Dakota County Herald Stnt Iligt ' ALL THE NEWS yWJLKN IT IS NKWS Established August 22, 1891 DAKOTA CITY, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1919. VOL.27. NO. 25 , X V i ITEMS OF lNTKHKST G MOANED FK03I OUR EXCIIAXCKS Ponca Advocate: Miss Arlcnu Fish er, of South Sioux City, spent Sunday visiting Miss Evelyn Bolton. Pierce Call: W. I). Shepardson went to Norfolk Saturday to attend the hog sale of J. 13. Roberts. Riverside items in Sioux City Trl bune, 8th: Mr. Cobleigh and family of Hubbard, Nebr., will occupy the residence recently purchased at 1913 Nash street. o Leeds items in Sioux City Tribune, 8th: Mrs. Ed Bakke, of Homer, Neb., and Miss Agnes Bakke of Sloan, la,, have departed after a brief visit in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Prank Caulum. Obert Tribune: Fred Brown visi ted his mother over Sunday at South Sioux City Mrs. Baugous, who had b-pn visiting at the home of her 'son, north of Obert, returned to her home at Dakota City yesterday. o v Pullerton News-Journal: Rev. John Grant Shich, formerly pastor of the Pullerton M. E. church was in the city last week to assist with the series of revival meetings in pro gress at the M. E. church. Sioux City Tribune, Sth: A rough game of basketball was played in South Sioux City last night between the South Sioux City and Walthill teams. The score was 13 to 11 in favor of the Walthill team. o Wynot Tribune: P. R. Beyschau and Dan McGraw were business visi tors at Jackson Tuesday Mrs. Ralph Goodwin of Dakota City, has been here during the past week visi ting at the E. J. Morin home and with other relatives and friends. O Waterbury items in Allen News: Earl .McAfee has . moved onto his farm west of town. .. .Miss Baker vis ited in South Sioux City Saturday and Sunday. .. .Mr. and Mrs. 0. B. Metz, from South Sioux City, visited over Sunday in the E. E. DeLaney home. . o Wakefield items in Wayne Herald: Mrs. Brown Palmer of Hubbard, spent Wednesday with friends in Wayne.. . ..Miss Gladys Barto, who -underwent two operations on one of her feet, at a hospital in Sioux City, has been obliged to undergo the third opera tion. o Ponca Journal: Mr. and Mrs. James Sutherland spent a few days last week with their son in Jackson. ....Monday evening, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Hedges entertained the Pres byterian Adult Bible Class at their home. A delightful evening was passed by thdse present. o Walthill Citizen: Miss Sylvie La'mson was a Lyons visitor Saturday. . ...M. Mason and wife of Homer, were in town yesterday visiting with their son, W. H. Mason:. ...Mrs. W. II. Mason and daughter, Lena, were Sioux City passengers Tuesday even ing Mrs. Amos Lamson and two daughters, of near Rosalie, were visi tors at the G. L. Rogers home Sat urday. o Hartington Herald: Mrs. J. A. Ireland and son Will, arrived Satur day evening from Emerson for a vis it with Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Ireland. Mr. Ireland's return from the hospit al, where he had undergone a severe operation, was the occasion of the visit. His brother Will, has recent ly returned from Franco, where he had been serving in the army with the 127th Military band. The moth er and son returned home Monday. Emerson Enterprise: Mrs. M. S. Mansfield of Winnebago, was here visiting Mrs. Sol Smith Friday and Saturday Grace and Melroy Nixon of Morningside, visited with Hazel Ford Reliable service lor Ford owners can only be had where experienced Ford workmen using genuine Ford parts, or materials, have charge of the work. This is why we urge you to bring f,1,j H your Ford car to us when it needs SKKVK'K "going over" and fixing up. Care- THAT PAYS ful attention giv&n to your car will lengthen the period of its useful ness prove to be money well invested. We have every facility to meet your wants and we give you the benefit of standard Ford prices. Homer Motor Company Distributors for Ford Cars, Ford Tractors, Ford Trucks Cadallac Delco Products Telephone CI). HoiHDr Nobrmku. Smith the latter part of the week. ....Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Drain came from South Sioiix City Tuesday morn ing to attend the Leonard Werz sale. ..Misses Graco and Margaret Powell 3pent the week end visiting in Da kota Citv with their aunt, Mrs. W. M. Powell Mrs. W. M. Powoll and Mr. Walter Snyder of Dakota City ipent Friday in Emerson visiting with their sister, Mrs. W. R. Matte son. Sioux City Journal, 11th: Died 'i South Sioux City, Nebr., Monday, Jiruary 10, 1911), Mrs. Amelia ("), 72 years old, of pneumonia. Shx. Jlassl was the mother of Post master Frank Blassl, of South Sioux City; The body will be taken to Salem, S. D., for interment The journey of an automobile truck thru Dakota county, Nebr., yesterday afternoon brought smiles "and winks from wiseacres who had been tipped that the driver would pass out liquid refreshments with lots of "kick" to anyone who could furnish the high sigtrof the brotherhood. The truck progressed slowly, due to a rush of the thirsty one's, among whom were a plentiful supply of farmers. The lack of speed proved unprofitable, however for Sheriff George Cain and Deputy J. P. Rockwell, of Dakota county, took charge of the traveling saloon at Hubbard, Nebr., at 5 o'clock yesterday afternoon before it had traversed more than a few miles. The chauffeur-bartender, Ed Oxford, who says ho lives in Sioux City, was taken to Dakota City and placed in the county jail. Fifty pints of liq uor were confiscated. Whether Ox ford succeeded in disrio'sing of any considerable amount of liquor before his arrest has not yet been determin ed. Sioux City Journal, Gth: The city council of South Sioux City passed a resolution at a meeting Tuesday night protesting against the rates imposed by the owners of the com bination bridge. A copy of the reso lution has been forwarded to govern ment officials at Washington, D., C. The protest alleges that the rates charged for vehicular traffic are ex cessive, setting out -that a farmer bringing produce to Sioux City must pay CO cents for the privilege of crossing the structure twice and asl3 that means bo taken to lower the toll charges on automobiles, 20 cents for car and driver and 5 cents for every additional passenger. The company's commutation books for pedestrians, the petition also states' while sold at hall rates, are in reali ty oppressive.'" The books, contain ing fifty tickets, are sold at $1.25. The company, however, provides that these books may be used by only one person, and that the tickets are ac cepted only for the current month in which purchased. The city council asks the government to order the company to remove the time limit on commutation books and also prays for the removal of the non-transferable clause, so that different members of the same family may use the same book. Any action to build a free bridge across the Missouri will meet with the hearty co-operation of the South Sioux City residents, members of the city council said Tuesday night, alleging that the majority of the suburb's people place the combi nation bridge company on a plane similar to that given highway rob bers. Allen News: Frank Hill, who has been with the army in France, was recently mustered out of the service and returned hninn llin lnt.f-nn mnvf or last week Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Atkins and Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Mor gan, of South Sioux City attended the funeral of Mrs. Sarah Benstead Sunday afternoon Sarah Moles was born August 8, 1837, Cambridge shire. England, anil in flm mnntli nC September, 185G, was united in mar riatro to Shndrneh Bpnsfnrwl Im. mediately after marriage they em- migraicu xo America, living lor a time at Mill Point, Mich., later mov ing to Evansville, Ind. In the fall of 187G, they moved to Nebraska, where thov both livorl until tlmi.. death. Shadrach Benstead nrecod- ed his wife in dpath on June 19, 1901. Sarah Moles Benstead passed 'to rest in the Great Beyond Friday after noon, January 30, 1919. Although she has not been in the best of health for years, Grandma Benstead hud not seemed to be unusually ill lately, Friday noon ate a hearty din ner and seemed In good spirits, when her son, James, with whom alio has been living, went out to his work. About the middle of the afternoon he went into the house fur something and there found his mother dead in her arm chair. The- children who are left to mourn the lois of a devot ed and loving mother, are four ?ons, J nines, John W, Fred P., and Albert; two daughters, Mrs. Jennie Ellis, of Allen, Nebr., and Mrs. W. A. Morgan, of South Sioux City, Nebr. All the children were present at the funeral. The last services of honor were con ducted Sunday nfternoon by Rev. Kilburn, from the Friends Church east of Mien, and the body layed to rest by the side of her husband in the East View cemetery. BEGIN TO RENEW FORESTS England and Scotland Have Already Started to Replace Trees :t Down During the War. England and Scotland are preparing to replant forests which have been cut to provide war supplies. Tlioy nre not waiting until peace Is concluded, but are doing It now. Never before have those countries been so bare of timber. Hunting ranges and sporting grounds have been sacrificed to supply muni tion factories at homo and armies abroad. The old forests wore pri marily ornamental and lncldentnlly useful, but those which nro now be ing provided for will be primarily use ful nnd Incidentally ornamental, says Robert II. Moulton In Popular Mechan ics Magazine. In the United States we are not In so much need of tree planting as they nre In the British Isles. But there arc two kinds of timber which the war demand has greatly depleted, nnd they arc kinds of much importance locust nnd black walnut. There Is nnother point to be consid ered In the planting of these trees: They can bo grown on sandy tracts of land which are now considered of no value, and thus reclaim the land. An excellent Illustration of what can ho accomplished In the way of reclaim ing useless land through the planting of tree: es has been carried out thfrlnfeJ st six or eight years bynres'T the last Ident of Whiteside county, Illinois; In these years be has accomplished the seemingly Impossible task of turning some 70 acres of sand, formerly as bar ren as the desert of Sahara, Into n nourishing forest. Nor Is that nil ; for this forest, acting as a sand bind er, has been the means of saving other fertile acres from the Inroads of the drifting sand, nnd the tolul result be ing that the farm has Increased sev eral times In vnlue. The sandy tracts, which, before being plnntcd to trees, were practically worthless, arc now worth anywhere from $50 to .$100 an acre. , H0LY0KE HAS L'OST HONOR Town Officially Declared Not to Have Been the Birthplace cf Junius Spencer Morgan. Ilolyoke, Mass., which Jins long claimed the honor of boing tho birth place of Junius Spencer Morgan, grand father of the present X. P. Morgan,.lms been shorn of this fame by the town of West Springfield. This decision has been rendered by the Connecticut Val ley Historical society. The explanation lies In tho fat that tho present city' of Holyoku was for merly a part of the town of West Springfield and that, contrary to Holy oko's contention, and the assumption of the Morgan family, tho site of sthe ancestral home of Junius Spencer Mor gan Is still Included within the boun daries of West .Springfield, though by it narrow margin. The present J. 1. Morgan received an opportunity to perpetuate family lus: lory In West Springfield through the In strumentality of any public gift which appealed to his fancy. Though Mr. Morgan was unresponsive, the contest between Ilolyoke and West Springfield for birthplace honors progressed mer rily nnd was settled only recently. Aviators' Ailments. Rnrofled air affects the aviator as well as his engine, and those who plan to make flying a regular vocation or to make frequent Mights to a consider able height are liable to find dlllleul ties In adjusting themselves to the new conditions. Etlenno nnd Lnmy re ported to tho French Academy of Med icine thnt enlargement of tho heart develops In all aviators. In ascending to nn altltudo where the atmospheilc pressure Is half that normal to the body or less, extra work Is suddenly thrown upon the heart, and if this Is repeated often or long continued some adjustment Is tho natural course. Tho hypertrophy seems to vary In degree with tho height frequented. Chasing nnd bombing airplanes usually fly abovo 35,000 feet, and tho heart on Iargcmont Induced Is greater than among tho groups of filers who keep In tho zone from 3,000 to 10,000 feot abovo sea lovol. CHANCE FOR COAL EXCHANGE Britain Haa Too Much Anthracite nnd New York Has a Surplus of Bitumlnouo. In England the coal controller Is trying to Induce the people to hum f anthracite In place of bituminous coal. He offers to exchnngo two tons of large anthracite for every ton of bi tuminous coal that consumers havo on hand. In the eastern United States the fuel administration has been try ing to get consumers to use bituminous coal In place of nnthrnclte. Welsh anthracite mines nro operating on part llnie, while English and Welsh bitu minous coal ililnes are working over time, says the New York Commercial. This would be a lino chance for ex change of products If shipping wcro available, and it soon will be. New York city needs anthracite nnd can get n surplus of bituminous coal. Eng land needs the latter and can spare the former. Ii England most of the people do not know how to burn an thracite. New Yorkers aro Ignorant of the way to use bituminous coal. Tho English persist In using open grates for beating rooms, find find It hard to make anthracite b-irn In them. In New York the open guile Is found only In the homes of the wealthy. Eng land fchivers with plenty of anthracite In sight, while New York Is threat ened with a fnuilit! of domestic sizes of anthracite. Each regards tho other as pig-headed becauso neither knows how to use the fuel available. It's an odd world. WELCOME DEATH'S COLD HAND Little Wonder That Men Who Realize Their Appalling Loneliness Should End It All. Alone. Not a living soul near to whom to speak. Forsaken it seems al most by God, whose presence scarce can penetrate the confused jangle of the city slums. Alone nnd penniless, with none to know of care. It Is n harder lot by far than death. What wonder that men die? Alone with bitter thoughts of fail ure crowding through the interstices of a sluggish brain. Alone with not even two coins to rub in warming friction, clnmmy hands thrust into emptypockcts. .Jt Is hard tq Uvo nnd doublv hnrd to die. Wliat woiuicr uiai men kill that breathing, pulsing thing within we call life? What wonder that men pass by their own hand from living death to deathless living? They eonio and stay with us a while ami pass, defying God nnd man, themselves defied. And only they whose hearts beat with a richer, warm er, redder blood will understand.- Milwaukee Journal. Pattl's Beauty Vanishes. According to a writer In Everybody's Magazine, "Pattl lives, not only In our hearts, but really, In tho flesh, at tho ago of seventy-six, In her magnificent castle of Craig-y-Nos, ten miles north of Swansea, In South Wales, on which sho has spent qulto half a million She lives there with her third husband, Baron Ccdorstrom, and sometimes, when they feci Inclined, they throw open their theater, a replica of the Balrcuth theater, to tho countrysldo nnd glvo ono of tho operas In which Pattl oiico thrilled tho world. Until recently Pattl was even sometimes prevailed upon to appear at Albert linll In London for tho benefit of somo char ity, but her beauty Is qulto gone It vanished far earlier than her voice and so for tho most pnrt sho Is hap piest In her Welsh fnstnesses among tho neighbors, who will always call her the 'Queen of AValcs.' " Dutch Select Wireless Site. The site for tho wireless station In tended for communication between tho Netherlands and the Dutch East In dies has filially been decided on. Tho ICoeiberg hill, which is 80 meters high and locnted In Hoog-Buurlo, near Apel doom, was selected, according to the Scientific American. A new railway lino will bo con structed from Knnlwyk. Tho station is to havo four towers, each 1210 meters high, u largo power houso nnd build ing for housing tho operatives. Tho communicating station In India Is to bo built near Bandoeng In tho Prcnn ger, so thnt tho dlstanco between tho 'two stntlons will bo somo 11,000 kilo meters. Ancient Rock Engravings. Tho prehistoric art museum lately revealed In Montesqul-Avnntcs, Arloge, southern France, contains rock en gravings estimated to bo IIO.OOO years old. Continuing tho exploration in. terruptcd by tho war, Count Bcgoucn nnd his thrco sons discovered on tho Inner walls of tho cavern a has relief of n real Hon, with numerous figures of reindeers, Wsons, horses, bears, ele phants, rhinoceroses, nnd such birds ns ducks nnd swans. Strangest of all Is a silhouette of a powerful man, with thick neck, distinctly human limbs, feet nnd hands, nnd a tall, and represented walking on nil fours. 1 i 'I'll f.' 1II.MM I it 1.1Vll ATlMtrC 1J JUlllillil) J'lli. ilJ'JlttJ tvki: ip tin: whiti: man's j . HUltlMIN By Rev C. R. Lowe. Will the United States become n mandatory power? Will tho pcoplo of the country stand for it? A man datory power as tho term is used is a nation into whoso keeping is placed tho protection nuvl direction of come small country that is not able to pro tect itself and which is not capable of self government according to tho modern notion of tho idea. it can not be said that all people aro fit for this task. Thero aro a lot of things a boy is not allowed to do becauso he is a boy, when he gets to bo a man he can do tho samo things with impunity. So it is with nations. A father takes tho son to tho circus because ho is too little to go nlono, and the smallei nations hnve to havo some ono to take them into tho game of world politics because they aro unsophisticated in tho arts of tho game and nro weak. Thoru aro tho German colonics which nre never to go back to tho control of tho German. Glory bo for th.-f. Mr. Wilson has led tho allie : .: itlons to conceed that theso colonic- aro not to bo nnncxed to any country, but that they shall bo held in trust by some "mandatory power" that can ho fired off tho job as mandator in ten yenrs or multiplo thereof, if their conduct docs not suit tho league of nations. Thero are other districts which aro to bo taken from the Turks, for instnnce, and they will havo to bo taken caro of. It will not be possible to set these districts off by themselves and told to govern nnd direct themselves, first becauso they have boon under tho heel of oppressors so long they are not governors, it is crushed out of thorn. When I was a boy I got a whipping for trading oil' an atomi zer nnd I couldn't trade dollars now and break oven. Thoy could not bo left alone secondly becauso the, old powers would not havo any compun ction against taking them back again, and thero would bo no ono responsible to hinder it, and then somo other nation might take poss ession. If a man finds a gold picco ho will pick it up, and so will a nntion pick up a colony. Suro it would bo a ffloj not to do so. But tho question is what wo aro going to do in this matter. Wo are not a coloninl country, and wo do not want to be. Wo havo always stood aloof from tho world's politics till we were in danger, nnd nro wo ready to got into the world gnmo and piny a part that is fitting our enorgjy push, and powor? -. That is a thing for us to decide, nnd tho ar gument is not on ono side. Wo iiavo taken upon ourselves a long timo ago mnttors of tho Western Hemisphere, nnd wo did not think anything nbout that, and it is not our idea to give over our leadership to any other so far as tho two Amer jcas aro concerned. Wo aro not going to bo crowded out of tho posi tion of tho Monroo I)octrinc.v Will participation in tho European and Asintic affairs compel us to foro go this? At tho risk of somo inconsis tnncy wo better hold to what wc havo and let tho coming events tnko caro of themselves. ,Wo aro all aware of the placo our Army and Navy havo made for this country of ours, nnd wo know tho leadership of President Wilson is accorded at Versailles and our people seem to be willing to stnnd for this leadership. But it will cntnil re sponsibilities. While Mr. Wilson is talking mandatory leadership for somo district. and the nations hnvo in part at lpast agreed to it, tho representatives of our nntion nro try ing to got out of tho game by should ering tho responsibilities onto somo other powor, just pnssing tho "buck". Just tho other dny Salvatoro Bnrzi lai, a former member of tho Italian Cabinet, said, and not without ron son, "By participating in tho war and by taking a loading part in tho Peace Conference, Tho United States has undertnkeij such moral obliga tions ns almost conslituto interna tional duti' . tho fulfillment of which becomes n point of honor to nny member of 'ho society of nations," Those wishing Buiclcs this year will please get their orders in early, as we will have only a limited number of cars, both in Roadster and Touring Models Buick IShe The Powerful Overhead Valve C. B. Martin Suloa Agent for South Sioux City Dakota City Jackson Hubbard , Homerand Surrounding Territory SIou.v Uilv Address, Hu 70. And thero is not tho slightest question of tho truth of it. It is not ns tho wo had n Jot of lobylsts at the peaco conference who nro trying to got hold of tho mandatory business for oursolvcs ngainst tho competition of tho other countries. It is a responsibility that has como to us unsolicited. Thero aro nono of tho nations that want this, tho col oninl nations would rather have tho colonies outright. And now what is our duty in tho matter? Is it right, and to us that means American to got tho other nations to piny our game and then leave them to hold the sack? When a man has n bonl fide business ho is promoting, wo look to see how much of his money ho is investing. And when tho Pcnco policy for theso nations has become but mandatory governing power in stoad of possession, nnd that nt tho Insistnnco of tho representatives of our country, wo cannot with good grace run away from tho responsibil ity. I know a mail upon whom tho death of a brother hns roaped labor and responsibilities that ho did not want nt all, but liko n man ho got under tho load and is doing what ho ought under tho circumstances. At Versailles there nro several of tho near eastern peoples nnd probab ly somo others thnt aro inviting tho United States Government to take their affairs in hand. Tho Armen ians for ono definite examples. Wo havo lots of famine money thero nnd may have a lot more, wo havo a sentimental interest In them. And when they desire our influenco in tlielr countries, nnd for tho U. S. A. to bo tho mandatory powor over them our representatives at tho peace ta ble aro trying to get out from under, the lond. Of course wo do not havo to tako it. Wo can, liko a weakling refuse it, but that is not American. If wo aro in tho world's game, wo havo to play tho game according to tho rules. Wo may not havo want ed tho war, but wo got it, and saw tho finish, and now whether wo want ed it or not wo havo tho leading rolo at tho Conference. Now what aro wo going to do with it. Wo ought to stand by tho position wo havo won or get clean out. Wo cannot main tain tho placo nnd not shnro tho responsibilities incumbent upon it. Others will take thorn if wo will not, but wo will havo to get out. Our pcoplo did not want tho Philipines but took chnrgo because thero was nothing ol8o to do with them. Wo do not want tho Eastern peoples either, but what aro wo to do with them. Wo cannot shirk. Wo will hnvo to tako up tho burdons and re sponsibilities tho wo do not want thcin and mako tho best of it. We haVo grown since Washington's time nnd with ago and growth comes In bors incident to manhood, and wo cannot shirk them. It mny not bo domocrntic in Mr. Wilson's mind to bo a mandator, but it is moro so than to glvo them an other country, or cast thorn adrift. Wo hnvo got into a position where wo havo to fish or cut bait. Let us fish. Tako up tho whito man's bur den of government of tho world, bo truo to tho duty, magnify tho Amer ican Idealism, show tho world that it will work, and wo will not Ioso n dollar by it. Wo aro right nt n groat placo in our history as n peo ple, a great opportunity is knocking, at our door, if wo aro greater than it is, and nro strong onough wo will mnko it turn to our account. Wo havo no ronsou to think tho President is not strong enough or that ho does not havo tho good namo of tho nation at heart. Wc will have to tnko up our shnro of directing theso Httlo peoples, or olso wo will hnvo to lot thoso who will tako tho burden say what thoy will as to tho disposal of them. THE HEttALD - $1.25 ler Yr Exhilarating Burlcsqua; Vaudovilli 11.121 Alwirt Filled with Prilly Olrli, Furor Clcwm, Ootf Mat Equlpigi, Drilllanl Sctnlc Enrironaent LADIES' DIME MATINEE EVEIIY WEEKDAY Everybody Gooa; Aak Anybody MAYS THE HIGHEST AXD BEST 3110 WEST OF CHIC1S0 DAKOTA CITV, NEBB.