The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, June 03, 1920, Image 3

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    V PAINS NEARLY
| DOUBLED ME OP
|| Nothing Helped Me Until V
r Took Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound.
Wyandotte, Mich. —“For the last
four years 1 have doctored off and on
i w i t h.o u t help. I
have had pains
every month so bad
that I would nearly
double up. Some
times I could not
sweep a room with
out stopping to rest,
and everything I ate
upset my stomach.
Three years ago
rail lost a child
Hi and suffered so
badly that I was out
of my head at times. My bowels did
not move for days and I could not eat
without suffering. The doctor could not
help me and one day I told my husband
that I could not stand the pain any
longer and sent him to the drug-store
to get me a bottle of Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound and threw
the doctor’s medicine away. After
taking three bottles of Vegetable Com
pound and using two bottles of Lydia E.
rinkham’s Sanative Wash I could do
my own housework. If it had not been
for your medicine I don’t know where I
would be today and I am never without
a bottle of it in the bouse. You may
publish this if you like that it may help
some other woman.”—Mrs. Maks
Stender, 120 Orange St., Wyandotte,
Mich.
Some Chance for Him.
When Jack Jolly, the golf ball niann
facturer, was in town last fall a
friend with whom he was playing said:
“Jack, do you think ‘I’ll ever learn
to play this game?”
“How old are you?” asked Jack.
“Forty-two," was the reply.
“Well,” retorted Jack,” “I have a
friend in Scotland who was 81 years
old Ids last birthday and he says his
game is still improving.”
ASPIRIN
Name “Bayer” on Genuine
"Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” Is genu
ine Aspirin proved safe by millions
and prescribed by physicians for over
twenty years. Accept only an unbroken
"Bayer package” which contains proper
directions to relieve Headache, Tooth
ache, Earache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism,
Colds and Pain. Handy tin boxes of 12
tablets cost few cents. Druggists also
sell larger “Bayer packages.” Aspirin
Is Irade mark Bayer Manufacture Mon
oaeeticacidester of Salicylicacid.—Adv.
Bird Neglect Is Short-Sighted.
The destruction of the quail is cost
ing the wheat growers of the entire
United States $100,000,000 a year—
chinch hugs. Potato growers of the
United States are paying out $15,000,
000 a year for parls green to protect
their potatoes from the potato bug.
The quail, natural enemy of the bug,
has been almost exterminated.
Cuticura Soap for the Complexion.
Nothing better than Cuticura Soap
daily and Ointment now and then as
needed to make the complexion clear,
scalp clean and hands soft and white.
Add to this the fascinating, fragrant
Cuticura Talcum and you have the
Cuticura Toilet Trio.—Adv.
Proud of It.
“I like your nerve!” she exclaimed.
"It is rather good, isn’t it?” he replied
unashamed.
A rabbit’s foot in the pocket may
promote peace of mind, but you can’t
lean on it.
DEATH WAS NEAR
Florida Woman in Critical Condition
From Dropsy, But Doan's
Brought Recovery
“Dropsy brought me right down to —
the shadow of the grave,” says Mrs.
Ida B. Atwell, 904 William St., Key
West, Fla. “For fifteen years I was a
hopeless wreck, struggling between life
_ and death. The
pains were so se
vere in my back
I screamed in ag
ony. My head
ached so severely
I thought my
skull was being
crushed. Black
specks floated be
fore my eyes, and
1 had to grasp the
bed to keep from
falling.
“The kidney se
_ ,. „ notions burned
Bn. AtwtD and scalded and I
^ could pass only a few drops at a time.
- * My body bloated. The pressure of so
much water on my chest almost smoth
ered me. My feet also swelled and large
sacs of water hung beneath my eyes.
My skin had a shiny, white appearance
and anywhere I pressed a dent would
remain for hours. I became a nervous
wreck.
“A friend told me about Doan’s
Kidney Pills and oh! I felt so happy
; when I found they were helping me.
Continued use of Doan's completely
cured me.” Sicorn to. before me.
ARTHUR GOMEZ. Rotary Public
Get Dcen’e at Any Stare, 60c a Bos
DOAN’S'V,11V
FOSTER.MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO, N. Y.
~ II— ■ I I — —MlMl ■—111 IIH Hi HI!.. II. _|H i i—inuj
The Coming Food Crisis.
From the Springfield Republican.
The evidence now seertis overwhelming that considerably less food will
be produced in North America this year than last year. The south temper
ate zone has just completed a crop season and its two great surplus food
growing countries, Argentina and Australia, report disappointing harvests.
In the United States and Canada, the only agricultural countries remaining
in the world upon which tl)e human race depends Tor a large exportable sur
. plus, the spring conditions are unfavorable. The planting season is veiy
late; the railroad tie ups and freight congestion have seriously delayed the
shipments of fertilizers to the farms of the country; farm labor is unprece
dentedly scarce and costly and the tendency is widespread for the smaller
farmers to cultivate only such an acreage of land as they can care for with
out hired help. No contribution to the world’s exportable food supply can
be expected this year, or perhaps next year, from central and eastern Eu
rope. Rumania and Hungary before the great war could be depended upon
for wheat, as the middle and western European countries could be depended
upon for beet sugar, but Rumania and Hungary must be dismissed to.’ the
present from all calculations. Russia’s great wheat belt is in the Ukraine
but the new Polish war of conquest as far south as Odessa is not the r g 1
sort of spring planting. The come back of Russia as a food exporting coun
try on a large scale still seems rather remote, regardless of bolshevism, ir
a new cycle of wars must be fought for the political control of the rich wes
em zone of the old empire stretching from the Baltic to the Black Sea.
The economic chaos and dismal social misery of eastern Europe is n°w
so extreme that one might see in_ this condition the clear warning of^ je
downfall of civilization? Tt Is' many"centuries since the situation of a vast
population was more critical. Those wretched human hordes, now more than
half starved, must be kept alive in the next few years, if they are to sur
vive, by means of the surplus food grown elsewhere—which is where America
comes in. It is futile, perhaps, in these days to talk about attaining a higher
civilization; the present task is to hold on to what civilization the world al
ready has. The first essential of civilization is food.
Newspaper headlines suggest that here in the United States bread may
before long go up. to 25 cents a loaf. This fear is not based on the short
winter wheat crop, for the United States could grow enough wheat in .he
worst season imaginable to feed its own people at a price by no means ex
cessive, provided that little wheat or wheat flour were exported. The trouble
now anticipated arises, first, from the European demand for American flour;
second, from the end on June 1 of the regulation of wheat prices by the
United States government.
The question immediately arises whether government control of me
market should not be continued, if such consequences of its expiration are
threatened. After the armistice, the cry arose that the government should
get out of business immediately, and the government did get out of busi
ness as fast as It could. But there were some disastrous results, as in the
case of sugar. Everybody now wishes that sugar had been kept under direct
government control. The railroads have gone back, also, but railroad trans
portation suffers. It may turn out that a monumental mistake will be made
in lettiner trovernment control of the grain market prematurely expire.
MORE WORK FOR THE TRACTOR
By W. A. MARTIN.
[National Crept Improvement Service.!
HE more hours you can make
your tractor work, the less you
will have to charge off to
"overhead.” In addition to ordinary
field work of plowing and cultivat
ing, etc., the tractor can always be
used In making new tile or open
ditches, back fill and clean up the
whole job In record time.
If you have hillsides or sloping
land, don’t let It wash away. Study
the subject of terracing. If you don’t
know exactly how the Job Is done,
get the advice of your county agent,
When Greeks Won Over the Italians.
Rome Correspondence of the London
Times, April 25.
The final acceptance at San Remo of
the greater part of M. Venizelos’ pro
gram Is very strongly criticised here.
The grounds of the criticism are two.
It is asked how It can be held to justify
the extension of Greek rule over such
a large non-Greek population. It is also
urged that the handing over of these
populations to Greece will inevitably
mean the resumption of fighting, if not
today or tomorrow, at least in the near
future.
U is said by many people that the de
cisions in regard to Greek claims are
not only impractical, they are unjust.
It is claimed, moreover, that they are
a flagrant outrage of the principles
which are still devoutly invoked in the
case of Italian claims.
This morning's Messaggero, com
menting on the report that a return will
probably be made to the December
memorandum on the Adriatic question,
savs it is useless to inveigh against this
solution, and that criticism should rath
er be directed against those failed to
convince Mr. "Wilson when it was possi
ble. It suggests that “Perhaps they did
not see that Mr. Wilson, afteg having
permitted the massacre of his points,
where they were in contrast with the
Interest of other allies, would have re
served an ms energetic intransigence
for our hurt.”
As I have said before, this belief is
the utterly unequal application of the 14
points and the Wilson principles is uni
versal in Italy. 1 have not found one
Italian who does not hold this belief,
and it is not unnatural that bitter com
ment should be revived by the placet
given to Greek claims while the presi
dential “No” still blocks the way to a
just solution of the Adriatic question.
When Kitchener Lost a General.
Lowell Thomas, in Asia Magazine.
During his seven years’ wandering
through the desert, dressing like an
Arab, living with Arabs in their tents,
observing their customs, talking to them
In their own dialects, riding on his
camel across a broad expanse of lonely
country unbroken except by the long
purple line of the horizon, lying down at
night under a silent dome of stars,
Thomas I-awrenee drank the cup of
Arabian wisdom and absorbed the spirit
of the nomad peoples. No westerner
ever acquired such tremenduous power
and ascendency over an oriental people.
He united the scattered tribes of Arabia
and induced chieftains who had been
bitter enemies for generations to forger
their feuds and fight side by side for
the same cause. Prom the most re
mote parts of Arabia the swarthy sons
• f the desert swarmed to his standard
as if he had been a new prophet. His
army of 200.000 Bedouins freed Arabia
from Turkish oppression forever. Law
rence contributed new life and foul to
the movement for Arabian Independence.
The far-reaching results of his spectac
ular and successful campaign are des
tined to play an Important part in the
final adjustment of Near Eastern af
fars.
When Lawrence attempted to enlist
as a private in the :ar! ; cf “Kitchener's
Mob,” in August, 0.4. members of the
army medical heard looked at the fra.I,
fi/e-foot-three, tow-headed young man.
winked at one another - ml told him to
rati home to-,: 's mother id wn't until
l.h» ntj:l war. Ju t four y,„"a p'ter he
or call upon some one who knows
how to use a v-shaped steel ditcher
and grader.
Terracing Is easy with a ditcher
and a tractor. Keep busy as long
as there Is an undralned acre on
your place or hillside which Is wash
ing, then get out and make a v-shaped
ditch alongside of your concrete or
dragged road. The greatest enemy
to roads is standing water and un
der-washes.
Keep the water off your road and
you may have a 365-day highway.
The old way of using a plow and dig
ging the ditch Is laborious, and any
way the v-shaped ditch Is better.
was turned down as physically unfit for
the ranks, small of stature, shy and
scholarly as ever, this young Oxford
graduate entered Damascus at the head
of his victorious Arabian army. Imagine
what the members of the medical board
would have said if someone had sug
gested to them In 1914 that this same
young man would decline knighthood,
the Victoria Cross and a commission as
a brigadier-general in the British army!
BURNING UP OIL.
From the Bankers Trust Co.
Oil fuel has, to a great extent, super
seded coal In the new American mer
chant marine. Of the 1,706 steel ships,
comprising a deadweight tonnage of 11,
647,386 recently on the shipping hoard's
construction program. Approximately
79 per cent, were planned as oil burners.
In addition, American yards are build
ing for private Interests more than 1,
250,000 tons of merchant ships, practically
all of which are designed as oil burn
ers. The division of operations of the
United States shipping board, calculates
that with the beginning of the year 1921
nearly 60,000,000 barrels of oil, a year
will be needed for the ships ntfw ope
rated by the United States shipping
board, excluding any private construc
tion done after August 1, 1919.
The greater advantages from oil come
from curtailment of the crew, saving In
fuel consumption, greater speed and in
creased cargo space. The reduced costs
give an improved competitive ability
with nations naving lower wage stand
ards.
Other points advanced in favor of oi]
are the better control of steaming, be
cause fires can be started and stopped
instantly, steam raised quickly, and time
in port saved through the greater ease
of taking on oil as contrasted with coal.
It Is also claimed that oil does not de
teriorate, that it eliminates the danger
of fire from spontaneous combustion and
is not subject to the danger of shifting
in a rough sea.
Beggars Left Fortunes.
From the Detroit News.
Thomas Cooke, known as “the Isling
ton miser,” who lived a life of penury,
saving and petty trickery in Islington,
a borough of London, England, left a
fortune of more than $300,000 for hi*
heirs to squabble over after his death.
Cooke managed to get his meals free oi
cost by the old and yet ever new trick
of falling in a pretended fit in front of a
house at dinner time. He would be car
ried into a house and then, on making
his usual quick recovery, he naturally
would be asked to share the meal.
Among other beggars who left for
tunes after their death was Jeremiah
Monihan, upon whom, when he was
brought to be buried in St. Louis, was
found a key to a safety deposit box. The
safety box contained $60,000 in perfectly
good interest bearing bonds.
Another, Marshall McMurran, a rag
ged recluse, was found in a starving
condition in his tumbledown shack or
the outskirts of Evansville, Ind. He was
taken before a commission for examina
tion as to his sanity and when he was
searched $22,000 was found in the lining
cf his coat and In his pockets.
How to Utilize Daughters.
From the Kansas City Times.
Ed Howe says the best help a farmer
I gets is from the hired man who aspires
v;o be the farmer’2 sonintew.
i
■ ' :'
Are You Human?
A little baby. A little child. Don’t they appeal to you ? Doesn’t your
heart yearn to pick them up, to cuddle them close to you, to shield them
from all harm? sure it does else you’re not human. Being human you love
them. Their very helplessness makes you reach out in all your strength to aid ’
them. In health there’s no flower so beautiful. In illness there’s no night so
black.
Save them then. Use every precaution. Take no chance.
When sickness comes, as sickness will, remember its just a baby, just a
child and if the Physician isn’t at hand don’t try some remedy that you may
have around the house for your own use.
Fletcher's Castoria was made especially for babies’ ills and you can use
it with perfect safety as any doctor will tell you. Keep it in the house.
Children Cry For /
r
■ ,i
\
A
: 1
•V
. Jj
Do the People Know?
Do you know why you are asked to call for Fletcher’s Castoria
when you want a child’s remedy: why you must insist on Fletcher’s?
For years we have been explaining how the popularity of
Fletcher’s Castoria has brought out innumerable imitations, sub
stitutes and counterfeits.
To protect the babies: to shield the homes and in defense of
generations to come we appeal to the better juugment of parents to
insist on having Fletcher’s Castoria when in need of a child’s med
icine. And remember above all things that a child’s medicine is
made for children—a medicine prepared for grown-ups is not inter
changeable. A baby’s food for a baby. And a baby’s medicine is
just as essential for the baby.
The Castoria Recipe (it’s on every wrapper) has been prepared by
the same hands in the 6»me manner for so many years that the signa-4
ture of Chas. H. Fletcher and perfection in the product are synonymous.
MOTHERS SHOULD READ THE BOOKLET THAT 18 AROUND EVERY BOTTLE OF FLETCHER’S CASTORIA
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
Bears the Signature of
Exact Copy of Wrapper. m
TM« CINTAUR COMPANY, NtW YORK CITY.
WAITER ALLOWED FOR COBB
Booth Tarkington’s Amusing Illustra
tion of Student Life in Munich
Before the War.
“Munich before the war,” said Bootli
Tarkington, the famous novelist, “was
an earthly paradise. For ten cents In
a Munich beer garden you would get a
quart mug of ambrosia beer and a
brace of incomparable frankfurters—
a meal which you would consume to
the music of Wagner and Beethoven,
played by a vast and magnificent or
chestra.
“Of course, In Munich the nrt stu
dents—poor fools—sometimes drank
too much. They tell n story there
about a Missouri student.
“ ‘Another large beer and two frank
furters for Student Cobb of Missouri,’
a Munich waiter sang out one night.
“‘Only give Student Cobb one frank
furter,’ said the manager of the gar
den. ‘Student Cobb sees everything
double.’
“ ‘I’ve already attended to that,’ said
tlie waiter. Cobb ordered four frank
furters.’ ”
Tills lias certainly been a bad year
frr the man who prints “house to
rent” signs.
Where Is the old-fashioned neighbor
who would volunteer to come In and
help move the piano?
When a man buys groceries he likes
to begin at the cigar stand.
Some disappearances are less decep
tive than some appearances.
Two Souls With but One Thought.
Mrs. Hilly—Doesn’t Mrs. Owens
look radiant? She must be thinking
of her new gown.
Mr. Hilly—Yes, and do you ob
serve how wretched her husband looks?
He is evidently thinking of it, too.—
St. Augustine Record.
Mighty Few Do.
“Why don’t you join a golf club?”
“Man, I don’t know how to play
golf.”
“That’s no reason. Ninety per cent
of the golf club members don’t know
how to play the game, either.”
A Fair Stock.
“Do you keep all the popular maga
zines?”
“No, sir. Nobody could keep ’em
all. I keep, however, about 3,000
kinds.”
The Theatrical Game.
Son—Father, my new revue Is going
to be produced. There’s a fortune in
14- f
Father—Whose!
Every time n modest girl sees a
man look In her direction she Imagines
he Is trying to flirt with her.
A landlady who rents her rooms to
old bachelors never has a vacant room.
There Is a grate fire in every one.
One who can’t agree to turning the
other cheek accepts his religious
creed “with reservations.”
0
The fellow who stays at home ev
ery evening accumulates a bank ac
count, but very few good stories.
Each Cup Of I
!: hsiant postum
I contains the same uniform quality |
or goodness that makes this table ^
beverage so popular. |
Make It strong or mild a9 you prefer
by varying the quantity used.
No wonder so many prefer it to coffee, f
not alone on account of taste but because
of its abundant healthfulness. Truly*
"There's a Reason for POSTUM
Made by Postum Cereal Co.
j Battle Creek.. Mickigan |
i.
^ -I
An Objection. i
"1 hear your husband Is very strong
in bis convictions." "Yes, uua’am, bat
lie’s weak in bis head.”
__ J
The privileges desired are what tha
average woman calls rights.
ALLEN’S j"
FOOT-EASE
Gives ease and I
comfort to ieet II
that are tender H
and sore. |l
If shoes pinch II
or corns and bun- '
ions ache this
Antiseptic, Heal
ing Powder will
give quick relief.
Shake it in your
Shoes, Sprinkle it
in the Foot-bath.
Sold everywhere.
DAISY FLY KILLER ATTRACT *ANDKUx3
-ALL FLIES. NaL
clean,urn amenta),cod*
venient, cheap. Lasts
all season. Made of
metal, car.’t spill of
tip over ; will not soil
or injure anything.
Guaranteed cffectlVC
Sold by dealers. #
6 by EXPRESS, <
prepaid, $1.267 jj
HAEOLU S0MEK3,160 Da Kalb Ave.. Brooklyn, N. T.
SHZ3H
* v Money back without question
it HUNT'S SALVE fails in tM
treatment of ITCH, ECZEMA*
RING WORM,TETTER or othe?
itehtne skin diseases. Price
75c at druggists, or direct from
A. n Richards E tilde* Co .Stiermaa.Tu
Acid Stomach
Makes the Body Sour
Nine Out of Ten People
Suffer From It
It sends its harmful acids and gases all
over the body, instead of health and
strength. Day and night this ceaseless dam*
age goes on. No matter how strong, its
victim cannot long withstand the health*
destroying effects of an acid stomach. I
Good news for millions of sufferers,
i Chemists have found a sure remedy—one
that takes the acid up and carries it out
of the body; of course, when the cause is
removed, the sufferer gets well. j
Bloating, indigestion, sour, acid, gassy
stomach miseries all removed. This Is'
proven by over half a million ailing folks
j who have taken EATONIC with wonder*
' ful benefits. It can he obtained from any
druggist, who will cheerfully refund its
trifling cost if not entirely satisfactory.'
Everyone should enjoy its benefits. Fre
quently the first tablet gives relief.
rnroi/l ro POSUKILI mMOVEOtrliT. B«r,’|
\ PrswAl* I'lMtOMcfc-- -Your tiaiwvf' lorhf
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