Dakota County herald. (Dakota City, Neb.) 1891-1965, September 21, 1916, Image 1

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    SSiETT
y
ota County Herald.
4
State Historical Society
Motto: All The News When It Is News.
Vol. 2r.
DAKOTA CITY, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1010.
NO. 4.
i
Items of Interest
Gleaned from I
Our Exchanges!
Newcastle Times: Mrs. Fred Cor
nell and children returned home last
Sunday from South Sioux City.
Allen News: Webster Minter a
former resident here but now livit.v
at Garretson. N. D., is here calling
on relatives and old friends.
Pender Republic: Mrs. W. W.
Pounds returned Monday from Pon
ca where she spent several days vis
iting her son Free. Mrs. Harry
Pounds, who had been visiting at
Hubbard a month, returned with
her.
Ponca Journal: Jas. Sutherland,
of Jackson.-agent for the Maxwell
Kdv, was in Ponca Monday. Mr.
Sutherland says he has sold a num
ber of cars this season and he just
recently sold one to John O'Neill of
Ponca, and one to Tom Jones of
Willis.
Emerson Enterprise: Win. Swee
ney and Win, Dougherty drove to
Vista Wednesday to be at the bed
side of Mr. Dougherty's sister, Mrs.
John Heenan, who is very sick
II. A. McCormick, editor of the
Wynot Tribune, was in town Mon
, day for a short visit. He was ac
companying his daughter to Wayne,
where she will attend the Normal.
Wakefield Republican: C. E.
Priest, a brother of Mrs. J. R.
Feauto, was severely injured in an
automobile accident near Sioux City
last Thursday morning. The driver
and another man in the car were so
badly hurt that doubt is expressed
as to their recovery. Mr. Priest
was able to be removed from the
hospital where he was taken to his
home.
Winnebago Journal: Miss Georgia
Mansfield, of Homer, was in town
Monday Wm. Best, of Dakota1
City, was in town on business the
first of the week . . .George Fisher,
of South Simix Cj', is here doing
electrical work afc "the mission and
around town Dr. Johnson was
called to the north near the old Clapp
place where a Ford car was turned
over when the driver attempted to
pass another car. Both accupants
were bruised, the lady having her
arm fractured very badly.
Ponca Advocate: Mrs. John Os
born has rented her residence prop
erty and will go to South Sioux City
to live with her daughter, Mrs. Omer
Hash. The H. B. Stutervant family
will occupy her residence At
high noon Tuesday, September 12th,
Mr. George Bartels, formerly of
Hubbard, but now of Salem, and
Miss Frieda Wendte, of near New
castle, were united in marriage at
the homo of the bride's parents, Mr.
sissEsssra
G.
I
F. Hughes
& Co.
Lumber, Building Ma-
iterial, Hardware, Coal
K3
To E&e People f
Dakota City Vicmlty j
WE have succeeded Mr. Fred Lynch in the fifi
Hardware and Lumber business in Dakota M
City, and are here to stay. Our aim will be &d
to treat everyone right, and alike, and will guaran- Ngj
tee satisfaction on all sales and work done at our M
place of business. We will carry a full line of $2
Lumber, Building Material, Hardware, Coal, Paints, (
Plumbing Material, Greases and Oils. We have a M
well equipped shop where wc will do all kinds of 0
Plumbing, Tin Work, Furnace and Stove Repairs. rcjj
Also Concrete Work of all Kinds. Wi
Come in and see us fcd
Let's Get Acquainted FH
1
I
m
H H. R.
GREER, Mgr.
BismssmmB
and Mrs. II. Wendte, Rev. L. Frank,
of the German Lutheran church,
officiating. The attendants were
Miss Mable Bartels and Mr. Otto
Wendte.
Wayne Democrat: Miss Florence
Welch returned home from Crystal
lake Monday evening where she had
been the past few days visiting at
I
9
m
&i
fcK
Dakota City, Nebr. ($
(0NL AMERICANS
11! -f j r Man
CARTER. In Nev York Evening Sun
"I've had enough of it"
the W. Nangle cottage Samuel
B. Short, who lived at Wayne for
twenty years prior to four years ago
when he moved to South Sioux City,
died at that place Wednesday, Sep
tember G, 1916, of cancer which had
been slowly taking his life for some
time. He was born in Henderson
county, Illinois, January 15, 18G2,
being 54 'years, 8 months and 22 days
of age, leaving a wife, one son, four
brothers'and five sisters besides his
aged father to mourn his death.
The funeral services and burial was
at South Siaux City Friday, and his
body was carried to its last resting
place by his four brothers and two ,
brothers-in-law. Many Wayne
friends will join in extending sym
pathy to the bereaved family.
Sioux City Journal, 19: The fu
neral of John Davidson Wav, 21
years old, of Waterbury, Neb.,
whose death occurred Sunday in a
local hospital following an operation
for appendicitis, will be held today
at Springbank, Neb. Burial will be
in East View cemetery. The body
was sent yesterday to Springbank.
Died, in South Sioux City, Neb.,
September 18, 1916, Mrs. Katie May
Nichols, 30 years old, of Laurel,
Neb., of peritonitis. Mrs. Nichols
was visiting relatives in South Sioux
City when she became ill. She is
survived by her husband and a
brother, Joseph Egger, both of
Laurel, Neb. The body will be sent
from the Samuels Bros, undertaking
establishment to Laurel this morn
ing. Funeral services will be held
tomorrow.... For an hour last night
the abandoned trestle of the Bur
lington railroad in South Sioux City,
Neb., burned unchecked. It was 11
o'clock when the first flames were
observed. At midnight the South
Sioux City fire department reached
the structure. The Sioux City fire
department was notified that the
south end of the bridge was burn
ing, and several trucks answered.
When it was found that the fire was
in Nebraska the firemen turned
back to their stations. The old tres-
tln whlnh ?a nVinllt lHn fnnt in lorwrfli
.w, i.... .j ....rw.. .-iuy Al.f llllf,bll,
is composed of heavy timbers, and
the flames last night made slow pro
gress. Only a small section was
charred after an hour. There was a
large crowd of spectators, but no
person volunteered to assist in car
rying water to the burning struc
ture. The trestle is considered a
detriment to the beauty of the town,
Sioux City Journal, 17: William
L. Reilly. 28 years old. son of M. T.
Reilly, acting superintendent of the
Dakota county, Neb., poor farm,
who Thursday was shot in the left
leg by an inmate, John Payson, 68
years old, died late yesterday after
noon in St. Joseph's hospital, where
he was brought for treatment fol
lowing the episode. The charge was
fired from a shotgun and created an
ugly wound. It was three inches
above the knee, about four inches in
length and to the bone. The wound
bled profusely. Reilly was weaken
ed when placed in the hospital.
Physicians yesterday decided that
amputation would bo necessary to
save the young man's life. Not
enough strength remained for the
wound to heal and knit with the
lower portion of the limb. Death
came several hours after the opera
tion. Accounts of the Bhooting of
Reilly are conflicting. The inmate
is exonerated by some and blamed
by others. One version of the af
fair is that the men quarreled and
that Reilly was the aggressor and
threatened Payson, and that the
latter shot only in self defense.
Another story of the shooting is that
Payson stepped to the window of his
room and at a distance of ten feet
deliberately and apparently without
provocation, fired the charge into
Reilly's limb. Neither of these
stories have been confirmed, and
Sheriff George Cain, of Dakota City,
yesterday said that he had been un
able to find witnesses of the affair.
Soon after the shooting Deputy
Sheriff John Hileman arrested Pay-
son and he is in the county jail af.
Dakota Uity. lie probably .will be
tried for murder. Supt. Reilly was
not at the farm when the shooting
occurred, lie had lett his son in
charge.
Sioux City Journal, 18th: John
T. Ash ford, of Winnebago, Neb.,
was in Sioux City yesterday . . . .The
body of William L. Reilly. who early
Saturday morning died in a hospital
of a gunshot wound, was sent yes
terday morning to the home at Da
kota City, Neb. The body later will
be sent to Jackson, Neb., for burial.
Died, in Sioux City, la., Septem
ber 17; 1916. John Davidson Way, 21
years old, of Waterbury, Neb., in a
hospital, after an operation for ap
peddicitis. Mr. Way came here two
weeks ago and submitted to an opera
tion, and his condition at that time
vvna oyf rnmnlu orlUnnl TTo livwl
WW ..... J ..., w ...V.
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. J.
way, on a inrm near wateruury.
The body will be shipped to Water
bury at 9 o, clock this morning from
the Westcott undertaking establish
ment. Tiie tunernl will be Held
Tuesday at Springbank, Neb. Bu
rial will bo in East View cemetery.
....Three persons were seriously
hurt last evening at 6:30 o'clock
three miles west of Dakota Citv.
Neb., when n motor car in which
they were riding overturned. The
iniurcd nursons wore Mr. nnd Mrs.
John Manning and daughter, Mrs.
blla Knowlton, all of South Sioux
City, Neb. Mrs. Manning and
daughter suffered broken ribs and
other bruises. Mr. Manning's left
leg was badly cut. The party had
been at Homer, Neb., and were re
turning to South Sioux City. At a
point west of Dakota City where
there is a ditch about three feet deep
along both sides of the road they
met a motor car going in the oppo
site direction. Mrs. Knowlton, who
was driving, said the other car
ci'ov.'.. d her close to the ditch.
Wli- he machine had passed her
fatux Jiouted a warning from the
rear seat and Mrs. Knowlton, in at
tempting to avoid the ditch, swung
l.. . l...1. ful 11. 1 A I.
iiui tui uiu:k. into iiiu roim ioo quiCK
ly and it overturned. The other enr
continued on its way. The occu
pants were thrown clear of the ma
chine, but none was able to go for
assistance. Frank Buckwalter, of
Sioux City, discovered the motor
victims and summoned a uhvsician
from Dakota City. An ambulance
from the Westcott undertaking es
tablishment was called to convey the
injured persons to their home in
South SioUJT CAtv. Thn mntnr rnr
was demolished. A close examina
tion of the injuries was made after
the victims arrived at their home in
South Sioux Citv hv Dr C. H Mnv.
well, of Dakota City, and he said
eacn would recover. The women,
in addition to their broken ribs, suf
fered bruises and shock. Mr. Man
ning suffered cuts and bruises. The
small daughter of George Boucher,
cashier of the South Sioux City bank,
also was in the car, but was unhurt.
Sioux City Journal, 15th: Mrs.
Phillip Gregory. 3824 Orleans avenue.
entertained at dinner Wednesday
evening- comDlimentarv to Mrs. Ja
cob Learner and Mrs. Emery Lea
rner, oi uaKota Uity, web., and Mrs,
R. C. Helfenstein and daughter Do
rothy, of Urbana, 111 The pilot
on tne engine ot the Norjolk-Sioux
City afternoon train was broken off
when the train hit a gasoline section
car between Emerson nnd Nacora
yesterday afternoon. The driver of
the car "evacuated" it before the
collision. The train was delayed
nearly forty minutes removing the
wreckage of the pilot from under
the front of the engine. The car
was demolished Two of three
speeders whose names were called in
police court yesterday failed to re
spond and bench warrants were is
sued for their rearrest. They are
H. L. Harding. 512 Twelfth Btreet.
arrested at Twenty-second and Pierce
streets and James Enright, nabbed
Sixteenth and Pierce streets. Rob-
Dakota City
Grocery
' ii hi i . . .,.,,-
Specials for Saturday
3 No. 2 Lamp Chimneys 25c
2 tfAb Cans Rumford Baking Powder. ... 25c
2 one-lb Cans Pink Salmon 25c
G Cans Oil Sardines ....25c
3 Bars Trilby Soap 25c
1 Do.. Lemons 40c
2 pkgs Kellogg "s Corn Flakes 25c
7 Bars Lin-O-White Soap 25c
HigHcst Price Paid for
COUNTRY PRODUCE
W. L. ROSS
Dakota City, Nebraska
brt McCoy, 3315 Jackson street, also
charged with speeding, forfeited a
cash bond. Bert Bostelle, of Jack
son, Neb., accused of operating a
car the license of which could not be
seen fifty feet from the rear of the
machine, also forfeited a cash bond.
... .A plot to knock out or kill John
Hileman, deputy county sheriff of
Dakota county, Neb., was proposed
by C. D. Martin, of South Sioux
City, to Otto Rupp, another prisoner
in the jail charged with a statutory
offense against an 8-year-old girl,
according to Rupp's story to the Da
kota county authorities. Kupp says
he refused to participate in the plan,
which is alleged also to have involved
a robbery. Martin managed to es
cape by other means Sunday night.
He had previously escaped from the
Woodbury county jail here. Martin
is wanted in Sioux City on a grand
larceny charge growing out of the
theft of some bicycles. . . .George E.
McElheny, alias Elmer Williams, 29
years old, a carponter of South Sioux
City, and Charles E. Davis, 515 Per
ry street, were arrested by Detec
tives G. A. Danielson and James
Britton yesterday and charged with
larceny from the person in connec
tion with the robbery of E. Wash
bnrn, of Rising City, Neb., on the
Missouri river front near the foot of
Pearl street Sunday night, Wash
burn lost $240. Ho said he went to
the river bank to get a drink After
Washburn had positively identified
McElheny and Davis in the office of
Chief of Detectives Richard, Davis
confessed the robbery. He admit
ted he and McElheny had, gone
through the pockets of the "Nebras
kan. McElheny partly corroborated
the story of Davis. He confessed
that Davis had committed the rob
bery and said he himself hastened to
get out of the way when he saw a
crime was being perpetrated. Mc
Elheny's story caused Davis to smile.
The smile was contagious and spread
to the faces of the detectives who
were questioning McElheny. Mc
Elheney has been arrested before
and is well known to the police, offi
cers said. McElheney was arrested
at Fifth and Pearl streets. Davis
was nabbed later at Fifth and
Water streets.
M. E. Church hutes.
At the Besstou of the annual con
ference Bishop Stunts listened to the
urintifvq nf thn mrnnhara nf this church
and returned the pastor to serve for
a third year. Thanks are due Kev.
E. E. Hosman for insisting from the
beginning that this be done.
AntimnjiMncr this result to some
ovfnnf thn nnator has already nre-
pared his program for the year.
ThiB program will be outlined in a
pastoral letter.
The services on Sunday should be
nHnrwlprl hv everv member. The
keynote for the year will be sounded,
and it is very much to our advantage
to begin not only well, but also to
gether. True Blues will meet on Friday
at 7:30.
Vnrinns committees will meet this
week at the call of the pastor.
P. J. Aucock, Pastor.
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