Dakota County herald. (Dakota City, Neb.) 1891-1965, March 28, 1918, Image 8

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

    DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD, DAKOTA CITY, NEBRASKA.
f?4vLfy ix
iMrtL
l1rl,lfnTw Will
t2ie
$yCharles.Holman
'3H vvh - (In the Coimtiy Gentleman.)
If ""a lL
Wvm
Vm
' FEDERAL INCOME
G 3H
I OUnuNO this fnrnior'B
share of the wheat dol
lar Is one of the war
tlino jobs Uncle Sam lmH
dono since food control
became tiossllilo. Affor
I nfi "ve months of grnp-
. tUw 1'llllK Willi UIU 1HUUICI1I,
Uncle Sam Is now trans
latliiB Into tho pockets, of both produc
ers nnd consumers beneflls derived by
the Nation, Ho lias shut off specula
tion, produced a free market and
movement of all grades of wheat, cut
expenses and Induced n normal How of
wheat In natural directions, and of
fected a thousand other economies.
The Food Administration Grain Cor
poration, which supervises the sale, or
Itself buys every bushel of wheat pro
duced In the Nation In Its progress
from country elevator to foreign buy
ers or domestic consumers, mnrks a
new step toward national elllclency.
How In four short months It has been
done Is told In tho following episodes
wherein two bushels of wheat traveled
to market.
One lino fnll afternoon, Col. Illll
Jenkins, who farms somewhero In Mis
'.ourl, londed his wheat Into a wagon
nnd drovo along tho black road that
led across the pralrlo to town. When
lie reached the co-operative elevator
of which ho was a stockholder, ho
pulled up on the scales, .checked his
gross weights carefully, and began to
unlond. Tho manager came out and
asked :
"WJien you wnnt to sell this wheat?"
"I iliiniio," lio nnswored. "Ono
time's about ns good as another
these days. 'T won't weigh any more
later," ho added, with n dry smile.
"Wheat shrinks a lot," admitted tho
manager. "I bear the Government
wants as much wheat as It can get
Just now understand tho Allies do
eat n terrlblo lot of It since tho wnr."
"What'" wheat to-day?" asked Col.
Jenkins, getting Interested.
"Well, let mo rco," parleyed tho
manngcr. "I guess this wheat'd bo a
good No. 2 tmder tho now grades."
"Grades? What about grades? That
Food Administration seems to mix Into
mighty nigh everything from rabbits
to nxlo grease."
"Hold on, Colonel," said tho eleva
tor man, good-naturedly. "Tho Food
Administration Is not to blame. Con
gress passed tho act and told tho De
partment of Agrlculturo to llx tho
grades. They becamo effective last
July. T sent out a letter on It."
"Well, I guess you better sell for
the best you can," said the farmer.
"I am needed at home." And ho drove
nwny.
A New Order In tho Grain World.
ONVKnSUTIONS of this
kind might have taken
lllllf.fk 111 llllnnuf .....
k 1E2M town lu tho great innln
02 bolt of tho Nation lift
"h er August 10; for revo
lution lu grain market
ing was taking place. Undo Sam
had started on this remarkable ex
periment; ho was going to sea wheth
er wheat could bo marketed minus
rnko-otTs to tho speculators. This
necessitated completo control by the
Government of stonigo facilities, trans
portation and distributive agencies,
and the markotlng machinery for
wheat and rye.
Everybody was troubled; most of
all, tho olllclnls of tho Food Adminis
tration Grain Corporation who had
undertaken, without salary, and at tho
sncrltlco of their pors-onnl connection
With tho grain trade, to whip into
shapo tho forces that would drlvo for
ward tho big business machlno for
marketing American wheat. A single
control; and a ?50,000,000 nonprollt
tnaklng corporation to do the work.
This work Is a necessary arm of tho
Food Administration, allowing tho
Government to do business quickly
and without red tape. Its stock Is hold
In trust by tho President of tho Unit
ed States. For tho time of the wnr It
will supervise tho rate or purchase
tho part commercially available of tho
000,000,000 bushels of wheat and tho
00,000,000 surplus of ryo grown lu
America in 1017. Its Job Is to llml ti
market for every bushel, lrrospectlvo
of class nnd grade. Under its patron
age, wheat screenings are moving Just
as easily as No. 1 Northern. It must
also work out satisfactorily tho local
prices for wheat at each of almost
20,000 country elevator points, adjust
thousands of complaints, organize tho
gathcrlug and analysis of date, Inspect
concerns reported as deallng'iinfairly,
solve vexatious disagreements among
tho trade, nnd deal effectively wltn tho
allies' purchasing agent nnd tho neu
trals who may desire to purchase.
In tho early days, following tho de
termination of prices for 1017 wheat
by tho President's Fair Price Commis
sion, confusion existed in every part of
tho wheat-producing regions. This was
ilntenslfleil by tho inauguration of the
'new grain grades, ns promulgated by
tho Department of Agrlculturo, which
took plnco about the snmo lime, and
led lo diverse romplnlnta and u fool
lug among farmers that tho Grain Cor- ,
porntlon nt tho Food Administration
was responsible for both tho prlco ns
determined and stricter obsorvanco of
grain grades. But tho corporation was
responsible for neither act It Is pure.
Ik
ly an administrative arm of the Gov
ernment formed to buy oraln or super
vise its sale at the prices determined
by tho commission, and It must do lis
work on the basis of the new grades.
Hut to return to our farmer and his
expectations of price.
Introducing Two Bushels of Wheat.
Lying side by side In his wagon had,
been 'i buahels of wheat that fate had
marked for strangely different ends.
They were very much alike, those
bushels of wheat, nnd lo look at them
you would not have suspected the
strange and wonderful ndventures In
Ntore for them. Yet fine wns destined
to travel abroad for consumption In
France; the other to find its way into
Georgia, where it was milled and Its
Hour dually reached n New York
baker on tho East Side. Hut In tho
sum f the travels made by the two,
as we shall follow them, will bo un
folded the international panorama of
wheat marketing In time of war.
Finding a Price at a Country Point.
High war costs of production gave
our Missouri farmer much concorn as
to ids returns and accounted for his
depression over tho prospects of his
wheat "grading down"; for that meant
a reduction of il cents per bushel un
der tho No. 1 grade. Hut It graded
No. Z
Tho elevator would nlso deduct an
additional 5 cenls a bushel to cover the
llxed charge made In this locality for
handling and selling. Tho H-cent
charge Included the commission of 1
dent per bushel customary In 1017
among commission men for selling tho
wheat to domestic millers or forelga
buyers. i
Tho elevator man wns none too sure
as to how to get at tho price which
this wheat should bring. He knew
considerably more about human nature
than freight rnles and decided to
"check up" tho problem to the nearest
zonu agent of the Grain Corporation.
Ko ho wrote a letter to tho representa
tive stationed at St. Louis. That let
ter was referred to tho tratllc expert
In tho Now York olllce, who transmit
ted tho following rulo for determining
tho prlco of wheat at any country
point:
There lo only one price for wheat at
a country point. That price is always
to be arrived at by taking as a basis
tho prlco at tho most advantageous
primary market where we have fixed
a price nnd deducting the freight to
that market and a fair handling profit.
That Is the price to bo paid for wheat
at any ojtatlon, regardless of the point
to which It may be shipped.
Working out tho prlco which should
bo paid for whent ut your station Is
it line occupation for an off day. If
you cannot llnd tho nnsVer,wrlto to
the Food Administration Grain Cor
poration lu New York City nnd Its'
tralllc expert will glvo you aid.
Finding the Prlco of No. 2 Wheat at
Glkeston.
AKK an nctual example :
An elevator man lu
Slkeston, Mo., wanted
to know what prlco
No. ti wheat should
bring at his station
when No. 1 wheat
at New York City was '2.'2S per bush
el. Hero Is how he went about It:
Tho freight rate from Slkcston to
New York bulng 10.08 cents per bush
el, ho deducted that from $2.2S per
bushel and found tho prlco at Slkcston
to bo ?2.1102. From this ho deducted'
1 per cent per bushel for tho commls-1
slon linn's charges, which put tho net;
prlco f. o. b. Slkcston at $2.1002. '
lie next compared this prlco with
what ho could get if ho sold at St.
Louis, his nearest primary market. At
St. Louis tho basic prlco Is $2.18 per
bushel, nnd tho freight rate from
Slkcston to St. Louis 0 cents per bush
el. This would mako tho Slkcston
prlco $2.12, less 1 cent per bushel for
selling charges, or $2.11 not. Tho St.
Louis price would therefore govern,
bulng advantageous to tho Slkeston
seller.
If our Imaginary 2 bushels of wheat
hail started from Slkeston, since It wns
a No. 2 grade, wo must deduct cents
per bushel, which would bring tho
prlco f. o. b. tho elevator point to
?2.0S02 per bushel. As our lninglnury
elovator man Is charging (5 cents per
biibhol for handling, which includes
tho commission fee just mentioned, wo
deduct an additional 4 cents to arrive
at the prlco tho farmer received. This,
price would bo ?2,0102 nt tho elevator.'
Some of that -1 cents will return to our
farmer If tho elovator prospers; for It
Is owned co-operatlvoly.
When Farmer and Elevator Man Dis
agree. Had this elovator been owned by prl
vuto firm or person, or had It ieon a
"lino" plant, Col. Jenkins would not
liavo boon so bland and trustful.
Ho might have refused to soil at all
and arranged to storo his wheat or ho
might have taken It over to n com
petitive concern which offered a high
er prlco ; for the Food Administration
has not yet attempted to regulate tho
prices paid farmers for wheat at coun
try points. It does, however, offer to
sell for any farmer or farmers' organ
ization wheat offered at terminal
points, but makes a commission charge
of 1 per csnt for Its cervices.
TAXJN BRIEF
The Requirements Boiled Down
for Busy Folks.
Iteturns must bo filed bn or beforo
April 1, 1018.
Tax due may bo paid How or on or
before June 1C, 1018.
If you nro slnglo nnd your net in
come for 1017 wns 1,000 or more you
must file a return.
If you were mnrrlcd nnd living with
wife (or husband) nnd had n net In
come of $2,000 ot mora lor 1017 you
must tile a return.
' Ilusbnnd's and wife's Incomo must
be considered Jointly, plus Incomo of
minor children.
Incomo of n minor or Incompetent,
derived from n separnto estate, must
bo reported by his legal representa
tive. Severe pcnnltlcs nro provided for
those who neglect or evade tho law.
For false or fraudulent return there
Is a penalty not exceeding ?2,000 flnov
or year's Imprisonment, or both, plus
100 per cent, of tnx.
For failure to mako return on or
before April 1, 1018, lino Is from 520
to .$1,000, plus CO per cent, of tax due.
Keturns must bo filed with tho Col
lector of Internal Itcvcnuo of district
In which you live.
An agent may illo return for a per
son v. ho Is III, absent from tho country
or otherwise Incapacitated.
Each return must bo signed nnd
sworn or nlilrmcd by person execut-'
lug It.
Single persons are allowed $1,000
exemption In computing normal tnx.
A married person living with wife
(or husband) Is allowed $2,000 exemp
tion, plus $200 for each dependent
child under 18.
A head of family, though single, is
allowed $2,000 exemption if actually
supporting ono or more relatives.
Keturns must show tho entire
amount of enrnlngs, gnlns and profits
received during the year.
Odlcials and employees nro'jiot tnxn
blo on tho salaries or wages received
from ti state,, county, city or town in
tho United States.
Interest on stnto and municipal
bonds issued within tho U. S. Is ex
empt from federal Incomo tnx and
should bo omitted.
Interest on United States govern
ment bonds Is nlso exempt, iixcept on
Individual holdings of Liberty Fours In
excess of $5,000 par value.
Dividends nro not subject to .normal
tax, but must bo reported ami Included
In not Income.
Gifts nnd lcgnclcs arc not Incomo
nnd should not bo Included on tho re
turn of tho beneficiary.
Life Insurance received ns a bene
ficiary or as premiums paid back at
maturity or surrender of policy is not
Income.
Payments received for real or per
sonal property sold Is not Income, but
tho prollt realized thereon is incomo
for tho yenr of sale.
Amounts received in payment of
notes or mortgages Is not income, Init
tho Interest on such notes or mort
gages Is taxablo Incomo.
From tho entlro gross incomo cer
tain nllownnces nro made In arriving
at tho not liJfome.
Necessary expenses actually paid In
tho conduct of business, trndo or pro
fession may bo claimed.
A farmer can claim payments for
labor, seed, fertilizer, stock feed, re
pairs on buildings, except his dwelling;
repairs of fences and fenn machinery,
materials and small toco's for lmmcdl
nto use.
The amount of rent paid for a farm
may also bo claimed as re tenant farm
er's expense.
Pnymcnts for llv.o stock itro allowa
ble If bought fqr resale. Hut if bought
for breeding purposes ctfttlo nro nu In
vestment, not tm expense, raid cannot
bo allowed.
A storekeeper can claim amounts
pnld for advertising, clerk Mre, tele
phone, wnter, light and fuel, also dray
ago and freight bills imd cost of op
erating and repairing wagons and
trucks.
A physician can 'clntoi cost of Ills
professional supplies, runt, ofllco help,
telephone, expense of tenm or automo
bile used In making professional culls
and oxpenses intending: incdlcnl con
ventions. A dentist can claim similar Hems,
except team or nuto espouse, which
nro not necessary lu his profession.
Expenses that nro personal or con
nected In any wa; with tho support or
well being of n person or family aro
not allowablo.
Tho costs of macldncs, instruments,
vehicles or implements that nro moro
or less permanent In character nro not
allowablo as an expcaisc They are in
vestments. Interest paid on a. moilgago or other
personal Indebtedness Is nllownblo on
a personal return.
All taxes pnld wfthln the year can
be taken out on a fedenil return, ex
cept federal Income tnxirs, Inheritance
taxes and assessments fin local im
provements. Losses sustained in business or
through lire, storm or shipwreck or by
theft, except whon compoitsiUed by in
surance or otherwise.
Wear and tear trf rented' buddings or
machinery used In bush less may be
t'lulmod.
You can also clnlm tho niwnint paid
to the Hod Cvora ami to other charita
ble, rellglouif or mil wtlnnnl organiza
tion to tho t'xtHiii of IS pur cent of
jour net Income.
STAMP OUT THE WAR
WITH
WAR SAVINGS STAMPS
tnUELnsaOKKKKLKJUJU-tE-lH 1'J.lLlIilWBrKSnSVj
LEGAl, NOTICES
I'lut I'nb-i'-lKlw
Order of Hearing and Notice of Probate
of Foteign Will.
In lliti (intuit) (Joint or Hut.out county
Nuliiiku.
HtnU-or Nelinihkii, Piiltotn I'ouiit s.
To Milium Htonc, Allco K. 1 n . liUcln V.
Ktone, KilKiir 11. Mono, unit to nil pciboiis
Interested In the enlnteof Tlioiiini .1. Stone,
deceased:
On lending tlieie-l.lt. on of lllliiin 1'. Nitr
norprnjlnif thnttiii limlni me milled In this
court um the llih Uny nf Miueli, lwlR, null
purporting tu ) u duly nntliuntluutixl
cop or tho Inst will mid lesuiuinil of
Tlionms J. H tune, (kreined.ltn l smhI Instal
ment be udullttid to pi ol.ii te. nnd the ml
mliilstiutlcm or HitliJ etnte ha t'miiteii to
some propei person ns mlniliilxtnitor ultli
tho will nnne-ceil for llic Mtlte cil NeinnsUn,
1 1 Is heieli.v nulereil Unit yon, tt nil all l-i-sons
lute tested in snld inntu r, amy nnd do,
iipponi' nt llio county com t to be held In
mid foi mid count, on the imtli day of
Miueli, A. ll.lUIS.nt Itlo'clock A.M., to show
cause, If any thcro bo, why tlm pinjer
ot the petitioner should not be granted, nnd
that notice (d the pendent of sum petition
and the liuuiltiK llioicof be ulen to all
permits luteiHsied In s.itd uinttei by pub
lishlliK a copy of this older In the Dnliota
l.ouittv fleiald, nweoWlj newspaper pi lilt
ed lu mud eounty, for th te .iiccesslt
weehs pi lor lo snld day of hem Iiik.
Witness my hand, and enl ol said court,
thla Mtll day or March. A. !., 191H.
8. W. McKinley.
spi. County Judge
Klrst publication ti-ll-.tw
Order of Healing and Notice of Pro jate
of Foteign Will.
In tho County Couit of Dakota County,
Nebraska.
State of Nebraska,
County of liakotn. sk.
To iJeoiitu 1'. Day, Abblo I.. Iny. Alice
Day Mollat, Marlon II. Day. I.ouIm- I'. Day.
nnd to nil persons Interested In the estate
of Alice K. Day, deceased;
On leadlnu tho petition id William 1'. Wnr.
nor piayliiK thnt the Instrument llled In
this court on the lllh day of Mnich.l'.IIH,
and mil noi Unit to be n duly ntlthc ntlcntcd
copy of tho lnnc will and testament of Alice
K. Daj .deceased, that said lustiiiinent bo
admitted to probate, atid the iidnilnlstin
tlon of snld estate bo m anted to soino
piopor person ns administrator with tho
will aunuxod, for tho state of obrnskn.
It Is lioioby ouleied that" j on and nil per
sons Inteiested lusiild uinttei may, and do,
appear at the enmity com t to be held In nnd
for Raid county, on tho liUtb day of Match,
A. D. IBIS, lit HI o'clock A. M to show
cause, ir liny theio bo, why tho pinyor or
tho petitioner should not bo grnlitcd, and
that notice or tho pendency or said petition
nnd tho heailiiK thereof bo Klvon to nil
persons Interested In said niatter by pub
llshliiKncopy of this order In tho Dakota
County Iloiald.n weekly nowpnporpiintod
In Hiild county, for tin vo biiccessHu weeks
prior to said day of heat Inn.
Witness my hand nnd siml of snld court,
thin 11th dny or March, A. I), litis.
S.W. McKtNI-KY,
MHAr.. County JiuIku
Mountain Tours-Summer of 1918
The tourist season of 1UI7 bruit .-lit more p,ilrnLiKc for llic
Burlington's Scenic Summer Toui of llic RocUk-s. TLiec-l .nks
On-ONIv Ticket, than ever before.
Glacier, Yellowstone, Rocky Mountain-Estes National Parks
and Scenic Colorado are all embraced enroute via The
Burlington's Three Main Lines.
THE TOURISTS' TRIANGLE TOUR
1 BURLINGTON, Omaha to Denver and Colorado Springs
2 -BTRJJNGTON, Denver to Yellowstone and Glacier Pinks
via the Cody Scenic Way, with 700 miles of "Mountain Pano
rama from Colorado to ihc Yellowstone.
3 BURMNGTON, Omaha, Through the Northwest, to Bill
ings, Yellowstone and Glacier. ' (. .,,
Ask for the Burlington map. Noic thu Geogr.iphy of its
Three Main Lines, and how tluse may be utilized for a summer
tout that includes the Eastern slope of the Rockies, from Colo-
rado to the Butish Boundary.
W.J. Willoughby, Agt., Dakota City, KqU.
r,. WAKELKY, Oimii.1 I iB.r Arm I,
1(101 Phi-ihi'ii Stuui, Oi.mli", N..li.
Sati
tflfSWH 1W- milMwl .-
First nuu 3-ai-aw
NOTICE OK SALE UNDER CHAT
TEL MORTGAGE.
Votlco Is heieby Klvon, that by virtue or
a chattel moi tKiiuo dated on tho Gtli dny or
Maich, 11)17, nnd duly llled In tho olllce of
the county clerk or linkota county, Ne
braska, 011 tliutltlt day of Miueli, 1917. nnd
executed by llavld Houidolnls to John
llajen to hocuio tho payment or tho stun or
fi".2.i. and upon which there Is now due
the sum of taiG.iM), default liavIiiK boon made
In tho pity meat of said sunt, and no suit or
other proceidltu: at law havltiK been Insti
tuted to iccocr snld debt or any pint
theieof, theiefore, I will soil the propetty
therein deseilbed, to-wlt:
Ono bay ueldliiK," yrs.old, weluht 12(0 lbs.
Ono bay teldlnit.Kyrs. old, weight 12(XI lbs.
tTwoRiuy niiiics, Syis.old, welKhtlWOlhs.
Ono ted cow, 7 yrs. old, 0110 led steer calf,
(coming ono year old at date or luoitttiiKo),
0110 Acuio mower, ono Now Uontury culti
vator, ono wnlUliiK cultlvnior, two lumber
wiiK'ons, two sets or work harness, two stli
rlitK walUlim plows, and other farm inn
chlnery and stnnll tools, at public miction
at tho house of John Hayes, located on tho
southeast qunrtorof section thirty-one (HI),
towmulp twonty-elKht (2S), raiiBo sovi(n(7),
east, In Dakota county, Nebraska, on tho
lltlidayofApill, lUlH.nt ten o'clock A. M.
of said day.
JOHN IIAYKS, MortKitKee.
Dated this Kith dny or March. HUH.
Klist l'UU 8-21-lw
Probate No tic: to Creditors
In tho county court of Dakota county,
Nebraska.
In tho matter of tho ostato of Willie L.
Itoss, deceased. -
Notice Is lioroby Klvon, that tho ci edit
ors of the snld deceased will meet tho nd
inlnlstiatrlx, with tho will annexed, or snld
estate, lxfoio me, county judKO of Dnltotn
county, Nebraska, at the county coui 1 1 00m
In snld county, on tho 2Uth day of April,
11)18. nnd 011 tho Kith dny of June. 1018, at lu
o'clock A. M. ench day, for the purpose of
piosontliiK their claims for examination,
adjustment and allowance. Tlneo months
nio allowed for credltois to present their
claims nnd ono year for the adinlnlstratilx
with tho will annexed, to settle snld estnto.
from tho Utli dny of Match, IBIS. This notice
will bo published In the Dakota Uounty
Herald for four weeks successively pilor
to the 1'Utll dny of Apill, 118.
Witness my hand, and sonl of snld court,
this Uthday of Mnrcli, A. U. HUH.
S. W. McKini.kv.
hkaj. County Judge.
TI10 Cfll KQ A' HOME EXPECT YOU
6UG Uf.nO to TELL 'EM ALL ABOUT
"OMAHA'S FUM &,,&&?. VISIT
CEHTBE" THE SSMMP' if i
Exhilarating Burlesque; Vaudeville
Sfz Atwaja rilldlth PritljCIrl. Funnr Clawns.Oorgeaat
Equlpiit, Brilliant Senile Enilrormjnt
LADIES' DIME MATINEE EVERY WEEKDAY
Everybody Goemj Ask Anybody
llm THE EIOCEST ADD BEST SHOW WEST OF CHICAGO
Alfalfa, White Sweet Clover,
Timothy, and Garden Seed.
Pure Bred Poultry. w"eef 00k
Aye 2$i-os. Blair, Nebr.
Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cured
hy local applications, na lliey cannot reach
tlin diseased portion of tho ear. Thcro U
only one way to cure catarrhal deafness,
and that Is by a constitutional remedy.
Catarrhal Deafness Is caused by nn In
llumcd condition or the mucous llnlns of
the Kustachlan Tube Whrn this tubo la
InlltuiH'd you liavo n rumbling sound or Im
perfect lit-arinB. and when It Is entirely
cloved, Diufmss Is tho n suit. Unless tho
Inllamniatlon can bo redund and this tubo
restored to Ha normal condition, licnrlin;
will bo destroyed forever. Many cases of
tleufnrss aro caused by catarrh, which Is
an Inllamed condition of the mucous sur
faces, llsll's Catarrh Medlcln acts thru
the blood on tu mucous surfaces of tho
rystem.
Wo will give Ono Hundred Dollars for
any caso n( Catarrhal Deafness that cannot
bo cured by Hall's CatnrrU Medicine. Cir
culars tree. All DniRRlsts. Tte.
it. J. ciiKN;jy & co , Toledo, o.
Etti'Vclopcs In EiHJery
Size, Color or
Qualify
AT THIS OFFICE
MWf.llfBUaJHL 'H'J'.gJ.CXlf
Your Business Solicilul. Auto I hone 111G
So ILfoS.!?s.
o
s;tLiikir
Sioux City, Iowa
Room 29, Lcrch Blk. Satisfaction Guaranteed
Our Boys in France
Are Fighting for "Freedom For All Forever"
It is your battle
Do your share in some way Every Day
You can help produce and save food
You can help the railroads
The service of every railroad '
of every car is vital to our Nation
The duty of railroads is increasingly
v difficult, and your aid is needed
As the war progresses you will
be more and more affected
Get the Habit
Begin Today
Load your car lo capacity
Load your freight promptly
Unload your freight promptly
And you ijill have mare cars
Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis & Omaha Railway
B. C. Buchanan, Agent, Dakota City, Nebr.
A. W. TRENHOLH
Vlco-l'ics.nnd flon'l M'nr
ST. PAUL. MINN.
11. M. PEARCE
Gonoial Trnlllc UnniiKur
ST. PAUL, MINN.
N
Westcott' Undertaking
Parlors
Auto Ambulniico
Old Phone, 42fi New Phone 2007
Sox City, Iowa.
Dr. Koch's Tonics fxtrTcts '
Poultry Tonic Good for Chickens.
Weona Dip is a fine Disinfectant for Hogs.
One farmer from near Jackson, fed One Pail pf
Stock Tonic and Three Packages of Worm Medi
cine, at a cost of S-l 50. This same farmer said
the Tenic and Worm Medicine did him SfiOO.OO
wortlj of good.
Persons wishing any of these valuable 'goods can
get them at my place in South Sioux City, one
block west from end of street car line.
E. J. GARLOCK, Agent
TttSOl