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About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 12, 1922)
WLDOUGLAS $5»6»7&*8SHOESffiS!S are actually demanded year after yearby more people thanauy other shoe in the world ^-\ BEfAUSF- for stylo. workmanship they are un equaled. Protection agaiust unreason, able profits is guaranteed by the price stamped cm every pair. Years of satisfactory service, have given them confidence in the shoes and In the pro tection afforded by Ibe \V.L. Douglas Trade Mark. W.L.DOUGLAS & into all of our lto stores at ractory cost, YY e uo not imiKo one cent of nr -fit. until tho iV nil tv«t -.. •hoes are gold to you. It is ,’*‘V00 ** worth dollars for you to W.l~ Itovolat nam* remember that when you '/g* S buy shoes at our stores, yyade Mari in the YOl’PAYONLY 0N15PK0FIT. wor/</. Jt stands Jor \ No matter wli ereyou live shoe tJt'.jth&ZlV&V'J dealers can supply you with f„Qp^f,ieco:t. The W .L.Douglas shoes. *heycost name and price u , no more in San Frauvisco plainly stampod on than they do in New England. \ the sole. fOMPARF °nr I7 ftrul If for sal* ifl ywndri*ti, v>v/itaa iU\l shoes xvithany stad for fr« catalog. *10 or $12 shoes made. TO MERCHANTS: IJ no dealer in your to ton handles h'.L. Douglas shoes, write to- President day for exclusive rights to W.P. I/ouylas Shoe Co, handle this quick selling, lO Spark Street Quick turn-over line* Broel+ton, Mass. Good Portable Lock. A portable door and window lock that can be carried in the pocket and applied anywhere without nails or screws has recently been invented by B. N. Wlekwire of Carbondale, Pa. It consists of a wedge that is placed between the door and the door jamb. The wedge carries a series of fine teeth that are* brought lightly into con tact with the wood by pressure upon a lever. If anyone attempts to open the door the movement wedges the lock into the jamb and the teeth grip so firmly that the entire door frame must be torn away, the inventor declares, before the lock can be forced. English Child Pedestrian. England has a very youthful walk ing champion In the person of Master G. O. Edwards, aged ten, of Moss Side, Manchester. Recently he dem onstrated his prowess in the toe-nnd heel contests by walking from London to Brighton, a distance of 50 miles. The easier the job, the harder to get it. This illustrates the perversity of existence. Suspenders and Garters / UnequaJlod fcj Comfort an dlong /j Wear Ono Year’s Lastingy ' Stretch Guarswteed. Thousands get two and three, years wear. Suspender*, 75c. Garters, 60o. Ask Your Dealer—If ho hasn’t them,' send direct giving dealer’s name. Look fcjr “NU-WAY” on bucklea. Accept no substitutes. Nu-Way Strath Suspender Co, AsDeptE C310 Adrian, Mich. NORTHWEST OPPORTUNITIES GARAGE—Best In manufacturing, agrl ' cultural district near Seattle, catching tourist trade, equipped for all kinds of mechanical and electric work. A good paying business. HOTEL—Best in the Pacific Northwest, the nation’s playground. This is a de pendable business, drawing the right trade, in a growing town near Seattle. A good location, priced right for a { quick sale. I GROCERY—Are you going West? YVo have a grocery store which will givo you a very comfortable income without ii too much outlay. Lumber and manu facturing town, where mills run night and day. Will sell for flat or invoice price. BEAUTY PARLOR— At a sacrifice. Beauty Parlor netting $350 per month, only one in town of 10,000; also draw % lng from surrounding territory. CONFECTIONERY AND CANDY MFO. —On prominent cottier in Chehalis, Wash., an Industrial town with $500,000 payroll; wholesale and retail trade; long lease; a money-maker. \ BAKERY—In large seacoast town near * Seattle, a business which will pay for itself Very good equipment, low over head. long lease. XX HOLES AI. E FRl IT B U SI NESS— Close to center of large Industrial pay roll town. A money-maker for the man that understands this business. • RESTAURANT—A good paying restau rant in thriving town, close to the flower city of the West, Seattle Write us about this. FURNITURE—Furniture store, An ex cellent business In a town o 35.000. Low expenses; good profit. Priced right. UNITED REALTY COH! ANY j 324-5 Pioneer Bldg. Seattle, Wash, i SIOUX CITY PTG. CO., NO. 41-192Z WAR CLOUDS GATHER IN NEAR EAST Virtual Ultimatum Delivered by Ismet Pasha at Mudania Peace Conference—Rupture Seems Imminent. Universal Service. London, Oct 7. (Saturday) 3:20 a. m.—A Central news dis patch "from Paris at 3:15 o’clock this morning states that the con ference between Premier Poincare and Lord Curzon terminated at 2:20 a. m. Lord Curzon express ed himself as satisfied with the result and said there would be a further conference at 9 o'clock this morning, when he hopes that an agreement wi(I be reached. Universal Service. London, Oct. 7.—An Exchange Telegraph dispatch from Con * stantinople states that' the Mu dania conference has been re •umed. The situation remains unchanged. BY KARL H. VON WIEGAND Universal Service Correspondent Special Cable Dispatch. ~ Constantinople, Oct. 7.—The war cltuds are gathering. Ismet Pasha, according to sources which I have reason to believe are reliable, became defiant at Friday's Mudania conference and in a scarcely veiled form delivered the equlvaleut of an ultimatum. Gneral Harington become adamant on the minimum concessions to be made by Great Britain. A rupture seems imminent. Frank Bouillon sprang to his feet and desperately sought to save the situation, but could accomlipsh little. Open tsreak Averted. Both Ismet Pasha and General Harington remained coldly firm in their attitudes and Bouillon succeeded only in averting an open break so that the allied delegates couljl return to Constantinople and confer with their respective high commissioners and governments. It is unofficially reported here that General Harington and the other al 1 lied representatives may go back to Mndania Friday night. Unless they reach r.n agreement with the Kemal ists at Mudania, the Angora note ac cepting the conditions of the Paris note, and inviting the allies to a con ference at Smyrna on October 20, will be nullified. Situation Not Hopeless. A statement made to me Friday night in high quarters sums up the situation as follows: “As long as we still have contact with the peace envoys, which is ap parent from the intention of return ing to Mudania, there is no break and the situation is not hopeless.” It was upon the question of Thrace that both sides locked horns. The Turks demanded a guarantee that the nationalist troops would be per mitted to march in and take over Thrace within the month, irrespective of the. decision of the peace confer ence or whether the peace conference was ended or not. Moreover, they de manded the western bank of the Maritza river and Adrianople. Britain Refuses Demands. Britain refused both demands, de claring that the taking over of Thrace by the Turks could not be permited until after the decision as to peace. In the meantime, the Alied proposi tion that the-. Turks be allowed 2,000 gendarmes in Thrace was turned down by Ismet Pasha, who declared the number insufficient. Bouillon intervened and sought to prevent abrupture desperately using all the arts of persuasion. He vainly sought to reestablish some sort of cordiality but neither Ismet Pasha nor genera] Harington would unbend. Blockade Lifted^ Bouillon finally succeeded in get ting an agreement for a suspension of further negotiations for 24 hours to enable the allied generals to confer with their governments. -Both Bouillon and Hamid Bey are pessimistic but neither has given up hope of averting war. General Harington has lifted the blockade against newspaper corres pondents going to Mudania. _A. TROOPS IN CONSTANTINOPLE. By Edward J. Bing, United Press Staff Correspondent. Constantinople, Oct. 6.—The Grena dier Guards, crack British regiment, tramped into Constantinople today, following a virtual breakdown of the Mudania peace conference, and the approach of Kcmalist cavalry to wards this former Turkish capital. The British force, brought here by tl.e "Empress of India,” swung through the streets, band playing, colors unfurled and Constantinople’s European population went wild with joy. Christians see In the troops a bulwark against ah Ottoman threat to take Constantinople by force and march through to Thrace, if the allies do not immediately cede this territory to Mustapha Kemal. FOR BEER aImD WINE. Long Beaoh, Cal., Oct. 6 (A. P.)— A liberal Interpretation of the Vol stead act that would permit the sale of light wines and beers was favored by the California State Federation of Labor in the annual convention here yesterday. IRISH REBELS BEATEN. Cork, Oct. 7 (U. P.)—Twenty-three Irregulars were killed and 30 taken prisoner in tne 30-hour battle on Monday and Tuesday at Killerglin, near Killarney, according to an offi cial report. * 4 ‘4 4 ♦ + ♦♦ + ♦♦♦♦♦444 44 ♦ CALLS ON PRESIDENT. ’ Loon Rejean, minister of foreign affairs in the island Republic of Haiti, called at the White House for a conference with President Hardiing. AGAIN WHAT OF THE MOVIES? Ullf HAT are we S°inS to do Ml about It?” pointedly asks a " motion picture producer in the current issue of Collier's Weekly after drawing up a stinging indict ment of the movies. He indicts the movies not on the grounds of immorality, for, he Bays, immorality is always obvious and can be effectively fought In the open. He bases his indictment on stupidity and greed, which, if one may believe him, are the salient characteristics of the industry. “Through a mistaken diagnosis, based upon ignorance of true motion picture conditions,” he writes, “greed and stupidity have been mis taken for immorality. * * * The 3 4-year-old intelligence will be satis fied to pay its way into a show planned by the 15-year-olds; The cheap sentimentalities, the vulgar ities, the absurdities, will continue to go out to millions a day, making them with each passing week more and more typical movie Americans." But the charge of stupidity brought against them may not alarm the film magnates. Showmen for many centuries before Barnum, as well as ever since, have regarded the public as stupid and have gained riches out of that stupidity. Enter tainment vendors who have catered to an intelligent public have usually gone bankrupt If the movies are stupid it is because the public is satisfied w*ith, and perhaps craves, stupidity. It is a singular trait in humanity that when it comes to shows, spec tacles, and entertainments peoplo — and highly Intelligent people at that • —will put up with the veriest rot. Consider the pageants which col leges, schools, churches and societies of one kind or another indulge in from time to time. Some of them, it may be, are good, but the vast ma jority are silly to the point of tears: The motion picture producer who finds a vent for his grouch through Collier's is in all likelihood oft the track when he lays a recent falling off of almost 35 per cent. In movie attendance to the stupidity of the pictures. The pictures have been constantly improving from the ar tistic as well as the technical stand point. The person who could enjoy a inovie 10 years ago can have little complaint against today’s product. Whatever decrease has taken place in attendance is probably due to summer heat and economic condi tions. The movies are on the up grade and there is no reason to think that they are apt to slip back. WAGE CHIROPRACTIC WAR IN NEBRASKA Norfolk, Neb.. Oct. 5. (Special).— Mixers and straights are waging a chiropractic war In I^gbraska, accord ing to Dr. Ros Knopp, who with his wife, Nell L. Knopp, were arrested Thursday on a charge of practicing chiropratic without a license. It is the second time. Dr. Knopp has been ar rested for the same offense. The Ne braska law calls for a certificate from a college which teaches three years of nine months each. The Knopps came from Iowa where the law calls for three years of six months each. Knopp says the fight Is not being waged between the Iowa and Nebras ka schools. Isadore Duncan, American born, who dances well, returns from Rus sia with a new husband, and is sent to Ellis Island for questioning before being admitted. Somebody in Wash ington has a queer mind and a pre posterous plan for saving this nation from bolshevism. An artistic lady that comes out from two heavy /turtains, stamps her left foot, lifts up her right foot, waves her arms and shows you what the Greeks dirt, or would have done if they had known how, isn’t going to upset the United States government. We should not make ourselves ridicu lous. Children Cry For ' .ALCOHOL-3 PEK CENT, jd tlSSMl' AvertableIVeparationforAs jj c4fe{1 slniilntingtheFood by Rejju1®* i feisl' lin&thc Stomachs and BmwPgf . , « r r» l Special Care or Baby. -—-TSm, That Baby should ha\«j a bed of its own all are agreed. Yet it ;<s|w . TherebyPromoUm,Ui?c j jg more reasonable for an infant to sleep with grown-ups than to use 5?Suf N Cheerfulness and Kc*”7“ -l a man’s medicine in an attempt to regulate the delicate organism of ■«$& ft«tther Oriam.MorP ‘ tiiat same infant. Either practice is to be shunned. -Neither would ' MinerabNc 1—TTUnjgR t tolerated by specialists in children’s diseases. jfcfrtatQUDciLjlti-Xi Your Physician will tell you that Baby’s medicine must be \ prepared with even greater care than Baby’s food. » J A Baby’s stomach when in good health is too often disarranged jin'ttZmi > by improper food. Could you for a moment, then, think of giving Sl'cv;! ft to your ailing child anything but a medicine especially prepared pj if for Infants and Children ? Don’t be deceived, i —rTTp—dvfbr Make a mental note of this:—It is important, Mothers, that Son and Diarrhoea you should remember that to function well, the digestive organs of i*PConSVrSshncsS anil ) your Baby must receive special care. No Baby is so abnormal that a Loss of Sleep the desired results may be had from the use of medicines primarily Bgjgfin! rcstiHir”ft^f<,fr^jnlnfan^ prepared for grown-ups. facsimiled nature of mothers should read the booklet that is around every bottle of fletcher-s castoria M GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS M Ihu Con-AtmCoHP^. I A Ponte BBIGHTENS'REFRESHES'fcD0S NEW ™JI JUS draperies U WCllIS PUTNAM FADELESS DYES—dyes or Yjnts as you wish FOUND OUT WHAT WAS WRONG Physician Might at Least Take Com fort in Fact That His Subcon scious Mind Was Right. Have you ever done a piece of work, conscious at the time thut something was vitally wrong with it,, hut unable to figure out the defect until after (lie job was finished? The “feeling that something is wrong" floats up vaporlike from the subconscious mind, one of every per son’s two brains. A Toronto doctor toiled evenings for two winters building In ids cellar an- eighteen-foot motorboat for Mus koka lakes. At that time he was con scious that something was wrong, but could not figure it out, though lie pondered in detail everything from engine to paint. When it came time to take the boat to the freight train he abruptly learned what hail bothered his sub conscious brain: There was no way of getting the boat out of the cellar except by tearing a big hole in the foundations of the house and digging a deep opening to the outside. Gentle Passage-at-Arms. During the war some Australian sol diers were quartered beside the Gor don ^Highlanders, and took great de light in chatting 'lie Scotsmen unmerci fully. One of the Gordons, while passing an “Aussie,” trod rather heavily on his foot. Up sprang the latter, furious, and shouted: “You stepped on my foot.” “Well,” said the Scotsman, “I did ma best to jump over it; but a Heilan snan’s only human, nae a kangaroo!” To overcome the display of emotion Is a life work. The baby begins life by crying. BELIEVE IN OLD PROPHECY Koreans Flock to Secure Holdings In What They Are Satisfied Is to Be Great City. Kclyong, tho lonely mountain of Korea, experienced a renl-estate boom that made the oil-town promoter pale Into insignificance. On a tiny piece of land on tho mountain side were on romped 2,0(52 persons, forming 018 households, while hundreds more were gathered at the base, bidding high prices for the privilege of buying a hit of land among the favored. The Korean prophet, Chyong Kara, whose writings have been preserved in the ancestral mausoleum of the one time Imperial family of Korea, long ago prophesied that Mount Kelyong would be chosen as the religious cen ter of tho sect which he founded and of the peninsula. Ills prophecy has recently been given great publicity, it is reported, and thousands of Koreans are flocking to the mountain, Arm in their belief that it is to lie one of the greatest cities of the world and that they are “getting in on the ground floor.” Helpful Youngsters. Tommy and Bob just came home from a visit to grandma. “I suppose grandma was quite busy cooking her basket of peaches?’’ said mother. “Not very,” replied Bobby. “Tommy and me saved her a lot of work. They tasted so fine <vc didn't leave her but a few to cook." If one can’t remember what he reads, he ought to go to lectures. lie may be car-minded instead of book minded. Trying to save money on the family table? Consider fried mush. SILLY IDEA OF “BLUE BLOOD” Austrian Aristocratic Requisites About on a Par wfth the Action of Foolish Boy. Penn Ilevkel of Pafayette college Bald at n dinner In Easton: “The Austrian t aristocracy must bo taking Austria's new democratic gov ernment very hard, for Austrian so ciety was the most, rigidly exclusive in the world. You had to have four qunrterings to your coat of arms—that Is, all the way back to your grand father and grandmother on both fa ther's and mother’s side, all your people had to he noble. A drop of common blood, and you were not received at court or in society. “This absurd treatment of good Aus trians who didn’t happen to be nohlo deserved to vanish as it has vanished, for It was stupid, absurd, cruel. In fact, it was all of a piece with the action of the boy who was found ston ing a frog and yelling savagely at it: “Til I’arn ye to be a frog!”—In dianapolis Ne^'S. Music Induces Cows to Give More Milk. Dr. C. Banks McNair, superintend ent of the Caswell Training school, state Institution, has produced proof that music induces cows to give more milk, says a dispatch to the Philadel phia Inquirer from Kinston, N. Q, The school lias a herd of Holstelna. The case of "Louise” was typical. One week, without music, the cow guve 382.5 pounds of milk. The next week, wlien a phonograph produced soothing tones at the milking periods, the pro duction increased Vo 419.3 pounds. The third week, when there were no sweet strains, Louise slumped to a figure un der the 400-mnrk. Doctor McNair declared where there were sixty or eighty cows together the profit in music would he hundreds of dollars a year. The one way to keep sound, s perfect teeth HE only way to keep the priceless blessing of sound, perfect teeth is to eat the kind of food that supplies them not only with proper nourishment but 4ives them work to do. Grape-Nuts not only induces thorough masti cation, but also supplies the lime and other elements re quired for building firm tooth structure. This wholesome, healthful cereal food is made from whole wheat flour and malted barley. All the nutriment of these splendid grains, including the vital mineral ele ments so often lacking »in so-called “refined” foods, is retained. A delicious, appetizing dish, Grape-Nuts, with cream or good milk, provides complete nourishment for body, bone and nerves, in readily digestible form. , Sold by Grocers Everywhere! 1 “There's a Reason” % for Grape-Nuts S) -THE BODY BUILDER Made by Poitum Cereal Co., Ino., Battle Creek, Mieh.