Dakota County herald. (Dakota City, Neb.) 1891-1965, May 30, 1918, Image 1

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    akota County Herald.
ALL THE NEWS WHEN IT IS NEWS
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llablishutl August 22. 1S91
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DAKOTA CITY, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, MAY 90, 1918.
VOL. 2(5 NO. 40.
I Mi!
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Items of Interest
Gleaned from
Our Exchanges
Wakefield Republican: Mrs. G.
P ranger was a Sioux City passenger
Saturday.
Walthill Citizen: Miss Sylvia,
Lamson was a Lyons visitor Wednes
d ay afternoon.
Dixon Journal: Rev Father Col
lins was a week-end visitor at Jack
son . . . .Miss Marion Hall was a week
end guest of her brother's family at
Jack-nn.
Lvons Mirror: Mrs. E. J. Hult
berj;, of Rosebub Agency, and chil
dren, visited the Swan Hultberjr
family this week. On Sunday, they,
nennmnanied by MissLillie Hultbeig,
vihuod the Dr. DeBell family at
West Point. Mrs. E. J. went to
Dorchester, Neb., Monday lo visit
her father.
Sioux Citv Tribune. 24: Rav Clark.
fishing at Crystal lake early today,
"ffZiiht the biireest fish ior the oca
hook and line season, he believes.
The fish was a mud cat and weighed
Hi pounds. Clark and Dr. Ellis
had a battle royal landing the fish.
They also landed 15 other bull heads
weighing about 1J pounds each.
Allen News: Mr. and Mrs. W. J.
Pettit and daughter Beth spent Sun
day at Albert Enders' home near
Ponca W. 0. Money went to
Dakota City Friday noon to see his
brother, II. G. Money, who was
taken quite seriously ill last week
with tuberculosis. lie died Satur
day evening.
Sloan, la., Star: Mr. and Mrs. F.
Bennett, of Homer, Neb., visited
Sunday in the home of the latter's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Oliver.
..Mr. and Airs. Geo. W. Thacker.
rBert Thacker, Glen Thacker, Claude
Thacker and Mr. and Mrs. John
Thacker. of Homer, Neb., autoed
over to this place last Sunday for a
short visit with relatives ami friends.
They returned home in the evening.
Fonda, la., Times: Mrs. Lillian
McLaughlin left Wednesday morn
ing for Sioux City and Emerson,
Neb., for a visit with friends ..
Mrs. S. W. Anderson and Mrs. T. P.
Buaby were hostesses to the Presby
terian Ladies' Guild at the home of
Mrs. Burt Kroesen. After a short
business meeting the afternoon was
spent in the interest of the Red
Cross. A luncheon was served at
the close of of the afternoon.
Sioux City Tribune, 25: Five boys,
members of the graduating class of
the South Sioux City high school, re
ceived their diplomas at the gradu
ation exercises held last night at the
Methodist church of South Sioux
City. The boys were Thomas Mona
han, Edward Mete, Otto Anderson,
Harold Pilgrim and Charles Glassor.
J. F. Towers, an attorney gav the
graduation address. Eighteen stu
dents who graduated from the eighth
grade also were awarded their diplo
mas at the exercises.
Emerson Entei prise: Andrew
Crow, of Hubbard, came up to visit
at the Mrs. Winnie Crow home last
Thursday.... Genial Carl Schrievir
' so far recovered from his Alas
xperience of last December
i .o was visiting among Emerson
li. ...''' st week. Oiit hand is yet
a little me worse for. the severe
freeze The ball game last Sunday
was rather disastrous to Emerson,
the score standing S to 1 in favor of
the visitors at the close of the game.
Ungenerous zealots claim that a
compact between the pitcher for the
home team and the umpire with the
lady friends of the Dakota City
team was responsible for Emerson's
low score, but this is unworthy of
belief.
Wateibury Items in Allen News:
Vernon Smith was in South Sioux
City Friday at the bedside of his
brother-in-law, II. G. Money . The
sad news of the death of Prof. H. G.
Money was received in Waterbury
Saturday. His death came as a
shock to his many friends, for al
though lie had, been in ill health for
some time, he had been seriously ill
for but a short week. Herbert G.
Money was born at Beaman, la.,
May 25, 1881, and died at his farm
home ner South Sioux City, Neb., on
May 17, 1918. With his parents he
came to Nebraska in 1887, and has
since made the Goldenrod state his
home. For the past fifteen years he
has devoted his time to the profes
sion of teaching, of which time two
years were spent as principal in the
Oakdale school near Waterbury, and
the past five years he has been the
principal of the Waterbury schools.
His success as an instructor has been
marked, and that he was greatly re
spected and liked by his pupils was
shown by the huge floral wreath sent
by his Waterbury pupils to be used
on his casket. His close application
to his school work, while bringing
him success in a business way, was
the cause of his failing health, and
he and his good wife decided it would
be best to rent a farm so that he
might be out of doors more of the
time. For the past two months
Prof. Money has been living alone
on a small farm near South Sioux
City, while his wife was completing
his school work in the Waterbury
schools. A week ago last Monday
Mrs. Money was called to his bed
side, as he had been suddenly taken
ill with an abscess of the lungs,
from which he never arose. In June,
1912, Prof. Money was married to
Miss Louise Schroedsr. Prof. Money
is survived by his wife, daughter
Mildred, father and mother, Mr.
and Mrs. W. G. Money, of Dunbar,
Neb., five brothers, 0. W., of Allen;
William, of Dixon; A. G., of Dunbar;
E. L., of Omaha, and Sergeant Jas.
L., of Camp Funston, Kans.; three
sisters, Mary, of Dunbar; Mrs.
Vernon Smith, of Waterbury, and
Mrs. E. H. Cassau, of Oilton, Col.
The remains were taken to Dunbar,
Dakota
City
rocery
Specials for Saturday
Chiek Feed per lb, 5c 1 1 lbs 50c
1 lb can Fancy Red Salmon 35c
3 cans of Oil .Sardines 25c
lpkg of Krumbles 10c
3 lbs oj Rice 35c
1 bottle of Libby's Chow-Chow 20c
3 pkgs of Tyin-o white 10c
4 pkgs of Pearline 25e
Fresh Vegetables and Fruit for Saturday
HigKest Price Paid for
COUNTRY PRODUCE
ROSS GROCERY
Dakota City,
Nebraska
He who wastes HH
1 a crust of bread 11
mMm prolongs the war W&M
Neb., where the funeral services
were held from the Presbyterian
church on Tuesday morning, Rev. A.
E. Perry, of Nebraska City, officiat
ing:. Interment wa3 make in the
Nebraska City cemetery. Prof.
Money was a faithful member of
the Methodist church, and belonged
to the Modern Woodmen and Mason
ic lodges. Mrs. Money returned
Wednesday to South Sioux City
where she will hold a sale next Sat
urday in order to dispone of the
farm tools and stock, after which
she and her daughter will go to
Lincoln and make their home with
her mother and sisters.
Renowned Man May
Visit This Section
L.T. Cooper, Noted IMillnulliroplst,
(lives Large Part of Income
to Cluirlly.
of the drug business. In Denver
over (i.", 000 bottles were sold in
six months, in Ft. Worth, Texas,
122,201 bottles were sold in twelve
.months, in Atlanta, Ga., over 1(G,-
U0U bottles were sold in twelve
months time, in Knoxville, Tonn.,
Kuhlnian-Chambliss Co., sold and
distributed -18, 32(5 bottles in nine
months, in Louisville, Ky the
Taylor-Isaacs Co., who operate eight
retail stores in that city, sold 52,000
bottles in less than 90 days. In fact
everywhere Tanlac has been intro
duced its sales has likewise been
phenomenal and the demand for it
is continually increasing. A total of
more than two and a half million
bottles of the medicine has been sold
through the Atlanta office alone du
ring the past eighteen months, and
it is without doubt the most widely
talked of medicine in the world to
day. When asked to explain this recotd
breaking demand, Mr. G. F. Willis,
international distributer of Tanlac,
said: "There can be only one pos
sible explo'"xtion, and it can be told
in one v 'merit.' That tells the
whole . f No preparation, m
matter h extensively advertised,
can possibly meet with stich phenom
enal success unless it posesses extra
ordinary curative power."
Thousands upon thousands are
testifying daily that they have been
relieved of disease after years of
sutlering by us use.
Tanlac is sold in JDakota City
Neiswanger Pharmacy. Adv
"LET US HAVE PEACE."
Mrs. R. L. Cheney
Tells of Bee Raising
The following special from Sioux
Fall under date of May 215, appeared
in last Friday's Sioux City Journal,
and refers to a former Dakota coun
ty girl, daughter of Dr. G. W.
Wilkinson, a pioneer physician of
this place, who with his children lo
cated in South Dakota about fifteen
years ago:
Sioux Falls, S. D., May 23. In
connection with the campaign of
education in honey raising, it was
brought to light that Mrs. R. L.
Cheney, of Milesville, this slate,
who resides forty miles from the
town of Phillips, holds the record
for having during the last year
raised the most honey ot anyone in
the state. She harvested two tons
of honey during the year, which
amounts to 4,000 pounds. In a let
ter to Mrs. Gina Smith-Campbell, of
Dell Rapids, she said:
"We live in Haakan county and
have kept bees for eight years. We
started with one colony and now
have forty. We intended to produce
honey just for our own use, but
being favorably locattd the business
grew. The honey is gathered from
alfalfa and sweet clover The clover
is a weed all along the Cheyenne
river and we have a world of it.
We have more thsn 300 acres of al
falfa. We have pasturage for many
times as many bees as we now have,
and it seems a dredful waste not to
keep nioie, for it means so little
work to care for them."
in these days when economy
should be a choice as well as a duty,"
wrote one bee raisen, "there is no
better solution of the sweet problem
than a few colonies of bees. It is
really surprising and sometimes al
most embarrassing to find how
much honey is gathered in an aver
age normal year by a single colony."
TEAM WORK.
It nln't guns, nor nrninment,
Nor funds that thoy can pay,
But the close co-oponillon
That mukes them win the day.
It nln't the individuals,
Nor the army as a whole,
But tho crrrlubtin' team worlc
Of every hlooniin' .sou!.
ItUDYAKD KII'LINQ.
M. E. Church Notes.
F. J. Aucock, Pastor.
For the next three Sundays there
will be no preaching service. The
pastor has been granted the usual
vacation and will spend the time on
the farm. Owing to war conditions
it is very difficult to secure pulpit
supplies and it is thought better to
close for the time rather than rely on
inefficient help. Sunday school will
be held each Sunday at 10 a. m. and
it is hoped that as many as possibe
will make it their plan to attend.
The Childrens' Day program will bo
given as usual, and the announce
ment of the time and date will
pear in next week's issue of
paper.
Not in recent years, perhaps, has
the coming of any public character
aroused such wide-spread interest
as has the proposed visit to Omaha
and other western cities of L. T.
Cooper, the millionaire philanthrop
ist. Mr. Cooper is described as one of
America's foremost leaders of ad
vanced thought, and sprang into
fame and fortune through his new
health theories based on what is
known as the Tanlac treatment.
lie never ceases to surprise you with
tho infinite variety of his knowledge,
and its absolute correctness and
thoroughness. In several of the
larger cities, he has done a great
deal of relief work among the
poor. "
Mr. Cooper is a firm believer in
practical philantropy and his relief
work is familiar to charity workers
over the country. His southern rep
resentative while in Houston, Texas,
recently distributed, under the per
sonal direction of leading charity
workers, one thousand dresses of
excellent quality to the poor women
and children. In San Antonio the
following week, he donated another
thousand dresses to tha poor of that
city and a few days later four hun
dred of the garments were provided
by him for the poor women and chil
dren of Galveston. Ladies promi
nent in social life and many promi
nent citizens of these places assisted
and co-operated with Mr. Cooper's
representatives in this worthy cause.
GIVCS 30,000 LOAVES OF BRttAD
Similar service was also perform
ed by Mr. Cooper in Memphis, Birm
ingham, Atlanta, Little Rock,
Shreveport, Vicksburg, Jackson,
Nashville, Knoxville, Chattanooga,
Macon, Savanah, Montgomery, Mo
bile and Augusta, and his establish
ment ot the tamous tree bread line
at Louisville, where he distributed
fifty thousand loaves of bread abso
lutely free and without question to
those in want, proved a revelation
to charity workers there. In fact,
in practically every city Mr. Cooper
has visited ho has always shown his
great sympathy for the poor and
unfortunate by performing some
unique act of chanty.
Mr. Cooper contends that nine
tenths of the diseases and ill health
of the present day American is due
to faulty digestion and improper as
similation of tho food, which finally
produces a stuffed up condition of
the vital organs.
It has been said that Tanlac, his
celebrated medicine which is now
accomplishing such remarkable re
sults throughout the country, not
only quickly overcomes all catarrhal
inflammations of tho mucous mem
branes, but acts directly in the cor
rection of stomach, liver, kidney and
intestinal disorders.
Tanlac as has been so convincingly
proven by the thousands upon
thousands who endorse it, is also a
reconstructive tonic of great power,
and has been known to entirely re
lieve the most obstinate cases of
rheumatism and blood disorders in a
very short time.
TANLAC SAl.KS I'HKNOMKNAI.
It is, indeed doubtful if anything
ever placed on the market in the
way of a medicine has sprung into
such popular favor in so short a
time. People everywhere have been
quick to recognize its wonderful
merit. The demand for it has been
nothing short of phenomenal.
In Dallas, Texas, over 120,000 hot
ties were sold in twelve months.
an-1 which according to druetrists of that
this city, has established a new record,1
and is unprecedented in the history '
Preserve and beautify your home
with Mound City Paint and Varnish.
For sale at Neiswanger Pharmacy.
A monster Is slowly raising Its head
I throughout this country which, unless
beaten down Immediately, will become
tho most dangerous enemy that the
cnuso ot civilization has yet been
willed upon to face. This evil that
threatens is to ho found in tholcslro
for penco at whatever cost It is tho
old "pence at any price" canker raised
to tho Nth power.
It la easy to dispose of this, ns yet
furtive but steadily Increasing, desire
for peace by pinning to it tho label of
Gorman propngunda. But this will not
bullk-e.
That tho world Is war weary Is only
too true. France and England lmvo
had this blood sickness on the part of
their people to contend with for a long
time. Its effect on Ilussln has been
demonstrated.
We, in America, have but com
menced our share of suffering and sac
rifice. If this revulsion of feeling is
allowed to sprend before the road is
half traveled there- can bo no doubt as
to our destination. Open hostility to
England, frank sympathy with Ger
many, "conscientious" or other objec
tions to war, are as nothing in their
effect upon our pnrt in tho struggle
and tho destiny of tho world which
now ndmlttcdly rests upon our shoul
derscompared to this desire for tho
war's ending simply that peace may
reign. Peace today, with Germany un-
by i defeated, would bo a living mcuaco to
I America ns n nation and to every man,
1 womnn nnd child who wish to continue
to bo known as Americans.
The Herald 1 year, $1.25.
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