The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, March 20, 1924, Image 9

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    Rejuvenated
Prominent retired merchant
•ays he feels like new man since
Tanlac relieved him of his trou
bles. Can now outwalk men 20
years younger.
R. E. Boyd, 5000 Fourteenth St,
{N. W., Washington, D. C., for forty*
eight years prominent hardware mer*
chant in the national capital, but now
retired, lends his name to further the
{cause of Tanlae.
“Indigestion and stomach weakness
jof a very pronounced type bad troubled
;me for several months prior to last
October fifteenth,” said Mr. Boyd, re
cently, “but since that date the Tanlae
treatment has made a new man of me.
Now I eat heartily, never have a sign
of indigestion, sleep like a log, and get
up mornings feeling like an athlete.
Today I can outwalk men twenty years
younger. Tanlae alone put me In my
I present fine physical condition, en
abling me to get more real pleasure
;than ever before out of meeting and
mingling with friends. Tanlae has re
juvenated me completely, so to speak.
It’s the finest medicine I ever ran
across.”
Tanlae Is for sale by all good drug
gists. Accept no substitute. Over 40
million bottles sold.
: Take Tanlae Vegetable Pills.
Clear Your Sian ,
wuh 4
Cuticura.
Soap to Claaaao /
Oiataaaat to Haal T4
Alohalr N»ikia< >«twf
» ——.■■■• " ■■■ ■ ' — -—- ...I——II—. —
•
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j
t
I
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1
♦
- 1 i:
i
i
ml catarrh have found Zon
itc highly efficacious as treat
ment for it. Spray the nose
Corning and night accord
g to direction* on bottle.
Tones up the mucous mem
branes and kills germs with
out injuring body tissues.
Doesn’t irritate or bum and
is positively non-poison®***.
'SIOUX CITY PTO. CO., NO. 12-1924.
Stolidity sometimes saves a man
'where reason wouldn't.
A Standard External Qemedy
of known value—«nfe an! effectlvei
.It’s “Allcock’s”—th* original and gen
# nine porous plaster.—Adv.
Prudery is n wig of'eu used to cover
. a bald character.
r- ---
Sure Relief
FOR INDIGESTION
6 BELtrANS
Hot water
Sure Relief
ELL-ANS
25* AND 75* PACKAGES EVERYWHERE
TODAY
BY ARTHUR BRISBANE
Foor old Uncle Sam didn't start
the war, and it cost him dozens of
billions, yet it seems impossible for
him to get free from It.
Our General Dawes, as was pre
dicted here, helps to brlhg In a re
port that says to Uncle Sam, "pay,
please.”
It seems that Germany must have
a loan, to get started on reparations.
She asked for twenty five hundred
millions. She Is to have $250,000,000,
if plans go tnrough.
“All nations, including this, will
contribute to the loan, and all will
be expected to squeeze Germany, If
she does not pay.”
That’s the program thus far.
Later, when Germany, having
bought raw materials, gets her breath
and starts paying reparations, will
Uncle Sam get part of the repara
tions? Don't ask foolish questions.
Certainly not.
But, in case Germany fails to pay
the fancy reparations. Uncle Sam
may have another chance to make
himself useful. As he lent Germany
part of the money she needed, what
more reasonable than for him to help
pay the reparations, in case Germany
skips payments.
That is the plan, and you will see'
it materialize.
The big Anaconda Copper Com
pany skipped Us regular dividend
resterday. That frightened the mar
ket, knocked down Anaconda stock
ind many other stocks that "sold
■off in sympathy." You’ll hear some
market expert announce gloomily
that trouble must be expected If de
magogues insist on senatorial in
vestigations that interfere with big
business.
On the other hand, American Loco
motive had its best year, with a net
profit of more than $12,000,000, a
profit above $21 per share.
American Locomotive sells around
$74 while Canadian Pacific paying
;10 per share, sells to the same crowd
of American speculators at $200. How
do you explain that? Do you inves
tors consider the Canadians better
managers, or more he\e«t, or what?
There ought to be no skipping 01
dividends by copper companies, and
would not be, if the public understood
the value of copper and braeis, and it
architects and builders would serve
their clients faithfully, instead ol
using trashy, rusting Iron, to lower
prices. Copper and brass, in building
would save tens of millions a year in
repairs, for they last indefinitely.
Using galvanized iron in water pipes
is wasteful folly.
Five nuns, little sisters of the poor,
were detained at Ellis Island because
the Immigration quota of their native
country was exhausted.
They are now admitted, under a
special ruling, as teachers. The pub
lic will welcome that ruling, since it
eaves five good women from deporta
tion. What about the mother of five
children, cruelly sent back to Europe
a few days ago? Could not some spe
cial ruling have been made to admit
her as a MOTHER? Is there a
higher calling than that of mother,
In the estimation of eur govern
ment?
Mrs. Brawner, very rich, dies and
leaves $1,476,138 to her Infant son.
Her older children get, each, only half
as much.
That sounds unjust but it reflects
nature’s wisdom. The human baby
Is the most helpless of living crea
tures. Only the passionate devoiiwi
of the normal human mother, at*& her
conviction that each baby Is the most
wonderful ever born, has carried the
human race along thus far.
When h. woman with millions
leaves a double share for her infant,
she is only doing what every normal
mother does in another way.
Akali Sikhs, who are the fighting
men of India, sent soldiers to fight
the British India troops. Mohandas
Gandhi urges the Sikhs not to fight
and not to send any fighting men.
Non-resistance will win, he says.
Gandhi’s attitude explains how it
is possible for 100,000 Englishmen in
India to hold down 300.000,000
Asiatics. There is as much difference
between a Hindu of Gandhi’s type
and a fighting Irishman, for instance,
as between a lop-eared rabbit and a
wildcat. But that Is no disgrace to
rabbit or wildcat. It's only a differ
ence.
Mr. Belton, a deputy police com
missioner in New York, says that
city will be dry in three months. It
will not be dry in three months, not
In three years. Governor Plnchot
says President Coolldge ought to
make the nation dry. President
Coolldge could not do It, even if the
. Jaw would let him use all the navy,
'and all the army.
'" I
This country Is firmly settled on a
basts of bootleg whisky, and the
question is what can be done about
ft? It was predicted, whan prohibi
tion started, that hardened whisky
drinkers would get whisky somehow,
of course. But they would die off,
poisoned, and then the young people
would grow up free of alcohol, and
clear. In thought. Unfortunately, ths
young people, millions of them, are
growing up with, a whisky flask on
the hip, many of them drunk night
after nilght—and every head of a
school for boys and girls knows It.
Dr. Holt, who died In China tbs
other day, knew as much about child
ren—especially rich rmen’s children—
as any oiie In America.
Shortly before he died he said, “un
less something happens to make con
ditions better, and If the children of
this period grow up as they are
starting, they won’t have tiiough in
stitutions in the country to hold
them.”
A Meriden (Conn.,) factory superin
tendent’s will was filed the other day,
and discovery was made that he ha d
left virtually his entire estate, valued
at about *69,000, to a young man who
bad helped to support himself by sell
ing newspapers. The story Is that this
youth had never failed to give the
‘'lonesome old man" a smile as he
passed through the factory selling his
papers, and the circumstance had so
impressed the latter that he has made
the young man fairly independent
through his will.
The country girl is ablo to put one
over on her city cousin in at least one
respect. According to statistics, the
country and small-town girls marry at
an earlier age on the average than do
the girls who dwell In cltlea.
CURI08ITY.
Wichita Eagle.
An old gentleman in Pennsyl
vania was frozen to death recent
ly when hi went some dlstano*
from his front door to consult a
thermometer. He wanted to know
exactly how cold it was, and was
able to tell his rescuers, with his
last breath, the precise and late
reading on the tube of mercury.
He was something of a preclsion
ist.
Ctirriosity concerning inconse
quential things is one of the most
troublesome characteristics of
humanity. The public’s mad and
unreasoning desire to know where
the fire is has cost the telephone
companies millions «f dollars and
has driven thousands of operators
insane. »
Financier or UsurerT
Milwaukee Journal.
In floating a $160,000,000 loan for
the Japanese government American
bankers step farther Into the field of
international finance. And, since
banking arrangements open the ways
of commerce and trade, the loan ought
to bring added foreign contracts and
foreign business to the United States.
But the loan seems to leave Japan
gravely doubtful about whether she
Is dealing with a new and w-elcome
group of international financiers or
is facing international OCurers.
Japan will pay an interest rate in
excess of 7 per cent, for her money.
The yield to American bond buyers
will be 7.10 per cent, at the offering
price of 92Vi. Japan has a right to
wonder at her treatment In the
world’s money mart, now established
in the United States by virtue of our
huge supply of gold.
International good will and under
standing will suffer rather than
thrive if debtor nations gradually
come to the conclusion that a rising
creditor nation is pursuing the course
of a Shylock. It is hard to think of
much better security than the Jap
anese government, as Is evidenced by
the oversubscription to this loan.
Stress may force nations temporally
embarrassed financially to submit to
the lender’s terms; but to the extor
tion he exacts these nations will add
a full measure of cordial dislike.
To ■ Far-Away Farther.
The wise folks say that things you
never had you cannot miss—
But, since I've been a tiny girl.
I’ve known it wasn’t true—
For all my life, dear daddy, I have
missed your care, your kiss!
And yet I don’t remember them;
you died when I was two.
When all the other little girls at
supper time would run
Toward town to meet their daddies,
and they seemed so glad and
gay!
They’d skip along and hold their
hands and have the grandest
fun—
Oh, how I wished that I might run
and meet my dad that way!
Then later, with my high school
chums, down town In little
bands.
The girls would seek their daddies
. and th«^ <h%nk them with a kiss
For the ice cream soda money that*
was slipped into their hands—
I used to wonder what adventure
a west could equal this!
The night of graduation, - with the
atage all trimmed so fine,
With potted plants and bunting, and
the girls in fluffy white—
Down in front the proud eyed daddies,
each one thinking, '‘She is
mine!’’
As they watched their little daugh
ters. Dad, I cried for you that
night.
The years have passed, and now I
watch a little boy at play—
And life has shown to me the sharp
est anguish one can know
Is when our children suffer; so
daddy, I Just pray
You have not known my sorrows,
for I would not have it so.
I like to think on some far star you
wait, from cares set free.
And never know when life’s black
waters round me rush and
swirl;
It helps to feel that if you knew you
would come back to me
And drive away the troubles of
your grown up little girl.
—Nell Lewis Woods in The Kansas
City Star_
How Many Children?
From the Delineator.
A group of distinguished Belgian
educators recently visited the United
States. Among them was Dr. Paul
Hager, president of the university at
Brussels and an authority on biology.
Though known the world over for his
science, Doctor Hager is loved in
Europe for a philosophy which
makes the>human problems of ordi
nary *folk the big .interests -of his
life.
Ho was asked hew many children
he had. He replied, "Three,*’ then
smiled understanding^ and added:
"But that’s a man’s answer I've Just
giver, you. If you ask a man how
many children he has, he will say,
for instance, 1 have three.’ If you
ask his wife, she will say, T have
four. One is dead.’ To most fathers,
their children are Just people—sons
and daughters; but to mothers, they
are souls, and souls never die,"
Good Boginning.
From the Santa Barbara Newe.
The baby was bawling. Pa atood It
aa long aa he could and then ventured
to make tpqulry.
"What doee the baby want?”
"Ha la like moat men,’! snapped ma.
"How l**that, my dear?"
‘‘Doesn’t know what he wants, but
keeps yelling for ill” she returned.
"He will' make a great statesman,”
said pa discreetly.
International boxing matches as a
substitute for war were advocated by
the Duchess of Hamilton. In the old
days of the Vikings, tribal disputes
were settled by fights between picked
The Merits Agricole I. to be conferred
on French families that have tilled the
same soli for three centuries. There are
750 such families In France. One fami
ly has held the same land since the
reign of Charlemagne. Another family
at Colombe* near Gap has worked its
farm for a thousand years.
The Clavllux is an organ-like instru
ment that plays light on a screen for
the eye. Just as music la played Into
the air for the ear. The Instrument
blends the qualities of color and of
light—now rising and falling In soft
gradation, now marshaled in full, Im
pressive splendor, now fKdlng into
abrupt darkness. Sonatas of light and
Sjrniphtmiea of color are thus made pos
$1,000,000 SHIPMENTS
OF HAIR NETS FROM
CHINA LAST YEAR
Shanghai, China—More than a mil
lion gold dollars worth of human
hair nets were shipped from Shanghai
to the United States during the first
nine months of last year, acordlng
to figures made public here.
This is a decrease of fully $500,000
from the corresponding period of 102$,
when $1,500,000 worth of business was
done from here In the human hair
trade with the United States. ’
As is apparent from the above fig
ures, everything Is not well In the hair
uet world. Business In, hair nets
seems to be confined only to those
brands widely advertised throughout
the United States by concerns who
lmpoyt the raw material from China
and manufacture the finished product
In their own factories and plants In
America.
This would appear to be the reacon
why local exporters of the finished
article find it difficult to market their
product, the major portion of the ex
ports from China being shipments of
raw hair.
Until recently the trade has been
limited mostly to double mesh hair
'nets, but there is discernible a steady
movement during the past two years
In favor of single mesh nets.
Most of the shipments of human
hair nets from China are made from
Chefoo, Shanghai being second, with
Tsinanfu trailing along at third.
Dealers in hair predict that If the
ipresent price for their commodity can
be maintained without violent fluo
•tuatlons a very steady business will
be assured.
Church Liberalizing
Is Urged by Woman
Mist Eleanor Dodson, of St. Louis,
Is now la Boston as associate secre
tary of the Students' Federation «t
Religious ** Liberals in Unitarian
Churches. She proposes to "take the
Cobwebs out of theology."
Turkish Women Demand
Abolition of Polygamy
Constantinople.—Turkish women
are agitating for the 'same right*
possessed by women of other coun
tries.
At a largely attended meeting of
women of the educated class held
in this city to discuss women’s
rights to end the practice of poly
sire to end the practice of poly
gamy was expressed.
The meeting passed resolution!!
demanding that laws regulating
marriages, divorces and polygamj1
on modern lines should be framed*
and a committee was formed t«
draft the reforms.
/Polygamy, which Is authorize*
by our present laws, Is a relic of
past ages,” said one speaker. “We
must break with this tradition
which, in any event, has not bees
practiced for the last twenty years.*
The authorities are said to be
sympathetically inclined toward the
women’s demands. _
“Faith Healing” Issue
In Church of England
London,—"Faith healing” promises
to become a subject of controversy in
the Church of England following the
report of < a committee appointed by
the-Archbishop of Canterbury * to in
vestigate the subject. The report
urged sick persona "not to look to
clergymen to do what is the duty of
physicians and surgeons” and advised i
the ebureb "not to apply Its means of -
restoration when no higher end than
the recovery of bodily health '.a
sought.” The report, which also
criticised amateur healers, is said
to bs opposed by certain factions ir.
the ehurch.
For some time past customer* of
a certain fashionable shoo In Bond
street, London, have been puzzled over
the identity of an unusually attractive
assistant who sometimes attends to
their wanta Now it transpires that she
Is Lady Rosamond Gallwcy-Robertson,
daughter of the. earl snd coj.it es of
Garrick. I<ady Rosamond is an ex
pert designer of dresses and so treat
was her desire to put her t-iLnt to
practical use that she at last obtained
her parents* consent to accept the posi
tion she now holds^_
The railroads of the United States
use 126,000,000 ties each year.
In Iceland, where one would suppose
that coal was about the most essential
of commodities. It has Just been an
nounced that Icelanders are about to do
away w’lth that fallacious heating med
ium entirely. The authorities in Rey
kjavik. the Capital, are considering util
izing the natural hot springs and gey
sers there for heating the who'.e coun
try.
A remarkable stone wall built In
the form of a fortress on the top of a
Georgia mountain, south of Lookout
mountain, Tennessee, Is believed to be
of pre-Indian origin, as the Cherokee
Indians told the first white settlers
that a strange white race were In this
vicinity before them. A walled-up
■Pring Is near the opening gate
There Is not a civil engineer in America
who could Improve on Its construction
aa a fortress defense.
College Dart Autos
Students i>* Pennsylvania State col
lege hereafter will be prohibited from
tithing their motorcar* to college as n
result of notion taken at the annual
meeting of the board of trustees. Pa
rents of students are to be notified to
this effect.
The resolution declared: “It Is the
opinion of the hoard ef trustees that
students of the college cannot keep nn
toutobiles for use while at cotlogr
wltlioo* Interference with their studies
and without considerable lisk to their
personal safety and health.”—New
York Sun and Globe.
“DANDELION BUTTER COLOR”
A harmless vegetable butter rotor
used by millions for 50 years. Drug
■tores and general stores sell bottle*
of "Dandelion” for 35 cents.—Adv.
No Clock Needed
Mrs. Blake.—So this Is your little
angel. Doesn’t n baby liven up r.
household wonderfully 7
Mrs. Drake—Yes, Indeed. We aln’l
had a wink of sleep since the little
darling arrived.
Work* Both Way
Captain—If anything moves shoot 1
Sentry—Yessuh; an’ If anything
■hoots, Ah move.—American Boy.
EMSB
She flavor lasts \
Something Wrong
May—How smoothly the auto runs.
Ray—Tea; what do you sippoec !•
wrong with It?
Emmum'm/ fitni/ttOMn
Will Your Family Be Happy This Spring?
If yours is one of the few remaining families lacking an
automobile, no doubt you have finally decided to get ooe
within the next four months.
A low-priced modern automobile like the Chevrolet has be
come Indispensable to the family of ordinary Income. A
million other families can easily prove to you that the better
way is with Chevrolet. The beauties of nature, the interesting
and educational features of other places and way* of living,
remain things to read about or seen dimly in cold photographs
untilyouaretree to get to them at your convenience and pleasure.
But, suppose you have definitely decided to buy a Chevrolet /
this spring. This does not necessarily mean you are whig to /
get it. Anyone posted ou conditions in the automobile onstnese
will tell you that thousand* of families are going to be mnaWr
to get cars this spring. This has been true almost every sprtog
for the last ten years. There are just two ways of making sure
of getting your Chevrolet for woe whan the flowers and balmy
brecse* of spring bars you to the country roads—buy fitness
ge, order It new.
If you do not event to pay for It in fisH at
Chevrolet dealer will airangs ten
You erill be surprised to learn how easy it is to pay for n
Chevrolet and nee it srhfle you are paying for It,
Please realise these stattasent* are me fir by yl in good faith
and we mean just what us say about the pouaible IMhsMts
of getting a car delivered {an you this spring if you wait until
then to otder it. The only way to be sure of a Chevrolet
this Spring is to order it NOW. ' ’ ,Xf |
Prices /. a. k Film; Michigan
Superior AwuUtrr . . . #490 Stouter Sake . . . $795
Puperior Touring ... 499 ftyeler Cm—ndJ Chwri, 395
Superior Utility Cpup* . . 640 Stouter Light Dtlirtnr . . 49s
Superior 4-Psm. Covp* . . 729 llttlrr Evprm, Truck OmiiIi 590
FUlwr Bodks ou eS Ckeed Model*
Chevrolet Motor Company, Detroit, Michigan
Division of Qenerai Motor* Corporation
ASK your local dealer to reo
1 ^ ommend a practical deo
orator. If you are unable to
secure one you can do the work
yourself, tinting and stenciling
your walk to give beautiful remits.
Alabasttne
Indeed qfKaboedne or WmUPmper
Buy Alabattine from your local dealer, white and a variety of **'"*«.
reaay to mix wnn com water ana apply WMB a tiilTBOlr brash.
Each package hat the cross and circle ptiatad/ia red By inter
mixing Aiabaatiae tints yow can accurately milch dnptrin aad
ruga and obtain indiridttal treatascat aI each ream.
I
- ■
WHtt/cr afimclat mggfOtm mmi !
,J-' - ’ -rVr ffim
ALABASTTWECOIIPAWT
Prizes worth $2$SOO
TJNTBR tbs da Pant International Crow-Shoot
—$2,500 in msrchandise prises. It costs yoa
nothing to regiatsi. Destroy this menses to gams
and crops. Writs today for booklets shoot tbs crow.
£. I. DU PONT DE NEMOURS A CO, INC.
Sporting Pomdmr Dimmom
WMJdBtGTOW. PEL