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About Dakota County herald. (Dakota City, Neb.) 1891-1965 | View Entire Issue (April 10, 1919)
DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD, DAKOTA CITY, NEBRASKA. f lt' BOSCHEE'S SYRUP Why use ordinary cough remedies when Boschee'8 Syrup has been Used bo successfully for fifty-one years in all parts of tho United States for coughs, bronchitis, colds settled In the throat, especially lung troubles? It Elves the patient n good night's rest, free from coughing, with easy expec toration In the morning, gives nature n rhuncc to soothe the inflamed parts, throw off the disease, helping the pa tient to regain his health. Made In America end sold for more thau half ft century. Adv. Goat Good Milk Producer. Mr. Wlnthrop Ilowland of Redlnnds, Cal., last year had n Swiss Toggenburg goat, kept on the University of Califor nia farm, which broke the world's rec ord as n milk producer, by over HOO pounds. For the period of one year this doe produced 2,0-11 pounds of rich sweet milk, or more than 21 times her own weight. The period of lactation for a good doe should be from seven to eight months. Big Gold Coins. The largest gold coin In circulation Is stated to be the gold "loof" of An num, the French colony In eastern Asia. It Is a flat, round piece worth ?275. The next size to this unwieldy coin Is the Japanese "obnng," which weighs more than two ounces and 11 half, about equal to $,r0. TTTO.r.yiiT-E .ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT. Avceciaoic iTcparauuniurna 41.l. C "... .(.Exinrinnuvfo 0? 1 vim 11 nvu uiuuuv tivLw UllgUICJlumaua """""" m -n.-lln.MlMrt1f(Mj "i ... rn.ntilnonnrl nciincr uwnir i'iu jaw --( t MtaeraJJfoTNAncoircj JPanpia Stnf JbcbUiSalb JHCortaiahS" TtimSmd iwitwryr'" AhcJplulKcmeqyiui Constipation and Dlarrnowg ""-"'"TiVwo Hmrpi'iviuii,jj L,OS5or j"' rosulUnfroj52!li!lraniv' " . . fac-Slmile Signature01 XneCENTACRGoWASt jYUKiv. ft Wo lO -nlTE -yi" '' Exact Copy of Wrapper. jjjyi!fct Contents 15FluidDraolnl JS felTOiMMBil j 5F til tg an i m m BGMSESj? NEWJiiWia n Grow Wheat in Western Canada One Crop Oiten Pays for tbe Land ngni Western Canada offers the greatest advantages Large profits are assured. You can buy on Fertile Land at $15 to ianu similar 10 mat wnicu mi bushels of wheat to tho acr Canada a sluslo crop has na ments of the IJomininn nnn PmvinrM et M.nltnkq c..u.tjt.iiai n.i Ait.. .. tho farmer to prosper, and extend every Gram crowing and Stock pricco of grain, cattle, sheep and hogs will inouHnwesierntnnananiiri tann nfKiirri Loans lor the nurehaw nf sforV mnv h ht there are good shipping facilities; best of rnarkrls; free schools: I churches: Golendid climate: low taxation (nnn For partlcaUnu to location of Undi for al, mipi. I'loitratnl literature! reduced rail war ratea, etc., apply tosupt. of Immigration. Ottawa. Can., oi 1.1111 O. A. COOK. DRAWER 107. WATGRTOWft. 3. DAK.i B. A. OABRKTT. 311 JACKSON ST., ST. PAUL. MINN. Canadian Government Agents Seemed Indelicate. Maggie always lilted to talk over llio telephone ; one morning before she wns dressed, nunty culled up nnd after talking to inniunia nsked to speak to Mngglo, but sho positively refused to come to tho phono, and when mamma nsked her why she would not talk to nunty over the phono she said, "I's 'hhnmed to talk when 1 Isn't dressed." Chicago Tribune. To Kill Plant Lice.. To kill insects on a cactus plant spray It with n very weak' solution of nlum ',! to 2 per cent. This solution Is said to be perfectly harmless to the plant but to kill the plant lice. Accident Is n word not to lie found . M A 'n the fjlvlno vocabulary. J' ' A hasty man never wnnt man never wnnts woe. . an. A Wholesome, Cleanslno, I OUr Refreshing and Mealing v Lollon Murine for Red SI? w j. ness Soreness, Granula te V ft Si tionJichingandBurning Z7? J,.7fl le Eyes or Eyelids; Z Drops" After the Moviea, Motorini? or Goll wUJwui your confidence. Aak Your PrueeUt (or Murine when your Eye Need Care. MU Murine Eye Rmcdy Co., Chtzm.tr Health Was Shattered Mrs. Hayes Was Discouraged Until Doan's Nade Her Well. "I was in awful shape from kidney trouble." snis Mr. Frank Htiycx, 42 Dover St., Boston, Mass. "When I got up out of a chair, I felt as though someone had stuck a knife into the small of my back and it fail ly look im lirr.itti nunv. 'The kidney fccrotiont passed often and only a little at a time. Tliey were so scalding 1 would scream so I believe I could be heard a block away. They deposited brick-dust-like sediment and their odor was something awful. Mv comnlcxion became sallow and I had large Mr. Hijm puffs under my eves. "I was troublcu with spells of gasp ing for breath and had such dizy at tacks I often fell right over, bpots floated before my eyes and I got so nervous I couldn't stand any noise. I cried over nothing at all, became ir ritable and imagined all soits of tliii.ub. My health was shattered and I be came discouraged. "I continued to grow worse in spite of any treatment and came pretty near dying several times. After several months of thii horror, I heard about Doan's Kidnev Pills. I uied a dozen boxes of Doan's and was cured. I was entirely well and have enjoyed good health ever since." Get Doan'a at Anr Slora, 60c a Box DOAN'SJLV FOSTER-MILDURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Always Bears the Signature In Use For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA TH 0NTAUH aOMMNT, NIW VON CITY. swa to home seekers. eosy payment terms. $30 per Acre possible encouragement und help to Raising. ,. lnwrtmirM h ttinK remain.' nf tr. infAPM. nn lrnnrmm,.nta '.fctt SEMI-SOLID BUTTERMILK For Hogs and Poultry 8 If you want best results in shortest t time and for least money, feed Semi-Solid Buttermilk Sold direct from factory to consumer. Can ship from Sioux City, Omaha, Lincoln or Chicago. Consolidated Products Co. Dept. S. C. Lincoln, Neb. WANTED A partner to co In with mo in a dairy. We can purchase a place of 280 acres adjoining a good town, only 20 rods to depot, at $50.00 per acre, No other dairy in town. All of this land can be worked and part can bo irrigated. Box 96, Gilata, Mont. WnUoni:.Rolt-nan,Waib lUKton.l) U. itoukt f roe. Illjh eat reference. Ileal ruulu. irTU c7 vv -v y W"WWIilPMMM-M M of 4ik- MM ill I'Altllh J7i to f tat. per acre; finr, rich corn unda, Nortlitrn Indiana, to, uo, 240 Imp. Uuntr Wllllum C Mytra. FraDcuvlll. Ind. W. N. U.,"SI0UX CITY, NO. 15-1919 EASTER It is Easter, the gladness of Easter is 'round me! It is Easter, the sweetness of Easter has found me I The newly leaved boughs of the trees are low swinging. The birds have come back to their homes and are singing, The blossoms I missed, have come back to the meadow, Every last cloud has gone, and gone with it its shadow! And each grief that was crowding about me and shoving Is gone; for my loves shall come back to my loving. It is Easter; the lilies of Easter are swaying! And the babies, their tresses all wind blown, are playing! And their wee fingers fashion me gar lands of clover It is Easter I grieved but my gnev ' ing is over! For the ones whom I loved, and who left me back yonder, Have grown nearer with Easter, grown nearer and fonder; And when the breeze touches the tree-boughs low-swinging I almost feel their loving, I almost hear their singing. And so all the gladness of Easter is 'round me, Its gladness, its love and its peace have all found me: To the ones whom I grieved for my arms are now nearer They were far and apart, now they're nearer and dearer! And each Easter that comes brings me near to the going I will find them and love them. I know they are knowing! I count up the Easters until I have found them, With my lips on their hair and my arms tight around them. Judd Mortimer Lewis. LIFE AFTER DEATH "Except the Grain Fall in the Earth and Die, It Cannot Bring Forth Fruit." PKItllAl'S because tho power of rising from death Is In man so Integral a part of his nature he uses It familiarly without surprise, never quite realizing Its God quality. From his dally deaths of trou ble and struggle, from the death of goals lie cannot rencli, the deaths of gladness and love, of hopes that die with each sunset, ho is reclaimed a thousand times. Uo cannot really die, for all the seeming deaths that dally attend him. They fall Into tho ground nnd die. He rises, raised by the power of life In him, und new hopes, new works hearings forth. ' To, set this life-power to eternal things Is hard for lilm, being within a material world of his own creation. He has lost the Intensity of desire for fcvWVVW two things which kept that early group humbly apart and fed It with pro found wisdom the desire of eternal love and a simple, uncompromising will to see (lie truth. He feels so strong a life-power within him now that he Is impelled to create his own lesser truth, wonder ing then at his dissatisfaction. Sincere In Rejoicing. It Is not so much belief ns percep tion that ho lacks a looking In tho wrong direction with eyes dulled, by dwelling on material objects. When the brightest day comes for celebrating the Itlr.cn Spirit, he goes to the ladened churches, rejoicing In the flower-bounty that purges Into bloom for the feast and In the massed choral singing of anthem;. Surely ho Is (sin cere; thus loving, thus praising, thus entering into the service which tho priests and' people hold? With less keenness of sight, however, for tho pure spiritual proving of tho truth tlinn those few were blest with who long ago, at the curliest Easter, after long sorrow and waiting, saw the real resurrection, yet perceived the greater fplrltunl one through it. Hut he knows It Is In the churches that In- will find the mystery of the , new llowor that Is to rise. It is ul- iajh tii'., to be reu)lsd at each BEGINS HOLY WEEK For Many Centuries Palm Sunday Has Been Day of Peculiar Significance. P ALM SUNDAY Is the nnmc usually given to the sixth and last Sunday in Lent nnd the beginning of holy week, after the custom of blessing branches of the palm tree or of other trees substi tuted In those countries In which tho palm cannot be procured, and of carry ing the blessed branches In proces sion, In commemoration of Christ's triumphal entry Into Jerusalem. Palms and branches of the palm were used In this historic entry be cause the palm was then regarded as an emblem of victory and the carrying nnd waving of its branches was em blematic of success and In honor of royalty. The date of the first observance of Palm Sunday Is y.ertnln. In the Greek church It was apparently ob served as early as the fourth century. In the middle ages tho pnlm, worn as n decoration, denoted that the per son so adorned had made the pil grimage to the Holy Land. In some countries people made use of figures of Christ tented on an ass, carved out of wood, which were car ried In religious processions and even brought Into the church. In other countries it was the custom to strew llowers and green boughs In church yards. TJio palms used In the procession of tho day are taken home by the faith ful and used as a sacraniqntal. They are preserved In prominent places In the houses, barns or even In the Holds. 1 and thrown Into thu lire during storms. Kroni the blessed palms are procured j the ashes for use on' Ash Wednesday. ' Where palms cannot be secured branches of olive, box elder, spruce or other trees are used. In Home olive branches arc distributed td the peo ple, while the clergy carry palms fre quently dried and twisted Into various shapes. In parts of Havarln largo swamp willows, with their catkins, and ornamented with llowers and rib bons, were used. Uecause every great feast at this time wns in some way u remembrance of the resurrection of Christ nnd wns In consequence called I'ascha, the Spanish term pascua florlda hnd Its origin. Thus It was that In 1512 the stnte of Flor.Ida, which was settled by the Spanlnrds, Indirectly received Its name. Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll kneeling, to be sown nnew In each heart, to give fostering care, to brood over and bless the soil of the henrt while waiting, to tell over nnd over again nt every time the questioning heart Is lifted up to it thnt what the mystery of life can do for the lesser grain It is bound to do by an ever truer mensure of the sumo law for tho spiritual growth. Teaches Great Truth. One can turn better, after that real ization, to the full springtide nnd feel even gladder than nature, knowing J the touch of the etcrnnl llower within. Wandering amid the old myths, filled . with their benuty and their deathless attachment to life, one feels always under tho shadow of ended things, J upon the verge where nil re nllty line ; gone down In darkness. The lasting and perfect poetry of these myths lin gers like gorgeous unsunken sunsets. ! As the latest coiner among them many may class the great Christian story of the resurrection. It Is Indeed u great myth, a superlative myth In the real meaning of the word ns a nnrratlvo founded on a remote event. Hut the singular, lone truth it sympollzes like u direct shnft of light separates It i from the darkness of the old myths ! forever. They taught tho underworld, where the shades moved In a half life or pale regret conscious of lost Joy, without hope. A mournful idea of Immortality that satisfied no heart and from which llm r.xnr.1 IdtiilrA.o ,P 41. of .1 .... ..(. .til fwt out In vnln for light. I That light appears In the great sim ple law. "Except the grain fall In the earth and die It cannot bring forth fruit." HARD TO CALL THESE EGGS Record Freako Devised for Those Who Were Careless About the Expenditure. The use of nrtlflclal eggs made of biigar, chocolate, glass, etc., Is of mod ern origin. In nil largo cities of Chris tendom the confectioners' stores rival one nnother In their efforts to turn out the daintiest and most uttractlvo Hnstor eggs. Sometimes they are of miiminotli size nnd great cost. A few years ago an English lord hnd manu fuctured by a famous confectioner a gigantic egg that was Intended for his lady love, the daughter of a mil lionaire In South Africa. This Easier gift was not less than three yards high and one und one-half yard in diam eter, so that n person sitting on a chair could easily have space In the inside. The monster was tilled with no less than 1,000 pounds of candy. An egg Intended for thu Infanta of Spain was manufactured at Paris at u cost of 20,000 francs (Sl.fiOO). This costly Easter egg was made of white enntncl, had In the Inside engraved tho pas sages of the Ulble referring to Easter, nnd by means of u complicated mo- harilcal contrivance u bird was made to fly out of It nnd sing twelve ulra rum well known operas. Genuine "Bayer Always marked For Pain Headache Toothache Earache Rheumatism Lumbago Out of Pain To Comfort! Proved Safe By Millions! AdultsTake one or two "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" wltH yateri If necessary, repeat dose three times a day, after meals; Ask for and Insist Upon "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" American owned Entirely! 0 cent Buyer package alio larger Bayer package-. Buy Bayer package! only Oct original package. Aspirin It tbe triJt mirk of Dayer Manufacture of Monoacctleactu'tittr of Sl!cIIet!j Bible Said to De 1,500 Years Old. A Bible, estlmntcd by authorities to bo 1,500 years old, worn by tho touch of devout hands through nil Jiese years, yet clear and legible, has come Into the hands of Rev. W. E. Atkinson, secretary nt Bremerton, Wash., for tho Industrial Y. M .0. A. Tho Ulble was used In an Armenian monastery. The pages of the volume are of papyrus, and It Is bound In leather. "Cold In the Head" li an acute attack of Nasal Catarrh. Pr ons who are subject to frequent "colds In tho haad" wilt nnd thnt tho uie of HALL'S CATAIIRH .MKDICINB will butld up tho System, cleanse the Dlood and render them less liable to colds. Repeated attacks of Acute Catarrh may lead to Chronic Catarrh. HALL'S CATAimil MEDICINE Is tak en Internally and acts through tho Dlood on the Mucous Surfaces of tho System. All DruKRlsts 75c. Testimonials free. fJOO.OO for any case or catarrh that HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE will not cure. F. J. Chcnoy & Co., Toledo, Ohio. Drawing the Line. "So you are n burglar I" said the prison visitor. "I'es'm. I like other people's prop erty, but I haven't the heart to bo an nnnrchlst an get It by rough work." Women Unsuccessful. Women nre unsuccessful as machine laco makers In the Nottingham (Eng.) district, according to u report on tho "substitution of women In nonmiinl tlon factories during the war" made to the home olllce. The employment of women ns machine attendants, to take the places of men called to tho colors, was a wartime measure, and the re port snys 'Hint "women not having mnde good their footing ns substitutes" the question of their continued em ployment at this work "hardly arises." Obeyed Commands. A sailor who was being reprimanded by an olllrer started to defend him self. "But I thought, sir" "You nro not supposed to think." About a week later tho snmo ofllccr sent this man ashore to get him somo clgnretto pnpers, nnd ns ho did hot have any change he gavo lilm n $20 bill. Tho mnn camo staggorlng back Willi a enso on his shoulder. "Whnt havo you got there?" asked the ofllccr. "Clgnretto papers," enme tho reply. "You didn't say how many, sir. You gavo urn the bill nnd said, 'Oct mo some clgaretto papers.' " "What do you think I want with $20 worth of clgnrotte papers?" "I nin not supposed to Uiliik, sir."--Judge. r (Dissatisfaction in the Quality or Price of Coffee ia easily remedied by changing your tablo drink to THE ORIGINAL Postum Cereal Boiled just like coffee 15 minutes after boiling begins you are certain of uniform quality. The price doesn't fluctuate from one month to the next. ' And besides there's only one grade the best You get it in every package. There's a greater reason however why you should drink Postum-HEALTH. No upset to stomach, heart or nerves the pen alty many pay for coffee drinking follows the use of Postum. It'a a rich, healthful, invigorating drink, and "There's IffvvAMrtXAl Tablets of Aspirin" with "Bayer Cross" A ATM Colds . Grippe Influenzal Colds Stiff Neck Joint Pains DEMAND THAT IS SUPREME World Must Havo Food, for Famine and Disorder Have Alwayo Been Synonymous. About 17.r)0 Benjamin Franklin ob selved In I'oor Richard's Almanac that wherever there wns famine there was disorder, and wherever them wns dis order famine followed In Its train. This has been the keynote of the present world situation. Graham Lusk writes In tho American Museum Jour nal. Lack of hygiene und sanitation does not causa disorder. Soldiers hnvo lived Incrusted lu the mud of Klanders, hut have maintained their morale when well nourished. Tito Russian Is firmly convinced that the louse 1b nec essary for health because this vermin leaves his body only In the event of his dcnlh. If cleanliness were as much desired by the people as food, then tho streets of our cities would be kept la perfect oi'der, and no dirt would bo allowed to accumulate upon them. In deed, Tolstoy teaches that the deslrer for cleanliness Is n cultivated extrava gance and not an Instinctive impulse, Thu call for food Is, however, Insistent and Instinctive and must be satisfied or social discontent arises. Out of Khaki. The man who had lived and moved and hnd his being In khaki for thr duration had at last been demob ilized, lie had also become demoral ized. , "By George," ho gasped, coming to an nbrupt stop aud Blaring across tbQ ' road, "Hint tailor has some nifty de signs iu Ills window! Look nt Uiosq purplo roses with scarlet loaves 1" "What's tho matter with vnnv nskctl his wife. "Havo you gono madl mat's a wtul-piipcr shop." "Oh I I had decided to order n nntr of that piece." Will Help nestore Forests. The American Forestry association will aid lu restoring the forests of Grcnt Britain, Franco and Belgium which were sacrificed to tho allied cnuso In the war, Charles Lnthrop Tack, retiring president of tho world court league, said nt n dinner In his lioiior nt Now York. Ho said about l.COO.OOO ncres of forest land in Franco had been destroyed, that virtually all of Belgium's forests of timber valuo hnd been felled by tho Germans aud that Great Britain's sncrlflco In for ests amount to 4,r0,000 acres. Silence may bo golden, but It won't pny tho expense of the drummer. iflaflMaflJVyVAA7flfiflAWVAtVVAAAAAAAAA AflaflMJ? a Reason