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V g- I 1 -f I I k:f FF 5 :K e^ f' *'*. ,r .v* fc if Vi THE CITY. For S ilc ttet, cheap. For rent. $$68 fc' For Sale I S & 4 fXR IVvr' Odd Fellow and Rebekah "Get-to-1 #ether" at I. O. O. F. hall Friday evening, March 31. Winfred and Wentworth lodges our guests.—Com-1 aUtmu. WANTED. LOCAL NEWS Mm was a Y I u s a y a n i a y Y I W I E A A I N S W I E With Pauline Starke, Percy Marraont, Edward Langforct Ti e "Crania oi a wife who was a model of beauty and a wife who v as a statute of apite. One came from the studios of Paris her if .ellneas an artist's inspiration. One came from the cold •avlrons A I S O N CHAUTAUQUA July 15 to 21,1922 New York's moot snobbish Mt. It is wife against wife. A bat Jo heart break. rH-r7^ AliHO CHKISTIB GO.MKDY *Onc Stormy Night* Admission |0c-30c *r--*'' Where he has school business to v.? transact. WKATHER FORECAST Verna IScklund, of Ufciaoaa, Bhoppar in Madison between Get your Neatsfoot or black har ness oil in bulk or gallon cans at Dncotah Filling Station. Dr. D. S. Baughman drove up to EXIDE Storage Batteries jrn- .* For .? RADIO Enthusiasts $ J* We Can Supply Them i Ask For Prices^ i^1 I- 'HT MADISON MOTOR & I? SUPPLY CO. OpfMitc Lake Park Hotel i'C, «.*» '.-V .jits V £r" 4/' M'*.. Enill Heldt, of Wentworth, and Henry Johnson, of .Sioux Falls, trans acted legal business today at the of fice of a local attorney. Among the Madison people com ing up on the afternoon train l'roti Sioux Falls were Frank Millard, Mrs. J. L. Redding and Ben Owenn. Prof. C. E. Warden of the high school faculty left the cley at 2:30 1:30 p. m., on a trip to DeSmet, Mrs joe Ryan who i Generally fair tonight and Friday opt-rat ion at the local hospital about »©t BWh change In temperature. ten days ago has recovered sufft* Or———— Sinall house.—Phone ter was removed. She left that in |stitution and returned to her home. About 46 last, year's Mrs. Clara Board and a Krand- M. Appelwick at the daughter arrived yesterday after i noon from Altona, Wis., and are be- pullets. See pDstoffice. The Hasvold Coffee company arej|ng entertianed at the home of the giving 22 pounds sugar for 98c, with former's sister, Mrs. A. O. Hallen an order for $10.00 worth of groc- beck. erle, any goods in the entire stock o. W. Cummings has just complet except sugar and flour. They accept ed eggs samp as cash. If you can't buy cupied by Attorney Hans Urdahl. |1«.00 worth of goods at one time Next he goes to the front rooms for fcuy a $5.00 order and get 11 similar work in attorney Ira F. Ble pounds of sugar for 50c. Don't send i witt's quarters. »oney away when you can do as well Mrs. W. A. Donovan, of Ramona, right here in Madison We meet! underwent an clently to be discharged and to re» BUSINESS LOCALS '"TTEJSTSHIM. Crtauui Honaier kitch«-a eab-j found great relief recently at the lo Mrs. B. J. Sutton. caj hospital when a very large gol- repapering the suits of offices oc- wa8 cataloKU«' house prices. j»y. Owing to the seriousness of the [case it was deemed best for her com- taken ill very suddenly yester- SALE# I fort to bring her to the Madison 1PTve set ^ood harness 1 set back hospital In the ambulance. Arriving pad harness, $2.00 1 set Con-j here she was given every attention eerd harness, $44.00 1 set Concord until the time set for an operation, harness, $45.00 2 set Concord har-iThe operation was performed last •ess, $49.00.—W. T. Stearns & Son, evening and today the patient Is re Hadison, South Dakota, ————O 1. O. O. F. ported recovering. John Bohl, of Minneapolis, dis trict commercial manager of the Western Union Telegraph Co., was in the city yesterday auditing the books of the local office and found everything in good condition as us ual. Mr. Bohl was a dinner guest last evening at the home of local manager Kaschel and wife at their home in the northwest part of the i Everyone interested In horseshoe! city. pitching in Lake county to meet at Mrs. B. B. Laughlia returned Mayfield building, Madison, at 8 home from' Sioux Falls this after o'clock Monday evening, April 3 for noon feeling quite honored because tike purpose of organizing a bofpealtoe'of having been present last night at •tub.—R. H. Mayfield. NOTICE. $ow la the time to hare your bat ttry repaired and recharge#* bet Mck do it at Corbin's garag& o .. a happy event transpiring in Siou* Falls and involving her daughter, i Miss Vera Leota Grayblll-who was entertained by a party of friends as a compliment to her announced en i gagement to Harold Rider Hodgins, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Hdogins of that place. In Bpite of the snowstorm last night the attendance was juat as i large last night as the previous eve- tMains today. ning at the special services in Trin Henry Nelson, of Oldham, was the} Ity Lutheran church. The Rev. •abject of an X-ray examination at Glenn preached a strong sermon set the new hospital today. ting forth God's Power to Forgive SlnB. Plain, practical and tenderly pleading was the gospel invitation invitation given out last night. Mrs. Anna Johnson-Reid sang two solos l^iuxpna recently for the purpose of in close harmony with the message Waking professional calls. of the evening. The subject tonight Mrs. Wm. Shenkfeld, residing will be A Day of Mistakes. The •fear Wentworth, is in the city for a choir will sing two numbers, few days, the guest of Mrs. Jake Ha- The entire cast and the commit beger. tees that so successfully put on the Mrs. John Hoffman, a Fedora res-, minstrel show for the American L« Klent, consulted a local physician in gi0n *is city while waiting for an after- Tuesday evening over the fact of the «on train west. satisfaction shown by the public in John Hunt, a resident of this city, their patronage. The affair had two recently purchased the Granger Mc- particular social features, namely a A1 lister residence property on Harth banquet and a dance. Over forty atenue N. held a sort of celebration laat people sat at the banquet table at the Lake Park hotel where the best of the cooking art was liberally pro vided. A pick-up orchestra out of Legion rankB furnished enlivening tuusic for the ball conducted in Le gion headquarters. Announcement has been made for the annual meeting of the South Da kota Live Stock Shipping association to occur in Sioux Falls Friday, March 31. The program takes place at the Chamber of Commerce. At 10:00 a. m., L. G. Atherton of this city speaks on "The Acceptance of Live Stock Shipments to the Associa tion." Frank M. Byrne, State Com missioner of Agriculture, has a topic at 1:30 p. m. The annual election of officers is set for 2:30. J. D. Mor rison, bureau agent for Lake county, discusses the "Cooperative Live Stock Commission Compaany's Work in Sioux Falls." F. J. Krug of this county is president of the association and Mr. A. E. Willard, Secretary. The children of the Baptist, Meth «#Ut. and Presbyterian churches were invited to a children's meeting yesterday afternoon. The way they came was a sight to behold. 8he au ditorium of the Methodist church was filled by the 240 members of the junior congregations of the Churches mentioned above. The ser mon last evening was by Mr. Bal lard on the subject, Which Side Am I On." He dwelt upon the statement of Jesus tfc*4 U «an is not oat and JV *.# *iik out ter htm he is out and out agaior him. The special ranelc •frus by rnal# quartette aod ib« Baptist choir. Tho next steps in theee serv ices are the meeting this evening at 7:30, a men's meeting tomorrow at 11 a. nij., at the Farm Bureau office, and another meeting for children al the church at ,4:16 Friday after noon. Engineer Albert Martin and Mike Peters are contemplating the erec tion of a substantial new two story brick structure on their adjoining lots in the center of the block in which the First National bank is lo cated. The site is the space now oc cupied by the old Sugar Bowl build ing and the frame structure having J. V. Regan for a tenant! The plans would call for a building fifty by ov er one hundred feet with ample ac commodations on the second floor for a large hall. Mr. Regan has al ready spoken for quarters in the proposed new structure and the local Elks are ready at any time to lease for a long period any hall the build ing might provide. In the event the project goes through such a build ing as the one proposed would add very mnch to the appearance of the row on the eaRt side of Egan avenue. Death Comes AM He Reads Paper Watertown, March 30.-—A sudden attack of heart failure While he evi dently was preparing to read a news paper is believed to have been re sponsible for the death of J. W. Chiles, panitor of a dry goods store in this city. He was found dead in the store, and is supposed to have been dead at least two hours before hlB body was found. Death came as he was sitting In a chair in the boiler room, the news paper lying near him. He apparent ly died without a struggle. "He came to Watertown from southern Illinois about three years ago with a son, who died two yeans ago during a "flu" epidemic. -o Stockmen Look For Prosperity Belle Fourche, March SO.—The snow has been melted off the cattle and sheep ranges in%this part of the state and ranchers now have their cattle and sheep feeding on grass, thus effecting a great saving in feed. Although the winter was quite a severe one, reports received here in dicate that losses of cattle and sheep were not above normal, with every prospect for this being a favorable season for the stockmen. •The stockmen of this district, as well as of the district lying east of the Black Hills, think the year 1022 will be one of the u^ost prosperous they have exgerlejiced for several years. Pneumonia Takes Four Children One Family Pine Ridge Indian Agency, March 30.—One of the saddest events re ported on this reservation for some time is the death of four children of Mr. and Mrs. Aca Steel. The father and mother were both stricken with pneumonia and later the four chil dren develope dthe same disease. Three of them were buried on one day. The fourth, a little girl, lived several days longer and was thought to be recovering when she had a re lapse because of her frailness and died. The father and mother are re covering. o i. .. Death Takes Hills Pioneer Rapid City. Mareh 30.—With the passing of Cassius M. Leedy, Rapid City and Pennington county lost one of the most widely liked and best known pioneers. Mr. Leedy had been a resident of Rapid City for nearly 50 years, and there is not an old timer within the trading territory of Rapid City that dl dnot know "Cash" Leedy. Mr. Leedy came to Rapid City in 1876 during the early gold rush and later took up a homestead in Pen nington county, on which he resided for a number of years. During his life he held many pub lic offices in both the city and coun ty. Mr. Leedy was also a charter member of the Gate City Hose com pany, one of the oldest fire ies in the Black Hills. Dies When Head Crushed By Horse' Pierre, March 30.—Elsie, the 13 year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Jeffrey, near Philip, was kill ed by the kick of a horse while she was at school. She had ridden to school on horse back, and at noon went to feed her horse in the shed where horses are kept. She did not return to the school building and an investigation show ed her skull was crushed, evidently by a kick from one of the horses In the shed at the tim^e. She was unconscious and lived on ly a short tlafe* iff,' SCIENCE AIMING BLOW_*T DEATH Famous English Surgeon Predicts Perpetual Life and Brain Grafting. DISCOVERIES BT CARRE Whole Kidnsy Successfully Grafted From One Animal Into Another of Same Species—Arteries Transplanted. London.—"Not only may the brains of the Illustrious be grafted on the living, but we may also be on the eve of the secret of perpetual life." This astounding possibility, arising out of a story told in the Dally Ex press of Prof. Alexis Carrel's discov ery. is revealed by Sir WilHuin Ar buthnot Lane, the famous surgeon, who worked with Professor Carrel be fore the war. "Any tissue kept on a microscopic slide, at a suitable temperature, fed with the right material, and drained at frequent intervals, will grow and live forever," said Sir William. "If this Is applied not only to one or two tissues, but to all the tissues of a living body, then It follows that such s man would live forever. Food Too Digestible. "We pay for civilization by eating flgestlble food. We should In reality eat indigestible food as the savage doex The Hindu lives on corn ground between stones and the cake he makes is most imperfectly roasted. There fore, he avoids all disease of the Intes tine. such as cancer, which Is spread ing in the eivillyed world with the roost alarming rapidity. "Professor Carrel has made astound ing discoveries. He successfully grafted a whole kidney from one ani mal Into another of the same species. He did the same with a leg and other members, transplanting arteries and veins at the same time. I have seen a hi nek dog with a white leg that had been grafted on. The blood vessels Joined up during the operation and worked successfully. Professor Car rel tried grafting a kidney on the organism of a living man, but it be came calcareous. These experiments, howerer, are 'invaluable because they lead the way. Overrun the Slides. "The tissues Professor Carrel Is ex perimenting with are mounted on slides and have to be kept at the same temperature as that of the human body. Thev are washed every day with saline water to dispose of by products and they will never die as long as the treatment is continued. They grow just like a fungus, and In time overrun the slide. There is no sucli thing as death as leng as there to perfect drainage. "Professor Carrel has not yet been able to unite tissues and keep them growing. Until this can be done these fragments will have no thought, al though they may possess feeling. "This work gives doctors and scien tists a great insight on what is going on in the human body. Small tissues of the brain, the liver, or the heart may all be treated In this way. If the fragments are fed with thyroid Juice they will digest the food and. provided all by-products are washed away, their lift ^.absolutely without limit." BUSS PRINCESS IS STOWAWAY Native American Who Wed in Europe Ftees When Reds Kill Her Husband. Hew Orleans, La.—Prlncees Tscher irttssheo, a native American and iden tified with Russian royalty under the KomanofT regime, is In New Orleans, having arrived as a stowaway and stewardess on the steamship Texan drier, which docked here from Ant werp. The princess ie being detained at the Algiers immigration station while government authorities are investigat ing. An examination will be held to determine whether she shall be al lowed to remain in this country with out proper passports. In 1906 she is said to have married Prince Ivan Tschernitscheo. Her hus band, It was said, recently was put to death by Bolshevikl. The princess Is said to have walked most of the way across Russia and Eu rope to Antwerp, where she boarded the Te*andrler. Fish Deep In Oil Welt. Bakersfleld, Osl.—A wildcat oil well em the Hitchcock ranch south of Por tervllle. at 1,200 feet, has begun to produce—not oil, but flsh, according to word received here. They were tiny specimens, apparently from a subter ranean stream. Man Paid Dog Fee, but Refused Wife's Pell Tax Staples, of Winsted, Oonn, rebelled at paying his wife's poll tax, saying that be cause she was his wife had no bearing on the caae, and that anyhow he could not afford It. Before leaving, the town hall, however, he paid his dog license fee. ''vjj'fcv-' *v* vV -7 -j CAR LOAD LOT SALE OP RUGS Alexandria Smith's Walton Rugs come in many ine patterns, with or without flA ringe. Size 9x12 "U Size 7.6x9 *27.50 ',lxl2 Tapestry Rugs, 1 piece good j*OQ OC tfrade, car load lot sale WO.OJ M. J. Whitalls world's best rugs, in 9x12 Wil tons' now offered during this car j*QC! A A load lot sale at tPOD.UU A big showing of 27-inch Axmin- /*Q ister Rugs to be sold at CAR LOAD LOT SALE OF CONGOLEUM RUGS !*!f lead lei sale xl0.6 car load lot sale $14.15 Ix9 car load lot sale $12.10 7.6x9 car load lot sale $10.10 »x9 car load lot sale $8.10 100 Congoleum Mats, each 25c 0 Furniture IN .F *w- •**. mt SCLLCRS MASTERCRAFT CASCAW^ QUININE 4mtrc««Me »nth«i always tiav« Hill IumkIt Slays Colds in 24 hoars—La Grlpp* la 3 Jays. Standard nmdy fot t*o (fcn.ru liana. No bad aflci tdttt*. Saft and fepmtfafctr DMMad r»d boi btannc Mt Hflfs (^traii tmi algnstur* A' 40 Dratt'"'—M CmM RIM company DiriRort MR. AND MRS. A. G. HALLENBECK Undertaken PHONICS: Home 8058 Otffc* AUTO HEARSH SB®VIOB Over Geo. Beck's Fnralture Store MADISON SO. DAK. flHsEY KIDNEY PUIS fOR •ACKACNTS KiONfYS AND SlAOftKV OUR GREAT TWO CAR LOAD LOT SALE WILL POSITIVELY CLOSE SATURDAY NIGHT In order to take advantage of these unusually low prices we have been quoting buy now as they will not be effective after Saturday Night, April 1. If there is any furniture or house furnishings you need this spring, you should buy them before this sale closes. We are sincere in stating they will not be any cheaper. We quote a few extra specials. Q* ROY BEESLEY DR. C. H. R. HOVDE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office Over Dakota State Bank HOURS: 9-12 a. m.. S-f, 7-1 p. m. Office Phone SlTf Bee. Phone 217* Madiaoa South D&koty Drs. Kellogg & Allison PHYSICIANS & SURGEONS Tefephone 2131 Midi—. S. D. *ii ie 1 Car Lot Sale Simmons' Steel Beds 1 inch post, V. 11. and white, dj/j |JP full size during this car lot sale. vO.DD 2-inch posts, all finishes. An (Q or extra special bargain at $:)5.00 2-inch post, genuine satin band brass beds Kitchen Cabinet This beawtiful kitchen cabinet, large size, white enamel inside, large flour bin, sold oak. sliding porcelain top. Very special at FREE A 32-Piece Set of White and Gold Semi-Porce lain D^hes With Each Kitchen Cabinet Sold. W. E. BRAY sz. A I S O N S O A K Beesley Dray. Line Does All Kinds of Hauling, Moving Household Goods, etc. Sand, Gravel and Black Dirt For Sale. Delivered On Short Notice. $19.85 Mattresses at Bargain Prices 50 pound high grade layer felt mattress, non-stretchable. best grade are tick, strap handle, a regular (f10 TA $24.00 value 21£.DU Cotton felt mattress, this 45 pound cotton felt mattress, covered in heavy quality art ticking, with roUed and sfcitisfcH During this car load lot sale tPO*«/0 qq $45.00 Phone 3772 "nfflifMi in antn Bigrfflfln friBinnrmfifl DR. A. H. NOLAN DENTIST flffiee in Huntemer Block PHONE 2291 I m. RENSVOLD DENTIST Office in Lanaon-Cook Block phohb Has MADISON «-}j-« 80. DAK. ji •. xSl