oQW d^EUMtncei. It a& by .aanyffeaa in$eo* LASX ffttt troopa had *at A*. "Ships, Ships and Mere Ship#' la Plea from ywwinww OF SHIPS HALTS TOURISTS An Available AcconwirocTatlons Are Booked Three Months in Advanoe. PASSPORTS AT A PREMIUM United 8tates Ports—Travol Only Half What It Was In 1914, !few York.—The slogan of "ships ships! and still more ships 1" so effec tively used during the war to speed up America's ship-building program as a defiance of the submarine cam paign still is heard In American sea ports. It comes, however, not so much from those having freight for transit as it does from those who desire to make trips to foreign shpres on business or pleasure. Steamship accommodations for all lands, despite moiVthan a doubling of pre-wartlme tariffs, and rigid restric tions as to passports are at a premium. I All Accommodations Booked. Representatives in New York and other terminals of passenger-carrying lines say that all available accommo dations are booked as far as three months ahead. The unfortunate busi ness man faced with the need of mak ing an unexpected trip abroad, is forced to depend on possible cancella tions of previously engaged passage on the part of someone who at the last moment is prevented from sailing. On many ships third-class accom modations hold men and women who are financially able to travel in the best that the ship affords. It is no Infrequent occurrence for a staid banker, or a wealthy head of a large business house to be found booked with the humble alien laborer return ing to the land of his birth for a visit. It was recently said by the head of a large line In speaking of tariffs, that In 1M4 a man could purchase a tour ist ticket Including rail fares and hotel accommodations for a trip half way aroend the world for the same sum that he Is now compelled to pay for a one-wiiy ticket from New York to a Mediterranean port. Records of departures and arrivals as kept here by the Steamship Men's association show that despite the very apparent rush, travel Is only about half, as to number of passengers, what it was in 1914. In May and June of that year there sailed from Amer ican to transatlantic ports 164,300 per sons of whom more than 100,000 were classed as third class. In the same months of 1920 the outgoing total was 80,823 of whom 50,000 were third dan. Arrivals Show 8lump. Of Incoming passengers in one month of 1914 there were 105,100 per sons. The corresponding month this year showed 45,120 arrlvalsi The rush this yt'iir and the difficulty in getting accommodations is account ed for by the fact that there is need ed "ships, ships and more ships!" of the passenger-carrying class. Avail able tonnage, due to the ravages of S the war, is greatly depleted. The I North German Lloyd and the Ham burg-American lines, which prior to the war carried a large percentage of the transatlantlt travel, do not exist In addition, many of the big liners of allied flags are gone, as for exam ple, the Lusltanla. Almost all the ships of the pre-war fleet of another large British line were submarine vic tims. Other ships were of a necessity laid up for periods of more than a year for reconditioning due to their accommodations having been ripped out with axes to make them into troop carriers. An example of this Is the huge Olympic, which bnt recently was returned to her passenger-carrying trade. Candy It Not Taking Place of Hard Liquor Washington.—Candy has not taken the place of alcohol for men who formerly Indulged In beverages now under the prohibi tion ban, according to Walter C. Hughes, secretary of the Nation al Confectioners' assodatlon. In a letter to the state depart ment, Mr. Hughes placed the confectionery Industry as fifth among those benefited by prohi bition. Savings banks, the soft drink Industry, ice-cream makers and moving picture theaters in that order had drawn greater proportionate profits out of the dry edict than the candy trade, he ssld. New Mineral S^betanee. Tonopah, Nev.—A new mineral sob stance, resembling asbestos, has been found in an eight-foot vein near Coal dale, Nev. Officials of the federal bu reau of mines have indtcnttifl thaftr In tention of sending experts to study the material. Experiments bsve proved the new substance Is good fwi insula tion and If §£aa a diamonds, ntyas ,and! stones, tt will being ho strife tt le also resembling asbeetoe, tt la to ho too light lor In -ft*!?- i-T* I '. t" unlioiited guarantee. 9100 SIVASO. sioc The reader* of tbla paper will bf' pleased to learn that there ts at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure In all Its stages and that Is catarrh. Catarrh being for list of ppyyiKBMT It testi monials Address CHWNiuv CHi. Toledo, t] Ohio. Sold Or all drucslsts. 7Sc. u lovnvoai Tin KOVTX Housework Is trying at any season of the year but particularly so In August. Women suffering from backache. Tame muscles, stiff Joints, rheumatic pains, bllllousnesa or other symptoms of kid ney trouble will find relief In Foley Kid ney Pills. They give relief from Irritat ing bladder ailments. Sold everywhere. o A IATI mszonri roa oinBaiv Children who throw covers off at nigM. play in water, and neglect ordi nary precautions are likely to catch cold in summer. Summer colds are wearing and weakening. Foley's Honey froas aB Otbef it ia R. E Fitzgerald, ft- Money-Back Shot-Shells You can get your money back for The Black Shells if, for any reiSOC at all, you don't like them. Just bring back the unused part of the box, and we wHl refund to vou, without question, the price of the whole box. The Black Shells have reached so high a state of perfection in water proofing, in speed, in power, and in uniformity—that we can every kind of shooting, in smokeless or black powders. greatly influ enced by constitutional conditions re quires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Medicine Is taken Internally and acts thru the blood on the mucous nur faces of the system, thereby 'lesiroying the foundation of the dlseaMe. giving th«*1 pationt strength by building up the con stitution and asslstins nature in doing Its work. The proprietors have se much faith In the curative powers uf Hall's Cartarrh Medicine that they offer One Hundred Dollars tor any case that It falls to cure. Send v ROA TACATZOWS AGO 8' 1 and Tar is a genuinely good cold, cough aad croup medicine for children because It contains no opiates. Sold everywhere. I o I WBI* rax xtAcxzans SLOWS NR The kidneys must be In good order if a man or woman past middle age is in prime condition. Wenk or disordered kidneys bring on backache, lame mus cles, stiff Joints, rheumatic palnp and other afflictions. Foley Kidney Pills are a good first aid to the kidneys. They heal, soothe and Invigorate. Sold every where. F0LEYK0)MYPni^ •oi 8*CKAC atAOr 1 Madison Iron & Metal Company R. E. HAKT1G. Manager We buy IKON, OOPPERTBRASS. LEAD all kinds aeray metal. RAGS, RUBBBB RDM AND PURS PHOfcB 2820 1, '3.' BLACK SHELLS Smokeless and Black Powders Try^The Black Shells, if you don't know them. You can UNITED STATES CARTRIDGE COMPANY, New York, Manufacturer* i a» ami jat« espy of 7*o Law Joe* FJU& E L. Beiderstaedt, R. B. Fitzgerald, Madison, South Dakota. DAMUTH'S MUSIC STORE 120 Egan Ave. North Next to Dacotah Oil Co. Strange food, hurried eating wfeen traveling, too heavy diet for hot weather —numerous causes contribute to de ranged digestion In summer time. Salts and castor oil are all right, but many persons cannot take them. Foley Ca thartic Tablets act surely and gently, without griping or nausea. Bold every where. "A few minutes more, Fefgy dear, and Daddy will be ban: with the Kemp's Balsam. Them you can go to sleep and forest that horrid old conch." KEMP'S BALSAM wm Located block woat Colman Lum ber Yard in old store building Drs. Kellogg & Allison rtlYSICIANS & SURGKON8 iWeph—e 2118 Maflsaa. 8. D. CHIROPRACTOR MATHIUA HOGB, D. C. Ph. a 0Klee at Ree., 41«, lat St. N. W. __ MRS. LENA CUDXMWQ'roW Avar Xohlers •ESS SmeMm get ana Black Powder* Waterproof make this your pot load is Yours a Silent Piano? Your piano now standing idle can be traded in toward a player-piano that w0 give you the finest kind of music. Come in and hear our player-piano^ You will be delighted with their sweet musifc flair v HUNTERS! We have everything for lunches. Get fixed up with eats before you go after them. Scudder Bros. Sanitary Market Phone 2907 Fall 5 Millinery Onr fall stock of millinery is now ready for your in spection. We have some very attractive styles this season. I cordially invite you to call 4 k Miss L.Grmager to or if *pU5»£ E. SHERIDAN $ SON Get Workman's INSURANCE S't -ix V a* i V i 1 & if- e-r, $