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The Daily Deadwood Pioneer-Times from Deadwood, South Dakota • Page 8

Location:
Deadwood, South Dakota
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAOE EIGHT THE DEADWOOD DAILY PIONBEB-TIMES SUNDAY MORNING, JANUARY, 1918. of the Black Hills, and should an of that enthusiastic and confident interesting one, for both teams are bunch. Goo! Just to have them be-evenly matched and fast. If anyonnlnd $lTe 18 enoutt to mk every thinks that the Deadwood high school I member d0 hU and sacrltlce toj 'win. Yesterday's Personals lj A 1 1 LIBERTY BOND tram or its rooters are discouraged, disappointed, down-hearted or.

disposed to lake the team's defeat by Whitewood last Friday night very seriously, they had better ask them. They are going into the game with Belle Fourche with the intention of winning it, and will fight tor all that is In them. They have the speed, the strength and the ability to win from anv team in the Hills on iha hlh Mrs. Tom Halloran of Edgemont, who is In the city taking care of the affairs of the Dailey Cafe, while Mrs. Dalley is visiting In Butte, had a birthday today.

Last night she entertained a number of her lady friends at her mother's apartments on Mill street. Why our Forefathers Did Not Wear Glasses 0200. 1st 002930 2d 100868 Sil F1SHKL AND COMPANY 8. G. Straight of Omaha Is at the Franklin.

T. D. Murrln of Lead had business in the city. A. Walker of Denver is reglst- crod at the Franklin.

ft. A. Glnpln of Denver was an arrival on the Burlington. school crcult on a good court, one In "tZZA" J. S.

Morrison of Brookings is MANY VISITING THK which there Is room to play and- a 61 Mullen Munn block or phone chance to bee, so when the Deadwood B-346. five goes against the Bella Fourche Mrs. Thomas Thomas of Two Bit five there is going to be a good ex- 1NCOMF. TAX SUN'S OFFICE People are begriming to learn of the fact that there is a man from the internal revenue department in the city, who has been lent here to answer questions regarding the income tax and the way in which it af hibition of how basketball should be; spent the alternoon In the city visit-played. There should be a good turn'ii'K and shopping.

among the Franklin guests. Mr. and Mrs. W. A.

Cassidy of Pluma were visiting In Deadwood. C. J. Johnson came In from Denver and is stopping at the Franklin. Robert Co; of White Owl was was among the arrivals on the Northwestern.

G. W. Gray and wife of White Owl are visiting In Deadwood, guests at the Franklin. out on the night the two teams mix, jfnr the game will be worth seeing. Cylinders de-carbonized at Ho Other games between teams on the garth's.

circuit will follow at the auditorium, Try a PioneerTimeB Want Ad. so that Deadwood public is promised a season of excellent exhibiiions of i i -bbbbb -g-g- hasketball playing. The boys amljoOOOOOOOOOOOOC The need of glasses has kept step with the march of civilization. It is undoubtedly true that many of our forefathers needed glasses and did not have them, but present day methods and habits have actually Increased the need of them. In times past men and women were more in the great outdoors than now.

Their range of vision was limitless, and little or no necessity for using the eyes at concentrated tasks that develop eyestrain- -reading, sewing, doing fine work or poring over a desk under artificial light. Eyestrain is an affliction not to be lightly regarded or neglected. Only properly fitted glasses will help it. Such glasses must be made special. We m.ike the right kind.

R. S. QUIMBY girls, the loyal and enthusiastic root-jo A. D. WILSON, Civil Engineer and Surveyor, i U.

S. Mineral Surveyor Phone A-257, Deadwood ers for the team who accompanied it to Whitewood, Friday night, will be present at the game, and If the team does not win it will not be the fault 00000000000 fects the people who come under its provisions, and yefteiday he received many callers and passed a very busy day. Single men, whose Incomes are $1,000 a yoar or over, are subject to the law, and these have been among' the visitors to Mr. Standish's offices, w'lich ara in the grand jury rooms of the federal building on the third floor. Married men whose incomes are $2,000 or more have also been among the callers and have had things explained to them so they know just what is expected of them in the way of paying taxes.

Mr. Standish will be in the city for several days yet, so everyone may have an opportunity to call on him and have the workings of the tax explained. lias pone out of his way to accommodate the public, and after office hours he may be found at the Franklin hotel by those who cannot find time to visit him In the day time at his offices and have things made clear. HAS ALLOWED CLL'KK OF OOV11TS TO HAVE DEPUTY At the meeting of the board of county commissioners yesterday much of its session was taken up with reading bills against the county, auditing and allowing them, listening to th; reading of reports and other routine business. During the afternoon a resolution was introduced and passed authorizing the clerk of the courts to appoint a deputy to assist him in the caring for the business of his office, and fixing the compensation of the same.

Of late there has been more business passing through the office of the clerk of the courts than one man can conveniently handle, and tha need of a deputy 'Jf Jeler and Optician WMMt Stop In the office has been imperative if the work Is to be kept up. Taking this Into consideration, and the importance of the work done there, the board members decided that a deputy was necessary, so when the resolu tion was introduced it received the unanimous vote of the board. Clerk Jenkins has mot as yet appointed a deputy, and will probably defer the matter for several days. DEATH OF MRS. HARRIET FLYNN Mrs.

Pollock of Deadwood is in receipt of a letter from Arthur Flynn, a former Deadwood school boy, telling her of the death of his mother, Mrs. Harriet Flynn, at their home in New York City last month. The deceased will be remembered by a 11 of the old time residents of the city, for during her residence here, which dated from a very early day In the city's history, she had been1 Born To Mr. and Mrs. Wm.

Elrod, Friday, January 4, 1918, daughter. at Ho- tkat stubborn cold with Rcxall Cold Tablets 25 cents Money back if not satisfied Cylinder de-carbonized garth's. prominent In church and social affairs, and was at one time one of the W-J-f Clvo Local Youngster the Best tart In Life ictive members of the Round Table club. Sha was a woman who was City Lodge Directory 1 liked by all who knew her, one who trained and retained the esteem of all BRJ)JIlH0SD AMERICAN matIe her and all meets first and third Thursdays of her delighted in her Francis J. Parker, foreman.

F. V. I frienshlp. She was prominent in tried ave you Babcock, correspondent. ALT A REBEKAH LODGE NO.

8. Meets first and third Friday of each month. Gertrude Leech, N. G. Mary E.

Mossman, Secretary. nsteel EAGLES Black Hills Aerie No. 105 meets first and third Tuesday of each month. Robert Kersten, W. P.

W. T. Hursh, Secretary. You would throve up your hands in holy hoiror, if anyone suggested that you swipe a bench from a school building or pilfer a single page from a book of the school's library. Bui are your dealings in public school affairs as honest as you think they are or perhaps would like to have others suppose them to be They are not absolutely not if you are spending your money for mail order merchandise.

You can't send accr.tol cash out of town for goods that can be bought in town and support to the greatest possible extent the public schools. Every brick in the schools every book in the schools' libraries must be purchased with school "taxes." The size of the taxation depends on the weahh of the community. And the wealth is governed by the earning capacity of the people who live in the community. Money sent away from home doesn't pay for one minute of home town "labor." It doesn't fill the dinner pail of a single local worker. It doesn't enrich home dealers.

It doesn't by one word broaden the knowledge of the children of this town add to the attractiveness or comfort of school days. Money spent with local merchants travels in a circle. It doesn't go out of circulation when rung up on the dealer's cash register as do mail order dollars when you slip them into the mail bo. The dealer spends it here. It pays the help back of the counter, who spend it in town for goods they good works and charities while a resident of the city, and those who were associated with her in the days when Deadwood was young will learn with i egret of her passing.

Her husband, j. Harry Flynn, before bis death, which took place in 1887, had been connected with the newspapers of the city from the earliest times. First, with the Pioneer, of which he was the business manager and advertising man, end then with the Times, occupying the same position on tha; paper until It3 consolidation with the 1'ioneer. She left the city shortly after his death, taking up her residence in Now York City with her son Arthur, and had since that time made that place her home. ODD FELLOWS Eureka Lodge No.

13 meets every Wednesday In Society Halls. Transient brethren cordially Invited. A. J. Mossman, N.

M. E. Shepherd, Secretary. The wonderful odor of 26 flowers Talc 25c Cold 50c Face Powder 50c Combination Cream 50c EASTERN STAR Deadwood Chapter No. 22, meets second and fourth Mondays at 7:30 p.

m. Erma Kubler, W. Evelyn B. Hlltner, secretary. ROYAL NEIGHBORS Star Camp No.

443 meets second and fourth Fridays of each month. Edna Lovetinsky, Oracle. Agnes Mc-Ginley, Recording Secretary. DEADWOOD HKiH SCHOOL AGAINST BELLE FOURCHE Arrangements have been made for the Deadwood hi eh school basketball ji use. it assists tnem purchasing homes that can be Taxed.

ij- ji iniw iijvi v.iiaiiui. aim iiiui utcivnaiiuiOG as "taxed." And it is on taxation, remember, that your mm. BLACK HILLS ENCAMPMENT NO. team and the team from the Bellc public scnools depend. The l(.

G. Phillips Drug Store Pie REXALL Store i. vs. r. imeeus bouuuu uuu The Calumet Baking Powder Co.

paid for the preparation or this article. Fourche high school to tangle up in a game of basketball at the Auditorium on Friday evening, the It will be one of the games on the schedule of tha high school circuit fourth Wednesday, and adjourned meeting third Monday in each month. Geo. A. Leech, C.

Chas. E. Beck, H. Fred Ager, S. W.

H. Bischoff, scribe; E. M. Mitchell, treasurer. wlmter We have the largest stock in the Black Hills and can supply you with just the articles that you, will want this time of the year.

Phone 124 and G124 ft. VABJ METER AUTO SUPPLY CO. DEADWOOD, SO. DAK. 639-41 MAIN STREET.

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About The Daily Deadwood Pioneer-Times Archive

Pages Available:
89,243
Years Available:
1877-1928