I I- DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD I h o 1 -y1 ! ilesi'in3& Ii'omisirv Wuium v ! 4 l!efcAKKYaaaVsaaaaaaaaaCiafj4a1r?nrr . . -rajftgMaHK;2UZ CIKjBP&EPRjT tMIXUZZ. ZZT I Certninly Pulcstlno Is nt the be- I :K. ??ilfKilXHH0?:X -SS::5 , A . m I Klnnlng of n new crn. And nl- I VV:VfflBmBwlBHH vt&rAnCT " Y Y I I though there tiro many dlfllcul- I 'KmWiM WMWrKFmHmH &in A A s4 && v ties In plnln sight, this new era XwI&SIlEBK&sWBEpSX&iV (WCrSf2l V y&y &a&iEL. xv v A. is promising. laL4HaEsnHKtfl7l :mllIr'. 'rW ' "The vlnw of Jerusalem as Wt$ffl.vTSSWMT&Wm&?ttifsH I A(ktiStSlSsrM , t2 . . one leaves tho Garden of Getl.- liBSKWSHjrWl HRMi 1 A -.yyf Sri scmano draws tho heurt with Vi7.AWitoSERRk tWulMmmU ""?'v i 'YV r? iJw HympiUIiy," writes William D. VbZL SSSTVw KW " 'lM '..flSiTM McCrncken In Asia. "The walls LXSSPBfcMaHK Wt BvrOU iT& .W-a5lli jf&EtftM r'R0 severely above bare slopes t T BBHllRBfclT? CM. llSSm i&Mfim'iFmF' V it SwtfiSn g&f where nothing grows",, for It Is V ':W2jHMEarf!K3i s35y outside tho city proper that blbll- varvsaJBiS''rai5KA ' H rBmmjiy&&MWj0 Wet JmFMaa&M)iatf o!?BiHfeymsssi3i i n i m md i "i ii 1 1 nin i in .I I II XznbJ -rs-t ttV V aaBmawaaBaBaBwMaKI.BffiK VJfcJit'lMI 'S BWH ''a 'ImRi imiiiiiiaaiiiiiiiiiMBiiiM -- y , . yMJ ,LE8TINE'S promising future 1 Pi unMimj i uiuoiuiu in at iiiu uv I ginning of a new era. And al I though there are many difficul ties In plain sight, this new era Is promising. "The vlnw of Jerusalem as one leaves tho Garden of Geth scmnne draws the heurt with Hympathy," writes William D. McCrncken In Asia. "The walls rise severely above bare slopes where nothing grows",, for It Is outside tho city proper that bibli cal prophecies of the desolation of Jerusalem seem to be fulfilled. "Today the city stands midway between the hor rors of the Turkish reglm6 and the promised good of tho British mandatory rule Nothing has been Idone as yet in n public way to beautify the city. INbrth and weHt the houses strugglo outside tho jwalls; on the south forbidding slopes border the jroad to Bethlehem; and on tho cast lies the ter irlblo valley of Jehoshaphnt a valley of dry bones. "Seventeen times destroyed bitterly hated ionxtously sought how desperate a history since Nebuchadnezzar captured it more than twenty-live centuries ago. "Iledeemed today, but In her nakedness, Jerusa- em waits to bo clothed. She has as yet no grace, o covering for her ugly wounds. Borne day her Ides will glisten with the brightness of a heaven- y radiance ; slio will bo washed and anointed like a brldo waiting for tho bridegroom." Tho prophetic part of this is written, of course, Jin Oriental imagery. Sir Herbert Samuel, the Brit ish high commissioner, puts tho situation In plain 'English and says, In his report to parliament: "Undeveloped and underpopulated, Palestine has possibilities of far more prosperity than tho stand ard attained before tho war." And Palestine's future is the concern of half tho (World. Christian, Jow and Moslem see In Kales itlno a holy land. It Is n most Interesting situa tion that is being worked out under our very eyes. It Is an obvious chnnco for tho punster; Palestine Is Indeed tho "Promised Land." To whom Is It promised? That Is what Jew, Arab and Christian In Palcstlno aro asking of tho British government (Tho British government replies that under tho imundato thero will bo complete freedom and equal ilty for all religions and equal justlco for all, re gardless of roltgton, ruco or position. Sir Herbert's report to parliament makes Inter esting reading, some of which must be done be tween tho lines, Concerning the policy followed under tho mnndato ho says: "The policy of Ills Majesty's British govern ment contemplates the satisfaction of the legitimate aspirations of tho Jowlsh rnco through out tho world In rclntton to Palestine, combined with u full protection of tho rights of tho existing population. "For my own part I am convinced thnt tho means jenn bo found to effect this combination. The Zlon Ism that is practicable Is tho Zionism that fulfills 'this essential condition. "It Is tho clear duty of the mandatory power to .promote the well-being of tho Arnb population, In 'the samo way as a llritlbh administration would tregnrd It as Its duty to promote tho welfare of (the local population In any part of our empire iTho measures to foster the well-being of the Arabs 'should bo precisely those which we should adopt lln Palestine If there were no Zionist question, and If thero had been no Balfour declaration. There Is in this policy nothing Incompatible with reasonable Zionist aspirations. "On the contrary, If the growth of Jewish In fluence were accompanied by And) degradation, or even by a neglect to promote Arab advance ment, It would fall In one of Its essential pur poses. "Tho grlevnnco of the Arab would be a discredit to the Jew, and In the result the moral lulluenco of Zionism would be gravely Impaired. "Simultaneously thero must be satisfaction of that sentiment regarding Pnlestlnc a worthy and ennobling sentiment which, In Increasing degree, animates tho Jewries of thu world. "Tho aspirations of these 1-1,000,000 of people also have u right to be considered. They ask for tho opportunity to establish n "homo" In tho land which was tlie political and has alwayB been tho religious center of Iholr race. They ask that this home should possess national characteristics In Iungunge and customs, In intellectual inter ests, In religious and political Institutions. "This Is not to lay that Jewish Immigration Is tp Involvo Arnb emigration, that tho greater pros perity of the country, through tho development of Jewish enterprises, Is to bo nt tho expense, nnd not to tht) benefit of tho Arabs, thut tho use of Hebrew islo imply the disappearance of Arabic, 'that tho establishment of elected councils in the Jewish' community for the control qt If affairs Is !to Uo followed by the subjection of the Arabs to tho rule of those councils. . In n word, tho degreo to which JtswlaU.natlonal .aspirations can be fulfilled In Palestine ts coudl- tloncd by tho rights of prosent inhabitants. Theso have been the principles which havo guided the policy of my administration. "It Is the policy 6f tho administration to con tinue, wherever possible, to apply tho Turkish laws, to which tho peoplo aro nccustomod. Changes are made only when they aro indispensable. Effi ciency is essential to "good government, but there Is a point where efllclency may becomo harassing. Tho danger of passing that point is foreseen. "Tho many faiths and sects which And in the Holy Land their origin or their inspiration are frco to maintain their teachers nnd pastors, and to practice their cults, without let or hindrance. In tho controversies that occasionally arlso between them tho policy of th'o administration hns been strictly to maintain tho status quo." Nevertheless, nntlvo Christians and Moslems are appealing to tho British government not to put Into effect tho Balfour declaration, because, they say, the Zionists wish "to evict nnd dispossess tho Arab population of Palestine." Tho Balfour dec laration, Issued In November, 1017, approves "the establishment In Palestine of a national home for tho Jewish people," and states that tho British gov ernment will use their best endeavors to facili tate this object, while ut the samo time reserving to all non-Jewish communities their full civil and religious rights. Tho Zionists ussuro tho nntlvo peoples that their fears aro groundless, "Our policy In regard to tho Arabs, as in regard to all our problems, la clear and straightforward," said Dr. Chalm Welzmann, president, In his nddress to tho Twelfth Zionist congress, recently held at Carlsbad. lie declares, furthermore: "Wo lntvnil to abate no Jot of tho rights guar anteed us by tho Balfour declaration, nnd recog nition of that fact by tho Arabs Is an essential preliminary to tho establishment of satisfactory relations between Jew and Arab. Their temporary refusal to recognize that fact compels us to glvo thought to tho means by which we enn best safe guard our Ylshub against aggression. Self-protection Is an elemental duty. But we proclaim most solemnly and unequivocally that wo havo In our own hearts no thought of nggresslon, no In tention of trespassing on tho legltimnto rights of our neighbors. We look forward to a future In which Jew and Arab will live side by sldo In Pales tine, and work conjointly for tho prosperity of the country. Nothing will stand In tho way of such u future, when once our neighbors rcallzo that our rights aie as botlous a matter to us as their rights nre to them." That there are troubles of many kinds Is evi dent from the report. Some of theso ure referred to thus: "Tho methods ,of nnrlculturo are, for the most part, primitive; tho nrvn of land now cultivated could yield a far greater product. Thero aro In addition large cultivable areas that aro left un titled. The summits nnd slopes of tho hills aro admirably suited to the growth of tho trees, but there are uo forests. Some Industries havo been killed by Turkish laws; none has been encouraged; the markets of Palestine and of tho neighboring countries nre supplied almost wholly from Europe. "The senborno commerce, such as It 1b, is load ed and discharged In tho open rondsteads of Jaffa and Haifa; thero are no harbors. "Tho country Is underpopulated because of this lack of development. There nro now in tho whole of Palestine hardly 700,000 people, a population much less limn that of the Province of Galileo aUmo In tho time of Christ. "The long delay in tho formal settlement of the International status of Palestine hns tended to dis turb tho minds of tho people, Even moro serious has been tho consequence that It has not been possible to Issue a government loan. Without a loan, many public works that would be ,dlrectly or Indirectly remunerative, cannot bo executed. "Tho financial conditions of eastern nnd central Europe nnd Internal difficulties within the Zionist organization In tho United States have prevented the Zionist movement from providing ns yet any largo sums for enterprises of development or coW onlzntlon although, indeed, several land purchnsesl havo been completed and many preparations mada for the future. As n consequence while there has beeu much pressure to admit Jewish Immi grants there ha been comparatively little expan sion In opportunities for employment. "The agricultural development of the country, nnd, Indeed, Its urban development nlso, are great ly hampered by the condition of confusion Into which the titles of ownership of lnnd were nllowed to fall during the Turkish regime. There Is hero a tanglo which will need years of patient effort to unravel." Of the total population of 700.000 the Jewish element numbers 76,000, almost all of whom have entered Palestine during the last forty years. Tho success of tho Jewish agricultural colonies at tracted tho eager Interest of the masses of the Jewish peoplo scattered .throughout the world. In many countries they were living under tho pressure of laws or customs which cramped their capacities and thwnrted their energies; they saw in Pnle&tlno the prospect of a home In which they might live nt ense. Profoundly discontented, as numbers' of them were, with n life of petty trndo In crowded cities, they listened with ready ears to tho call of a healthier and finer life as producers on the land. Some among them, agriculturists already, saw In Palestine tho prospect of n soil not less fertile, nnd an environment far more free, thnn thoso to which they were nccustomed. Emigration of Jews to Palestine is Increasing rapidly In central and eastern Europe, nnd tho new Pnlestlnc Immigration regulations would allow of a controlled Immigration of about 17,000 Zion ists of tho pioneer class during the coming year, said S. Landmnnn, secretary of tho Zionist organization, in an Interview. Mr. Landmnnn, who Is now In Vienna on a spe cial mission In connection with Jowlsh emigrants to Palestine, said tho selection of the emigrants Is being inado by tho Zionist organization, which has established Pnlestlno offices In tho Important Jowlsh centers. Preference Is given to young peo ple, strong in body and determined In spirit, who havo had actual experience In agriculture or other nnnunl work, nid who know Hebrew. Several thousands of such pioneers known by tho Hebrew name of Cballtzlm have already left, and others are waiting In tho largo centers until proper arrangements for their transport can bo made and until now openings for employment In Palcstlno nre reported. One of tho features of tho pioneer movement Is thnt It Includes a fnlr proportion of girls of well-to-do families, who have decided to devote their lives to the now Palestine. They njet as land girls and tnkc caro of tho domestic arrangements In the Jowlsh colonies. Bovtewlng tho wholo field In "Zionism nnd World Politics," Dr. Horace Moyer Kallen concludes that at lenst tho cornerstone of tho future Zionist edi fice has been laid. And Dr. Kallen believes that this Is an event of profound nnd hopeful signifi cance for tho Jewish race. Ho feels that tho Jow has too long been compelled to chooso between tho unwelcome alternatives of sinking his rich cultural and splrltunl herltago In thoroughgoing nsslmllntlon with tho Ufo of tho country In which ho lives nnd of leading tho Btnrvcd, unhappy ex istence of a suspected outcast, a roan with u doff nlto racial consciousness but without a country. Pspirifl Never say "Aspirin" without saying "Bayer." WARNING! Unless you see name "Bayer" fyi tablets, you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by, physicians over 21 years and proved safe by millions for Colds Headache Rheumatism .Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis Earache ' Lumbago Pain, Pain Accept only "Bayer" package which contains proper directions. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets Bottles of 24 and 100 All druggista. Aspirin a the trade mark of Barer Manufacture of Moaotlcacldetr of SallcrUcaaM STUNG FOR THE LAST TIME I MAKES MERRY WITH PUBLIC Never Again, Says This Marine, When He Thinks of That Four-Dollar Taxi Bill. "What's all your hurry?" asked one marine of another who was hurrying down the street In Washington. "Oh, nothing in particular," said tho gynie, "only the other night I takes my girl to the movies." "Yes, yes, go on!" "She was wearing a brand new pair of shoes and when she gets Inside the theater her feet starts to ache and she takes her shoes off." "Ah, ha ! Tho plot thickens I" "Well, when she gets her shoes off, she can't get 'em on again, nnd after Uie show It cost me four bucks to get her home In a taxi." "Stung t" said the Interested friend. "What are you going to do about It?" "I'm going down to the flve-and-ten-cent store to buy her a shoe-horn. Snfety first 1" The Leatherneck. Thousands Have Kidney Trouble and Never Suspect It Applicants for Insurance Often Rejected. Judging from reports from draggiati who are constantly in direct touch with the public, there is one preparation that has been very aucceasful in overcoming these conditions. Tho mild and healing influence of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root ia soon realized. It stands the highest for its remarkable record of success. An examining physician for one of the prominent Life Insurance Companies, in an interview on the subject, made the as tonishing statement that one reason why so many applicants for insurance are re jected is because kidney trouble is so common to the American people, and the large majority of those whose applica tions are declined do not even suspect that they have the disease. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp Root is on sale at all drug stores in bottles of two sizes, medium and large. However, if you wish first to test this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bingham ton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When writing be sure and mention this paper. Advertisement. What Did He Mean? "I long for the kind of a man who would love and protect me alwnys," slie murmured, "one who would un derstand, n man who would kneel In the dust to kiss the hem of my skirt," her voice trailed dreamily. "Chlorine, dear," said the young man, earnestly, "It wouldn't be neces sary for him to kneel In the dust." M0THERI CLEAN CHILD'S BOWELS WITH CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP Even a sick child loves tho "fruity" taste of "California Fig Syrup." If the little tongue Is coated, or if your child is listless, cross, feverish, full of cold, or has colic, glvo a teaspoonful to cleanse the liver and bowels. In n few hours you can see for yourself how thoroughly It works all the constipa tion poison, sour bile and waste out of the bowels, and you havo a well, play ful child again. Millions of mothers keep "California Fig Syrup" handy. They know a tea spoonful today saves a sick child to morrow. Ask your druggist for genu ine "California Fig Syrup" which has directions for babies and children of all ages printed on bottle. Mother I You must say "California" or you may get on Imitation fig syrup. Advertise ment No More Credit. "I understand you prefer charges ngalnBt this man," said tho Judge. ,rNo, your honor," returned the gro cer. I prefer cash, and that's what I had him brought here for." In His Book, "Windmills," Gilbert Canaan Pokes Fun at Many Ven. erable European Institutions. Gilbert Cnnnan ndmlts a misunder standing of his pacifist attitude to ward the war In his preface to tho American edition of "Windmills," but avows firmly thnt "tho attempt to re move militarism and military concep tions from nmong human preoccupa tions Is a good cause and I will serve with the only weapon I know how to use the pen which they say la mightier than the sword or even tho howitzer. Having applied myself to this service before the outbreak of the great war, which for mo began In 1911, I was not to bo diverted from It by the panic confusion of those who were overtaken by tho calamity rath er than prepared for It." With a solemnity which Is grot esque, he recounts In "Sannnys Is land" the wars between the Fattlsh empire and Fatterland. The reader will recognize many European Insti tutions nnd events at which Mr. Canaan is poking fun. A second read ing reveals more of his sly allusions. remarks the Springfield Republican. FOR MOTHERS! THIS ADVICE IS VITAL TO YOU Council Bluffs, Iowa "Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription was a wonderful help to me during expectancy. At these times I hare always relied on it to keep me healthy and strong. I am the mother of eleven healthy children and I took 'Favorite Prescription' with all of them (with perhaps one exception) and in addition to their being healthy, my Buffering was very slight, due I am but to the use of tho 'Prescription'. Women who take it during this tune will find it a Tory helpful medicine in every way." Mm. W. M. Statts, 2111 Ave. D. Get this Prescription now in tablets or liquid from your druggist. Also write in all confidence to DrTPierce, President of the Invalids' Hotel in Buffalo.N. Y., and get FREE MEDICAL ADVICE in return. Send him lOo if you wish a trial pkg. of tho Prescription tablets. Habit IB Mr " Morn in ght n i n 6 KeeoVbur Evfes Clean - Clear Healthy k'-it tar fr Cfe Cf BotW Murino Co,ChluCa,UlX ELyty&ii Nujol will give you the healthiest habit in the world. Without forcing or irrita ting, Nujol softens the food waste. The many tiny mus cles in the intestines can then easily remove it regu larly. Absolutely harmless try it. Tbt MtJmt MtilvJ fTnttlnttnOU CmfUlnt A Reliable Firm to Ship to Rice Brothers Live Stock Commission Cattle Hogs Sheep Sioux City Stock Yards 3 PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM RrooTM)inanja-ntipiIUIrXllDr Restore Color and Biautr to Cry and Faded Halfj niftmx Ctirm. lia.l'tU'linpiif.H.T Great Discovery. First Professor (lu high powered motor car) We've got' It at last 1 Second Professor G-got w-what? First Professor Perpetual motion: I can't stop. t ll 'kj A Trade. "1 "I've got some old stock that Pm disgusted with." "Mo, too." "Well, we can't lose. Let's swap." HINDERCORNS jumQ. crm. ci- louin. eta., itojn all pain, rntures comfort to tba (eet, makes nalkln ra.r. 1STE by rnall or at Druc El'ta. llUoosCBuealVorks,ratclioeii,M. T. W. N. U SIOUX CITY, NO. 0-1921. i i i J v i