The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, January 22, 1925, Image 3

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Two Extremes
President Angell of Yale said at a
New Haven party:
“We have almost too many colleges
in America: Tusculam college, Woo
ford. Chieora, Tarkio, Pomona, Kenka,
Coker—queer places, some of theft?,
must be. England, on the other hand,
has too few colleges—Oxford and
Cambridge only.
“Oxford and Cambridge stand so
high in the English schoolboy’s mind
that if you ask him what air is com
posed of, instead of answering that ft
i/' composed of oxygen and hydrogen
iie will probably say:
" ‘Oxygen and eambridgen.’ ”
Ever Thus
A New York judge let a wife take
the bench and sentence her husband.
Asked by her if he had anything to say,
he replied, “No. never."—Detroit News.
Permanent roads
are a (rood
invest! int
ROIld ““WO* an expanse
Building Far
Behind the
Automobile
(Millions now recognize
the automobile as a ne
cessity. It is no longer a
luxury for the few. Sixty
per cent of its use is tor
! business.
Becausa of this the mod
ern paved highway has
become en economic ne
cessity.
Yet although the mileage of
Concrete Roads and Streets has
been stttdily increasing, our
highway tsystem today lags far
behind the automobile. The
great majority of our highways
are as out c3 date as the single
track, nan ow gauge railway of
City years ago.
Such a condition not only seri
ously handicaps the progress of
the automobile as a comfortable,
profitable means of transporta
tion, but also holds back com
mercial, industrial and agricul
tural advancement in practically
every section of the country. It is
costing taxpayers millions of dol
lar t annually.
Highway building should bo |
continued and enlarged upon.
Your highway authorities are
ready to carry on their share ol
this great public work. But they
must have your support. Tell
them you are ready to invest in
more and wider Concrete High
ways now.
PORTLAND CEMENT
ASSOCIATION
HI West Washington Street
CHICAGO
t-i National Organization to Improve
and Extend the Uses of Concrete
Office! In 29 Citiei
She’ll Wed Rupert Hughes
Rupert Hughes (In Inset) novelist.
Scenario writer and motion picture
director, Is to be married at'aln. Hie
former wife died in the orient. Hie
bride will be Elizabeth Patterson
Dial (above), a movie actress.
After robbing him of fl,600, Nellie Paschal, 23, kissed James Butler,
bank messenger and told him to “beat ft,” according to Batter's story. Nel
lie is being held in Kansas City, Mo., on a charge of having kidnaped But
Blind Man’s Dog His Eyes
toll II.— BMT.m-TT I.1DTH-T , •%«*»
------
Although h6’s totally blind, Clyde Rfrihrick, an evangelist, has crossed
,v 1,000-foot railway bridge spanning the Grand river at Grand Rapids
Mich, almost every day foir a year. On his perilous Journeys he Is ao
.ompanied only by his dog, "Silver." A false step and au oncoming train
would hurl Rothrlck 50 fe^t lnt* the river. I
Seeks Post I
Adj. Gen. W. A. Raupp of Missouri
soon will start an active campaign
for the position of chief of the mil
itia bureau in the war department,
at AVashington. He hopes to suc
ceed General George C. Rickards of
Pennsylvania, who will retit.) la
June at the age of Cl.
Sues Professor
Prof. R. Cresap Journey of North
Carolina State Agricultural college
kissed his wife, Mrs. Helen Journey,
now of Oak Park, 111., before each
meal. But with every smack, he
pinched her back so forcibly the
osculation didn’t register, Mrs. Jour
ney charges 13 her divorce petition.
She also eacuces the professor
ef trying te bribe a college student
to taka her away. But in his cross
bill, Journey charges his wife wai
too friendly with the student. .
Can You Idenify
This Mystery Girl?
t ' ■ ———*
Pound In a Chicago depot more
than a' week ago and taken to the
Cook county hospital, the Iden
tity of this girl has remained a
profound myatery to police.
She appeared to be in a daze,
and did not know who she waa,
where she came from or where
she was going. She was ex
tremely well gowned.
Steal Her Gems
I--———.....-’-""I I
|>£R£ J4CQDE5‘ BcyTCKfcERS
Mrs. Jacques Rosenberg, of New
Vork City, was held up In tho ele
vator of her apartment house, and
robbed of $20,000 worth of gems by
two men, who knocked bar husband
senseless.
Our International Beauty
Dse Marvcnga, for a long time one of the most popular actreasea ia
Germany, has been repfjitinr her successes In New York.
New Bust of Wilson
This new bust of Woodrow Wilson is the work of Bryant Baker, New
York srnlp'or. He is shown putiing the finishing touches on his work.
She'D Be Waiting
GEORGINA BROWN TALKING TO HER LOVER, OALE ROWAN,
THROUGH THE BARS OF HIS CELL.
San Francisco.—Georgina Brown la
going to stirk to her lover. Dale Row
an, 23, charged with absconding with
nearly $50,000 from the bank v, her*
he was employed.
She says she will be waiting for
him whet: he has finished his prison
term. I
“Then we’ll go back to the farm
and settle down for good,” she tells
tho world.
And Dais agrees. For t&» boy who
left the country to make his mark
in a Mg city longs to return to the
country life again. i
“If I !»A(l staked on the farm. I'd
never been In this mesii,” he declares.
Rowan was arrested when he and
Oeorginai came back Utah tb
visit friends her*
' 1