Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Dakota County herald. (Dakota City, Neb.) 1891-1965 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 29, 1921)
' "PH DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD h r t T 4 W f r 4 WONDERrUL GAIN IN WEIGHT REPORTED Young Woman Only WelQhed 70 rounds Now Wclgho Over 100 and Is Gaining Every Day. "Before I began tuklng Tanlac I onl weighed 70 pounds, I now weigh over one hundred mid nm gaining every day," snid Miss Lnltue Davis of Clint tnnnngn, Tcnn. "I bought my first bottle of Tmilnc at Gas City, Ind., and It helped me so much that I continued using It. I have always been very delicate and suffered n groat deal from stomach trouble and rheumatism. I rarely ever had any ap petite and simply could not relish any thing. I fell off until I only weighed 7C pounds and wns so thin I looked perfectly awful. This Is the condition I was In when I began taking Tanlac. "Oh, I feel so different now. Even my complexion Is Improved. My appe tite Is good and I can hardly get enough to eat. Tanlac Is simply graud and I can truthfully say It Is the only medicine that has ever done me any good." Tanlac Is sold by leading .druggists everywhere. Advertisement. Try Being Poor. "What's the icood of wealth?" "What, Indeed? I have four auto mobiles and the doctor sns I must walk to and from the olllce." Bos ton Transcript. If You Heed a Medicine You Should Have tiie Best Have you ever stopped to reason why it is that so many products that are ex tensively advertised, all at once drop out of sight and are soon forgotten? Tho reason is plain the article did not fulfill the promises of the manufacturer. Thi applies more particularly to a medicine A medicinal preparation that has real curative value almost, sells itself, as like an endless chain system the remedy is recommended by those who have been benefited, to those who are in need of it. A prominent druggist says "Take for example Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, a preparation I have sold for many years and never hesitate to recommend, for in almost every case it shows excellent re ults, as many of my customers testify. No other kidney remedy has so large a According to sworn statements and verified testimony of thousands who have used the preparation, the success of Dr. Kilmer's Sw np-Root is due to the fact, eo many people claim, that it fulfills al most every wish in overcoming kidney, liver and bladder ailments; corrects uri nary troubles and neutralizes the uric acid which causes rheumatism. Yon may receive a sample bottle of Swamp-Root by Parcels Tost. Address Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binglnmton, N. Y., and enclose ten ccu'.s; also mention this paper. Large and medium size bottles for sale at all drug stores.Advertiseraent Sonic men who den't stein J.- know when they are whipped, duiib'.les have suspicions. And Is Made Well Again by Lydia E. Pinkham's. Vegetable Compound Sm-intrfield. Mass. "The doctor told my husband that I had to have an oper ation, uinerwisc x would be a sickly woman and could not have any more chil dren on account or my weakened con dition. I refused to have the operation. Mv husband asked me to try Lydia E. rinkhnnvs vegeta ble Compound to see. if it would not help me. .For thu first four months I could do but little work, had to lie down moat of the time, was nervous and could eat hardly anything but my husband was always reminding me to take tho Vegetable Compound, which I did. Of my eight children this last one was the easiest birth of all and I am thankful for your Vegetable Com pound. I recommend it to my friends when I hear them complaining about th'oir ills." Mrs. M. Natale, 72 Fre mont St., Springfield, Mass. Sickly, ailing women make unhappy homes, and after reading Mrs. Natale's letter one can imagine now this home was transformed by her restoration to health. Every woman who suffers from auch ailments should give Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound a fait trial. It is surely worth while. . Money back without question If HUNT'S GUARANTEED SKIN DISEASE REMEDIES ' (Hunt's Salve and Soap), fail in the treatment of Itch, Eczema, Ringwormfetter or other Itch In? skin tliseaaes.Try this treat ment at our risk Sold by oil reliable (lrucRlsta, A. U. Richards Medicine Co., Sherman, Texas PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM RamoYffDaJiania-StopsIlalrl-'aniDH Restore Color and I Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair antm-or Cht-m. Wsa. 1'atf Koeu.W.Y rial annii mar. a iriirrTTi r v. HEfUDERGORNS RemoTes Con. Cal- t oases, etc, stops all pslo, enuns comfort to tho ect, makes walltlBi: ranr. Ua. by mall or at Drug (isU. lllscox Cbsmlcal Works, I'&tckugue. N. Y, Ciiticura Soap IS IDEAL- Foir tiie Hands Soap 25c, Ointment 25 mi 50c, Tslcna 25b Beari iiniiiMwwwi i i i i i imm ' t iwr-num l A wonderful face bleach, & KREmOLA ssfffsr i cafw& taw l!llIIIUL.n COMpAMr, aitstlcUsu Ar.CSJcM w7n U., SIOUX CITY, NO. 40-1921 njmwjjjHHBijnjs e imMmlt W-Wfflr& YM WmfM mvv HAVE HERITAGE OF HONESTY Little Doubt That Children Know In. stinctlvcly. That It la Vrong to Commit Theft. "I knew from a child that It wai wrong to steal," said a very successful man, who has made a fortune without being a crook. "That Is what saves the woild." re plied an editor to whom he wa talk ing. "Thank henven, all boys are honest. They never become i-rooks till they are men." That statement Is not perfectly, al though In a large measure, true. While chlldroh, If trained by scoundrels, will steal, they know Instinctively that stealing Is wrong. They' would much rathe- be straight. Tho theft of apples or watermelons or peaches commltteed by youngsters Is mischief. Show them that It Is real ly stealing, that they are depriving someone else of what Is rightfully his, und there will bo no more climbing over bnck fences for them. One of the reasons thut this Is not a dlfllctilt world In which to live is that honesty Is Instinctive, and theft hus to lie cultivated. The average schoolboy despises a thief, and will have nothing to do with him. If ho reads In the nowspapers of an absconder or a forger or a man who misappropriates a trust, the lad Is shocked and disgusted. It is only when he becomes hardened by contact with the. world, and learns that men often prosper, even though they nre dishonest, that he becomes hardened and Justifies his own misdeeds. Wntch a crowd of boys at games, and you will find that the cheat Is al ways marked and barred from the gunie If ho continues to cheat. Tho cheat himself was not n cheat always. lie has learned cheating from another boy, who In all likelihood learned It from a man. As long as we start honest, as most of us do, the great percentage of us are likely to remain so. Only those who are weak fall from their stand ards, and even they, when the race Is over, heartily regret that they ever were anything but fair and clean and open minded In their dealings with their fellows. Improved Airplane Propeller. Announcement Is made In the Timet of the invention of nn Improved typo of airplane propeller whereby englni' power necessary for driving the air plane will bo lessened nnd the vibra tion of the machine will be much re duced. The new type of propeller arises from the addition of a numbei of "veins" or flanges made of alumi num to the existing type of propeller. ThecP "veins" are about G Inches lu height and run parallel across the sur face of the propeller at n distance of about one foot from each other. There arc eight at the drive side, four ut each end of the blade, and six on the wind side In similar position. It Is clnlmed that by this arrangement the air Is properly directed past the pro peller blade faces, with the result that there Is an avoidance of the air lossc from tho blade ends, which through natural causes take place In the pres ent type of propeller, making poslble a mnxlmum thrust with a minimum expenditure of power. Gets Power From tho Air. Hermann Plauson has actually been extracting electric current from the air and using It for power. Tht Scientific American says he uses a captive balloon having n metallic cov er provided with a large number of pointed projections or spikes and nl. lows It to ascend to a height of 1,000 or 1,000 feet above ground. Positive electricity Is then collected from the air and transmitted to Uie ground through n wire rope fitted with spark ing gap, which in turn produces an electric vibration In a circuit. M. IMauson obtained with one balloon at a height of 1,000 feet a supply of 17.28 kilowatt hours por diem, and with two balloons 01.0 kilowatt liours. He calculates that a battery of ten bal loons should give an annual supply of 210,000 kilowatt hours. Palaces for 510 a Month. Costly nmrblo palaces, erected In the Sixteenth century by Dutch mer chants on the all-but-forgotten Isles of the South seas, are for rent at two pounds ten shillings a month, approx imately $10, according to letters re ceived by Sydney newspapers from mariners and Itinerant merchants. The letters Here In answer to a re quest for Information made by an English novelist, who Is visiting Aus tralia In search for a forgotten Island of romance In the Bnnda sen. One of the letters gave details of the Island of Bandn Nelra, where merchants erected palaces, now fot rent at $10 monthly, out of the pro ceeds of their nourishing nutmeg and other spice plantations In the Six teenth century. Nerves Revealed by Dyes. Surgeons know very little about tho nerves until the discovery of a meth od of dyeing them. The larger parts of the nerves were known, but tho delicate thread-like prolongations ol the neurons those telegraph wires that connect tho brain and spinal cord with every remotest part of the body escaped the notice of the keenest-eyed mlcroscoplsts until about twenty years ago, when they were first made vis ible. Tills wns the result of the discovery by Golgl, the famous Italian anato mist who won the Nobel prize In 1001, and by Clival, tho almost equally fa mous Spanish surgeon, that Impreg nating the nerve fibers wltjb chromate of silver and reduced silver nitrate wrueii -,'ii-in absolutely black. iftfct Contents 15FluidDracli fiVW.lii ilI4 M IIIIAULJJAU swmww&ii " .rnnnr-ilPEH OENT. AVr.nali1r.lVcn8faK0B6fAS" ..:,:in:nrtth.ToodbvHCiull tlnfithcStonarisandBowdsrf TftcrctylrximoiinSDKcsUj ccrfalncssandRcstContauj neither OrJoMorpnjnc. v. Miner aL NoxNAncpTic & I i i.ii,fiiinMncdyfof iGonsUpationandDlarry nsifiUnSuicrcfr Jac-flmilcSijnaof &M2 Exact Copy of Wrapper. WATER FROM ARTESIAN WELL Why Method of Bringing It to Sur face Is Only Successful In Cer tain Localities. Artesian wells are possible only In certain localities. When there nre pervious strata lying between Im pervious beds the water percolating through will he Imprisoned; lying up on the lowest, and rising to some point In the highest, when a pervious stratum brings it to the surface and It escapes In the form of spring. If, however, a shaft can be sunk to tho lowest point, the water of the whole basin will puss upward for escape and will rise to a level, corresponding to the greatest height to which the Imprisoned strata reaches. The wells wore named from one at Artols, France, which was the first sunk with full knowledge of the principle In volved. The Chinese from time Im memorial have used these wells, iuil they have also been used for cen turies In tho neighborhood of Vienna. The artesian well at Grenoble, near Paris, throws water to a height of 32 feet nbove the surface at the rate of more than 500 gallons a minute. Boston Globe. Compulsory Elegance. "Is there any reason why the farm ers should not appear In dress coats and patent leather shoe??" , "I s'pose not," replied Farmer Corn tossel. "Maybe It's what, we'll be brought to. Dress coats and patent leathers is about all some of these rustlcators leave behind to apply on their board bills." Hall's Catarrh Medicine Those who aro in a "run down" condi tion will notice that Catarrh bothers them much more than when they ore in good health. This fact proves that while Ca tarrh is a local dlsense. It is greatly in fluenced by constitutional conditions. HALL'S CATAIUUI MEDICINE Is a Tonic and nets through tho blood upon tho mucous sUVfuces of the body, thus reducing tho inflammation and assisting Nature In restoring iKirmal conditions. All Druggists. Circulars free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio Animal Superiority. "Did you ever see'a movie star with out some kind of silly uffectatlou?" "Only one." "Jinn, womnn or child?" "Neither. A dog." Birmingham Age-Herald. Watch Cutlcura Improve Your Skin. On rising and retiring gently smear the face with Cutlcura Ointment. Wnrii off Ointment in five minutes with Cutlcura Soap and hot water. It Is wonderful iiometlmcs what Cutlcura will do for poor complexions, dandrufT. itching and red rough hands. Adver tising. If you are henpecked you need not crow about It. f J,A af , l)-AEa !r 1 k j 0ql AAA Mfc Never say"Aspirin' without saying "Bayer ' Warning 1 Unless you see the namo "Bajor" on package or on tablets you are not getting genuine Aspirin pre xcrlbed by physicians for twcnty-0110 yenrs and proved feafe by millions. Tako Aspirin only hs told In tho Bayer pack ago for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia, CASTORIA For Infants and Chadren. Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Always Bears the Signature of For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA THC CCNTAUN COMPANY. NEW YORK CITY. GENUINE tobacco makes 50 good cigarettes for We want you to havo the best paper for "BULL." So now you can receive with each package a book of 24 loaves of MUkV. the very finest cigarette paper in the world. r . '.. s fed? ItUsfrt 1344. UJ Waterproof Airon lluy direct tha bent at lowest cost attractive patterns nf Otnchani, I'ercnle. plnln npl. jirlcen on request. Amur. Apron Co, 2110 Smith IlUlc , Scuttle Wash. Women Wauling Profitable Spare Time Work Wrtto V. BUnUENER, OLNUY, ILLINOIS. Tho Roward. The reward of a thing well done, 19 to have done it. Emerson. DYED HER DRAPERIES, SKIRT AND A SWEATER Each package of "Diamond Dyes" con tains directions so simple that nny woman can dye or tint faded, shabby skirts, di esses, waists, coats, sweatcis, stock ings, hangings, draperies, everything liko lcw. Uuy "Diamond Dyes" no other kind then perfect home dyeing is guaran teed, even if you have never dyed before. Tell your druggist whether the material you wish to dyo is wool or silk, or' whether it is linen, cotton, or mixed goods. Dia mond Dyes never streak, spot, fade, or run. So eaBy to use. a'dvcrtitemcnt. Chinamen indented everything he foie the Caucasians did, Including backscratchers. Stop the Tain. Tho hurt of n, burn or a cut stops when Cole's Carhollsalvo is upplled. It heals quickly without scars. 30c and GOc by all drugidsts or send 30c to Tho J. W. Cole Co, Kockford, III. Advertisement. It's n poor writer thnt escapes criti cism. Ithcuraatlsm, Earache,, Toothache, Lumbngo and for I'aln, All druggists sell Buyer Tablets of Aspirin in handy tin boxes of 12, nnd In bottles of '21 and 3(K), Aspirin Is the trndo mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetlcacltl ester of Halicyllcacid, M I If 1 ( Jfv In t Use BULL DURHAM t &?& J?y M$ K"J I CONDENSED CLASSICS it ABBE CONSTANTIN Y '$ By LUDOVIC HALEVY j , Condensation by !! Charles E. L. Wlnrrate :x-:hmx:m:"X: I.uiIotIc llnlcvy, French nuthor, vras born In 1'arlM on tho ft rut of Jnnunry, isai. HI tnthcr ntM n c 1 c Tcr, vcmntllo writer of erne, prone, tnudolllc nitil dramas M uncle, Fromnntnl Ilnlcvr. vrn for ninny jenrw naao clntcd with the opcrn hence the double nnil early connect Ion of I.tulovlo with the I'nrUInn ntnicc. At the nge of O he mlcht have been Keen plnylnc In that "Foyer de la nnnne" with Tfhlch he wns o make hU render so fnmlllnr. At elRhtcea he Joined the rnnkH of the French administration nnd occu pied vnrloua post. In the uprlnt of 1SC0. being; commla nloned to vrrlte a ploy for thc.uinnngcr of the Vnrletlen, Ilalevy usked the col laboration of Henri Mcllhne, nnd the prnpoanl wnsi Immediately accepted, thuH beRlnnlnR n connection which con tinued for more than SO yenrn. The Joint work of the two authorn had u rcrcnt tokuc, but Ilalevy In bent known to more recent render by hln "IMbbe Canninntln," published noon nfter the conclusion of the Frnnco IruNalan war. Ilalevy died In Pnrln on the 81h of May, 1008. WITH a otcp still vnlinnt nnd firm the old Abbe Constan ts walked along the dusty road of the llttlo village where for more than thirty years he had been tho cure. At the entrance of tho castle of Longueval ho stopped und mourn fully reminded the big blue posters fixed on tho pillars. They announced tho snlo of the castle, the former homo of tho cure's denr old friend, the marquise, who had recently died. And the result of the auction? The great estnte bought by two en tiro strangers 1 "Do you know who they are?'' nsked Madame do Lavardcns. 'Tes, Mrs. Scott is nn American pos sesslng a colossal fortune. Ten years aso Mrs. Scott begged in the streets of New York, they say. They are rich pnrvenus who amuse themselves by throwing hnndfuls of gold out of tho window, and who will turn up their noses nt us and care nothing for our traditions or our life." Such wns tho story. But when young Mrs. Scott nnd her beautiful sister arrived, to tako pos session of tho castle nnd called Im mediately upon the abbe, he learned a different tale. Religious, generous, nmlnblo and lovable they proved. And they were certainly beautiful, particularly tho younger sister, Bot tlnn l'crciva). At tho cure's little homo they mot Jean Bcynaud, tho son of thnt gal lant doctor of the village who, while advancing with tho soldiers In the war of 1870 to carry on htB work of mercy side by Bide with his dear old friend the abbe, had suddenly been struck by a bullet and killed on tho spot Jean, Inherited tho noble traits of his father, wnB beloved by tho whole village. But ho was poor while the American Bisters were immeasurably rich. As acquaintances and friendships grow, very pleasing It was to the gentle, lovable old cure to learn that his new parishioners wero most anxi ous to extend their benefactions nmong tho poor In tho hamlet, asking him, Indeed, to be their medium. They had, indeed, been poor until nn Inherited silver mlnq made them fabulously rich. Now, they had hosts of admirers Mrs. Scott because sho wns frankly flirtatious; nnd Bottlna because, as sho realized, tho fortuno hunters thirty-four of them she counted, Including a French duke nnd a Spunisli noble sought lier wealth. And when, one day, thoy nil went over with Jean to visit tho llttlo church, nnd Bottlna nt the organ played a rovorlo of Chopin, good gentle Abbe Constantln's heart wns tilled with such joy that tho tears came to hl$ oyes. But all this left n deep problem in Joan's mind "Which of tho two sis tors la the prettier?" At first ho wns ymvlncctl that It was tho coquottlsh Mrs. Scott who charmed him the more ; thon ho would bco Bottlna, smiling and blushing amid tho sunlit clouds of her floating hair, and he would declare to himself "I waB mistaken, tho prettier was Miss Perclval." , Tho days went on and Jean nnd Bet tina wore often thrown Into each other's company. What resulted is best pictured In Miss Perclval's own remark to her sister when ono day sho oxclalmod: "no Is tho first mnn, positively tha first, in whose eyes I havo not read 'Oh, how glad I should ho to marry that llttlo body's millions l" And then as Mrs. Scott went ui Blalrs to kiso her Bleeping children, Bottlna remained long leanlnf, on tho balustrade1 of lior balcony. "It seems to mo," said she, "that I nm growlnc to bo very fond of this nlnce 1" sbbbbLsbLsbKbbKLs& One day when Jean wns telling o hla expectations' of promotion and Uw probability that ho should wandci from garrison to garrison, llzt'ly com ing bnck to the little house that waR his rathcr's, ns an old colonel on half pny, sho exclnlmcdJ "Always quite nloho?" "Why quite nlpnc? I certainly hopa not." , "You intend to marry?" "Yes, certainly." "Yet you havo refused several good opportunities. Tell mo why." "Because," ho replied. "I think It best not to marry rather than to marry. without love. "And I think so, too." She looked at him ; he looked nt her and suddenly, to the great stirprlso of both, they found nothing moro to say nothing nt all. But now Jean is no longer tranquil; with Impatience and nt tho same time with sorrow ho sees the moment of hla departure approach. Yet how could he stay and resist the temptation of Bcttlna's charm? As an honorable man Jean felt for Bettlna's money horror, positive hor ror. In Bettlna's mind tho sensation of love had come nt the same time that It had to Jean's. But, while he, liorrb lied, had cast It violently from lilm, she on tho contrary had yielded In nil the simplicity of her perfect lnnocenio to this flood of emotion nnd of tender ness. An Bottlna grow more tondcr, Jcnn become moro gloomy. lie wns not only afraid of loving; ho was nfrnid of being loyexl. IIo felt he ought to remain away, but ho could not; Urn temptation was too strong. Ho tried to avoid Bcttlnn at recep tions nnd oven Xo leave without saying good-bye. "If I touch her hand," ho thought, "my secret will escapo me." His secret! He did not know that Bottlna rend his heart liko an open ' book. When Jean descended tho stnlrn thoso words Wero upon his llpu: "I lova you, I ndoro you, and that Is why I will see you no moro I" But lie did not utter them; he actu ally tied Into tho darkness. Bcttlna standing In tho hnll door and taking no notlco of tho rain driv ing across her bare shoulders, watched him go. "I knew very well that ho ioved me," sho thought, "but now I am very suro that I, too oh I ycsl I, too M Meanwhile Jean hastens to his deaz old friend tho euro to tell him that ho Is going away immediately to Paris to seek exchango Into another regfc ment, to leave tho llttlo hamlet forever. And then in his emotion ho confessed to tho nbbo thnt ho adored Bcttlnn. "It Is n madness which has seized me," ne exclaimed. "Ah! If sho wero only poorl" "Do you know what I think, Jean?" exclaimed his good friend.' "Jean, 1 believe that sho loves you." "And I bellovo it, too; but that Is Uia very reason I must go. Her money la tho great obstacle." At that moment someone knocked gently at tho door. It was Bettlna. Going directly to Jean eho crlexl, "Oh, how glad I nm you are here." Then slm took both his hands In hers and addressing the euro sho said, "X1 have como to beg you, monBlcur le cure, to listen to my confession." And to herself sho way saying, "I wish to bo loved! I wlsli to love I I wish to bo happy nnd to make him happy ! And since he cannot havo the courage to say It, I must havo the courage for both I" "I am rich, inonBleur lo cure," nue continued, aloud, "very rich, but I lovo money most for tho good which It allows me to do. So I have the care of this money, and I havo always wished that my husband should be worthy of sharing this great fortune in order that ho should help mo make good uso of It. I thought of another thing, too 'lie who will bo my hus band must be someone I can love!' There Is a man who has dono nil ha con to conceal from mo that ho loves me, hut I do not doubt thnt ho loves me. You do lovo mo, Jean?" "Yes," said Jean In a low voice, his eyes cast down, looking like a crlru Innl, "I do love you." ' "I know It very well, but I wanted to hear you say It And now, Jean, I say to you, I lovo you l' , Do not como near nie, yet. Before I catna hero I thought I had a good'Qtock of courage, but you see I have no longer my Arm composure of u mlnuto ago. And now, monsieur lo euro", I want you to nnswer mo, not him. Toll me, If ho loves "mo and feels mo worthy of: his lovo, should he not agrco to ho my husband;" Jean," said tho old priest grnvelya "mnrry her, It Is your duty." And us Jean took Bcttlnn In his nniia tlin rrlfl rnnrlnnnil. "Vnil linvn often told inc,monsIour lo cure, thnt Jean was almost liko your own son. Now you will havo two children, that Is all." A month later Bgttlnn, In tho simplest' of wedding dresses, entered tho church. Tho old cure said mass, Jean and Bct tlna knelt beforo him. Ho pronounced tho benediction. Then floated from tho organ the same ruverio of Chopin's which Bcttlna had played tho first time oho had entered that village church, whero wus to bo Consecrated tho hupplness of her life. And tills time It was Bottlna who ( wept. t Copyright, jjut, by tho Pont IuWlshln Co. (Tho U&aton Pout). Copyright In th United Klncdom. tho Dominions, Ua Col onlen and dependencies, under try opy right net, by tho Post Publishing Co.. Boston, Mobs., U. 8. A. All rlghta iv served. rt