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Argus-Leader du lieu suivant : Sioux Falls, South Dakota • Page 5

Publication:
Argus-Leaderi
Lieu:
Sioux Falls, South Dakota
Date de parution:
Page:
5
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

ivr i ea.iJs- MIL LOSSES RESlEiS I1EA ANNUALLY HEM tl.e cic'lit extended to them liy th to procure the necessary pe it nd coal which were plaeed their by the Hrilisb govern n.ent. lit II the colonlea of Zionist' group' nee now being formed with III object of procuring the nocofwury materials for planting and sowing. Wit he credit given by tho Jewish bunk It will be possible speedily anil suc-lessfully to tarry out theso task-' Each day largn deposits uro receive! by the bank on helm If of all kinds. Institutions as well as private Ish r'llers, who finally ibcre1 liquidation, the ctJiiliileiii of I tie i-bitioit in the bank ha .) shaken. Since the oi Ji.tl-ea, the head bank in Jaffa Bud Its in Jc rixali-iti, Gu7.ii.

and Metro have resumed their operations. The credit extemied by ttie Jewish bank has been an Important f.irt.ir In stimulating btiHlcexa In the Jewish colonies. The large commercial houses as well as numerous small merchants were nt once able to resume their Egyptian trade. Many owners of oiuugo plantations were able, thanks Fred. Ui Fixer, for key ema-bafccr Taxi.

Phono i. COUNTY COUNCIL Clause Tbompsoa, Chairaaa cf Defence OrgaEizatioa Here, Gvei Up Work Insurance Commissioner State Pi.mnon. aM tf ia r.uU...1 I insiir; nc Commissioner W. N. In Palestine, the jewUrit bank, Is iiis- Speak of Law to Be Framed for Farmer Protection piaylng great activity or line, in spue of all the difliculties tinder which the I Cord wood, dry, at very lfnuMopSt Address J.

A. Lynch, rston, Minn. tP Garrison of Oldham ar-t VTln tha city for a visit with ami to do some 1. Bobby Smith, nobby signs. Moat roasters, all kinds, at Whit- For men who think about their smoking! to Mr.

T'ean from another son, George, who is in the navy, conveying the cheerful news that he would be home tor Thanksgiving. Ho expect to reach Sioux Falls next Sunday. Just arrived carload of Western boxed apples at 20 1-2 N. Phillips Ave. Mrs.

Howard Simpson received a message- from the American Red Cross in New York city this morning, frying that thn ship on which Howard Pimp-nun sailed had reached port safely Mr. Simpson left here nearly a month for Krance and tt wag beiieved sailed from New York two weeks ago last Saturday. Dr. Heath hag removed her office to 225 Boyce Greeley block. Phone 2053.

Milton Pay and Franklin Huehn, both members of tha S. A. T. at Huron, came down last night for a brief visit with relatives and friends. Dr.

E. O. Deltrlch, dentist, 307 Minnehaha building. N. AV phone 447R.

The Methodist Red Cross auxiliary will meet Friday afternoon at Red Cross headquarters to sew. All members are urged to be present. Tarn caps with large tassel made to order. Phone 1275-M. The bank relarlngs for Tuesday were J339.6S2.18.

compared with for Tuesday of last week. Get your Mazda lamps at Wheeler's, III West Tenth street-Miss Mae Gremmels of Wall has arrived for a two weeks' visit with her sister, Mrs. J. A. Vatidagrift.

Order your lumber for repairs of Loonan Lumber Co. Phone S44. Good apples for sale cheap, Phillips house, Fast Eighth street, near Omaha depot. Bring your sacks. Now is the time for Xmas photos.

Obermeyer Studio, S12 Boyce-Creeley building. A large vaslety of meat roasters at Whitfield's. A daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Utley, 1006 Fourth street.

Workmen on the Elks' building have the basement about completed. Poor quality coal which docs not store well, is causing numerous destructive tires around the state said W. N. Van Camp, state fir marshal and Insurance commissioner who spent yesterday here. Mr.

Van Camp was looking up a recent lira in the schoolhouse at Colton and found it occurred from this cause. A new schoolhouse at Hurley was destroyed in the same way he said and at Fort Pierre a fire broke out but was discovered in the coal pile in time and the coal removed, "The coal we are getting thin year from the east is not really tit fur storing," said Mr. Van Camp, "and I wish to caution all householders to be careful with it. We have found so many cases where spontaneous combustion in the coal has started ilres that have destroyed property." Mr. Van Camp Is also assembling data in advance of the state hail Insurance law.

This was one of the constitutional amendments passed by the voters November 5. "The operation of this law will entail a great deal of work on my department." said the marshal, "but in the end I 'believe it is going to prove a good thing. The losses of the farmers through hail have averaged from $500 to $700 per year for the past five years over the state and 1 believe we can effect a good suv- who do that, soon decide that With the war over and the work of the council of defense assuming a totally different character, Claude W. Thompson of this city who nines last April has been the efficient chairman of the Minnehaha county council of defense, has tendered to Governor Nor-beck his resignation to become effective November 30. Mr.

Thompson who Is the head of the Thompson Automobile company and one of the leading young businessmen of this city, has been devoting a larKe part of his time during the past eieht months to the work of the council The many hearings, investigations, orders and their execution, required not only the time of the chairman as well as that of his associates, but also some personal expenditures that could not be cared for under the limited appropriations for the work. Mr. Thompson in resigning stated that while the work had been incessant and heavy, it proved a pleasure in many ways to be of service but that he now felt that the time had- come when ho must give his own business the attention that it required. ISLa ighthearted Havana pays big I rr, fire department was again call-I now Shrlver-Johnson build -T'l at the comer of Eleventh street vidllins avenue, where spontane-? mbiltion was responsible for tire he coal bunker. There i no i.image.

1 Rt substitute for hard coal. Delta rorMle by W. C. liuchanan dumber company. TtPnrv Carleton.

contractor on tha llition to McKennan hospital is be-r delaved somewhat by the fion-ar-V il of 'steel for the top floor of the This material was Shipped jrom Chicago Monday. I n. and noy Nugen, generat In-Wance. "All American Companies," 02 Taulton building. fe I Fzra Moore, non of Mrs.

S. H. Moore, ing. It may be somewhat dllticult at iirst but we expect to have data on hand and to frame a law that will be better than anything of its kind In the country. My idea is that It wli not be compulsory but that when ts advantages are realized, all the farmers will voluntarily want to i Honolulu and that at the time of vritinK his letter he was enjoying the Vilmv breezes of the western climate, Vitting under a banana tree.

Moore inlisted in the navy several months 0" nig brother, Merrill, also enlisted tt the same date and his last letter iitas lifted at Sidney, Nova Scotia. 1 Mrs J. J. Pean has been Informed ihu her son, Harry Elliot, has Just Veen discharged from a hospital In Vlorida. where he had been through a tu? of the influenza.

Following make use of it." Mr. Van Camp left last evening for ger dividends in smoke enjoyment and tranquil nerves than a heavy, strong cigar. Yes Tom Moore is doing as much to spread the glad tidings as any cigar now selling. Perhaps it's because Tom Moore's make-up includes such a generous proportion of good Havana more, in fact, than any other cigar of like price. Tom Moore now comes in three convenient sizes: "Bouquef (a new member of the Moore family), 11c; "Invincible" 13c or 2 for 25c; "Royal," 15c (the Royal is sold plain or in foil.) Your cigar dealer has all three.

Aberdeen. ll CHATEAU THIERRY hortly after came a seconn message i SOLDIER IS HERE Emil Ililler cf Flandreau Spends Few Honrs in City Was Wounded in Famous Fight INVINCIBLE 13c or 2 for 25c i lTAISATOKHroUU laat.ft bv ra WWITFD STATUS ClJVtSlHWf.HT 111 Any men who are qualified as investigators of agricultural insurance can obtain government positions at from to $2,700 per year by taking the civil service examinations announced for December 21. Production experts, both men and women, are wanted at salaries which run from $4.48 to $8.32 per day. Statistical draftsmen, men or women are needed at salaries of $1,200 to $1,600 per year and ship draftmen, architectural, mechanical and structural-steel draftsmen, men or women, have openings in the navy department at from $4 $5.92 per day. Automobile draftsmen and tracers, open to both sexes, for service in tha quartermasters' department, pay from $3,000 to $2,000 per year.

All Information may be obtained at the Sioux Falls postoffice. WHITE CROSS SEEN WHERE LEINSTER WENT DOWN, SAID Dublin, Nov. 20. Over the sea where the Dublin mail boat Leinster was sunk by a German torpedo in the Irish channel, Oct, 10th with the loss, ol about 480 lives, a great white cross was seen in a clear sky by resident of the Dublin coast, they aver. Canon Pim, rector of Christ Church, Kingstown, sent the following statement to the Irish Times: "pn Saturday afternoon last there was a bank of cloud on the horizon and against a clear sky above it there appeared for some moments the form of a great white cross of absolutely perfect shape.

It was seen by at least four members of my own household as well as by other people. "One of- the witnesses described It to me that it had seemed to him first as if there were a great cloud figure with stretched arms which assumed the form of a cross, and as the sharpness of its outline passed it seemed to be full of the face of men and women. It was just, as It were, over the place where the disaster to the Lelnster happened. "One presumes to offer no explanation, but it was certainly there and at least it was a symbol of surpassing comfort." 1 y. IJOM immM To) To in Y7fnT.T THERE ARE no better PEREGOY MOORE DISTRIBUTORS, Farley Benton Managers.

Full of praises for the Rainbow division of which he was a member and in whose charge at Chateau Thierry on July 8 he was severly wounded, F.mil HUler. son of Mr. and Mrs. 1.. 11.

Ililler of Klandreau, spent a few hours here Monday an his way home. Young Hitler who was with the 114th infantry, visited his cousin. Miss, Edna Ililler, 401 north Minnesota avenue, ard she accompanied him to Fland-reiu Monday afternoon. He was one of a party of ir.OO wounded soldiers who reached New York September 20 and has been recovering at the hospital at Fort Dcs Moines, la. Hiiler who hud many exciting is 23 years old and enlisted with the Minnesota national guard in ISIS.

"1 was one of a party of 6 that stormed a hill at Chateau Thierry, "he paid, "and oily four of via were saved, all being wounded. A machine in hit me in the side and injured my spine but with good treatment 1 am now getting over it and was given a 15 day furlough to visit REAL ESlAifc i ER3 Trustees of Frederick M. Hubbell estate to J. H. Fernyhough.

lots 1 to 24, inclusive, block 24, Scott's first addition, $1. Oscar C. Potter to F. Blethen, lots 10. 11 and 12, block 66, Meredith second addition, $450.

Bertia Simonson to Anne Riswold, lots 17 and 18, block 3, Baltic, $1400. Grace Gleason and Joseph to- F. E. Blethen. lots 1, 2.

3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9, block 60, Meredith's second addition, $2,250. C. L. Peterson and wife to Ole H. Haugpe.

lots 11 and 12, block 2, Peterson's first addition to Colton. Joe Vitna to James Ferro, lots 7 and 8, block. 3, VanF.ps addition, $1. Edward Higgins and 'wife to H. W.

Ross Lumber lot 14, block 11, Highland addition, $1. N. P. Dodge and wife to Frank Ober-holtzer. lots 70 and 71, Belmont addition, $390.

Mary E. Archer to Solomon Corder-man. lots 10 and 11. block 1, Black-man's addition, $2500. N01EHP PLURALITY 1 Dr.

W. E. Winsett HOUSEHOLD 'A PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, 3 Office and Residence, Suite 701-702-703 4 Sioux Falls Nat l. Bank Bldg. I Phone N.

W. 590. FOR FIT tOK STYLS FOR "WEAR Bob 1 Going Co. I II JL i 1 I F.tf.HcytShoe Company, IXzkers.JlanchesterMtf Hampshire li ill i j. ihii.ii-iii:,; JOHN ''DOWNER IIAZEff PIANIST AND ORGANIST.

Teacher of Piano, Organ and Theoretical Studies. Studio, 217 Dakota Avenue, South Sioux Falls. IS NEARLY mm vnsm iimm mp, UJ Returns Reach Pierre Trom Coudy Auditors Lead 4,483 (Fpeclnl to the Argus-Leader) Pierre, Nov. 20. Every county in the state except the one in Campbell county has made an unof ficial report of -the votes cast in his county, and with the vote that county Expert Repair Service Also storage at reasonable rates.

If your car don't work right, we can repair it. Garage open day and night. Ceo. Marbett, Manager. 221 West Eighth Street.

out. the total shows: SENATE Thos; Sterling 50911; Or-vi'le W. Rhinehart W. T. Raf-fc-fv 5164.

CONGRESS FIRST DISTRICT C. Chtistopherson "1S240; R. E. Dow-dell, 14752; O. V.

Carlson, 351; J. D. Wipf, -1333. CONGRESS SECOND DISTRICT Royal C. Johnson, 21162; J.

W. McCar-ter R200. CONGRESS THIRD DISTRICT Harry P. Harry L. Gandy Bring us your linens and ve will iron them free on our the latest labor saving device for your home.

Telephone us today and make appointment for your ironing. See how nicely and quickly we will do it. 10030; J. E. Uasiord.

210; Thos. II. Ayres, 2308. GOVERNOR Peter Norbeck, 49531; James E. Bird, 17G90; Orville S.

An derson 723; Mark P. Bates, 24913; Knute Iiewis. 1352. Moments are far too valuable today to be wasted or rnisspent. a Fully one-half of the time you now devote to ironing with old stove-heated sad irons is a sheer loss.

This amount of time could easily be saved for more urgent household requirements by using an Electric Iron In addition, an Electric Iron will do better work for you will save your clothes, linens, etc. will eliminate needless tramping about will abolish dirt and muss will save fuel and expense. Thousands of Electric Irons will be given for Christmas this year because of their serviceability. Buy ens eow price, $5.03. LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR W.

H. McMasters, 47232; C. C. Siderus, 18-fc67; Fred S. McDonald, 849; A.

Put nam. 240H. v.seeo:j-coss'- Physician and Surgeoa Special attention given to diseases of women specific blood diseases; Wassermann blood test furnished. 130 S. Phillips Sionx Falls.

SECRETARY OF STATE C. A. Burkhart, 46285; Daniel Healey 20055; Joseph A. Hofer, 862; Gilbert Gron- Seth. 22815.

ATTORNEY GENERAL Byron S. Payne, 46623; Joseph J.Conry, 19433 Seth Teasdale 22913. STATE AUDITOR Jav E. Reeves, 45470; Frank Murphy, 20G60; C. D.

Hines, 44. Henry B. Anderson, 23- is. STATE TREASURER G. H.

Hel- gerson, 46524; Robert Peterson, 20670; T. Shaw, 1021 Charles ((lis Hi: 22484. W0RTHECSR1 COMMISSIONER OF LANDS Knight; 46784; nV. C. Hicks, 19954; Petr Frederickson, 2H143.

SUPERINTENDENT OF INSTRUC anirr TION Fred Shaw, 46326; T. tt Is to your advantage to Pie highest prices for product. Cll or write ior our UluntrmU price list, shipping tar" anil rope. The -best ealpraent tou fir Bout ft Liakuia. Iowa oi lit N.

Main. Sdux 8. Ml Markey. 19624; Olive Knowles, 1960; 1 OB Ralph K. NlCtlOl, 22322.

RAILWAY COMMISSIONER J. J. Murphy, 46150; Churchill, 20574; uscar Larson, TekpLcss 125. SUPREME COURT JUDGE First Tel. 287 214 So.

Main Ave. ItnXlt flcr, of Countr Htfeinttntrtt- District, S. 37359; Second District John Howard Gates, 8233: Third District. Charles B. whiting.

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