The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, June 03, 1920, Image 9
—— I ... ..... , ... ------- DONT LET. THAT COUGH COMTOfUEf Spohn’s Distemper Compound will knock K In very abort time. At the first elan of a cough or cold In your horse, give a few doeea of "SPOHN'S." It will act on the glands, eliminate the disease germ and prevent furth er destruction of body by disease. “SPOHN’S” baa been the standard remedy for DISTBMPRft, INPT.USNZA, PINK BT EL CATARRHAL PBVBH, COUGHS and COLDS for a quarter of a century. 60 cents and SI. 16 per bottle at all drug storea SPOHN MEDICAL COMPANY. Ooahen. Ind. f * Hi _ /a I j To Preserve ; and keep all household linen 1 spotlessly white and in perfect condition use Red Cross Ball Blue in the laundry * every week. I Nothing else will take its place and nothing else is just as good. All grocers, 5c Teamsters Life Saved "Peterson Otntment Co., Inc. I had a very severe sore on my leg for years. I -am a teamster. I tried all medicines and salves, but without success. I tried doc tors, but they failed to cure me. I couldn’t sleep for many nights from pain. Doctors said I could not live for more than two years. Finally Peterson’s Ointment was recommended to me and by Its use the sore was entirely healed. Thankfully yours, William Haase, West Pfrk, Ohio, care P. O. Reitz, Box 199." Peterson says: “X am proud of the above letter and have hundreds of others that tell of wonderful cures of Eczema, Plies and Skin Diseases." Peterson’s Ointment Is 60 cents a box. Mail orders filled by Peterson Ointment Co.. Buffalo. Cuficura Soap -The Healthy — Shaving Soap Cnticora Soap ahavea wlthootmog. Everywhere Sc, HEMSTITCHING and PICOTING ATTACH MENT; works on all sewing machines; $1,50. Add. J. F. Light, Box 127, Birmingham, Ala. I ww at J vui. Premier Clemenceau gave the red ribbon of the Legion of Honor to an old acquaintance of Ids who had done Important work for France In the war. The recipient of the decoration was delighted and at the same time embarrassed because the large bea^d, which he had worn for years, hid the honor badge from view. “Oh, that's easily remedied,” C'lem eneeau said to him when told of the dilemma; “Just cut a window about shoulder high in your whiskers and the ribbon will show through it nicely." Lift off Corns! Doesn’t hurt a bit and Freazono costs only a few cents. any hard corn, soft corn, or corn be tween the toes, and. the hard skin cal luses from bottom of feet. A tiny bottle of “B'reezone” costs little at any drug store; apply a few drops upon the corn or callous. In stantly It stops hurting, then shortly you lift that bothersome corn or cal lous right off, root and all, without one bit of pain or soreness. Truly I No humbug !-*Adv. Blessed are the meek, for '.hey get In their work just the same. If a man has no means of forgetting ils trouble, he will make more. "1. I Why Exclusive Agencies Cost More to Operate A roofing dealer who has an exclusive agency has no competition on his pri-' vate brand. As a result he can charge a large profit if you’ll buy. In addition, he is usually a long distance from his little manufacturer and must invest more money to keep his stock up. Now look at the Certain-teed way. Any responsible dealer can sell Certain-teed. Each dealer carries a small represen tative stock. If he needs more he orders from a nearby Certain-teed warehouse or jobber. It usually takes only a day [ or two to get it. The result is small investment, small storage cost, light insurance, and no slow-moving articles. Certain-teed Saxes You Money That’s why Certain-teed dealers operate at less expense. And it’s also why Certain-teed saves you money because they can afford to sell at close margins and there are enough of them to insure you a fair deal. Now let’s see what you get when you buy Certain-teed Roofing. \ It’s roofing that has never been known i to wear out on the roof. It is guaran teed for 5, 10 or 15 years, according to t weight. It is woather-proof, fire retarding and spark-proof. ! There is nothing else you want from roofing. And since you get this highest quality roofing at a saving, it’s the logical buy. Any responsible dealer can get Certain teed for you quickly from a nearby Certain-teed warehouse or jobber. He gets it when he wants it and he gets what he wants. He can afford to sell you at a fair price. Certain-teed Products Corporation General Offices, St. Louie Offieu and WarehouMi In Principal Cltiaa Certain-tegd Beware of the dealer who tells you he has Certain-teed, but tries to sell you a private brand. He probably wants a bigger profit. Ill THREATENS TO DEM D. S. Issues Warning When Ameri cans Refuse to Pay Him $50 000—Carranza's Daughters Coming U. S. Washington. May 29.—Francisco Villa threatened to destroy the prop erty of the Alvarado mining com pany in Parral, Chihuahua an Amer ican concern if any attempt is made to operate the mine, according to ad vices to the state department today from the American consul in Chihua hua City. The Mctdcan rebel chieftain made his threat upon-refusal by the mining company to pay $50,000 to Villa. The present miltary authorities of Chihauhua have been re: •’eiUd by th American consulate to give the nec essary protection to the mining com pany. The counsul was informed that there are about 4,000 troops in the vicinity of Parral. Ignacio Enriquez, revolutionary military governor of Chihuahua was reported to have conferred with Villa - -*■ . —+— MAY VISIT EUROPE, TOO Mexico City, May 29.—Both daugh ters of the late President Carranza, Mias Julia Carranza and Mrs. Vir ginia Aguilar, the wife of General Aguilar are preparing for their re turn to the United States as soon as the verdict on their father’s death is reached and their personal af fairs can be adjusted. The young women are familiar with the United States having been edu cated in a convent in St. Louis. They probably extend their itiner itnerary to Europe. Both of the mourning daughters have signified that they will not leave Mexico until the senate commission makes Its final report on the cir cumstances of the president’s death, and they are determined to disprove, if possible, the suicide theory. In refutation of this theory, they have called attention to the fact that Carranza’s uniform showed where two bullets had struck close to his heart at such an angle that It would have been impossible for him to have shot himself except with an automa tic. Such a weapon they say he did not possess. —4— General Felix Diaz has agreed to sur render his entire forces to General Guadalaupe Sanchez, revolutionary commander, according to reports re ceived today. General Diaz arrived at Misantla in the state of Vera Cruz and in trans mitting the proposal to give himself and army up, asked for guarantees of safe conduct to the city of Vera Cruz, where he Intends to take a steamer for some foreign port, the report said. GONZALES TO RETIRE. Vera Cruz, May 29 (United Press). Gonzales today confirmed the reports that he was about to retire to private life at Monterey, making public a statement to this effect. General Gonzales’ withdrawal from public life follows a period of three weeks in which he was In virtual con trol of the administration of national affairs subsequent to the evacuation of Mexico City by President Car ranza. OBREGON SEEKS PEACE. Mexico City, May 29.—Gen. Pablo varo Obregon, chief of the present regime in Mexico, in a message to the Los Angeles city council today de clared it would be “one of the hap piest days in his life" when the United States and Mexico are able to with draw troops now stationed on the boundary “because of mutual lack of confidence." The message was in reply to a tele gram from the municipal officials of Los Angeles, wishing success to the new government in Mexico. EMBARGO ON SUGAR IS DRAWING NEARER Mexico City, May 29.—General* Al agriculture committee today ordered a favorable report on the McNary bill providing for an embargo on sugar exports. The committee believed this would help reduce the retail price of sugar. Those supporting the bill were Sen ators McNary, of Oregon; Capper, of Kansas; Kenyon, of Iowa, and Nor ris, of Nebraska, republicans, and Harrison, of Mississippi, and Ken drick, of Wyoming, democrats. Sen ators Smith, of Georgia; Smith of South Carolina and Ransdell, of Louisiana, democrats, opposed it. Before taking final action the com mittee amended the measure so that it would not except sugar sent to to the United States by foreign countries or thier nationals to be refined. Early Senate consideration of the bill is planned by Senator Mc Nary. ALLEGED ROBBERS TO FIGHT EXTRADITION Charged With Taking $850 and Diamond From Des Moines Man. Washington, May 29.—The Senate papers calling for removal of Sherry Scott and John Rogers to Des Moines from Omaha on charges of robbery were held up in the office of Gover nor MoKelvie here pending the ar rival of papers from Des Moines, at taches of the governor’s office said. Officials declare both men will de mand hearings and probably fight extradition when the papers are is sued. They are charged with rob bing a Des Moines theater manager of $850 and a $300 diamond ring. Annette Has Gone, But the City of Butte Will Not Forget Hei Butte, Mont., May 29—Butte did its best today in memory of Annette Cl chot Markham. Eleven months ago a gay little French bride, she was burled from the county poorhouse. where for weeks she has fought a losing battle against ill health and adversity. When Ralph Markham, former private In the quartermaster corps, took his French bride to Butte and found parental objections, his love cooled. He deserted her and fled. Alone and among strangers she fell ill, and was taken to the county poor house. When business men learned of it today they hurried a committee to see her. She had Just died. There was a funeral Butte will not forget. Business was practically sus pended as hundreds of war veterans and Red Cross nurses marched be hind a flower cr w . ed casket. She was ■> ,.ar nurse in France and wore th; Yoix de Guerre. SMITH IX rams Claas Loos and His Wife Are Victims of Insane Boy Near Parker S. D. Parker, S. D., May 29.—A double murder occurred at 8 o’clock this morning on the Claas Loos farm. 10 miles northwest of here, when Evert Loos, 32, hacked and beat his aged father and mother over their heads with an ax. Young Loos is in the county jail here. He was confined to the state asylum for insane at Yank ton two years ago, but had been dis charged as cured. It is believed his act this morning was committed in a period of insanity. Wouldn’t Plant Corn. News of the tragedy came to Sher iff Karp from neighbors of the Loos family. It appears the elder Loos wanted his son to resume corn plant ing this morning, that the son re fused and words followed. Then, the son grabbed the ax and struck the father over the head. The wife and mother evidently witnessed the alter cation and went to the assistance of her husband, when the son turned on her and beat and cut her about the head. Mr. Loos was dead when the offi cers arrived at the farm, but Mrs. Loos still lived though there was no hope for her recovery. Both were horribly mutilated. The son made no effort to escape. Claims Self Defense. Young Loos make no denial of hav ing killed his parents. He tells of having words with his father about the corn planting and says the father s;;;;;;s-ed -tdc , ) was about to assault him with a board when he struck back with the ax. Those who have Investigated the affair believe the father may have had a board in his hand and that he tried to defend himself with it when his son wielded the ax. Mr. and Mrs. Klass are pioneer farmers, who came from Holland. Th* son is single. SALESMAN HELD Is Said to Have Wounded Ga rage Employe Because He Could Get No Gasoline. Aberdeen, S. D., May 29.—“I’ll kiU you if I can’t get gas," A. B. Krouth, a traveling salesman, with headquar ters in Sioux Falls, Is said to have told Perry Allering, 20, for the shoot ing of whom he was arrested today. Krouth is said to have shot Aller ing in the chest and right eye after Allering is said to have told him ftiat the garage In which he was working in Selby. 60 miles west of Aberdeen, had no gasoline. Krouth Is said to have called at two other places for gasoline and to have threatened to shoot when clerks told him they had no gasoline. : It is also said he was trying to reload his revolver when he was ar rested by Deputy Sheriff W. S. Schwartz. Krouth was placed in the county jail. Allering was taken to Aberdeen for medical attention. EGAN GUILTY IS VERDICT OF JURY Disbarred Sioux Palls Attor ney Was Charged With Over insuring Property Burned. Sioux Falls, S. D„ May 29.—After being out all night a Jury in the state circuit court hero this morning returned a verdict finding George W. Egan, of this city, guilty of making false statements when making appli cations for fire insurance on a build ing belonging to him which was de stroyed by fire. Egan was three times a candidate for governor of South Dakota and was twice disbarred from practicing law in the state on charges of unpro fessional conduct. In the case just decided the state charged that the destroyed building, on which there was insurance of $27,500. was not worth more than $2,000. The maximum penalty Is three years in prison or $1,004 Una, or both. ALLEN DEBATES' WITH GOMPERS Kansan Defends Industrial Court Settlement Plan and Opponent Says Labor Has Right to Strike. BY ROBERT J. BENDER. United News Staff Correspondent. New York, May 29.—The public, represented by Governor Henry J. Allen, of Kansas, and the worker ex emplified by Samuel Gompers, presi dent of the American federation of Labor, debated in Carnegie hall to night one of the foremost questions before the American people today-^ the right of labor In essential indus tries to strike if the common welfare is threatened. It was a no-declslon affair, politics was to play no part in it. Judge Al ton B. Parker, one time presidential candidate, presided, and his opening words testified to his neutrality. Parker's Opening Words. “Two great leaders of men,” he said, "are to speak through you to more than 100,000,000 people. What they are to say will command at the outset wider consideration by the press and people than did the famous Lincoln-Douglas debate. Each of them Is a man of high character—of demonstrated patriotism, and is en dowed with moral courage that en nKlao Him fn nil In n struggle for what he believes to be right and Just.” But Allen sounded what was re garded as many as the keynote of hts potential candidacy for the republi can presidential nomination, when he said: “Mr. Gompers, within the last three days, has called upon all men of or ganized labor to assemble themselves around the political effort to see that no man goes to congress who is not in favor of his program. “Do we want that? Do we want a shackled, bridled congress? "Let me tell you, the political party in the forthcoming campaign that has not the constructive courage to stand out and pledge to the public protec tion against the wrong and terror of industrial warfare will travel down the pathway of cowardice to defeat.” Hall Filled to Capacity. Carnegie hall was filled to capacity when the debaters entered amidst ap plause. Gompers, wearing a cut-away coat, gray trousers and a dark gfeen vest, preceded Allen, who was dressed In a dark green business suit. Each being short of stature, and in clined to stockiness, and with a marked tendency to baldness, they might have been taken for father and son, for Gompers is 70 and Allen but 54. Behind them on the platform mas a mixture of workers and others of na tional repute. Included in the stables were: Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, Her bert Hoover, James W. Gerard, Wil liam Fellows Morgan, H. P. Davidson, George Foster Peabody, George W. Wlckersham, Miss Mary Garrett Hayes, Warren F. Stone. F. E. King, Mathew Woll, Frank Morrison, Ed ward Hannah and Mrs. Sarah A. Con boy. Under the rules of the debate each speaker had 45 minutes for his main argument. Woman Aids Gompers. Gompers spoke first, and was aided by Mrs. Conboy, who "spelled" him for some minutes on routine matters which did not necessitate the vigor ous expulsion of Gompers’ personal ity. Gompers was the orator of the old school, voluminous both In sound and gesture. ' Allen’s was the oratory of the new school, quiet and conversational. "The diference between a slave and a'free man is that the slave mu3t work when his master commands while a free man may dispose of him self and his labor according to his wishes,” said Gompers. “I come,” said Allen, in opening his reply, “not as a representative of capital or as a representative of labor, but as a representative of us all—the public. "I speak from the viewpoint of blem of today. “A free Man?” he asked. "Personal liberty?” he reiterated with eloquent sarcasm. "It was my experience in the recent coal strike in Kansas that a majority of the men wanted to work— but their union would not let them. Duffy Worked Anyhow. “One man—Duffy—worked anyhow. He was suspended from the union for 99 years. The union leaders threat ened his grocer If he continued to sell him goods. They threatened his landlord if he let Duffy maintain his home. That is the “personal liberty" the distinguished head of the Amer ican Federation of Labor has been so eloquently speaking of tonight.” "We have not taken away from any man his divine right to quit work but we have taken from Mr. Gompers his divine right to order a man to quit work.” The ovation which greeted this re mark led Allen to turn for this mo ment to a tribute to the solidarity and the war work of labor—“and keep In mind,” he said, “that every man in the mechanical department of my newspaper is a union man." Allen closed his statement by ques tioning Gompers as to whether Gom pers figured that a strike was a pri vate fight between capital and labor in which the public should not in terest itself. If the public igas en titled to a hearing. Allen asked fur ther, "how would Mr. Gompor's ef feet it?” Allen’s main argument, ended amidst tremendous applause. ►.’hen Gompers arose in rebutal tliere were cries from the gallery to "answer the question?” Gompers demurred, saying he did not have time tonight, but "I will live long enough to do so.” HAD CHRONIC BRONCHITIS FOR TWENTY-8IX YEARS NOW WELL AND HAPPY this is worth reading The experience of Mr. E. J. Ton palik, 1438 Rase street, LaCrosse, Wisconsin, is chiefly remarkable on account of the length of time he was afflicted. He writes: “I have been suf fering with chronic bronchitis for twenty-six years and every winter I would catch cold and become so hoarse I could not speak for six or eight weeks. I could get only tem porary relief. “This winter I was taken with Grip and was in awful shape. A fellow workman advised me to take PE-RU-NA. By the time I had used three-fourths of a bottle, the hoarseness was gone, also that tired feeling. I am on my second bottle. Hereafter PE-RU-NA will be constantly in my house. It is the best medicine ever put up for the purpose." For any disease due to catarrh or catarrhal conditions, PE-RU-NA is equally dependable. Coughs, colds, catarrh of the head, stomach trouble, constipation, rheumatism, Sains in the back, side and loins, loating, belching gas, indigestion, catarrh of the large and small in testines, are some of the troubles for which PE-RU-NA is especially recommended. DE-RU-NA can be purchased flnwVlOra in aitkax lintiSJ form. SLOW DEATH Aches, pains, nervousness, diffi culty in urinating, often mean serious disorders. The world’s etandard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric add troubles— GOLD MEDAL bring quick relief end often ward off deadly diseases. Known as the national remedy of Holland for more than 200 years. All druggists, in throe sizes. Leek for Ik# Baa* Gold Medal oa ovary boa sad accept no imitation Harvest 20 to 45 Bushel to Acre Wheat in Western Canada Think what that means to you in good hard dollars with tha great de mand for wheat at high prices. Many farmers in Western Canada have paid for their land from a single crop. The same success may still be yours, for you can buy on easy terms. Farm Land at $16 to $30 an Acre located near thriving towns, good mar kets, railways—land of a kind which grows 20 to 45 bushels of wheat to the acre. Good grazing lands at low prices convenient to your grain farm enable you to reap the profits from stock rais ing and dairying. Learn the Facts About Western Canada —low taxation (noneon Improvements), healthful climate, good schools, churches, pleasant social relationships, a prosperous and industrious people, for Illustrated literature, maps, descrip tion of farm opportunities In Manitoba. Saskatchewan, and Alberta, reduced railway rates, etc., write Department of Immigration, Ottawa. Can., or &L Cool. Drown ItT. litortown, tosrtti Dak.) . f. loooott, Deon 4, loo Il4f.. Inoho, Hot, •of I. A Barrett, 111 Jickioa ».. It. Psal, Woe Money back without question If HtmT’S SALVE falls In the treatment of ITCH, ECZEMA,, El NO WORM,TETTER orother j Itching skin diseases. Price" ffic at druggists, or direct from LA llohario M teles Co. thmaalm. I Safe Position. “In this dangerous reform I am go* Ing to the front.” “That's right. I'll back you. freckles Now y^,,TfiV°:uGuu 1011 °* these homely ■p®J** n M of Othlne—double should eoon thatthe light#* have begun t0 . tirely It 1» seldom sHSSfe'® olear completion. double etrengtb .Be eure to a*« *«' l"nilBr ,aar*ntee ol mon^y' back It It falls to remoye freckle*. A good wife Is entitled to a good husband, but It doesn't always work out tlmt way. _T Sure, Relief 6 Bell-anS Hot water _ , Sure Relief 1 Nltfht and Morning. Have Strang. Healthy Eye,. If theyTlre,Itch. Smart or Burn, tf Sore, Irritated. Inflamed or TUUR L.TEJ Granulated.useMurine SS# of^A^Drug^ JWtefor Free Eye Book. ?l«rl»i *-T* ^r^rPTa. CO., NO. *3-1920.