I Shoes for Misses and Children are particularly Smart ... · >t-r Capitalized at $50,000,000....

1
ttmir "i mtOm ^&BSSmsssf SOME SriART OUTINQ SUITS lllS5.™u» 4MMM » <#**•* ^mHmxmssam We have been pretty husy lately selling our smart outing suits. These garments are ideal in cut and pattern and nothing more stylish or comfortable for Warm weather wear can be imagined. Come in and see them. You won't look long before "spotting" a suit that fills your every require- ment. Our hat and furnishings departments can sup- ply the rest of your summer outfit, so that a single vis- it to our store will suffice to prepare you for passing the heated term with perfect equanimity. Suits from $10 to $20 Our Stocks of I Shoes for Misses and Children are particularly strong in ihuse Stylish models adapted for wear on all occasions. low cut models in white, tan and black. New i Smart Oxfords for Women $3 and $3.50 Outing $Ja&cs for Lake and Country. J. A. JOHNSON. ®JK SJtrfly Hett&ct: M40IH0N. 0OOVN DAKOTA. TELEPHONE, NO. :m. MONDAY, JUNUi'4, 19U7 HHXI OV tUBJIOAirTIOM. 9jrm»ll,l |4.0u By Mil, month*. .. . tf.oo b/Mlt, a montbt !.(*» By mil, 1 month 86 tocarrtcrper wMk JO J. f. MTA11L Proprlohir. II A. 8TAHL. HMIkm The total bank clearings compiled bv Biftdstrect'a for the principal cities <>f tha United States for the pant week wag $2, fi 59,106,000, againat f2.K71.770,- 000 in the corresponding wedt of but Worth about 1300,000 in cash and property in firown and Marshall conn ties, Peter Wolf, an old bachoelor farmer, who up a few months ago lived alone on his farm a few miles fium this city, committed suicide by hanging himself in a barn. The l>ody was foand by his housekeeper, who cut it down and sent word to Al>erdeen Living with Wolf was his nephew, who came from Holland 11 few month* ago, and the housekeeper who found the body. On the day of the traeedy the nephew was in Aberdeen to make some purchases and it is believed Wolf took advantage of his abnence to com- mit suicide. An investigation in being made by the county authorities. . J. ! Captain Chas. T. Fox has been se- lected an first commander of the crnisei South Dakota, which is now being fitted ont at San Francisco and will aoon be out in commission. Captain Pox was l>orn at Chelsea, Mass , in 1801, and was appointed to Annapolis in 1868, graduating in 1873. Most of his sea service has been on the Pacific and at Asiatic stations, and shore duty in Washington and at eastern yards. The South Dakota will be kept on the Pacific coast for some months in order that she may be given a "shaking down" crniso. The silver service pro vided by the state is now at the Crook lyn navy yard, and will be shipped to the west coast when the date of presen- tation is decided upon. r-amage sulfa aggregating $106,000, or $60,000 more than the original cotd of the road, have boon filed against tho Cincinnati, Flendngsturg and Southwestern railway by sufferers from the wreck of a funeral train May 10, when two persons wore killed and seyente«n_ Injured. Attorney Raum Goes to Prison. Peoria, 111., June 24.—Daniel F. Raum, once a prominent attorney and son of Green B. Raum, ex-commls- Bloner of pensions, was taken to Jollet penitentiary to serve an Indeterminate sentence for forgery and embezzle- ment. Mrs. Raum will reside at Jol- iet, where she will be able to comfort her husband. Representative Hale, republican, of the second congressional district of Tennessee, in Washington a dav or two ago, listed his state in the Roosevelt colnmn. He said that if again nomin- ated, Roosevelt would carry several southern states, as the country wanted him to fcava an opportunity to finish the Panama ]V«nal and the mighty re forms and measures for which ne stands. "It would be a national calamity to make a change at this time," be added: "Since congress ad joorned 1 made two trips west, passing through many states, I find the people everywhere for Roosevelt, the poli- ticians frequently against him. I have recently gone ovei my state and find Tennessee solid for tne president. Our people will'listen to no other name and oar state will instruct for him." A man who is in perfect health,so hr can do honest day's work when necessary has much for which he should be thank ful. Mr. L. C. Rodgers, Hranchton, Pa., writes that he was not only unble to work but he couldn't stoop over to tie his own shoes. Six bottles of Foley's Kidney Cure made a new man of him. He says, "Suocess to Foley* Kidney Cure." iiolli day A Porter. W. R. Ward, of Dyersburg Tenn., write*: "This is to certify that I have used Orina Laxative Fruit Syrup for ohronic constipation, and it has proven, without a doubt, to be thorough prac tical remdf>y for this trouble, and it is with pleasure I offer my conecientius^ref- 5 V r >t-r Capitalized at $50,000,000. Dover, Del., June 24.—The Consoli- dated Copper company of New York city, capital ff>0,000,<)00, was chartered here during the day. The company is authorised to explore for mines and secure mining rights for copper and other metals and ores, particularly in the Yukon territory of Alaska. Centenary of a Lottery Town. Tn 1Ko7 Daniel Milior laid out 200 building lots on n large tract of laud which be owned along the Susquehan- na river near the mouth of Wlcoiilsco creek In Pennsylvania. He numbered tickets to correspond with the numbers of tho lots ami, placing them in a hat, charged $33 a dniw, says the Phila- delphia Record. The drawer became the owner of the lot indicated by his ticket. The town was called Millers- burg, In honor of the founder. It Is located in Dauphin county and will celebrate its one hundredth ansdmt" sary on Sept. 1, 4 and 5 next WIPES OUT HIS FAMILY. Florida Man Kills His Wife, Three Children and Himself Jasper, Fla., .luno 22.— YV. W. Bar ton, a carpenter, shot and Instantly killed his wife, three children and himself at his home her*. One victim, a child five years old, lived long enough to tell that Darton did the kill Ing. Unhappy domestic relations ar< believed to hare been responsible for the crime. LAST LINE IS OPENED. POLICEWOMEN FOR LORAIN. Ohio Society Leaders Offer Their Services, and Mayor Accepts. Disgusted by unpunished crimes in the way of robberies and pocket pick- ing. society women of I<orahi, O., re- cently offered their services to Mayor King as policemen, says a special dis- patch to the New York World. "Huh! A good joke," he remarked, "imagine a bunch of the Four Hundred dressed in picturo hats and peekaboo waists patrolling the streets In search of criminals:" Rut he promised to accept their serv- ices and said be would swear them In the next day. "I'll use as many as re- port for duty," he told them at the end of their Interview. The women declare they nre in dead eu 111 est, but the mayor thinks they will change their minds after a night's slet-p. "I'm game, though," he said the other night. "I 'll put them on duty if they cornu around. We need a few more policemen or some police-women." Korean Financier. A Korea u countryman named YI Tuksu has come to the conclusion that something should be done to prevent the collection of money to pay the pub- lic debt l>ecoming such a drain 011 the circulation medium as to euuse embar- rassment to the merchant class, says the Korean Daily Times. He suggests that Koreans give up such luxuries as their gold rings and silver hairpins and other objects of Intrinsic value; that these lie conservatively appraised and stored carefully In some safe de- posit and used as bullion to back a pa- per currency which will circulate among the people. Whether this is feasible or not It shows that the Ko reans are willing to look the dilllcultie* of tho situation squarely in the face i and desire to meet ail valid objections halfway. Yerkes' Famous Underground System in London Completed. London. June 24.—The last link of the late Charles T. Yerkes' tube sys- tem of underground railroad was opened during the day. The new line, which connects the northern suburbs with the heart of London, is eight miles long. It was begun In 1908, runs on tin average of sixty feet be- low the surface and cost $25,000,000. A party of financiers and officials at- tended the opening ceremony, which was followed by an elaborate lunch- eon. The public were permitted to travel free during the afternoon and evening and were given souvenirs of the opening of the road. Tornado of Small Proportion*. Oklahoma City, Okla., June 24.—A tornado of small proportions passed over a portion of Southern Indian Territory and Oklahoma, doing more or less damage to property. Three persons are reported injured, J. L. Benson, near Junction, Okla., serious- ly, and Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Catt, ten miles west of Lawton. RUSH FOR MONTANA LANDS Thousands of Homeseekerg Arriving at Billings. Billings, Mont., June 22.—Home- seekers are flocking Into this city In anticipation of the drawing for lands In the Huntley Irrigation project on June 26. More than 1,000 arrived dur Ing the day. The hotels and rooming houses are crowded to overflowing and the newcomers are being forced to erect tents. Secretary of the Interior James R. Garfield will personally oversee the drawing. He will be accompanied to Billings by a number of officials from the reclamation service, the forestry and land office departments. Cured Hemorrhages of tho Lungs "Several years since my lungs were so badly affected that I had many heinorr hages ."writes A. M. Ake.of Wood, 1ml. "I took treatment with several physicians without any benefit. I then started to take Foley's Honey and Tar, and my lungs are as sound as a bullet. I recorti mend it in advanced stages of lung trouble." Foley's Honey and Tar stops the cough and heals the lungs, and pre vents seiious results from a cold, Jtffuae substitutes, llollidav Porter. A Lesson in Health Healthy kidneys filter impurities front the blood, and unless they do this good health is ia>jKisil>le. Foley's Kidney Cure makes sound kidneys and will positively 6urc all forms uf kidney and hiaddcr di- e-ease. It ntrengtheus the whoie system. Hoiliday & Porter. Pineulcs for the kidneys strengthen these organs and apsist in drawing poison from the blood. Try them for rheumatism, kidney, bladder trouble, for lumlutgn, tired worn out feeling. They bring ijuick relief. .S'atisfation Guaranteed. Sold fey fttobata * JUtokaa. MILLIQNAIF ES IN HET Sixty or Mori ndictments Ex* pected^ii Denver. COAL AND TIMBER FRAUDS Wealthy Officials Of Railroad and Fuel Companies Doing Business in Colo- rado Said to Be Among Those Who Must Answer Charges. Denver, June 24.-«-The News says sixty or more indictments will be re- turned hy the special federal grand Jury'which has beto in session sinco May 14 investlgatlrj^ coal and timber frauds In Colorado And other Western states. The jury will report to Judge Lewis. \ Among those indicted will be at least ten Denver men®, among them millionaire officials of at least one railroad company. Officers and sev- eral stockholders erf Milwaukee and St. Louis coal companies doing busi- ness In Colorado also will probably be dragged into the net. It Is not likely that bench warrants will be Issued by Judge Lewis for tho arrest of the persons indicted for sev- eral days. Arrests will follow imme- diately. L. C. Wheeler, who Is in cBarge of 100 secret service men who have been In the state for si* months gathering evidence against men accused of fraudulent, coal and timber land en- tries, considers the work of the grand Jury at Denver by far the most im- portant of any Inaugurated by the United States attorney general since the beginning of the land fraud in- quiry. HARRIMAN ROAD INVOLVED Suit to Cancel Coal Land Claims in Washington. Portland, Ore., June 24.—The Ore- gonian says that, seeking to cancel six coal land claims in Lewis county, Wash., forty miles east of Chehalis, patented to Portland men, the govern- ment has filed suit. In tho United States circuit court at Tacorna charg- ing that the patents were secured by fraud. The government alleges that O. E. Lytle, William Crooks, Joel M. Long and A. L. Mohler and others en- tered into a conspiracy to defraud the government out of the titles to the aforesaid lands and that they, "be- lieving said lands to contain large and valuable deposits of coal, procured and obtained certain persons to make filings thereon." The lands in question were patent- ed In 1903 to stockholders of the Port- land Coal and Coke company, com- posed of nearly fifty men, nearly all of Portland. This company, the gov- ernment alleges, is a "subsidiary of the Oregon Railway and Navigation company." meaning that it exists for the purpose of passing the land from the patentees to the Oregon Railway and Navigation company, for whom it is charged the coal project has been promoted. ABOUT TWO HUNDRED OUT BRIEF BITS OF NEWS, Statu* of Telegraphers' Strike at San Francisco. San Francisco, June 24. —The situa- tion here in connection with the strike of the telegraph operators Is quiet. In all about 200 men are out, upon conservative estimate, and the service Is now maintained in the offices of both companies by officials, Including chief operators and wire chiefs, together with several men and women who have remained loyal. General Superintendent F. Jaynes of the Western Union company is ac- credited with the statement that the company hopes to be running fairly well in another week, when outside operators were expected to arrive to fill the places of the strikers. As to whether the strike shall be ordered to extend to other cities re- mains to be determined. The Postal and Western I'nlon officials insist that they will hold no conferences with the officials of the union. If they remain obdurate the telegraphers in other cities may be called out, thus tying up all the commercial telegraph busi- ness of the West. ATTACK RELIGIOUS CAMP. Worshippers Scattered by Streams of Sulphuric Acid. Alliance, o., .Mine 24.—Business men and students numbering about thirty attacked the "Gift of Tongues" relig- ious camp and scattered the more than 300 worshippers with acid. The camp, which was objected to by many persons is run by Rev. Levi Lupton. The attackers were armed with squirt guns loaded with diluted sulphuric acid. When the erowd reached tho camp Rev. Lupton and many of the more devout of the worshippers were kneeling on tho "mourners' bench." At a signal the acid was thrown all over them, especially the Rev. Mr. Lupton, who was covered from head to foot with the fluid. Lupton wa.j badly bamed. No arrests have been made. Filling Places of Striker®. San Francisco, June 24.—The places of the striking carmen are fast being filled and, according to the United Railroad officials, there are not enough jobs left now to go around among them even if they were willing to re- turn to work. The company now has 1,000 men In Its employ and this num- ber is being augmented at the rate of thirty or forty a Secretary Taft has returned 10 Washington from his Western trip. William Cleddlne, former member of the Canadian parliament and once mayor of Montreal, was cut in two by a train at Depew, N. Y. Mrs. D. H. Cole, wife of a prom lncnt business man of Cumberland, Wis., suicided by jumping into Lake Heaver Dam. Long illness is ascribed as rhe cause. The Ottawa (Ont.) board of trade has presented a memorial to Lord Grey In favor of the construction of an all-British state owned cable to encir- cle the globe. President O'Brien of the American association has suspended Manager Mike Cantlllon of the Minneapolis club for three days for umpire baiting In the game at Milwaukee June 20. Mrs. John D. Rockefeller, Jr., and her son, John D. Rockefeller III., were thrown from a pony cart In which they were riding In Tarrytown, N. Y., but fortunately both escaped injury. Last Body Is Recovered. Hampton, Va., June 21.—The hody of Midshipman Henry Clay Murfln, Jr., of Jackson, O., the last of the missing midshipmen of the battleship Minnesota's launch accident, was re- covered in Hampton Roads by the steamer Ossinlng near Old Fort Wool. A launch took the body to the Min- nesota. Pineules are for the Kidneys and blad- der. They bring quick relief to baek- aohe, rheumatism, lumbago, tired worn out fowling. They produce natural ac- tion of the kidneys in filtering waste matter out of the bood, .'50 days treat- ment £1.00. Money refunded if Pine ules are not satisfactory, bold by Schutz & Ketcham. Found at Last. J. A. Harmon, cf Llzemore, West Va says: "At last I have found the perfect pill that never dissappoints me; and for the benefit of others alficted with Tor pid Liver and chronic constipation, will pay: take Dr. Kings New Life Pills." < iuaranteed satisfactory. 25c at Schutz A Ketchams' Druggist. Jones Bros. & Co. Reliable Druggists & Jewelers Watch Repairing Hand Paint- ed China Glasses Fitted. Paris Green is the enemy of all kinds insects which de- stroy plant life in gar- den and orchard. Now is the time to kill them before they get beyond control. We have a large fresh£stoek of Paris Green also Sprayers for use on Shrubbery and Fruit Trees. Jones Bros. SGo. Corner Drug Store Madison,^ So. Dakota. PHONE 160 McKIBBIN HATS & GAPS NONE BETTER HADE OUR Spring Stock IS HERE Slid includes some very nobby styles. mvjr: You know McKIBBIN'S always has the quality and styles the Very Latest. Lake Co, Clothing Co. 1 4AAA ! W. B. Soule i i G roceries Phone 59--2 M an Zan Pile Remedy comes put up in a collapsible tube with a nozzle. Kasy to apply right where sorness and intiam mation exists. 11 relieves at once blind, bleeding, itching or protruding piles, (iuaranteed. Price fiOo. Lkdittoday. Hold by Schutz & Ketcham. Costello & Jensen Exclusive UNDERTAKERS ^Td EMBALMERS Calls promptly attended to. Locnted in the McKinnon block, West Fifth St. Fresh Baked Goods AT J. HEMAUR'S CITY BAKERY. PHONE No. 104 If you will make inquiry it will be a rev elation to you how many succumb to kid ney or bladder troubles in one form or an other. If the patient is not beyond med- ical aid, Foley's Kidney Cure will cure It never disappoints, llolliday A: Purler. Miss Grinager, Fashionable Milliner Has Received Her New Spring Stock and will be pleased to have her cus- tomers Gall and see the New Styles. HOLLISTER'3 focky Mountain Tea Nuggets A B >y Mi'ifirmi" fur Busy Pn i>lc. Brings Golden Health and Renewed Vifror. A stride tor Constipation. Indinostion, T.lver ml Kidney troubles. Pimples. F.ezem;i. Impure IucmI, Had lireat.h, Slui?i,'ish Itowels. Heudaoho nil HarUieho. Its Hooky Mountnin Tea in tul>- i't form, .1. r ) ienis a box. Genuine made by •JOM.I.SIKH DKUO COMPANY. Madison. Wis. «0LDEN NUGGETS FOR SALLOW PPnPLfi Notico ot Hearing Fetition for letters of Administration. State of South Dakota, County of Lnbe, ss. In county court. In the matter of the estate of Amuud O. Syverson, deceased. The state of South Dakota sends greeting to Mn^ie Syverson, Torn Legard. Martna Sather, Maiie Jacolson, Edwin Legard, Syvert Legard, Enilia Legard, Otto Legard, Alvin Legard, Arthui H. Le gard, and John I. Legard, heirs at law and n*;xt of kin of Ainund O. Syverson, deceased, and to all whoui these present? may come. Notice is hereby given that Maggie Syyorsan has filed with the judge of this court, a i>etition praying for let- ters of administration of the estate of Amuud O. Syverson. deceased, and that Tuesday the 2 r ith day of June. ISM)?, at 10 o'clock a. in., of said day, being a dav of a regular term of this court, to-wit: of the June term, 1907, at the office of tho county judge in the city of Madison, county of Lake has Insen set for hearing said petition, when and where any person interested may appear and show cause why the said petition should not be planted, Dated at Madison. S. D., this 12th day of June, A. D. 1907. —J. H. Williamson, Judge of the County Court. —Hana CJrdahl, Attorney for Petitioner. hvh .re 1 Uur awia««rv* . ' Jt* drtte' Sp*r unu PtKauureall ttdofcrtlll.9>i| rraa '* M.W Five Dollars for One la wiat an investment in irri^iil lands, today, will mean t<> Calgary investors in the very near future. There is no fluctuation Safin in lands. The trend of prices is steadily upward. Irrigated land ' that can be bought "rom the Canadian Pacific Railway for #2. r > an acrr, one quarter down balance 011 easy terms, is selling at from $200 to $3,000 an acre in the United States. If you wish your money t<> grow,call on us or address T W. Rae, State Agent. A. E Fuller, Local Agent, Madison or Canadian Pacific Irrigation Colonization Co Limited No. 43 Dth Ate, West Calgary, Alta, Canada. % if' '«S w

Transcript of I Shoes for Misses and Children are particularly Smart ... · >t-r Capitalized at $50,000,000....

Page 1: I Shoes for Misses and Children are particularly Smart ... · >t-r Capitalized at $50,000,000. Dover, Del., June 24.—The Consoli dated Copper company of New York city, capital

ttmir "i mtOm

^&BSSmsssf

SOME SriART OUTINQ SUITS

lllS5.™u» 4MMM • » <#**•*

^mHmxmssam

We have been pretty husy lately selling our smart outing suits. These garments are ideal in cut and pattern and nothing more stylish or comfortable for Warm weather wear can be imagined.

Come in and see them. You won't look long before "spotting" a suit that fills your every require­ment. Our hat and furnishings departments can sup­ply the rest of your summer outfit, so that a single vis­it to our store will suffice to prepare you for passing the heated term with perfect equanimity.

Suits from $10 to $20

Our Stocks of

I Shoes for Misses and Children are particularly strong in ihuse Stylish models adapted for wear on all occasions.

low cut models in white, tan and black. New

i Smart Oxfords for Women $3 and $3.50 Outing $Ja&cs for Lake and Country.

J. A. JOHNSON. ®JK SJtrfly Hett&ct:

M40IH0N. 0OOVN DAKOTA.

TELEPHONE, NO. :m.

MONDAY, JUNUi'4, 19U7

HHXI OV tUBJIOAirTIOM. 9jrm»ll,l |4.0u By Mil, • month*. .. . tf.oo b/Mlt, a montbt !.(*» By mil, 1 month 86 tocarrtcrper wMk JO

J . f . MTA11L Proprlohir. II A. 8TAHL. HMIkm

The total bank clearings compiled bv Biftdstrect'a for the principal cities <>f tha United States for the pant week wag $2, fi 59,106,000, againat f2.K71.770,-000 in the corresponding wedt of but

Worth about 1300,000 in cash and property in firown and Marshall conn ties, Peter Wolf, an old bachoelor farmer, who up a few months ago lived alone on his farm a few miles fium this city, committed suicide by hanging himself in a barn. The l>ody was foand by his housekeeper, who cut it down and sent word to Al>erdeen Living with Wolf was his nephew, who came from Holland 11 few month* ago, and the housekeeper who found the body. On the day of the traeedy the nephew was in Aberdeen to make some purchases and it is believed Wolf took advantage of his abnence to com­mit suicide. An investigation in being made by the county authorities.

. J. !

Captain Chas. T. Fox has been se­lected an first commander of the crnisei

South Dakota, which is now being fitted ont at San Francisco and will aoon be out in commission. Captain Pox was l>orn at Chelsea, Mass , in 1801, and was appointed to Annapolis in 1868, graduating in 1873. Most of his sea service has been on the Pacific and at Asiatic stations, and shore duty in Washington and at eastern yards. The South Dakota will be kept on the Pacific coast for some months in order that she may be given a "shaking down" crniso. The silver service pro vided by the state is now at the Crook lyn navy yard, and will be shipped to the west coast when the date of presen­tation is decided upon.

r-amage sulfa aggregating $106,000, or $60,000 more than the original cotd of the road, have boon filed against tho Cincinnati, Flendngsturg and Southwestern railway by sufferers from the wreck of a funeral train May 10, when two persons wore killed and seyente«n_ Injured.

Attorney Raum Goes to Prison. Peoria, 111., June 24.—Daniel F.

Raum, once a prominent attorney and son of Green B. Raum, ex-commls-Bloner of pensions, was taken to Jollet penitentiary to serve an Indeterminate sentence for forgery and embezzle­ment. Mrs. Raum will reside at Jol-iet, where she will be able to comfort her husband.

Representative Hale, republican, of the second congressional district of Tennessee, in Washington a dav or two ago, listed his state in the Roosevelt colnmn. He said that if again nomin­ated, Roosevelt would carry several southern states, as the country wanted him to fcava an opportunity to finish the Panama ]V«nal and the mighty re forms and measures for which ne stands. "It would be a national calamity to make a change at this time," be added: "Since congress ad joorned 1 made two trips west, passing through many states, I find the people everywhere for Roosevelt, the poli­ticians frequently against him. I have recently gone ovei my state and find Tennessee solid for tne president. Our people will'listen to no other name and oar state will instruct for him."

A man who is in perfect health,so hr can do honest day's work when necessary has much for which he should be thank ful. Mr. L. C. Rodgers, Hranchton, Pa., writes that he was not only unble to work but he couldn't stoop over to tie his own shoes. Six bottles of Foley's Kidney Cure made a new man of him. He says, "Suocess to Foley* Kidney Cure." iiolli day A Porter.

W. R. Ward, of Dyersburg Tenn., write*: "This is to certify that I have used Orina Laxative Fruit Syrup for ohronic constipation, and it has proven, without a doubt, to be thorough prac tical remdf>y for this trouble, and it is with pleasure I offer my conecientius^ref-

5 V r

>t-r

Capitalized at $50,000,000. Dover, Del., June 24.—The Consoli­

dated Copper company of New York city, capital ff>0,000,<)00, was chartered here during the day. The company is authorised to explore for mines and secure mining rights for copper and other metals and ores, particularly in the Yukon territory of Alaska.

Centenary of a Lottery Town. Tn 1Ko7 Daniel Milior laid out 200

building lots on n large tract of laud which be owned along the Susquehan­na river near the mouth of Wlcoiilsco creek In Pennsylvania. He numbered tickets to correspond with the numbers of tho lots ami, placing them in a hat, charged $33 a dniw, says the Phila­delphia Record. The drawer became the owner of the lot indicated by his ticket. The town was called Millers-burg, In honor of the founder. It Is located in Dauphin county and will celebrate its one hundredth ansdmt" sary on Sept. 1, 4 and 5 next

WIPES OUT HIS FAMILY. Florida Man Kills His Wife, Three

Children and Himself Jasper, Fla., .luno 22.— YV. W. Bar

ton, a carpenter, shot and Instantly killed his wife, three children and himself at his home her*. One victim, a child five years old, lived long enough to tell that Darton did the kill Ing. Unhappy domestic relations ar< believed to hare been responsible for the crime.

LAST LINE IS OPENED.

POLICEWOMEN FOR LORAIN.

Ohio Society Leaders Offer Their Services, and Mayor Accepts.

Disgusted by unpunished crimes in the way of robberies and pocket pick­ing. society women of I<orahi, O., re­cently offered their services to Mayor King as policemen, says a special dis­patch to the New York World. "Huh! A good joke," he remarked, "imagine a bunch of the Four Hundred dressed in picturo hats and peekaboo waists patrolling the streets In search of criminals:"

Rut he promised to accept their serv­ices and said be would swear them In the next day. "I'll use as many as re­port for duty," he told them at the end of their Interview.

The women declare they nre in dead eu 111 est, but the mayor thinks they will change their minds after a night's slet-p. "I'm game, though," he said the other night. "I'll put them on duty if they cornu around. We need a few more policemen or some police-women."

Korean Financier. A Korea u countryman named YI

Tuksu has come to the conclusion that something should be done to prevent the collection of money to pay the pub­lic debt l>ecoming such a drain 011 the circulation medium as to euuse embar­rassment to the merchant class, says the Korean Daily Times. He suggests that Koreans give up such luxuries as their gold rings and silver hairpins and other objects of Intrinsic value; that these lie conservatively appraised and stored carefully In some safe de­posit and used as bullion to back a pa­per currency which will circulate among the people. Whether this is feasible or not It shows that the Ko reans are willing to look the dilllcultie* of tho situation squarely in the face i and desire to meet ail valid objections halfway.

Yerkes' Famous Underground System in London Completed.

London. June 24.—The last link of the late Charles T. Yerkes' tube sys­tem of underground railroad was opened during the day. The new line, which connects the northern suburbs with the heart of London, is eight miles long. It was begun In 1908, runs on tin average of sixty feet be­low the surface and cost $25,000,000. A party of financiers and officials at­tended the opening ceremony, which was followed by an elaborate lunch­eon. The public were permitted to travel free during the afternoon and evening and were given souvenirs of the opening of the road.

Tornado of Small Proportion*. Oklahoma City, Okla., June 24.—A

tornado of small proportions passed over a portion of Southern Indian Territory and Oklahoma, doing more or less damage to property. Three persons are reported injured, J. L. Benson, near Junction, Okla., serious­ly, and Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Catt, ten miles west of Lawton.

RUSH FOR MONTANA LANDS Thousands of Homeseekerg Arriving

at Billings. Billings, Mont., June 22.—Home-

seekers are flocking Into this city In anticipation of the drawing for lands In the Huntley Irrigation project on June 26. More than 1,000 arrived dur Ing the day. The hotels and rooming houses are crowded to overflowing and the newcomers are being forced to erect tents.

Secretary of the Interior James R. Garfield will personally oversee the drawing. He will be accompanied to Billings by a number of officials from the reclamation service, the forestry and land office departments.

Cured Hemorrhages of tho Lungs "Several years since my lungs were so

badly affected that I had many heinorr hages ."writes A. M. Ake.of Wood, 1ml. "I took treatment with several physicians without any benefit. I then started to take Foley's Honey and Tar, and my lungs are as sound as a bullet. I recorti mend it in advanced stages of lung trouble." Foley's Honey and Tar stops the cough and heals the lungs, and pre vents seiious results from a cold, Jtffuae substitutes, llollidav Porter.

A Lesson in Health Healthy kidneys filter impurities front

the blood, and unless they do this good health is ia>jKisil>le. Foley's Kidney Cure makes sound kidneys and will positively 6urc all forms uf kidney and hiaddcr di­e-ease. It ntrengtheus the whoie system. Hoiliday & Porter.

Pineulcs for the kidneys strengthen these organs and apsist in drawing poison from the blood. Try them for rheumatism, kidney, bladder trouble, for lumlutgn, tired worn out feeling. They bring ijuick relief. .S'atisfation Guaranteed. Sold fey fttobata * JUtokaa.

MILLIQNAIF ES IN HET Sixty or Mori ndictments Ex*

pected^ii Denver.

COAL AND TIMBER FRAUDS

Wealthy Officials Of Railroad and Fuel

Companies Doing Business in Colo­

rado Said to Be Among Those Who Must Answer Charges.

Denver, June 24.-«-The News says sixty or more indictments will be re­turned hy the special federal grand Jury'which has beto in session sinco May 14 investlgatlrj^ coal and timber frauds In Colorado And other Western states. The jury will report to Judge Lewis. \

Among those indicted will be at least ten Denver men®, among them millionaire officials of at least one railroad company. Officers and sev­eral stockholders erf Milwaukee and St. Louis coal companies doing busi­ness In Colorado also will probably be dragged into the net.

It Is not likely that bench warrants will be Issued by Judge Lewis for tho arrest of the persons indicted for sev­eral days. Arrests will follow imme­diately.

L. C. Wheeler, who Is in cBarge of 100 secret service men who have been In the state for si* months gathering evidence against men accused of fraudulent, coal and timber land en­tries, considers the work of the grand Jury at Denver by far the most im­portant of any Inaugurated by the United States attorney general since the beginning of the land fraud in­quiry.

HARRIMAN ROAD INVOLVED Suit to Cancel Coal Land Claims in

Washington. Portland, Ore., June 24.—The Ore-

gonian says that, seeking to cancel six coal land claims in Lewis county, Wash., forty miles east of Chehalis, patented to Portland men, the govern­ment has filed suit. In tho United States circuit court at Tacorna charg­ing that the patents were secured by fraud. The government alleges that O. E. Lytle, William Crooks, Joel M. Long and A. L. Mohler and others en­tered into a conspiracy to defraud the government out of the titles to the aforesaid lands and that they, "be­lieving said lands to contain large and valuable deposits of coal, procured and obtained certain persons to make filings thereon."

The lands in question were patent­ed In 1903 to stockholders of the Port­land Coal and Coke company, com­posed of nearly fifty men, nearly all of Portland. This company, the gov­ernment alleges, is a "subsidiary of the Oregon Railway and Navigation company." meaning that it exists for the purpose of passing the land from the patentees to the Oregon Railway and Navigation company, for whom it is charged the coal project has been promoted.

ABOUT TWO HUNDRED OUT

BRIEF BITS OF NEWS,

Statu* of Telegraphers' Strike at San Francisco.

San Francisco, June 24.—The situa­tion here in connection with the strike of the telegraph operators Is quiet. In all about 200 men are out, upon conservative estimate, and the service Is now maintained in the offices of both companies by officials, Including chief operators and wire chiefs, together with several men and women who have remained loyal.

General Superintendent F. Jaynes of the Western Union company is ac­credited with the statement that the company hopes to be running fairly well in another week, when outside operators were expected to arrive to fill the places of the strikers.

As to whether the strike shall be ordered to extend to other cities re­mains to be determined. The Postal and Western I'nlon officials insist that they will hold no conferences with the officials of the union. If they remain obdurate the telegraphers in other cities may be called out, thus tying up all the commercial telegraph busi­ness of the West.

ATTACK RELIGIOUS CAMP. Worshippers Scattered by Streams of

Sulphuric Acid. Alliance, o., .Mine 24.—Business men

and students numbering about thirty attacked the "Gift of Tongues" relig­ious camp and scattered the more than 300 worshippers with acid. The camp, which was objected to by many persons is run by Rev. Levi Lupton. The attackers were armed with squirt guns loaded with diluted sulphuric acid. When the erowd reached tho camp Rev. Lupton and many of the more devout of the worshippers were kneeling on tho "mourners' bench." At a signal the acid was thrown all over them, especially the Rev. Mr. Lupton, who was covered from head to foot with the fluid. Lupton wa.j badly bamed. No arrests have been made.

Filling Places of Striker®. San Francisco, June 24.—The places

of the striking carmen are fast being filled and, according to the United Railroad officials, there are not enough jobs left now to go around among them even if they were willing to re­turn to work. The company now has 1,000 men In Its employ and this num­ber is being augmented at the rate of thirty or forty a

Secretary Taft has returned 10 Washington from his Western trip.

William Cleddlne, former member of the Canadian parliament and once mayor of Montreal, was cut in two by a train at Depew, N. Y.

Mrs. D. H. Cole, wife of a prom lncnt business man of Cumberland, Wis., suicided by jumping into Lake Heaver Dam. Long illness is ascribed as rhe cause.

The Ottawa (Ont.) board of trade has presented a memorial to Lord Grey In favor of the construction of an all-British state owned cable to encir­cle the globe.

President O'Brien of the American association has suspended Manager Mike Cantlllon of the Minneapolis club for three days for umpire baiting In the game at Milwaukee June 20.

Mrs. John D. Rockefeller, Jr., and her son, John D. Rockefeller III., were thrown from a pony cart In which they were riding In Tarrytown, N. Y., but fortunately both escaped injury.

Last Body Is Recovered. Hampton, Va., June 21.—The hody

of Midshipman Henry Clay Murfln, Jr., of Jackson, O., the last of the missing midshipmen of the battleship Minnesota's launch accident, was re­covered in Hampton Roads by the steamer Ossinlng near Old Fort Wool. A launch took the body to the Min­nesota.

Pineules are for the Kidneys and blad­der. They bring quick relief to baek-aohe, rheumatism, lumbago, tired worn out fowling. They produce natural ac­tion of the kidneys in filtering waste matter out of the bood, .'50 days treat­ment £1.00. Money refunded if Pine ules are not satisfactory, bold by Schutz & Ketcham.

Found at Last. J. A. Harmon, cf Llzemore, West Va

says: "At last I have found the perfect pill that never dissappoints me; and for the benefit of others alficted with Tor pid Liver and chronic constipation, will pay: take Dr. Kings New Life Pills." < iuaranteed satisfactory. 25c at Schutz A Ketchams' Druggist.

Jones Bros.

& Co. Reliable

Druggists

& Jewelers

Watch

Repairing

Hand Paint­

ed China

Glasses

Fitted.

Paris Green

is the enemy of all kinds insects which de­stroy plant life in gar­den and orchard.

Now is the time to

kill them before they

get beyond control.

We have a large

fresh£stoek of

Paris Green also

Sprayers for use on Shrubbery

and Fruit Trees.

Jones Bros. SGo.

Corner Drug Store Madison,^ So. Dakota.

PHONE 160

McKIBBIN HATS & GAPS NONE BETTER HADE

OUR

Spring Stock IS HERE

Slid includes some very

nobby styles. mvjr:

You know McKIBBIN'S

always has the quality and styles the

Very Latest.

Lake Co, Clothing Co. 1 4AAA

! W. B. Soule i i G roceries

Phone 59--2

M an Zan Pile Remedy comes put up in a collapsible tube with a nozzle. Kasy to apply right where sorness and intiam mation exists. 11 relieves at once blind, bleeding, itching or protruding piles, (iuaranteed. Price fiOo. Lkdittoday. Hold by Schutz & Ketcham.

Costello &

Jensen Exclusive UNDERTAKERS ^Td EMBALMERS Calls promptly attended to. Locnted in the McKinnon block, West Fifth St.

Fresh Baked Goods AT

J. HEMAUR'S CITY BAKERY.

PHONE No. 104

If you will make inquiry it will be a rev elation to you how many succumb to kid ney or bladder troubles in one form or an other. If the patient is not beyond med­ical aid, Foley's Kidney Cure will cure It never disappoints, llolliday A: Purler.

Miss Grinager, Fashionable Milliner

Has Received Her

New Spring Stock and will be pleased to have her cus­tomers Gall and see the New Styles.

HOLLISTER'3

focky Mountain Tea Nuggets A B >y Mi'ifirmi" fur Busy Pn i>lc.

Brings Golden Health and Renewed Vifror. A stride tor Constipation. Indinostion, T.lver

ml Kidney troubles. Pimples. F.ezem;i. Impure • IucmI, Had lireat.h, Slui?i,'ish Itowels. Heudaoho nil HarUieho. Its Hooky Mountnin Tea in tul>-

i't form, .1.r) ienis a box. Genuine made by •JOM.I.SIKH DKUO COMPANY. Madison. Wis. «0LDEN NUGGETS FOR SALLOW PPnPLfi

Notico ot Hearing Fetition for letters of Administration.

State of South Dakota, County of Lnbe, ss. In county court. In the matter of the estate of Amuud O. Syverson, deceased. The state of South Dakota sends greeting to Mn^ie Syverson, Torn Legard. Martna Sather, Maiie Jacolson, Edwin Legard, Syvert Legard, Enilia Legard, Otto Legard, Alvin Legard, Arthui H. Le gard, and John I. Legard, heirs at law and n*;xt of kin of Ainund O. Syverson, deceased, and to all whoui these present? may come.

Notice is hereby given that Maggie Syyorsan has filed with the judge of this court, a i>etition praying for let­ters of administration of the estate of Amuud O. Syverson. deceased, and that Tuesday the 2rith day of June. ISM)?, at 10 o'clock a. in., of said day, being a dav of a regular term of this court, to-wit: of the June term, 1907, at the office of tho county judge in the city of Madison, county of Lake has Insen set for hearing said petition, when and where any person interested may appear and show cause why the said petition should not be planted,

Dated at Madison. S. D., this 12th day of June, A. D. 1907.

—J. H. Williamson, Judge of the County Court.

—Hana CJrdahl, Attorney for Petitioner.

hvh .re 1 Uur awia««rv* . ' Jt* drtte' Sp*r unu PtKauureall ttdofcrtlll.9>i|

rraa '* M.W

Five Dollars for One

la wiat an investment in irri^iil lands, today, will mean t<>

Calgary investors in the very near future. There is no fluctuation Safin in

lands. The trend of prices is

steadily upward. Irrigated land ' that can be bought "rom the

Canadian Pacific Railway for #2.r> an acrr, one quarter down balance 011 easy terms, is selling at from $200 to $3,000 an acre

in the United States.

If you wish your money t<> grow,call on us or address

T W. Rae, State Agent.

A. E Fuller, Local Agent, Madison or

Canadian Pacific Irrigation Colonization Co

Limited No. 43 Dth Ate, West Calgary, Alta, Canada.

% if' '«S w