NOW is the time to visit California! Naturally, you want to see most of the best scenery in America en route. To do this, take the logical route—Burlington (in connect ion with the Denver & Rio Grande Western and Western Pacific)—because it takes you right through Denver, the Pikes Peak region, Royal Gorge, scenic Colorado,Salt Lake City and the Grand Canyon of the Feather River in the beautiful Sierra Nevada range. Then, if you return by way of the great Pacific Northwest (Yellowstone or Glacier Park Line) you put a ring around the Golden West—the most wonderful trip in America. On this ideal circle tour of about 6,000 miles through a dozen states you see practically every kind of scenery, every phase of topography, every variety of plant life every species of animal life, every sort of mineal wealth and every beauty of landscape that our West affords. Rail rates are the same via all Western lines. There fore, you have ‘Something to gain and nothing to lose by investigating before completing your plans. Let me tell you more about the Burlington’s more travel-comfort-at-the-same cost service. L. E. DOWNEY, Ticket Agent Get Your Sale Bills at the Frontier .—'-! PAID LOCALS. Paid announcements will ap fiear under thiB head. If you have anything to sell 'f -vish to buy tell the people of vt ui this column. Ten cents per line first in ert;on, subsequent insertions live cents per line each week. — t'ARM LOANS—R f». PARKER.37I4 I HAVE SOME HORSES FOR SALE or trade—Peter Reifer3. 22-tf EAT AT “THE SUBWAY.” 7-tf. TRY OUR HARD ROLLS. FRESH every day.—McMillan&Markey.7-tf KODAKS, FILMS, KODAK FINISH ing.—W. B. Graves, O’Neill. 30-tf FOR SALE—5 DOZEN THOROUGII bred Buff Orphington Pullets, $10 per doz.—Mrs. Edward Murray. 30-2p FOR SALE—THREE DOZEN WHITE Leghorn pullets, $1.00 each.—Mrs. C. F. Baker, O’Neill, Nebraska. 30-3p FOR SALE — ONE (GOOD REG istered Hereford bull, or will trade for some good grade Whiteface heif ers,—I. R. Ridgeway, Dorsey. 30-2p IF YOU NEED THE OLD LOAN ON your farm renewed for another 5 or 10 years, or if you need a larger loan I can make it for you.—R. H. Parker, O’Neill, Nebraska. 21-tf I HAVE' A SMALL FARM AND some cash to trade for a larger farm. See R. H. Parker, O’Neill. Ne braska. 40-tf PHONE ORDRES FOR CHESTNUT Hard Coal to Seth Noble. 28-tf THE NEBRASKA STATE BANK IS the only bank in O’Neill operating under the Depositors Guaranty Fund of the State of Nebraska. Avail your self of this PROTECTION. 8-tf BUY FRESH BREAD AT THE Bakery. 7-tf EASTERN CHESTNUT HARD COAL for Magazine stove will arrive soon. Seth Noble. 28-tf WANTED—MEN AND TEAMS OR trucks, to haul clay on Ewing road project. Ten thousand yards to move, average haul two miles. Call H. F. Nightengale, Ewing. 25-tf BUY FRESH BREAD AT THE Bakery. 7-tf FINE FARM TO RENT—COMPRIS ing 240 acres, 40 rods from the round house in O’Neill, Neb. See Judge Carlon, 20-tf FOR SALE—MY 320 ACRE FARM north of Ainsworth. This land is unimproved; lays level and is goad soil. Price $20.00 per acre, one-third cash, balance, your own time at 6 per cent.—J. H. Shultz, O’Neill, Ne braska. 30-2p TRY OUR HARD ROLLS. FRESH every day.—McMillan &Markey.7-tf LEAVE YOUR ORDER FOR PENN sylvania Hard Coal for Base Burn ers with Seth Noble. Car due to ar rive soon. 28-tf EAT AT “THE SUBWAY ” 7-tf. In thfe country newspaper, sensations, scan dals—-the recording of human misery—is al most taboo. At least it certainly is secondary to the printing of real news about people and things. For the province of the country paper—your Home Town Paper—is to give community in terests first place, printing the more or less sensational personal items only when neces sary to keep faith with subscribers who pay for ALL the news. 4 " Therefore, your Home Town Paper can give yop, in full measure and overflowing, 100 per cent pure news about the people in whom you are most interested—your relatives and friends of the Old Home Town. % Subscribe today for your Home Town Paper WANTED—EXPERIENCED MAR ried man on farm.—Neil Ryan.31-3 FOR SALE—ONE 240 EGG INCU bator and one 500 chick brooHer.— Ed. Davidson. 31-tf TRUCKS FOR SALE OR TRADE— (3) Three New (1%) One and One Half Ton Trucks.—R. E. McHenry, Norfolk, Nebr. 31-2 MONEY TO LOAN ON FARMS.— Unlimited supply of money to loan. —Rose McHenry, Norfolk, Neb. 31-2 WANTED—GIRL FOR GENERAL house work. Inquire of Dr. Finley. 31-tf FOR SALE—6 R. C. RHODE is land Red Cockerels. $1.50 each.—R. L. ArButhnot. * 31-1 I JUST MADE ONE FARM LOAN of $15,000.00 and one of $25,000.00 and one of $40,00(^00. I am prepared to make Farm and Ranch Loans as large or as small-as you want. If you want a small loan,see me, or if you want a large loan see me.—R. H. Par ker, O’Neill, Nebraska. 24-tf The Daily State Journal to Jan. 1, 1924 for $2 or with Sunday $3. No family need be without The Daily Journal now. Rate good only in Ne braska and adjoining states. The leg islative session and the battle for lower taxes the coming year will make The Journal desired by every Nebras ka family. The Journal is delivered on most rural routes on the day print ed, nearly a day ahead of most other 'papers. Try The Journal the coming year at the Bargain Rate. 31-1 Subscribe for The Frontier and keep posted upon the affairs of this great courty of ours. SHIPS THAT FATTEN SAILORS 1 • Modern "Tankers" Are Now Blamed for Added Weight Taken On by the Seamen. Shipping experts continue to argue regarding the advantages of oil fuel over coal. At present the question is occupying the attention of medical men. The adverse effect of oil fuel upon such surfaces as steel, canvas, rope and other rflipping accessories are widely known; ships’ doctors are now divided’on the question as to whether it is harmful or beneficial in its effect upon sailors, a writer in London Tit Bits states. % Sailors on oil-fed vessels are fatter and plumper than those who work on coal-fed ships. Some naval surgeons declare that the fattening effect is pro duced by the slight fumes exuded by the dormant oil fuel; others ridicule the suggestion, and maintain that the former are fat simply because they have less work to do. “Coaling ship” is one of the finest exercises in the world for reducing superfluous flesh. It is hard work that has to be maintained at high speed all day. Ships vie with each other In get ting their coal aboard in record time, and even after the operation is finished the sailors still have a few more ounces of avoirdupois to work off in cleaning up the mess below decks. Usually three days are occupied in cleaning a vessel after a bout of “coal ship.” On the other hand, oil-fuel ships perform the task In about three hours. Doctors nre asking themselves: "Is the fat a healthy fat, or an injurious parasitic growth?” If a hammock is splashed with oil fuel, all the scrub bing and boiling fn the world will not prevent a hole from appearing in it; nhd If it eats through double-ply can vas, what will oil fuel accomplish in the case of human beings? "Tanker” hands are noticing that after two or three voyages they begin to put on flesh. FAMED FOR ITS MARASCHINO Dalmatian Town of Sebenico Really Has Little Right to Other Claims to Honors. Sebenico vainly boasts of being the Roman colony Slcum, where Cladiua quartered his veterans, and so styles Itself in public inscriptions and Latin documents. But Slcum stood farther south, near Salona, at n spot still marked by Roman remains. It is to be feared that Sebenico had a sadly ignoble origin, says the Manchester Guardian. The name is said to be derived froni a word that means the fort from whence bandits watched the sea for ships which they attacked and plundered. The little Dalmatian pirates’ lair remnined quite unknown until selected in the early Middle ages by Croatian kings for their favorite residence. Apart from pos session of a picturesque land-locked harbor, the only cathedral in the world built entirely of stone gnd metal, and the nncestral house of the Orsini, Se benico hns few claims to distinction. However, by some people Sebenico will always be held in high honor for being the place where they make maraschino, an insidious liquor dis tilled from small blqck cherries. The Wrong Saint. Childhood’s propensity for getting names mixed was well Illustrated a Sunday morning or two ago when little Richard, on the way to Sunday school with his mother and sister, met' another little boy afflicted with St. Vitus’ dance. '*• Richard was deeply Impressed by the Incident and asked his mother what was the matter with the little boy. ‘‘Poor child,” the sympathetic moth er replied. ‘‘He has St. Vitus's dance.” Back at home, Richard rushed In to tell his father of the Incidents of the morning and closed with the re mark : “And—and—and we saw a poor lit tle boy who jerked all over. He had the Ritcomb Riley.’* s ,1.11 .»" -.'ll l.l I , ... I. The Man in tne Moon. Observations made from August, 1920, to February, 1921, by Prof. Wil liam Henry Pickering of Harvard, who is one of the world’s leading astron omers and an authority on lunar and Martian plienomepa, tend, he asserts, to prove beyond doubt that life exists on the surface of the moon. The fu