DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD, DAKOTA CITY, NEBRASKA. u HAIR FALLING? HERE IS WHERE IT SHOWS Don't worry! Let "Danderlnc" sav your hair nnd doublo Its beauty. M To stop falling hair nt onco and rid Hig scalp of every particle of dandruff, get n small bottle of delightful "Dan derlnc" at any drug or toilet counter for a few cents, pour n little In your hand and rub it into the scalp. After several applications the hair usually stops coming out nnd you can't find any OandrufC. Your hair will grow strong, thick and long and appenr soft, glossy and twice as beautiful and abundant. Try it! Adv. New Form of Torture. "How did you enjoy your visit to tho Blithcrsbysr "It was an ordeal." "How so?" "I hud to sit through 1,000 feet of tho baby." ' "WhatT "Film, yon know. They wore show ing me motion pictures of the little darling taken between the years of one and tliree." Birmingham Age Ilcmld. ? HEAD STUFFED FROM CATARRH OR A COLD $ f. Says Cream Applied In' Nostrils Opens Air Passages Right Up -l. V s L A. A A A A A AhAAAAritAhAl AAA A Instant relief no waiting. Your clogged nostrils open right up ; the air passages of your head clear anrt you can breathe freely. No more hawking, snufllng, blowing, headache, dryness. No Mrugfiling for breath nt night; your cold or catarrh disappears. Get -a small bottle of Ely's Cream Balm from your druggist now. Apply a little of this fragrant, antiseptic, healing cream -in your nostrils. It pen etrates through every air passage of the head, soothes the inllamed or swol len mucous membrane and relief comes Instantly. It's just fine. Don't stay stuffed up with cold or nasty catarrh. Adv. Proof. "Do you know Jones?" "I lent him u tenner this morning. I should say I do know him." "You lent him a tenner? Then I fdiouhl say you don't know him." Sure Relief 6 Bell-ans Hot water Sure Relief RE LL-ANS VFOR indigestion WATCH THE BIG 4 Stomach-Kidney a-Heart-Liver Keep tho vital organs healthy by regularly taking tho world'3 stand ard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles iraramreai The National Romedy of Holland for centuries and endorsed by Queen Wllhel mina. At all druggists, threo sizes. Look for the nirna Gold Mdl on rnr box and accept no ImlUtiou SO bl'KCLIVTION TctiiH Oil Iuftment. Cleologlst reports 9 oil strata on our tract of 61& acres at CIlfton-by-lho.Hea. Near Goose Creek, famous Kusher field. To provltio fund for drilling wo are now Belling Hay Shore home ultcs between Houston and Clalveston. nearly 5,000 souaro feet space. BUlilclent D drilling sites. $60, flrkt payment 110, and giv ing an Interest In 120 drilling sites. Land situated In center of Coastal oil belt, produc ing 80,000 barrels dally Warranty deed Southern Pacific Ilallroad Depot on land. Write for literature and reference Clifton I and and Production Company, Box 102!, Houston, Texas. Agents Wanted, AN OIL LEASE IS THE THING Learn how 90 of the fortunes have been made In oil; circular free OR ANT C. MEL HOHK, Boston ntock, Pekln. Illinois. t'ullfornla Health uml llupplnr, land and plenty How about your JobT He your own Uoss. For Information, Mccarty's IS Sacra mento Ea. tracts, Ilox 4(3, Sacramento, Cal, ISU'itOVKI) FARMS. Am subdividing In forms to suit or will sell In block. 1,440 a. fine Improved black land, near Cairo, III. Owner, U. S. Deiloulln, Oreenvllle, Illinois. W. N. U., 8IOUX CITY, NO. 5-1920. J) 1 '( 1&F (A4 n a a GOLD MEDAL - BELGIUM SKETCHES A Piece of Tile By Katharine Eggleston Roberts. CoP right. 1920, Western Newspaper Union) 'Is this where I used to live, grand mother?" The little girl stood In tho middle of No Man's Land, surveying, the torn ground nnd leafless trees. "Yes. dear, right lieiv where you are standing." The old woman slipped and slid over the uneven etwtfh, peer ing now into one cavity, now Into an other, seeing always only small hits of broken bricks, nnd sometimes a rusted obus. "Loulsn," she called to her daughter, "I believe this is whero the old cherry tree stood. Try here. I teem to remember hearing Paul say he burled It near the tree." Louisa, a tall, broadly built woman, thrust her spado into the ground nnd silently began to dig. "Grandmother," tho child called from a little dlstnnce, "did father and moth er live here, too?" "Yes, Marin." Madame Verbeek turned to her daughter again. "If wo don't find the money, what nro we to do for Maria? If only her mother were here. Wo have nothing." "And when Paul turned everything to silver and burled It before he loft, ho thought ho put it in tho safest place." Louisa straightened her ach ing back. ' "Yes, nnd he thought ho'd come for It himself. Somehow, lie never seemed tn realize that he might never come." Her voice dwindled to a whisper. Louisa begnn to dig again. Tho old woman wandered off, looking, always looking, till she same to where Maria stooped and poked nt something In the debris. It was round nnd white, with envemous eyes nnd broken teeth. The child recoiled. The widening black pupils darkened the gray of her ecs as she stared fascinated. "It's Just llko the ones we saw on the way. Isn't it, grandmother?" she naked after a horrified, moment. "Was he a German or a Belgian?" () "You enp't tell now, MnrJe, Come on away from it" She took the little Where Prosperous Belgians Used to Live, one's hand, nnd together they tramped through the rankf yellow water-grass, the tired old woman, who lohgingly remembered the town that had been leveled, powdered to nothing by the firo-of the heavy guns; nnd tho child, who gazed with scarce believing stare when they told her this place had been her home. She had heard a lot about honlc in the few years of her life. Her grandmother had told her all about It, in the long, cold nights "And father nnd mother were they happy here?" Those people had been In the stories, too, and she liked them. "Yes, Maria; very happy, until the war came." "You told me father wouldn't ever comu again. t)o you think that moth pr will?" "I don't know, denr, I don't know. The Germans took her drove her off to work." "When she comes, she'll bo glad to sea me, won't she?" "Yes when sho comes." They stopped and looked ncross the barren wnste. "What's that, grand mother, sticking in tho ground? Oh, It's n tile I" She rubbed nway the dirt. "It was In tho kitchen wall." They looked nt It together. "It's u pretty picture, Isn't It? There are some trees, and there's n little girl, and I guess that must hnvo been a womsn and a house. It's brok en." She bat down on n hump of sod and put the til upon her knees. "Yes, It's brokon." Madame Ver beek watched the little girl examining the one thing left of home. "Mother I" Louisa rested on her spude. "You've found it 1" She started eag erly. Louisa shook her head. "There's no use trying. We'll nover find It in this upheaved place. Let's go away." "But what nro we to do?" "I do not know." Maria saw them making ready to depart. She clasped tho tilo against her side and skipped aerota to where they Btood. "I'm going to take It back with me, for mother; nnd, when she cornM, I'm going to give it to her." Madame Verbeek sighed: "We ought not to let her plan bo, Ilelene will never come." They trudged tho long wny bnci across the battle-riven Innd. Marin prattled of the tilo sho'd found. "I'll wash It nine nnd clean. Tho little girl bus n dirty face. Auntie, do you s'pose sho lived there In that pleco of house?" "Yes, yes, maybe she did," Louisa's thoughts were busy elsewhere. Whnt to do? How t(i provide? Her mother was so old, tho child so young. If only they had found her brother's money 1 Twilight wrnpped the lleliN in dreary gray before they readied the little railroad hut a new-built siding where nobody lived. About her thin, bent shoulders Madnmo Verbeek pulled the shawl more tightly She shivered ijltif Ssll -Inn lBBBBjB0(W I SBBSjftfciKBffzcflu I'll, i i . - VKhSNv! I k.SkeiO r'S?K?s.' "2VS. VcK4 M)C.W5y'vi ',"S-' gg " "' The Wrecked Home. as the damp and chilly wind cut through her threndbaro garments. Louisa put her arm within her moth er's and they stood between Mnria and the wind. Back to Ypres, the pulling engine took them, and then they had another deary walk to where they lived out near the edge of town. One by one the clouds up In tho sky faded and floated off and left tho stars and moon to wntch the drooping trio find their way. The women were both si lent though their thoughts ran In n never-ending whirl of "How" and "when." Maria dragged between them, half asleep. At last they reached the placo they now called home, and they were glad to sink upon their beds of straw and sleep. And each one dreanScd tlio gray-hnirea woman of a happy . past, Louisa of Innumerable fiends that tortured her with worry pointed spenrs, Maria of a tile that camo to life. ( Tho heavy sky of blenk November bound tho world within its pall. Louisa wakened from her restless sleep. An other day to meet. Each day" seemed long, nnd yet they passed too quickly as the winter camo. She moved nbout the room on tip-toe. Why wake the other two? The more her mother slept, the less she'd think nbout the fu ture with nn empty purse. Her gloomy thoughts wero startled by a knock. "Heleno!" "Louisa 1" That was all until the mother held Maria In her nrms her bnby grown Into n llttlo girl. Madame Verbeek awakening, thought thnt drenms were fooling her. And then they all sat speechless, so filled with things to say they could not talk. "I've hunted for you for u Ions tlme,"snt last Ileleno begnn. "When I enme back " "Where have you been?" "Not where I would hnvo gone, but let the pnst lie still. I camo back homo as quickly as thoy let mo free. But home was gone, nnd then I looked for you. Lnst night some people over there In Poelcapelle, you know the Necfs they used to live near us told me you were here." "Then you were homo before us?" "Yes, I was homo; I found the money Paul lind " "You found tho money 1" both tlid women gasped. "Oh, I found the money, the box lay In full view upon tho ground; I found the money, but I didn't find my family nor my home a broken piece of tile was nil I found." "I found one, too. I saved it Just for you." Marin ran to get it from the cupboard. "Look, your piece fits w'th mine. It makes tlio picture a woman and a little girl. Thnt's you and me, One corner's gone, though, yet "A man stood there before a house tMto-tvIiB m.l. vvr wS" tSBBBEam-wayi Mg .wjc : 71??3nm , V i I tier mother said. Jr&MWt m sWssssssv xHssKflssHr rSrsBrBSSSBSsr ii sssHi.HiH.iil.iHfi1.KH.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiPijiHliiiiiW WPMBBf 07 Ounronteed try ' i This Jhwti&tiA, cn Its toastc Deep Laid Plot. "Motlier nnd tho girls Insist on my wearing my oldest clothes every day and Sundny," said Mr. Cumrox. "That's economy." "I think It's diplomacy. If they can keep mo looking shnbby they know I won't hnvo tho norvo to show up nt any of their parties." In mnny cases the only difference between n 1010 nnd n 1020 Now Year resolution Is the date line. A company Is known by tho man who dominates It. "Gee-Whiz.1 How it Hurts The Pain in My Foot!" "Sometimes it is in my arm. Merciful Heaven, how my back hurts in tho morn- ingl" It'a nU duo to nn over abundance of that poison called uric acid. Tho kidnoyB aro not ablo to got rid of it. Suoh conditions you can readily over come, and pro long Hfo by tak ing tho advice of Dr.Picrco, which is "keep tho kid neys in good order.'! "Avoid too much meat, alcohol or tea. Drink plenty of puro water, preferably hot water, beforo meals, and drivo tho urio acid out of tho system by taking Anurio." This con bo obtained at almost any drug etoro. Send a bottlo of water to tno chemist at Dr. Pierce's Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., and you will rcccivo frco medical advico as to whether tho kidnoys nro affected. When your kidnoys get slug gish and clog, you suffer from backacho, sick-headache, dizzy spells, or twinges and pains of lumbago, rheumatism or gout; or sleep is disturbed two or threo times a night, tako heed, beforo too late. Get Anurio (anti-urio-ncid), for it will put new lifo into your kidneys and your entire system . Ask your nearest drug gist for it or send Dr. Picrco ten centa for trial package. Don't Wait to Be Bilious Keep well. Whenever your appetite Krrlnt liar m sour stomach and a coated tongue I a m rvrr-rVr warn you, take CARTER'S UAKIE.K3 IITTLE IVER Little Liver filU and the trouble will cease. PILLS Good for man, woman and child. For your health's sake stick to thin old, tried and true remedy.Purely vegetable. Saudi Fill Snan Dose Small Price DR. GARTER'S IRON PILLS, Nature's great nerve arid blood tonic foi AaeMla, RkenaatlHtt, Nenrecsnr-"! ItotpiM ta and Fetmale Weaknii,. SIMPLE MATTER TO DIAGNOSE Collar Salesman's Ailment .Would Probably Yield to Treatment of the Right Kind. Tho collar salesman leaned his llu-en-llko face over tho counter ut me nnd whispered, "I'm getting collnr UIs." "What's that?" I nsked, twisting n number fifteen choker nround my six teen neck. "A dlseaso peculiar to collar sales men only. After one has sold these linen nnd llannel circles for any length of time lie begins to think, walk and dream In circles and spirals. "Mentally, I can nover nrrlvo nt any conclusion. I start to think from n thought which nlwnys seems to mo to be a bono collar button, nnd I inva riably arrivo at the point whero I began. "When I tako a walk I catch myself describing circles which scorn to bo mndo of collars. Tlio streets, the houses, the stars seem ut times to be n merry-go round mndo up of llnon objects. "At night I dream of mounting vnst circles up tho sky mndo up of millions of collars, nt the top of which is u giant collar box." "Young man," I said, "your brain needs laundering." Cartoons Magazine. MUCH EXPLANATION IN ORDER Young Wife Had to. Do Satisfied as to the Identity of Husband's "Alma." A husband newly wed, and nlso n graduate of tlio University of South ern California, went to attend a ban quet on tho campus with a few of his collego mnto). Ho omitted telephon ing his wlfo. When friend husband did arrivo home his wife was almost ready to break oft diplomatic relations. "Whero In tho world hnvo you been?" was her menacing question. "Why, dearie, I hnvo been out en Joying the evening with my dear Alma Mater." "What?" ejaculated his wife, Jump ing to her feet. "Alma who?" Then tears. It took tho errant head of the fam ily Just two hours and twenty-llvo mlnutcH to convince ills heart-broken helpmate that Alum Muter was not tin alluring vampire. I.oh Angeles Times. So Considerate. Tho trnllle wiih ut Its height, and there wero tho usual piles of passen gers' baggngo on tho platform. In tho usual way tho porters wero bang ing It about, while tho owners mourn fully looked on. Suddenly the station master appeared, nnd, approaching ono of tho most vigorous baggage-smash-lng porters, shouted In stem tones: "Here I What do you mean by throw ing thoso trunks nbout llko that?" Tho passengers pinched themselves to make suro that thoy wero not dreaming, but they returned to enrth when tlio ofilclnl added: "Can't you see you're making big dents in tlio coucreto platform?" Naturally. "Tlio poet sang to his lovo, 'Dtfnk 'o mo only with thine oyes.' " , "Sho must hnvo had liquid eyes." . t ' ; olfeJ .?; y GET some toda t You're going to call Lucky Strikes fust right. Because Lucky Strike ciga rettes give you the good, wholesome flavor of toasted Burley tobacco. IsS? After-War Coffee. ' Pooplo old enough to remember tno Civil war nro able to recall the fact that after tho closo of thnt conflict it wns dllllcult and often Impossible to ohtnln coffee. Various substitutes wero used, such as parched rye., but ono thnt was commonly utilized in Wnshlngton and mnny other cities wns sweet po tatoes. Tlio latter wore first roasted nnd allowed to burn sotnewhnt on the outsfde. Then theyi wero nWhed In witter nnd boiled. The wntor wns thus transformed Into coffee, by no menus so unpnlutnblo as might" bo Imagined. Sugar In those dnys cost 2." cents a pound. Hut tlio sweet potato coffco required no sugar, nnd eo wns an eco nomical drink. Different Times. , "You don't bco niiy cdttorlnls today on tho subject of whither nro wo drift ing." "No ; whither nro we skidding Is tho proposition nbw." i Physical courngo can bo bought chenp, but moral courage, is unpur- chasablo nt any price. Sioux City Directory "Hub of tho Northwest." HiujWHREY The Dry Cleaner nd Dyer Expert Cleaning, Dyeing and Repairing. Hats Cleaned, B21 PIERCE ST.. SIOUX CITY, IOWA FIIRCOATS,ROBES,ETC. Mndo to your order without extra ohorgo. With your first ordor wo glvo you a U.OO pair of gauntlot gloves. Henu us your hides, we gloves. Henu us J Biiarautoo all work. TWIN CITY FUR COAT AND ROBE CO. 1620 S. E. Fifth St., Mlnaeipolu, Minn. International Motor Tracks FOR Servlco and satisfaction a sho for ovary nood a postal will bring you catalogue. International Harvester Company of America. Inc. Branch SOO Wnll St. Sioux Ctly, la. Travelers Will Find a Warm Welcome) at tho Hotel West MINNEAPOLIS Sensible Prices Service Our Watchword High Grade Dry Cleaning Dyeing, Prosslng and Repairing. Special attention elven mall orders. Parcel post paid one way. Have a jood proposition to offer anyons Interested In handling an agency tor us. Let us hear (rom you. W00LFS0N & CO., 012 Plem St, SIOUX CITY, IA. nSftsHH III