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About Dakota County herald. (Dakota City, Neb.) 1891-1965 | View Entire Issue (April 14, 1921)
DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD El J A' tfj i MOT 10 OFFER A E -M- UTAH SENATOR FAVORS GENER. AL SALES TAX WOULD YEILD 1 ,500,000,000 Sponsor of Proposal Declares l Will Properly Distribute the Burden of Taxation. Washington, D. C. A general sales Uz was advocated In a atateiuunt by Senator Smoot, of Utah, lopubllcan ciombera of tliu senate flnunco coin, mlttee, who unnounccd lie would Intro duce such a bill In thu hum ate. Tho measure, which lio estimates would yield approximately $1,000,000, 000 aunnually, wriuld place a flat tax of 1 pur cent on (,'rou sales above f G, 000 aunuully of virtually all commod ities, both raw materials and finished products. Tho bill carriea a few ox omptlons, but application would bo stayed practically only on such corn 'modules as now bear higher levy. Early consideration is planned by tho senatu finance committee. Mr. Smoot said his proposal tax would bo sltnplo in application and easy to compute. Ho declared it would properly distribute tho burden of taxation, eompolliiK each citizen to boar n share proportionate to his abil ity to pay as nieaiured by his buyliu; or producing powers. "If the sales tax becomes a law," ho continued, "congress can repeal not bnly the Items provided for in tho bill, but can repeal all of the irritating, dis criminatory taxes amounting to hun dreds of millions of dollars, and tho ox cess profits tux." "Taxes on hoft drinks, tobacco, autos and somo other no-called luxuries would remain. TIumo commodities al ready boar taxes regarded as heavlor than tho one per cent tax. In addition to tho tax on n.ilen, a levy having tho sumo application would he placed on total amounts of all lenses." Concerning the scope of tho bill, tho senator said: "It is u tax on tho gross value of foods, wares and merchandise, wheth er raw materials or manufactured fcroducts, whether of domestic or for nlgn origin and such as aro gonorally old by exchange and dollvory for do mestic consumption, whothor In bartor or In n cash, credit or Installment bas in, which tax shall accruo at tho salo or lease at the rato of 1 por cont of their total value at tho times of. chango In ownership." Tho senator contended that tho salon tax mothod wiut one of justlco to all. Tho actuul added cost to tho consum er of a 1 per cent tax added at each turn of the goods would, ho predicted, (all bolow II per cent. Tho bill contemplates payment ot tho whole tax, accumulated through re salos, by tho ult'mato consumer, tho sonulor said, addlnt; that thero was no objection to tho final sailor absorbing tho tax If ho cared to do so. Watch Death List for Homes. Pittsburgh, Pa. Housing conditions nro ao critical In Pittsburgh that somo of the undertaken! aro running a nock ft nd neck race with tho roal estato doalurs as a moans of obtaining flats, houses or bungalows. Hosourcoful lion mi hunters mtiko rogular calls Rt the undertakers', Inquiring whothor tho death ot any person has compelled the family to vacate Many nuccoaiful business connections have been made through this channel. I Reward for Robber. WaBhltiKlo", P. C. Postal em ployes hnreufter will bo armed and rewards glvon for tipprohon.iion of tnnll robbers, Postmaster General lluyit sent out nn order posting a standing reward of $5,000 for "any poBtnl employe or other persons who brings In a mall robbor." The ordor provldod for tho mining of essential tnen In the sorvlco. "Mall robborlos must stop," said Mr. llnyfl. "Wo aro Koliif; to uso ovory power posslblo to do this, no matter how drastic." J Robbers Make $8,000 Haul. Knukaunn, Wis. -dlonds valued at 13,(100, u sr,000pnyroll and night mall pouches, all partly made up of regis tered mull, wero taken by robbors, who broke Into the Chicago and Northwestern rullioad station bore. J Won't Raise Steel Prices, 4 Voungstown, O. --Independent steel companies of tho Voungtowu district Indicated that they will not follow tho oxumplo of tho Republic Iron and fit eel company, of tho largest Inde pendents horo, In raising the prtco ot plates, bars and structural steel $2 & ton. 1 Rejeot Proposed Wage Cut. Now York. Union (representatives ot the workers In thu paper and pulp mills ot tho United States and Can ada at a conference unanimously ro Iftctod a proposal submitted by tho mill ownors culling for u 30 por cent wags reduction and 'Increasing tho working sUy from eight to nine hours. Nearly 3 Million to China. Now York, -ltollof funds totaling F 8,992.010, bavo boon sent to China. ie Amorlcan committee tor China W'nluo fund announced. Pi CORNHUSKER ITEMS News of All Kinds Gathered From Various Points Throughout Nebraska. OF INTEREST TO ALL READERS A boys' band will be organized nt Ilroken How. A brass band will shortly be or ganized ut Pierre. Omnhu Is working to secure tiiitlouiil headquarters of tho Klks. Madison has decided to hold no Konrtli of July celebration. Klmwnod has nn epidemic of measles and several very serious cases. Lincoln street car men have accepted a 10 per cent reduction in wages. The grand council of the Royal Ar canum will meet In Omaha April IMS. The commercial club ut Pierce has decided to celebrate Independence duy. Work on Omaha's new SU.OOO.OOO High School of Commerce will begin shortly. Hebron Is planning u stock show, corn carnival and baseball tournament this full. Paving: work has been resumed at Children nfter having been suspended during the winter. A class of thirty-five were Initiated Inst .Sunday by ISeutrko council, Knights of Columbus. The Blue Springs Community club has more than doubled Its membership In tho last three weeks. Imperial women ure making plans to form an auxiliary to the American Legion post of that place. lloldrego will hold an airplane meet Mnv r, 0 and 7 the ilrst assemblage oinhe kind belt! In the state. A class of about 125 was Initiated ltn the order of Demolay at Masonic temple at Hustings recently. Adams county will furnish twenty live markers for the graves of ex service men within her borders. Scottsblutr sugar companies have contracted for nearly 200,000 ncres of sugar beets for the coming .season. Vlflccn thousand bushels of wheat viB purchased by u Cage county Hour mill ut u price of $1.US per bushel. Valparaiso's new modern school building, to replace tho one destroyed by tire In 1010, Is muring completion. Sixty-two of the rural school dis tricts In Cage county have contributed ?MI).H0 toward the China famine fund. Re'atrlce defeated a proposition to eturn to the, council system at a spe :lal election last week by a vote of Ultt to 1,1(12. During the week of April 11 the iVebraska Farm llurouu federation will conduct a membership campaign In Thnyer county. . Kdwanl Mntthowson of Wakefield was seriously Injured when the car he was driving, ran Into an embankment near that place. Mrs. .Jessie ("Jossanl died at her homo In Columbus of blood poisoning caused by a scratch on the linger while making garden. Leo Porter, a lfi-yenr-old Hralnerd lad, will lose the sight of his left eye from n III! shot fired by a comrade during their play. James O. Dahlman ut Omaha nnd ('buries W. llryun, beaded the list of nominees In those two cities nt the primaries Tuesday. The six-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Will Mueller, living near Nelson, was burned to death In u flro .started while playing with mutches. Heavy ilamago was done by the sand nnil dust storm, which lasted for sov-iMity-two hours and was general over tho western part of the state. The warden has notified sheriffs In tho IKl counties or the statu to send no more prisoners to the penitentiary un til pief-ent crowded conditions are re lieved. Several hundred delegates iroui var ious purls of the state attended the celebration and banquet of the North Platto Klwanls club, which recehed Its charter last week A class of nearly one hundred, one Df the largest In the hlstt-y of the Ileal rkv high school, will receive di plomas at the animal commencement exercises to be held In May. Mrs. Clarissa Lloyd, who died near I'alrbury recently, was burled within M) feet of tho site of the soil bouse erected by herself and husband In Jef ferson county llfly-one years ago. The state banking board has an nounced the closing of the Hriiwn County State bank ut Long Pine, Neb. Depleted reserves mid Inability to make collections are given as reasons. O. C. Leach, a produce dealer, has maintained since January 1 a truck dellory from Heaver City nnd nearby towns to Alma, hauling poultry and eggs. With one commercial car and a trailer he bus hauled $i:i,'-77.22 worth uf eggs and $:i,8IM.87 worth of poultry. The llev. A. M. Horan, formoily pus tor of the Hnptlst church at Cedar Bluffs, has been elected pastor of the First Baptist church at Wahoo. The Omaha Y. M. O. A. opened a drive to raise $.'.0,000. Within twenty four hours one-half of tho same had been subscribed, the total being raised Inside a week. Plans ure being made to have the Loup valley truck meet at Ord on or about May 0. Qui Linn of Kimball, who has served on tho village board of education for thirty-one consecutive years, has de clined to bo u candidate for reelection this spring. "Cadet" and "Topsy," owned by Deorgo V. Alusworth of Ilavelock, h tiember of thu Omaha Kennel club, ro tently won Ilrst prizes ut the Chicago log show. Cadet Is an alredale and I'opsy took Hi st female puppy prize mil the Ilrst nolce prlzu In the Amer can bred class. NEBRASKA FAIR DATES. Locatlon, Secretary's Name and Ad. dress, and Date of Fair. The following list compiled bj Win, II. Smith, secretary-treasurer of tho State Association of Fair Managers, H complete to date. Any further Infor illation deslied may be obtained by ad dressing the secretarj treasurer at .'118 Funke Mulldlng, at Lincoln. Antelopp N'ellirh, l"rnl H Hpfiicnr; HopL 13-11. lioonr A I Won, c". H. Mcf'orklo. ftept 20-2J. Iloyil mute II II. Htory: Hpj.i. 14-16 HulTnlo Ki'iirrii'y, (1. K llnntif, Ainc 30-lt Kept 1-2 Ilutlcr Mrv'U KiPt 20-23 t'ltr, V. II jlcOnmn, Jr.; c inn It. II llnrvey, Kept C'Iibkh- I tiin-i Inl w Clii-yemii- Shindy. C'liiy !! Punter fuming Winner. Cuitcr llriiken Hob Auk. M-2B. Daw c C'lmilron. DawKiin Ix-xltiKtuii, , N. Uwlglit I'ordi It. I! Falklnburi;: ropt. i-is. iJIxiitt Concord, K. J Hetit 27 Itiittlimi, Auk. 31- I1oIk- Hooper, llornnrcl .Mmuilcli; Auk 30- OoiIkp Hrrilitxr, Wultnr Slevcra.8ept.H-M. DouKliiannmiia, l 11. Cox, Waterloo; Sept. M-lli. DunilylleiiUulmnii, J. N Kobliloux; Hept. 1517. Kllllnorr flenrta, H. K. iinlnlen; Sept. 14-18. franklin l-'rnnkllii. J. A .StewiiH. Sept. 13-13. I-'rontliT- Stockvlllu, W. (1 llnrtlett. Hept. 20-24 Kurnnn llenvcr Clly. J. IJ lluimer; HepU Oni ileHtrlce. Iloyil Itlm; Sept 20-30 Oreeley (lreole , Hopt 20-23 Hall- ')-iu IManil, Ittiilolpli Dtirtarlil; Wornl Klver; Hept. 11-1(1 Ilfimllt'iii -Auroiu, I, A. Morrli. Am;. 30- Hept. 2. Harlan -Alum, C :. Alter, Kept 20-23. Hnyon Hayen Center. Hltclieock Ciilljertsoti, J. A Kit It: 16-17 ll(ilt--Chanihera, J. W llolilen. Hept Holt--O'Neill, l'eter W. nurfy. Hept lliiwaiil St I'nul, Cliarlen Uoliri . 2II-J2 JofferMn Palrhui y. Hept. 14-10. 21-23. Hept. Joiinxon 1 ciiiiiB.-n, miner J. Sent 27-Ort 1 Lamb; Kearney Mlnden. Keith OKnllaln, Itoy D. Klker. Hept 13-18. Knox -Il.tiomllfilil. H. C. DIerkH, Hept. 12-16. I.iincnter I.lneoln, A. II. Hinltli: Kept. 4-9. Lincoln -North 1'hittu, H. M Houdcr: Hunt. 20-24. Maillnon Madlion, (leorso V. Koliow: Kept 11-16 Merrlek Clarkn, H. M. I.lttlo. Hept. 14-10. Nance Kullerton. Nuinaha Auhtirn, Col. II. Krnat; Aug. 29- Hept. 2 NucKoIIh Nelwin, Geo Jackson; Sept. 19-23. l'awnee Pawnee City, U W. Ofhorn; Pierce Pierce, V. II. (lleaaon: AtlK. 30- Hept. 2. Polk Oeeeoln. I.ynn Hheldon; Hept. 27-30. Ited Willow McCook, IJliuer Kay; Hept 13-1 6. Hallne Prlend, I.eroy W. Inuluim; Auk 2C-20 Hnunclern W'ahoo. BcottHblunV-Mitchell, Hept 14-10 Hewaril Heward, V. 20-23. Sheridan Gordon, J 13-16. Hherman Loup City, 21-23. J. T Whltohead-, II. Chepman; Hept W. Loedom; Hept. C. J Tracy; Kept, Stanton Stanton. K. i: Pont, Sept. 20-23. Thayer I lenhler, I! J. Mitchell, Aug, 31- Hept. 2 Valley (ml. II 1). I.egBett; Hept, 13-10. Washington Arlington, c. II. Mamliall! Hept. 21-23. W'ebnter tllmlt.ii, H. P Duncan; Autr. 23-28, York York, Ceo. V. Hlirock; Oct. 3-7. IllslltlCr I'AIK. Maywood, H M Hall, Hept. 20-30. STATf. PAIIt. Lincoln, K. It Daiilelson. Hept 4-9. Mnry Jane Mursli, 80, resident ot Nebraska since LSntl, Is dead at her home In Brownvllle. A goat ranch Js to be established by Dr. S. B. Vlers, who lias lately bought an eighteen-acre tract near Diller, which he Is stocking up with some of the best bred goats In the country. The northwestern section of the Ne braska state teachers' association, comprising thu counties In the Sixth district, has Just closed a successful three-day convention In Alliance. Marvin, 8-yeaiMild son of County Treasurer nnd Mrs. JJIke Trltsch, Is In ii hospital at lialtsuioiith, suffering from burns which may prove fatal ns u result of being scalded by boiling water. April 1 marked the opening of tho tlshlng season In Nebraska, but tlsh ermen are cautioned by George W. Koster, chief or the stnto division of llsh and game, not to take bass or trout until May 1. A buby boy weighing but one pound nnd six ounces was born to Mr. and Mrs. I'Yod .1. Hledeiuaii on their farm near Big Springs, March 11. He now weighs one pound twelve and one-hulf ounces, nnd Is perfectly normal ami In Hue health. A team of horses, seventeen tons of hay and four hundred bushels of corn were burned when a tire of unknown origin destroyed the barn and corn crib of Gene Miller near I'nwiiee City. A large, amount id' harness was nlyo burned up. I'lre completely destroyed every building except the house on the Irn Mathews farm, near Imperial. Eight een work horses, ten cows, seven calves, all harness, '1,000 bushels ot corn nnd twenty-eight lends of hay were destrojed In the blaze. Itecelpts for bogs at the South Omaha stock yards In March fell (10,000 short of a jear ago at the samo time, but the inernge weight was six pounds heavier than In March, 1YM. CheaVer and more corn evplalus the Increase In the weight of the hogs. The Waunetii Hour mills which wero burned a few weeks ago will be -rebuilt with a larger output, from u 100-burrel to a .loo-bimvl. With both legs practically -levered from Ids body, William I'tttul. repre sentative for the lloldrege Bottling works, was found llng beside tho Burlington trucks at Cambridge, dying u few hours Inter York high school won the highest team honors, nnd Murval Thompson of Kiicnd the highest Individual honorn at the seventh annual state high school livestock Judging contest nt the col lege of agriculture last week l'Mre destrojed the geiu-ial store ami postolllce at Huntsman. It was not dlscoNcre'd until It had made such headway that the loss was total. Miss Iva Powell, M years old, n member of the Knox county pig club, was winner of a big bunch of Ilrst prizes at the county fair last fall, and will have a herd on exhibition at tho coming state fnl. Of Nebraska's (SO million bushels ot wheat -0 millions were still on tho farms on March 1 Of ur. million bush' els of corn there were 1111 millions left, and ot S.'t million bushels of oats it . i wero IS millions left PISS Ulf BE BILL HOUSE VOTES FAVORABLY ON MEASURE GOVERNING USE OF FOREIGN LANGUAGE EXPECT GOVERNOR TO SIGN Opponents Of Bill Endeavoring to De lay Final Action To Make It a Law Carries the Emer-' gency Clause Lincoln Two votes more than tho number necessary to curry the emer gency clause were cast In the repre sentative assembly for the Keed-Nor-val language bill on Its final passage. This assures the taking effect of tho new act Immediately upon its appro val by tho governor, and its opponent will bo unuble to suspend Its operation by resorting to a referendum. It now goes back to tho senate, the house having cut out a proviso that permitted tho teaching of pupil In a foreign language by a tutor on tho ground that it would be discrimination since the bill itself prohibited it in groups. When the senate concurs, as It Is expected to do, tho bill will go to tho governor. As soon as he signu It, It becomes a law . I Tho bill, which was opposed by a ' strong segment of the German Luth- icran church, prohibits teaching In any : school of any kind, In the common school branches, In uny foreign lang uage. It permits this for religious In- I struction, but only on Sunday, 'but i does not interfere with such teaching in tho homo at any time. On the ground that Interests op posed to tho Heed-Norval foreign lanic uago bill, which passed the house and , is ready for the governor's signature, did not got a hearing before tho house committee, they nro preparing to aak Governor McKelvie for a hearing be fore he signs tho bill. No formal request has been made to the governor, but Rev. Matthew Herr mann, district superintendent of tho German M. E. church, has indicated that this request will bo made. Investigating Committee Reports Tim Iteed Investigating committoo appointed by the senate to ascertain if there was any truth in tho repeated fitorlM that tho adoption of the code I system had created duplication and ! waste and that there was need for remodeling the state government to do away with ovorlapplng and ineffl- j clency, handed In a ten page report, i It vindicated the code system as a means of handling public nffalrs, and j makes a nnmher nt rfpntnmfnrt:itlnn I - .-.., Including one for better cooperation ! of the old executivo departments with the code departments. It shows that tho state collects in fees $125,000 a year more than tho administrative de partments qost, and that the conts In Nebraska compares favorably with those in adjoining: states. Watching "Ambulance Chasing" Bill Lawyers of tho state generally aro watching with keen interest the pro gress of the bill which is intended to prohibit tho solicitation of personal Injury suits for tho purpose of prose cuting thorn In Minnesota and other utates. The bill already has passed tho senate and has been reported out by tho sifting committee in tho house, whore It Is expocted to come up for ronslderatlon in the next fow days. Lawyers supporting the measure nrguo that tho business being taken Into other states rightfully belongs In Nebraska. Advance Scale of Occupation Tax A now scnlo of occupation tax on domestic and foreign corporations, raising tho maximum for large con cerns from $2,500 to $3,C50, is fixed by tho Iteod-Mears bill, which tho lower "branch of tliti legislature passed on third, reading. For concerns hav ing not moro than $1,000,000 ot capi tal not employed in Nebraska, thero Is Httlo or no Increase, but above that amount the tax is raised from 10 to 4fi per cont. Refuse to Talk Adjournment Not only do.es tho Nebraska stato senate continue to refuse any talk of adjournment, but ninny senators are convinced thnt tho presont session' can not bo concluded before the week ending April UH. A motion by Senator Cooper of DoiiBlas that tho senate appoint R committee to confer with a like com mittee of tho housQ on adjournment, rceoived less than a handful of votes Water Scarce nt Soldiers' Homo The stuto board of control Is wor ried over tho wator supply nt the Mil ford homo for soldiers. It has not boon ablo to tlnd sufficient wnter with. In one tulle of the institution. It may bo driven to lllterlnir tho small creok near tho home or piping water from tho Industrial homo for women, situ ated a mile or moro away on the op posite Bido of tho Illuo river Annexation QUI Sidetracked With tho aid of the DoiiKlas county delegation, except Representative Druescdow. tho bill nrovldlnir for un noxatlon of Sarpy county to DoukIhh as a means of enabling Douglas coun ty to pave tho road between Omnha nnd Fort Crook without a state aj proprlntlon was killed In tho house Cigarette Bill Is Killed An effort to repeal the present antl clgaretto law and to restore the old law, which was in force bcrore tho 1919 legislature wiped It from tho stn tuto books, vras defeated by the Ne braska house by a vote ot 59 to 28. The old law was repealed two years ro becauso It could not bo enforced. Uoprosontutlvo Ilyrum testified Unit the now luw 'was being enforced and that It has had a great effect on the smoking public by prohibiting the sale of tobacco to minors and forbidding smoking In public eatlnc places Mrs. Robert O. Reynolds HHSbEIS- dHI "1 have actuully gained twenty-live pounds and I Just think Tnnlnc Is the grainiest medicine In the world, sniu Mrs. Robert O. Reynolds, 127 North Denver St., Knnsas City, Mo. "For ten long jears I suffered from a very bad form of rheumatism, stom ach and nervous troubles. My appe tite was very poor. What little I did eat soured on my stomach and I suf fered the most severe pains In my j back, hips and shoulders. My rheu matism was so bad that I could not raise my hnnds to comb my hair and my arms hurt me to my linger tips. 1 became so weak and run down that I lost all my energy and life had be come almost a burden. I tried muny things but nothing Helped me. "I had only taken my Ilrst bottle of' Tnnlnc when I noticed my nppetlte was Improving nnd I could sleep bet ter at night. 1 have taken three bot tles and the wny It has helped me and built me up Is really astonishing. I can eat anything and everything with out the slightest disagreeable after effects. I sleep just tine nt night nnd am In better health than I have been for years. I am glad to give this statement, hoping that uny who are suffering ns I did may experience the same wonderful results, which I be lieve they will If they give Tanlac a fnlr trial." Tanlac Is sold by leading druggists everywhere. Adv. It Was His Brother! At a crowded dance one evening n fellow I had Just finished the previous dance with bumped Into me. Feeling Indignant nt him for huving trampled on my pet corn And new satin slip pers, I exclaimed to my partner, "That fellow Is about us light on my feet as the bird they call the elephant." "Yes, It's too bad. My brother Is just learning to dnnce nnd you know, the Ilrst hundred years lire the hnrtl est," was the unexpected reply. Chi cago American. Catarrh Can Be Cured Catarrh Is a local disease greatly influ enced by constitutional conditions. It thf'efore requires constitutional treat ment. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE Is taken Internally and acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces ot the System. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINES destroys the foundation of tho disease, elves tho Datlent strencth by Improving tho general health and assists , nature In doing Its work. All Druggists. Circulars free. , F. J. Cheney &. Co., Toledo, Ohio. A Joke Is not ulwuys a Joke when it OH yoll. Is $ffiwt fantenta 15TluidDxacli CAaBUaiiJB'JMMBHiV ir-r..rnr-n PER GENT. AVciclabterreparauon&rAs hi linglhcStomMfcandDaNrettrf. Tt. rwTWnritlnii Dtettrtfanl Cheerfulness andRcstCofltiiosI neither 0ptom,MrPnuicl "1 Mineral. NoXMmiuu ilfddxxutr(m Anna JbcJUlAStOt idhTrrrtnltTtr .inr.iiRpmcdyfor ConstipaWanilDUnjw" and f cvcnbiH.v-. ToSSOFStEEP ireadltaihwftaM2J5u' rlraUeStitwtfl," a-q-ssSSS11 Trew aj Exact Copy of Wrapper. ASPIRIN Name "Bayer" on Genuim Wurulngl Unless you &ee the nauMi "Bayer" on package or on tublets ya are not getting genuine Aspirin pr scribed by physicians for twcnty-oM years and proved safe by million. Take Aspirin only as told tu the Bayer package for Colds, Hendache, Neural gia, Itlieiimntlsm, ICaraclie, Toothache, I Lumbago and for I'nln. Handy tin boxes of twelve Bayer Tablets of As pirin cost few cents. Druggtsrs also 1 sell larger packages. Aspirin Is tba trade mark of Bnyer Manufacture of Monoflcetlcaeldester of Sullcycacld. Adv. I A smnll boy's Idea of greatness la to be able to lick another boy a size larger. A womnn never thoroughly enjoys anything she can't cry over. Makes Hard Work Harder A bad back makes a day's work twice as hard. Backache usually comes from weak kidneys, and if headaches, dizzi ness or urinary disordeis are added, don't wait get help before the kidney disease takes a grip before dropsy, gravel or Bright's disease Bets in. Doan's Kidney Pills have brought new life and new strength to thousands of working men and women. Used and rec ommended the world over. Ask your neighbor! A South Dakota Case Chas. H. Trow brtdp". Springfield, S. D., says: "I suf fered from pains In the small of my back most of tho time and sharp twinges took mo when I stooped over to lift any thing. I had to pass the kidney se cretions too often nnd I suffered from headaches and diz zy spells too. I used Doan's Kidney Pills and several boxes cured mo." Get Dou'i at Any Store, 60c a Box DOAN'S "VST.V FOSTER-M1LBURN CO., BUFFALO, N. Y. TOO LATE Death only a matter of short time. Don't wait until pains and aches become incurable diseases. Avoid painful consequences by taking GOLD MEDAL rereyreri The world's standard remedy for lddnej, liver, bladder and uric add troubles th National Remedy of Holland since 1696. Three sizes, all druggists. Look for the nint Gold Medal on erery bos and accept no imitation 126 MAMMOTH JACKS I hire a bargain for jon, com 9 qnlck. W. 1 DeCLOW'S JACK FA KM i Cedar Rapids, Iowa Si , k'RFMfll 1 &I.K5!.ViE,.s,KJM. WZZIWL: nllLlllllLH ll.Unorn..!l. 11.11. Or. C. M. BnT iaill.HI Wlp.n c,, 2f75 Mkhl Avenue, Ctucwi For Infants and Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Always Bears the Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA THC CCNTAUH COMPANY, HCW VONK CITV. WiLEM -JHR5 Si lijusgr CASTORIA JL. M m yr aI vi! r i t ro