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Show ' prosperity, in northwest;. 30. ) i Mitchell, South Dakota, OFFERS PEART Sept. South Dakota idea this year is to emphasize the riches of this state When it is confidently stated that this year for the sixth consecutive yeajj .South Dakota will lead all other states in the greatest per capita wealth, it can readily be understood why South Dakota is ambitious to advertise its crops and resources. The report of a fortnight ago regarding the heavy fall of snow, and damage done to the crops by frost, now appears to have been a false alarm. This is the judgment of a party of newspaper men and representatives of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Ry. who have made a trip of more than 1,200 miles through the state during he last ten days. The greatest estimate of damage that is now made by those in a position to know is, three per cent damage to corn crop of the state. In the rich agricultural section, in the valley of the Missouri River, crops appear to splendid advantage. Occasionally one finds fields where there has been perhaps too much wa ter and the crops are somewhat late, but this is the exception. The following is a conservative estl mate of the products of the state and their value for 1903: The-- AID MARCONI WOULD EQUIP EXPEDITION WITH "WIRELESS." He Considers System Would Be Cf Great Value If the Arctic Explorer Had to Call for Aid Few Difficulties In the Way. ' William Marconi stands ready to equip Commander Robert E. Peary's next polar expedition with wireless telegraphy. He la confident of overcoming all physical obstacles that might be thought to interfere with the use in the arctic regions of this latest factor In world communication. More- - - s Product. Wheat Corn Oats Barley f lax Rye utor-- Bushels. Value. 50.000,000 135.000,000 21,000,000 11,000,000 tiO.OuO.OOO 30,000,000 H.ooO.ouO 2.0UO.0UO 4.0oO,OuO a.OUO.OOO 1,500.000 Live 660,ooo S2.0tW.UUU 7,000,000 Utuiy tttiu ci eainery S.euO.OOO Kgxa and poultry , ay 12.000,000 Wool and hides l.iOO.OOO Garden products and fruit 4.000,000 12.000.000 Minerals, alone and cement Total $146,460,000 While corn Is the second product in total value, the 1903 crop shows an Increase of about thirteen and a half million bushels over the crop of 1902 At the rate corn is being increased in acroage. the prediction that corn will be king in South Dakota within a few years, seems to be reasonable. The total production of . new wealth for 1902 was $119,949,000. The increase of nearly $27,000,000 of this year Is sufficient answer to the derogatory re ports about the state that have ap peared witnin tne last fortnight. remaps a stronger argument In favor of the state is shown in an ex amination of the bank deposits. In July, 1901, South Dakota banks had deposits amounting to $14,000,000.00: on July 1, 1902, these amounted to $30,000,000.00, and on July 1, 1903, to JZ,UVV,UUU.UU. In addition to the money In corn. wneai ana me gold or the Black Hills, which has been termed the richest one hundred square miles In the world, there is good money in South Dakota cattle. Men who have come to sou in. Dakota without money, and who now count their dollars with five figures, say that raising cattle Is the only business in the world for which a man can borrow his entire capita'. It Is a fact that South Dakota banks are glad to help any honest, industrious young man, who comes well recom-menle- d for his commercial in cattle business and acceptintegrity, his cattle as collateral. A banker of Ipswich told your correspondent that during twenty years of such loans he had not lost one cent and he could name by the score young men who had secured from South Dakota banks the price of their first herd of cattle. A visit to the catUe ranch of Lee A Prentis near Vermillion, S. D., was one of the interesting features cf the above mentioned trip. Lee & Prentis are the largest cattle breeders In bouth Dakota. They exhibit with some pride, among their valuable shortheifer which rehorns, a cently took sweepstakes over the winner of the sweepstakes at 1902 International Live Stock Exposition at Other shorthorns have Just re turned from a very victorious tour and county fairs, among Inter-statwinning eight first prizes at Sioux City, eight at Yankton and six at Huron. There are other stock farms two-year-ol- Mrs. Peary. over, he would give his personal attention to the making of the apparatus to insure its practicability. The expedition would have the benefit of all the latest improvements, and the equipment would be reduced to the minimum both of weight and bulk. It is optional with Commander Peary whether the world shall receive a daily account of his progress in quest for the Pole. Messages can Bent by the exploring party to the 6 and from there flashed to the Mare stations, off the coast of Newfou1 land and Nova Scotia. But the greatest advantage of would be the ability to keep up ci municatlon between the members the pioneer party and the main bi or the ship. The hardships that h developed into tragedies could t? be minimized and perhaps be elimin sd. If supplies were running sho rU message could be sent asking for Her. The main party could be a . . . ..St A me wnereacouis. or llms 'meuI ul pushing northward, and when the time came for the final dash the explorers eould send word through the relay sta tions to the rest of the world, and everybody could read next day that Peary had set forth on the last stage or bis Journey. Mr. Marconi Is not unfamiliar with the conditions he would have to meet. He has discussed arctic exploration with the Duke d'Abruzzi. In addition. he has put stations in operation la Alaska, Nova Scotia and Newfound land and has found It possible to send message.! la the coldest weather en countered In those latitudes, "I believe wireless telegraphy would a- , d -- Chi-Cair- o. K4 e In the state that show blooded rattle Dot far behind these prize winners. A large number of the farmers and stockmen, as well as a majority of the South Dakota editors have been in attendance at the Corn Palace at Mitchell during the last week. The South Dakota Commission to the SL Louis Exposition has Just decided to reproduce the Mitchell Corn Palace as the Soutu Dakota exhibit, and visitors to St Louis will have an to see a building 140 by 100opportunity the exfet, terior of which will be entirely constructed of corn. Like other South Dakota towns, Mitchell is show!cg considerable prosperity and enterprise this year. Th cornerstone of the $40,000 city hall was laid last week; the walls of a $50,000 hotel to be built of stone and are up above the first floor; a Carnepie llbrsry has been built at a cost of $15,000. and a score of smaller buildings are under construction, and Improvements and pavement of streets are under way. As an especial reason for such a fine showing at this time, the Isst legislature of bouth Dakota greed to submit to voters of the state in November, 1904, the question of moving the state cspitol from Pierre to Mitchell. The of th latter town, backed by a goodly number of IhoM In the roost thickly populated portions of the state east of the Missouri River, and in the Black Hills, who will End Mitchell more aectble than Pierre, have already under way a lively campaign by which tbey expect to scur the capitAl in November, 1 &04. The reproduction of the Mitchell Corn Palac at the Ft IjouI Exposition is regarded as a big card la their ft vor. tl Straight Tip. Yoirg married p"oj.: ag') to avoid just one quarrel re i fl- the fiit and then they wi!J be happy all their lives. MrmpLis (Term.) News. one IL I'U In the Froxtn North. be of great assistance to a polar ex pedition," he said. "By this means It will be possible to keep In communi II fto'f The weary, worn feelout, come to eings verybody who taxes the kidneys. Wnen tho kidneys are overworked they fail to perform the duties nature has for provided them to do. When the kidneys fail danger-ous diseases v Called Into Being by the Death of Pope Leo. The death of the pope has enriched a wuu a lie w wuiu. A policeman is a "camerlengo." The first constable who heard himself addressed by thateDithet was .Indeed all-tire- d darme who was called "centurion." But the motto of the Paris police Is "When in doubt, arrest your man," and in this case the Innovator spent a few hours at the police station before being released. According to one authority, the connection between .a quickly follow, policeman and a camerlengo Is to be urinary disorders, found in the silver hammer used to diabetes, dropsy, rheumatism, Brlghfs thrice strike the deceased pope's brow. disease. Doan's. Kidney Pills cure all A policeman is a "cogne," I. e., he kidney and bladder ills. Read the fol- who strikes and this furnishes the lowing case: connecting link. However that may Veteran Joshua Heller, of 706 South be, the fact remains that the word la ! Walnut street, Urbana, 111., says; "In now in common use,, and In- every, the fall of 1899 after getting; Doan's street squabble at present some one is sure to shout, "Eh, va dono, Kidney Pills at Cunningham Bros. " New York Tribune. drug store in Champaign and taking a course of treatment I told the readA YOUNG ENGLISH PEER. ers of the paper that they had relieved me of kidney trouble, disposed of a lame back with pain across my Duke of Lelnster, Premier of Ireland, loins and beneath the shoulder blades. Is 16 Years Old. During the Interval which had elapsed The duke of Lolnster Is one of the I have had occasion to resort to Doan's youngest peers in King Edward's Kidney Pills when I noticed warnings realm. He Is 16 years old and la thu of attack. On each aud every occa- premier peer of the kingdom of Iresion the results obtained were Just as land and head of the great Irisa house satisfactory as when the pills were of Fitzgerald, which for hundreds of first brought to my notice. I Just as years has played so conspicuous a emphatically endorse the preparation role in the history of the emerald as I did over two years ago." Isle. He is a great grandnephew of A FREE TRIAL of this great kidney the patriot. Lord Edward, the hero and medicine which cured Mr. Heller will martyr of the '98 rebellion. During his be mailed on application to any part school days the young peer was one of the United States. Medical advice of the leading boys at Eton In all free; strictly confidential. Address sorts of athletics, but he developed Foster-Mi- l burn Co., Buifalo, N. Y. signs of consumption, the malady that For sale by all druggists, price 0 carried off both his fattier and mother, cents per box. and left him the youngest duke In the English peerage when barely 6 years Leaves. now every precaution Is being Thou hast been blowing- - leaves, O wind of old, andto taken preserve hirn for the great strife! Wan, curled, boatlike leaves that raa things that may be expected from one and fled; of his brilliant ancestry. Unresting- - yet though folded up from life; Sleepless, though cast among the Still Another Case. dead. Franksvllle, Wis., Oct. 12th. Many Out to the ooean fleet and float; remarkable cures are being reported Blow, blow, my little leaflike boat from all over the country but there) O wind of strife! to us a wedding wtndi Is one rlcht here in FrsnksvlilA whioh run Kisses or ner mouthi Blow thou our souls together, heart aiJ 18 certainly worth publishing, and nalnd; which has not as yet been given to To narrowing Northern lines, blow from the public, . the South. Mrs Ixuls Markison of this place Out to the ocean fleet and float; ' Dai been a sick woman for quite a Blow, blow, my little leaflike boat lonB t,me ad could not find anything n- -. b,W,nr mMr a drift,B UtMnV her any help. She suffered all d From circling cove down to the unshel- the Palnul symptoms of what is sea; known as female weakness. erally my oiue Mil I KverV Woman who rMrf r.vwv i w. hor rnr wing. will understand these distressing con Us to a new lovellt futurity. Out to the ocean fleet and float; ditions which combine to make the Blow, blow, my little leaflike boat lives of many women one long burGeorge MacDonald. den of weakness and suffering. Mrs. Markison chanced one day to An M.i.tU.l d. new remedy called Dodd'a The first livinir ohwt .rt bear of Plll. "Id to be a strangers who visit the Norwegian KItdne7 weak-a- n medicine for sPlcn1,1 women's Breldablik Is an East Indl steamship rat, the pet of Capt Paulsen, tb i ne89' She determined to try some master or the steamer. He does not uu "uuo IOUDa nerseu getting uetter. permit even the customs officials whe She kept on with the pills and was visit the Breldablik Co slight him. cured. Speaking of her case, Mrs. Boarding Officer Rauch, who exam Markison says: "I can and do praise Dodd's Kidney Ined the steamer's manifest yesterday on her arrival from Samar, was called Pills as a remedy tor female weakness. to account by the rodent, which forced They are the best medicine I have Its way to the front, obliging the of ever known, and have done me a ficlal to stop work and make termi great deal of good." with the pet of all on board. The Some Pointers on Trousers. rat Is eighteen Inches long. PhiladelA man's trousers, when a tallo. Record. phia presses them In the summer, are nearly always pressed with the ends $100 Reward. $100. Ths t4't of this enr wtll be Je4 to leara turned up, but In the winter they are tiiere It st Irsatooe l"t pressed turned down. A tailor says: . arirare ! lu t btva shi h care la4r!i4 lutm. ttil ih.t i. "Trousers are Cktairb. Hell's ("sturm Core li the ooly tx!tlT pressed turned up la rare now kw.i La lt, radical frstoralty. .torrU the summer because It Is presumed a ronaUtntlookl 1icm. miiilnt a ronatito- nf -Hall s Curr Core In. that every man wears them tamed up takn fl trt(oo. dlm-tiutxio the Mood ud rt flint tm. . UrT.r ltr.ln the In this season. He wears them so be' "r'f rountati" of tn diae. and firing the pattMt cause In the summer he wears low ironciD try omiflinc op tbertnaUtutloa n4 awlatlof tor la data lu work. The proprietor shoes, and trousers that are not X) It euraUre mrb felib Inixnia-power., that tbf offer turned up catch at the back In a suck Toranrceae tost It raiia toeare. ''" "inirn lead for at ef temont'a. shoes. But turned up, they dost Adlre Ow r. J. UlESEr Toledo, CO., Sold touch the shoes; they don't catch la TV. droti. Ua.l TMtUf i'liw are Uia beet them; they set right That Is the main reason why we turn up trousers MOW LONG MOSQUITOES LIVE. in the summer." Scientist Asserts the Pests Exist Through the Winter. It U not known Just how long mos quitoes can live, but their average Ufa Is much longer than la ordinarily supposed. Thousand1 of them live through the winter, hibernating or asleep In dark places la barns ot fcotite cellars. In sparsely settled localities, wher thy can hot find such plaoes for shelter, they live through the winter In hollow trees, and, even though the temperature may fall fat below f reeling, they are not winter killed; but on the approach of warm weather become active again. Motqnt-toeare frequently sen flying about In the woods before the snow hat wholly left the ground. William Lr man Underwood In the Popular Neuralgia Sprains Science Monthly. Lumbago 1 , - earner-Ungue!v to-da- y Ji jr. t 1.1 L. ! ! ! - V "S X bbs Xx I Ul lira gen-tere- 1A-fn- ! Using the Instruments. established without too much trouble, wireless telegraphy would be of great asslsur.ee to him." Commander Peary Intends to proceed by ship to the northern shore of Grant Land, which Is the northernmost land yet reached on the globe. From there he proposes to go over the polar ice pack by means 'of sledges drawn by dogs. The distance from Grant Land to the pole Is about 490 miles. He will take a group of Eskimos from the Whale Sound region, and tbey will constitute the bulk of the exploring party. The vessel will be named the Charles II. Darling, after the assistant secretary of the navy, who was largely instrumental In obtaining the leave of absence for Mr. Peary. The expedi tion will be financed by the Peary Arc-tie club r,f v . ... - -.tA vrV " me oiDer ventures 1 (!.('. PARIS' NEW SLANG WORD, I l oy the American naval officer. The capes, bays and fiords of the northernmost land on the globe, North cation with the main base, and thence Orecnland, discovered by Commander with the outside world. The explorer Peary, were named after the members can tell the members of his party to of the club who bad aided the explorer the southward where he Is. If he Is in his quest for the pole. New York In ned of supplies he can give direc Press. Hons as to how these shall be forward ed and of what they shall consist. If A Possibility. he is In dire straits he can direct what A man given to studying cause and route the rescuing party shall take. If effect think that perhaps the cause of be Is successful In his quot the whole the unusually early frosts in the West world can be Informed cf the discov Is the fact that the street bands have ery of the pole months before It oth trwlse would know of it. "I wish It to be understood that 1 rn not making any of these su?e- tlons with a view to hampering Mr. Peary in his plans. I am merely answering questions on a subject not tu?eested by myself. "Yes, I would be willing to give the matter my personal attention. As Commander fVary says, the north pole changed from the tune of "A Hot Tlm is the last great geographical prize In the Old Town TcMiJght" to "Hiathe world has to ofir, and If I were watha," to be asked to aid him by means of wireless telegraphy I would consider Weather Vane 100 Years Old. no pains too great to make the venH. W. Mclntyre of Randolph. VL. ture a success. has a unicu" relic in tho shape of a "We have perfected wlrles te!g-r-aph- weafhrr vane that is nearly 100 yearn to an ettcnt .r,cre I think it Id. TMs wfathT vane was nut on 1 would available for ue by an arctic the Orano county grammar school party. Two years ar'i ft would have . h"n tl; srhnoi been ont cf th? miration, A few t ,f ;n nn ?; and I? In cod months hfnre we .! .l in a roov.n condition toav. For al rur- yrillmer.f 1 to do ffi'fh n'r I know "? poses this psrne relic li to he placed of the r;l',-(tffaf pr ht., at Ranirls on the in the way of this r ' ; r'.r pre j ;, dolph (r,fr-r. ALL TIRED OUT. I l 1 1 difficulty of transportation and the unexpected capers cut by apparatus, which behaves with comparative docility in lower latitudes. As I under stand It, metal has to be used sparingly where the cold Is so intense, and the best steel is rendered as brittle as glass. Even the sledges have to be fastened with thongs or strings, as bolts and nails would be out of the question. I also appreciate that an arctic explorer considers the question of his commissary, and he does not care to feed anv more nersona than f be has to. An expert operator with the pioneer party would be out of tha question. But I believe that all theso difficulties can be overcome. "There are no technical difficulties to speak of. We have tried wireless telegraphy in latitudes where the cold was most intense and got better results than anywhere else. Atmospheric conditions present no obstacles whatever. "You can say for me that I realize the importance of such a test. I would insist on superintending the construe tion of all apparatus intended for this purpose. It would be an honor to be of assistance to Commander Peary in achieving such a triumph as the discovery of the north pole." "Granting the feasibility of wireless telegraphy in polar explorations, the north pole Is already In Peary's hands," said a member of the Arctio Club, the organization that has supported the explorer in his previous ventures. If Mr. Peary could be assured of a moderate weight and good behavior on the part of the equipment it is possible he would consider it, but he is the one to decide that point. I have heard him say that things don't act up there the same as they do down here, and often the nature of materials is changed completely by the in tense coia. ir there are no extra mouths to feed and stations can be rr . j tht d!e 1 tnl!. r I . For Rheumatism Bruia Serves Long as Lawyer, E. C. Taylor of Warren, O., wnr succeeded James A. narfleld a of the old Nineteenth district In cor.greaaj on t,e advance of the laffr to the presi- flency, i,a, coirplfted tb of I'm irartire of law. It is Raid that rso other lawyer In Ohio Is able to show o many years of activity Lp M profession. DacKache Soreness Sclattci Stifrnevas) Use the old reliable remed lve ' yr it fifty-eight- h St. Jacobs Oil |