Dakota County herald. (Dakota City, Neb.) 1891-1965, February 01, 1917, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    I
DAKOTA QPUNTY HERALDj DAKOTA OIg, NRBRA8KA.
NEWS OF NEBRASKA
Interesting Happenings Print
ed In Condensed Form,
TOLD IN A FEW WORDS.
News of All Kinds Gathered Frorr
Points In the State and So Reduced
In Size That It Will Appeal to Al!
Classes of Renders.
Richard Sclirodcr, who lived aiont
fllx miles from ColnmbiiB, was frozct
to doutli near IiIh home.
The flno farm homo of Gus Jonas, twe
miles Boutheastfof Fremont, was do
ttroyed by fire. I-oss, $11,000.
The Fifth Nebraska regiment anfi
rompany A, bIrihiI corps will loav
Llano Grando Feb. 3 for home.
The Farmers' Athletic club at Hog
ors was destroyed by Jlrc. The loaf
Ih $lO,noo, covered by Insurance.
A special election will bo held in
Weeping Water Fob. G to vote on war
r.mts for the extension of the watei
tjhtem.
Nebraska manufacturers of popanc
other soda fountain beverages are go
ing to use inadeln-Nebraslta beet an
jjar hereafter.
Kearnoy Is to have a commlSBlor
form of city government and will elocl
three men to fill this position at the
regular spring election.
William ID. Taylor, aged eighteen
of lleatrlco, apprentice Beamun, died
of spinal meningitis at tho Ureal
I-nkca naval station, Chicago.
Tho oldest man In Cuming county
Johann F. Wlchert, ninety-six yeais ol
ago, is dead at tho homo of his son
Frank, northeast of West Point.
Tho Hansen postofllce, ten mllei
north of Hastings, was robbed of $CC
in cash and $10 was taken from (lie
fltoro till of Postmaster Qauvreau.
Tho state board of charities and cor
rortlonu appointed B. M. Johnson
chaplain of tho, penitentiary, to sue
ceod J, W. Shahan as secretary of the
board.
A movement to abolish capital pun
lBbmenl Is to be launched by Airs. C
W. Hayes, chairman of tho legislative
eommltteo of tho Nebraska Federation
of Womon'B clubs.
Two hundred breeders of Poland
China Jiogs Kntlierod at Coleridge to
nttond the sale at tho Robert ScIiuh
farm. Fifty head were sold at an av-
erugo prlco of $GG.
A judgment for $10,000 was awarded
Will Keek of Fremont against Arthut
Slroupo by Judge liuttou in district
court. Keck sued Stroupo for allcnat
lug Ills wife's affections.
Tho oxocutlvo eommltteo of tho Ne
braska Luther league- met at Fromont,
St. Luko'B church, Bmersun, invited
tho convention to meet there In Juno
Tho Invitation was accopted.
Tho contract foe building the now
rodga county court houso waa let to
tho tlrm of Olson ,fc Johnson Co. ol
Missoula by tho board of 'supervisors.
Tho contract prko is $11'J,G75.
Paul 1). Truoblood, well known
throughout tho stale as past grand
cotisellor ot tho United Commercial
Travoloru, passod away quite budden
ly at his homo In Grand Island.
Tho Burlington railroad has agreed
to pay tho estato of tho lato John
Taylor, tho engineer who was killed In
a collision noar Yutan somo weeks ago,
$18,000 in settloment of his death.
A petition signed by fifty citizens ol
llrulo, protesting against the passage
of the bill compelling the teaching ot
the lifo of Abraham Lincoln in the
public fjihools ot Nebraskn, was son!
to Representative Ileal.
B. O. Mayfleld tooTc tho oath ai
member of tho iStato board of control,
filing a bond! for 25,ono for the unex
pired term ho will all of Judgo Konno
dy, and a llko bond for tho same
amount for tho long term.
in granting a dlvorco to Mrs". Sarali
E. K. Dillon of Omaha. Judge South'
orn of Kansas City ruled that a year's
realdonco in Missouri is not necessary
if tho ofTonso alleged as giound for
dlvorco was committed In tho stuto
Instead of being on his way to San
Francisco to join his roghnont in the
Philippines, Jesse Naneo, former mem
ber of tho Fifth Nebraska, is in the
Auburn hospital. He was found with
a shotgun wound In his loft sldn. Do
Hpondoncy over having to loitvo Is said
to havo boon tho enuso ot tho shooi'iug
W. T. Upton, B. F. Androws and L
fl Samples of tho Stato Medical in
otltute, Omaha, pleaded guilty before
Judgo Wbadiough to a chargo of using
the mntla to defraud and were fined
$350 each. Thoy had advertised a
"euro all' which, In their words, "adds
years to lifo and llfo to years."
Four of nine mon convicted recently
in fedorul court ut Omaha for uso ol
tho malls to defraud in the sale of lm
aginary wild horse, alleged to range
tho government reservation In Arizo
na, filed motions for a now trial. Thvy
nro J, Sidney Smith and C. A. Smith
Omaha; William IHnkloy. nrayton;
D. F. Uurwlnkle, Des Moines.
Tho stock judging team from the
University of Nobruska won tho an
nuul' collogo utudonts' stock Judging
contest at tho Denver live stock show
Tho total was 3,247 points. Tho Col
orailo agricultural college, tho only
other competitor, mado 3,171 points
E. II. Davis of tho Nebraska team
made tho high Individual score, 071
out of a possible 700.
I'lio York County Agricultural son.
cty has selected ono-hnlf block of
ground where a community building
will bo orocted to cost JSO.OCO.
Jack Hughes has sold his l.noi-ncro
farm an.l stock ranch on the Llttlo
Hluo rivor to F. K. McCullough of
Falrbury, tho consideration boing $10,
000.
A cow boldiiglng to J 3. Norrren,
near Ong, gavo birth to twins u ye.tr
ago, uud to twlim again a few laja
ago, making her tho mother of four
heifer calves within one year.
Tho poatofuco at Cullinan, Arthur
county, has been discontinued, mall to
Valloy llange. Civil service examina
tion will be held on Feb. 24 for post
mnsters nt Etna and White Clay.
C. C. Mlckoy or Omaha and his com
panion, Willis Chase, were slightly in
jured when an automobile, driven by
Mickey, was struck by a freight train
near Hprlngaeld. Tho machine was
demolished.
A now creamery and cold storage
building, costing more than $200,000
with a working capacity of over 13,
000,000 pounds of butter per year, will
bo erected by KIrschbraun & Sons at
Omaha.
Clarence A. Maloney of Pcndor, who
was appointed to Annapolis l;y Sen
nlor Norrls, has resigned from tho
academy and gone homo with Ills fath
er. Maloney suffered a nervous break
down nB tho reslut of ovcrstudy.
Ilishop lx)enegren, special represent
ative ot King GtiBtav and tho 5.000.000
Lutherans in Sweden to the Luther
ana of America, will visit Omaha, the
farthest point west on his trip, in
Juno nnd speak at a mass meeting
Juno G at tho Auditorium.
The individuals expecting to get a
divorce and marry again will have to
hurry, if a bill introduced by Heed of
Hamilton becomes a law. Under the
present law a person may romarry
after a period of six months has
passed, but under tho lteed bill thoy
will havo to watt two( years.
There la no law calling for check
ing up tho accounts and business of
county commissioners nnd county su
pervisors, and for tho purpose of cor
roding this matter a bill was intro
duced in tho houso by Cronin, Ollls
and AnderBon of Phelps which will
make theso offices subjoct to cheklng
up by tho usual ollllal.
William Nleinoyor, a Burlington
freight brnkoman living In Wymorc,
wna run over by a freight train In tho
yardB at Creto and died soon after,
He leaves a wife and four children,
Ho Ib thought to havo been making a
coupling when he slipped on tho Ico,
falling under the ear, which passed
ovor him, severing one leg nt tho hip.
If Nebraska, as a stato, docs not ap
propriate a road-building fund in order'
to mako tho federal good roads fund
avallablo in this state, business men
and farmers In Douglas county arc
drafting a bill to provide a means
whereby tho county may voto bonds
nnd tako advantage or this federal
monoy for development within tho
county.
Fed Inmbs, $14.35 per cwt. On the
Omaha market this prlco was paid for
two shipments of fed lambs rrom the
western part of Nebraska. Ono bunch
of filG was Bent in by A. F. Elliott or
Mlnataro, nnd averaged Boventy-four
pounds ovor tho scales. Tho other
bunch enmo from Bond & Scott of
Wood Klver nnd nveraged seventy-one
pounds. This brings tho prlco per head
at about $11, a pretty fair tlgure for
a lamb.
Three basket ball accidents oc
curred nt tho Omaha Young Men's
Christian nsRodatlon. Nowton Wood
ward, senior of thoOmnha high school,
had his noso broken In n practice
contest. Jonn Calvert of tho Benson
Methodists broko his right arm wlitle
playing right rorwnrd against the First
Christians. Calveit foil with his arm
under him. Paul McKltrlck, right for
ward Tor tho Oklahoma Kangora, had
his noso ro-brolcen when ho bumped
Into a Brandols plnyor.
Tho Nebraska potash Industry that
dovolopcd last rail In tho vicinity ol
Antloch, in tho Bouthorn portion ol
Sheridan county, has spread over into
Garden county to tho south, and in
the lake conutry north or Oshkosh sov
eral stills nro bolng erected closo to
tho Bhallow lakes. Around Antloch
more than 200 men aro given employ
mont at tho pumping plants and about
tho stills. Tho prediction Is mado by
railroad men that tho potash Holds ol
Garden county will prove richer and
moro productive than thoso to the
north.
Whllo crossing tho Missouri river
en route to their home at Phelps City
Mo , rrom a dance, thoy had attended
at Brownvlllo. Neb.. Albert Khuber
ling and his sister, Miss Emma, nur
rowly escaped drowning when the
automobile In which they wote Udlnj:
plunged Into an airhole near the No
braeka sldo and not Tar rrom Brown
vllle In tho car with tho Klmberl'ngt
nnd In tho roar soat wore Mr. and Mrs
Gould Smith and tho Misses Allto Ad
nms nnd Helen Mayes. They were
resetted by tho occupants or anothei
car ahead of them.
President Iloper of tho Omaha, Lin
coin and Denvor highway will call a
meeting or tho executive board or tin
association to consider a change In the
iiamo ot tho highway to the "Buffalc
Bill trail." It la proposed a bill shall
bo Introduced in the Nobruskn logls
laturo providing for an appropriation
of $25,000 to provido jnarkers for the
trail. Tills appropriation shall take
tho placo of tho bill providing $2r..00f
of Nebraska funds to build iv fTrt.OiK
monument, with tho stntos of Color
ndo and Wyoming and tho city ol
Denvor, on liookout mountain. As nr
lnducomont to Colorado to cooporato
it la proposed the trail shall fo'lovs
tho monument to Lookout mountain.
SAUC
I
TION
f&
i
I
I
I
1
1
I
I
I
1
1
I
I
M
I
"Hi
Having decided to go to Montana, I will sell at Public Audion all my Personal
Property, to the highest bidder, on the Frank Lusear farm 2A miles southwest
of HUBBARD, Neb., 7 miles northwest of Homer, and 8 miles northeast
of Emerson, Nebr., on
Wednesday, EebVy,
,
Ma QJ? JRb W
'-M i mi wws ii mii mi i
Sale Begins at 12:30 Sharp. Free Lunch at Noon
V mmm
6 Head of Horses
1 Bay Mare in foal, 11 years old, wt. 1500; 1 span of Geldings, 6 and
10 years old, wt. 2600; 1 Bay Gelding, 4 years old, wt. 1200; 1 Arabian
Gelding, 2 years old, wt. 1100; 1 Yearling Colt, a good one.
1 Cow giving milk. 1 Heifer f :
3
-. -1 .M. MM
4 i.
oS
3 Head, of Ged' O-
12 head of Brood Sows, 51 head of Shoafcs, 1 Duro
ooar
p a v m
M.
nl Sk r n
O
1
"e &M. A XLJK. XW? A
2 Lumber Wagons, 1 Hay Rack and Trucks, one 16 inch Walking Plow, 1 Buggy, one 18 inch Moline
Riding Plow, 1 Moline Corn Planter, 130 rods of Wire, 1 other Corn Planter, 1 Moline Cultivator, 1 Seed
er, 1 McCormick Rake, 1 McCormick Binder, 1 Standard Mower good as new, 1 Seed Corn Dryer, 2 Sets
of good Work Haf ness, 1 set of Hames and Tugs.
Some Millet and Alfalfa Hay 300 bushels of-Oats
Some Corn and Other Articles too Numerous to Mention
Terms:
10 months time
under $10 cash.
will be ' given on
No property to be
sums over $10, bearing 10 interest,
removed from place until settled for.
All
sums
M
IKKEL MIKKEL
Col. E. F. Rasmussen, Auct.
H ingerford, Knudsen & Way, Assistants.
SEN, Owner
J. R. Waters,
Clerk
rfd
I
1
I
m
I
1
i
1
i
I
I
1
i
I
l
OTC??Z7Z323!raXaKC5CTC2CKCryKCK
NVSNSXi
Farm Notes.
Issued by lite University of Nebraska
College of Agriculture.
KECOnD-IlUKAKING ATTKNDANCK AT
WINTER MKETINGS
This year's attendance at Organ
ized Agriculture meetings at Lincoln
January 15 to 19, was by far the
largest in the history of tho event.
The combined attendance at all sess
ions was estimated at 16,000, as com
pared with 0,000 last year.
The sessions of agricultural meet
ings which make up Organized Agri
culture attracted what was probably
tho largest gathering of farmers for
educational purposes ever held in
the United States. Herbert Quick,
member of the federal farm loan
board, who explained the workings
of the new rural credits act to 1500
farmers at St. Paul's church Friday
afternoon, declared that this audi
ence was the 'argest he ever ad
dressed on this subject. Thischurch
the second largest audience room in
the city and tho largest one avail
able at the time, was secured be
cause the largest speaking hall at
the university farm was entirely in
adequate. Tho need of a new auditorium
with suHicient seating capacity to
care for crowds of farmers who at
tend events of this character was
urged on every hand. Several meet
ings passed resolutions urging the
state legislature to make some pro
vision for a new auditorium.
Some meetings were so crowded
thabt'ven standing room in corridors
was at a premium. Some persons
who eahie late Wednesday and
Thursday went from meeting to
meeting but were unable to find
standing room at any of them.
l'KKPAUKDNESS AUA1NST OAT SMUT
Whether or not preparedness in a
military way isjadvisable, prepared
ness against oat smut is a paying
proposition. Oat smut destroys an
nually on tho average more than 5
per cent of the Nebraska oat crop, is
tho word that comes from tho agri
cultural botany department of the
university college of agriculture.
Now is the best time to become
acquainted with the formalin treat
ment and to lay plans for "spring
drive" against this common enemy
rather than wait until the rush of
planting is on. The department of
agricultural botany will be glad to
furnish complete information as to
the smut treatment problem.
FARM INVENTORY
A circular giving' an outline for
the farm inventory and directions
for its use has been prepared by the
agricultural extension service of the
University of Nebraska, Lincoln.
Blank forms along with directions
for their use are included..
This outline can be used for four
years and may be had uppn applica
tion to the extension service. For
the time required in its making, the
the farm inventory is the most val
uable record a farmer can make. It
should be rnnde bofore March 1.
LENGTHENING HEN'S WORKING DAY
To lengthen the day during the
the winter, electric lights aro used
in the poultry house's at the univer
sity farm, Lincoln.
It has been found a paying invest
ment to get the birds up early and
give them the benefit of a sum
mer day's light during the winter,
according to the poultry depart
ment of the state university. The
lights are thrown on automatically
at 5:00 a. m. and turned off at 7:00
p. m.
WINNINGS AT THE NATIONAL WESTERN
The University of Nebraska stock
judging team and university stock
made almost a clean sweep of prizes
at the National Western Live Stock
show which just closed at Denver.
Tho team won first place and $200
in cash prizes besides four silver
trophies. The stock took $400 in
cash, and one silver trophy offered
as a special prize.
The five men on the judging team
took individual honors in the con
test as foilows: 1st place, 2nd, 5th,
Gth and 8th, in competition with 30
contestants. Colorado Agricultural
College won 3nd place; the Curtis
School of Agriculture, Nebraska,
3rd; and the Colorado School of Ag
riculture, fourth.
Thn Fni US AT HOME CXPECT YOU
1 110 rULtd TO TELL 'EM ALL ABOUT
"OMAHA'S FUN CSrfjjTlfd. VISIT
CENTRE," THE J1&M it
Exhilarating Burlesque; Vaudeville
ttipAltlriFlllid tltt Trill Clfli, Funny Clooi, Gpiu
Equlpts. Billlliat Scull Cailrsantat
LADIES' DIME MATINEE EVERY WEEKDAY
Evorybody Coot; Aih Anybody
'ItalTi THE IICOW 110 Itir SHOOT MIT OF CMIC1C0
THE BIG EVENT HAS HAPPENED!
Free 640-Acre Wyoming Homesteads
The long-wauied (MO-acre Homestead Act is now a law. It
permits application for these homesteads in the grass-covered
livestock area of Central Northeast Wyoming you can reach
this area either over the Burlington's nisin line via Douglas for
Converse County or via Upton, Moorcroft, Gillette or Clearmont
for Northeast Wyoming. Inquire early ahd go early.
This area contains large bodies of excellent grazing lands
from fifteen to fifty miles from the railroad Write me jor cir
cular of information and init ructions, which will tell you exactly
what to do without loss of time to apply for a stock-raising and
dairy homestead. You can secure one of these valuable mile
square homesteads in a region established and well known as the
psrmanent livestock area of Wyoming.
If' is my judgment that practically all of the desirable graz
ing and agriculturnl landa, will be applied for in 1917. We do
not advertise these lands for the purpose of f creating passenger
travel. We consider it our duty to advise you of this opportu
nity and to tell you that it is the lastt chance- you will have.
l,
IS.-1L-. : -
gSi!miiJmiiSmmmZtm!mSt Fwmii bhiim muiw iniMMMna MkaBBMMMMaaahwawww
S. B. HOWARD, Immigration
C. B. & Q. R. K.
1001 Fitrimm Strt-ot. OmhIih, Ni-Ii
Agt.
Abstracts of Title
A S 10,000 Surety Bond Guarantees the accuracy
of every Abstract I make.
. J. EIMES.S, Bonded Abstractor.
Successor to the DAKOTA COUNTY ABSTRACT CO.
ORSV
Fields & Slaughter Co.
DKALUKS IN
Grain, Feed, Flour, Hay and Coal
FRED PARKER, Manager
Phone No. 4 Dnkotu City, Nobr.
w
V
y
tear
Vi