Dakota County herald. (Dakota City, Neb.) 1891-1965, March 17, 1921, Image 8

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    l
MaMMMMH
VIENNA DEATH RATE
I BECOMES APPALLING
Condition of Children Even More
Harrowing, Declares Authority
I on City's Desperate Plight.
f V
WufcMH
Five years of famine hare resulted
Id greatly Increased mortality tndj
morbidity la Vienna which before the
war wus counted ai one of the health
test cities In Europe. Figures prepared
by Dr. CJuatnve Holm, head of the'
Vienna Health Department, show Uiat
In Iflta (ho death rate was 10.3 per
thousand. In 1018 the rate was 22.5
Iter thousand, an Increase of more than
7 per cent.
Professor flans Spel of the Uni
versity of Vienna, says that "even
more terrible than the mortality sta
tistics lire thoso referring to the con
dition of children and their mothers.
Owing to wider-nourishment few moth
ers can nurse their babies, and the milk
shortage affects not only Infants, but
all children In spite of !'. that has
Imcn done to help. At Professor
Clemens Plrquet's clinic In the uni
versity some M.810 children were ex
nmlned In 1018. Only 4,037 of these
or nhnut one-thirteenth were pasted as
Mu s:ood, fat good; 23,000 were pale
iiid thin, or very pnlo nnd very thin.'
''fhe health of these children shows
rnont disquieting features. Skin disease,
rachitis and narlow's disease nro rife.
"The chief medical officer of Vienna
nsks, 'What Is going to happen to these
under-fed children, In whose bodies the
germ of tuberculosis Is latent, when
they reach the twenties, at which time
It becomes active?' "
To combat these conditions the Amer
ican Relief Administration of which'
Herbert Hoover Is chairman fed last
winter In the city of Vienna some
BOO.QOO of the destitute and under
nourished children, supplying them
with a substantial meal of American
' fbo'd, served In a number of large
kitchens opened for that purpose.
The conditions In Vienna are more
or less typical of those In Poland and
other countries of Central fcnd Eastern
Europe. Last yoar the Itollef Admin
istration was ablo to reach some 3,500,
000 under-nourished children and this
winter the program calls for the feed
ing of a like numler, but eight of the
great charitable organisations of
Amortcn have united under tho name
of the European Itellef Council, of
which Mr. Hoover Is the chairman.
The child feeding task will be carried
on not only by the American Relief Ad
ministration but by the American Red
Crciss, the American Friends' Service
Contmlttee (Quakers), the Jewtsh Joint
Distribution Committee, the Federal
Council of the Churches of Christ In
America, the Knights of Columbus, the
Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. 0. A. An ap
peal for $33,000,000 has been made and
(he organizations named havo joined
In 'raising the sum.
LAUGHTER OF CHILD
I SCARCE IN POLAND
"Jn all the time I was In Poland, I
scarcely one saw a child laugh,"
declared Dr Harry Plott, discoverer of
the- .typhus barcllus, lu a report to
t lik, European Relief Council ou med
icaid conditions among the Jewish popu
lation of Poland, based on his recent,
Investigations there for the Jewish
Joint Distribution Committee.
,",fh most deploruhle sight of all
th, miseries -In Pot u ml Is the condi
tion of the children," Dr. Plots suld.
"Infant mortality U exceedingly hlgni
because of undtr-nourlshiuent aud the
tAjl. percentage of contagious diseases.
l(j, large part ssethers must resort to
srtfnclal feeding as they are unable to
nurse their children. In many cities
I'aaw underlet 'children, suffering with
dlMfl, wandering about the' streets
w,l no place U g, begging for bread."
Tuberculosis has become prevalent
atn$ng the Jewish chlldreu, largely
due- to the overcrowded conditions lu
wliicb they are forced to live, their
laj'k of nourishing food and warm
clothing, according to Dr, Plott.
Typhus, which killed thousands of
Jews last winter tn the worst epidemic
Poluud has ever seen will recur again,
he said, as conditions are much worm
among the Jews than ever before.
"Favus, a contagious akin disease,
la now rapidly spreading from child
to child," he continued. "In Vllua
there are 11,000 cases among the Jew
ish children alone. Smallpox, too, is
prevalent 'hroughout Poland and the
Ukraine and children, with wide
spread eruptions and temperature,
have been seen running about the
streets. There are thousands of cases
every year, which vaccination would
prevent, but there Is no vaccine,"
Dr. Plots told how In Lithuanian
villages he found children, six aud
seven years old, unable te walk or
talk, the result of malnutrition. In
regions where whole towus had been
destroyed during the war, he found
families crowded lu miserable dug
outs, The Greatest Gift
Yeus Christmas gift te the Euro
pean child relief celltctlen may help
In saving a child's life and Is earn
estly solicited. Sena checks te the
local committee ef the Joint organ
izations or direct te European Re
lit? Council, 42 roadway, New
Vork City,
TOP OF SNOWDON IS SOLD
Ground on Britain's Loftiest Mountain
Has Recently Been Purchased
by Farmer.
Treak purchases are heard Cf from
time to time, hut It Is not often thnt
the sale of a mountain Is announced.
For tills reason alone tho transfer of
the summit of Snowdon, Including sev
ernl hundreds of acres of the slope
which Is grazing ground, and the
ground on which Is built the Summit
hotel, by Lleut.-Col. Worsley-Tnylor, to
a farmer, Is of more than ordinary In
terest, remarks the Christian Science
Monitor.
Mount Snowden In Carnarvon Is
the most famous peak In tho southern
part of llrltalu ; Is well known to nil
holiday tnnkors, and Is of a hold and
rugged outline nnd forms, with Its
subsidiary peaks, nn Impressive ranee.
The ascent presents no special features
of difficulty If one of the five well de
fined pathways Is used, but should the
climber he bent on "pioneering," and
leave tho beaten track, he should he
prepared for anything In the way of
mountaineering problems. I
The view from summit of Snowdon '
on u tine day makes the climb wortfi
while, for spread below Is Anglesey,
the Menal straits, and a great curve of
ocean from the far-off extremity of
Curdlgan hay to Rhyl. In the fore-
ground nre to he seen tho well defined
peaks of the sister mountains. Alto
gether the el luil) Is a most exhilarat
ing form f cxcrclfjf, nnd although the
boast of having gained flits top does
not curry much weight, there In a cer
tain satisfaction In having reached
one's objective. Gladstone, twenty
eight years ago, after halng performed
the cllmh, addressed n political meet
ing of 3,000 people on the summit of
Snowdon. i
UNIQUE IN ANIMAL WORLD
Elephant Has Survived Because He
Has Been Able to Adapt Him
self to Conditions.
These Is nothing else like the ele
phant. He has come down to us
through the ages, surviving the con
ditions which killed off his earlier con
temporaries, nnd he now adapts him
self perfectly to more different con
ditions than any other animal In Af
rica, Curl Akcley of the American Mu
seum of Natural History writes In the
World's Work.
He can ent anything that Is green or
even has been green, Just so long as
there Is enough of It. Ho can get
his water from the aloe plants on tho
arid plains or dig a well In the sand
of a dry river with his trunk nnd
fore feet, und drink there, or ho Is
equally at homo living half In the
swamps of hotter watered regions. He
is at homo on tho low, hot plains of
the seucoast at the equator or on the
cool slopes of Kcnla nnd Elgon. So
fnr as I know ho suffers from no con
tagious diseases and has no enemies
oxcopt man. There- nre elephants on
Kenln thnt have never Iain down for
n hundred yeurs. Some of the plains
elephnnts do rest lying down, but no
one ever saw n Kcnla elenhnnt lvlne
down or any evidence that they do lie
down nt rest. Tho elephant Is n
good trnvelcr. On good ground n
good horso enn outrun him, but on
had ground the horso would have no
ehnneo and thero nre ftw nnlmnls
thnt enn cover inoro ground In a day
than nn elephunt. And In spite of
his appearance ho enn turn with sur
prising agility und move through the
forest as quietly as n rabbit.
Results of Hybrid Mating.
Hero Is a strange set of fuiw, prov
en by three different Invcstlgutors lu
threu different parts of the world ut
three different times. '
lu routings of so-called "pure" races.
that Is to say, Englishman with Eng-
lisii woman, Frenchman with French
woman, German wlHi German woman,
etc., 104.G4 more males are horn tliiui
femnlcs.
In hybrid routings, that Is to say, of
different nationalities, there Is a more
slgnltlcaut excess of male over female
births.
In routings of United States whites
the ratio Is about the sumo as that of
European hbrlds.
In matlngs of United States colored
folks there Is u slgnltlcaut excess of
females over tho ratio of British West
Indian colored who uro relatively pure
bred.
Slept Thirty-Two Yeare.
Surely n subject for the speculatlvo
psychologist is tho record sleep In
dulged In by Caroline Ohlson, n
Swedish girl. In 1875. when only u
child of fourteen yenrs, sho fell Into n
long trance In tho Island of Okuko, In
the Ritltlc, and remained unconscious
for 81! years. Food was administered
to her, although she seemed qultu un
concerned. Nor did she respond to
any tuqulry during that long time.
Then suddenly she awoke, no longer
a girl, but u middle-aged woman, und
the most careful examination could
not reveal the slightest weakness or
mental effect. After coining out of her
long trance Caroline enjoyed very good
health.
Earth Not a Perfect Sphere.
The diameter of the eurth from pole
to pole through the equator Is short
er than that ut the equator. Though
In- popular lunguage the earth Is tuld
to be round, like u ball, It Is really
an Irregular sphere, slightly ilattened
at the poles. The Mlylit departure
from rotundity Is uccounted for by
the tepid motion of the eurth while
la ft more plattlc state.
BAK6&A efitMy UE&ALb,
THIS "ANGEL0 WAS A KITE
Cut Suporttltlous Railroad Man Who
Shot It Down Was Certainly
Scared for a Time.
"The fhoptlng," snys a Texas man,
"occurred some jenrs apo on the Pan
handle branch of the Snntu Fe, nnd
the hero of the tnle was a superstitious
engineer who believed In 'warnings.'
"One night he was rolling nlong at
'a good speed, when he saw a clear,
white light, Hike a will-o'-the-wisp,
dancing over the trnek a few hundred
feet In front. lie shut off steam mid
came to a stop us quickly as he could.
The conductor und truln crew came
running up to the engine to see what
was the tnntter.
" 'There Is some one swinging n Inn
tern across the track,' said the engi
neer, and the crew went ahead to In
vestigate. " 'We can't find anyone,' reported
the rear brnkemnn, nnd the engineer
pulled out again, birt he went slowly,
nnd In n few minutes stopped again.
The crow went ahead onco more Jo
see what wns the cause of tho light.
The conductor, who wns n good shot,
drew his revolver, nnd at his second
shot there was a crnsh, a scream, and
the light went out, nnd something
white came fluttering down from the
clouds.
"The engineer was scared. 'You've
shot nn nngel, Mire,' he said to the
conductor, with n face as pale ah
death.
"Investigation brought out the "fact
that a small hoy, with a lantern tied
to the tall of n kite, wns the cause of
the trouble; hut for u long time It
tensed the engineer to he asked nbout
'shooting nngels.' "
HIGH PLACE FOR LEWIS CASS
Was Instrumental tn Setting Up Amer
ican Form of Government In
Western Territories.
"Those who pushed the frontier west
ward were themselves the products of
frontier conditions." says Wllllnm B.
Slinw In the Ainerlenn Review of Re
views. "Such a leader was Lewis
Cuss, a native of New Hampshire,
who went out as a youth to the settle
ments thnt were soon to be organized
Into the state of Ohio, took part In
lawmaking there, served as n volun
teer olllcer In the war of 1812, was ap
pointed governor of Michigan terri
tory, nnd for many years wns engaged
In the difficult task of setting up nn
American form of government In re
gions thnt hnd hurely emerged from
tho wilderness stnge.
"That Lewis Cn.ss wns In after yenrs
a United States senator from Michi
gan, n member of cahlnuls, n diplomat
and nn unsuccessful aspirant for the
presidency inny have pnrtlully blinded
us to the renlly Important services thnt
ho rendered In tho plonrer period' of
Michigan's history. Neither ho nor
any of the men of Ids day could have
foreseen the strnln that wnR to be put
on the stutes crented out of the old
Northwest territory canned by the at
tempt to nbsorb vnst populations of
northern European blood Into the citi
zenship. ,,
"Lewis Cnss lived to see great ar
mies recruited among those newly
made Americana to light for the Union
nnd tho principles of nationality which
he hnd himself defended throughout
his career."
First Payment of Rent.
It would ho hard to find exact rec
ords of tho first lent paid. It Is said
thut when tho Germans conquered
purls of Gnu), the land was parceled
oit to chiefs, lieutenants and prlvutn
soldiers. In return the holders iif th
lands promised military service when
needed. Some of the land wus given
to favorites, who were ullowed lo pay
In money. Instend of service, nnd the
system wns established. Ren was
certainly known In the dnya that Rome
iiouiished, there being Latin names
for rent under long leasehold tenure;
rent of a farm, ground rent, rent of
state lauds and the annual rent pay
able for the rlylit to the perpetual en
joyment of anything built on the sur
face uf the laud.
Ancient Bible.
A Illble belonging to Elizabeth Had
don, a Quakeress, printed in lftOO, has
been discovered in the East. The Hud
don Hlhle Is sixteen yeurs older than
the Reims Testument sometimes
spoken of as "the oldest Hlble." Tho
lladdon lilblu Is au authentic "Great"
Illble. It Is also a "Treacle" Illble.
C'overdale, the translator, rendering
"The Prophecye of Jeremye," gave
the reading "1 am hevy and abnfhed.;
Is there no trluele ut Gylyad." This
In the King James modern version
rends "balm lu Glleud."
The Huddnn Illble Is Indeed "Great."
It weighs IS pounds, nnd Its dimen
sions are: Thickness. 4 inches;
width, 10?; luvhe), length, 10& Inches.
Detroit News.
Few Do Much Walking.
Statistics of miiuklud'ri ambulations,
Including young children und old per
sous, aud taking Into consideration
the fact that nowadays there are the
Inclination mid the facilities to ride
more and wulk less than our fore-'
fathers did, show that n fair estimate
of the average distance walked dur-
Ing the 'J4 hours by the men, women, this fouriwnce was sent every year lu
and chlldien of continental United an envelope which cost twopence, and It
Stutes seems to be four miles. The coal the duchy twopence to uckuowl
poftman and the policeman uud the edge receipt I "Rut there Is a stranger
messenger boy wulk fur more miles lease In the north of Loudon," he said;
than four, so doe the farmer, though "Wine liuiues there are leused until
the um of the tractor has taken some ' tne' death of the duke of Counaugtit.
of the burden uf agricultural work off . There Is no other date attached to the
absuk's uuixe. .J document,"
bAkoxA efov. NriiaASkA,
ANCIENT RACES PLAYED BALL
Tossing the Sphere Is Supposed to
Have Had Deep Symbolic Mean
ing Centuries Ago.
Although It Is a proven fuel that
the game now designated baseball Is
of modern and purely American origin,
the use of a ball tn ceremonies and
games goes back many centuries.
Pour thousand years ago, In the
twelfth Egyptian dynasty, a Coptic
artist sculptured on the temple Rent
Hnssnn, human figures throwing and
catching balls. A leather-covered bull
used In games pluyed on the Nile over
10 centuries ago, tins a place nmong
the many urcheologlcal specimens In
the Rrltlsh museum. It has u sewed
cover ami Is In u remcrknble stnte of
preservation.
The gume of hall wns prized by the
preeks as giving grace nnd elasticity
to the human tlgure, and they erected
n statue to one Arlstonlcus for his
proficiency in it. Ancient medical
practitioners vvcre wont to prescribe
a course of bull plnylng, where the
modern doctor would order a diet of
pills.
It Is supposed that ball tossing had
a deep symbolic meaning when pluyed
In the spring of the year; nnd that
the tossing of the ball was Intended
first to typify the upsprlnglng of the
life of nature after the gloom of win
ter. Anil, whether this wns the case
nmong the people of antiquity or not,
It Is n remnrkahle fact that the ec
clesiastics or the early church adopted
this symbol and gave It n very special
significance by meeting on Easter day
and throwing n hall from hand to
hand, to typify the Resurrection.
"TOTEM POLES" TELL STORY
Are Historical Records, and Not, as
Many Supposed, Idols to Be
Worshiped.
Au art In sculpture not resembling
any other art In the world, unless pos
sibly thnt of nnclent Mexico, Is found
highly developed among the aboriginal
nnthes of the northwest coast.
Their material Is always wood, and
Is furnished by huge trees from the
forest, which nre carved Into the
most fantastic shapes. In this style
nre sculptured the so-culled "totem
poles," which, often of great size and
height, astonish the observer by the
Intricacy of their workmanship and
the weird Imaginativeness of their
complex designs.
Early missionaries In that part "of
the world mistook the totem poles for
idols. As a matter of fact, they pos
sess no such significance, being merely
heraldic columns. Each tribal clan
has Its own traditions nnd myths
which takes the place of history, mid
these nre symbolized by the wctrnor
dlnarv birds and (other animals, some
times human faces or figures, caned
on the totem poles.
Thus the Rear clnn will have Its
heraldic column topped by the sculp
tured figure of a bear. The raven
shows up conspicuously ns the totem,
or crest, of the Raven clnn ; the whale
for tho Whale clan, and so on.
To the unversed n totem pole would
have no significance beyond Its queer
ncss, but It Is In reality a whole story
carved In wood.
Power of Poise.
Poise Is power. The man who Is
not muster of himself under nil comll
tlons cannot feel the assurance, (he
power, which Is the right of every hu
man being to experience. He Is never
sure of himself, and the man who Is
never, sure of himself Is never wholly
at ease. He Is not even well-bred, for
good breeding implies self-control un
der all circumstances
There is, perhups, no other thing
which Is so conducive to one's physical
and mental comfort, efficiency, happi
ness and success us u calm roltid. When
the mind Is unbalanced, by anger, ex
citement, worry, fear or nervousness,
tlw entire body is thrown out of har
mony. All the functions are deranged ;
the man or woman Is not normal, und
Is, therefore, whatever the situation,
at a complete disadvantage, wholly un
able to contend with It. Orison Swell
Murden In thu New Success Magazine.
Elevator Rope in Coal Mines.
One of the uiost impressive things
about n colliery, to an outsider. Is the
mammoth drum which winds thu rope
which brings coal up from the pit. This
monster drum may measure 130 feet
In circumference, and weigh about -H)0
tons, nnd It will wind In the rope with
Its load at a speed of nearly 00 miles
an hour. There are miles of the rope,
when the r't Is a deep one, like the
Yorkshire Main colliery's, wlmse ver
tical shaft holds the record for depth
by going down nearly 1,000 yards, nnd
for long dlstnuccH horizontally. The
rope costs $10 n ynrd und Its maximum
life Is three aud one-half years. Every
Inch of It passes each day through a
man's hands for exnmluutlou. Shaft
accidents are very rare.
Strange Leaaes.
For weltd leases London would be
hard to beat lu some lustunces, say u
correspondent. He dealt with houses
lately which were for sale and found
thut the ground landlord wns the duchy
of Cornwall, the leaseholder paying nn
unnunl ground rent of fourpeucel Aud
MBirnnfiiiinfiiH imw
AND CUPID PLED, SHRIEKING
Truly, as Many Have Averred, Ro
mance Today Has Fallen From
Ite Once High Estate.
They were young and It was eve
ning, and the moon was shining. And
they were young.
He wns facing her, hllhouettcd
against the silvery light of the moon.
Every line of his stnlwnrt, manly fig
ure stood plnlnly outlined before her.
He looked Into her lovely dark eies.
Their liquid depths fascinated him, en
thralled him.
He leaned forward.
"Darling, I love your he breathed
passionately into her tiny ear.
She gazed at him passively.
"You nre beautiful, wonderful, love
ly 1" he cried, a's the moonlight Il
luminated her classic features.
Her glance rested upon him as he
stood out clearly in the pale light.
"Will you marry me, be my wife?"
he nsked, with bated breath and eyes
shining. Hidden fires glowed In their
burning depths.
And still her gaze was upon him.
He lenned forward a little farther,
waiting for her answer, eagerly, fear
fully. "Will you marry me, precious one?"
he nsked again, his burning glance
upon her scnrlot lips.
She opened her mouth to speak.
Pearly teeth gleamed In the silvery
light.
"All 1 You nre going to say 'yes,' "
he muttered, passionately, taking hold
of her tiny, llly-llke hnnds. "You nre
going to say something."
He leaned closer, his bond outlined
clearly against the pale moonlight.
"I wns going to say, why don't you
Monr u rubber band ((round your bend,
to train your ears not to stick out?"
(The end of a perfect eveulng.)
Detroit Free Press.
GREAT ACTRESS KISSED POET
Sarah Bernhardt Made Her Meeting
With Longfellow an Event to
Be Remembered.
When Surah Bernhardt enma to
America In the seventies sculpture
wns her "side line." As soon us she
arrived In Boston she expressed a de-
sire to do the bust of Longfellow, says '
the Christian Science Monitor. Long- i
fellow, however, though not Insensible '
of the honor, declined. He said that '
he was about to leave for Portland,
Me., and feared thnt Mine. Bernhardt
would have departed before his re- '
turn. Then, to mltlgnte the curtness
of his refusal, he asked the tragedienne
to his home, Inviting Wllllnm Dean
Uowells nnd Oliver Wendell Holmes to i
meet her.
They became very amiable toward
one another, nnd Longfellow, who
spoke excellent French, praised Mme.
Bernhardt's performance of "Phedre,"
telling her she surpassed' the grent
Rachel, whom ho hnd seen f0 years
earlier. The actress, not to be out
done, told the poet how much she en
Joyed reading "ninwnthn," which she
pronounced Hee-n-vntore.
Evidently the affair of the sculp
tured bust did not raukle, for on her
departure, n the poet and his other
guests were escorting her to her car
riage. she turned nbout suddenly, Im
pulsively threw her arms nbout Long
fellow's neck nnd, kissed him on the
cheek, said: "Vous etes adorable."
Kidnap Chinese From Legation.
Knng-Slilh-to, formerly treasurer of
the Anfu club, who since the rwcent
downfnll of that alleged pro-Japnuese
organization has been in hiding In the
Russian legutlon nnd for whose arrest
a leward of .$10,000 wns offered by the
Ohluese government, has Just been
the victim of n coup on the part of
Chinese servants employed In the le
gation, according to a dispatch from
Peking, China. They entered Kang's
bedroom In the early hours of the
morning, bound him, wrapped him In
u bed quilt and hoisted him ovr the
legation wall. Accomplices delivered
him Into the hnnds of the squad of
gendarmes which had been waiting
for weeks for nn opportunity to cap
ture him and other refugees supposed
to have hidden hi firelgn legations.
Woman's Latest Venture.
An engineering factory, organized,
controlled, and mannged by women,
who also execute the orders at the
latho and lu the foundry that Is the
latest eiitei prise of the "weaker sex."
It Is one which deserves every suc
cess. At the head of the firm, called Ata
lantn, Ltd., Is Ledy Pursons, the wife
of the famous engineer and Inventor
of the stenin turbine. The factory
was started In the MIdlnnds by 20
women ex-wnr workers. Good orders
have already been secured, and Lady
Parsons Is convinced that these
pioneer women engineers will he suc
cessful. "There Is nothing," she says, "thnt
a woman cannot do when she tries."
Loudon Times.
How Lightning Kills.
Numbers of eas of death by light
ning huve failed to reveal any direct
effect of the passage of uu electric
current through the human body. The
evidence indicates thut death was
caused entirely by shock. The result
Is psychological rather thnn physical,
the shock Inducing heart failure or
other organic disturbances.
Sometimes strokes huve l-een fatal
to u mother although the child In her
arms was unharmed. Persons under
the Influence of a drug or Intoxicated
beeni to escape. This seems to Indi
cate that the nsycholugV'ul element Is
I an Important consideration. Popular
HtMiTiri' Monthly.
3
iaAwuWUu
I'onl .Motors OrerJiiuilid.
Labor, $18.00; parts nt Ford prices.
Best of service. Homer Motor Co.
St. Mark's Church, New York.
The site of St. Mnrk's church Is the
oldest church site In New York and
has been consecrated to religious service-
for 200 yenrs. Peter Stuyvesnnt,
the Dutch governor of New Nether
lands, erected the first little prlvute
chapel in 1CC0. He nnd his wife, Ju
dith, were buried undernenth the chap
el. In her will she left the church to
the Dutch Reformed Church of New
York, providing thut the tomb be pre
served. The building was ullowed to
full Into decay until 1793, when Petrus
Stuyvesnnt, a great-grandson, proposed
to the vestry of Trinity church that
an Episcopal church be erected on the
site, the cornerstone of which wns laid
In 1705 nnd the church completed May
0, 1709. The steeple was added In
1829 nnd the porch a few years later.
Since 1830 no material changes In the
present nppearance of the church havo
been made, nnd the church proper Is
Identically the same as It was one
hundred years ago. Peter Stuyvesunt
nndhls wife nre burled In the vault
beneath the porch of the church.
The Right Way to Read.
The only way to read with any
efficiency Is to read so heartily that
dinner timo comes two hours before
you expected It. To sit with your
Llvy before you nnd hear the geese
cackling that save the capital, nnd to
see with your own eyes the Carthagin
ian sutlers gathering up the rings of
the Roman knights after the battle of
Cannae and heaping them Into
bushels; and to ho so intimately pres
ent at the actions you are reading of
thnt when anyone knocks at the door
It will take you two or three seconds
to determine whether you nre In your
own study or In the plains of Lom
hardy lpoklng nt Hannibal's weather
beaten face that Is the only kind of
study that Is not tiresome, ulmost the
only kind that Is not useless. Sydney
Smith.
Amber as Medicine.
The medicinal uses of amber have
recently been discussed, and It Is
somewhat curious to find the belief In
the curative virtue of amber neck
laces, In cases of cold In the head,
still seriously held In China. One
correspondent reports such a cure In
tt case that had refused to yield to
any other treatment, and attributes It
to the action of amber so worn on
the inucuous membrane. Another goes
only so fnr ns to suggest that since
nmber had apparently a curative val
ue ns used Internally by the old physi
cians, Its use In necklaces had a ra
tional basin "according to the views
once in vogue," which Is reasonable
enough. 1 1 K A L NOTICES
First Pub. Mnrc'.i 10, 1921 4w.
ROAD NOTICE.
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
The commissioner appointed to 1
cate a road commencing at the south
east corner of the northeast quarter
of the northeast quarter of section
13, township 29, north, range G east
oi the Gth Principal Meridian in Da
kota county, Nelnnska, and running'
south on tho section line to tho
southeast corner of the northeast
quat tor of section 24, township 29
north, range 6 wnat of the Gth Prin
cipal Meridian, all in Dakota county.
Nebraska, and there terminating, has
reported in favor of the establish
ment thereof, end all objections
thereto or claims for damages must
he filed in the County Clerk's office
on or before noon of the 23rd day of
May, A. D., 1921, or such load will be
established without reference thereto.
GEO. J. BOUCHER,
(Seal) County Clerk.
First Pub. March 10, 1921 4w.
ROAR NOTICE.
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
The commissioner appointed to lo
cate u road commencing at a point
nt the noitheast corner of the north
west quarter of the northeast quar
ter of section 4, township 27, rane
ea-t ol tlie Ctii Principal Meridian
in Dakota county, Nebraska, running
thence west on the north line of sec
tion 4, 1320 feet to the half section
clino of section 33, township 28,
lange 7, thence north on said line
2238 feet, thenco in a northeasterly
direction 300 feet, thence in a north
westerly direction 300 feet, thence
almost north 1150 feet, thence north
west 23G feet, thence in a northerly
diiection to the public rond on the
mirth line of section 33, intersecting
said rond about the middle of north
west quarter of noitheast quarter of
said section and there terminating,
has reported in favor of the estab
lishment thereof, and all objections
thereto or claims for damages must
be filed in tho County Clerk's office
on or before noon of the 23rd day of
Mav. A. D.. 1921. or such rnml wtn ii
Established without reference thereto.
, , UWJ. j. ROUGHER,
(Sol) County Clerk.
LET US PRINT IT FOR YOU
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