The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, February 15, 1923, Image 3

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    _L After Every Meet |
WRIGUEYS
Chew your food
well, then nsc
WRIGLEY^S to
| aid digestion.
It also keeps
the teeth' clean,
i breath sweet,
| appetite keen.
The Great American
In the Foreign Field.
There are 699 foreign mission boards
and their auxiliaries, represented by
25,000 missionaries laboring in the
world-field, and they are associated
with an army of 110,000 native teach*
ers and preachers.
freedomTfrom
LAXATIVES
Discovery by Scientists Has Replaced
Them.
Pills and salts give temporary re
lief from constipation only at the ex
pense of permanent Injury, says an
eminent medical authority.
Science has found a newer, better
way—a means as simple as Nature
itself.
7a perfect health a natural lubricant
keeps the food waste soft and moving.
But when constipation exists this nat
ural lubricant is not sufficient. Medi
cal authorities have found that the
gentle lubricating action'of Nujol most
closely resembles that of Nature’s own
lubricant. As Nujol is not a laxative
it cannot gripe. It is in no sense a
medicine. And like pure water It is
harmless an<^ pleasant.
Nujol is prescribed by physicians;
used In leading hospitals. Get a bottle
from your druggist today.—Advertise*
ment.
Mostly.
Comedian—“When is an actor not an
actor?” His Friend—“Nine times out
of ten.”
Try PISO’S I
COUGH gigs
pleasant—no op- 11
i- set stomach—no b
opiates. 36c and B|
1-1 60co*«rywhef*M
Cuticura Talcum
is Fragrant and
Very Healthful
Soap 25c, Ointment 25 and 50c, Talcum 25c.
There aj*e scores
of reasons why
"Vaseline” Petroleum Jelly should be
accounted a household mainstay. A
few of them are bums, sores, blisters,
cuts. It comes In bottles—stall drug*
gists and general stores.
CHESEBROUOH^MANUFACTURINO CO.
State Street New York
Vaseline
RcgUS.Rat.Off
PEYrOLEUM JELLY
** Pruluct is rurmmtndrd Mryudmu
kmauu •fit* mbmiuu purity *nd afrtHvmm
AS SUREAS DAWN BRINGS ANEWDW
ftitiii
imiiiiiiiiiil
takThatQMand ««|
ns FitTbmorvoar.
LOOK OLDIES'?
JryWlI UbU I bottle of Q-Ban Hair j
Color Restorer will bring back original color
quickly — stops dandruff. At all good druggists.
75c, or direct from HeMie-EHa, CUsriAa NeapUi. Tom.
The Cruel Retort.
They were sented on a little rustic
bench. The moon shone through the
trees. All at once the girl timidly
si.id: “Jackj dear, I can’t understand
why you lavish all your affections on
me above all other girls In the world.
Why is it?”
“Hanged if I know,” lie replied,
“and all the other fellows down at
the house say that they can’t make it
out, either."—Denison Flamingo.
'Morning
Keep Your Eyfes
Clean — Clear «■»< Healthy
Hr Fr»o «•* MuHm CfcChltHo.UA
want mug LAWS
LEFTUNCHANGEQ
Delegation Tells Nebraska
Legislature Widespread
Sentiment Against Pro
posed Amendments.
Lincoln, Neb., Feb! 9 (Special.)—
A delegation of business and profes
sional men from northeastern Ne
braska was here Thursday to use its
influence on the legislature in oppo
sition to any change in the present
road law. Wednesday they were
given a heading before the joint sen
ate and house committees on roads.
Ex-Senator E. C. Houston, of Te
kamah, was spokeman-in-chlef for
the delegation. Those of the satisfied
group who want the legislature to let
well enough alone and who said so
are Ex-Senator A. II, 'Miller, of
Washington county; Clark Ohlan,
Blair; J. W. Tyson, Herman; W. J.
Isgrig, Tekamah; A. B. Peden, Oak
land; E. C. Engham, Lyonjs; Ben Ev
ans, Decatur; Ex-Kepresentative H.
L. Webster, Tekamah; Rudolph Braz
da, West Point.
“The sentiment is general,” said
Ex-Senator Houston, "that there is
no present need for a change in the
road laws. The people are satisfied
with the arrangement both as to
conduct and maintenance.” This sen
timent was echoed by others of the
delegation.
CflUjjTEMSE
Nebraska Legislature Refuses
to Reimburse Boyd County
for the Walter Sim
mons Trial.
Lincoln, Neb., Feb. 6 (Special).—
The house this morning killed a bill
introduced by Representative Thatch
er to repay Boyd county for the $5,000
expenses incurred in the prosecution
of Walter H. Simmons for murder.
The county asked re-imbursement on
the ground that it was small and un
able to stand so great an expense.
The house advanced to third read
ing a bill that refers to a vote of the
entire people the question Of whether
a county agent shall be employed. The
present law makes it mandatory
where 300 farmers so petition.
The house passed a bill allowing
railroads to sell tickets at reduced
rates to mirlnters, theological stu
dents Ailing "vulplts and mission
workers.
Representatives from the cattle
country have introduced a series of
bills aimed at putting an end to the
present form of thievery going on In
that section.
“We are asking the legislature for
.Authority to deal with the cattle
t Vleves in a lawful manner,” says
Representajwe Broome, of Sheridan
co'inty. • “K the legislature does not
do this, the newspapers will have
some sensational stories to print.
There will be some dead bodies found
on the prairies some morning, and
they will be those of men who are
known to be the thieves, but upon
whom proof cannot be fastened.
"Cattle thievery is being carried
on in an up-to-date and scientific
manner. No longer do the rustlers
confine themselves to branding mav
ericks or killing a cow, hiding the hide
and then peddling the meat around.
They cut one or two cows out here
and one or two there and when they
get a carload drive them to the rall
rodd. There they are shipped to
markets where ther are no brand in
spectors. The business has grown so
much in the last two years that the
cattlemen will resort to violence If
the kind of laws they are askipg are
not passed.”
RESISTS PAYING
State Attempts to Collect for
Care of Insane Person—
Claim Is It Would Be
Double Taxation.
---
Lincoln, Neb., Feb. 6 (Special).—
Whether the state can collect from
tl)e estate of persons who are treated
In the hospitals for the insane fox
the cost of keeping them there is a
question raised in an appeal tiled in
supreme court by representatives of
Thomas Murphy, deceased, of Keith
county. The state has a bill of $1,000
for five years’ room, treatment and
board at the Hastings asylum. The
law gives the state the right to re
cover1, and the constitutionality of
this statute is assailed in the case.
The claim is that the Murphy pro
perty having contributed, by taxes
levied every year for the support of
the state institution, it is diouble tax
ation to require him or his estate to
pay for his keep at it.
--
DOCTOR FACES TEN
YEARS’ IMPRISONMENT
_
Omaha, Feb. 10 (Special).—Dr.
John T. Mathews was found guilty by
a Jury in district court here at 8
o’clock tonight on a charge of mur
der by performing an illegal operation.
The Jury was out an hour and a half.
The doctor was charged with perform
ing the illegal operation last December
on Miss Loretta McDermott, Bassett,
Neb., school teacher. The penalty pro
vided by law is imprisonment for
one to 10 years.
KEEPING IIP WITH
THEfilESS
Nebr&bka Legislators Devot
ing Time to Committee Work
—Anti-Picketing Amend
ment Into Discard.
Lincoln, Neb.. Feb. 8 (Special).—
The house and senate are both well
up with their business. Neither has
more than a bill or two on general
file and the greater part of the time
Is devoted to committee meetings. A
general disposition Is shown to
slaughter bills that are not of Impor
tance.
The house Wednesday passed a bill
providing for the election of officers
of an irrigation district by the di
rectors instead of the land owners, and
providing for a consolidation of these
officers. It also passed one that
allows the county attorney of Doug
las County to spend $2,600 a year in
detective service, as also one pro
viding for foreclosure of tax sale
certificates held By school districts,
drainage districts and other subdi
visions.
By a vote of four to three the labor
committee reported for indefinite
postponement a bill amending the
anti-picketing law; which was sub
jected to a referendum last fall and
adopted. The bill proposed to permit
strikers to talk with strike-breakers
and made it an offense only when
they started to using intimidating or
coercive language.
The senate has decided to go into
the investigating business itself, and
has appointed two committees to
look into the affairs of the state in
situations, one to delve into affairs
of the state university and another to
look Into normal school affairs. The
senate wants it understood, however,
that these are not "smelling” com
mittees, but named for the purpose
of ascertaining what facts are nec
essary for the senate finance com
mittee to know when it starts to look
ing over the appropriations bill when
it comes from the house.
The house university investigation
committee has been given until Feb
ruary 17 to report. It is expected to
make some harsh criticisms of meth
ods. The senate committee will not
duplicate this investigation.
The senate killed a bill Thursday
that would have made every county a
unit for telephone service and given
every subscriber free service within
its border on the ground that it would
raise rates. It passed a number of
bills, among them one providing that
small school districts bordering on
other states may make arrangements
to have their children given high
school training in the adjoining states.
' *
\ ^
But Governor Bryan Main
tains Tuberculosis Work Is
In Interest of the
Packers.
Lincoln, Neb., Feb. 7 (Special).—
Governor Bryan refuses to take the
back track on the matter of a bovine
tuberculosis appropriation, although
a petition was received from 100
members of the Madison County
Farm Bureau' urging that he favor
$300,000 for this purpose and to con
tinue the department of agriculture
and H. K. Smith, former expert in the
employ of the state, says that Bryan
doesn’t know what he is talking about
when he says that the packers and
the veterinarians are the principal
beneficiaries.
The governor says that the eradica
tion work does not eradicate, and he
goes after Mr. Smith in this wise:
"The whole scheme is one by which
the owners of registered herds get
their doctor bills paid by the public.
Mr. Smith told me recently, in a talk,
that he is receiving pay for spreading
this eradication propaganda. He
further told me he was in the pay
of the packers. His letters should
not be published by the press unless
nmfked advertising matter for the
packers.”
American Legion Members of
Nebraska Solidly Against
Any Tampering With
That Statute.
Lincoln, Neb., Feb. 5 (Special).—
The propsed repeal of the language
law, it is predicted will never get to
Governor Bryan because It will bo
knocked out in the legislature. It
proposes to leave nothing to the law
but that section relating to the Uis
crimlffttlon of the English language.
The American Legion members are
solidly against tampering with the a t
in any way and those who would 1
to kill or cripple it are fearful of th •
fate if they vote for the amended l
FIRE DESTROYS HOME
Allen, Neb., Eeb. 7 (Special).—
Fire starting from a defective flue in
the roof, destroyed the dwelling
house, at Martlnsburg, seven miles
north of here Sunduy night, which
was occupied by the Jesse
Grover family. The fire was
discovered at about 7:30 in the
evening, and with the prompt aid of
neighbors, all the personal property of
the family was saved. The house
was perhaps the oldest dwelling In
Martinsburg, having been erected
almost 50 years ago by Jonathan
Martin, the founder of the town and
after whom the vijjage was named.
DECLARES TANLAC
“IS BEST Of ALL”
St. Paul Woman Says Stomach
Trouble Is Gone and She Has
Gained 10 Pounds.
“Tanlac Iras meant health and hap
piness to me, and I think It has no
equal,” declared Mrs. Albert Raping,
highly-respected resident of 29 E. 10th
8t„ St. Paul, Minn.
“I was so terribly run down my ;
housework seemed like a mountain to
me, and lots of times I had to give up
and rest. I was nervous, weak, and
had splitting headaches and awful dlz
cy spells. My stomach was so badly
out of order almost everything I nte
would sour and 1 suffered terribly from
gas, heartburn and a distressing smoth
ering feeling- I could not sleep nights,
my back ached terribly, I lost weight j
till my clothes didn’t fit, and was In
a generally wretched condition. •
“But now I get real Joy out of car-1
lng for my house. Since taking Tnn-1
lac I have gained ten pounds, never j
have indigestion and all my aches and
pains are gone. I take pleasure in
recommending Tanlac.”
Tanlac Is for sale by all good drug
gists. Over 35 million bottles sold.—
Advertisement.
Marriage and All That.
“Marriage used to mean cleaving to
each other. Cleaving, sir. Now, it’s j
just a trick to make sure that there j
shall be at any rate two persons in the
world Who will never meet again.”
“Man Is an inexperienced motorist
In the Alps and women are his hair
pin turns."
“After you have been married live
years, there should always he someone
to dinner.”
“Compromise Is the breath' of mar
ried life; and it is almost more Im
portant for a man to learn what his
wife deprecates than what she ap
plauds. The temperature of the hot
water Into which he Is predestined peri
odically to plunge will he lower if Ire
falls to share her antipathies.”—E. V.
Lucas.
Folks talk the most when they know
their talk won't effect anything.
A political pull is often a great
strain on the candidate's leg.
The course of true love requires a
lot of money to keep it In repair.
Winter Find You Tired
and Achy?
DOE1S winter find you miserable with an aching bock? Do
you get up lame and stiff — lag through the day tired,
weak and depressed? Do you know why you are so
run down?
•
There’s good reason for your condition and likely it’s weak
kidneys. Winter’s colds and chills throw a heavy burden on
the kidneys The kidneys fall behind and poisons accumulate.
It’s little wonder, then, that you suffer backache, rheumatic
pains, headaches, dizziness and bladder irregularities.
Don’t risk serious kidney disease. Use Doan's Kidney Pills
before it is too late. Doan's have helped thousands and
should help you. Ask your neighborl
“Use Doan's, "Say These Good Folks:
Mrs. A. Jenson, 407 Bur
leigh St., Yankton, S. D., says:
“My kidneys caused me to suf
fer a lot. My back ached .and
pained awfully, especially when
I did my washing. Headaches
were frequent and the action
of my kidneys was too free. If
I took cold, the trouble was
worse. Doan’s Kidney Pills
soon brought me relief from
the backati.. s end ether igns
of kidney c<> plaint.”
G. Addink, Orange City, In., I
says: "I used Doan’s Kidney 1;
Pills for years. I had a dull, S
aching pain in the small of my |,
back. I had dizzy spells so |:
that I would have to stand for f
a minute after getting up from 13
n chair. When I caught cold it a
would settle on my kidneys and g
cause my back to ache. I keep |
Doan’s in the house and ward ■
off these symptoms. They al- I
ways give me satisfaction.” %
DOAN’S ™
At All Dealers, 60c a Box. Foster-Milburn Co., MChcm., Buffalo, N. Y.
Ill Gives Charming New Solor Tone ta Old Sweaters
1U ueil ill PUTNAM FADELESS DYES—dyes or tints as you wish
DIFFERENT KIND OF CAPTAIN I
That Particular Police Official Was
the Incarcerator, Not Liberator,
of Suspected Persons.
The letters O. It. following the name
on the slate at the city prison mean
that the person rrmed has been re
leased from jail on his own recog
nizance, or without being required
to give bond. Naturally, the first
thought of an attorney representing a
prisoner Is to obtain the release of
his client on bis O. It.
Several days ago a lawyer walked
into the office of Edward Shubert,
captain of police, at headquarters and
made an eloquent plea for the release
on his own recognizance of a craps
shooter. Ilis plea fell on deaf ears.
“Say, look here, you’ve got the
wrong captain,” Shubert said. "There's
the let 'em pass out captain over
there. I’m the put ’em in captain."
The lawyer left the office, shaking liIs
head.—Indianapolis News.
It occasionally happens that a good
debater proves his case when he Isn’t
sure of It himself.
Complications.
“Wliut Is this platonic love, uny
hojv?"
“It is supposed to he sor’t of Intel
lectual attachment, In which a man
and a woman gain inspiration from
each other hy an interchange of
thought.”
“I see.”
"Hut it usually lends to a situation
in which some lawyers or a court
functionary speaks tlie last word.”—
Birmingham Age-IIerald.
And There Are Many Such.
A man appeared at the children’s
home to adopt a hoy. Among the chil
dren playing in tlie yard was a l»oy
who had .just arrived. He was ragged
nfcd dirty.
The man decided to take ldm and
said: “Son, go get ready now and we
shall soon lie off.”
"Mister,” said the boy seriously, “I—
I ain’t got nothing to get ready wlift.”
—"Exchange.
A Gain.
Rub—Itobbs has lost ills reputation.
Dub—How fortunate for him!—Naw
York Sun.
LIVED UP TO HIS GROUCH
New Yorker,Surely Went the Limit B®.
tween Saturday Afternoon and
Monday Morning. *
Wl.IJIt hud a grouch when he left
the office Saturday afternoon. Ha re
fused an Invitation to join a friend
who said he knew a place where the
no idem substitute for the wild thyme
blows and started for his lonesome
home.
The grouch was still in evidence
when be return'd Monday morning'.
“I got borne Saturday,” he said, “sat
around a while, took a nap and de
cided l did not want to go out to din
ner, so I drank n part of a bottle of
sftile milk and went to bed. I have
spoken just two words since I went
away Saturday. They are the name
of a brand of cigar, and I used them
in buying a smoke."
“Didn't you sneak to the waiter
where you get your meals?" asked a
friend.
“Not n word,” Bald tbe owner of th®
grouch. “I ate In n nickle-in-the-slot
place."—New York Sun.
Y^ What is
good health worth
to you?
Health is priceless. You wouldn’t
knowingly part with it for anything
in the *|rorld. __
Why then go you risk it needlessly for
the sake of a few cups of coffee? Coffee
contains caffeine, a harmful drug which
often interferes with nerves and digestion.
There’s an easy, pleasant way to avoid
this menace to hqplth, without any sac
rifice of comfort or satisfaction. Drink
Postum instead of coffee.
Postum is a pure, cereal beverage—
wholesome and delicious — a safeguard
for health.
: “There*s a Reason”
{ for Postum
Your grocer sells Postum
iu 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 Co., Inc.
Battle Creek, Mich
10*