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Image provided by: South Dakota State Historical Society – State Archives
Newspaper Page Text
C. R. TINAN, Publisher 24tli YEAR ~^^g£s DOC. ON THOSE SffeMj ^i! Fred Griswold Brule County1 *-hich will I sew. g/ra^ggg .^•fWVTT^ ^y/^^fetraiflEUMl •r££S«?.0ASaKa-ss! t^TWlilCTOOWG.ca "MTHIHK) The Litchfield Manure Spreader piiOF. ROBERTS, one of the most no ted agriculturists in the west estima ted .$250 as a conservative figure for the value of the manure produced during sev en months on a farm carrying4 horses, 20 cows, sheep and 10 pigs. We might till half a page with figures on the value of manure to the farmer, but the principal thing is to get it on to the soil so as get he full value of it. The Litchfield Man ure Spreader docs this. Hundreds of farm ers have foumd this out to their complete satisfaction. Let us show you the machine. The Ochsner Store pjjr, ... -®». T/iey are certainly good/ give them "'value received.,-in the most artistic and colorings'superb, are sold here exclusi velv at Wr. 111 Nulcus, I'un? KimhatI State Bank 11 Neonpoic vrrn I Does a Genera! Banking Business We can sell you a draft I htit is piml in any part of the world. We can give vou every accomodation consist ent with sound and conservative banking Buffalo, Chas Mix, Aurora and Real Estate provo very uttractive to Home ho ilesired. If you have a town lot or farm to can findyou a buyer 1 can REFERENCE. Any man wc have bandied Rea'. Ustnte for THE KIMBALL Housekeepers know when they get Their Money Worth out of a Carpet During the past 3o years millions of housekee pers have learned by ex perience that Richardson's Super= lative Carpets wear. The patterns are These famous carpets Bowles' Furniture Store u—,rrfTiHwaiiarw—• SSraCfiESBHBS A. AV. Haxnm.MAX, V. PKES Saokora a I ir' Collections a Specialty and Interest Paid on Time Deposits Remitted on Day of Payment Cashier or investors. XcruiBall Dell, .:i If yon have ihnt car. cull or write to me and if anyone frcinil who lias property to dispose of f*sr him to me. 1l want to buy a picco of 5. roperty no oneserve you Quite so wejl re- F. A. Reynolds. Eiiinfoan,&5 The town is now dry as old Maine. Not a drop can be secured l'roin any of the saloons and l'roni present indica tions prospects are by no means bright for the lover of good "Old Kentucky" or "Milwaukee's Best."—Oacoma A rgus. And it all came about beeau.se the saloon men not too smart. One of them was.twice arrested for selling litiuor to minors and both of them open on Sunday. Judge Smith not only revolkcd their licenses but fined one $000 and the other 8C500 to boot— and every saloon man in the state should be glad of it. It is open de fiance of the license laws which prompts revulsion of sentiment and sweeps every saloon out ot existence good, bad and indifferent. The yellow journals are hunting for .iohn D. Rockefeller's dad, whom Ida Tarbell says is somewhere in Iowa one of ihe grandsons recently declared that the old man was on a South Da kola ranch. A man and a woman re porter were at Shenandoah. Iowa last week in the search, one repre senting the Des Moines News and the other the Chicago American. There is little doubt but what the old man— who is about !0 years of age—is living under an assumed name—hence the ell'orts to spot him. It would be a great story for a yellow journal. The Milwaukee extension from Armour stops about 12 miles south of Plankinton, where a new town will be located. The other town will be loca ted about the same distance from Harrison. The latter town will have to pull up stakes and move to the rail road or pass in its checks. The ex tension will cut oil'a third of Armour's trade and ell'ect Plankinton the same way. Kimball is not hankering for a north and south line—not if she knows it. Out of the 205 newspapers in South Dakota, the Mitchell Ca/.ette has found nineteen that "have not sold their opinions on the national rail road rate question."' This certainly looks dark for the pee-pul and makes the load for the Cazette to carry a monstrous one. All efforts so far to run to earth William Rockefeller—father of John I).—said to be in South Dakota—have proved unavailing. He is probably running a store somewhere and doesn't advertise. The Chicago. Milwaukee & St. Paul railroad now runs its cais to Oacoma, situate on the west bank of tiie Miss ouri in South Dakota. Hip. Hip. Hurrah! Where Is Our Friend Wititc? Another bad mishap at the well Sundav and .J. S. Stewart and E. F. McLaughlin were doing the strenu ous act fur two days again. Pump rods pulled in two ami the Lord only knows what. •I. White's contract with the city, after lie walked oil" with the bid, calls for tlie beginning of work oi the waterworks tomorrow—that is, we are so io!i| by members of rhe council but not a pound of material has ar rived up to this writing and nobody seem to know why—or anything aboul it. Mr. White was placed under no bonds for the proper fulfilling of the contract—as he certainly should have been—and as near as we can find out has everything his own way—and no body seems to care a continental one way or the other. Fortunately the heavy rains this summer has shut o(T much kicking which would otherwise have arisen. It needs a good lire to send the council Hying to the prairies a lew jumps ahead of an indignate mob. Chamberlain Democrat: The ^raii lvad company had decided to name the first station west of Oacoma Raliance. On the extenson north from A rinour the towns will be Corsica and Sticknev in the order name. Con trary to the general impression the extension will not be put through at present to Plankinton but wi'l have its terminus at Sticlcney. a few miles south of Plankinto ,. Dr. .1. W. Cloven ,-::. resident dent List. Chamberlain. Oiiice over E. I Scott's drug store THE ONLY STRICTLY MORAL NEWSPAPER IN SOUTH DAKOTA KIMBALL, SOUTH DAKOTA, FRIDAY, JULY 14, 1905 The Sunday Dinner "Whatshall we have for Sunday dinner," is a worry to more than one housewife filty-two times a year. Why not solve it bv making an adjourn ment to one of the hotels or cafe? Most women think that they would rather continue the everlasting grind of cooking and dishwashing than to dress and go out to dinner. That's where they are fooling themselves. Let them try it otice and experience the relief of going home .-'.fter a most excellent dinner and having nothing to do but sit down and enjoy a brief rest of an hour or two with the latest magazine. And the husband who will begrudge his wife and family this much is a mighty small man—what Mrs. Howard Gould of New York city calls a damn mean man. And if Mr. Kimball Busi ness Man did but know it, he can't I buy the raw material and gasoline to cook it. with for the price of dinner at Conant's or LolT's. Mr. Conant has caused to be printed some of his Sunday menus in these columns that the public might know what was going on—and with good ell'ect. Many were at the hotel for dinner last Sunday—and previous Sun days—and they will be there next Sunday. The Cataract at Sioux Falls or the Widmann at Mitchell serve no better dinners than the Kimball House. Traveling men say that the cooking at the Kimball House is hard to equal anywhere. The large number who took dinner at LolT's cafe a week ago last Sunday has already been referred to. Many were on hand again last Sunday.When establishments of this kind have en terprise enough to set out the menu that they do at half price—and how they come out even is more than I know— they should be patronized to the limit -not because they need the money—for there is no profit in it— but because its a convenience not to lightly regarded and a snap for the housewife. June Rainfalls for Kimball I'. S. "Weather Observer Rose has furnished ns with the following] figures showing the .lune rainfall fori the past six years. As will be seen. I the amount, of moisture was greater in 1901 than for .lune this year—which will be a surprise to many with short:' memories. 1000. inches 2.40 lDO.'S, inches 1.7: li01 I roquois Chief: The Kimball Gra phic deyotcs a column to the Boston Bloomer girls and tells a whole lot about them that no one else over found out. Hut that man Tinan always was great on investigation. Exchange: Mro Tinan says that: six of the Boston Bloomers, who beat. Kimball to a fare-you-wcll in a ball game last weeks, are boys and the other three .ire girls. We wonder now Tinan came 1 know. Brookings Register: date Tinan, emphatically says that the "Huston Bloomers" baseball team is made up principally of boys and maiden-faced young men. Clate always was pretty fair at guessing. iannvalley Chief: The Kimbal Graphic says that the Boston Bloomer nine are a fake as a ladies baseball club and that there were only three I women in the game at Kimball. Tinan I is expert authority on such matters and his testimony ought to have con siderable weight in deciding the momentous question as to the sex of of that famous aggregation. DeSmet "ews: Clate Tinan gives the snap away. His word for it the Boston Bloomer hall team is compos ed of six boys dresseed in wigs and bloomers, and three real girls. Miss Emma Maynaid will have change of the services in the Presby terian church next Sabbath evening. She will render some splendid instru mental music and will tell about the education of the blind in the institu tion at fJarev where she is instructor, The ottering wijl he for her benefit. Everyone invited. 1 8.42 1904 2.10 1!'02 2.:»!l 1905 7.00 As stated bv the fJitAi'inc early in the spring, an extra amount of rain is due this summer to make up the nor mal precipitation. Xothwitlistand the fact that wc had good crops in 1904 and 35)03 it was pure luck in that there was a decided shrinkage in the amount of rain for both years. What rain there was in those years happen ed to come in the crop-growing months. Thero have been years when the rainfall was much greater and wc got but half a crop. A Startling Discovery OR HIE GliAPJlTC. yywwv'n'vvvvvw $25 Reward! To anyone who will name the man who is spreading the gospel of Brule county lands farther and wider than 1 am. 1 am not only spreading the story of Brule county and her natural and cultivated lands from one end of the United Stacos to the other but I am doing it all the time—in the dead of winter as well as when the birds begin to nest and the hun gry home-hunting denizens of the efete East begin to "sit up and take notice." It follows, therefore, that if you have any iand in this county, or in Buffalo or Charles Mix, which vou want to put on the market at the going market price, I am the man you want to do business with, lean put your wants before hundreds of real estate buy ers, and if 1 can't sell the land it is only :e ciuse the price is prohibitive. 1 want more lands on my list, and 1 want them right away. The time to sell land is when there is a demand for it, not when you have got to chase a man a hundred miles and choke it into him. I advertise your lands with no cost to you and keep it up until I find buyer if vou are on the other side—a buyer in stead of a seller—I have the property right on my list and you can be dead certain of getting what you want at a price that is bound to make you some money. 1 relieve wants, bring comfort to the sad and downcast and dispel all clouds of land sorrow. Open dav and night, and no trouble to show the goods. Address Lock Box 43, PUKWANA, South Dakota Ho suro mill mention this newHimpor when you write. Australian White Obi S E E I and Cattle Wash FOli SALE J3Y BE.OOKS & BRCHAN GERMAN AMERICAN LAND CO We bay or sell Lands in Any Partrof South Dakota or Iowa We will rent your land and pay your taxes Kor you. Write us regarding our prices' on Lands. Tiefercnces furnished if desired, OFFJCE8 AT Kimball and Platte, S. D., SiouxCity, !owa, I. I WEEKS, KIMBALL, S, G. d. jones, $1.50 Per Year in Advance ,-\r Has the largest sale in the United V States of any proprietary dip. show ing* that wool growers find it best sui ted to their needs. Kills scabs and ticks but not sheep. Strength endors ed by U.S. Government and State of fieials. One of sioux an. NO. 1213 the best disinfectants & 1 I x. SkVit igwa II IIIIH •WIIHII1IIIIII 1 fe-'rvV —JSL— 5