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About Dakota County herald. (Dakota City, Neb.) 1891-1965 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 8, 1914)
"WHWwp- -wAV"'- if?- ' ' "" v L! ' ';" " ' ' wa'"MWBJJniinw n mi'u j.m t -r -"- "-rrmrao "t nsai 'r w v 't -'b DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD; DAKOTA CITY, NEBRASKA. v t 'ty I a i? w WHY CRIP IS DANGEROUS. It 'ts an Epldomlo Catarrhal Fevttf Caused by a Bacillus that Gener ally Leave the Patient Weak After the Acute Stage Has Passed. BBsC-yiBIBBBBBBBMBIIBPBWfcr C Grip Patients Grateful to Poruna, tha Expectorant Tonic. Do not make tho error of regarding Brlp ns an exaggerated cold. Thcra Is a big difference between tlio two. Grip Is an epldomlo disease that pot sons tho vital organs. When a per son has grit;, tho air passages aro allvo with millions of bacilli poison ing tho blood. Tho Infected person feclj tired and exhausted. Pcruna Is a Tonlo Laxative. It requires a good tonlo laxative to keep tho body of the patient as strons as posslblo to counteract tho effect oC the poisons created by tho grip bacil lus. An expectorant tonlo with soma laxative qualities is tho safest rem edy. Such is Teruno. Bewaro cs peclally of coal tar .powders or tablets because they lessen tho vitality of tho patient. There is no specific for the grip. Peruna has been used .with good success in former grip epidemics. In dications point to tho return of grip, this winter. Do not fall to read tho experience) of former grip patients with Peruna, Mrs. Gentry Gates, 8219 First Ave, East Lalte, Ala., -writes: "I had a bad case of cHp. I tried Peruna and It cured me. 1 con safely suy It, is a lino medicine." Mrs. Charles D. Wells, Sr., 230 South St., Delaware, Ohio, writes: "After a severe, attack of la grippe I took Pcruna and found It a good tonic." Ask Your Druggist for Free Peruna Lucky Day Almanac tor 1914. Not a Linguist. Mrs. Worldly If, aa you say, your master kissed you against your will, why did you not cry "Help?" French Maid Ah, madam! Zatees Just zee word of vlch I could not sink at ze moment. Zen, ven I remember eet, eot vas too late. Ho haf kissed me free, four, five times!" Puck. IS EPILEPSY CONQUERED7 New Jersey Physician Said to Have Many Cures to His Credit. Red Bank, N. J. (Special). Advices from every direction fully confirm previous reports that too remarkable treatment for epilepsy being admin iBtered by Dr. Perkins of this city, Is achieving wonderful results. Old and stubborn cases have been greatly benefitted and many patients claim to have been entirely cured. Persons suffering from epilepsy should write at once to Dr. H. W. Perkins, Branch 49, Red Bank, N. J., for a supply of the remedy which Is being distributed gratuitously. Adv. A Doubt. "Did you read where some expert says kissing is Immune from germs?" 'Even germs of affection?" The Army of Constipation Is Growing Smaller Every Day. CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS are responsible they not only give reliet they perma- nentlycure Con stipation. Mil lions use them for Biliousness, Indigestion, Sick Headache, Sallow Skin. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE, Genuine must bear Signature GANGER FKKK TREATISE Jne Loach Sanatorium, in it I inarnll. T ... A 1 1 ..Mu.iaiiufwaa, 1UU, UBS ntllill kti nil a knnlil.t V. I 1 - - w-- mt r-"v m vioi nuivu u i. . Rives intenwtinff t a o t Aboatthocansoof OanoerialtotelU what todo for pain. weeding1, odor. etc. V rite lor It tod, memJoDiagthU taper. - -. 62 II DTI I RE RED in a few days JUT I UilEi without pain or a sur gical operation, too pay until cured. Write lilt. IVJiAY, 300 IJeo Bldg., Omalia, Neb. Sioux City Directory "Hub of -the Northwest." AAAAVMMW 7,Z RARRFR ''"'"SOE-Learn bawertrade. OITV UHIlQUn Tools gireii: wugnu paid. 101S 1-OUKTII STKE1CT, SIOUX CITV, IOWA FOK IIE8T 8KKVIC15 SHIP RBCE BROTHERS Live Block Commission Merchants at SIOUX CITY, Chicago or ManaaaClls THE MARTIN HOTEL ABSOLUTELY FIREPROOF 250 ROOMS; RATES SI. 00 AND UP. For peat Results ship to FRANK E, SCOTT COMMISSION CO. Live Stock Salesmen and Buyers Room SOS Eiclunge BW. Hock Yard Slcui City, lot! SWANSON&GILMORE Live Bick Commission Merchant!). SIOUX CITY, IOWA oud CHICAGO, ILLINOI3 Oar motto: "A growing business bullton reputation" Barber Supplies TheKleeblattBarborsSupplyCo.,0I8l,lerct!8t., Sioux CltyIawlll treat you right. Write them. J. C. Rennison Co. FLORISTS Howtn for Ail Occasions. SIOUX CUT. IOWA Protect your bo(? against Cholera. We have Increased our capacity and can now furnish ANTI HOG CHOLERA CPPTTM upon Immmllate notice. Con OblVUHt suit your local veterinarian. SIOUX CITY SERUM COMPANY STOCK YARDS SIOUX CITY, IA. Before deciding on your new car investigate the JEFFREY FOUR $1550 COMPLETE KAMBLEI? DISTRIBUTING CO. 512-1-1 Douglas SL Sious Cily, la. Bk aaa7o BBBSBBBBifsi nuifeuv nwsfjmw v1 i-t wir griLLa. Making Tomorrow's World By WALTER WILLIAMS, LL.D. (Coin (At School of Joumllim of the Unbtnlli) cfMtuourt) THE WOMAN IN London, Enfe land. Tho par liamentary frnn chlso for women translated into American paral lelism tho right ot women to voto for members of congress is n BUbJect In Great Britain of argu ment, newspaper article, public meeting, florco contention, nud, in tho caso of militant s o'c i o ties, acts of law lossnoss and amateur revolu tion. An assem blage of women, estimated in number from 200, 000 to 250.000, from all parts ot tho United Kingdom gath ered in Hyde Park, London, a day or two ago, In a demonstration for tho franchise. Mooting after meoting is held attacking the Llboral government for declining to permit the considera tion of a suffrage measure in parlia ment. Tho question has become po litically acute. From tho shades of academic discussion it has been forced cut into the open of practical politics. As it is in tho domain of practical pol itics, ono hears tho epithets that too gftcn disgrace political discussion. "Sho Is a hyena in petticoats," said an anti-suffrage speaker, describing a dis tinguished Englishwoman who favored suffrage borrowing, consciously or unconsciously, tho phraso with whjch Horace Walpole pictured tho brilliant Mary Wollstonecraft, mother of the woman's suffrage movement In Eng land. "These dreadful, misguided women," said a British woman of high social rank, "who would destroy all ' r ' .' . ' ' "- A Militant In tho good In the world." "Tyrant,' and "monster" are favorite epithets flung at the prime minister, Mr. Ascjuith, whoso opposition to woman's suffrage has thUB far prevented parliamentary adoption, almost consideration, ot n woman's suffrago bill. When all words fall, the militant suffragists throw stones and set on fire buildings and tho British policemen (use clubs. Woman's Suffrage Ignored by Press! An odd feature ot It all Is that while tho woman's suffrage movement has been advancing In Great Britain in the last ten years, not by painful Inches but by rapid furlongs, tho Brit ish press, In tha main, has largely Ig nored il. Only when It got into the police courts, by tho deliberate and purposeful lawlessness of tho militant section of the suffragists, did tho Lon don dallies deign to notico the move ment to any considerable extent. Thero appeared to bo a conspiration of silence on tho part of the newspa pers. Explanations are various for this sllenco. "It wasn't news," said the editor of tho most widely circulat ed newspaper with n single excep tion In Great Britain. "If a few wom en hired a hall In a corner of London, mado speeches nnd passed resolutions, nobody wished to read about It In the newspapers next morning except them selves. Why should wo print It? Of course, whon another group of women sought to hum St. Paul's that becamo news to everybody and wo published It." Another explanation Ib that tho groat London dallies, with two or three notable exceptions, nro Conservative in politics. Tho majority, o! tho Con servative party aro opposed to tho ex tension of tho parliamentary franchise to women. Tho British nowspapers are organs ot comment and opinion ou their nowB pages as well as In their editorial columns, nnd publish only or chlelly thoso things which help or which they think will help thler par ticular party. By ignoring woman's mffrugo they thought they promoted sBBBBsBBm. 4 ; t j(' , ' . ii-- . ah - . r - t " s - f f . i. Hill A"1SH THE CASE tho Interests of tho Consorvntlvoypol icy. Tho Liberal Journals, In tho in terest of tho Llboral government, which, divided In sontlmcnt on the subject, ignores .or, at least, postpones its consideration, did tho samo. Tho Hydo Park demonstration, in which nt least 200,000 women took part, with Important addresses from somo of England's most distinguished women, received a scant half column In tho London newspapers tho next morning, or, rather, taking placo Saturday and thero being no Sunday nowspapers, It recolvcd tho scant half-column tho sec ond morning following. THo British political Journal and nearly all tho Journals in Groat Britain may bo thus described following their usual plan of giving large spaco only to what they indorse Ignored tho woman's BUffrago movemont. Progress of Movement Unrecorded. "No body of political controversial ists are so badly sorved by their own press as tho antl-suffraglsts," said Mrs. Mllllcent Garrott Fawcott, president of tho National Union of Women's Suf- frago Societies. "Tho anti-suffrage press appears to act on tho assump tion that If they say nothing about a political event It is th'o samo as if it had not happened. Therefore, while they glvo prominence to any circum stances which they imagine likely to bo Injurious to suffrage, they either say 'nothing about these facts which Indicate its growing force and volume or else record them In such a manner that they escapo tho, observation of tho general reader. The result is that only tho suffragists, who nro In con stant' communication with their com rades In various parts of tho world and also have their own papers, aio kept duly informed not only of what has happened but what is likely to happen. For tho ignorance of the nntl-suffrag-ists the anti-suffrage pnss of London is mainly responsible. Things aro what w j :, - ' V('rfr ,-. ; U ' ' ...v?V .ih. Jk 1 J K WVi Vs '? i x J.' ifei '" ' 3w Albert Hall. they aro and the consequences will bo what they will be, whether tho nows papers print 'them or not, ifnd to leave the controversialists on your own side In Ignorance of facts of capital impor tance is n strange way of showing po litical allegiance." II. A. White, tho editor of the London Dally Standard, Introduced a now departure In London journalism In this respect. Ho devoted a pago daily to a full statement of events and arguments bearing on all sides or tho suffrago and other wom en's questions. Militancy. Tho campaign of tho militant w'om en suffragists, however, receives largo notico in tho nowspapers. The Lou don Times, in this morning's issue publishes a list of tho principal Jiro losses bolloved to havo been caused by militant women suffragists. It occu pies a column and Is conspicuously displayed. The total Is about $760,000. Tho Times Is fair enough to say, how over, that the evidence Is not strong In all tho cases reported. But why militant suffragists, who seem to bo peculiar to Great Britain? To attract attention, says one; to force tho government to consider our de mands, says another; to gain money and notoriety for a few lenders, says a third. "It seems to bo a law of po litical evolution,", quoted a mllltaut suf fragist In her own behalf, "that no great advanco In human freedom can be gained except after the display of somo kind of violence. Wo aro onlv adopting tho mothods of men to ac complish our ends." Helped by Brutal Treatment. Militancy has boon mot, In many In stances, by brutality. Tho Cat-and-Mouso Act, which releases for a time from prison offenders who nro 111 or go on a hunger strlko nnd then per mits tholr rearrest, has been substi tuted for tho barbarity with which forcible feeding was carried on. The unnecessary severity with which aomo policemen donlt with somo zealous or fanatical women cauaod public oln- 4 I j VUV , Inn, which had boon almost unanimous In condemning militancy the revolu tionary rnthor than tho constitutional method of propaganda to chnngo for n tlmo, It not to actual approval, to a kind ot tacit Indorsement or indiffer ence. This bruUil sovarlty, shown In a numbor of casos, by tho police au thorities has also tended to unlto tho discordant elements that favor worn nn's suffrago into onq somewhat har monious wholo. On tho platform ot n largo hall In tho West end of London tho othor ovonlng woro In vocal har mony speakers representing all phases of tho movemont, from tho militant, who throw rocks, to tho lady who only wroto letters to tho nowspapers and for reasons ot domestic tranquillity wrote thont anonymously Severity had tho usual "effect or creating sym pathy for tliQ person pjmlshcd and less , opposition to tho causo. Recently tho severity has been lessoned and tho punishment has boon mado more near ly to fit tho offense Narrating what was done only a fow months ngo, an ar dent suffragist snld that mluor breach es of law, bucIi ns waving lings nnd making speeches In tho lobbies of tho houses of parliament, wero treated moro soverely than serious crime on tho part of men had often been. A sen tonco of throe months' Imprisonment as an ordinary offender wns passed In ono caso ngulnst n young girl who had done nothing except to decline to be bound over to keep tho peace, which sho was prepared to swear sho had not broken. Tho turning of tho hoso upon a suffrago prisoner In her cell on a midwinter night is another example. This has been, fortunntely for all con corned, changed for tho hotter by tho moro recent administration of tho much-rovlled Cnt-and-MoUBo Act. Militants Small In Number. Tho militant suffragists, first organ ized into ti society tan years apjo, are now divided Into two or more Inharmo nious groups. Tholr work Is largely associated In tho public mind with tho names ot the Pankhursts, mother and daughter. Tho militant suffragists constltuto but a handful ot tho udvo cates of tho franchiso for women. They get 90 por cont. of tho public at tention but they aro In number nnd Importance) scarcely onq per cent. The National union, which advocates con stitutional methods, includes or rep resents tho greater part of tho suf fragists. Thero aro scores of other women's organizations formed with the samo general purpose. The Na-1 tlonal British Woman's Totiipuiitucs union, tho National Union of Women Workers (tho largest wonton's union), tho Association ot University Women Teachers, tho Society of Registered Nurses, tho Women's Co-operative guild (the only organized body repre senting tho married working women) are somo of the numerous societies that favor 'woman's suffrage. Tho town councils of Liverpool, Manches ter, She'flleld, Birmingham, LecdB, Bradford, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Dublin, and Cork are among the 200 town councils which havo petitioned parlia ment to pass n woman's suffrago bill. The Dublin council authorized tho lord mayor and other officers to attend in their .robes of oftlco and proscnt tho Dublin potltibn in person at tho bar of the houso ot commons. Ireland for Woman's Suffrage. Ireland, with characteristic tempera ment, next to homo rule, has "given largest tlmo to discussion of woman's suffrage. Tho Irish Nationalists gen erally favor It and tho Ulster Orange men havo included In their so-called provisional government schemo tho franchiso for womon on the bnsls of register for local government pur poses. On tho contrary, it was an Irish preacher who, having described Jeze bel aB a typo of tho modern woman suffragist, said that sho painted her faco, tied her head and looked out ot tho window at Jehu, "nnd, would you believe It, tho hussy was nigh on six ty years old." The Fight In Parliament. Tho opposition ot Mr. Asqulth, the Liberal primo minister, desplto a ten tative promise given beforo ho wont Into ofllco, hns pi evented practical con sideration of any woman's suffrage bill In tho houso of comons which In cludes probably a majority supporting liio measure. Among thoso who favor woman's suffrago aro Sir Edward Grey, David Lloyd George, Ramsay McDonald, the Labor leader, Lord Hal dano, Arthur Bnlfour, Philip Snowdoa and WIHIam Redmond. Tho opposition , numbers such uistinguisuea statesmen ub Mr. Asqulth, Austen Chamberlain, Winston Churchill nnd F. E. Smith. Tho result ot tho next general clectlqn in 1914 will, in part, turn upon tho question, becauso woman's suffrago societies aro entering tho campaign pledging, as far as possible, overy can didate for parliament to favor an ade quate suffrago bill. Suffragists Sure to Win. Women havo had municipal suffrago In Great Britain since 1870 and tbpy havo voted for poor law guardians nnd school boards (where they still exist) since tho samo year. They wero mado ellglblo for town and county council momborship by an act of parliament passed in 1907. Othor civic liberty has been granted to women In tho Uni ted Kingdom. Tlio' parliamentary fran chlso Is now tho object of tho woman suffragists' endeavor, How soon this will, bo attained cannot bo said. Thut It cannot long bo delnycd is obvious, unless British public opinion, becauso ot foolish or fanatic acts of tho sup porters of tho movement, or for othor reason, radically changes. In Great Britain, uh In tho United States, though In different way, tho highest court Is tho court of public opinion, and Just pow tho apparent early decision of this court Is for tho trial of tho experiment of universal suffrago In Great Britain for womon as well ob for men for ench, ono voto, In tho making of tomorrow's world, (CopyrlKht. WI3. by Joocpli II, Bowles.) To Clean Plaster. To clean plaster, preparatory to re whitewashing or to palntjng, llrst ap ply n coat of starch. By tho tlmo you havo reached tho last bit of Bpaco tho first will bo nearly dry, and If you bo gin at once to wash it off with water, to which somo soda or keroseno has been addod, all smoke and grlmo will corao off with tho starch. This Is on tho Bnmo principles of stnrched fnbrlcs washing easier than unstarched the dirt comes out with the starch. Jjr WRIGLEYSi ' , ji I M soothes your throat! (AZ::: (j i u h """ u& X)tyu llP J After smoking A Vfiti Jsf$' fc coos your Lj - Jjjgp mouth makes "k fij jferv V ( refreshed. 'rh J JMH1J?jKSjmH v Heartburn and J C IHMbHBI. flatulence dis- y MSSSBsvSilHHk. appear. KmiiSmMBmS more by enjoy- fh VKH9HHk inS this goody Sthat improves U ffiKAWyour breath, f liwWtmMm mmmm$g32BW teetn, appetite. 11 jiHve iP" and digestion. j - rwywxw t Qrg Bfn ; Dishonest persons are SlUll yfWsf wrapping rank imitations to sgSSafeSsc JSSy II :sA3 look like the clean, pure, &TlLNiS jrtvvBr P y healthful WRIGLEY'S. These will sCir (C J) beofferedprincipallybystreetfakir8,peddlers B IV and candy departments of some. 5 and 10 cent ScJfiStStSttsr 2 stores. Refuse them.! Be SURE it's WRIGLEVS. SJSSX ('l BUY Each box Chew WONDERFUL GROWTH OF THE CANADIAN WEST The Cities of Western Canada Reflect the Growth of the Country. As ono passes' through Western Canada, taking tho City of Winnipeg as n starting point, and then keeping tab on tho various cities and towns that lino tho network of railways that cover tho provinces ot Maultoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, and cover ing tho oyoa ns tho gazo is bont on these It Is folt that thero must bo "something of a country" behind It, all. Thon gaze any direction you llko and tho snmo vlow is prcsonted. jlold nftor field of waving gmln, thousands and hundreds of thousands of thorn. Farm hands and laborers aro nt work converting tho virgin prairie with moro fields. Pasturo land In ovory di rection on which cattlo aro feeding, thriving and fattening on tho grnssos that aro rich In both milk and boot properties, but it Is unfortunate that more cattlo aro not seen. That, how ever, is correcting Itself. Horo wo havo in a lnrgo measure, tho ovldonco of the wealth that helps to build up tho cities-, and It should not bo forgot ten that tho cities thomselves havo as citizens, young men who havo como fron. other parts, and brought with thorn tho experience that has taught them to avoid tho mistakes of eastern and southorn cities. They also are Imbued with tho western spirit of en terprise, energy and push, and so Western Canada has Its cities. At a banquet recently given In Chicago, a numbor of prominent citizens of Win nlpog woro guests. Among tho speak ers was Mayor Deacon of Winnipeg, in spoaklng of tho remarkablo growth of that city, which In thirty years has risen from a population of 2,000 to ono of 200,000, ho spoko of It ob being the gateway of commorco and continued "Now, how great that tldo of com morco is you will have somo concep tion of whon I toll you that tho wheat alono grown in tho throe prairie prov inces this year is sufllciont to keep n steady stream of ono thousand bush els por, inlnuto continuously night and day going to the head of tlio lakes for three and ono-half months, and In ad dition to thnt tho oats nfcd barley would supply this stream for another four months, , "Tho vnluo of tho grain crop alonu grown in tho thrco prairie provinces would bo Biilllclont to build any ot our great transcontinental railroads and all tholr equipment, ovorythlng con nected with them, from ocean to ocean. "Now, If wo aro nblo to do this with only ton per cont. of our arablo land under cultivation what will our possibilities bo when 288,000,000 ot jK tCP IT BY THE of moat dealers for 85 contains twenty S cent packagee it after every acres ot tho best land that tho sun shines on Is brought undor tho plow? Do you not seo tho portent of a groat, vigorous, populous nation living undor thoso sunny skies north ot tho 40th parallel? And If with our present de velopment wo aro nblo to do as wo aro doing now, to purchnso a million dollars' worth of goods from you every day of tho year, what will our trado bo worthMvhon wo havo fully develop ed tho country? "Now, who Bhall assist us to dovol op this great empire that is thero? Shall It bo the alien racos of southern Europo or shall It bo men of our own blood nnd language? In the last thrco fiscal years no less than 358,000 Amor lean farmers havo como Into Western Canada, bringing with thorn goods nnd cash to tho value of $350,000,000. And I want to nay horo that no man who SLOANS LINIMENT relieves rheumatism quickly. It stimulates the circulation in stantly relieves stiffness and soreness of muscled and joints. Don't rub it penetrates. RhautJUUltm Nerar Raturaad "I am a tra-reHlne man and about ono year uo I was laM up wiUj rheumatism and could not walk. A friend recommended Sloai?s IJnlment nnd the mornlni alter I used It my kuep was nil O.K. und It has neyer bothered roo slnro, I always keen W WP,lm,,At,,n i"0 h""" nd carry 1 1 with mo on tho road." Hr. Thonuu & Uuntr, Watt rhlUuUlphla, id. Rheumatism Neuralgia Stlffasss Vanish "I suffered with an awful atlrrna In tor leei. That night I iraTe my lees a stood rubbinK with Sloan's IJnlment and belleTo me, next morning I could Jump out of bed. I have been supplied with a bottle, erer loco." Mr. A. Moon of Uaach$ir, IV. H. Sprained Anltla Relieved "I was III for a lone time wllhaflererelr sprained nnklo. I got a bottle of Sloan's Liniment and now I am able to bo about and can walk a treat deal. I write this becawe I think you deserro a lot of cred. It for putting such a fine Liniment on tho market and I shall always take time to recommend Dr. Sloan's Liniment." ". Uuulu IUiuh cf ISaUinwlt, ild. Sloan's Liniment gives a grateful sensation of comfort. Good for sprains, neuralgia, aoro throat and toothache. Use it now. At all Dealers, 25c, EOc anil $1.00 Send far Sloan's free book on horses. Address Dr. EARL St SLOAN, Inc. BOSTON, MASS. iJM.y.;M:n.yj llett Ceoch Bm; Tutu flood, Un la uin. olJ by DmreUli. BOX Pv cenia. sots foot on our shores 1b moro en tirely and heartily welcome than tha agriculturist from the south. "So long as theso conditions remain I consider that this Is tho best guar anty that tho Bword will never again bo drawn in nngor between the two great branches of the Anglo-Saxon race. Tho grain crops of Western Canada in 1913 'have well upheld tht reputation that country has for abun dant yields of all small grains. Ad vertisement. ' iSt The moro people glvo tho easier It Is to forglvo thorn. Putnam Fadeless Dyes color lu cold, water. Adv. Lots of peoplo could help, moro by not saying so much. J I HI Mm IWiM references. mm rwnu. meal Pfl st'S i H tt&!'5BSSsilsSSsljsllk lrffrillV"'BSSSSsiBBBTsBBBl IrUuJUslaBssssfJ LbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbVLSTA Isf nl7nrlsW7H . bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbBbV 1 sZ.atr7- lsssssV u?&tlaftyr v VV, N. U., SIOUX 4CITY, NO. 2-J914. l -.il 1 JJ 21 m i rfl C srl M i tfi ''I 41 i m fa . rlH rm '. in '?-' 1,1 I, .j ; j X "it ' ? M ;,; ssmm