The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, January 25, 1923, Image 3

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    i
I
f LOOM
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When the body begins to stiffen
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k is usually an indication that the
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ta»ek for the name Gold Medal on every
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dlreet tram UESS1C • EUUS. Ornkta MEMM1U, TEkW.
Settled.
"Well, want to marry my daughter,
I suppose,” snapped the grumpy old
millionaire ns he glowered at the
young man before him. Then, adjust
ing his glasses, he added: "By the
way, aren't you one of my daughter’s
former suitors ?”
"N-n-no, sir,” faltered the timid
youth.
“Well, you are now,” said the old
grouch ns he turned away. “Get out 1”
—Boston Transcript.
Sure Relief
FOF| INDIGESTION
6 Bell-aws
l Mot water
i^\ Sure Relief
DELL-ANS
25$ AND 75$ PACKAGES EVERYWHERE
8I0UX CITY PTG. CO.. NO. 4-1923. '
Self-adinlrution is apt to cause a
man to stretch the truth.
Fame cares little for the workman, i
but much for the work.
The man who lives by his wits Is 1
not always a high liver.
took to Your Eyes
Beautiful Eyes, like fine
Taeth, ire the rieult of Corutant
On. The dally uie of Mttriae
tnakea Et»« Clear and Radiant.
Eulorablc. Hanaiesr. Sold and
Racommcndad by All Drusglata.
wm/sgi
REFUSE TO
RUN TRAINS
FOR FRENCH
Traffic Tieup Predicted—
Many Miners Quit—Frertch
Soldiers Man Trains—Labor
Being Imported.
BY C. F. BERTELLI,
Universal Service Correspondent.
Paris, Jan. 21.—The great rail
road strike in the Ruhr and
Rhineland is on. One half of all
the railroaders in the occupied
territories went on strike at 5
o’clock Sunday night. The bal
ance of them will leave their
posts Monday.
By Monday night, it is predict
ed the railroads will be tied up
completely and the French will
he unable to move the coal they
are taking from the requisitioned
mines.
The famous Paris-Berlin express
was stopped at Dortmouth Sunday
evening when the engine and train
crews quit.
Other Strikes Under Way.
In addition to the rail strike which
is counted on by the Germans to-par
alyze, besides the railroads, a large
part of the traffic on the canal sys
tems fed by the railroads, strikes are
now on in 18 mines and many fac
tories.
All the banks at Essen, Dortmund
and Bochum have been closed and
have announced they will remain
closed until the French release their
grasp on the Ruhr branches of the
Reiehbank, seized during the week.
The reports received by the French
press indicate that a general strike is
likely to be In effect by Tuesday.
Streets in Cities Guarded.
Trench machine guns have been
strung across the streets of Essen
and Dortmund to prevent the striking
railroaders and miners from, staging
hostile demonstrations. Thus far, no
serious incidents are reported.
Czecho-Slovakian and Italian la
borers en route to the Ruhr to take
the place of strikers, were halted at
the German frontiers. They will be
detoured and are expected to go to
work under supervision of the French
Monday.
Referring to this importation of
outside labor, Sunday night’s Intran
slgeant says:
"This is the commencement of the
de-Prussianization of the Ruhr." .
Sunday evening’s socialist papers
attack the morning Matin for saying:
"It is possible that the war will be
reopened."
Premier Poincare and Minister of
Reparations Barthou Sunday morn
ing completed the new FYench plan
for a moratorium providing Germany
obtains a loan of 3,000,000,000 gold
marks. Of that amount 500,000,000
marks would be used to stabilize the
exchange rate of the mark and the
remainder would be applied on rep
arations to France. Under the plan
Krnnce would retain her hold on the
Ruhr until all the conditions were
fulfilled.
The French communist party at
their meeting Sunday afternoon here
voted in favor of the order from the
Third Internationale at Moscow for
a general strike throughout Europe
on January 31, as a protest against
the French invasion of the Ruhr.
A
By H. W. Smith, Universal Service
Special Correspondent.
(Copyright, 1923, by Universal Service)
Essen, Jan. 21.—A life and death
struggle is developing for possession
of the Ruhr, though for the most
part the struggle still remains be
neath the surface.
On the one side is the great de
termination never to release the
stranglehold on the Ruhr until the
French have been paid their claims
in full. On the other side is the con
viction that the real aim of the in
vaders is to dismember Germany and
hold In perpetuity what is claimed as
security only.
The struggle may break out into
open conflict at any moment.
Soldiers Man Trains.
Apparently for no other purpose
than to demonstrate that they are
independent of the Germans, so far
as maintaining operations in the
Ruhr are concerned, the French
ran two trains to Essen from Dort
mund Sunday afternoon.
The trains were manned by the
military and claimed to have made
& speed of 75 kilometers per hour
(about 45 miles). The officer in
charge of railway operations told me
Sunday afternoon that he had made
preparations to fill all the places of
German railway men who might
strike throughout the Ruhr and that
he would be able to carry provisions
for the French.
1 asked him how Dortmund would
get its food, and he answered:
“We cannot be expected to send
food to them.”
The Paris-Berlin express was di
verted Sunday at Cologne. The rail
road station at Dortmund was closed
Sunday. A serious situation is re
ported at Dortmund where the whole
railroad staff went out as the result
of an order by the French to shift
back to the Ruhr empty cars diverted
by the Germans.
444 4-4 4444444444444^
4 DIES AGED 125. 4
4 4
4 Atlanta, Ga., Jan. 20 (A. P.) 4
4 —Eveline Booth, a negro wo- 4
4 man, of Oglethorpe county, 4
4 Georgia, is dead at the age of 4
4 125 years, 9 months and 11 4
4 days, according to information 4
4 made public here by Dr. Will- 4
4 lam Davis, director of the d<e- 4
4 partment of vital statistics of 4
4 the state board of health. She 4
4 died December 24, 1922. 4
4 4
4444444444444i44444
REV. GRANT
STANDS PAT
IN SERMON
Fails to Recant as Ordered by
Episcopal Bishop—Restates
to Big Audience Plea for
Freedom of Ideas in Religion.
BY EARL L. SHAUB,
Universal Service Correspondent
New York, J^n. 21.—The Rev.
Percy Stickney Grant, rector of the
church Of the Ascension, who was
ordered by Bishop William T. Man
ning to recant his liberal utterances
or leave the pulpit, Sunday put the
next move into the controversy
squarely up to the Episcopal church.
He did not recant in his sermon: he
did not resign. Instead, he stood pat
and restated many of his utterances
to which the church took exception
last Sunday.
This was takeft by many as a defi
> to churbh.iauthorities and an indi
■ dktion that he will fight to the fin
| jflh,for ,Msi kUpws. His sermon was so
1 worded, however, that it was at most
an indirect &nd subtle defi and not
ah open dn$.1
Voices Plea for Freedom.
The church has the alternative of
dropping the matter or trying the
rector on a charge of heresy.
“Do you want freedom or do you
want authority?” Rev. Grant cried.
“If you want freedom, have it!
“Do you want an American church?
If so, have it!
"Do you want an unshackled
clergy? If so, have It!
“Do you want the truth as the min
ister sees it, or do you want him to
conceal the truth? If you want the,
truth, have it!
“Do you want the church to be si
lenced by sinister financial Inter
ests?
Big Crowd Applauds.
“Do you want to keep young men
out of the church? When you ask
your sons to go to church with you, do
you want them to reply: ‘Please, dad,
don’t ask me to listen to such bunk?’ ’’
This was met by prolonged ap
plause from the congregation that
packed the fashionable edifice to the
walls, jammed the doorways and ex
tended to the sidewalk outside.
The rector reiterated that the be
lief in the Virgin birth of Christ was
not a tenet of the early Christian
church but was the result of the
teaching of theologians who lived
long after the days of Christ and his
apostles.
He said also that Christ Himself
defied the doctrine that he was equal
with God and to prove It he cited
these passages:
“My Father is greater than I”, and
“None is good but God.’’
“I prefer to get my views of what
Christ taught from his associates
rather than from theologians.’’ the
rector said. “I prefer St. Matthew to
Saint Augustine. Now, the first three
gospels clearly state that Jesus was
not equal with God.”
The reading of the second lesson in
the service ended: “Blessed arc ye
when men shall revile you for so per
secuted they the prophets.”
' Fiancee In Congregation.
Mrs. Rita D. Acosta Lydig, former
wife of W. E. D. Stokes and of Capt.
Philip Lydig, whose engagement to
tlie Rev. Dr. Grant was announced
last April, wras in the congregation.
One of the rector’s former assaults
against the rules of the orthodox
church was delivered recently w'hen
Bishop Manning failed to give his
consent to the wedding because Mrs.
Lydig was twice' a divorcee. Mrs.
Lydig is wealthy, attractive and so
cially prominent.
While the Rev. Dr. Grant did not
say wrhat his future course will be,
he intimated he would be guided by
his conscience, defining it as a more
infallible guide than the suasiok, of
ecclesiastic attitudes and traditions.
He referred to his fight for liber
ality, saying:
"Pain is the cal! of a wounded spot
for new blood. Liberal pains are the
cry for new blood in politics, religion
an economics.”
“Before you erect a new building
you must tear away the old,” he said,
and added:
"Well, it’s the same with ideas.”
Criticizes “Dead Ideas.”
He spoke of the evolution of the
mind as well as the body, saying
Providence protects a man in his ev
olution.
"It is better to have a living idea
that is part of the day,” he said,
“than a full dress idea that is dead.”
“We must have the fullest freedom
of speech so when we hear ideas we
can put them to the test of reason.”
He said that to suppress ideas is
to “blackjack the soul.”
DISORDERS IN THRACE
HALTTRAIN SERVICE
Universal Service.
Rome, Jan. 21. The Orient express
which runs from Paris to Constan
tinople, has been suspended through
the Balkan states.
• The discontinuance of the trans
continental train is due' to the grow
ing disorders in Thrace, where t
Greeks are reported mobilizing for
new war on the Turks.
• —-_T ^ ,
SETS WORLD RECORD IN
GRADE COW MILK TESTS
‘Janesville, Wis., Jan. 20 (A. P.)_
"Kit” a five year old grade Holstein
cow owned by Rockwell and Klatter
Henry, Beloit, has Just finished a
year's production run in the Beloit
Rock county cow testing association,
which makes her a world champion
among grades for production in as
sociation testing work.
The official figures !n#the Wisconsin
register of production is 23,538 pounds
of milk with 806.7 pounds of fat with
an average test of_3.42 per cent.
DYED HER BABY'S COAT,
A SKIRT AND CURTAINS
WITH “DIAMOND DYES"
finch package of "Diamond Dyes” con
tains directions so simple any woman can
dye oi* tint her old, worn, faded things
new. liven if she has never dyed liefore,
•he eah put a new, rich color into shabby
skirts, dresses, waists, coats, stockings,
■westers, coverings, draperies, hangings,
everything. Bur Diamond Dyes—no other
kind -then perfect home dyeing is guar
anteed. Just tell your druggist whether
the material you wish to d.vc is wool or
sl\k, or whether it is Minen, cotton, or
mixed goods. Diamond Di es never streak,
•pot, fade or run.—Advertisement. »
Smallpox Has Afflicted Monkeys.
Explorers of the Brazilian wilds
Lave reported finding monkeys show
ing clear traces of having suffered
from smallpox, says a message from
Rio de Janeiro, according to the New
York Times. George Clarke llleyer,
an expert of life in, the Brazilian for
ests, points out that there is no good
reason why wandering animals and In
sects should not carry smallpox germs
from human victims to their simian
cousins.
Write G. A. Cook, Desk W, Drawer
197, Watertown, S. D., for full par
ticulars ahouf cheap lands ami great
opportunities In Western Canada.
Ancient Mine Working*.
A discovery of considerable archeo
logical interest lias been made 30
miles north of the Beeupoort tin mines
in the Transvaal, near the Becliuana
land border.
A prospector has unearthed what is
apparently a portion of an ancient
smelting plant and a quantity of sing,
which is being submitted to expert ex
amination.
' Nearby were old workings and a
substantial body of ore containing a
whitish ine#al, thought to be platinum
or molybdenum. Mining engineers
have left for the scene of the dis
covery.
To Have a Clear, Sweet Skin
Touch pimples, redness, roughness
or Itching, If any, with Cutlcura Oint
ment, then bathe with Cutlcura Soap
ami hot water. Rinse, dry gently and
dust on n little Cutlcura Talcum to
leave a fascinating fragrance on skin.
Everywhere 25c each.—Advertisement.
GOT OLD GENTLEMANS “GOAT”
College Boy’s Expression Made Him
Fear Money Had Been Wasted
on His Education,
Whenever old Eben Tootbnker
doesn’t understand what you say he
says, “What say?” So do his neigh
bors. It Is not strange fehat he doesn’t
understand Ids college boy son's way
of asking the same question.
Old Etien’s wife noticed thnt he
was somewhat depressed the evening
after the boy had got back to the
farm from Ids first year at college.
“What’s the matter, Eben?” she asked.
“Mary, I’ve spent $900 on thnt
boy’s education, and I’m afraid it’s
wasted,” said Eben. “He don’t know
as much typ he did when he went to
college.”
“Why, what do you fiean, father?”
“Well, tonight I said to him that it
looked to me 'sif It might rain tomor
row, and what do ye s’pose he said?”
“Why, I don't know. What did he
say?”
"Well, sir, he begged my pardon!”—
Youth's Companion.
His Wife's Voice,
While visiting my brother one eve
ning 1 heard some one singing in the
yard. Supposing It to be the maid, I
said, “She thinks she has some voice."
My brother said, “I guess thut is
Mrtry.”
Mary was bis wife.—Exchange.
News to Him.
“My wdfe has been nursing a grouch
for a week.” “That so? I didn’t know
you were ill.”
•525
f. 9. b. Flint, Mick
Lowest Priced Quality
Automobile
i£very Chevrolet is fully equipped when sold.
It has electric lights and starter, gasoline tank in the
rear, demountable rims and extra rim and tire carrier,
3-speed transmission and reverse, speedometer and all
necessary indicators on the instrument board, curtains
open with doors of open models. All closed models
have high grade Fisher Bodies with plate glass win
dows. There is nothing more to buy but the license.
Costs least per mile for gasoline and oil.
There are more than 10,000 dealers and service sta
tions throughout the country. Repairs are made on a
low-cost flat rate system.
for Economical Transportation
i
Prices F. O. B. Flint, Michigan
SUPERIOR Two Paaacnger Roadatcr . . $510
SUPERIOR Five Passenger Touring . . 525
SUPERIOR Two Paaacnger Utility Coup* WO
SUPERIOR Four Pa.aenger Scdancttc . 850
SUPERIOR Five Paaacnger Sedan ... WO
SUPERIOR Light Delivery.510
Chevrolet Motor Company
Detroit, Michigan
NO CANARIES IN CANARIES
Marines Who Had Expected to Stock
Up There Met With Some
Disappointment.
Cunarles are scarcer tlinn hens’
teeth In the Canary Islands, record
ing to the United States marines of
the cruiser Pittsburgh, who arrived at
Gibraltar recently ufter a visit to Las
Palmas, the principal seaport of those
islands.
The marines expected to find ca
naries hopping all over the islands,
waiting for salt to lie sprinkled on
their tails. Disillusionment came with
their first visit ashore.
The islands got their name from
cants, the Latin name for dog. and
the marines say there are fewer '•«
nnriea in tlie Canaries than their are
snakes in Ireland.
Relatives and sweethearts of the
sea soldiers who were promised a ship
ment of feathered songsters nt an early
date will now have to wait until the
marines have an opportunity to visit
a bird store in the United States.
Any marine on tlie I'ittshurglifHs
ready to soli a canary cage for a
song.—From Letter to the Philadel
phia Evening Public Ledger.
Another Infant Prodigy.
“And whose hoy are you?” the vis
itor naked of little Robert.
“Mamma’s hoy and papa’s boy," was
the prompt answer.
“Well, well! That’s fine!" the vis
itor commented. “Cut just now can
you be both mamma's boy and pupa's
hoy?”
But Robert had evidently thought
along those lines himself. He came
back promptly with:
“Why, that’s easy; can't a wagon
have two horses?”
Everybody knows how everybody
else ought to do things.
Appearances Sometimes Lie. >
Geneva, three and one-lmlf years
old, has u baby brother seven months
old and is, therefore, “wise” ns
the articles required to provide for
all the needs and comforts of an In
fant.
She was In a store the other day
when n woman, a stranger to 1mlh
Geneva and her aunt, entered. Thu
newcomer was nicely dressed nnd car
ried a commodious leather handbag,
closed at the top by a drawstring.
Walking up to the woman, Geneva
asked: ‘Have you a baby?”
“No,” said the surprised woman.
“Then,” asked the little girl, “why
have you this?" laying her hand on.
the bag that the woman curried.
Endangers Fur Animals.
According to Dr. William T. IJorn
nday It takes HO skins tJ make the
average mink wrap, 200 for a squirrel
coat an l 280 for a black nude cout,
90 skins may go to tbe making of h
striped skunk jacket, and 300 to a
Siberian ermine wrap. Before many
years. If the present rate of slaughter
continue?, many of our most Interest
ing aniiimls will he practically extinct;
even now the trapper Is forced rather
afield, and skins once* unmarketable
are being used to supply the deficiency.
—Scientific American.
Nerves
of
Steel—
The successful man of today is clear-headed, self-reliant. His
keen eye and steady hand result from abundant, self-controlled
energy, and steady nerves.
Such a man can overcome difficulties because he is physically
fit. Foolish habits of food and drink have no place in his schema
of things. When he finds that coffee disagrees he promptly
changes to healthful POSTUM.
This pure cereal beverage i3 not only free from the health
disturbing drug element in coffee, but there’s comfort and
satisfaction in its delicious, full-bodied flavor.
You’ll find Postum a factor for Health.
“There’s a Reason”
Your grocer sells Postum In two forms: Instant Postum
(in tins) prepared instantly in the cup by the addition of
boiling water. Postum Cereal (in packages) for those who
prefer to make the drink while the meal is being prepared;
made by boiling fully 20 minutes.
Made by Postum Cereal Company, Inc.
Battle Creek, Michigan.