DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD; DAKOTA CITY, NEBR nrf i iiiTMiwmTiigrrTy wrrif Tti-Bn-itwmwffl DAKOTA COUNTY II KHALI) JOHN H. ItKAM. Puhll l.cr. Permission hns been prni ted for e trnnsmission of this pnper thru tho mnils as second clns mnttcr. subscription Price, SI. 25 I'cr Year. Telephone Nos. 13 mill 1C Offlclnl Pnper of Dakota County. THURSDAY, JULY 17, 1919 mriii(fin CORRESPONDENCE JACKSON C. J. Goodfellow installed an elec tric washing machine in his home this week. , Mrs. Grace Lamb and daughter .Hennetta, of Randolph, Neb., are guests in tho M. Boler and Mrs. JJra Hy homes this week. Mack Leedom, son of Mr. and Mrs. .Joe Leedom, has arrived home from overseas. Victor Nelsen has placed an elec tric sign on his garage which has electric bulbs on which illuminates the sign and also the front of the garage. J. A. Hill has installed a Westing lionisc automatic electric range with two ovens and three hot plates. The Westlnghousc company claim baking can be done on c per kilowat cur rent with no more expense than with gas at $1 per 1000 cu. ft. Kate Sullivan and the McEwen children of Sioux City, spent the week-end with her brother, Thomas Sullivan. H. A. Hamm and family of Sallx, Iowa, visited friends here last Fri day. J. B. Kassing left for Castana, la., last Saturday to bring back his auto that he had to leave there a few weeks ago while visiting there, on account of so much rain. He and his family returned home on the train, Mrs. Flynn received word last Fri day from her son James, of his safe arrival from overseas on the trans port Manitou, and was leaving at once for Camp Merritt to lie mus tered out. Mrs. Ivowe, of Poncn, was an over Sunday guest in the home of her nephew, Jas Sutherland, and family, Frances McCormlck deported last week for Minneapolis. Rev. Fr. Carmody arrived here last (Week to spend tho summer with Rev.' McCarthy. Ho will also have churge of tho Homer parish. .Josephine Brnnnnn is spending a few 'weeks' vacation in the John Lil ly home in Sioux City. Horn, to Mr. and Mrs. Will Carpen ter, July 4, 1919, a daughter. Beatrice Jones arrived home from tt trip to Denver and other Colorado pointB last Wednesday. She was ac cfnppnnled home by her niece, Cath erine Dessert, of Casper, Wyo. Harold Boyle departed last Thurs day for Sand Point, Idaho, to visit his aunt, Mrs. Sara Wood. En routu he expects to visit his cousin, John Hogan, at Cut Uank, Mont. HOMnn. Alvort Peterson is in a Sioux City hospital for an operation. Mrs. Ed Ross, of Miranda, S. D visited friends in Homer last week. the proud parents of a fine boy born to them on Sunday, July 13th. Mike Green shipped a car of fine fat cattle to Omaha Tuesday. John Harty, Mrs. Hood and children Mr inJm RntJitinn. nn Kdnn ttv-1 and Tom Lone were south bound pas mill, of LaCrosse, Wash., accompnn- .sengcrs Tuesday morning, led by her mother, from Lusk, Wyo., ' Quite n bunch of young people from visited a few doys here with her here picnicked at Crystal lake lues brother, Art Rymill and wife, and ut- day. ... tended the welcome home banquet I Mrs. Christiansen,- Mrs. Maurice Thursday evening, meeting many old and daughter Clara, were city pas friends who were glad to sec them, scngers Tuesday. They departed for home Saturday. ' Mr. and Mrs, Win, Goertz enter- Miss Grace Nixon of Morningslde, tained a number of friends at din attended the welcome home banquet Jier Sunday. Thursday evening. I Nels Andersen and family visited Mrs. H. McKinley risited her daugh- their daughter, Mrs. Hohenstein, last ter, Mrs. II, A. Monroe, and family, Friday. over Saturday night at South Sioux, I Quite a number from here attend-returning- Sunday noon. Mis3 Mar- ed the funeral services of Charlie jorle, who has a position in Sioux Andersen Saturday. City, accompanied her. I Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hansen en- Milton Foreshoe and family were tertained several friends in their guests of Mrs. Foreshoe's sister, Mrs, home Sunday. Oliver Smith and family Sunday. I Mrs. Lars Larsen was quite sick Chas. Ostmeyer of Sioux City, was last week, but is getting along nicely a Homer visitor Sunday. at present. Miss Lulu Harris will teach the Ired Bartels was a business caller Meridian school the coming winter. in Sioux City last I-riday. Miss Viola Loomis was an incoming A. Johnson and family visited in passenger from the north Sunday. the II. Hansen home last Thursday. It is Homer that put the "come" Huns Jensen of Nacora, was in our In welcome, for you ought to sec city last Saturday on business, them come to Homer to the "welcome I Mr. nnd Mrs. Len Harris spent last homo" banquet. Last Thursday night Thursday and Friday with friends in we had it in a tent south of the Ho- .Iowa, mer State bank. The overflow was I J. P. Heeney motored to the city scattered nil over the street. They iluesday, everv direction. The The l'i came from double attraction of the overseas boys and the Brown Family orches tra drew one of the biggest crowds we hove had. The speaker, Rev. Baird, of Wayne, had seen service at the front as chaplain, and knew just what he was talking about. flan tfnnon r..i.l TJ,. ., 1 J ., ,1 ,.,. .. ,.f vjuir iinusi: iiiiii 111:11 iiiiiiiiiti nun. 111 Emerson, were calling on friends in C. M. Rasmussen spent Sunday Homer Wednesday and went to Dako-1 the bam Larseri home, ta City from here. Helen and Kothryn Long were pas- Mrs. Irve Rockwell of Omaha, and.sengers to Sioux City Tuesday. children were guests of her parents, Mrs. Henry Wolf was at the county le Farmers' Union meets Saturday evening at the Peter Jensen home. Mrs. Green, Mary and Jim Green motored to Sioux City Thursday. L. Goodsell, of Homer, was in Hub bard on business last Friday. Dr. Stidworthy of Homer, was call ed to the Lars Larsen home last week on professional business. in John Church ond wife, for the "wel come home." Miss Olive Learner had her vaca tion last week and spent it at home. Will Learner motored to Sioux City Thursday, accompanied by his daugh ter, Miss Olive, Miss Gladies Parker and Miss Nadine Shepordson. seat on business Friday, Tom HelFernan motored to Siuox City Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Andersen motor ed to the city and spent a couple of days last week with friends. Mr. and Mrs, Carl Andersen visited friends in the country last week. ner nusnana wno nas neen overseas for nearly two years. She was ac companied part of the way by her parents, Will Broyhill and wife, who will visit relatives in Illinois for n while. Mrs. Frank Resscgleu and children visited several days with her grand parents, Mr. nnd Mrs. S. A. Combs, and also with friends. Win. Wnllway, sr., of Emerson pre cinct, was a guest for several days at the Mrs. Augusta Ostmeyer home. Some of tho street lights have been out of commission for a month or more, still we are paying taxes for their maintenance. The old Wm. Clapp place now own ed by Thus. Ashford, is being newly shlngl&d and repaired. MlSK Lena Ostmnvr vlnltixl snvnrnl (lays last week with relatives in Sal cm Dr. Nino Smith. Mrs. C. J. O'Connor 1 . J 1fun C A I 1... .1 . n m i-.i. 11..1 11 x 1 i... iiiiu itiin. q. j. tun s urovu in aioiix viiiu iuhu jiunnuii ruiurneu ihni nit.. iu.i i.. 1 - - - --- ----- 1. r .. ..,, ,1.. -.in 1 City Wednesday and were cuests for wee irun 11 visit in inu uin nome .1, .,, . .. ,. ,, " , , . it PlU l'nln) ; n tno day .in the Mrs. Thos. .Ashford .11 1K lOini, O. U. I,n, 1a A I T ..... !...! Mary Mackay s v s ting re at ves IV"""' . "r'.'V Vu '"'"i , " ; Coleridge Neb , thorn to Dakota City and spent thoJ Sara, Foley, returned Monday from,,,ny w,th rclnt'ves there. 1.1- .fii. ...ia1. ..i..a!..: 1 ri III IWISH IN llllinU OneparClSOn. ..iiiuuub hi mi; wuuu; nub ween. Mrs. Will Brady hns gone to meet Charlie Varvais and wife motored last at a week's vfsjt with relatives and friends-at Newcastle. Mrs. Frank Davey, of Sioux City, is 0 guqst in the D. A. Casey homo this Week. o mjitnAiiu L. E. Priest was passenger to Sioux City last Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Tom HcfTornan are II'' I III-' ,rf:a,wKjB: - "Z Hfl8 WW&SSfc&CSsSfllM m$fM Protect your buildings at little cost Any weather-beaten barn that you know of would still be in nne condition 11 k been kept painted with , ' yyin The Guaranteed DEVOE BARN PAINT 1 In fwu :torf Afo Green and Engttth Rd Oxide This is a mineral paint made in two colorsred and moss It costs very little, and you'll be (surprised how much surface a gal lon will spread over. We recommend it for use on barns, I fences, roofs and buildings of ajl , kinds where a good preservative is needed at small cost. Paint Duvoc next time you paint. HubbWd Farmers' Supply Co. (Inc.) 4JUAL1TV- -HKKVICK llVLIAIIII.m Hubbard, Neb. G. F. Hughes & Co., Dakota City, Neb. I Sr w IliBilDtfff l3B7w BH to the city one day last week Will Hays autoed to the city week to visit his wife and baby. Mrs. L. B. Palmer visited relatives in Wayne last week for a few days. RABELAIS PROVED A PROPHET Events He Recorded, In Tale for the Nursery, Have Now Become Assured Facts. When Pantagruel took leave ot the good Gargantun, his royal father, and took shipping at the port of Thalassa for Catay, In upper India, he completed In four months the voyage which It took tho Portuguese three years to complete, says the Christian Science Monitor. Many leagues then lay be tween father and son, but they com municated. fJL1hnt Is the point In turn ing over the leaves of the euro's book at this hour, when the dream of the dominion of the air, which has haunted tho imaginations of men for centuries, hns como true. Pantagruel, busily making purchases at tho fair some where In Asia, hears a Joyful cheer and sees that one of his father's ad vice boats has arrived "that Ship was light as a Lark, so that It seem'd rather to fly on tho Sea than to sail." Pantagruel nsked Mallcorn, the bear er of dispatches, whether he had Con znl, tho heavenly messenger. ,l'Yea, Sir, hero it Is swndlcd up in this Bas ket.' It was a grey Pigeon which Pan tagruel cnus'd to bo undressed and a white- lUbbon ty'd to Its Feet The Pigeon presently flew away and In two hours It compass'd tho air, and Gnrgautua, hearing It had a white rib bon on, was Joyful and secure In his son's welfare." That Is Rabelais' lit tlo story, n talo for thp nursery, but with nil the potentialities which, In the -fullness of time, have been realized. Still Tl mil to Plant Late Vegetables Tho lntter part of July is the best time to plant such vegetables as turnips, beets, carrots, endive and bush beans for winter use, says the University Extension Service. Let tuce and radishes may also be plant ed then for late use. Seeds sown at this time of year need not be sown as deep as earlier. Many peo plo make a practice of saving their own garden seeds. Lettuce, radish, squash, sweet corn, tomatoes, beuns, peas, and cucumbers nre some of tho vegetables from which seed can be saved to advantage. NAN'S BURGLAR By GLADYS P. ANDERSON. I'm' ut Mure Mutton Advocated On account of dry weather in Wy oming and Montana, sheep are being rapidly placed on tho market from those states. Considering the high price of hogs nnd beef steak, mutton ought to be more generally used, ac cording to University extension work ers. The use of mutton at least once a week is advocated, both as an economy measure and to encourage the sheep industry. Americans have been eating only 6 pounds of mutton pur coplta to 71 pounds of pork and (57 pounds of beef. The use of mut ton one day a week would increase its consumption about four times. Aiij Woman Can 31 tike Perfect Jelly Many housewives insist that the making, of good jelly depends upon luck, but any housewife may always have perfect jelly if sho knows tho principles of good jolly making nnd follows a few genera) rules, says a circular called "Jelly Making" sent out by the Extension Service, Col lege of Agriculture, Lincoln. Tho circular gives .viilunblu information on making jelly. It describes a per ' feet jelly thus: "Beautifully colored, , transparent, palntablc, quivers hut does not How when removed from tho mold. Cuts easily with spoon, but retains shape. Nelthor syrupy, gum my, sticky, nor tough." I . Thu Hernld 1 year, 51.2G. In front of Nan 0 ray's house roared nnd surged the great Atlantic. The waves floating an occasional ilshlug vessel were nil that passed before her windows. Nnn vu not an old worn uu, somewhere between twenty-eight and thirty. She lived alone and kept the old house In good order. Always on Saturdays she drove to the village three miles uwuy for groceries; on Sundays she drove . as regularly to church. These simple excursions were nil that brightened her life. There was only one other house near hers, the Hansons', and they had been on unfriendly terms for years! Once the son, Dick Hanson, hud paid attention to Nan and Dick's mother had Interfered and broken off the en gagement. There wasn't n prettier girl at Itocky Coast than Nan Gray; still she had never married since Dick Hanson left town. There were times as the years went on that she longed for him to come ugaln. She wns often afraid alone In her house, especially in the winter time. She confessed her fears to no one, hardly to herself. "What good does it do to be afraid? I've got to live alone and there's no way out of It," she said. Nan had heaped her stove with the last of her wood, but she feared It would burn out before morning. There wns no water In the house and no path to the well. A sense of utter loneliness smote her as she sat alone that evening listening to the roaring of the wind nnd the breaking of the waves. At eight o'clock she went up stairs to bed. It was a long time be fore she.went to sleep; then she slept soundly for a few hours. It was per haps four o'clock when she awoke with a deadly terror. There was someone In the house. She lay still, listening fearfully. She hcartl movements soft and guarded. Later on she heard the pump out in the yard, which had a peculiar creak. Presently the first cold glimmer of dawn was In the room and she heard u door shut below then everything was still. She thought of her mother's sliver teaspoons and the gold watch which had belonged to her father. Of course they were gone. But when she reached the kitchen she gasped and stared. A bright lire was burning in the stove and the room wns full of the aroma of coffee. A pan of warm bls-J cults sat on the stove. In the frying pan was a bit of beef steak all ready to cook. The water pall was full of fresh water, nnd tho woodbox was piled high with dry wood. Outside the storm was raging, but tho kitchen seemed like a little oasis of warmth and comfort in the midst of It. Nan tried to think who had done It, but she was entirely at a loss. She ate suspiciously, almost us if she thought the food might be poisoned. The .next night Nnn retired early, to awaken as she had done 'the night be fore, nt sounds below. She got out of bed, and throwing her kimono hastily about her, she groped her way to an old-fashioned chest which had be longed to her father, and drew forth an old rusty revolver. "It may do to scare them away," Nan thought, ns she started down stairs. When she opened the kitchen door, her face waS ghastly. Tho fire was burning, nnd the tea kettle boiling. She had only a vision of a figure dnrtlng swiftly Into the pantry. Nan sprang to the pantry dOor and drew the bolt. A cold shiver ran over her. "Who are you?" she finally asked. Thero wa no response. Then she spoke again, "Who are you?" "Can't you guess, Nan?" came n feeble volco from the pantry She hurriedly unbolted the pantry door. "In heaven's nnino, what are you doing here?" sho demanded, dropping the revolver to tho floor. Dick nanson, emerging from the pantry, looked at once shame-faced and self-assertive. "Wait fan, until I explain. Mother thought of you over here all albno In this terrible storm and sho couldn't stand it. I Just came home last night. I thought you might bo in need of wood, so I came over early. How neat everything is here," ho went on, his voice gatherlug firmness In spite of his agitation, which made him tremble from head to foot. "Whero have you been nil those years, Dick?" Nan asked. "All over tho world, Nan. I enlist ed in .the navy when. I loft home." Dick approached Nnu and put his arm around her. "Haven't you been afraid here all alone?" ho asked. "Yes, I havo"; hut I didn't think you cared." "I did," ho answered, "l'ou'ro not geMng to bo left hero alonoiany longer, Nun." Then tliedoor opened and Mrs. Han son looked in. Dick's face showed over Nan's shoulder. "Bless you, my chldlren," said the old lady, her faco'beamlng with friend liness, and It was suddenly borne in upon the consciousness of Nun Gray that love and kindness were not such strangers at ltockyi Court as she had thought. (Copyright, UU. by the.McClur News ID H U m m m m m m m m m m m m m m m u u m u n m m m u m m m m m u u u u u m u u u n n m m n n HI Ke oBi oBt Bros. Grocery Co. mu'iiLL1 a1 "ip n wrwprt-pwrwi iirn imviJ' ' x n on no m on m m m m 151 Specials- m SWEET PICKLES, per Dozen Vw j CATSUP, 35c Value 30c H m COFFEE, 45c Grade (Steel Cut) 40c. M m SALMON, Large Cans, 2 for .45c rgj BAKING SODA, Per Pkge .4c GJD CORN STARCH, Large Pkge 10c H U EXTRACTS, Lemon, Vanilla, Almond ttlo rl POWDERED SUGAR, 2 lb:. f..r 23i- SWANS DOWN CAKE FLOUR,' Per Pkg....:i2c jjj " COCOANUT, 15c Pkg., 2 for .25c jl m m m m m m m Wc pay Sioux City Market Prices for Hut ter, Eggs and Poultry We also carry a full line of Fresh Fruits and Vegetables Telephone No. 31 Buy Here and Save $$$$$ llQlBlPIell51QlIl(l51QlEniM U m m u m m m m BhhmBBmBi G. F. Huah & Co. Lumber, Building Ma terial, Hardware, Coal We have now been in Dakota City in the Lumber, Hardware and Coal business, a little over three years. Our aim has been to please our customers, to treat every one right and alike; and to give satisfaction as nearly as possible in all sales. We still carry the best Lumber, Building Material, Hardware, Paints, Greases, Oils, and nearly every thing in our line. We thank each, and all Patrons for their past patronage, and will give you the same courteous service in the future. COME OFTEN I II. R. GREER, Manager. Dakota City, Neb. i ' t Sturges Bros. Have Moved to 315 Pearl Street where we will be glad to see all our old pat.ons and we hope, many new ones. This-move is nec essary, as the building we now-hW is too srnull for our growing business Stiirges Bros Old Location, 411 Pearl St. Sioux City, lowu How is YOUR Subscription?