Bakota County Herald. I ., V! ALL TIIE NEWS WHEN IT IS NEWS - DAKOTA CITY, NEBRASKA,' THURSDAY, JUNE 23, 1921 KSTAULISIIK1) AUGUST 2S, 1S!M. vol.. XXV! u. no. a. P 4 fl i fct t i A m rji NEWSY ITEMS FROM U 5ira(Dnr3Dlng Allen News: Mrs. Heckt left for Homer Monday for a few dnys visit in thu home of her sister and family. o Maitinsburi items in Aller News: Henry Nobbe and family spent Sun- day with their daughter, Mrs. E. Ebel at Dakota City. () Ponca Advocate: Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hart and Geo. Carter and family autoed to Wakefield Sunduy, whole they visited lclatives. o Marti nsburg items in Ponca Advo cate: W. C. Smith and family, of Jackson, are now residing in the Burg. Mr. Smith trucks between here and Sioux City. o Ponca Journal: Misses Mildred Kavanaugh and Mona Nordyke, of Sioux City, are guests of the Misses Marian and Helen Hurley today.... Mrs. J. A. Harding visited over Sun day with her son, Ray Harding, at South Sioux City. Her little grand daughter, Mary Francis, returned willi her. o Wakefield Republican: J. E.Chris ten was a Jlubbard and Sioux City visitor'' Sunday. .. .Mrs. Geo. Barto, daughter Gladys and son Charles, re- " e" turned last Saturday from a two week' visit at Lincoln.. Hi 1 m r r n- l .!..,-!. .. r: .!. HUM iVUS, V j. IJIC3L uiiu uuuiiiilci lyuiia, of Sioux City, spent Sunday at the home of Mr. Priest's sister and hus - band, Mr. and Mrs. .1. R. reauto. o l.vnnt lUlrrni'-Siin! Mrn. John Snen " ::., i "v : . . , 'company lower its trucks and nav cer and children eft ast week fori,. ' r - ,,, , , i -i i., n..o.., ,, t Am.no,.niin.- Lhe cost of living between the rails. their far-away home at Aguascalien tes, A. G. S., Mexico. ...Mell A, Schmied, editor of the Dakota City Eagle, was a caller at the Mirror Sun office, yesterday, while on his way hwnqffom Council Bluffs. lie was accompanied by his wife, daughter and son-in-law, Mr. nnd Mrs. D. D. Dryden and their son Jack. o Walthill Citizen: Miss Lola Col lins went to Homer Tuesday to visit her uncle, Frank Wilson.... W. H Mnqnn. wlfi nnil .Iniip-litfir. Miss Lpna. were Sioux City visitors last Thurs- day.. -.-.Miss Abble Rockwell and Mrs; - Harry WHkerson and children return- survived byfour-daughters;' Annn ed to Homer Friday night, after vis- Wilson, of Solway, Alinri.; Mrs. Mer iting with Mrs. Wm. Cornwall thh Shannon, of San Francisco, Cal.; Lew Allen and wife of Hubbard, and Mrs. Myrtle Siler, of Sioux City, and Bert McClain and wife of Homer, Mrs. Chris Kunzer, of South Sioux camcame Saturday night for a visit. City, and two sons, John Townsend, Mrs. Allen remained for a longer stay, of Sioux City, and Ben Blue of South o Sioux City. Funeral services will be Sioux City Journal, 17: John Ber- held in South Sioux City tomorrow gin, of Waterbury, Neb., marketed a morning at 10 o'clock. Interment good load of yearlings on the Thurs- will bo in Floyd cemetery. .. .Mrs. day trade, for which he received Lindsey Jensen, 119 South Helen St., 88.15. There were thiity-one head and Miss Florence De Laney, 361 Cor of white faces in the consignment rectionville road, were injured 'Sun averaging 717 pounds. ...Miss Esther day when a car which Mr. Jensen was Learner has returned from Mitchell, driving was forced into the ditch on S. D., where she has been head of the the lake road between Crystal lake department of home economics in the and South Sioux City in meeting an Dakota Wesleyan university. She othr machine. The Jensen car turn will spend the summer with her par- ed jjver, tin owing the two women out. ent:, Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Learner.... Mrs. Jensen was severely bruised. Larsen Bros., of Hubbard, Neb., mar- Miss De Laney received a sprained keted two mixed loads of cattle on. knee and shoulder. Both victims the Thursday trade and sold yearling were removed to Dr. McArthur's of heifers and steers at $8.25. They had fice for medical treatment. In or sixteen yearling heifers averaging der to avoid a collision Mr. Jensen G52 pounds and eighteen steers was forced to turn his car into the gsssssiQ Your. Spring Supplies We have tKerr. Interior Wall Finish Outside and Inside Paints and Varnishes Barn Paint Poultry Fence and Netting Garden Tools Lawn Mowers ' Screen Wire Screen Doors Window Screens Carpet Beaters Perfection Oil Stoves, and other makes Full Line of Enamel and Alumiium Ware Full Line of Galvanized Ware Horse Collar Pads Baskets Hog Troughs Hog Oilers Garden Gates Iowa Farm Gates Posts- Steel and Wood Tinrin: tons or slack coal SKK US FOR ANYTHING IN BUILDKHS HARDWARE LINE lllf! STOCK or m'.miii:h II. It. GIlEElt, 3Isui!iBer. Dakota City, Nob. ssmssw ID OUR EXCHANGES 5 (gl weighing nearly 1,000 pounds at that pries, . o Walthill Times: Miss Sylvia Lom- son has taken a position as stenogra- pher in the farm bureau office.... By being not big a hurry to accept (the first position offered him, which I was not altogether to his liking, V. A. I'atton has landed a very satisfac tory position as manager ot a new lumber yard in South S.oux City, kno.'.i as the Thompson j aril, and ho took charge of the plant Wednesday. Mr. I'atton is well experienced and is qualified to hold successfully a good position and he is well pleased with the opening that came to him. The faintly exepct to move to So. Sioux as soonN as Mr. Patton finds a suita ble cottage to live in. o Sioux City Tribune, 18: Late de velopments in the fight of the South Sioux City council to have the Sioux City Service company, which runs street cars through the Nebraska town, lower its tracks and pay the cost of paving between the rails, dis closed the fact that the Service com pany doesn't own the tracks ocross the river, at least as shown by Dako ta county records. The trucks are higher than the paving. The line is fiiuiirwl tttr iUt Cm 1. C:,,w 'J., rp . V ""'; 3. '.'... "...r '? """ tion company, but it is said the same ' nr !!( inn. nnnl. ... ! .. .. u,"' m.-w cutu wui iui iiLiun. In ti. ,.!,;., nr o:,l.. n i. ornerfo7smth S oux Cltv t lis ma Sng waf lies gnedC ,rtl very contingency which now has arisen. at- The council has demanded that comnunv Inwor itc Imnlrc on1 The coiporation, informally, has re fused on the ground that it cannot afford the expense. Mr. Frum be lieves an agreement will be reached. In the event that this is not the case, he said, court action probably would have to be resorted to. It is a question whether the city could do the paving and then make the com pany pay for the work. o Sioux City Journal, 21: Died, in Snutl SlOUX Citv. Neb.. Juno 9(1 inl Mrs. Minerva Wilson, 58 vearg old, of B compHoationof diseases'? SKe' is Attention! I Where Nations, If Neighbors, Bear One Another Naught but 111 Will By SENATOR MEU1LL The traveler returning from liurope comes from tin old world where the rivalries and hitter jealousies between the peoples which have been allies arc almost equal to the hates which still live among thosa who were enemies; he comes from an old world in which it is the general rule that if notions urc neighbor. they bear ono another ntuight but ill will. Despite the disarmament of the countries west of Ilussia, there are us many men under arms as there vcre in central and western Europe be fore the outbreak of the roiiuMct.iu 1911. The course upon which Europe has embarked, if followed to its end, will lead to irretrievable ruin. The.totnl number of states west of llussia has been increased by seven, each circumscribed by tariffs, by restrictions upon travel and railway transit, that are tantamount to a blockade. If there is ruin to the east of central Europe, to the west of it the victorious countries are beset'by cciniomic disorders and crushed by continuing deficit. ditch. The car was damaged. Mr.' Jensen escaped uninjured. .. .F. M. Sides, 1517 Pierce street, narrowly escaped death early last night when,' " unurcu aervicua wuiu u un a motor car, which he was driving, different la8t Sunday from what thoy was demolished by a switch engine ustialy are. The pastor was not ublo at Third and Howard street. Sides to preach because- of Ills sore- throat, suffered only a wrenched buck - and and so Mr. M. C5. Learner rend a cer arm. The accident was the first one mon.for him. This will bo th0 pro of serious nature to occur on the new gram for next Sunday also, tiltc. paving on Third .street. Sides was driving east in Third street when his machine was struck. His attention had been attracted to another train whi -n was approaching tho crossing and he failed to see the switch en- gine until it collided with his car. The machine was smashed into bits of s'cel and wood. Sides was una- ble to explain his escape from more serious injury. He was removed to ff"ff. rlnKn of cultivating several acres of corn and then losing the right to thcland and crop along about the time thc big oars begin to turn a rich yellow, awa't two families who are farming on n strip of ground near Sallx, la., and which figured in injunction' pro- ceedings in the district court o? Dakota county, Neb,, at Dakota iCity J-estprday... Tho ground is suid'to'W ownttl'hy Mrs. Felix Jaurcn. who yesterday sought injunction against a number of alleged squatters, who are said to bo farming on the Jauron property. Judge Sherman Mclvinley who heard the cases, granted a tern- norary injunction restrainirir John Herrink from farming on the prop- erty. The injunction will empire on July G, when tho Dakota county dis- trict court again will convene. In the meantime, Mrs. Jauron will con- duct the cultivation of the crop. An agreement was reached between Mrs. Jauron and other persons farming in her favor, she wiU take pssession a.6 tssft "". change in tho course of the Missouri river, the strip belongs to the state of Nebraska, where Mrs. Jauron pays tnxes ' ' OfViciul Proceedings of the lloartl of Coilllllissioncrs'py Mrs. Learner. Mrs. Loamor nb Dakota City, Neb., June 14, 1921. Tho Board of Equalization of Da kota County, Nebraska, met pursu ant to law, with the following pres ent Geo. Barnett, County Assessor; Will II. Rockwell, Nels Anderson and J. J. Lapsley, Countv Commissioners: Geo. W. Learner, County Attorney, and Geo. J. Boucher, County Clerk. inu bloux (Jfty Hridge Company field objections in writing to the as- sessment of the Sioux City Bridge Company's bridge in Covington pre- cinct, hearing on which was set for June 27, 1921. Several persons up- n01.f',.w infm,n. in L .1... ,,...... ...... ....... j .... V..X...I.UIM Hi' assej made ment or various properties no formal protest. Whereupon the Board adjourned to meet June 1G, 15121. Geo. J. Boucher, County Clerk Dakota City, Neb., June 15, 1921. The Board of Equalization met pur suant to adjournment with the fol lowing present: Geo. Barnett, Coun ty Jtssessor; Will II. Rockwell, Nels Andersen and J. J. Lapsley, County Commissioners; and Geo. J. Boucher, County Clerk. Several persons ex amined the assessments of various properties. Notice was given the Consumers Ice Company and ,ho Missouri River Bridge Company that tlte lionra intended to raise tie as.)tlmt Kecum( from V0V,K ;j inches sessment of their property, and June 27, 1021, fixed as date of hearing. Whereupon the Board adjourned to meet June Hi, 1921. GFO. J. BOUCHER, County Clerk. Dakota City, Neb., Juno 10, 1921. The Board of Equalization of Da - Kota county, Neiirastyt, met pursuant' to t.djournment with the following! present: ueo. Harnett, County As sessor; Will H. Rockwell, .1. J. Laps ley and Nels Andersen, County Com rnissioners, and Geo, J. Boucher, County Clerk. The Board contln - ucu iu uAiiiiiiiiu mo iisrHKmeniH as returned for the various properties. No formal complaints were filed this day. Wrereupon tho Board adjourn ed to meet June 27, 1921. GEO. J. BOUCHER, County Clerk. McCORMICK of Illinois Lutheran Church Notw H 0w J which the preacher will he .tblu to take hid placo. Wo ara glad Mr. Lcainur so kindly consents to do thia for us. Thei'o Is a place in the Lutheran church for what Is known as iay readers, one of the members 0f tho church who conduct3 tho serv- iC() aml rcad8 a Sorpton, not his ow.i. In thc ca80 of u vcttucy tl, c0gro. ,,, ipto nn nf timii- nwn mm,. bcr t Uq tho .,, rondor just a!, KY elect a .pastor, and this lay ST" T? !1 . i . "f ' and,lllB,T ? c,aBC8 ho ,CIin cl "y ' "T' T lls, '? PBrt ol our PrivlIOBOa under Avl!,u ,,a own as tho univorsa priesthood of believers. It would bo profitable if our churches would ftvall themselves of this privilege In -tho t,IU0 ot thc,r vacancy. It would hot, bo. necessary for tlt0 reader to preparehlgtown qormon, but'to'featl a Bormon, say from some- book of sermons, and Micro aro ninny of thorn. Last Sunday tho young folks drove from tho church to tho foot of tho hills and had tholr dinner. It was an outing given to tho girls by the young men In return for tho party the young ladles gavo them Bomo time ago at th0 parsonage, Boasted frankfurter!! and bum, nnu pickles, 'and all the lco cream you c0Uld eat. Tho conduct of tho young folka waa wholl in kooptng wlth tho Tulof vftKrtolSSi! a "s -ijwi. oj" :Sn "J1 ,Kn l l l.0,r hmot3- J"s0l h.ttd, a, g,ood "m to,Bether, a"d then departed. The pas or aad his family were invited guests. tho parentB will remember the Friday aftornon hour at the church fnr flln nil tlflrnti'a ulntvlntr hial flint lii nigniy pieasou wiui me turn-out last wook. This Is a fine thing, nnd tho church will benefit from it !a many ways. Wo understand ono of tho Omaha papers had an acount of the death of Dr. W. F. Eystor, of Crete, during oast week. Dr. EyBter was tho oldest Lutheran minister in tho United States, !)9, and tho oldest college graduate In tho country. Ho was :i pioneer In tho Lutheran church In Nobraska He ,., 10., '.,., .... entered the ministry " I" n ' 1 " " ' Lnv nosUIonii of honor m ,', "?. ,0,,t,0II of " 01 church in his time. Man; mo to the Htate nenr- liitn hold In the y yours ho -wiia n .,. fnou,. I,i .u.. MnlliMLiin , '" ,',"""' '" '," """'" C0,1,eK,0-, "'. uenoratlon and 111 friends havo been gone u long time, jiow ho has gone to be with them. No (lulu In l)i'( Plintliii,' Mil uhi'iit Nothing is to ho gained by plow ing deeper than 7 inches for winter wheat, occording to experiments con ducted ot the Nebraska experiment al substation at North Platte. Kmr pints were plowed each of tho four depths, U, 7, 10 and 14 inches, for eight years. Highest yields were e 'urcd fiom tho intermediate depths. The lowest yield was secured from plowing incites. J he increase in yield front plowing i inches ovor was sufficient to justify plowing at tne greater depth. the yields from plowing 7 and 10 inches were practi cally tho same. Tho 14-Inch, or very deep, plowing produced the lowest yields of any except tho 3 inch denth. The denth of nlowinir 1 had no appreciable elfect upon the storage or use of boll moisture. Higher yields were secured from early than front late plowing, but the differences were not great. Hot ter yields followed packing than where packing was not done. Those ! intetested In obtaining a full report 01 ineso experiments iinouKl asl their countv agricultural agent or tne Nebraska Collego of Agriculturo f-jr Experiment Station nulletln 178, 'Winter Whont, Scod-Rcd Preparation." The Scrap Book FAMOUS PLANT AT CAPITAL Glastonbury Thorn, In the Grounds of the Episcopal Cathedral, Object of Veneration to Many. In the grounds of the Episcopal ca thedral of St. Albans, which Is being built on commanding heights overlook ing America's capital city of Washing ton, there Is a curious plant known us the Glastonbury thoin or Christ thorn. This plant has a rare history, for thc tradition, us told by a writer in the Pathfinder, Is that It was this kind of thorn front which the crown was made when Christ was crucified. It belongs to a very large botanical fam ily, namely, the euphorbia ot which there arc upwards of three thousand known species. They usually yield n milky Juice when cut or bruised. In some cases this Juice Is poisonous. Some of the wild tribes of Africa have used It to poison the tips ot their ur rows. The mime Glastonbury comes from old Glastonbury abbey, near Bath, England. It was to Glastonbury, ac cording to tho legend, that Joseph of Arlinnthea camu as a missionary to found the first Christian church In Eucland, and It was there that he brought the holy grail, or golden cup u&ed by Christ at the last supper. It is related that Joseph on reaching Glastonbury thrust his stick Into the ground. This stick was from the Christ thorn and be had brought It from the Holy land as a sacred me mento. It took root and since then sprouts from It have been taken to many different countries. A fanatic during religious troubles cut down the original thorn at Glastonbury, but It hpraug tip again afterward and visi tors to Glastonbury ruins can sou It. Thu old story Is that Glastonbury thorn blossoms miraculously at Christ mas, and at no other time of the year unless someone having royal blood In his veins pays homage to It. It Is even told that when tho young prince of Wales, In November, 1010, was In Washington and paid u visit to the St. Albans cathedral site, the Glastonbury thorn put out a blossohi which was placed In a silver box and presented to him. In accordance with the ancient custom. Tho modern world la skeptical and It does not believe that there Is anythlny peculiarly holy In a royal personage. So If the Glastonbury thorn blossoms out of Its regular season It Is because It lias been encouraged to do so by well-known horticultural incthods; and there Is no mlrucle about It beyond the great miracle that is always being per formed in the blossoming of any flower. Compare Prices and Save the Difference Prices Good Only for Saturday, June 25tli - Extra heavy galv. Bushel Barket, rope handle, $1.35 No. 9 galvanized Wash Boiler 2.35 5 gallon galvanized Oil Can 1.25 12 Quart galvanized Sprinkler 1.05 3 gallon Wood Churn 1.50 3- tined Hay Fork, with 4K foot handle 1.00 FRED SCHRIEVER & CO. DAKOTA CITV, XKIIItASKA IIMBIIIIII Still Active Though With Broken Neck. An extraordinary case of a man walking about with a broken neck Is reported from the Metropolitan hospl tul, Hoxton, England. Beyond the fact that he has been supplied with n support for his neck, there Is little other evidence of the man's abnormal condition. Tho case Is rendered tho more .reiiinrkablo by reason of the fact that ho Is over seventy years of age. lie was Injured In an elevator accident. Affidavit Should Accompany This. A largo uiastlfT In Bingham, Ala., In curred thu wrath of his master, who locked him tin lit tho bathroom. The dog whined pltcotisly for a while, then was quiet. When water logan to leak front the celling tho man Investigated. Rover was found at tho bottom of the tub, which was overflowing with water. He crawled In, pulled down the faucet and drowned himself. Montreal Her ald. Lamentation Came Slowly. While crossing the street, a young boy was knocked down and run over by un automobile lit Colllnswood, N. J. Getting to his feet he ran down the street a short distance before he realized what had happened, l'lien he began to scream. Beyond A few bruises and cuts he suffered no In juries. Quick Action Saved Boy's Life. The miraculous escape of u boy tit C'olllnt'swood, N. J., was' due to the presence or nilud of a young woman. The boy attempted to ctawl under a titaudlng train nnd luul got part way tinder, when the train started. The young woman dragged him out so rati' Idly that he was not hurt. Sixty Years In One Pulpit. For sixty years vicar of Watford, Herts, England, the Rev. Reginald James died In bis ntiiety-fourth year. He had dfllclatcd nt over fi.SOO bap tisms and over 1,700 marriages.. x Remarkable Willow Wand. A willow wand nine feet four Inches long was cut by a Poland (Out.) farmer. " Contest ileus '.nrllig 'Unji'iv Twenty-eight birds entered in tho Nebraska National Egg Laying con test being conducted by tho Collego of Agriculturo laid twenty-eight or mora eggs each during tho month of May. Twenty of tho twenty-eight were single comb white Leghorns. A singlu comb Rhode Island Red laid thirty eggs in thirty-ono days. Ten hens jn the contest haye averaged more than twenty eggs each month for tho last seven months. Ono Sin gle Coirtb White Leghorn has luid 161) eggs in seven months nnd two Barrod Rocks have laid 148 eggs each in that time. With gnu exception the ton high hens of this year's contest aro owned in Nebraska. Twenty of tho twenty-eight high layers for May aro owned by Ncbraskans. Tho contest is being conducted to encourage tho raising of hotter laying strnins of poultry. A great deal of fntcrcht mis been aroused over tho state in the lr.gt few years and more than 200 poultry raisers recently attended tho second annual poultry field day at the Collego of Agriculture. Co operi'tivo marketing of graded eggs is u subject in which many aro in terested, Tho poultry raisers of Hamilton county saved $850 in April unil May by the co-operatiVo market ing of high-grade eggs. THE II KHALI) FOJt NEWS