Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 29, 1925)
Tanlac added 20 pounds ‘‘Seven yean’ stomaJi trouble cost mo lots of money, but 6 bottles of Tanlao made me a well and happy man. I have gained 20 lbs.— never felt so well/"— I Otto Cifrin, Portland, Ore. ANLAC is Nature’s greatest tonic and builder. Made from roots, barks and herbs after the Tanlac formula, it revitalizes the blood, tones up the digestive organs and puts the whole system in fighting trim. Don’t go about your work sickly and discouraged. Follow the ex ample of millions who have been helped by Tanlac. Stop at your druggist’s today and get this won derful tonic. You’ll be surprised how quickly you start to improve. •1 For Constipation Take Tanlac Vegetable Pills TANLAC FOR YOUR HEAJJTH Don’t take chances of your horses or males being laid up with Distemper, Influenza, Pink Eye. Laryngitis, He"'e«, Coughs or Colds. Giro “SPOHN’S” to Bbth tlio sirk and the well ones. The standard remedy for 30 years. Give "SPOHN’S” for Dog Dis temper. 60 cents and $1.20 et drug stores. SPOHN MEDICAL CO. GOSHEN. IND. New Type of Bicycle An air-bicycle lias been invented ir. Italy, consisting of it gasbag sufficient to carry a man’s weight, and it bicycle, different from the ordinary type by reason of no wheels. Instead, there Is caused to revolve by motion of the pedals. The handlebars control the elevators and rudder. i ii ii ■■■ ~*gsaal<B Here’s a book let you want—the new, revised edition of “Recipes for Curing Meat.” Selected recipes you and ycur fam ily win like. Tells how to make all your favorite meat dishes better—Liver Sausage, Dried Beef, Corned Beef, Head Cheese. Frankfurters and many other good things. Big demand makes it necessary you send at once. One copy sent FREE and Postpaid. Get yours now. Write today! THE CAREY SALT COMPANY Dealt 2IS Hutchinson, Kansas 11 tgjjjSiila SAYS PILES ALL DONE AND NO MOPE ECZEMA "I had eczema fur many years on my head and could not get anything to stop the agony. I saw your ad and got one box of Peterson’s Ointment and X owe yg* many thanks for the good it has done me. There isn’t a blotch on my head now and I couldn't help but thank Peterson, for the cure Is great”—Miss Mary Hill, 420 Third Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pa. “I have had itching piles for 15 years and Peterson's is the only ointment that relieves me; besides, the piles seem to have gone.”—A. 15. Ruger. 1127 Washington Avenue. Racine, Wls. Use Peterson’s Ointment for old sores, salt rheum, chafing and all skin diseases. 35 cents. Druggists recom mend It. Mail orders filled by Peterson Ointment Co., Buffalo, N. Y. New Monument to Payne A new monument to John Howard Payne, author of the song, ‘-Home, Sweet Home,” has heer, erected on tha Dixie highway, at Spring Place, Mur ray county, Georgia, by the Old Guard of Atlanta. The Lord needs no advice under tb« guise of beseecliment. Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION 254 AND 754 PACKAGES EVERYWHERE HAIR REMOVER (SIP EKFLLO). (Guar anteed Harmless.) Mall >1.00 to and recalv* from FIRST I.ADY CO.. Salt Hake. Utah Mfre. of Cremes and Toilet Preparations. HOTEL MARTIN In the Heart of SIOUX CITY Absolutely FI reproof — Kates from 11.78. k BIG CAFETERIA - HOME COOKING RESINOL 5oothinq &.nd He&linq •Stops Itchinq SIOUX CITY PTG, CO., NO~ D-192C. The Old Home Town wrreR]: ^ HOME / BRUNO!J V—v— ‘pfettgUtU Ve fVSM iK.TIME). 2r\ Z, 'LOOK AT ^ ^'DUDE^ ^USAY-^^r— TO BREAK \ {£jg°r AWJNPcW U 'shows hes W™?*6 A DESPER«1E)J^tT Ogg^yt^grcH, rpOGTf 'I I SUCK YEP THH \ BRICK WENT \ CUEAN THROD^HJ '"2J-\s r<5EE MISTER WATSON THE <S*XSS IS i BROKEN ON A BOTH SIDES MEE-HEE’.y g? j-j- NOT BEEN DEFINITELY DECIDED WHETHER. THE FAL.SE' TEETH PIS PLAT' STOLEN FROM THE FRONT OF DOC POLL-MANS OFFICE WAS TAKEN BEFORE OR AFTER. FIVE DOZEN BISCUITS DISAPPEARED' FROM THE BAKERY - «,«, by nea «««. *£*><*, TODAY BY ARTHUR BRISBANE Recent and unneccssar.ly alarming nevs from Italy has disturbed Italy’s friends in this country, and what is moro serious it had, for a while, a bad effect upon Italian exchange. It is a pleasure to announce that Italian currency recovered notably yesterday, and it is a duty to warn any gambler inclined to sell Italian exchange short that he is certain to be badly pinched before he finishes with that experiment. You must take with many grains of salt alarmist reports from Italy. Travelers may proceed to Italy as usual and find the usual warm Ital ian welcome, comfortable and de lightful living at very reasonable prices, and as great safety for themselves and their families as an Italian family would find here in the United States. The Senate, after floundering, passes the Underwood Muscle Shoals bill which would give gigantic pub lic property to private corporations, to be exploited on the usual basis of taking the last dollar thut the traffic will bear. The situation can still be changed in the House. It seems absolutely certain that the people are not to be allowed to operate their own power plant on which they have spent already $140, 000,000 of public money. That being the case, Henry Ford ought to come back to the fight. The House undoubtedly would vote to let him have Muscle Shoals. Ninety nine per cent, of the people would approve such a vote. And Henry Ford would use the power of the plant to give cheap fertilizer to the farmers; he would sell power to those that wanted It at the lowest possible cost. There Isn’t any question about that, for that Is what he has always done. That’s his policy. Ford withdrew, but he ought not to sit by and see a private corpora tion, with no public spirit, take from the people a property which in Ford’s hands could be made useful to everybody. Are the Japanese able? They are. Indeed, and in every line of effort. Have they firm nerves, skill, con centration, capacity for sustained ef fort? Yes, they have. . * In New York City, for the first time in history, two foreigners are playing for the championship at balk line billiards. There never was suoh a competition before without at least one American In it. This time, the two competitors, bo'.h Japanese, are named Suganama and Suzuki. If you know anything about balk line billiards you know It takes steady nerves, self control, good bal ance and a brain that can’t easily be disturbed by surrounding condi tions, to play that game well. The Japanese can do anything re quiring skill and nerve. The Jap anese government will have plenty of men with courage and concentration to run those BOO airplanes that they are turning out every month. Don’t forget It. Thre* men, Harry Malcolm, Ed ward Smith, and Ambrose Geary, all young, were put to death In the elec tric chair on Thursday night. They had murdered a woman. They died In the usual way. One told the small gathering that ha was In nocent, which he was not. Geary, least concerned of all, walked to the electric chair smoking n clgaret, carrying in one hand a picture of a young woman, a cruci fix in the other. He handed the cru cifix to the chaplain, kissed the photograph two or thr<e times and L'Amour 1*24. From Judge. They had been married IS years. Just 13 years. "X adore you more eve ry day," he told her. 'T worship you, my darling,’’ she whispered In his ear. "You are the only woman in all the world I want to be with,” he said. "There i» no one but you, dear, I could ever care for,” she \owed. They had been married just 13 years. But. of course, not to e.«ch other. The St. Gall Radio Association has de cided to construct a wlrel* ss receiving station at the Santis Observatory, which Is k.800 feet above res level, i died without a word. Lack of imagination enables young men to die in that fashion. Lack of imagination also makes it possible for them to commit murder. And lack of imagination enable-s the public to follow the murderer’s example and put him to a violent death. Our government says the financial arrangement in Paris, too deep for the average man, will give to the United States its fair share of the German money, and, at the same time, will not tie us up in oany way or make us responsible for German payments or anything else. That's good news, and let us hope there is no “if" in it. The Europeans are nlevet gentlemen and their in tense satisfaction with the settle ment might make susplcioun minds uneasy. Thirty five years ago Ogden Mills, very rich, built the Mills building In Wall Street, New York, 10 stories high. It was considered a marvelous structure. Now the Equitable Trust company will tear it down and build a 34 story building in its place, to cost $12,000,000. There is nothing unusual about the 34 story building. The interest ing thing is the Equitable lease oh the new building, which runs well into the next century. Bong before the lease ends the new building will be torn down. By that time the flying machine will have replaced the suburban trail} and all building will be done over ta meet flying machine con ditions. And by that time our single tax man may have persuaded the world that the only trouble with our civilization is allowing individuals to own land. Gossip About Books and Authors Where is the present day writer with the eternal, bubbling zest and eminent quotability of our own Mark Twain? A new anecdote about him, clipped from tho January In ternational Review tickled our risi bilities. “When Mark Twain was living in lower Fifth avenue and when his daughter Clara (now Mrs. Gabrilovitch) w’as keeping house for him, he invited half a dozen men to lunch. "Of course Howells was one of them and of course the laughter was abundant and frequent. Once as it died down, Mark said, ‘Clara is upstairs; she will hear that laughter, and she’ll say, “There’s Mr. Howells telling father another one of his shady stories!”’ "At this outrageous assertion. Howells (who was one of the most clean-minded of men) almost blushed. He defended his good name by declaring that he had known only one shady story in all his life. “ ‘I know,’ said Mark, ‘and that’s Just it. Clara is getting tired of hearing that.’ ’’ Rafael Sabattnl has Just been awarded the Adolph Zukor $10,000 prize given to the writer whose story made the best motion picture play during the year ending Sep tember 1, 1924. The picture which received the prize was SCARA MOUCHE. We didn’t see that pic ture but we revelled In THE SEA HAWK—if Scaramouche was better than that. It’s worth quite a Journey | to see. Houghten, Mifflin and Com pany is publishing on February 2T He Wanted Atmosphere. From the Wall Street Journal. After many conferences had been held by the board of directors of a small town bank about buying a new water cooler, a grouchy old member had this to say: “Gentlemen, before we adjourn, 1 move that our next conference be held on a merry-go-round.” And, as they looked at him In aston ishment, he added the tag of explana tion: "We never get anywhere." An Atlanta (Ga.) barber shop lias equipped each of Its 12 chairs with an individual telephone. Ships' bottoms are painted with cop per ttMe. which poisons barnacles. his latest novel with Its setting tn America, THE CAROLINIAN. This story is now running serially in the Good Housekeeping magazine. Poetry and religion! What two better mediums to go hand in hand to uplift the heart of mankind? In a recent service conducted in Christ 1 church, Westminster, a famous ac« tress read to a crowded congregation Walt Whitman's hymn to the Amer ican people, beginning "As a strong bird on pinions free," and followed by selections from Shelley and Tagore. A small treatise on “How to Get Educated Though Poor,” Is con tained in the early chapters of the biography of William Crawford Gor gas (Doubloday, Page and company). S^orgas roomed with another south erner, v/ho was just as poor as himself. The two young men di vided the housework between them selves. Gorgas got up early every cold winter morning and made the fire, while Bowen did the family mending. One morning Gorgas gave this amateur seamstress his sadly worn trousers—they needed patch ing. The Kentuckian made a beau tiful job of It but Gorgas’ enthusi asm was somewhat dissipated when he discovered that Bowen had used his soft felt hat for material. “Only one extravagance did these ■ young men tolerate—Gorgas’ en thusiasm for the theater. ‘The Two Orphans’ with Kate Claxton was now the rage of the town. The poignant scene when the little girls, one blind, were huddled under the gaslight, with the paper snow of the old Union Square falling upon their devoted heads, especially stirred the emotions of the young medicos. When the villain seized the blind girl, Bowen leaped to his feet, and yelled over the balcony, ‘Tako your hand off tliet girl, you scoundrel, or I'll blow a ho^C through you,’ put ting his hand to his hip pocket.” Thomas Boyd (see review above) does know whereof he writes In hlf book, Through the Wheat. He en listed at 19, when the war brok* out and fought through the Argonne, where he was badly gassed, and Bellcau Wood. With his company of 250 men he marched through a field of wheat, which was open to the enemy’s fire, and he was one of 23 survivors. Reading for Kindergarteners A friend of ours, who conducts a. kindergarten, writes: “I have a table in my kindergar ten room that has books the chil dren can use, not to ‘read,’ but just to handle and enjoy, looking at pic tures and telling one another the stories they represent. I think that If the way to have tiny children be gin to love books. Of course I have told them the stories many times.'* (It Is our experience that a child of two can be taught to respect and value books. We believe that It Is a mistake to give them only cloth books till they reach years of dis cretion. Perhaps one book may be sacrificed In the lesson, but once learned, the whole home library Is known as a treasure to be cherished. Our little girl of three has had for a long time, a comer In our book shelf and except for one tattered volume left out In the rain last summer, and one wickedly experi mented on with the new box of crayons, her books are In perfect order. (Parental egotism, like mur der, will out, you see.) The Supreme Teet. From the Boeton Transcript. ‘‘Does your husband treat you un kindly?” ••Certainly not!” said the woman. "Then why do you want a divorce?" “I don't actually want a divorce. I merely want to apply for one. Then I can judge by the kind of a fuss my husband makes whether he really cares for me or not.*’ _ Within the radius of 40 miles of Taber, Alherta, It Is estimated that 1,000 antelopes are now collected, and I they are reported to be eating I he farmers' green feed, reserved for their cattle. The antelopes were neatgy ex tinction at one time, but under pro tective measures they are coming back. j ■ftp t SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSISTI Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians 24 years foi Colds Pain ^ Toothache Neuritis Headache ft t Neuralgia Lumbago Rheumatism Accept only “Bayer” package which contains proven directions. Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablet*—Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists. Aspirin is tbs trade nark at Bajwt Manx factnr* «t MaaoaceUeaddester of Ballcyllcadd Modern Incandescent lights h»7e about four times the efficiency of tf.ose ! of 18 years ago, experts say. Green*s August Flower The remedy with a record of fifty eight years of surpassing execflenee. All who suiter with nervous dysftep sla, sour stomach, constipation. Indi gestion, torpid liver, dizziness, head ach^s coming-up of food, wind on stomach, palpitation and other Indica tions of digestive disorder, will find GREEN’S AUGUST FLOWER an ef fective and efficient remedy. For fifty-eight years this medicine haa been successfully used In millions of househo ds all over the civilized world. Because of Its merit and pop ularity GREEN’S AUGUST FLOWER Is found today wherever medicines are soli. 30 and 90 cent bottles.—Adv. From an interpretation of n passage In the Koran Moslems are forbidden to have shades over thd- eyes. A Lady of Distinction Is Recognized by the delicate, fascinat ing Influence of the perfume she uses. A bath with Outieura Soap and hot water to thoroughly cleanse the porea followed by a dusting with Outieura Talcum powder usually means a clear, oweet, healthy skin.—Advertisement. 4 ___ The number of telephones in service in the United States has increased by 5,827,000 in the last ten years. DEMAND “BAYER” ASPIRIN Take Tablets Without Fear If You See the Safety "Bayer Cross.* Warnrng ’ Unless you see the same “Bayer" on package or on fablers you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians fee 23 years. Say “Bayer" when yon bay Aspirin. Imitations may prove dangerous.—Adv. Baris merchants are eH splay b*, manikins cut from thin slabs of T.ood1 Instead of the expensive wax affairs. A *Ybeiuical sponge” that at>sort.n food odors and gnses In refrigerator* and pantries is n new Invention. A Woman’s Health l i'opJin, Mo.—4,I have used Dr. Fierce's Faroritc Prescription and con— sider it a won tier tut tonic lor women and supe rior to any other remedy. It bail! me up in health and strength ant) relieved me of all. the distressing feelings which usually go with feminine weak ness. That is just what other reme \ w^h th» 1 octgVihot ^ to pr. \ Gel * t Wi4’-,0t- ' V and \ UlltETV 1UCLL SLOT MACHINES r«K rale at tM.tt. We sell operating machines of all descriptions. UNIVERSAL MACHINE CO.. Central I*ark Ave.. YONKERS, N. T, HE WILL, tell you that the first re sults of constipation — headache, sleepless nights, biliousness, backache, etc.—warn that the body is flooded with intestinal poisons. In time these poisons rnay cause the breakdown of health and lead to serious disease. Laxatives and cathartics do not over come constipation, says a noted authority, but l»y their continued use tend’ only to aggravate the condition and often lead to permanent injury. Why Physicians Favour Lubrication Medical science has found at last b lubrication a means of overcoming con stipation. The gentle lubricant, Nujol, penetrates and softens the hard food waste and thus hastens its passage through and out of the body. Thus, Nujol brings in terna] cleanliness. Nujol is used in hospitals and is prescribed by physicians throughout the world. Nujol la not a medicine or laxative and cannot gripe. For sale by all druggists. Ntii rt RIt MLS. MT. OSS. For Internal Cleanliness