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About Dakota County herald. (Dakota City, Neb.) 1891-1965 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 13, 1921)
Nva.1' ' t ' ; 7 f i ; i'. W'. 1 1 ' I JJJTU0iaaa&&irr Strayed away from my promises, 1 eil bull calf. FRANK UFFING, Hulibaitl, Nob. For Snli" Somo Rood Uuroe Jersey hours. FRANK UFFiNG, Hubbnul, Nob. 1) 15. S. ,1. 1) A I L llcsidunt Dentist ih o:i-: 6i HOMER, NE1JR. J. B. ROBINSON Auctioneer GLNLRAL FARM SAI.IIS mitl RLWL i:st ti:. Make your dates early, as they are Filling Fast. SOI', Court St. Slou Cltj, In When, you want your Ford Properly Repaired with Cit' inl ine Ford Parts, by (Jeiiuine Ford Mechanics, take it to the Ford Hospital. HOMER MOTOR CO. LET US PRINT IT FOR YOU Tha mi ujat i;of.ic expect you i ne ruLn.oTO tell 'em all about Exhilarating Burlcsquo; Vaudeville SIlllAltiyiFillidiilhrretlrClrli.FuonrCloint.Gorttooi Equlptft. Brilliant Senile Eotirormenl LADIES' DIME MATINEE EVERY WEEKDAY Everybody Goat; Ask Anybody IWATI THE BIGGEST AID BEST SHOW WEST OF CHICAGO BUY ANOTHER WAR SAV1H8S . CTflMD $100 Reward, $100 Cstarrh is a local disease greatly Influ enced by constitutional conditions. It therefore toqulres constitutional treat ment. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE Is taken Internally and acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaro-j of the Sys tem. HAUL'S CATARRH MEDICINE dostroys the foundation of the disease, rives the patient strength by Improving the nenerat health and usslsts naturo In doing its work. S100 00 for any case of Catarrh that HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE falls to cure. Druggists 75c. Testimonials free. P. J. Cheney 8c Co.. Toledo, Ohio. ADVERTISING PAYS All Except Those Who Do Wot Advertiao. . rmlliiiw lu riant In sJjfa. I f.ork..rJriit.i.J & ' youTr uli o an I fiOMtrttrdrii iuJ TJ lllllUilKMUiilMiw 1'i.iiinil -rAJi ftl III fcl.lt. ,- T ni 10c. lor one racltac 'JV sr one package YTVi?P JXi5ft nnt Pfliuy mid I4 JjijltOl3cf eh of Gli MUillshtecd THE ItOLHtS 1 CIHERUAN SEED CO .77 N. CUveljni . vo. Cjiton, Uto. LUMBER MILLWOKK tad iurl building mtorUI l 25 OR MORE SAVING m YOU pom fa goniiair uujidi uu jvu uaictsui aoouibltfUlUt of what oufietKliid have our cvtlmu tor rat urn mll W ahlp quleh and pay the frelaht. .PVTfRS LUMJibK CO :.( nOVI) STRLKT O.MAIU. NHL gsggaii!tn::nili:::ii:.-:i;:i:;::fcgsgra C0& tcw 5(huijijieds jfcUtifi SJiuxedl? Here is your opportunity to insure against embarrassing errors in spelling, pronuncis n and poor choice of words. Kuow the meaning of puzzling war terms. Increase your eflitirncy, which results In power and success. WEBSTER'S NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY is an nil-knowing teacher, n, universal question answerer, inado to meet your needs. It ia in daily uso by hundreds of thousands of suc cessful wen and women tuo world o ir. 400,000 Words. 2700 Paces. 6000 II lunrallons. 12.00U Ulo&ruphlcal Cn irles. 30.00U C'toCrajililcal Subjectt. GRAND PRIZE. (Highest Award) l'uuaina-l'acifio Imposition. RLCL'LAK and INDM-PAPr.lt Editions. WRITE tor Specimen Yitn. FKEI, 1'w.kei Mjpgiljoucamc this pjptr. G. & C. 1VIERRJAM CO., Springfield, Mats., U. H. A. m m .-.. .v r:,reafflSJS5fiT'!!! liOOAT, JJBWS VPWMfi THURSDAY, JANUARY 13, 1021 S5.00 Wash Boilers at S! "5. PKED SCHKlLiR & CO. Rev. C R. I.owe was a nassenirnr to Omaha Monday, i"epcfiing to re turn weuncidny. Miss Lucille 1?iim of S ni City, bewail teaching in the Sl-ill district west of Homer Monday. Mrs. G. F. liroyhill entertained a few "men folks" Tuesday evening in honor of her hushi.nd's fiftieth birth day. Miss Goldie Frederick was compell ed to dismiss her school near Willis lost week, on account of an attack of tonsilitis. Prof. C. K. Simpson went to Lin coln last Thursday to again take up his residence, having recovered from his recent illness. The new board of county commis sioners were in session for the first tune 'lues.il.iy. A big grist of busi ness was disposed of. Mrs. Pat Kelleher and bnby wenttr Council Hluirs, Iowa. Satuid'ay for a week's visit in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Schumacher. Mrs. Fred Kdgnr and little daugh ter arrived Tuesday from Worthing ton, Minn., for a visit with her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. L. Niobuhr. The personal cll'ects of the John F. Sides estate will be sold at public auction at the farm southwest of town about the 10th of Fein nary. Giant Holbrook moved on Monda.v from the Mrs. Eva Orr house to the Vern Heikes farm, where he will work for Mr. Ileikes-thr coming sum mer. County Judge Mclvinley officiated at the wedding of William H. Finne gan, of Sioux Cjty, ami Miss Lilu B. Holdcroft, of Sloan, Iowa, on Thurs day of last week. The boy3 and girls btiet ball teams went to Ponca Tuesday evening and both teams met defeat the boy? by a 28 to 1G scoie and the girls by a "51 to -1 count. l'Olt SAM! ."1 room house, in South Sioux City, Neb., partly modern, half block from car line; terms reasona ble. Address, No. 11, caie the Her ald, Dakota City, Neb. The sale of the Henry Permann personal property on the old Geo. T. Woods farm last Thursday was well attended and everything told at sat isfactoiy prices to Mi. Becnminn. It was somewhat of a surprise to the people of Dakota City to hear of the marriage of Prof. A. II. Bru nelle, who served as princ pal of our schools last year. lie is i.mv located ut Fuilerton, Net). Fred S. Berry, county attorney of Wayne county and a former resident attorney of this place, has been ap pointed by Gov. McKelvie as one of the six members of the state normal board for a four year term. Billy Lopp, an old time resident of South Siou:c City, now .living at Se attle, Wash., was calling on old Da kota City friends while heie on busi ness Wednesday. He and Mrs. Lopp have been on un extended visit in the east, and stopped o(f for a visit with lelatives and old friends in Da kota county. For your Heating Steve or Furn ace, there's more "Heat Units," more lasting satisfaction- Dollar lor Dollar- in n Ton of Genuine Hocking Lump Coal than in any of the cheap er grades. Take home a load You'll need it. Monioe Wilbur Lake Lumber Co, South Sioux City and Hubbard, Nebr. Sheriff Geo. Cain and Deputy J. P. Rockwell weie called to Homer Tues day evening to take charge of an In dian full of "white mule" that was making life miserable i'or the oificers there. They brought him back an'l placed him in the county bastile for safe keeping, ufter quite a tussle with him along the way. Ho was just too crazy drunk for anything. A special meeting of Omadi Lodge No. 5, A. F. & A. M., has been called for Thursday afternoon of this week at 2 o'clock, and also for Friday af ternoon at the same hour, when the Master Mason's degree will be con ferred on a class of eight candidates. A six o'clock supper will be served to the lodge members on Friday, by the Ladies Aid society, in the new church basement. Sheriff George Cain and Deputy Sberifl Rockwell leLurnu, fiom Om t ha last week where they attnded the trial of William Gordon of South Sioux City, in the iederal court, in which Gmdon was charged with op erating a "still." He entered a plea of guilty, and was sentenced to U0 days in jail. The case against Tony Cemino, also of South Sioux City, did not come up for trial, as Tony had not been placed under arrest by the federal oflicrs at that time. A. B. Rich, whose marriage was an nounced in the Bloomfield, Neb., pa pers last week, where he was serving liis second year as superintendent of schools was given his release by the boatd of education, according to the following, which appeared in Tues day's Sioux City Tribune as a special from Bloomfield: "AlHdavits charg ing Supt. A. B. Rich with improper conduct were filed with the board of education and Mr. Rich was called before the board on Saturday and abked to lesign. Alter reading the all'iduvit he resigntd without pro test. Rich came here in August, 1919, nnd was seiving his second year rs superintendent. His wife died about the middle of September, 1920, and on December 28 ho was married to Miss Ruth Harris, the ceremony taking place at Hastings, this state. Miss Harris had been a teacher in the schools here but had been reliev ed of ber duties by the school board foin time prior to her marriage. The all'idaviU charged Rich with improp er and unseemly conduct. Public sentiment is solidly back of the board in the step taken. Principal Priest is now acting superintendent and will probably succeed to the job," ViAtrttaA iTtMmv titiA.,rt wwwn iihiuiuui goaa&wcvsia&aa 1'tctl llirmrti wan Ifrrr fr""' H" uroft on business Monday. One Range-best make -this week only, at cost price. FRISD SCHK1KVISK K V.U. The M. K. Ladies Aid society wul meet Friday afternoon of this week with Mrs. C. It. Young. B. B. Gribhle returned to his home at Chambers, Neb., after a week '3 business trip in this county. A. M. Chambers came up from Pen der Monday and is assisting his son, Ray Chambers, on the farm, in mov ing some buildings. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Tackalerry of Sioux City were dinner guerts here Sunday in the home of their daugh ter, Mrs. Will H. Orr. Ralph Graham got in on the pri.r money at the corn show nt Lincoln last week, winningninth prls-o for the best ten ears of large Yellow Dent corn. County Supt. W. E. Voss went to Lincoln on Wednesday to attend the three-days' session of county superin tendents' institute, called by the state superintendent. Fred II. Cadwallader, wife and ba by, of Merriam, Neb., and Miss May Cadwallader, of Winside, Neb, were over Sunday visitors here in the home of their sister, Mrs. It. M. Wnddell. J. P. Rockwell went to Emerson on Sunday to attend the military funer al of Harry McEntnfTcr, who lost his life on the battlefields of France, and whose body had just been ship' ped home. The Tony Circo family moved to South Sioux City Monday, having rented a piece of ground near the Northwestern bridge. Mr. Circo is employed in one of the Sioux City packing houses. Will Learner of Homer, was fined $50 and costs in Justice of the Peace Grover C. Davis' court Monday, foi assaulting Frank Kettler, t. member of the firm of Kettler & Probst The trouble was all about an oil tove. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Miller enter tained nt Sunday dinner, Mr. and .Mr:.. Geo. I. Miller of Salem, and Air. and Mrs. Alvin Anderson, Mr. nnd Mrs. Aug. Snmuelson, Mr. and Mrs. h Samuelson, and Misses Nettie and Esther Samuelson, of Wakefield. Fred "Phillips fell out of a tree he was trimming in the Mrs. A. K. Chri.i tiansen yard last Wednesday a dis tance of about twenty feet. He lit right end up on his feet, nnd was so badly jarred that he has been unable to get around since. On the evening of Wednesday, Jan uary the 19th, the Young Ladies So dality of Saint Michael's chinch ol South Sioux City, will give a dance in the Knowlton & Manning hall in South Sioux City. The dancing will start about half past eight and will continue until midnight. A genuine pleasant evening in promised. The proceeds of the dance will go to the Saint Michael school. Tickets are now on sale at $1.00 a couple. Many people missed reading what Thomas A. Edison said recently le garding the labor situation. Heie it is: "I am not against the olj'ht hour day, or any other thing that protects labor from exploitation at the hands of ruthless employers. But It makes 1110 sad to see young Americans shackle their abilities by blindly con forming with rules which f rce the industrious man to keep In stop with the shirker. I have always felt that one of the principal reasons for American progress In the pas' has been that every ninn had a chtncc to become whatever he wanted U- lie. Today I am wondering what would have happened to me by now if fifty years ago some fluent talker had con vinced me to the theory of the eight hour day and convinced me that it was not fair to my fellow workers to put forth my best efforts in my work. I am glad that the eight hour day had not been invented when I was a young man. If my life had b'-en made up of eight hour days T do not believe I could have accomplished a great deal. This country would not amount to as much as it does If the young men of fifty years ago had been afraiti that they might enrn more than they were paid. There ought to lie some labor leader strong enough and wise enough to make trade unions a means of fitting their members for better jobs and greater responsibilities." Lutheran Church Notes By Itev C. It. Lowe. Next Sundny morning we will have special music, furnished ny .1 choir composed of those who used to for nish the music twenty years ago. Come and hear them, you will enjoy it. Council installation net Sunday u.orning. The pastor was absent the fn-.t couple of days this week at Omaha, in conference with the president of Synod, making some adjustments of the synodical apportion. nents. The young folks will pr.ie ice next Saturday night at Mr. C. C. heer mann's. The (Jot eminent l.'iicnur.iges Dating .Mutton. The United States Department f'f Agriculture has provided the State College of Agriculture with a publi cation called "Farm Slaughteiing and Use of Lamb nnd Mutton," Tor free distribution to the farmers of Ne braska. The purpose of the bulletin Is to encourage the use of mutton and thereby aid the sheep Industry. There are 112 pages and :io illustra tions showing the various oparatlons in the slaughtering of Inmbs, cutting up the carcass, and cluing the flebh. It nlso contains a large number of recipes for cooking the meat. The ease with which sheep and lambs are slaughtered on the farm and the comparatively small size of the car cass make them a conveii,ent foim of fresh meat for family u and for summer killing. The meat p.m uo be cured for futuro uie. Ask nt your farm Bureau office for farmer. bulletin 1172, "Farm Slaughtering and Uso of Lamb and Mutton," or write the Collejio of Agriculture. rA HaMa. srt. iltlUta AAMa tJAuKt uu ii nuonnaAi PO MOST WORK ON THWPAY Statistics Show That British Factory Employees Are at Their Best About Midweek. j Wbat Is the best workday In Amer ica? hi Lnglanil It Is Thursday. That Is (be finding of Industrial re search board Investlgatois of that country. The Iondon Chronicle reports that over a period of twenty weeks the output was registered and "graphs" were made. 1 The workers gave their best on Wednesdays and Thursdays, hut the output on Saturday was Invariably low. Whuii doubled (to equalize time) It Is often less than 75 per cent of that on other days. Another Important conclusion was that the skilled workman Is much more legulnr lu his output than the worker not so well ffiuilllled. He does not get the "tired Saturday feeling" so soon. In some factories the output arises untl Friday, but among the less skilled workmen It was found that Thurs day was the best working day. An Important consideration which the Investigators kept In mind was tin t of the atmospheric condition In which work Is done. Itecords of the air conditions have been taken with the output records. In various plants the Saturday out put was so low that employers found It unprofitable, to operate, so they closed down. From this It would ap pear that on a half day the worker does not give the average of a half day of production. Richard Splllane In the Philadelphia Public Ledger. BOMBAY A CITY OF BEGGARS Government Is Planning Severe Meas- ures to Repress Nuisance That Is Becoming Intolerable. Some time ngo the government of Bombay appointed a committee to ooiw slder and formulate proposals for the puiposu of suggesting practical meas ures whereby the ever-growing nuis ance or professional beggary might be abolished. The committee has now completed Its investigation and has issued a report. The report shows that there are In Bouilmy city alone 5,000 professional bfggars-, and the beggars In other parts bring the total for the presi dency to over 00,000. The general coiu'luMons of the committee are that there must be introduced nt the earli est opportunity mi .net for the preven tion of professional beggary, which will be applicable to the whole of the presidency. Sadhus and fakirs, It Is suggested, should be exempt from the operations of the act, which It Is proposed should mnke begging a cognizable offense. Those who have visited India will .doubtless recall with feelings of horror the terrible sights they have witnessed of beggars, many of them physical wrecks and suffering from loathsome diseases, seated about the roads so liciting alms from pnssersby. From the Times of India. War Maps for Envelopes. From the Bed Cross Bulletin of the Baltic stntes, published at Riga: "The shortage of paper has resulted In many novel makeshifts. One of these Is the use of German nnd Rus sian official war maps as material for envelopes. "Large quantities of war maps of the nusslan, the German Imperial army nnd Bermont's western volunteer nrmy were captured by the Letts slnei! their Independence In November, 1018. They were sold to private Interests, who make many varieties of envelopes from them. The paper is of excellent qual ity. "No attempt was made to remove the map proper. The maps were sim ply folded and cut to' size and glued. It Is very convenient to open 11 letter and find that the !ii"!do of the envelope Is 11 map of the district of which the letter trents." Houses Few Less Divorce. France Is finding one comfort in the housing shortage. Divorces are de creasing In Paris and other French cities "because of the lack of houses and apartments." Unable to find suitable places In which to live apart, disgruntled cou ples In many places ure composing their differences and continuing to live imiler the same roof. During the first three months of this year, 8,00r decrees were pronounced In ParlH alone, but since April the shortage of houses has been making Itself felt, with the result that the number of divorce actions has been falling steud lly. Last month the number of ap plications fell below one thousand, and this month it Is believed the number will not reach the seven hundred murk. It Is an 111 wind, etc. Prehistoric Graveyard Unearthed. A prehistoric graveyurd believed to be at least 2,000 years old has been unearthed near Sturgard West Prus sia, by German Investigators under the direction of Professor Zakrewskl. In one of the graves the excavators found six black urns and one red urn with white stripes tilled with clay and ushes. Among the remains were some glittering substances which the Inves tigators believe once hud been udorn inents of piehlstorlc men uud women. Electricity In White House. The White House Is probably more Intrlcutely equipped electrically than any other residence In the world. There ure In the house more than 170 miles of wires, providing for 8,000 In candescent lights, u bell system untl a private telephone nystein for the pres. Ideiit and his family, exglushely. i - - giASJChn "yriTt iB.vwffiftg.aifiitte tf &owfftaTfleiwMM Stinson's Specials for Saturday, J an, 15 FOR THIS DAY ONLY Two Packages Quaker Corn Flakes '-."i Jersey Cream Pancake Flour 'ISc Two Pounds Peaherry Collco ,'... c One Large Package Dandelion Oats . . .- -'lOc 100 Pounds of Granulated Sugnr $!.! Si Cans A-l Tomntoes, Feasor Kraut 7."c rij Pounds Handpicked Michigan NEW Navy Beans .0c Good Rib Boiling Meat, pel pound i'JJuc 1 Sack -18-llt. Climax Flou i, Guaranteed A-l i?il.7." Ladies' and Children's Diesses and Aprons ....tl."i per cent Ills. All our Wool Sweaters One-Third Off All our Hosiery, at One (Jnailer Oil Fresh Fruit and YciKutuhluH of all Kinds for Suturdny's Trndu Stinson's Dakota City, CHESS COMES EASY TO HIM Youthful Prodigy Declares There Is Nothing Wonderful About His Mastership of Game. Chess Is the easiest game In the world In me. During the long dull days of the war my father used to play all the time with his friends. At llrst I did not understaml wiint the chessmen were for, and wondered why father would sit for hours and gaze at the bimid with Its funny-looking pieces. One day when I did not want to go out and play I watched him play bis game. 1 became Inter ested. I bothered my father so with questions that he chased me out of the game as soon as he was through with his friend. I waited eagerly for him to get through. He played a practice game with me, and I under stood every move after that. The next game we played, 1 beat my father, who Is a very good chess player. There Is nothing wonderful about my way of playing the game. My secre tary, Mr. Ar.enberg, says that It comes from reincarnation. A baby Is born with good brains, and they ex plain It that way. They say that his ancestors or some spirits have given this power to him becnuse so much ability ID one person must have taken a long time to develop. When I play chess I can plan my moves six or sev en moves ahead, and most players can only go three moves ahead of the game. I can't help It at all, 1 was born that way. I like to play with poor players. At West Point, where I beat II) games nnd drew one, there were only nine good players; tho oth ers had no business trying to play me at all. I have played lots of fine players In chess. During tho war I beat the German governor at Warsaw, and he was an old man and a fine player. Then I drew a game with Itubensteln, tho Russian champion, and nlso drew with Griffin In a blindfolded game In England. I have not played Lasker yet, but one of the 21 1 beat In Paris says he drew u game with Lasker, and another said he beat Capablauca. In America, my hardest game so fur has been with Coloirel Flebeger, sixty-two years old, tit West Point. Samuel BzcszewslU In Leslie's. SEE SUICIDE NATIONAL PERIL Influential Japanese Newspapers Exalt Christian Idea as to the Sacred. nets of Life. .Suicide, which has always been prevalent In Japan, Is, according to the Jnpnnese press, even more rife than ever since the financial crisis lu the Laud of the Rising Sim, says the Literary Digest lu a recent Issue. The Osaka Maiiihiil. which sees peril to the nation In the prevalence of self slaughter, acknowledges the excel lenees of the Christian view that sui cide, Instead of being merely an apol ogy for failure, Is a crime. .Many sul (ides In Japan are due to the fact that the Japanese have "less attachment to life than foreigners," untl ulso to the traditions of feudal times when they belittled life. The Osaka MalnlchI says further: "Death much more suicide means evasion of reponslbllty . . . and the notion that those who commit sui cide have the keenest sense of respon sibility Is wrong. Suicide Is the em bodiment of egoism and Irresponsibili ty. Onu of the strong points of thew Christian people Is their conviction that to 1:111 one's self Is as crimlnul us to kill others." Remarkable Photographic Feat. Conspicuous among a number of, re markable scenes In a three-reel motion-picture film recently taken of un ''- " -ri tnft.Vtf'VW' iStZS8a2& leMwMajftsy& Nobraskn Ohio steer mill in operation, is one flint actually shows the boiling of molten metal In an open-hearth fur nace heated to 51,000 degrees Fahren heit. The photographic fent of suc cessfully registering this action In de tail on the film Is particularly Inter esting, becnuse the subject Is one that a human eye can nut gaze upon un protected, says Popular Mechanics Magazine. Furthermore, tin extreme heat of the furnace cast some doubt on the safety of the camera, with Its charge of celluloid ribbon, and while the exposure was made, two men stood ready to hurl the operator to u cooler place If anything happened. Potato Flour Mixed With Wheat. A fifty-fifty mixture of wheat Hour from the United States and potato flour of domestic make has been or dered by the Netherlands government for Its people with the hope of keeping down the price of bread. Unjess some thing Is done to keep down the price of Imported wheat It will soon be out of the reach of the populace, says tho Chicago Journal. Potato starch was used it great deal during the wnr for tho purpose of piecing out tho wheat flour supply, and It was not generally acceptable to the people, but potuto Hour will not be open to the' same criticism, nnd It Is anticipated will prove more palatable. No Respecter of Persons. Law enforcement Is no respecter of persons, its a young woman stcnog tnpher In the olllco of Chnrles J. Or blson, federal prohibition director, can testify. This young woman ordered some wine of pepsin from her druggist. Tho druggist considered the order and her record on previous orders. "Young woman," he said, "I cannot sell you niy wine or pepsin. You nre using too much. We are under strict orders from the prohibition director to watch carefully our sales on wine of pep. Bin." Indianapolis News. HER FIVE YEARS OF TROUBLE ENDS LIMIOLN WOMAN SAYS Kill: CAN'T FIND WORDS TO L'XPRIISS BLR (HLVTlTUDi: FOR TAN LA P. "Even before I had taken half a bottle of Tunlac I noticed u wonder ful improvement In my condition," EaUl Mrs. Elizuhoth Finnell, 10-11 N btreet, Lincoln, Nob. "For fivo years everything I ate formuntcd and bloated and distressed me terribly. 1 hud to bo taking something constantly for constipn tlon and nt times my feet would swell' until I could hardly stand. My Uerves were shattered, I couldn't sleep and had awful headaches. I often got so dizzy I had to sit down and was so weak I could hardly do any of my housework. "Well, I road a lot about Tanlnc nnd decided to try it. My appetite was never better and 1 don't think anyone has any better digestion than I have. Tho hendnclies, dizzy spells and weaknesi huvo left mo and my nerves are calm untl steady so that I sleep peacefully uvary night and get up feeling fine and my housework. Is not u bit of trouble." Tanlnc Is sold In Dakota City by Neiswnnger Pharmacy, in South Sioux City by McBoath's Pharmacy, in Homer by Brnastiuld & Jensen, in Hubbard by Duggan & Heffernan. Advertisement. ' The Herald forNcw3 when It Is News, ? '" t.. j