Dakotl Csunty Kifftldj DftUotd Pity, Ntbvh ana wwtwb atum i irirni.ijnjZiaHrXaT3ni!g i11iT . Ill ill" ..-., . , .....r-. i r fAPHILIPPINE TRAVELOGUE J i 3K ? THE ROMANTIC I8LANDS OP THEFAR 1 &$P)h 3 ggA'g EAST. PICTURE8 OF THEIR NATURAL &Vk 8 BSaBwl BEAUTY AND HISTORIC SPOTS BE- F WMgiS 3 iSIlTE?!! S COMINO A MECCA FOR TOURISTS AND Wfty US glqiy Ifj. A POPULAR WINTER RESORT. yssL-grT jgl The Zigzag on the Way to Bagulo, All aboard ! Let's go I We're sturt Ide from Manila, the great picturesque, Americanized Oriental city, and will travel by automobile 200 miles to the north to Bagulo, the summer capital of the Philippines. Tho trip can also be made by truln. We have ahead of us one of the most scenic, spectacular and thrilling auto mobllo trips In tho world. Wo will havo excellent roads all tho way. Tho Philippines are, In fact, a puradlse for autolsts, possessing 3.G00 miles of lino macadamized roads. Tho first part of tho trip Is through typical small towns and then across the central plain of Luzon and through several rich and fertile provinces, whero tropical vegetation Is seen nt Its best Hero ono Is Impressed with tho great agricultural wealth of tho Philip pines, which represents ono of tho East's greatest producing areas, with tho advantage of Immense naturnl re sources for the development of further production. It is regrettably true that oven in tho United States thero Is far from any real understanding of tho potentialities of tho Islands. At some points rlco fields, looking In the dtstanco like tho greenest of green lawns, stretch away as far oh the cyo can see. If you want color, If you want to feel tho romaaco and mystery of an Oriental twilight, pass this way as; the red eyed sun at the end of the dying day Is slowly sinking behind tho unending cxpanso of green fields. At first you cry out In ecstacy at tho gorgeous scene. But as you ride along, your eyes fastened oa the panorama of tints and colors, and with tho Im penetrably black Oriental night com ing on fast, you becorao enthralled. Sou no longer try to express your feel ings. You cannot You realize that those now fast changing, colorful master pieces la the heavens and on the land scape are pictures thut no man can ad equately describe nor human hands du plicate. So what's the use of trying I True, these are but impressions, but the traveloguer considers himself Justi fied in mentioning them, for they are a part of tho trip to Bagulo and return. Indeed, the gorgeous sunsets In all parts of the Philippines leave nn Im pression oa the mind of the tourist that is everlasting, We leavo the palms and tropical foliage and enter tho zone of rugged plue. Wo pass from the soft, Incense laden air of tho warm lowlands to the crisp, invigorating ozono of tho tern perato zone, all within a few hours' time. For mile after mile tho road now fol lows tho tortuous courso of a river, tho road lying in the bottom or on tho rocky sides of n grnnlto canyon. Tho Philippines aro rich in hydro electric possibilities. This power Is the cheapest power on earth. And it Is everlasting. Your trnvclogucr Is nei ther a prophet nor tho son of a proph et,1 but he predicts that one day there will be Innumerable Philippine govern ment owned hydroelectric plants In this canyon we nro now passing tb&agii. Think of the possibilities of such a project! Toduy the trip from Manila to Bagulo Is too expensive for tbeJ average Manila worker and his family, raauy of whom may live and die without beholding the wondrous beauties of their own island of Luzon. Think of what a blessing it would be to. Filipino mothers and children to feel upon their fevered brows tho cool, invigorating breezes of the mountain tops, now so near and yet so far I With the Philippine government owning its own electrlcvrahways and hydro-electric plant it wUld be poMibU to bring Summer Capita! of the Philippines. tho trip to Bagulo within the mians of hundreds of thousands of Filipinos. Not only Is there sufllclent power In this river to electrify u line from Ma nllu to Uugulo, but to operuto the street rullwnys of Moulin, light tho city and furnish power for manufac turing concerns. But wo havo now arrived at' Cump One. From this point tho scenery rapidly chnnges ns tho elevation In creases. We nro traveling over tho famous IJeiitfuet rond, tho construction of which through the inountnlns Is u most remarkable engineering triumph. At places the road Is blasted out of tho solid granite. Hiding on the edge of u 100 foot precipice mukes one feel like "At times vve seemed perilously near the Jumping off place." ho is on tho rim of tho world. Some of tho turns nro so sharp It is Impossible to sco "0 feet ahead, and we seem to bo perilously near the Jumping off place. Wo wonder If it Is safe to lean out and peer Into the canyon far below', and when we do we are perfectly sat isfied we are flirting with death. Yet the trip Is n. safe one, providing our driver lias better norves than our own. in iuu duuii nu icui.il iiiu uuiamna of Bagulo, a city among tho clouds, All l. ....... ... ...... 1. .1... ...l.l. "nd uro rat,,er surprised ut tho modern v.mj nv miu it, lu uk. iu It'll J curs Ull- gulo has grown from a village of huts to tho now Justly famed mountain ro sort of tho Philippines, sometimes call ed tho Philippine Simla. It Is un doubtedly destined some day to become a large city. Bagulo ranges In elevation from 4,C00 to 5,000 foot nnd Is surrounded practically on all sides by high moun tain ridges nnd "hogshncks" towering Into tho skies at a height of almost 8,000 feet Aside from tho scenery, which Is noteworthy, tho great blessing of Ba gulo Is Its temperate climate, which Is Indeed a godsend to those Impoverish ed by tho tropical temperatures of tho lowlands. Not only Is tho mountain i & trr -wt S ' ,. If yr ' -"' vy :4fe;v v AC. 4j,V. '&' . f. V t ' ' '' Ai vwl -; t -' 13 nssaviKHBCjb i krrVysaaaasi PR :M -tftijBin I IBBW4 nSjT -"i'llSjsVjsVjSBBVaSH IICTsBK-3f i.r V'-t anHalsiBH IliSSflliilliHI aWffiOmliuHBisH BaiiiwSnBsBssH UJssflHsSK-SirBBSBSMBSSSlsB iPBssaWssssEaBysl air rich In ozone, but It has been dem onstrated to be extraordinarily free from conns of all kinds. Each year during tho hot season the school teachers of-tho cntlro archipela go are enabled by the government to spend a month ut the teachers' camp In Bngulo for recreation and confer ence on school work, American army olllcers and their families also go to Bagulo for the hot months. And now that your traveloguer has you In Bagulo, he believes ho will leave you there, for thero aro many Interest ing Bide trips to take, and, besides, Bagulo Is tho most dollghtful place for a vacation In the entire Orient O.U.T. Ate No Breakfast , For Over a Year AVtSCOXSirS MAN SCFFKUKI) .SO FHOM nVSIMM'SIA Hi: COULD HAltlll.V (JUT AHOrNI). "Actually, two bottles of Tanlac havo done me more pood than nil the other medicines and treatments I have tried put .together," r.nid Paul Jnuios Knwnlskl, 1B17 JufTerson ave nue, Waukesha, Wis., and employe of the Federal Malleable Company, in West All Is, Wis. "For years I have had trouble with my stomach," continued Mr. Kowal ski." "My appetite vnt very poor and for a year I couldn't eat any breakfast at nil. Nothing agreed with me, and after every meal I would bloat up terribly with gas, of ten become nauseated, and finally pot so I just dreaded to eat. I had n bad headache all the time nnd be ii.iic jo dizzy at timet. I cnuid hard ly keep from falling. My nerves wero in such bnd shape it wbj alnio't impossible for ine to get a r,on night'a sleep, sometimes lying awako all night long, nnd in the .mornings I Cuuld hardly get out of bed. My kidneys worried me a great rioal and I had a severe pain across the small of my hack just about all the time. I kept losing v.rlght and finallj 1 tiecanio so hadl run down and weal: I could barely get around and lost loth of I'mu from my work. "Sr me of my friends down at the hop where 1 work advised me to try Tanlac. snyinj; it had done thcip a world of gooi', and the way it went after my troubles was simply rt markable. I had taken only a few doses when I began to improve, and now I feel like a new man. -I h.'ve a good appetite, everything I eat agrees with me, and I haven't had a headache or dizzy spell since I be gan taking Tnnlae. I am never both ered with my kidneys and the?pains have left my back entirely. It will always lie a pleasure for ine to rec ommend Tanlac' Tanlac is sold in Dakota CUy by Neiswanger Pharmacy, in South Sioux City by McBeath's Pharmacy, in Homer by lhassfield & Jensen. Advertisement. mm adopt 10.000 ORPHANS Connecticut to Provide Foster Mothers for Little Victims of Turks. Ten thousand little victims of Turkish brutality aro to be foster mothered by tho big hearted women of Connecticut ns the result of ap peals by Near East Relief, the former Commlttco for Armenian and Syrian Belief of 1 Madison avenue, New York city. Tho women at a meeting voted to "adopt" that number as their share of tho 250,000 homeless nnd starving boys nud girls orphaned In the massa cres and deportations. Thrco hundred .representatives of women's organizations attended the meeting at Hartford, at which Gov ernor Marcus H. Holcomb presided and pleaded tho cause of the stricken peo ples. AnoUier speaker was Henry Mor genthau, former U. S. Ambassador to Turkey. Assurances that tho example of these noblo hearted Connecticut women will bo followed by similar organizations In all tho other states liae been received at the headquarters of the Near East Relief, 1 Madison avenue, New York city. Webster's New International DICTIONARIES are in use by busi ness men, engineers, bankers, judges, architects, physicians, farmers, teachers, librarians, cler cymen, by successful men and women the world over. Are You Equipped to Win? The New International provides the means to success. It is an all knowing teacher, n universal ques tion answerer. If you seek efficiency nnd ad vancement why no t make dally use of this vast fund of Inform ntlon? 400,000 Vocabulary Termi. 2700Paftt. 6000 llluitratiotu. Colored 1'latn. 30,000 CeoftranMcal Subject. 12,000 llloHraplilcul tntrie. Rejulir and IndU-Paptr Editioni. Wrlteforipeo- B I ram p: llinlrntloaj. etc. Free, a t of 1'gcket Map II you H nmo tbliH paper. C&C. MERKIAM CO.. Springfield, Mm. "iiiimiHmf noA uo j ii iNid sn lai ii i in ISLaS sw in si IB sp r-iH! K?. IBj IHRlfeM HUP ssyjSsjgjcn -..Hi. T LEGAL NOTICES First Pub. Juno 17, 1920 4w, IN 'I'HK COUNTY COURT OF DA KOTA COUNTY, NKHHASKA. State of Nebraska) Dakota County, ) B3, To Minnie Harper, John Matz, Carl Matz, Frank Matz, Fred Matz, Fred Beerman, Edna Warner, William Beormnn, Chas. Labahn, Ida T.tunday, Emma Trask, John i.ubahn, William Lorenz, Frank Hendricks, Fred Hen dricks, Otto Hendricks, Lnnnn Hen dricks, Anna Hendricks, Henry Hen dricks, John Lass, 'Inniinh Liermnn, Hikn Emke, C. E. Sending, Anna' Stark, Fred Stadlng, Matilda Wall-: way, John C. Stading, Freda Kipper, Herman Stading, Emma Thoi.ias, Mary Limbach, John Sund, losa Lna therbach, William Sund, Emmn Ken-' nelly, Hikn Marshall, Fred Sund, Henry Sund, John Wagner, Fred Wag ner, Maria Herman, Minnie Slerk, Lena Scheinansky, Hika Krugor, and Rika Sierk, and any and all other persons interested in the estnte of Christ Stading, Deceased. On rending the petition of 1 ewis Hlanchnrd praying final settlement and allowance of his account filed in this court on the 14th day of June, 11)20, as administrator with the will annexed, nnd trustee, of the estate of Christ Stading, deceased. It is hereby ordered that you, and all per sons interested in said matter, ap pear in the County Court of said county on the 9th day of July, 1920, at 10 o'clock A. M. to show cause, if any there be, why the prayer of the petitioner should not hi granted, and that notice of the pendency of said petition and the hearing thereon ho given to all persons interested in said matter by publishing n copy of this order in the Dakotn County Her ald, a weekly newspaper printed in said county, for four successive weeks prior to said hearing. S. W. McKINLEY, I (Se'.l) County Judge. First Pub. July 8, 192Q Iw. j PHOHATi; NOTH'F. TO CRUHTORS. In the County Court of Dakota County, Nebraska. In the Matter of the Estate- of An drew J. Parker, deceased. I Notice is hereby given, that the creditors of the said deceased will meet the executor of said estate, be fore me, County Judge of Dakota County, Nebraska, at the County Court Room, in said county, on the 2nd day of September, 1920, and on the 4th day of October, 1920, at 10 1 o'clock. A. M. each day, for the pur-, pose of presenting their claims for j examination, adjustment and nllow- ance. Three months nre allowed for creditors to present their claims, and one year for the executor to settle said estate, from the 2nd day of July, 1920. This notice will be, published in the Dakota County Herald for four weeks successively prior to the 2nd day of September, I'JZU. Witness my hand, and seal of said court, this 2nd day of 'July, A. D., 1920. S. W. McKINLEY, (Seal) County Judge. OUIUN'ANCi: NO. jM7 An Ordinance providing for the ap propriation of .Money l lie rnl.sed by the levying of lax on all taxable nroncrty in the Ylllaxe of Dakota City, Nebraska. Said money to be used to defray tbe o I'Mi-v oT said Village for the Fiscal Ynr Commenc ing on the Last fue.sd.iy in April, 1020, and ending on the L:vt Tuesday In April, 1021. Be it Ordained jv the- Chairman and Village Board of Trustees, of the Village of Dakota City, Nebraska: Section 1. That the following amounts be appropriated for the use of the Village of Dakota City, Ne braska, for the liscal year commenc ing on the last Tuesday in April, 1920, and ending on the last 'iutsduy in April, 1921. Interest on water bonds and sinking fund $1250.00 General Village Purposes . . 1500.00 Total S2750.00 Section 2. That a tnx ho levied on all taxable property in the Village of Dakota City, Nebraska, sufficient to make said amounts, and that the amounts so levied be certified to the County Clerk of Dakota County, Ne braska, by the Village Clerk of Da kota City, Nebraska. Section 3. This ordinance shall be in force from and after its passage. Passed and approved this 2nd day of July, 1920. G. F. BKOYHILL, Chairman Board of Trustees. Attest: Sidney T. Frum, Clerk. (Seal.) LSTKAY A'OTICi:. Taken up by tho undersigned on his farm west of Hubbard, Neb., on or about July 1, 1920, one white mare, weight about i)00 pounds; age about 15 years. Owner can havo snme by paylnc, for this notico.nnd for feed and care. JOHN C. SULLIVAN, Route li, Hubbard, Nebraska. Have YOU Paid YOUR ? Subscription. I'flaiT'h f xff la eUnlln mKibBIV freeA tlB CO, J,4 i.oti' jj T Till rou whit tad how la oUnlln nrourtcriU suit) llowrritrJcuaad " Whn tO UlUlate MftlttCfOL IUf ftilJ .. i.ii. I &uj 10c lor oo pftcku iiubol Glial F.UUV utd tarpcxwswr KUUa MtU tVOdfCt ib book' 7nr Homts uTHUftui mo co- . a, .. -I. .A ... . ai." K" m, MVVfteWSj fcWUWs, VUWe MmSsT1 THE UNIVERSAL CAR insist on m:.MJim: roitn pabts The Authorized Ford Dealers are your protection. As such, wo' handle nothing but the Genuine Ford dium Steel, nnd each pnrt according to its use -is hent-treated in the way that will give it the longest Imitation "Ford" parts are being sold by many mail order houses, down-town stores nnd garages to the unsuspecting Ford owners ns "Ford" parts. They are not genuine Ford parts. They are made bj concerns who have no connection whatever with the Ford Motor Company. Tests have shown them tu break when tho genuine Ford parts didn't even bend, parts. They are made from the famous Ford Vana wearing qualities. Our Ford garage and Ford mechanics arc at your service at all times. Drive in when replacements or repairs for your Ford car may bo necessary. Save your car and also save your money. HOMER THE HOUSE What Do YOU Want to Know About the Far West? I I I i SUNSET for orer twenty years h boen the recognized exponent o( the Watt. It is distinctly a msgszino for the home the whole famlly-and it brings the Far West and the Pacific Slope to your door. ,(40 I 2i t$mmc(pttpaij or NewHavN.Connecticut I How is YOUR Subscription ? WeYQ No other paper brings to your Whole Family the wonderful variety of high grade reading for all ages. IN A YEAR, 52 issues, The Companion gives 12 Great Serials or Group Stories, besides 250 Short Stories, Adventure and Travel Stories, Family Pace, Boys' Page, Girls' Page, Children's Page, and the best Editorial Page of the day for mature minds. START A YEAR'S SUBSCRIPTION FOR YOUR FAMILY NOW. COSTS LESS THAN 5 CENTS A WEEK. OFFER No. 1 1. The Youth' Companion 52 issue for 1920 2 All remaining Weekly 1919 issuos; also S. 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