The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, April 14, 1921, Image 3

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    Mrs. Robert
0. Reynolds
“I lmve actually gained twenty-live
pounds and I just think Tanlac is the
grandest medicine in the world,” said
Mrs. Robert O. Reynolds. 127 North
Denver St., Kansas City, Mo.
“For ten long years I suffered from
a very bad form of rheumatism, stom
ach and nervous troubles. My appe
tite was very poor. What little I did
eat soured on my stomach and I suf
fered the most severe pains in my
back, hips and shoulders. My rheu
matism was so bnd that I could not
raise my hands to comb my hair and
jny arms hurt me to my finger tips.
I became so weak and run down that
I lost all my energy and life had be
come almost a burden. 1 tried many
things but nothing helped me.
"I had only taken my first bottle
of Tanlac when I noticed ray appetite
was improving and I could sleep bet
ter at night. 1 have taken three bot
tles and the way it has helped me and
built me up is really astonishing. I
can eat anything and everything with
out tiie slightest disagreeable after
effects. I sleep just fine at night and
am In better health than I have been
for years. 1 am glad to give this
statement, hoping that any who are
suffering as I did may experience the
same wonderful results, which I be
lieve they will if they give Tanlac a
fair trial.”
Tanlac is sold by leading druggists
everywhere.—Adv.
Profit Is not without honor in any
country; but it is often dishonorably
acquired.
ASPIRIN
Name “Bayer” on Genuine
Warning 1 Unless you see the name
"Bayer” on package or on tablets you
are not getting genuine Aspirin pre
scribed by physicians for twenty-one
years and proved safe by millions.
Take Aspirin only as told In the Bayer
package for Colds, Headache, Neural
gia, Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache,
Lumbago and for Pain. Handy tin
boxes of twelve Bayer Tablets of As
pirin cost few cents. Druggists also
sell larger packages. Aspirin Is the
trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of i
Monoacetlcacidester of Sa'lcycacld.—
Adv.
Many a young lawyer fulls because
lie practices at the wrong bar.
Makes Hard Work Harder
A bad back makes a day’s work twice
as hard. Backache usually comes from
weak kidneys, and if headaches, dizzi
ness or urinary disorders are added,
don’t wait—get help before the kidney
disease takes a grip—before dropsy,
gravel or Bright’s disease sets in.
Doan's Kidney Pills have brought new
life and new strength to thousands of
working men and women. Used and rec
ommended the world over. Ask your
neighborI
A South Dakota Case
James E. Palmer,
retired ^farmer, «HV |
“There was a
steady, dull ache
over my kidneys
and my back was KlflKr 4
sore. I became Hr □
weak and exhaust- If
ed. The kidney se- # II
cretions were scald- % JL
ing and passed too /JWSjp£1
often, making me wlJ''iMllmtmfi,' V\
... get up several jjfr "" flHM; '%mj V
times during tlie »>»* mMJ —
night. A friend told me to use Doan’s
Kidney Pills and three boxes cured
me.”
Get Doan's at Any Store, 60c e Box
DOAN’S VSSV
FOSTER-MILBURN CO., BUFFALO. N. Y.
Keep Your Skin-Pores
Active and Healthy
With Cuticura Soap
j s—g fSc. Oiatant 25 smi 50c, Ttltma 25c.
Mr. Lansing ’s Book. j
--—‘
Pham »ho Nflwv Y«*rU WnrlH
It might be said of Robert Lansing's
book, “The Peace Negotiations,” that
the former secretary of state has writ
ten, a volume of 280 pages to demon
strate that President Wilson had no
sympathy with his opinions, no re
spect for his judgment, and used him
mainly as an international law clerk.
We have read Mr. Lansing's personal
narrative with a* sense of utter be
wilderment-first, as to why Mr. Wil
son took him to Paris, and, second as
to why Mr. Lansing went. On
the face of the record it was
Mr. Lansing's duty to have re
signed after the armistice was signed
in November, 1918. • * • • Mr.
Lansing reveals himself as a foreign
minister who was wholly out of sym
pathy with the policies and program
of his chief—yet he remained secre
tary of state, and he accompanied
Mr. Wilson to Paris to participate in
the negotiation of a treaty of peace
toward the principal provisions of
which he was confessedly hostile.
Having participated in a limited way
in the negotiations and regarding the
treaty in the form in which it was
signed as indefensible, Mr. Lansing
returned to the United States to ad
vocate the ratification without reser
vations—and remained secretary of
state.
To begin with, Mr. Lansing did not
believe in the League of Nations. He
rejected the element of force in com
pelling the fulfillment of international
obligations and retained an ardent
faith in the general principal of the
j Hague Tribunal. Ten million corpses
! and the ashes of 8300,000,000,000 of
ruined property had in no sense weak
ened this assurance in the efficacy
of a purely legalistic system of in
ternational relations. As long ago as
May 25, 1916, Mr. Lansing warned
Mr. Wilson against the malicious ani
mal magnetism of Mr. Taft's League
to Enforce Peace, in spite of the fact,
as he explained, that he had not had
an opportunity to study it carefully;
but it was not necessary for Mr.
Lansing to study anything carefully
in order to warn Mr. Wilson against
it. The secretary of state had a
single rule of counsel—namely, the
worst is yet to come.
Mr. Lansing was, of course, opposed
to the president’s going to Europe,
although if Mr. Wilson remained at
home, Mr. Lansing, who was antag
onistic to Mr. Wilson’s peace pro
gram, would be at the head of the
American delegation. Before he had
and first hand information about the
president’s League of Nations plan he
confided to his diary that it was
likely to be imDracticable. In Paris
Mr. Lansing was impartially dis
pleased with everything and every
body. Whatever was, was wrong.
No sooner does the conference decide
to incorporate the covenant of the
League of Nations into the treaty of
peace than Mr. Lansing convinces
himself'that it is necessary to frame
- the treaty independently of the cove
nant. He sneers at Jan Smuts and
Robert Cecil. They are quite as in
corrigible as the president. Colonel
House annoys him. Lloyd George and
4444444444444444444.
4 BURROUGHS’ PHILOSOPHY. 4
4 4
4 From the Writings of John Bur- 4
4 roughs. 4
4 Life has been to me simply an 4
4 opportunity to learn and enjoy, 4
4 and, through my books, to share 4
4 my enjoyment with others. I have 4
4 had no other ambition. I have 4
4 thirsted to know things and to 4
4 make the most of them. The uni- 4
verse is to me a grand spectacle 4
4 that fills me with an awe and 4
4 wonder and joy, and with intense ♦
f curiosity. 4
f We are beginning to see that 4
4 money, after all, is not the main 4
4 thing. The real values cannot be 4
4 bought and sold. We are really 4
4 here to be happy and to make 4
4 others happy. It is a great mis- 4
4 sion to live simply and honestly 4
4 with the times. We have got to 4
4 make the most of our time and 4
4 get at the essential things as they 4
4 are now, and any vital idea is 4
4 bound to bring fruit in some way. 4
4 It Is the little voice inside that 4
4 we should hearken to. 4
4 Growing old is a kind of letting 4
4 go. The morning has its delights 4
4 and its enticements, the noon has 4
4 its triumphs and satisfactions, but 4
4 there are a charm and a tranquil- 4
4 ity, and a spiritual uplift about 4
4 the close of the day that belong 4
4 to neither. 4
4 ♦
4444444444444444444
Out Where the Cactus Blooms.
From the Salome <Ariz.) Sun.
Salome Is the healthiest place on earth
—so restful and . quiet that you might
live here for years and never realize
how dead you are and then die and
never know’ that you had been alive—
which comes pretty near being life eter
nal
The train stops here twice each day
—when it goes from Phoenix and when
It comes back from Los Angeles. Some
folks have wondered why it comes back
from Los Angeles, but the engineer's
wife has the asthma and lives in Phoe
nix—so he comes back. The train stops
here because Salome has the only good
water for a long ways—and the engine
has to have water. The train goes
through here because it can't get
through tho GranHe Wash mountains
without going right through Salome—
otherwise some of the natives might not
know what a train looks like.
When the tram stops some of us buy
a paper or an orange from the news
butcher. while the rest of us reciprocal
inly make faces at tho supercilious and
self-satisfied day coach passengers, who
make unkind remarks about our town
and comment audibly upon its God-for
saken appearance—not knowing that
we know that most of them come from
even smaller and more God-forsaken
towns than Salome—and Where the
peace and quiet and the scent of desert
so make one’s soul content that we
should not he surprised some day, if
God himself should come this way.
Twenty years ago there was no one
here, but me- and now there’s folks a
living as far as you can see. On some
nights when the tourists are thick and
the section men all in town and a good
game going at Blarney castle, as many
as 75 or M) people have been counted
here—which is a big increase from noth
ing in 20 years.
Almost everything grows well here.
Squint Eye Johnson built a barn last
year and on account of the high price
of lumber cvt four big cottonwoodd posts
and set them in the greund fc.- the
corners, mailing boards on to complete
tbe barn, it rained after and the
Clemenceau are objectionable per
sons. The Italians are bad, but the
Japanese are worse.
At times Mr. Lansing's pages con
vey the impression that the peace
conference was little better than a
slumming expedition and that really,
nice people do not do that sort of
thing. He has not faith in a peace
of democracy. He rejects irritably
the system of mandates. He regards
the president's doctrine of "self-de
termination” as highly mischievjus,
and classifies it with "the consent
of the governed" clause in the Decla
ration of Independence as something
that statesmen are bound to disre
gard. He thinks it very dangerous for
the president to put such ideas In the
mind of certain races. » • • • •
Of nothing else is he so sharply crit
ical as of Mr. Wilson's final surrender
to the Japanese in the Shantung set
tlement. Mr. Lansing devotes a
chapter to it. and reveals the inter
esting fact that the president dele
gated to him the task of dissuading
the Japanese from insisting on their
Shantung demands, and that he failed
completely to wring any concessions
from them; therefore Mr. Wilson and
secret diplomacy were equally to
blame.
As to his conversation with William
C. Bullitt about the general iniquity
of the Treaty of Versailles, Mr. Lans
ing admits that he said less to Bul
litt than to certain other people, but
the others respected his confidence.
Then Mr. Lansing cpmes home to ad
vocate the ratification of the-objec
tionable treaty without reservations.
When Bullitt revenles the confidential
conversation, Mr. Lansing telegraphs
a long explanation to the president,
who is in the west pleading for the
acceptance of the treaty, and his
feelings are hurt because the presi
dent never acknowledges the receipt
of the message. And so Mr. Lansing
remains as secretary of state, at vari
ance with the president and wholly
out of sympathy with the president,
until his resignation is finally de
manded by Mr. Wilson for reasons
the common sense of the country in
stantly rejects as trival and incon
sequental.
Mr. Lansing thinks that he has sup
plied the real reasons for his enforced
resignation, and we think he has, ex
cept for one inportant omission. Ho
says never a word about his extraordi
nary procedure as secretary of state in
reversing the president's Mexican
policy at a time when Mr, Wilson lay
ill and helpless. In all the narrative
there is no reference to the series of
notes, each of which was in effect an
ultimatum, that had brought the
United States to the verge of a war
with Mexico, when a stricken presi
dent suddenly discovered what was
going on and intervened. » • • •
The historian who reads Mr. Lans
ing's "The Peace Negotiations” will
almost instinctively classify it with
"McClellan’s Own Story," in which
the deposed commander of the Army
of the Potomac set out to vindicate
himself and ended by proving Lin
coln's case against him.
corner posts started to grow—and It
kept Squint Eye busy all summer nail
ing on more boards at the bottom to
keep the cows from getting out—and
now he has a two-story bam and uses
the top story for a hen house. Squint
Eye says one more wet year and he will
have to buy an alrplano to feed his
chickens.
Melons don't do very well here be
cause the vines grow so fast they wear
the melons out dragging them around
the ground—and in dry years we some
times have to plant onions in between
the rows of potatoes and then scratch
the onions to make the potatoes’ eyes
water enough to irrigate the rest of the
garden.
Salome has the purest water and the
clearest air in the whole world includ
ing Texas. Don’t mix Salome with
Yuma, where the bad soldier lived, and
when he died—well, he sent for his
blankets and overcoat. Yes, it was
through the streets of Yuma that the
coyote chased the jackrabbit—and they
were both walking—and it wasn’t more
than three figures in the shade at mi<U
night, either. Just warm.
Westward.
From the Milwaukee Journal.
At a point near Spencer, In south
western Indiana, there are as many per
sons northward to the Canadian border
as southward to Mexico and the gulf;
there are many between you and the
Atlantic as in the trebly greater dis
tance to the Pacific. And that center of
population explains why they call our
part of thq country the “middle west."
Fourteen times the census has been
taken, and always there has been a
westward movement. This is natural
enough, when one remembers that in
1790 the center of population was close
to Baltimore. What is a little strange
is that there has not been a variation
north or south of 100 miles. The dis
tance traveled has varied. The 10 years
following 1850 showed a great Jump
westward, but the decade that included
the civil war marked a slowing down.
This is natural; the farther west the
median line is drawn, the greater area
there is to the east to keep pace in
crowding population and industry with
the new settlement of the west. A
stronger reason is that there Is little
new agricultural land in the west. There
is much land yet to be reclaimed and
made profitable, but there are no great
finds of rich areas which do not call
for anything but the settler's ax and
plow.
We are settling down. For nearly 40
years the center of population has been
in Indiana, and it will be longer still I
crossing Illinois. Our problems cease j
to be those of the pioneer settling land j
hitherto unused and become those of the ■
scientist making better use of our ter- '
ritory. discovering what regions will
best produce certain crops and what
new regions can be made available by
artificial improvement.
Positive Pleasure.
From London Answers.
Two dentists were talking “shop/*
One remarked:
“My treatment is so painless that It
often happens that my patients fall
asleep while I am attending to their
. teeth.”
The other dentist gave a deprecating
shrug of his shoulders.
“Pooh, pooh, my dear man! That is
nothing:” he cried. “You should see my
place with all the latest improvements.
Why, my patients nearly always ask
me to send a message to fetch a pho
tographer so that they can be photo
graphed with the expression of gladness
which my patient dental treatment
alone can give them/'
* •, • . . . % ' " • ft.
n (. , -
./if E/J
BOSSES COLOR)NO? LSI
Spohn’s Distemper Compound
to break It tap and get them back in condition. Twenty-seven
years’ use haa made "SPOHN’S” indispensable in treating
Coughs and Colda, Influenza and Distemper with their resulting
complications, and all diseases of the throat, nose and lungs.
Acts marvelously aa preventive; acta equally well as cure.
60 cento and $1.15 per bottle. At all drug etoroa.
SPOUN MEDICAL COMPANY, GOSHEN, IXD.
Thought Him D»»0.
Five-yea r-otvl Buddy heard ht»
mother talking about Washington*
birthday and with wide open eyes lie
cried in amazement: ''Washington's
hirtliday! Why, l thought-he was
dead!” The mother explained at some
length and got in reply, “Well, ail
right, what'll we give id in?"
Pa Equal to Emergency.
Wtllle— Paw. can you name *tx
noted legislative bodies?
Paw—Well, there's the Anierieao
congress, and the British parliament,
and the French chamber of deputies,
and the Herman redeirstag ami the
Japanese diet, my son.
Willie—But that's only five, ami the
teacher wants us to t ame sis.
Paw—Well, there's the—er—ef—
the Hungarian goulash. Now don’t
bother me. Can't you see I'm read
ing?- Cincinnati Enquirer.
, Taking a Chance.
“Congratulations, my dear, i otue
thought of marrying h-m.” “Well,
maybe I'll congratulate you Inlor.”
Fetters Forged by Passion.
It Is ordained in the eternal consti
tution of things that men of intemper
ate minds cannot he free; their pas
sions forge their fetters.—Burke.
Cuticura Comforts Baby’s Skin
When red, rough and itching with hot
baths of Cuticura Soap and touches of
Cuticura Ointment, Also make use
now and then of that exquisitely scent
ed dusting powder, Cuticura Talcum,
one of the Indispensable Cuticura
Toilet Trio.—Adv.
The Needle Quick.
He carries a route from one of the
News substations. His pals worry a
lot because, on the coldest days, lie
goes thinly clad. One of his pet bits
of frigidity is wearing his clothing
Seoteli style—bare-between the shin
and knee. It gives the other kids the
shivers to see him.
One cold day he blew in at paper
hour and. rushing up to the manager
at the station exclaimed:
"Gee, I was lucky today, Sully 1”
“How was that, Mae? Did you buy
some clothes?1’
“No, I found a brand new fur.”
"No!”
"Yes!”
"What kind of a fur was it?”
"Transfer!”—Indianapolis News.
Catarrh Can Be Cured
Catarrh is a local disease greatly Influ
enced by constitutional conditions. It
therefore requires constitutional treat
ment HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE
■ Is taken Internally and acts through
the Blood on the Mucous Surfaees of ;
the System. HALL’S CATARRH.
MEDICINE destroys the foundation of
the disease, gives the patient strength by |
Improving the general healtb and assists :
nature In doing Its work.
All Druggists. Circulars free.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio.
Who’d Have Thought It.
Nicholas Murray Butler, it appears,
is not without his waggish moments.
’Tis said that tie was discussing (tea
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
Mothers Know That
Genuine Castoria
,,
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
' THC CCNTAUIt COKPAOT. U» WAB OTP.
derate matter with Brander Matthews,
and that Professor Matthews observed
that when the first man takes over an
old idea, the process was translation.
“When the next man takes it,” con
tinued Professor Matthews, “it is adap
tation. When the third man takes it,
it is plagiarism.”
“And when the fourth man takes it,”
added Dr. Butler, "It is research.”—
New York Evening Post.
Unfortunate Knowledge.
“I thought sure Jack and Miss Flyr
tle would make a match of it. Whut
caused the break?” said Smith.
"It was all due to Jack’s unfortunate
knowledge of Shakespeare. You see,
when he proposed, Miss Flyrtle said:
Well, here’s my hand and ray heart
with It. ‘Twas mine; ’tis yours.’”
“ ‘And lias been slave to thousands,’
quoted Jack without thinking—and it
was all off In the twinkling of an eye.”
She Knew Time.
Four-year-old Betty had been per
mitted to go visiting at Aunt Ruth’s
house. About four o'clock Dncle
James made ready to take her home,
hilt Betty objected strenuously to go
ing. “My Muvver said I could stay
all day,” she said, "and it's ail day till
it’s dark.”
Returning the Ring.
Jeweler—Why do you want the dia
mond removed from this ring? It’s a
perfect stone.
Maud Grahhins—Well, I’ve broken
my engagement with Mr. Green and
it’s against my principles to keep
the ring.
No one can afford to lose his tem
per; huf one isn’t studying economies
when It happens.
FORGET PASSAGE OF TIME j
Neither at Work or in the Hours of
Play Does It Pay to Watch
the Clock.
At oniy one time does tlie average
human being measure time with ef
fort, end that Is when he is goaded
by fear. Scare a man with Impend
ing disaster, with bodily danger or
with death and he becomes really ac
tive. Time doesn't drag then. The
clock hands, If he took time to look
at them, would seem like racehorses
in their speed.
Don’t be u clock watcher. Work
while you work with so much energy,
so much Interest that time doesn't
matter.
Play when you' play with so much
abandon, so much enthusiasm that (he
day passes without your measurement.
The man who measures time in
cycles or circles is wrong.
Time must be computed in a straight
line along which there Is no backward
motion.
You can never have- yesterday again.
If you wasted it, try and mnkc today
do double duty. Hut you can't do that
If you watch the clock.—F. A. Walker
j in Chicago Dally News.
Muffler Wanted.
Agent—1 have here a little Inven
tion to make the voice carry farther.
Mr. Henpeck—For goodness’ sake,
don't tell my wife.—Science and In
tention.
Awful Blunder.
"What cured Cholly of flirting?”
"He tried to flirt with a police
woman."
It’s Really Amazing j
the amount of nourishment ^ (
you’ll find, in a small dish of
Grape-Nuts
"With cream or good milk added j
Sweet with its own sugar, 1
developed from the grains in
the making, this sturdy blend
8 of wheat and malted barley
contains, in compact form and J
at low cost.the nutritive and <
mineral elements needed to i
build health and strength. . 1
—- :l
Adding ns n postscript, "Burn ililw
letter,’’ Is your ewe to Hurt ttie row
flngrntlon yourself.
r *1
■
BY USING fHC SENUINE
Stearns’ Electric Paste
A? 4v SURE DEATH to Waterbugb, Ant*. Hal.*
Mice. These pests nro tiio urenMitJ, carriers «>1
disease and MUST UE RILLED. Tbtj dwt**
both iv.'od and property
Directions in lb languages H every bo*.
Brady for use—two slses Hfx and tl-AC
U 8. Ooversnuiut buys It.
TOO
LATE
Death only a matter of short tin;-.
Don’t wait until pains and aches
become incurable diseases. Avoid
painful consequences by taking
GOLD MEDAL
The world’s standard remedy for kidney,
liver, bladder and uric acid troubles—the
National Remedy of Holland since 1690.
Three sizes, all druggists.
Look tor the name Gold Medal on every boa
and accept no imitation
Saved My Life
With Eatonic
Says Now Jersey Woman
“1 was nearly dead until I found
Eatonic and I can truly say It saved
my life. It is the best stomach medi
cine ever made,” writes Mrs. Ella
Smith.
Acid stomach causes awful misery
which Eatonic quickly gets rid of by
uklng up and carrying out the acidity
md gases which prevent good dlges
ion. A tablet taken after meals brings
luick relief. Keeps the stomach
leaitliy and helps to prevent the many
11s so liable to arise from excess acid.
>on't suffer from stomach miseries
vhen you con gel a big box of Eatonic
dr a trifle with ycur druggist's guar
antee.
:>ccll(int II. mi Mr*. In M<|«C:|, , r tVcmlM
>.l Kleld. Write I, r particulars yo n.rl
Inr Royalties, Boy 33t. Miles U||« Menl
mmmkv&mm