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About Dakota County herald. (Dakota City, Neb.) 1891-1965 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 29, 1920)
7J DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD, DAKOTA CITY, NEBRASKA. " n J WOM May Pass the Critical Period Safely and Comfortably by Taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Summit N. J. "I have token Lvdin '. 5. I'inkham'a Vogctablo Compound dur- ing onanpc 01 luq and I think it is a pood remedy in such n condition. I could not digest my food and had much pain and burninir in ray stomach after meals. I could not sleep, had backache, and vorst o f a 1 1 were the hot flashes. 1 saw in tho naners about Vegetable Compound so I tried it. Now I feel all right and can work better. You havo my permission to publish this letter." Victoma Koi'i'L, 21 Oak Hidgc Ave, Summit, N. J. If you havo warning symptoms such &b a sense of suffocation, hot flashos, headaches, backache, dread of im pending evil, timidity, sounds in tho ears, palpitation of the heart, sparks before the eyes, irregularities, con stipation, variable appetite, weakness, inquietude, and dizziness, get a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound and begin taking the medicinn at once. Wc know, it will help you C3 it did Mrs. Koppl. Oh, So Much I 9 Wife You coniplnln that I nm al ways nsklng you for money. Why don't you give mo so much a year nnd havo done with It? Hub I do give you "so much." That's Just what I complain of. RECIPE FOR GRAY HAIR. To half pint of water add 1 oz. Bay Hum, q small box of llarbo Compound, and oz. of glycerine. Apply to tho hair twice a week until it becomes tho desired shade. Any druggist can put this up or you can mix it at homo at very littlo cost. It will gradually daikcn streaked, faded gray hair, nnd will rnako harsh hair soft nnd glossy. It will not co'or tho scalp, is not sticky or Creasy, and does not rub off. Adv. Up-to-Datc Economy. Charity Collector Ilnvo you nil) particular uso for your old clothes? Surly Citizen Sure. I'm wearing them. INFLUENZA starts with a Cold Kill tho, Cold. At tho nza take HILL'S CASCARA&QUININ 3mt Standard cold remedy for 20 yean in umet lorra saie, ure, no oplatea breaki up a cold In Zt houra rellevea nrln In 3 davi. Money tiacK It it lam. ilia .. . lV " .. M. Genuine box nai a Hed top wltli Mr. lllira picture. At Alt Drag Stmt , HEADACHE Often Caused by Acid-Stomach Tea, Indeed, more often than you think. Becauao ACID. STOMACH, starting with In. 4i5eatlon, heartburn, belching, food-repent. In, bloat and aa. If not checked, will even tually affect ev(y vital orenn of tho body. Severe, blinding, splitting headaohea are. therefore, of frequent occurrence as a reault of thla upiet condition. Take HATONIO. It quickly banlahea acid atamacn with Ita aour bloat, pain and gaa. .. f." ,,u "aijon neipj ine stomach set full atrenvth from every mouthful of food you eat. Millions of people aro miserable, weak, alek and alllnc becauao of ACID 8TOMACH. l'oliona, created by partly ll eated food charged with acid, are absorbed Into the blood and distributed throughout the entire ayatem. Thla often causes rheu matlim, Mllouiness, clrrhoila of tho liver, heart trouble, ulcera and even cancer of the jitomach. It roba Ita vlctlma of their hearth, undermines the strength of the most vigorous. If you want to Ret back your physical and mental strength be tull of vim and vigor enjor llfo and be happy, you mint get rid of your acid-stomach. In EATONIC you will find the very help you need and It's guaranteed. Bo get a big 50o box from your drugglat today. It It falla to please you, return It and he will refund your money, E ATONIC CfOk YOURACID-STOMACg) rnCuMEo taiida.p.a.;toag Appropriate. "What do you think nro thu best flow cm for an April bride to carry?" "I would aitvlHO u shower bouquet." Catarrh Cannot Bo Cured by LOCAL. Al'l'MCATIONft ua thej cannot reach tho bpiU of. the disease. Catarrh la a local dlsoasc, Greatly lntlu encod by constitutional conditions, HAl.lva C'ATAWUI MUU1C1NU will euro catarrh. It Is tuiccu lalvrnully and acts through tho illood on the Mucoub Surfaces of tho Hystem. HALlH CATAIUtll MED1QINI3 Is composed of some of tho best tonlcn Itnown, combined with noma of tho best blood pui liters. Tho perfect combination of tho Ingredients In HALL'S CAT A HUH MEDICINIJ Is what produces such won derful results In catarrhal conditions. DruKfflsts 75c. Testimonials freo. F. J, Cuenuy & Co., Props., Toledo, Ohio. Men who thlnl' mouey will do ev erything may bo suspected of dolug anything for money. W VffllME Me!kt and Mornlajf. limom Strong, I la alt hy JEw. If they Tire. Itch- Smart or Burn, if Sore, ' WURlftS Irritated, Inflamed or Granulated, nee Murine eftea. Setlis, aWrak. Safe for Infant otA4ult.AtallDrult8. Wrltefor IHBM1 SK:"IS fmrm IL!rafcn&&f 11111111 i.Vit 'zmmi t.WJWiWw Mm. ftv m mp firstk i.'iiiii. Free Er Book. IUmtf$mUtU,att$t ID GOLDEN WES Adventurous Spirits of the World Turned in '49. Lives and Souls Counted, for Little In the Frantic Rush for the Yellow Metal Thouoands Died en Route. On Dec. 8, 1818, the first deposit of California gold was made In tho United Stales mint by David Carter. What a date I Gold had been dis covered In California, and the earth trembled under the march westward. Around tho days of Ml) In the Golden state on the blue Pacific, says the Kansas City Journnl, nn American playwright constructed n drutna of tolling power, "Tho Girl of tho Golden West." It 1b a picture of the rough and 'terrible days of that frantic epoch, where men lost their souls and their lives In the pursuit of the yellow metal. California was admitted as n state Into the Union In 1S."0. In MO, -10,000 linmlgmnts nrrlved In California overland and by way of the Isthmus of Panama. It was In a littlo pioneer fort of Cnpt. Sutter's, formerly an officer of tho Swiss Guard of Charle3 X of France, that tho announcement was made that shook the world In 1818, nnd produced scenes of unparalleled excitement. From every part of the globe came tho gold seekers, from Chile, Peru, from ancient Cathay, from the Sandwich Islnnds, from England, Franco and Uussla. Says Cnpt. Sutter of that memorable morning In 1818: "I wns sitting In my tiny fori when Mr. Mar shall, who was digging a mill race at Column, on the American river, burst Into my presence, lie was while as ashes and greatly excited. I glanced nt my rlllo to see If It wns in Its place, for In those days wo lived in perpetual expectation of nttnek from Indians. No I Murshnll flung on the table a handful of scales of pure virgin gold. I was thunderstruck. He explained how ho had found It nlong this left bank of the strewn." A pioneer tells tho story of tho fear ful gold-dust fever. "Two years after tho discovery of gold on tho American river by Marshall, I, llko thousands of others, got the 'gold fever,' and I got It bad. To this land of gold promise came the bravest and best men of the older stales. They wero the daring spirits of the old home, who, Ill-content to vegetate amid the scenes of their birth, took heart of hope, and through weeks nnd months of peril nnd fa tigue tolled across the wuterlcss and snvnge-peopled wastes to the lnnd afar. They lit their campflres of buffalo chips and sagebrush and tossed In un easy dreams at night with their guns for pillows. ' Tho revclllo that woko them wns often tho crack' of rifles In tho hands of the savages. For days, weeks and mouths thoythirsted and hungered amid the alkali deserts and tho rocky canyons, nnd when they reached the land of promise thcro was littlo loft them but their splendid manhood, brains and brawn. "Tho prnlrle schooners from Mis souri nnd Arkansas, drawn principally by oxen or mules, formed a continuous lino of march by every route leading to the south pass of tho ltocky moun tains. , "The Into Dr. StlUninn, who con ducted u hnspltnl at Sacramento In M0 nnd '(30, estimated that, In seeking tho 'golden lleece,' in less than ono yenr 10,000 young men who had start cd with cheers and song were sleeping beneath the wild flowers." During tho year 1818 $10,000,000 in gold was extracted from tho mines, principally from thu Yuba, Feather and tho American rivers, nnd from tho gulches connected therewith; the rock er, tho shovel, the prospecting pan and tho crevlco knlfo being tho only ma chinery employed. Over $10,000,000 was olftnlneij In M0. From 1818 to 1870 $1,000,000,000 was tho gold output of tho stato of California. Through out the first three years of tho min ing excitement every article of trade had to bo Imported. "SI compro oro nqul" (gold dust bought here) should bo tho legend of California. And Daddy Took the Hint. Miriam Field Is not quite nine. Also, she Is very pollto; of that there can be no possible doubt. A favorite uncle Is visiting tho family and Miriam wishes him to pend all his tlino with hor. Uncle Roger and Dad wero dis cussing politics after dinner, a day or two ago, about tho time Dad Is In tho hublt of bringing In enough coal to last for another twenty-four hours. Miriam hung around her uncle, tried to catch Dad's eye, stood first on ono foot, then on tho other, and at lust at a lull in tho conversation her voice was heard: ''Daddy, don't you have to bring in any coal today?" China Gets Back Pavilion. The beautiful pavilion on tho Tar tar city wall above Chlcnmen gnto In Peking has been returned to Chinese custody. In the mutiny of tho troops In Peking early In 1012, after Yuan Stilh kal had assumed the presidency, tho commanders of thu foreign lega tion guards In tho capital decided that, asit military measure, the pavilion Bhould bo occupied by foreign troops. The American legation guuid has oc cupied it ever since. Both Welcome, "A wedding Is not hnlf a wedding without the presence of friends," says nn nxchunge. i'ou can also spoil It "prfbents." THOUSANDS PROCLAIM THE MERITS OF PE-RU-NA Read Thair Loiters Mrs. Martha C. Dale, R. F. D. 1,' Cannon, Del., writes: "I nm en tirely cured of chronic catarrh of the stomach and bowels by PE-IIU-NA." Sir. J. Bayer, Glendalc, Oregon: "There is no medicine like PE-RU-NA for catarrhal deafness." Mrs. Kate Marquis, Middleburg, Ohio: "PE-RU-NA cured mo of catarrh of tho head and throat." Mr. J. II. Collins, Wesson, Mis sissippi: "PE-RU-NA makes mo feel vigorous and able to work without that tired, weak feeling I usually have otherwise." Mrs. P. Ludvigacn, Austin, Min nesota: "I got rid of my liver trouble and can cat anything sinco taking PE-RU-NA." Mrs. L. Hearing, 283 East 109th St., Now York City: "For catarrh of the head and stomach, I havo found PE-RU-NA better than any other medicine." Mr. W. H. Edgar, 49 Cooper St., Atlanta, Georgia: "PE-RU-NA cured mo nftcr I had suffered fifteen years with rheumatism."i Mrs. Leona Dodd, R. No. 3, Medon, Tennessee: "PE-RU-NA is a grand medicine for coughs and colds." So many diseases are due to ca tarrh and catarrhal conditions, makes PE-RU-NA the best medi . cine in tho world to havo on hand for emergencies and general health protection. Thousands of families nro never without a bottle of PE-KU-NA or a box of PE-RU-NA Tablets in the medicine cabinet. That Is the safe way. You can buy PE-RU-NA any where In tablet or liquid form. Skin Troubles Soothed ' With Cuticura Soap 25c, Ointment 25 and 50c, Talcum 25c Ensy to 'Accomplish. Hank Cashier You will have to be identified, inndam, Lady My friend hero will Identify me. Cashier But I don't know her. Lndy Oh, well, I'll Introduce her. St. Louis Globe-Dcmocrnt. "ROSY-FIT" if bilious get your Pep and Color back with "Cascarets" Furred Tongue, Bad Tii.sie, indiges tion, Sallow Skin, mid Miserable Head aches come from n torpid liver and sluggish bowels, which cause the stom ach to oecome filled with undigested food which sours and ferments, form ing nclds, gases, and poisons'. Cascarets tonight will give your bilious liver and constlpnted bowels a thorough cleans ing and have you feeling clenr, bright nnd as fit as a fiddle by morning. CnbcareU never sicken or Incon venlenco you llko nasty Calomel, Salts, Oil, or griping Pills. They work while you sleep. Adv. A High One. The aviator you took mo to seo Is n trump." j "Yes, and lip's an ace, too." Red Cross Bnll Blue Is tho finest product of Its kind In tho world. Ev ery woman who has used It knows this stntement to bo true. Some men havo a regular Sunday morning attack of homesickness when tho church bells ring. WAS DISCOURAGED St. Charles Man Tells How He Suffered Before Doan's Cured Him. "Heavy strains on my back and being exposed to all kinds of weather, weak ened my kidneys," says John S. Shel ton of St. Charles, Mo. "The misery in inv back was constant and I had to get up several times during tho night to past) the kidney secretions. I got no rest night or tiny and lost twenty two pounds in weight. My eyes bullied as it there w c r o firo in them. I also had diy spells and would feel as if I wero B o i n n to pitch forward. Sharp catches would tako mo in my back as u tomcono wero (hiving a sharp knlfo into mv Mr. Shtltoa back. Mv kidnevs wero so weak I had no control over them nnd the secretions were scanty and burned in passage. 1 had pains in my bladder too. I was discouraged. I tried diflerent remedies but received no benefit. I was advised to use Doan's Kidney Pills and. when 1 did so I was soon relieved of my mis ery. Doan's cured me." Gat Doan's at Anr Stor. 60c Dos DOAN'S WAV L FOSTEK-MILBURN CO- BUFFALO. N. Y. 4 Baby Coughs rtqulra treatment with n remedy that con tain! no oplatea. Piao'a la mild but effec tive; pleaaant to take. Aak your druggut faf P I SOS HAfTMS IrStlln T Helps V PROLONGING LIFE OF TREES Fllllno Cavltlc3 With Cement Ends the Spread of Decay, and f a Simple Operation. '" a Filling tho cavities of trees with cement to prolong their lives Is being commonly and successfully practiced. It Is not only worth while In preserv ing fruit trees, but Is nlso the means of saving valuable shade trees. Trees with cavities several Inches deep nre often cut down when, by using a little cement nnd sand, they could be kept alive for ten or fifteen years longer. Of course, the cavities are small at first, but continue to get larger. They favor decay, weakening the tree. With u knife or n chisel remove nil of tho decayed wood. Trim the edges of tho. wound smoothly with n sharp knife. Then a coat of paint or shellac should bo given tho outer edge of the wound. Successful growers recommend the use of creosote and coal, tar to. disinfect the Inside of the cavity after It has been thoroughly cleaned out. This may bo applied with a brush. The cement may then be put In im mediately. A 'good mixture may -bd made of one part cement to two parts of clean sand. After the cement nnd band have been stirred a few minutes add enough wnter to make the mixture Into n thick paste. Begin filling the cavity Putting a new heart Into a tree. Ce ment has been substituted for the "heart" and most of the body. from tho bottom and tamp tho ma terial thoroughly. The work may bo dono on a warm day, nnd cement must bo protected from freezing at least forty-eight hours. Ilcmcmber that wnnnth and Moisture, nre essential for the uniform nnd rapid hardening of concrete. UNEVEN PAINT COATINGS BAD Great Care Should Always Be Taken to Have Them of Equal Mois ture Resistance. Contlngs of equal moisture resist ance .should bo applied to all surfaces of a wood product which would give dlssatisfnctlon If It were to wnrp In service. Tests at tho forest products laboratory, Madison, Wis., have shown thnt even when wood Is properly Ulln dried, no coating entirely prevents It from picking up or giving off mols turo nnd, consequently, from swelling nnd shrinking under tho Influence of varying ntmospherl6 conditions. Vnrnlsb, shellac, and othCr mols-ture-reslstnnt finishes merely decrenso tho rnto nt which tho moisture changes In wood occur. Tho niglier tno grade and tho more coats applied, tho slower will be the moisture enanges. Unequnl coatings on opposite sur faces of wooden urttcles cnuso un equnl rates of change in moisture con tent and henco unequal shrinkage on tho two sides of the piece. The re sult is that the wood tends to cup or twist out of shape. Planting tyemorlal Trees. Planting of trees in honor of heroes who gave their lives in tho into war is becoming a favorlto method of per petuating tho memory of theso men. Iu Clovelnnd, O., amy au, aioiuonui Ully will bo mndo memornblo by tho dedi cation of Liberty row, which will ex tend for nino miles and will contain 094 trees each planted In mempry of a gold star hero of Cleveland. Tho trees will bo called Victory oaks and each will contain a tablet bearing tho nnmo of n soldier, and tho date nnd place of his death. Do Away With the Billboard. Signboards more than ever aro be coming n nulsnnco on account of their Increasing slzo nnd number. Our road sides nro boarded up with great signs In Uashy colors. Just as n traveler along roadways reaches a point whero a lino view Is expected a glaring sign completely obstructs the view. It Is exuhperatlng to ""vo a mercnani in trude nnd forco nttentlon to his busi ness on nn Individual nt a tlmo and place whero it is not wanted. No good Milusmnn conducts himself In this man ner. Exchange. n.wiTi"j. ir'u. --' - r.nnfpntiiB'PluidI)faoM r IWSS Lhccnumcss uiiuivv.---.-- '! r mi v-i "i. y - ; ! JfttjxcfOldDcSAXLUiuuv V'ant &. AhrfnfulRcmcdyfof GonstlpauonandDIarr LOSS oi HKlk nnr' resulting thcrcfromun41' Exact Copy of Wrapper. B.&'5fKct l$ss$ LlfcfSi TERRIFYING DISCOMFORTS FROM Itching and Burning Eruptions Torture Victims. If your skin seems ablaze with the fiery, burning and itching of Eczcifra, real and lasting relief can only come from treatment that goes below the surface that reaches down to the tvcry source of the trouble. Skin-diseases come from a disordered condition of the blood, and search 'far and near, Didn't Like feolf. When DeWolf Hopper in "The Bet ter 'Ole" played n recent engagement nt a downstate university, tho fol lowing conversation took place be tween two coeds: "Are you going to seo The Better 'Ole?' " "No; I just can't stand those golf stories, and T know that I wouldn't like a golf piny." A. number if local golf players agrco that tho nineteenth hole wns the bet -- ter 'ole, especially before April 2, 1018. Detroit Free Press. Unreliability, oro hard things "Figures to deal with." "In what way?" "Somtlmes they won't He sometimes they won't stand." and Money makes tho automobile go, and the automobile makes the money go and there you are. When a shower of missiles como your way, you know your own missile has hit home. Roses nro llko children; you've got to give them plenty of care to get the best results. You may think that you aro loved by your neighbors, but don't bet on It. Tho cnshlcr should bo known by tho company that keeps him. Somo people put on nlrs while others merely whistle them. Ono little hint Is often worth more than n ton of advice. The more some men havo the less they seem to think others entitled to. TFie entire food values of wheat and malted barley arefound in GrapeNuts A food in every sense: nourishing, delicious,, economicol. Easy to digest because of twenty nours baking., Ready-to-serve. For Infants and Childron. Motors Know Bat Genuine Qtmm THE OIKTAUn COUMNT, NSW YORK OITY. SKIN DISEASES you cannot find a blood remedy that approaches S. S. S. for reaL efficiency. S. S. S. has been on the market for fifty years, during which time it has -been giving uni form satisfaction for all disorders for which it is recommended. I you want prompt relief, you can rely upon S. S. S. For expert ad vice as to the treatment of your own individual case, write to-day to Chief Medical Adviser, Swift Specific Co., Dcpt, 44. Atlanta, Ga. Always $ Bears the w Signature Xf a iW In 1 ( Jf Wse J For Over i i Thirty Years 'C ASTORIA DISEASE AMONG HORSES the answer is SPOHN'S DISTEMPER COMPOUND Whenever thoro 13 contagious disease amonff horses SPOHN'S Is tho solution of all trouble. SPOHN'S Is in valuable In all cases of IJISTEMPEH, PINK EVE, INFLU ENZA, COUC3HS and COLDS. A few drops a day will pro tect your horse exposed to dlsoaso. Regular doses threo times a day will act marvelously on your horse actually Sick. GO cents nnd $1.50 per bottle. - SPOIIN -MEDICAL, CO., Gosbcn, Ind., V. S. A. NO NEED FOR INTERPRETER Squaw Evidently Had Not Always Been One of the Ordinary "Blanket Variety." Wo were honeymooning in Arizonn. Of course, we had our ever-faithful camera with us. On tho principal street corner of n hmall town I saw an old Indlnn squaw sitting on the sidewalk with her pottery on exhibi tion nbout her. I thought thnt would bo a dandy picture to tako back home. My wife and I stopped in front of tho squaw and, knowing an Indlnn's su perstition nbodt being photographed, we hesitated. Jiist then the proprietor of the store in front of which she was I squatting opened tho door nnd I In quired of hlin: "Do you think she would object to our taking a snapshot of her?" lie said ho didn't know, that we might try it, and whllo we wero discussing tho situation the bquaw spoke up In excellent English and with decided gestures: "No, I don't enre to have my picture taken." Ex change. Let It Go at That. McXutt So you wero hit by mi auto? Do you expect any dnmngts? McPutt I'm satisfied; I've hsd enough. The Distributing Point. "llow Is it that couple always seems to be in a pickle?" "I suppose they get It from their family jars." , Very Much. "Is there anything In that cipher messago?" rtI am sure It w'ns not vnt for naught." Ability fs measured by deeds rather than by Intentions. ci!i-sa x t x -fta - --Mt4i&1wwttf,s 'W W,s'ntfA;V,W "-jrrt- -2X - -v . ..