Dakota County herald. (Dakota City, Neb.) 1891-1965, August 25, 1921, Image 1

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    'State Hfstorloijl goaietJt
Dakota County Herald.
ALL THE NEWS
WJIKN
IT IS NEWS
ESTABLISHED AUGUST 28, 1891.
DAKOTA CITY, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 1'921
V0I..X.VV1II. NO. f0
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151
NEWSY ITEMS FROM
I'onca Advocate: The Dayton fam
ily spent lost Sunday with the Chas.
Becrmann family at Dakota City....
Miss Gertrude Poineroy, of So. Sioux
City, visited with friend's in Por"t
Friday and Saturday, and took in the
picnic at Newcastle Friday evening.
o
Sac City, Iowa, Sun: Mr ami Mrs. g uh - g, c, , M' d
K iTr:.,Zl nnfU M" MB"d,M. George Bates, A Dakota City,
, ! Mb..vw., -- , . ..
i.iinan mcL.uugniin, oi rumiu, uiuvu
over last Sunday and were guests at
the Rev. J. 11. Mahafly tent on the
chautauqua giound and attended the
chautauqua program . Mr. Kroesen
is tho publisher of the Fonda Times.
Other Fonda people also were present
during the day.
o
Walthill Citizen: Louie Valask and
fsmilv of Homer, pent Monday at
the Matousck home. .. .Alice Mason of
Homer is visiting at the home of her
uncle, W. H. Mason and family....
Mrs. Albert Aleans and children went
to South Sioux City Saturday even
ing for a few days visit... .Winni
fred Patton leturned to South Sioux
Tuesday after a several days' visit
with her grandmother, Mrs T. R. Da
vidson. Fonda, Iowa, Times; Burt Kroesen
and family were over Sunday visitors
at Arnold's Park and Lake Okoboji
This is a great summer resort and all
Iowa apparently makes it a play
ground. .. .Arthur "Rood" Teter, of
Sioux City, the champion tobacco
salesman of the state, if not the
world, was1 on the Big 4 Fair grounds
last week selling "Climax" the good
oiu cnew. .miywuy uoou saiu n wus
good.- He ought to know.
i A i" i
Hartington Herald:' C. A. Walz,
Manager of the Beste drug store, re
turned' last night from Sioux City,
where he had gone in hope of identi
fying jewelry stolen from his store a
week ago. He recovered about $200
worth of the goods which he had no
difficulty in recognizing. The rest
has not been located. There are
five members of the gang, captured in
Sioux City, now in jail in Dakota City
where they are eingheld fqr-several
robberies in this "state.
o
1'onci Journal: Mrs. Twohig and
Miss Margaret Twohig came home on
Friday from a visit in Sioux Falls,
Sioux City and other places... .Man
ni noi nni,i nnA vn "iriUi n,,,i
Ora and 'Vera Beermann. of Dakota
City, were guests in the Dayton Aus-
tin home Wednesday The parents
of Atlee Chapelle received a telegram
t,n Omia vocriof-nHn,, ct,.n nt
from Groves registration station at
Hoboken, New Jersey, that his body
would be in Hoboken about August
25th.
Emerson Enterprise:
Mrs. Neis-l
wanger, of, Dakota City, is visiting at the accident occurred. They had
the home of her brother, Geo. Haase. looped the loop several times and, af
. ...N. J. Hai.fon, who recently sold ter circling the field, Jay Gehan
his garage at Nacora and went to brought his plane into a tail spin.
Kansas, evidently likes that country, The plane spiraled in the air for pos
as he is disposing of other personal sibly a minute. Then, like a shot,
effects Mr. and Mrs. W B. Maher it dropped out of the sky and crashed
and two children, Marcella and De- to the ground. The plane was corn
lores, of Norfolk, left for their home pletely demolished. Both fivers wpre
Sunday after..oon after visiting two unconscious when' pulled from be-
Attention!
Your.
Spring Supplies
We Have tKerrv
Interior Wall Finish
Outside and Inside Paints and Varnishes
Barn Paint
Poultry Fence and Netting
Garden Tools
Lawn Mowers !
Screen Wire
Screen Doors
Window Screens
Carpet Beaters
Perfection Oil Stoves, and other makes
Full Line of Enamel and Alumi mm Ware
Full Line of Galvanized Ware
Horse Collar Pads
Baskets
Hog Troughs
Hog Oiler?
Garden Gates
Iowa Farm Gates
Posts Steel and
THREE TONS
SEE US FOR ANYTHING IN
IMG STOCK
O. F. Hughes &. Co.
H. It. GREER, Maunder. Dakota City, Neb.
E3 'JSShs32(M&SaRSiS3S3tK
11
H
al
weeks at the home of Mrs. Pat Ker
wln. o
Sioux City Journal, 17: Mr. and
Mis. J. H. Barber have returned from
Clear Lake, S. D., where they were
guests for an outing of Dr. and Mrs.
J. S Bates. Mrs. Barber is the sis-
4 . .-.f T1 11.., nr. Af.. nwi fcl..,. 1Mnl
'were in the party.
iiio trj) was
On the wav
,., hv fll.tmr,n
home they spent some thin at Water
town, S. D., camping at Lake Kam
peska. Sioux City Journal, 10: The Wed
nesday cattle trade was topped by
Will Hartnett, a piosperous Nf armor
near Jackson, Neb. He mniketed 24
yearlings averaging 85J pounds at
510.10.... In less than six hours after
they had been arrested on charges of
illegal monufactute. of irfx'cating
liquor, D. R. Gill and W. F. Gibson, of
Jackson, Neb., were on bread and
water diet in the Dakota county,
Neb., jail. They pleade.l guilty to
the charge and were sentenc ed to 60
days in the county jail. They also
were sentenced to pay a fine of $1,000
each. Judge Guy Graves showed no
morcv to Honor violators in his court
Thursday Besides sentencing Gill
and Gibson he flnnd Andrew Rrnss nrwl
Frank Oto $1,500 each and sentenced
tnem to six months at ham labor in
the county jail They were arrested
on charges of illegal manufacture of
intoxicating liquor a short time ago.
Gill and Gibson will have to survive
on br6ad and water for the first ten
(invs 0f riieir imprisonment. Sheriff
George Cain, assisted by a state
atrent and a tlonutv s her if. arrested
?1. . . . " V ' . .
Gibson and Gill Thursday morning at
10 o clock, lhe olticers located a
still and 400 gallons of molasses mash
in a cornfield two miles southeast of
Jackson Wednesday night about 10
o'clock", They hid in the field and
awaited the arrival of the owhers of
the still. Gibson and Gill drove up
in a motor car about 10 o'clock in the
morning. When they started to work
the sheriff arrested them. The two
men were taken before Judge Sher
man McKinley and bound over to the
district court. A Jew hours late)
they, appeared before" - Judge Graves
where they pleaded guilty and re
ceived their sentences.
o
Sioux City Journal, 22: Jay S.
uehan, well Known bioux Uity air
pilot, was probably fatally injured
nnd his brother, John C. Gehan, an
"Pnt of the plane, was seriously
'"J""-" .......... a...,. .,, ""-
were doi"K c'r?,us W"B
to come out of a tail spin and sent
em, "asning 10 ine Brouna duu
et be'?Jv on the flying fie d at South
them crashing to the ground 500
Sioux City at 6:30 o'clock Sunday
night. The Gehans hnd been up for
a practice flier lit and were nuttincr on
a few stunts overthe. flying field when
, -'
Wood
i
OP SLACK COAL
BUILDERS HARDWARE LINE
OF LUMBER
OUR EXCHANGES
-- v ' iMilu-
C-"-rV-v.KNs..
N Nebraska State Pair,
neath the wreckage by field attend'
ants. They were rendered medicM
assistance by Dr. R. J. McArthur, of
South Sioux City, and rushed to St.
Joseph's hospital in Westcott's ambu
lance, Tho accident was witnessed
by hundreds of residents of the hill
district on the West Side. Only a
few spectators were at the flying
field. Jay Gejian had not recovered
consciousness at a late hour last
night. He suffered a fractured
skull and was believed to have been
injured internally. Hospital attend
ants reported that his condition was
serious and that an operation proba
bly would be necessary before morn
ing. He resides at 714 Twenty-fifth
street:
iri rr' ': m i i t 7
John C. Gehnn, 1738 Pior.iWip.i.-kB,, ;x.-.-!J!&lA.i
street, is vice
president of tho
simmons-Pierce Live Stock Commis
sion firm at the Sioux Ci,ty stock
yards. He regained consciousness
en route to the hospital. He was
seriously cut about the head and
shoulders and seemed to be in great
pain. However, it was not thought
that he was dangerously injured.
-. , . . ,
BIG
DOUBLE CIRCUS
HAS VAST
PKOtiltAM
Ulngling Bros, nnd Itanium k Hallcy
To Present Scores or Entlrclj
jSqV Tcntures
The announcement that the far
famed Ringling Brothers and barnum
& Bailey Combined Shows are to ex
hibit at Sioux City, Wednesday, Aug.
31st, has aroused no end of interest.
It would seem as though practically
all the youngsters and 'grown-ups in
this section were planning to. attend.
Twice each day for almost two
months New York's great Madison
Square Garden was packed with those
who thronged to see this biggest pro
gram in circus history. They -nw
scores of the jungle's most feiocious
beasts, subjugated to such a degree,
that these beautiful animals leaped
to and rode on the backs of elephants
and horses, jumped through hoops of
fire, opened their mouths that their
men and women trainers might lay
their heads and hands inside them, or
leaped from pedestal to pedestal like
trained dogs. And these marvelous
dumb actors are all on tour with the
great double circus. The four im
mense steel arenas in which they per
form are set up in the mammoth
main tent. There is no additional
charge everything is on the one
program. And by "everything" is
meant not only the wild animal dis
plays, but trie entire circus. More
than COO men and women, enilnncinf,
the world's foremost arenic stars,
tnke part. There are almost 100
clowns. Aside from the forocious
beasts, the program includes thirty
trained eleplinnts, Troupes of cam
els perform in the rings. There are
five companies of trained seals, many
dogs, boars, monkeys, pigs and pig
eons. Fully seventy trained horses
and shetlands are presented. It is the
biggest circus program the world has
ever seen, given under the largest
tent and in connection, is the famous
combined Ringling Bros, and Barnum
& Bailey menagerie.
FOR SAL 10
Forty-five acres of good bottom
hay. C. Deloughery, Jackson, Neb.
Official Proceedings of Hio
Hoard of CoinmiNKiojiers
Dakota City, Neb,, Aug. 10, 1921.
The Board of Equalization of Da-
kota county Nebraska, met pursuant
to adjournment with tho following
present: ueorge Harnett, county as
sessor; Will 11. Rockwell, J J. Laps
ley and Nel3 Anderson, commission
ers: Geo. W. Learner, county nttorney,
ana Geo. J, Boucner, county clerk.
The matter of the levies for 1021
! I ! I I .11 III! I II I
rs (Ua :
" f S II
r- - . .rw -
..- - M a x
Lincoln, Sept. 4 to 9.
coming on, the Board made nnd au
thor!? id levies as follows on all tax
able property in Dakota county:
STATE LEVY
mills
General fund II.
Capitol Building fund
COUNTY LEVY
General fund
General fund Indebtedness .
Road fund ,
Bridge fund
Bridge fund indobtednqss . .
Mothers' pension
EMERSON VILLAG.'.
.5
.4
1.
.5
.1
4'.
General fund
ft
.1.
OtnA- ,! 1!.1.4- . ' - ' ' li
'Fitz-7A'.1,.pmnnf ffrfcri . " ,r ...- '
I -i- .... w..v.. -
Bond interest and sinking .... 2.8
HUBBARD VILLAGE
For all purposes ,".
JACKSON VILLAGE
For all purposes 2.
HOMER VILLAGE
Genera G.
Streets 1.25
Liuht nlant 5.
Interest water bonds 1 .
Interest light bonds 1.1
Interest on sewer bonds 1 . 15
Interest water extension bonds .5
DAKOTA CITY VILLAGE
General fund
Int. and singing water bonds..
2.5
a.
SOUTH SIOUX CITY
General fund 5.
Maintenance streets ond cross
ings Library fund
Maintenance of water system .
Maintenance electric system . .
1.5
.07
2.5
1.5
interest and sinking lunu, wat
er bonds 1.5
Interest and sinking fund,
light bonds 75
Interest and sinking fund, in
tersection paving dist. No. 1
SCHOOL DISTRICTS
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142
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55
No further business appearing tho
Board adjourned. '
GEO. J. BOUCHER, Clerk.'
The
Scrap Book
ALPH0NSE WAS ON HIS WAY
Under the Circumstances He Naturally
Felt the Call to Duty Was
Imperative.
"Alphonse." said the heiress, "I
have been seriously thinking."
"Thinking of nu
precious?" asked
Alphonse.
"Indirectly, yes.
I havo been think
ing that If you
married me, every
body would 6iiy
you only did so In
order to get my
money and control of my property."
"What do I care for tho unthinking
world ?"
"But, Alphonse, I will marry you."
"My own ilnr "
"And I will not hao people say un
kind things about you, so I have ar
innged to give my fortune to the mis
sionaries. Why, Alphonse, where are
you going?"
Alphonse paused long enough on his
way to the door to look back and mut
ter: 'Tin koIiik to be u missionary."
BRAIN MATERIAL TO SPARE
Apparently Nature Has Provided Man
kind Vyith Moro Thinklnfl Material
Than Is Required.
Thu World war gave unprecedented
opportunities for the study of Injuries
to tie brain.
Then wero Instances In which Indi
vidual fighting men lost as much as u
teitcupful of brain substance without
Impairment of their mental faculties.
Extraordinary!
The reason Is not easy of explana
tion. But apparently nuture provldos
us with more brain material than we
need to think with, nnd we can spare
quite a bit of It without serious conse
quences, unless some essential struc
ture be entirely-destroyed.
Is compression, In childhood the skull
may be squeezed all out of shape with
out harmful result. The Flnthead In
dians do that, and so do ubo'riglnal
peoples In other parts of tho world.
But even u clot of blood, duo to cere
bral hemorrhage, Is liable to causo
paralysis, and local pressure of a bono
may render a person Insane. Phila
delphia Ledger.
Tho Herald for News wlien It isI?ovt.
f"i ; i- a J H Wj L n j:rrlj
iBHnraMlinHNI
iiittifiLiiHiniiuiEiiffjiHrtiii iitiiji jtf jifimirmif mm uiiHtifiiifiiim iniml
See This Golden Range It's the Latest!
Actually this new coal and wood range appears as if it'
' were worth 10,0001 For were it made of solid gold, you
could scarcely detect the difference. Not only does tho
' '' 3 - ntw metal heavy, thuk "coppcroid"-which composes its
3 -J' oliter w?"5 an '"S'1 closet, resemble gold in color, it re-
tains this golden appearance despite heat; it cleans easily,
' does not chip, crack or break, and defies rust. So the
vi t range is as everlasting as it is beautiful to behold. Come,
, r; ' tee, admire and wonder at it 1
.'ft
ROUND OAK
COPPEROID CHIEF RANGE
The price is surprisingly moderate, due to immense pro
duction, and is guaranteed. Terms. '
FRED SCHRIEVER & CO.
DAKOTA CITY, NEK It ASKA .
Farm Riircau Field Notes
About two dozen pure-bred live
breeders, representing Dakota, Thurs
ton and Dixon counties, mot at the
City Hall at Emerson last Friday to
discuss the advisability of forming nn
association of pure-bred breeders of
the thrco counties. Every person
present expressed himself in favor of
such an organization nnd sot forth
such advantages as co-operative ad
vertising, tho holding of co-opcrativo
sales, the building of a sales pavilion,
exchange of stcs, etc.
A temporary organization was
formed nnd a committee appointed to
draft u constitution and by-laws. A
meeting to make this permanent and
to plan tho work for tho association's
activities during the' fall and winter
months is called for tho City Hall in
Emerson at 2:30 p. m., Saturday, Au
gust 27th. It is hoped that every
oreeder from the three counties will
be present at that time.
Mr. "Nick" Ryan, the popular
druggist of Emerson, surprised those
attending Friday's meeting with hot
cofTce, cheese and ham sandwiches,
and cigars. Evcryono loft feeling
this to be n token of welcome to the
town.
Sickness is present in the horses
on a few farms near Jackson, Being
of an unusual nature, local veterina
rians have had trouble to copengainst
the disease. Dr, A. II. Francis,, of
the State office of the Bureau of
Animal Industry, was called to see
one of these cases. He is of the
opinion that the disease is Botullsim,
which Is due to the animul eating
some feed on which the germ exists.
t
The lollowing letter reached our
i,irico under- dte of August 10th
and should bu of- Interest to those de
siring to buy harness any time dur
ing the next year:
To tho County Farm Bureaus:
Wo are today in receipt of a wiro
from the U, S. Farm Sales Company,
Sallna, Kan., who havo been handling
the army harness, stating that tho
price on tho $40.75 sot of hurness now
is $37.50 Lo.h. Sallna, Kan.
They requested us to notify our
County Farm Bureaus of this fact,
and also stated that there were only
900 sets of this harness left to bo
distributed among six states.
Kindly give this Information to any
of your-farmers who uro intor&sted in
the. harness. J, ., t
f-.ci. m - y.,fy)iu;uiwryiUta,ki -
Nebrasli
aska ParnrBureau Federti
ration.
Mr. George Harris of Homer, pur
chased a .set of these harness lost
spring and is well pleased with them.
He says that ho cannot buy a set in
Sioux City of the same quality under
$75 to $80. Tho writer saw them
And considora them excellent in ev
ery way for heavy horses, but too
large and heavy for light ones.
C. R. YOUNG,
County Agricultural Agent.