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RW 5»*. 5 w .r 4, It*-* v C: fT- v ,p LUCKY STRIKE 4 .. 'i'. i*' Notice this dr'ioous flavor when you smoke Lucky Strike —it's scaled in by (She toasting process TL7E£L££~jQ C!jr iLcaOcr MAX* I SON. SOUTH DAKOTA TIL1710VI 21 «B "VEDNESDAY,~SEPT. 2 C192lT Catered *t Madison poatoffic* aa a»«:ond (MtW. TERMS '"i f. f,v ft Sy~" *5 h* 1 J' 1 *t It 'y OF r, ft SUBSOFUFTIOlf mail. rmmr. ft.#* mall. month* Mitchell, -in two robberies near Mitchell nearly $2,000 worth of wen'* olothinK was stolen from the Ott clothing store at Bridgewater, 40 miles east of here, and a safe wasf blown in the |fanholder meat market at Stickney. The yeggs obtained about $2SO in cash and checks from the safe. No trace lias boon found of the thieves. Belle Fou rche, Sept. 21.—Joe Duo*, of Nisland, ex-county commis sioner, on Friday was shot by two hunters whom he had ordered from his land. They refused to leave and when he was seen taking the num ber of their car one of the hunters shot, at him. A wool lined leather vest saved him from injury. Pierre.—Nine hundred tons of hay was burned near LaPlant a few days ago. It was the propetry of the D. Z. Cattle company and held as a surplus to assist in carrying cattle over the winter in case the snow fall is such as to shut off the open ran^e. The fire occurred while all the forie from, the headquarters ranch was at Mabridge attending the fufMfai tht foreman of the ranch. iffnrfflBilfti AESTHETIC ROOFNTS SET k 1.S4 Carripr, per *««lt if J. K. 3T.VHU Propriater. H. A. STAH!., Ptssinftmr Manager. STATE NEWS Wellington Springs. Arlington S4dy, aged 15, agricultural student of th«* local high school, sold his prise b«IJVr ralf for $250. Corsica. The Tuny Kuipwr land adjoining Platte and consisting of not quite 40 acres was sold for $320 per acre. There wm & crowd of about 200 present and bidding was livaly, Alpena.—Mrs. Bert Kent of thin etty, was quite seriously hurt. While Mux the family washing her hand wm caught and pulled into a wring ar on a power washer. Two rings on the hand were smashed into thl flesh and the bones crushed. Mobndge.—J. W. Dingman. Tor •ftorly of thia city, now of Oelwein. la., is searching for hhs son Richard. 17 years of age, who disappeared from his home at Oelwein on the morning of Sept. 5. and has not been •eon or heard from since. It is be lieved that he came to South Da kota. Humboldt.—A. umbar of farm era la this viplnity art contemplating fowling corn to their cattle this win ter. since they are unable to get the price they ank for It. Very few farm ers in this district have done thia be fore, but now that corn is so cheap tkey say that this is a profitably wmy to get rid of their cheap feed. a ^•mpTe 2,300 Years Old Uncovered. Athens, (ireece.--Kulns of a great temple have beet) unearthed at SUtyon, a city on the southern shore of the Gulf of Corinth, which In the Fourth eentnrr before the Christian era was one of the principal cities of Greece. Experts who have visited the new excavations declare that the tem ple was sacred to the worship of Arte- Skunk Is Outdone by Nomius Pygmaeus Bug Minneapolis. Minn.—The no mius pygmaeus is a concentrat ed rival of the skunk. This Is the text Dr. William A. Ril*y. chief entomologist at the university farm, has read to International Falls. The citi zens of the city, being assailed by a tefnfic odor, had at first thought their sewage system was faulty, but later placed the blame on some strange Insects which were being trodden upon Noirdus pygmaeus is an Arctic species of the beetle, which gives ott a terrible odor when killed or injured. It rarely in vades towns, but, unfortunately, when it does, there is so way of avoiding It. I zxf*-' Mf* •\1." .-ir bills' V *30,880 HOME Music* Gymnas-,.1 and Modern Social Life Will Make Tfcese Rats Gentlemen The superrat, like the superman, if not, as Nietzsche would have It, of the warrior type, but is a gentleman or gentlewoman, an aristocrat at heart, altiiuugh democratic iu his ways. He is gentle and sociable, a good fellow, as It were, healthy and active ami has an aesthetic side, be ing fond of #iKd anisic. These are some of the conclusions drawn from years of experiments with the ordinary rodent by Dr. Mil ton H. Greeriiuao, director of tbe Wis tar Institute. To muke observations on a more ex tensive scale and under more favor able conditions than heretofore, par ticularly In food research, the Insti tute is iildlng a $3O,0U0 home for rats. Tbis building, now in course of construction, will be a one-story wing to tbe present building and will be provided with every kind of conven ience conducive to rat comfort anil well being. The results. It is believed, will be of far-rtaching benefit to man kind. Besides an office and laboratory there will be a well-equipped gymna sium for the rats. Ladders for climb ing, modified trapeze, running space, treadmill cages snd gnawing appar atus will be provided to give the en genicaUy-ralsod redent the proper ercisa. TOURISTS PASS UP SWISS Money Hates Are Blamed far Laak «f Sightseers. Switzerland has reached the scute stage of economic stringency result ing from a tuo favorable rate of ex change. The tourist season, upon which It depends to such a great ex tent, opened with little prospects. Tourists who usually visit .Switzer land during the .summer, are going to French and Italian resorts. The Swiss, themselves, to a considerable extent, are abandoning their own country to spend their outings in France, where Swiss money counts for twice its val ue at home, or In Italy, where It counts five times the normal value. The crisis shows not only in the absence of tourist trade, but on in dustrial stagnation, a good many workers being already oat of employ ment. A few weeks ago It looked as If the delegations to the second assembly of the League of Nations, September 8. would find difficulty In getting lodg ings here. It now appears that th« hotels will welcome the league dele gations unless there Is an unexpect edly radical change In die travel sit uation. NEW TORI IS PORT OF MISSMIG SWLS Runaway* From All Parts of the Courttry Go to Gotham for Adventure. New Xork is tho "port o missing girls." In addition to its own quota of an nual disappearances among girls un der Verity-one, the lure of the "big city" draws adventurous misses of other towns, according to Capt. John A. Ay res, head of the police bureau of missing persons. While the number of missing New York girls is decreasing each year, those from other cities who come here show a proportionate Increase, says Ayres. New York attracts girls Croat far as the Pacific coast, bat the ma jority come from east of Chicago. Little more than 1 per cent of these girls remain "lost," Ayres said. Since 1915 the number of these cases has averaged slightly under 2,000 a year. The number of runaway boys and of adults of both sexes Is about, tbe same. "Girls come to New York because they believe they will find adventure here, when, In fact, this is the 'slow est* town In the country. Men figure directly iu less than 25 per cent of the missing girls cases. "The fool age' for girls is from fourteen to sixteen, la boys tfs from ten to seventeen." SELLS SOME MIMES ftldt Farmer Laborer Gets MlWaw From a Company, Pedro Alvarado, the former mine laborer who became a multi-million aire by his discovery of a rich silver ore outcropping at Parral, Mex., which was developed into the famous Palmlilo mine, has just sold 51 of his mines in Chihuahua. Durango and Seuora to the Mexican Natural Re sources Company of San Antonio, Tex., for United States cur rency. *1 Alvarado vMM into wide public no tice about fifteen yean.A£ft soon af ter his rise to sud ferisg to pay the lea. Gen. JtorHrto president at tike time, offer. -*r ane, by of of Mex who wss refused the For many years Alvarado distrib uted large sums of money among the poor people of Parrul by making a trip through the streets ouce a week scattering silver coins as he went •i§afc JfrialiiJL •uniflfit i '*v* mm •VHMii! of marble upon the site of his lowly birthplace, the cost of the structure being f'J.OOO.OOO. It is stated. In ev ery room he place# a piano and a cage of canary birds. He also erect ed a line Catholic church in ParrsL FISH BITE TOO FAST Man After Them Had Too Much and Could Not Lnsfc Smoke. Fish bit too fast the other day for Harry H. Woodward, a barber, near Castleman's Ferry, on the Shenan doah river in Virginia, and he re turned to his home a bit put out be cause of his streak of luck. He said they came too fast tor him, and he had no time to sit on the bank and smoke his pipe and nod. Woodward and two friends went to the river during the morning, the stream having cleared after a rain, and he put out two ordinary lines. After landing 17 black bass, be reeled up and came home, saying he had too much luck for one day. One of the bass weighed a little over five pounds, and the others ranged from three to four-and-a-half pounds. His two friends caught seven between them. When Woodward laid the fish on the floor of his barber shop there wss a general craning of necks, and the next day the place where he had fished was visited by many other anglers, but with no such luck struck Woodward. as DISEASE MADE HER STEM, After Failure of Law te Cure Woman, Physicians Will Operste. Following tbe failure of the law, science will try to cure the burglary tendencies of Mrs. Fannie Liehowitz. of New York city, third-time offender. Dr. B. H. Vaughan says the woman Is the victim of hypothyroidism, s disease causing a dulled mentality, due to the fact that there is Insutti Americsn Organization. Vienna.—A new survey of economic conditions has caused the American child relief to make a drastic cut In its charity in Austria. It is proposed this summer gradually to reduce the number of children fed to 20U.UUU and these will be confined largely to Vien na and other cities where much want will be faced during the coming winter. Tbe general improvement In the rural regions is illustrated by the action of rbe Americans in closing 68 of their kitchens in upper Austria alone In one week. All children of parents In fair financial circumstances are excluded under the new program, as well as children of farmers. In other words, American relief will be confljic to those in actual need. BOY LEADS BAND OF THIEVES Philadelphia Youth Could Start Motor Cars, No Matter How Well Locked. Declared by the police of Philadel phia to be the leader of an organized band of youthful motor thieves who have stolen, in six months, 2UI) cars, valued at more than $5.00,'.*W, Charle* J. ilicketts, sixteen years old. was sr rested. 'un'caaiuu iuu beeu wade, the poik*e say, to the theft of five of the cars. The arrest of Uicketts was accom plished bx detectives as the youth was alleged to going after li's "latest machine." He was beki in I2.0U) ball. According to the detec tives. Uicketts Is a fine mechanic. Although Just past his sixteenth birth day, they say he can start any 'car, no matter how well locked, by using a small piece of copper win. "We liave been after this lad for three months." said Detective Falvey. "He is certainly in a class by himself and a horn leader. No wonder his gang, five of whom are already in Jail, awaiting sentence, were afraid of him. Several were older than he» bul he seemed to be able to boss them like a manager I IT Raising the Family-meemao Ntf, K'M Mtvwc ne. CAW TOOK CO mm New Wool Sweater Coats $7.75 1 dent secretion from the thyroid gland, i If the amount of secretion is increased to norm.-i. intelligence is stimulated, i and the person begins to reason cor rectly and to distinguish between right I and wrong. After treatment Mrs. Lieb owltz will be placed under a test to determine the success of the oper ation. Fniln D—sitsr in 1015 Just Caught. A French infantryman, who desert ed In September, 1915, and evaded all search, has Just been arrested In Paris. Helped by his wife, he had lain roncealed in the house for six years, despite frequent searches fcp gendarmes. CUT RELIEF IN AUSTRIA Mew Survey of Conditions Ca Reduction by Just the sort of sweater you can't get along without from now on. Knitted in plain weave, all wool. Tuxedo style, all sizes i n Brown Navy and Black. Special $7.75 Indian Head Muslin 1*. Genuine Indian Head Mus lin, 36 inches wide, bleach ed, linen finish. 19 cents is less than today's wholesale price. Get your share be fore this lot ia all sold. Towling 12 l-2c Bleached, Linen finished, Crash Toweling, 18 inches wide. Our 19c quality. Spe cial per yard 12 l-2c. Curtain Marquisette 40 inches wide. Mercerized finish. White, Ivory and Ecru. Specially priced for this sale per yard 39c. Wash Cloths 5c Pure white, 12 inches square. Edges finished in Pink or Bkae. Special each TH1T COtTUJ STOP AJTS UUT Your lkrtneys have worked «very min ute of your life. They cannot stop and rest. If overworked, weakened or di» i ordered, jive them help Foley Kidney Pill* heijj restore regular and normal action of kidneys and bladder and re- i move the cause of trouble. Prompt anion and tonic Id in effect. sensible enonyn to tlw Kids 0 vt i 4 Thursday, Friday and Saturday— PAULIS DRY GOODS CO. $18.75 Dress Sale Newest Fall Creations at a Price any Woman Can Afford to Pay $18.75 Canton Crepes, Poiret Twills, Tricotines, Crepe de Chines, Rashanara Crepe, Fine Satins and Georgettes. Beaded, Braided and Medallion Trimmed Models in Black, Brown and Navy. Values Extraordinary. You will find all of the authentic autumn styles shown in the leading fashion magazines. Madras Shirting 39c Yd. Fine Madras Shirtings in neat stripes on white grounds, full yard wide, a good firm quality that washes well and irons eas ily. Per yard 39c. ED. GUNDERSON Tailor and Cleaner Opposite Postoffios PHONE 2316 Embroidery Edsres Yard 10c One and a half to three inch edges. Pretty patterns on fine Baliste and Nain sook, suitable to trim fine underwear and childrens clothes. Per yard 10c. Make Your Own Comforters Now for comforter materials—for soon will come nights that are keen and frosty—when itll feel mighty good to smuggle d©wn in a awna eott&tfer mmln t# your own liking. COTTON CHALUS 19c 36 inches wide, ail good desirable patterns, dark and fast colors. SILKOLINE 19c. Best quality 36 inch Silkolines in new pat terns and color combinations. CRETONNES 35c. Heavy Bungalo Cretonne, 36 inches wide, all gwxl styles for heavy comforter coverings. COTTON BATTS. Pure white, soft, and fleecy, 10 ot. size, 15c. 14 oz. size, 18c. 3 pound size, large enough for a com forter, only 89c each. DR. H. P. WESTABY DKNTIST QfflM Pojter-HenJdn Block PHONE 2290 .vc eh TH_ e*juL£.r vis."**' Extra Large Blankets $2.98 Extra large dou ble bed blankets, good weight, soft fleece, grey and tan with colored borders. Every body that reads this ad will want s o e a i s price. So in or der to make them go around we li mit them to two to a customer at each $2.98 Boys Sweaters Heavy weight wool sweat ers in slip over styles shawl collars, combination colors. Sizes 32 to 36. Regular $6.50 values. Special on sales days $4.95. Boys coat sweaters, wool mixed in dark grey and ma roon. $3.95 values reduced to $2.75. Bias Tape 3c Made of fine White Cam bric in sizes 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5w Bach piece contains 4 yards at 5& fioys Pompader Caps 10c Boys Razzel Dazzel Pompa dor Caps. Made of good quality felt. Bright colors. Each 10c. DR, KENSVOLD DENTIST? Tffice ht Lannon-OMk Bock PHO\E 9169 WAOTSON-i-SOUTH DAKOTA MADISON SO. DA& powr soo (.er nat-tTM new wm omuR rz a».