Dakota Gduift y Herald. ALL THE NEWS WHEN IT IS NEWS i. ESTABLISHED AUflUST 28, 1891. jk'tfUo IiliIl(lIil5IliiIiHaiiiiiii5iiDjiiJiiDisi m ISJ NEWSY ITEMS FROM yyyiWyybbDbrDaaoQraDaDPPPM Allen News: Mrs. J. It. Feautu and babe left for Homer Thursdny morning .for ' a .short visit with her mother, Mrs. L. E. Priest. Wisner Chronicle: Mrs. Helen Rich is visiting her son, Supt. A. 13. Rich, at Bloomfield, and daughters, Mis. Frances Cheney and Mrs. Cora Graves at Plainview. 4 Rosalie Rip-Saw: Raymond Fouls and Miss Myrtle Farber were mar ried at Sioux City on "Monday. The newlyweds will ' make their homo with Raymond's parents this winter. " Congratulations. o Sioux City Journal, 4: Harvey Taylor, of Decatur, Neb., sustained a broken arm while cranking an auto mobile yesterday afternoon. The mi Imp occurred at South Sioux City and Dr. McArthur set the fracture. Walthiil Citizen: Louie Vlansk and family and Mrs. Will Miller of Homer, speht Sunday at the J. F. Matousek home. . . .Albert -Onderstal and wife are in Sioux City today to consult a doctor in regard to Mrs. Onderstal's health. Ponca Advocate: Rev. A. L. Urn- plcby made a business trjp to Dakota City on Monday.... Fred Rogoshwent down to Coburn Monday to finish up some mason work. ..:Emery and An nn Austin were at home over Sunday from their school work in Dakotn county. Craig News: A .letter from Mrs. Raymond I. Fouls, of South Sioux City, says her father, Wallace Dose, is failing yery fast, physically. Her sister Mary's husband, John Carlson, died at a hospital at St. Paul, Minn., of cancer of. the stomach, about a month ajo. Sioux City Journal, 31: Mrs. J. Edgar Anderson, Wirrick flats, is en tertaining in her home, Miss Margai et Ryan, of Jackson", Neh....Born In Sioux City, la., Wednesday, Octo ber 29, 1919, at Maternity, hospital, to Mr. and Mrs. 0. D..Metz Suth Sioix City, Neb.,- a.son. - 'U -Ay. Wakefield items in Wayne Herald. W. A.' Heikes and S. A. Heikes of Dakota City, were business visitors in Wakefield and Wayne Mondny... C. T. Barto received word of the death of his son-in-law, Herman Carl son, in Omaha Friday. Mrs. George Barto, Mrs. Richard Chinn, Frank Barto and Ernest Barto went to Oma- ha Saturday to attend the funeral. o Frod, Montana, Tribune: M. B. Hogan, local manager of the Libby Lumber Co., is the proud daddy of a bouncing boy born at the Dahl hos pital ,on Monday evening of this week. The bust cigars in town have been going the rounds since the event happened and M. B. Is' one-'of the happiest fathers in the whole state. Mother and son doing fine. The Tribune joins in extending congrat ulations. Sioux City Tribune, 3: L..Whlte horn, who has been visiting two weeks with his daughter, Mrs. G. E. Bur dick, left Saturday for his home in Omaha, i Neb.... Forty friends and neighbors surprised Mr. and Mrs. -M. Hurley recently at their home east THE UNIVERSAL-CAR FORD TRUCK YOUR NEED Because of its all-around utility, the Ford 1-ton Truck with worm drive has made itself an absolute business necessity. It's so dependable in service wherever placed, flexible and sure in - control and low cost of operation and maintenance and possessing that vanadium steel strength, it has become the want in every line of busi ness, from retail merchant to manufactur er, from engineer to contractor, from cor poration to farmer. Let us tell you details and give you a demonstration. Truck chassis $550 f.o.b. Detroit. SMALL & ROGERS THE FORD MEN homer Motor co. THE HOUSE -1"'! SocroT OUR EXCHANGES m of Leeds. The hours were spent in formally. Luncheon was served r.t the close of the evening. Mr. onti Mrs. Hurley will depart soon for Hub bard, Neb., where they will locate. o Sioux City Journal, li Thieves Thursday night broke into the rail road station at South Sioux City, Neb., and emptied the cash drawer of its contents, which amounted to slightly more than 10. An entrance was Directed by smashing the locks on the door. Two $50 Liberty bonds which were in the drawer, were left behind by the thieves. The bonds yesterday morning were found on the desk and it is thought that the burg lars examined them and then decid ed not to take them. o . Emerson Enterprise: Nels Tol strop returned Tuesday from his hunting trip at Crystal lake, bring ing home the limit, also a nice string of fish was brought home.... Mrs. Geo. McPherran and two children of South Sioux City, came Tuesday even ing for a' few days' visit with Mrs. S. N. Swanson. The ladies are sis ters... .Charles Skidmpre of theBly burg neighborhood, was in Emerson Tuesday with the back end of his 'Ford full of fish. They were taken from the shutes in the Missouri the day previous, and tlfey were of the best kind oi eating, although buffalo was the only kind they caught. Wayne Herald: Mrs. Brown Pal mer ofv Hubard, was visiting friends in Wayne Friday and Saturday.... Mrs. J. J. McBride of Sioux City, was. a guest at the F. S. Berry home Sun day. She returned to Sioux City in the after noon....W. B. Elliott of Homer, left Wednesday for the Rio .Grande valley in Texas, after spend- " A A l-l I AM A Blt 1 I IV 1aAA. HI IAI1 nig u uuy ncio wiui ma nicuc, iiiisa Doris WillcutS', . who attends the Normal school.... Mrs. Harvey Nceley went to Grand Island Saturday to meet and accompany to this place .her mother, Mrs: Eva .Orr, who had been visiting there. Mrs. Orr re sides in South Sioux City. one ex pects to visit her daughter here. -.- Thanks for tlieFruit "A weelc' or so ago D. M. Nelswahger shipped two barrels of canned goods'; which had been donated by the ladies of the Lutheran church in this vi cinity, to the Tabitha Home-la Lin coln, Neb., a home for elderly peopl.i of the church. Following is a letter received by Mr. Neiswanger from the .superintendent of the home, acknowl edging receipt of the shipment, and extending thanks for the donation: Lincoln, Neb., Oct. 31, 1919. Mr. D. M. Neiswanger, i Dakota City, Neb. . Dear Mr. Neiswanger: j Your two barrels of good things you sent arrivea saieiy unci in goou condition. Kindly convey our sn cerest thanks to the ladies and to all who have a share in this expres sion of kindness. .May God bless you.. xou Know mere are aoout vd eaters in the home. I am sure you believe me, if I assure you of our apprecia tion and thankfulness. 1 With kindest per.senil regards, al so thanking you all again, I beg to remain, Sincerely and gratefully yours, ! REV. E. WALTER, Supt. Tabitha Homo. OF SERVICE " - DAKOTA CITY, NEBRASKA, A Stitch DAKOTA CITY SCHOOL NOTES A. H. BRUNELLE, Prlnclpnl William Joyal has Registered in the fifth grade and Wilfred Kinkel has registered in the high school. "Hio thee to the house qf horrors" was the invitation, so we all hied to the school house Frl'day. night, for the Hallowe'en party? The horro-3 were worst downln the basement, where only by following a dsuigerous path amid the darkness, guided only by a slender' cord,' could the upper lights be reached. The author of this dark .design" must havo"'hadV1nf mind Theseus and his trip through the Labyrinth with the thread loaned him by the 'enamoqred Ariadne. Up above, decorations of corn and grin ning jack-o'lanterns, gave a festive effect; but the climax was when someone swas telling a ghost story, and just as we had the lonely. wan derer in the deserted cabin where he heard three dreadful knocks, there were three knocks at the auditorium door, and in stalked some sure enough ghosts. Pumpkin pie, apples, can y, and noncorn were served in a mix ture W cafeteria and personal serv ice style, and were followed by half, an hour of dancing. Everyone, is thought to have been home, safe and sound, by half-past eleven. The com mittee is to be congratulated on its careful planning and industrious prep arations. By way of breaking the monotony, the football team journeyed to Jack son 'Friday and won a game by a 27-0 score. The first score came after only a few minutes of play, Jackson being dazed by the speed and power of. .the Dakota City attack. Jackson then took a brace,, and held for the remainder of the first half. Dakota City was slowed up by the additional fact that a succession of players on both sides were injured, necessitat ing taking tPmo out almost continu ously. The field was in such poor shape that sprained ankles wero com mon,.added to the other Injuries. Dakota City took a brace in the sec ond half, making three touchdowns, two of thqm in the last few minutes of play. All four touchdowns wero inudo by passes' over the line or close to it. Jackson put up a stiff de fense, holding Dakota City for downs njore than once, and making their own first downs several times. The game was exceptionally clean, there being no ponalties for rough conduct. Bobler, wno intercepted a pass and paved the way for a touchdown, Cap tain Antrim with his speedy end runs, Kramper with his powerful plunges and effective defense against passes', Culbertson and Ebcl by their fierce smashes and tackles on de fense, deservo credit no less than Stinson and Kinkel who each aro credited with two touchdowns. -Jackson afforded, Dakota City's players apd rooters very considerate treat ment throughout. Dakota City plays Newcastle on the local gridiron next Friday. New castle has a scrappy bunch, reputed to be skillful In the forward pass, anil will put up a hard game. Miss Marguerite Shroiner, Miss V. Clara Cpok, and Miss Margaret Hart nett werp hostesses at a Hallowe'en party Thursday evonlng, given at the Schmied home. There were about thirty guests who enjoyed their de lightful hospitality. Hunting for red ears of corn, various means of fortune telling, the tlm'o-honored nibbling at apples and doughnuts sus pended by strings, and tho "hard- (times" costumes added to tho merri ment oi me evening. A delicious lunch was seryed somewhere about midnight, but the more enterprising are said to . have continued ' tlfeir merry-makings fnto the weo small hours of the morning. A , tHY H WIS ?4 'JMLii IffllHtesdk ISM THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1910 V J in Time. I 7 1 Homo Demonstration Notes 'Miss Florence Atwood . ; Home Demonstration Agent Tho following statistical facts 'about pchool children show tho need of physical examinations, education in hcaftn and hob school lunches, Out of the 20,00p,000 school chll dren In tho United States, ono per tun i. ib, uieiiiuuy uuiuuuve; u per ceni , are tubercular; 5 per cent have de- ffcctitoyhearingfciiper- eht have do , fttli.BVes:- SlLper cent undernour ished (nfalnutrltltJnY; 1B td;25 per cent nave aaenoius diseased tonsils and glandular defects, and 12 per cent nave neart diseases. It is tho aim of tjio "Hot School Lunch" work to lower the per cent of malnutrition children. Severn! teachers in the county aro interested in this work and are willing to see that this work is carried out in their (schools. Aro you ready to co-oner- ate with your teacher in procuring equipment and arranging for this Hot Lunch to be served at noon for the benefit of your child. Think it over and seo if you don't think it Is worth while. Last Friday evening a "Community Hallowe'en Party" was held at the home "of C. C. Beermann. Tho newly constructed building afforded an ex cellent place for the frolic of tho ghosts. Old and young entered into tho games with a spirit of enthusi asm which continued throughout th entire evening. Over one hundred were in attendance and tho interest shown was an assurance that recre ation is needed in every community. In many communities the "commu nity spirit" is not as it was In tho past. Today with tho numerous au-'. tomoblles, many people think that they must travel miles away from homo for their, recreation. Where this is done ones interests aro dlvldr cd and the spirit that is needed for a desirable community is lacking Why not strive to bring about thp spirit that was shown here, In other communities. M. E. Church Notes ltev. S. A. Draise, Pastor Last Sunday was a fine Sunday school day. The attendance was about up to normal although thero are many moro who might have been present. In tho afternoon about 75 of tho Sunday school children and adults attonded the convention ut Salem. Several could not go for one reasonor another, but we had a good representation and a good time. Don't forgot the time next Sunday- 10 o'clock. The mid-week service will bo on Wednesday evening hereafter. The change was made in order that the pastor might be at Homer on Thurs dny evening for a mid-week service. Npxt Sunday morning service ot 11 o'clock. Come! Boost! Siiiipiu'il (,'iini Itntlou Itetimis Profit Snapped corn, cottonseed cako and alfalfa proved tho best money mak ing ration in a cattlo feeding expor iment at tho Nobraska Agriculturpl Experiment Station, according to a bulletin just Issued. Five lots of steers wore fed as follows: Corn and alfalfa, profit per steer, $8.21; com, cottonseed nut cake, alfalfa, profit per steer, $G.5G; ground corn, cottonseed cake, ground alfalfa, prof it per Bteer, $11; snapped corn, cot tonseed cake alfalfa, profit per steer, $19.85; silage, cottonseed nut cake, alfalfa, profit per steer, $7.05. Bul letin 174, "Beef Production," may bo qbtalned free by writing tho Agri cultural Experiment Station, Lincoln. Lutheran Church Notes By Kov C. H. Lowe. A' matter of tho payment of our Midland College pledges has repeat edly como to my notice. I know this, that tho pledges wero made to read payable on or before January 1. A lot of us have been notified al ready that tho first payment Is duo, and some of our men nro not just pleased with tho manner in which tho matter Is crowded. I hftvo re ceived u couple of notices as to my own pledge, but I have considered it only as an official notice that Mid land has been moved toM'remont and thnt tho pledges aro due "on or be fore January 1st, and sent in tho payment when it was convenient. the payment. Just mako it before !. HMO, nf lnl.n. T .... wiu iiiou ill tkUiuiuuiy. .liu unv ought to feel badly as to this matter. it is just your ollicinl notice that Midland has been removed and that the pledgo is payable. Of course. the money will bo received at any time. Wo have about completed our ar rangements for an adult men's class and an n'VIt women's class. Tho pastor v' 'each tho men's class and AIr.s. 0 V Hates will teach tho wo men's ci . The division of the class will bo mado next Sunday and all arrangements will bo mado for the grand opening n week from Sun day. Dr; S, H. Yerian, the (representa tive of Midland College, dropped Jr. last Saturday night, and spokq nt tho church service Sundav mornintf. At the tlmo of tho canvas In July there was so much haste that tho work was not dono thoroughly in any congregation, ana tho Dr. reports that his work over tho congregations goc3 on well oven In tho places that hnvo been canvassed in past is com ing across nicely for Midland Col lege. Tho County Sunday School conven tion met at Salem last Saturday and Sunday. Wo had very interesting' meetings indeed, though not largely' attended on Saturday. Sunday tad a good attendance, i Tho pageant put oh by the Mothodlst Sunday school Sunday afternoon was certain ly fine. Miss Brown illustrated lecture was tho most interesting from a Sunday school standpoint of any for, several years. The ,' Brown Family orchestra furnished a gopd number of very pleasing selections of music, The pastor1 drove vover to Ponca with Dr. Yoriart'-Monday on Midlatifl uouege jjusiness, ', "i F06p VALUE OF MILK y , Largely because. Milk is' n liquid, manyv people havo not considered "it n necessary article in tho diet, and havo. either, reduced their purchases of this valuable food, or purchased it rather reluctantly. However, when Its real food valuo is known, it is looked upon ns tho most nourishing of all foods. It is a complete food, containing all tho food essentials necessary for body activities; its protein is of ex ceptional quality, and the fat in milk contains a newly discovered substance, essential in the diet, called Fnt Soluble A. This substanco has been found to be indispensable to health, anil no child can grow and develop without it. ' Furthermore, this substanco Is val uable to tho. adult In promoting health and vigor. This growth and health promoting clement is deficient in tho diet of ono out of evory three children, who aro tnereoy caused to sutler in va rious ways; somo children oven de velop soro eyes and rickets and other complicated disturbances when they do not receive sufficient amounts of this substance. Fat Soluble A is found moit abundantly in Milk, Butter, Cheese, and ico cream; tho fat of ,tho egg contains it,,aaalso do tho leafy por tions of vegetables (to i somo,' extent.' Milk and i Dairy Products, however, are tilo iprinclpnl sources. ur. bnormn i of Columbia Univers IlIillllilillllllllllslGSIillimElHBIII CONSERVATIVE INVESTORS find in the Certificates of Deposit of this In stitution many appealing features. They aro issued for amounts large or small for periods long or short. Safety for principal is certain; interest yield not only fair but non-fluctuating. Either in conference or by correspondence, our Officers will furnish complete p'articulars concerning this thoroughly reliable investment. m m m m m m n m OS I1 Jackson 03 Jackson, eapioEinMMiiHHHanffiiiffliiHHiipHpB VOL. 28. No. 10. ity says that tho average American diet should consist of at least twlco as much Milk, Butter and Cheese as at present. , Dr. McCollum of John Hopkins Uni versity, tho foremost authority on , nutrition, says that thero are no sub stitutes for Milk and Dairy -Products ' . as food: they aro essontial to tho growth of tho child and to the health of tho adult. If ono but for a moment consider ed Milk on tho basis of its protein, fat, and sugor content, and overlook ed Its growth and health promoting substances and its ideal mineral mat ter, It would bo found that Milk is n cheap food oven then, when com pared with moso other staple articles of diet. For example, veal costs abouttvvics as much as Milk for tho samo food value; pork chops, ham and shoulder, nro moro expensive than four per cent Milk, whllo chicken at 27 cents a pound, is moro than fifty per cent moro expensive, and broilers at 30 cents a pound aro almost five times as expensive. Eggs at 48 cents ' a dozen arc about two and one-half times as costly as four por cent milk. Fresh fish, such as salmon, halibut, and whltcflsh, cost about two and one- ' half times as much. Of tho fruits only those that aro dried aro as cheap as milk. Tho samo is generally truo wth re spect to tho vegetables,' except pota toes. For instanco, canned peas' nt 20 cents a pound 'are' about three" and ; one-half times as expensive as four ' per cent milk, or 'in other ''words, when they are 20 Cents a pound, It ' requires 52.58 cents worth of them to equal ono quart of four per cent milk, which is generally purchased for 15 cents. All theso figures show that Ml": '. is nn economical and nourishing food, even at 15 or 20 cents a quart. This fact, coupled with the 'fact, that Milk contains certain substances, called vitamincs, which are nece'sdaty for growth and health, and mineral matter of splendid" quality, should . mako everybody realize keenly that Milk should bo used freely 111 evory Amerlcan'-homo and in every, human dietary. National Dairy Council. Interest In Poultry Growing " Ono of .the. surprising developments InnNebroskn poultry raising is the Increased .'Interest 'among men. ,'A fowtf years .ago when University ex- : tcnSfjpnt'Wprkers went out' they gave demonstrations i,to only wpnaent and girl;),' Npwtholr audienccsiftre of ton.'wtRely me?i vIT.bnp,caea crowd of 200 wan couipuMd wholly pi mB.Vl, In several other intw of JiptfWO' attendance:, women were entirely' lacking. Women '.aro still intensely Interested in poultry but .they how have tho cooperation of the; men, who evidently havo como to realize tho immense importance of poultry raising, as a farm asset. Nebraska , has about. 12,000,000 chickens within Its borders and the value of its poul try products for the last year Is es timated at $50,000,000. Dig Enrollment ut State School Registration in tho University School of Agriculture, a secondary school of tho university enrolling 'an yone with a common school educa tion, now totals about 450. More than 300 aro boys. Tills is one of the largest registrations' in the history of tho school. Practically every county in tho State and several oth er states aro represented "among thai students. Registration In the pow-, or farming enRineerlii.T courses Is steadily growing . with. f each' Monday. xnese courses, wnicn include tractors, trucks, and automobiles, ?.may, be4 en tered any Monday morning. A four weeks' course' 1sb16 oJTeiTOd in tho farm shop, or blacJtsmithlng and .car pentering. The" university agricul tural engineering department now has a total registration of more than 700 'studonts. Tho Red Cross; the heart of jh'u manlty. 1 i State Bank 1 Nehrnska V--r..-, .