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About Dakota County herald. (Dakota City, Neb.) 1891-1965 | View Entire Issue (May 12, 1921)
DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD . r SUFFERED SEVEN LONE YEARS Finally Relieved by taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound i il av vat 1 wfm&ryzp wttysxiiiL. Ravenswood.W.Va. "For seven long years I Buffered from a female troublo land inflammation so (that I was not ablo I to do my housework. II consulted several (doctors but none J seemed to give mo I relief. I read in a paper about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound so I decided to try it. and before the first bottle was gone I fminr! crrnnt rnlinf an I continued using it untif I had taken eight bottles, now i am very weu anu can do my own housework. I can gladly recommendLydiaE.Pinkham'mcdicine to suffering women." Mrs. IJgiitha Licking, It. F. D., Ravcnswood,W. Va. The ordinary day of most housewives la a ceaseless treadmill of washing, cooking, cleaning, mending, Bwccping, dusting and caring for littlo ones. How much harder the- tasks when como de rangement of tlio system causes head aches, backaches, bearing-down pains and nervousness. Every such woman should profit by Mrs. Liering's experi ence. Itcmembcr this, for over forty years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetables Compound has been restoring health. Perforating Envelopes, Perforation around the return ad dress of nn envelope ennblcs the re ceiver of the letter to use the corner card ns the address fpr a return let ter, lly tearing off the perforation Uiu nniiio and address of tho sender may be taken from the envelope and pasted on the answering letter. Such practice, according to Popular Mechan ics, will Insure correct addressing. Find Cause of 'Wound' Shock Doctor Canon of Harvard and Aids Announce Results of Ex periments During War. FRECKLES Now It the Tims to Get Kid of Theio Uily Spots. There'i no longer tho allKhteat need ot feeling nahamod ot your frecklea, an Othln double atrength la guaranteed to remove thrie homely apota, Simply get an ounce of Othlne double atrength from your ilrueglat, and apply a little of It night and murnlng and you ehould aoon see that even the worat trrclclea have begun to dlaappear, while the lighter ones have vanlahed entirely. It la aeldom that more than one ounce la needed to com. pletely clear the akin and Rain a beautiful clear complexion. lie aura to aak for the double strength Othlne, aa thla la aold under guarantee of money back It It falla to remove frecklea. Ho Knew. "Willie, 1 suppose you know what caterpillar Is?" "Yes'in, It's an up .bolstered worm." A Jewish girls' club hits been or ganized In Shanghai, China. ; DIFFERENT FROM SHELL DAZE Condition Usually Develops Some Hours After Serious Wound or , Accident Dead Tissues Be come Toxic and Poisonous. ('(iinbrldge, Mass. Discoveries made I by Dr. Walter U. Cannon of tho liar ! van! Medical school und other Amorl j can, llritlsh and French medical off I cers toward the close of the. World i war have brought forth new evidence regarding the cause and nuture of the strange phase known as "shock," u condition that led to Innumerable deaths In war time and frequently hns a .similar result after accidents In time of peace. "Shock, or wound-shock, as It Is often called, has long bullied the medi cal professlan," Doctor Cannon said to a press representative, on being asked to describe the results of his Im portant work. Occurs After Any Accident. "This condition, whleh.i by tho way, should not be confused with shell shock, an entirely different phenome non, usually develops some hours after a serious wound or uccldent. It frequently followed grave shell wounds In the war, and often comes on after a person has been seriously hurt In an accident In times of peace, after, for example, he has had a limb crushed In a railroad accident. "There have been numerous theories of tho nature of shock. Some doctors hold that shock resulted from nervous collapse, others that It came from u clogging of blood vessels by fat from wounds, some that It was duo to pa ralysis of the nerves controlling the m lories, others that the adrenal gland was somehow affected so as to do tho mischief, and bo on. Our work In France gave us oppor tunity to study shock In the utmost de tail. One by one wo throw out the theories advanced In former years. Establish Real Cause. Wo at length finally tested and es tablished the fact that tho condition results from tho touring or crushing of muscles or oilier tissues by missiles moving wlfli terrific velocity. Tho dam aged or dead tissue soon becomes toxic, or lu other words acts llko a Why That Bad Back? Is bnckacho keeping you miserable? Are you "nil plnyed out," without trcnRth or vigor for your work? Then find what 1b causing tho trouble nnd correct it. Likely, it's your kidncysl ou lmvo probably been working too hard and neglecting rest and exercise. Your kidneys have slowed up nnd po. sons hsvo accumulated. That, then, is tho cnusa of tho, backache, headaches, dinlncHS and bladder irregularities. Usa Doan's Kidney Ptlls. Doan't liavo helped thousands nnd should help you. Ask your neighbor I A South Dakota Case Mrs. 12. L. DoMclt, BprlnKfleld, S. D saysi "I lind an at tack of kidney trou blo. My bnclt was lnmo und I had a dull pain In tho email of my hack nnd folt miserable I had nerv ous spells nnd tho back nnd top of my bond pained. I used Doan's Kidney Fills nnd wan relieved In every way." Get Don' at Any Store, COc a Doz DOAN'S "VSSS FOSTER.MILBURN CO., BUFFALO, N. Y. Tvy Hdirt ItlUISMrr OialA allla sort of poison. This toxin causes an Increased permeability of tho smallest blood-vessels, the capillaries, and thus there Is lost through their walls quan tities of the llulil portion of the blood which should he lu circulation. The result Is somewhat similar to that of great loss of blood from tho body." American, llritlsh and French medi cal and Mirglcul olllcers co-operated In the Investigation?, some of which were mnde at Ilethuiie In 1017, some In London, and others at Dijon In 1018 lu a laboratory of the American expedi tionary force under Doctor Cnnnon's direction. "Toward the end of the war," con cluded Doctor Cannon, "we hnd learned much nbout methods of treat ing Mich cases, lluding that It was helpful to keep the patient amply warm, to give lilni quantities of wa ter, and, If necessary, to transfuse blood Into the system from somebody else's." PREDICTS SLUMP IN SHIPPING New Chief of Japanese Steamship Firm Is Michigan University Graduate. Tokyo. Japnii's greatest steamship compnny, tho Nippon Yusen Knlsha, has selected as Its president YoneJIrc Ito, who Is n graduate of the Univer sity of Michigan. Mr. Ito, who hns been serving ns vice president of tho company, takes the place of Huron Itempol kondo who died recently. In a statement to tho press Presi dent Ito said that tho world's supplj of ships Is so In excess of the cargo demand that It is natural that the freight market should he as depressed as It Is. Ho considered the outlook a dark one and said that Japan should be prepared to face a long period of seri ous depression In the shipping business. Molasses Halts City Council. I Williamson, W. Vn. Molns.scs caused the postponement of the month-, ly meeting of tho city commission of ' Wllllnmson. The city fathers gath- creu in incir meeting room, oniy to find that some miscreant hnd smenred molasses on the scats of their chairs. ays Earth Is Speeding to End -V- Pastor Outlines Nine Ways by Which World May Meet Destruction. Detroit The world Is traveling on its way to destruction, at the rate of GOO.000 miles a day, so the ltov. George T. (Sullen of the West Grand lloulevard M. H. church believes. That was a sure thing, ho declared, nnd further he wild there are at least eight other ways In which tho old world may come to Its end before the fatal ending of tho "death Journey." Find, he declared, the axis of the earth might decide to shift about a few degrees, with the result that the oceans would sweep over the dry lands and destroy all life before tin ark could bo built. If that falls to occur there might he n fulltuo of Internal llres and the crust of tho earth would absorb all the water and the air. Tho death of our planet might, on the other hand, be brought about by the heat of the sun dyfng out and leaving the earth a mass of Ice. There was Just a possibility Hint we might all bo asphyxiated by tho earth passing through the tall of a comet, or this Radiophone Chess With Sweetheart m JTiJumLSia &&je iPiiSB Your New Home should be made artistic, sanitary and livable. These walls should be Alabastined in the latest, up-to-the-minute 'nature color tints. Each room should reflect your own individuality and the treatment throughout be a complete perfect harmony in colors. The walls of the old home, whether mansion or cottage, can be made just as attractive, j'ust as sanitary, through the intelligent use of Acid Stomach for 10 Years HOW ft DIFFERENT WOMAN Earnestly Praises Eaianlo , "My wife wits a great sufferer from ( acid stomach for 10 years,," writes II. D. Crlppen, "but Is a different woman since taking Kutonlc." Sufferers from aehl stoinach lot Entonlc help you also. It quickly takes up and carries out the, excess acidity and gases and makes tho Mimmch cool nnd comfortable. You digest easily, get" tho full strength from your food, feel well and strong, free from bloat ing, belching, food repeating, etc. lllg box costs costs only n trlllo with your druggist's guarantee. K AIIE?lms! gr.SSSM ." ' ' .m . W -J . .. .'. . Ell ... . I ill 0i Not eln. ornamental, cuf tnlcnt ami ... j jm ml- xtlnap LaaUallMa- W,lHBHt i , 'x'niA ZUKailK&diHaiHSft JmF. laWfWaWllBlMirHBiahallil'l WBli TTtTfn fill For thrco hout Miss lleoxu 13. HerUe of New York clij piu.eil ilns with her sweetheart, II. I. ltogers, who was In Krle, l'n. ltadlophoue Is the an swer the game being n"'Btunt" of the radio show on tho Hotel IVnujlvanlii loof. planet might collide with another world wandering through space. Another Way. And the end might be brought nbout by tho slowing down or the speeding up of the rate of the earth's rotation oh Its own axis. Tho rotation at present Is Just suiliclent to counter act tho centripetal force of the sun nnd If It were slowed down the earth would lly Into the sun, starting at tho rate of 1,100 miles nn hour nnd bo consumed. If the rate of rotntlon were accelerated the earth would fly out Into spnee Into n temperature of 100 degrees below zero and the oceans would he frozen to their utmost depths. Other ways by which Mr. Gullen could see the world come to Its end were the closing up of all volcanoes and other vents for gases, the Inevit able result of which would ho a terrific explosion tint would shatter the-world or bring part of the atmosphere to such a heat that the oxygen and nitrogen would unite nnd cause a combustion of the atmosphere. That such disasters were not Impos sible wns shown, ho said, by the spec troscope, by means of which mnn could rend the life history of tho planets. He ndded: "The spectroscope shows that ono planet Is in a state of white heat, that another showing yellow Is on the down grade, that Mars Is dying, that tho moon Js dead, while Jupiter Is Just get ting rendy for sentient life. This world is on Its way to death, for It Is travel ing straight toward Hercules G00.000 miles n day, and while the dlstnncQis Immense It is not Infinite." The Great Danger. Hut tho greatest danger that Mr. Gullen thinks confronts the enrth Is n collision with a dead star. Such n stnr would be Invisible until It enmo within tho range of the sun's rays, which would be when It was live times ns far away as Neptune. It could then bo seen In the telescope. In twenty-1 five years more It would bo visible to i j. ' the linked eye. In five yenrs more it M would pass Neptune and In 145 days ' from that time If It kept straight on, It would strike the earth. That would 1 give us thirty-two years and 145 days of warning from the time tho dead world was first picked up by the tele scope. Science tells us the end Is coming, tho preacher went on more reassuring ly, but It does not believe the end U near. It estimates that God took ninety million years to make the world habitable by mnn nnd that man's Ufa on It Is perhaps 100,000 years. His comparatively" optimistic com ment at the finish was: "Why could God spend till that time In making u woritl If It Is to be de stroyed so soon? God wastes neither space, material nor time. He Is too busy. He Is continually mnklng new worlds, but He does not destroy them almost as soon ns they are made." Instead of kalsomine or wallpaper How much better, when you have a new home, to start right than to have to correct errors afterward from former treatment with other materials, when you come to the use of Alabastine, as does nearly every one sooner or later. Once your walls are Alabastined you can use any material over it should you desire, but having used Alabastine you will have no desire for any other treatment. Alabastine is so easy to mix and apply so lasting in its results so abso lutely sanitary and so generally recognized as the proper decorative material in a class by itself that it is becoming difficult to manufacture fast enough to supply the demand. Alabastine is a dry powder, put up in five-pound packages, white and beau tiful Jints, ready to mix and use by the addition of cold water, and with full direc tions on eacn pacicage. cviry pacxagc sj mumi Aiaoamne nas cross ana circle priiucu in icu. tLmtm ibjii r til ih orii 8 MINUTVrrM I COlDWATgB I M Better write us for hand-made color de signs and special suggestions Give us your decor ative problems and let us help you work them out. Alabastine Company 1655 Grandville Ave. Grand Rnplds. Mich. "InitONLYTOOLT KUDtCT0)iPPlVl8 PIFj IN YOUTH'S GAY SPRINGTIME I ROOM FOR YOUNGER CRITICS Incident of Innocent Pleasure That Excited the Admiration of 1 Gap Johnson. "It shore does a feller good to sec the innocent pleasure children get out of the coining of sprlngl" said Gap Johnson of Itumpus Ridge. "The ilrst right warm day most of my young 'tins swarmed, ns you might say. Wife took and ripped 'em out of their under clothes that she'd sewed 'em up In Inst fall, and they hit the path for the creek, scratching and cussing mer rily. "They found there s-oven or eight of Gnbe Glggery's kids, three or four of Jlm-Tom Tullery's, n bunch of Zeko Yawkby's and several more that no body could tell whose they were till they got their faces washed. Well, then there wns a grand hoornw ns they all shucked thelrselves nnd whirled In to tying each other's clothes up in hard knots, and fighting about It, and such ns thSt. it omul nnd round nnd over nnd under they went, till they all fell Into the drink and kept right on lnmmlng each other till they knocked all the water out of the creel;." Kansas City Star. In Hard Luck. A few months ago, when writing n letter to a girl I hnd recently met, I placed It In the desk drawer un sealed and Inter mulled It. About u week after I received a formal note, thanking me for u little file I had en closed, and nddlng thnt really she saw no reason why I should go to such trouble when she nlrendy hnd n com plctejvory set. Apologies were In or der, nnd I tried to be as diplomatic as possible In explaining thnt In the drawer I temporarily put the letter I have any number of trinkets und, un known to me, tho tile must have slipped In. Chicago Tribune. They Have a Place in the World and a Duty That Is Well Worth Performing. The younger critics, says Heywood I5roun, are the lineal descendants of that .little child In Anderson's fairy tale who, when the emperor was be ing made a spectacle of nnd all tho world wns being fooled by the sharp tailor, refused to be quiet and cried out, "He hasn't got anything on." These young enthusiasts who have no posi tions to lose nnd no dignities to live up to go about pointing to all our literary emperors and calling attention to the senntiness of their nttlre of greatness, nnd refuse to he silenced by their scandalized or terrified elders. Good sense bids us welcome their hon est gnze at even tho sacrosanct per sons. It can't hurt anything really fine, and it's about time we enme out of some of our illusions William Al len White sized It up nbout right from the conservative point of view when he said In praising "Main Street": "Of course, I'm on the other side of thft street myself, but flint's just tho rea son why I like this book. It give ua fellows something to nns,wer." BIG PROFIT IN RABBITS In IVicmorlam. A crowded elevator In a western of fice building was neurlng the bot tom of its descent when It suddenly dropped n few feet, recovered., and continued its trip at a normal rate. "It's all right," saitl the elevator boy reassuringly. "If It had fallen It would only have meant a couple of stories." "That's all," replied n portly gentle man, casting a solemn eye upward. "Just two one in the Star and one in the Times." American Legion Weekly. The Swiss people were the first to date their coinage. Passing the Third Floor Up. - "Us women are going to vote nnd so I thought I'd rend up on tlie law," she said confidently. "Yes, ma'am" expectantly. "Can I look at It?" inquiringly. "What department of state, mndnm, are you looking for?" anxiously. "Why, tho museum," convincingly. "Quite so, quite so. That really Is the place where quite a number of them should be found, but we nre so crowded for spnee that they still are nil up In the Inw library. Mr. Bailey, take tho lady up to the third floor." lllchurd Lleber, director of the de partment of conservation of Indiana, was tho expectant, anxious nnd meek person In the story. Ttidiunnpolts News. Frank. "Well, he's frnnk even if he Isn't tnctful." "In what wny?" "He ndmits ho wants all the money he can make; he says In most matters he thinks of himself nnd his own In terest ilrst and lie doesn't claim th.it ho was happier when he didn't have u dollar to his nnme." - Largo Increase in the Industry in This Country. m cr HAROLD Unfold. 1W U Kalli Ava.. llruolD, N a on utiii or meifti. fin't ... frtlpo?r: . 'will not ioll or Injur nylhintr i.utruueou. ua ni i FLY UILLEU uci V. PAKKER'S HAIR BALSAM tUiboYrtnaoarutl fitcialUlrlaillnt BMOty to Cray anil I'adoJ IlaJj avc.a,na 91 n ituiteiii Ittarat Clirm. Waa. l'atflinru,H.T HINDERCORNS uramm cms. ci. Joaaca. cla., auta aJI ln, txiuraa ro.n(ort to tti hi. uaax walk lor tui, 11. br mall or a.1 Urur fbu. UUooi Ctivmleii VVWka, I'aScbvuu. H. I. "A CARPET OF GREEN" In Montgomarr County tbera la rea.1 ehanca fur the white farmor Tor txoklet ITarm T ' - Hell HMe . ou try, Al Iowa Doy Clears $1,200 In One Year by Raising Them In His Back Ytird. Washington. Raising rabbits for tho market Is becoming a pleasurable und prolltablu Industry lu certain parts, of the country. A resident of Kaunas City, Kim., has raised H00 to 400 pounds of rabbit meat a joor for his own table at a cost of only elglit to ten cents i pound. In Nebraska a largo religious Institution that has raised rabbits Instead of poultry re ports the meat more satisfactory than chicken ami tho experiment profitable. According to a former county coimnls (doner of Washington, rabbits weru crown on the county farm to provide 81,1 toiicty hospitals; tho Initial stock, nunibfc'iinj lit) rabbits, Increased to l.'-'tH) In t-u uniithb. besides tlm-,. used lu the ho$irrifr. A hlglr1 school boy lu Iowa, who breeds registered stock on a hinn-e J1H feet Miuiiro In his back yard, raised enough rabbits in 1H1S to clear more than Jfl.'JOO. An Ohio farmer -ends UK) pounds of rabbit meat a week to city restaurants, jot Is unable to meet Iho demand. The foregoing are con crete o.Muuplos of what has actually been done from records of the bureau of biological uurvey of the United Slates lVpurtinent of Agriculture. "It is now well known that rabbit meat," says Ned Duurborn, iihMbtunt biologist, lu u bulletin to furiuers, "Is as flno as that of poultry, und that a prolific ten-pound doe can onsllj raise In a year 'M joung, which ut live months will produce not less than r0 pounds of delicious meat, lly means of compound hutches, nil this can be for chicken for tho j 1.0110 on ,m area 4 by 0 feet Ilulf an ljour of time a day nnd some hay, rond side weeds and refuse from orchard. garden and kitchen, supplemented by j 11 small tiuantlty ot grain, cover the 1 cost of production, liaising rabbit meat for homo consumption Is n prop. twit Ion for turning to nccount time, 1 space and materials which arc ordl-1 nnrlly wasted. In regions where rab bit breeding Is practiced extensively rabbit meat Is in common uso and has a place with other kinds of meat In dally market reports. "The Ilrst object In -abblt raising la to supply home needs. Tho l.vst en dorsement tin article can have Is the fact that It Is used freely by Its pro ducer. If one Is Inclined to disdain domesticated rabbits on account of ex perience with wild rabbits, ho should know-that tho latter, as sold In tho butcher's shop, tiro not to be com pared with tender young hutch rabbits Tho flesh of the tamo rabbit Is n high ly nutritious nnd deslrablo food, re sembling somewhat tho white ment of chicken. Wherever It hns been Intro duced lu tho markets, it bus become popular, ami the demand for It hq steadily grown. Death from snakebites are nuiner. ous In Afghanistan. Medical science is unable to exiduln 1 Tally two-thirds of n college educa :lie cause of warts. Hon Is more ornamental than useful. F fere's a Reason hy GrapeJwts makes a helpful breakfast and a profitable lunch for the worker who must be awake and alert during the day. GrapeNuts is the perfected goodness of wheat and malted barley, and is exceptionally rich in nourishment It feeds body and brain without jax. ujjuju i-xic uiecaLiun.. "There's a Reason - s ) f- '