The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, February 26, 1925, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    HE WON OFFICE.
WONT QUALIFY
Thurston County Man Can*
not Now Take Place
As Commissioner
Walthlll, Neb., Feb. Walter K.
Mitchell, who haa been one of the
three Thurston county commission
ers for the last eight years, and who
won his election by nine votes last
fall, now finds his office declared
vacant becouse he failed to fils the
required bond during January. Mr.
Mitchell can only secure hts office
now by appointment by the county
clerk, county treasurer and county
attorney.
DIVORCECOOTS
BEING BOOSTED
Two Wealthy and Aged Ne»
braskans Made to Pay
Heavy Alimony
Lincoln, Neb., Feb. % (Special.)—■
The high cost of divorce is being
boosted by the supreme court. It
has Just handed down decisions that
cost Christopher Ticrnan $40,000 ali
mony and Samuel White $17,000.
Tlernan is 83 years old and White
72. Tlernan Is the wealthy owner
of half a dozen business blocks In
Lincoln, and had been married twice
before he wedded (he woman who
has Just got a divorce and $40,000.
She had spent most of her life in
a convent, and was less than half
Tiernan’s age when married 1(1 years
ago.
While Is a wealthy Seward county
farmer. He admitted having $200,- '
000 worth of property. He was a
widower and married a York school
teacher who was under 40 years old.
He tried to get the supreme uuurt
to leave off Interest on the Judg
ment because he had paid temporary
alimony.
NORTHWESTERN WARNED
ABOUT OVER-CHARGES
Lincoln, Neb., Feb. (Special.) —
Hallway Commissioner Randall has
written r letter to D. M. Davis, head
of the freight department of the
Northwestern railroad, notifying him
that steps must be taken to Insure
the Issuance of correct freight bills
In the future, or drastic action will
be taken to see that it is done.
Mr. Randall charges that these
errors, us represented in complaints
to the commission, have been so nu
merous, as compared with the errors
of the other railroads, ps to suggest
‘hat the men who make out and
collect the freight bills have received
their instructions from men higher
up. He says that It is fair lo as
sume that many *)ave been over
charged without ceing aware of the
fact, and that if the road does not
protect them from this the commis
sion will huve to do something
about it.
Mr. Davis insists that the officials
have given no instructions of tl\e
character Mr. Randall Intimates, and
that no greater number of errors
are commuted by its agents than by
agents of other roads.
NtBHASKA ROAD TAX
PLANS BADLY JUMBLED
Lincoln, Neb., Feb, (Special.)—
The good roads association repre
sentatives at the legislature have
abandoned their plan for a state
highway commission to have charge
of all the road construction in the
state and to map out a six or eight
year program. Uovernor McMullen’s
opposition to any new boards and
commissions, even though no pay is
attached, forced relinquishment of
that plan. The big fight now is
over a division of the gasoline tax
and license money as between the
state and the counties and whether
, to have a centralised authority or
"not.
There will be a two cent gasoline
tax. The road committee will be
against any exemptions, but the
farm bloc Is insisting that tractors
and cleaning establishments be ex
empted. The committee is for cut*
ting about $2 a year off the license
fee, while the farm bloc Is opposed
to any reduction in license taxes
for pleasure cars, but wants farm
tractors and trailers cut 60 per cent.
In license. The committee U not
sure about the division of gasoline
lax and license fees, but Is inclined
to give the state department most of
It to spend. The farm bloc, on the
other hand, is going to Insist on an
eonal dlv'slon of both.
The old question of whether to
continue accepting federal aid or not
Is also to be fought out. The fed
eral government having changed Its
policy and having decided to deat
only with state Instead of county
units. It is necessary te change the
wtntutes, if Nebraska la to get fed
eral aid after November 1, 1926. The
farm bloc leaders aay that most of
their members are In favor of quit
ting the dollar-matching practice
and that they will oppose an>
change in the atatutes. i
EMERSON PIONEER
BUSINESS MAN DEAD
Emerson, Neb., Feb. „ '—Word of
the death of John L Davis, pioneer
business .man here, has been received
by Mrs. Rose Waggoner, daughter of
the dead man. His death occurred
In San Jose, Cal.
During his SO years here, Mr.
Davts was engaged in the furniture
and undertaking business. He also
was a chicken fancier of note and
captured many prises, among them a
first with three Rhode Island Reds at
the international exposition In St.
Louis, in 1919.
IS DEMANDING
HIS OLD FARM
Nebraska Man Who Traded
For Colorado Soil Brings
Suit
Falls City, Neb., Feb '•.—Roland
M. HUI, living near Humboldt, has
filed suit to recover 1M acres of Im
proved Richardson county land
which he traded for a tract of Colo
rado land ha did not properly exam
ine, he alleges, "because there was a
foot of snow covering It at the time."
According to Hill, the transaction
cost him f 11,000 because when the
snow cleared away the land was not
at all like It was represented to him.
WOMAN HOMESTEADER
DEAD; 92 YEAR8 OLD
Grand Island, Neb., Feb. —
Nancy Chapman Bhadduck, said to
be the first woman homesteader In
Thayer county, near Davenport, Neb.,
died here at the home of her nephew,
at the age of 92 years.
EXPECT FIGHT
FOR THE CHILD
Fremont Authorities Slow
To Act on Demand of
Her Mother
Fremont, Neb., Feb. (Special)—
City officials refused to consent to
the removal of Emma Jessup, 12
years old to a home for children at
Omaha, pending word from the girl's
father, Reuben Jessup, at Carthage,
S. T)„ but the mother of the girl who
Is separated from Jessup, signed the
necessary papers demanded by the
! home representative. Chief George
Nagel, who knows the girl’s father,
said he expected complications might
arise when the father returns.
The child was removed from Ingle-,
wood to a hospital last week at the
suggestion of her teacher, Retha
Martin, and It was found that she
was suffering from frozen feet. Em
ma told her teacher and the city phy
sician that her feet were frost-bitten
when she went to Carthage. R. T>.. to
testify at the trial of men who shot
her grandfather and her father on
their farm near Carthage. She said
the frozen feet had never been given
any attent'on. Rhe lived with her
grandmother here.
IT WA8 A MAGGIE
J1GGS AFFAIR
Newcastle, Neb.. Feb. N (Special)
—The Radies’ Aid of the communist
Congregational church here added
some extra spice to a dinner held In
the I. O. O. F. hall by staging, a
“Maggie and Jlggs” program. The
hall was decorated In colors and
hearts appropriate for the season and
Maggie and Jlggs were so well made
up and acted their parts so well, per
forming with rolling pin, silk hat,
cane and cigar, that those who par
took of the corn beef and cabbage
said It seemed that Maggie and Jlggs
were real. Mrs. Vaughn Sweet play
ed the part of the Jlggs and Mrs. S.
J. Ttlden Sloan acted Maggie’s part.
The proceeds of the dinner amounted
to about $50.
EDUCATIONAL CONFERENCE
DATES ARE FIXED
Madison, S. D., Feb. .—The third
annual Eastern Educational confer
ence between county and city sup
erintendents of schools, the state sup
erintendent of public Instruction, and
the Eastern State Teachers college
staff will be held at Madison on April
16, 17 and 18, It has been announced
here by the committee In charge of
arrangements.
The purpose of the conference is to
give opportunity to admlstrators In
education to consider as a group
problems related to their work
Spec Its 1 emphasis this year wilt be
given to the problems of arithmetic
teaching, Inter-scholustic athletics for
girls, and standards for the training
of teachers.
OMAHA LEGGERS REMEMBER
FEDERAL JUDGE M’GEE
Omaha. Neb., Feb. V—Federal
Judge John F. McGee, who ended his
own life Sunday In Minneapolis, was
In Omaha but a few weeks during
lust June and July, hut In that time
established a record on the bench
which won the acclaim of the church
element, spread dismay in the ranks
of the hoettorgOig fraternity, and
made hlu name familiar In every
household.
He was called to Omaha to clear
an overcrowded docket, and In rec
ord time had sentenced nearly 100
persons, In each case dealing punish
ment which In other cities had won
him the name, “Ten-year MeCJee.”
Some of tjm persons Imprisoned
by him have been liberated, due to a
decision of the circuit oourt of ap
peals that he erred technically by
not designating the order in which
they should serve terms Imposed on
more than one count of an Indict
ment. The higher court ruled that
because of this, the sentences were
made to run “concurrently” Instead
of "consecutively,” as specified by
Judge McGee.
REVEALS REAL NAME
Waterloo, la.. Feb. *“ <1. N. S.) —
I*ol1oe knew a prisoner's right name
today through hls attempt at self
destruction. Following an unsuc
cessful attempt to dig out of Jail
here yesterday, a man who was
“registered” ns William Baxter’ of
Chicago, sought to hang himself
In h’.s cell. Olher prisoners gave
the alarm, and police cut him down
Whe'a his cell wag searched, the
officers found a slip of i>aper or
which the prisoner had wrttter
“my real name Is William Baxtei
, v< Columbus. Ohio”
CONDEMN BANK
METHODS USED
Nebraska Supreme Court
Gives Stinging Rebuke to
Management
Uncoln, Neb.. Feb. *. (Special)—
Stinging condemnation of the meth
ods of officials of the Gross State
hank and of a national bank at Spen
cer, particularly that of F. W. Woods,
head of both Institutions, now de
funct, Is contained In a decision of
the supreme court denying the claim
of E. A. OehlerkinK for reimburse
ment from the deposit guaranty
fund on *5,<M)0 worth of certificates
of deposit he held against the Gross
hank, when It failed.
The court says that these certifi
cates were unlawful In their incep
tion and part of an unlawful design
to spaliate the deposit fund. The
court finds they were Issued on the
basis of credits that consisted of
worthless notes sent by the Spencer
hank to the one at Gross, that Woods
ordered unloaded at a time when
both banks were about to break be
cause of “culpable mismanagement."
Oehlerking bought the certificates
from a Uncoln. firm that was sell
ing them for the bank. The court
says that the law will look through
all semblances and forms to ascer- (
tain the actual facts.and that no li
ability will attach to the guaranty i
fund where no bona fide deposit ha?
been made.
INSSUitAN^fc <_,urvi T
SAYS IT WAS SUICIDE
Lincoln, Neb.. Feb. (Special)—
It la up to the supreme court to say
whether Eugene H. Smith, Page
banker, died of accident, heart di
sease or from self-inflicted injuries.
Ho was found on the morning of
July 6, 1920, with his head In a half
barrel used as a watering place for
milch cows in a pasture. He was
dead. His bank never opened after
ward, and it was found to be In
bad condition.
He carried a $5,000 policy of insur
ance in the National Accident of
Lincoln, which says that either he
died because he could not face the
disgrace of a failed bank and so killed
[ himself by sticking his head In the
barrel, or else the mental distress
accentuated a heart trouble from
which he suffered. His widow says
that the marks in the mud and the
bruises on his face showed he had
slipped and fallen against and into
the barrel. She said he had been
jovial and undisturbed the night be
fore and that the condition of the
bank had not lately changed.
BIG LAND DEAL IS
RECORDED AT MARTINGTON
Hartlngton, Neb., Feb. -—-Accord
ing to information given Dy the coun
ty clerk of Cedar county, H. A.
Fchager, a deed was recorded In the
office here which required Internal
levenue stamps amounting to $528.50,
showing that the transaction In real
estate Involved the sum of $528,500.
This Is believed to be the biggest
transaction In real estate which has
taken place In northeastern Nebrasua
in several years. The deed is
for a tract of land formerly known
as the Gilman land, dontaining 2,560
acres and leased to W. S. Gilman.
The land belonged to the old God
dard estate and the deed avss given
by Mrs. Hope Goddard Iselln and
her husband, of Glen Head, L. I.,
to the Hopelunds company, of Provi
dence, R. I.
BIG BOND ISSUE
IS HELD INVALID
Lincoln. Neb., Feb. (Special)—
The supreme couit lias held inA'alld
the issue of $108,000 worth of bonds
that the Gothenburg South Side Ir
rigation district has issued. Part
of the proceeds of the bonds were
to be used to buy Avater rights of ,
an old irrigation company, but the
court says that the evidence shows
this company has not' made use of
the Avater appropriated for its use
for more than 20 years and that as it
made no objections meanwhile to
persons and companies that have
since tapped the riA'er there is not
enough Avater left to make the new
project feasible, and that if the bonds
are issued the money will be wasted
and lost.
THEY WERE WEDDED
FIFTY YEARS AGO
Coleridge, Neb., Feb. * 'Special)
-rMr. and Mrs. H. S. DeBow cele
brated their 504h wedding anniversary
at their home here by holdtng ‘‘open
bouse” in the form of a reception for
:v large number of relatives and
friends. A unique feature of the re
ception was the exhibition of the
bride’s wedding gown of half a cen
tury ago. a dove colored silk dress,
with basque and train.
WHITE RIVER BRIDGE
REPORTED WASHED AWAY
Vivian. S. D.. Feb. '—It la report
ed that the bridge under construc
tion across White river south of this
place, near the Anderson ranch, was
washed sway when a gorge of ice
struck It.
The estimate of the loes Is placed at
shout $500 and It is further stated
that the work has been discontinued
until spring. The crossing was being
rut In by Lyman and Mellette coun
ties.
SAY THIS HUSBAND
WAS COLD BLOODED
Lincoln, Neb., Feb. (Special)—
In five year* Harold B. Gr**iam of
"imaha made 15,000 out of a $S,900
Investment In the business of manu
facturing ice cream, said Mrs Gra
ham’s attorneys in supreme court, and
in order to deceive his wife and pre
vent her from securing adequate
support made her believe he was in
difficult circumstances, carried the
stock and credited the dividends in
and to the name of a friend.
fhe Factor of Rants.
From the Christian Science Monitor.
The highly important task under
taken by the United States Chamber
of Commerce, with the co-operation
of Secretary Hoover, to conduct a
systematic nation-wide investigation
of the reasons for the excessively
high cost of distributing commodi
ties. will accomplish little more than
all its predecessors in the investiga
tion field unless it goes into the fun
damentals of the problem. That there
are too many persons in the line be
tween the farmer or manufacturer
and the ultimate consumer, each of
whom takes some toll for hi* more or
less valuable services, has long been
well recognised. There has. however,
been an inclination 'to avoid discus
sion of certain underlying facts,
either from lack of knowledge as to
their relation to the problem, or from
an indisposition to criticise what i«
regarded as the firmly established
order of things.
In the course of the forthcoming
Inquiry, it should be possible fear
lessly to examine into all the various
items that add to distribution costs,
and to recommend the adoption of
such changes as would seem equit
able f\td desirable. One of the fac
tors entering into distribution costs
is that of the rents of warehouses,
storage buildings and retail shops.
Whether what is termed "economic
rent” enters into the price of goods
is an academic question that is not
of much importance in this connect
ion. What is important is the ques
tion of how far the charges of the
various "middlemen” are affected by
the rentals they must pay for the
buildings In which they transact
business, and whether It Is possible
by the wiser direction of taxation to
decrease the burden of rent that now
Is carried.
Visitors to New York City at any
time during the past 40 years have
seen in the heart of the city’s
. business district two blocks, bounded
by Thirty-eighth and Fortieth streets
1 anl Seventh avenue and Broadway,
vacant except for some old two-story
"taxpayers.” These valuable lots
have been held out of use awaiting
th‘ coming of some owner of capital
who would pay the high rental de
manded for this fortunately located
pioperty. Quite recently the south
west corner of the Thirty-eighth
street block was leased for an ag
gregate rental of $12,000,000 for a
term of 63 years. This means that tn
addition to a fair return on the $3,
600,000 which tire building to he
erected on the lot will cost, and heavy
city taxes, there must come out of
the building’s earnings an annual
payment of nearly $200,000 for the
privilege to ’capital of employing
labor to create a great, useful build
ing. It might be interesting to Sec
retary Hoover to find out where this
$200,000 comes from each year, and
what the lot owner gives in return
for it.
Helping Trial Marriages.
From the Chicago Journal of Com
merce.
Not long ago the health commis
sioner of Omaha announced himself
in favor of a law anulling every mar
riage from which no children had
been born within a limited period
two years, as we recall. Now a bill
of that sort, but providing for a
three-year trial period, has been in
troduced in the Nebraska legisla
ture by Representative Robert E.
Hines—who. Incidentally, is the
youngest member of the 'house; and
W'ho, incidentally again, is a bachelor.
The Omaha health commissioner,
when he made his announcement, de
clared that a law of the kind he
described would help end childless
marriages. Perhaps they would help
end marriages of that kind; but
would they help start any other kind?
Any no-children-no-marriage law
would merely give legal sanction to
trial marriage. A three-year trial
marriage, or a three-year period of
free love, would receive the full
authority and blessing of the state of
Nebraska.
Representative Hinee, praising his"
bill, declares it would compel the
“upper class” to increase their birth
rate. It would do nothing of the
sort. People who wished a brief and
titillating adventure Would marry
with the full intention of parting at
the end of three years, when the law
would annul their trial marriage.
And as to people who desired a per
manent marriage but did not want
children, what would prevent them
from re-marrying every three years?
Representative Hines’ trial mar
riage bill would not compel an in
crease in the birthrate of any class.
It would merely turn the marriage
sacrament into a three-year lease,
renewable upon agreement of both
parties.
Thrifty Dansa.
From the Los Angeles Times.
An American has recently made an
Interesting survey of farm conditions
in Denmark. He writes that, though
many conditions are unfavorable to
successful farming, the Danes hava
evolved a system under which they
live happily and realise a satisfac
tory return for their labor. They,
occupy the best of houses themselves
and treat their stock equally well.
They use every kind of modern labor
saving device operated by electricity,
have specialised in certain lines and
stick close to the text. "They sell
practically nothing," says the writer,
"except milk, live pigs and eggs, and
waste none of their time going to
market." Through their co-operative
system the milk Is taken to the
creamerlee by persons assigned to
that duty, and the skimmed milk Is
returned to them to be fp4-„ to the
pigs. Thi pigs are by tha same sys
tem taken to the bacon factories, the
hen’s eggs to the packers, and all
dtsposad of through ths central
agencies. Thslr exports of the three
commodities—butter, eggs and bacon
—amount to over $200,000,000 an
nually. The only other product. It is
stated, is sugar beets, a consldarable
quantity of which crop Is grown on
contract with the sugar factories.
Explained.
From Life.
“Have you noticed how thin Smlthers
ha* grown?”
“Yes. Hi* wife 1* dieting.”
The bell of the Kplscopal church at
'Williamsburg, a., has a legend to ac
count for It* *weet tone. The foundry
in which the bell was being made in
1761 was situated outside of London.
Queen Anne visited there with the
Duchess of Marlborough. As the com
position was being heated the queen
asked if it was possible to add to the
sweetness of the ton*. Her majesty
was Informed that silver in the metal
in the rim of the hell would mellow tl}*
tone. She Immediately gave the work
men all the sllxer she xxaa wearing and
commanded her attendants to do the
same.
I
[fl __ &
Pungent Paragraphs
A skirt is a garment which always
seems to be too long, too short, too
tight, or too something.—Kalamazoo
Gazette.
"There are germs that live on
other germs." People are like that,
too.—Newark Star Eagle.
Probably sausage was chosen at
the White House breakfast as Rep
resenting all elements.—New York
World.
The golden wedding is the reward
two people get for sticking to
gether from dimples to wrinkles.—
Illinois State Journal.
A Carnegie girl Is to marry a
Rockefeller boy. Those landlords
having inexpensive apartments to
rent to struggling young couples will
please take notice.—Lansing State
Journal.
There are still those old-fashioned
people who think It Is too bad
when half a dozen or more lives are
lost in an avoidable grade crossing
accident.—Springfield Union.
We are getting so that we cannot
see the word liberty without un
consciously looking for the word per
sonal before it.—Worcester Gazette.
When the modern girl kisses, she
has to make up again.—Asheville
Times.
There are only a few Americana
who have the grand manner, and
they use it as a substitute for brains.
—Memphis News Scimitar.
But there isn’t as much enjoyment
in being naughty as there Is in feel
ing superior to naughty people.—
Santa Barbara Daily News.
Help Meudon Smell Sweet.
From the New York World.
The voters of Meudon, France,
8,899 in number, went on strike as a
protest against the French govern
ment’s decision to locate in their
town an incinerating plant for the
disposal of the rubbish of Paris. The
town council had previously signi
fied its displeasure by resigning, so
the refusal of the voters to vote
leaves the place without a local gov- .
ernment. V
Dear, dear, these childish, lmprac- I
tlcal French! How simple their
problem seems to us. Obviously, the
first thing they should do is to hire
a lobbyist and a campaign manager.
Next they should eet aside a week,
called No-Incinerator Week, to be
inaugurated by prayers In all tho
churches of France. Then during
No-Incinerator Week they should
hold a campaign. This should en
list the united support of the Meudon
Chamber of Commerce, the Meudon
Y. M. C. A., the Meudon Retail
Merchants' Association, the Meudon
Real Estate Board and the Meudon
Better Homes Association; and the
Meudon Silver Cornet Band should
give its services free of charge. As a
climax to the campaign there should
be a parade, with floats, decorated
automobiles, the Meudon Fire De
partment and school-children in line,
and the school children should carry
banners: "Give Us Air,’’ "Burn Your
Rubbish Somewhere Else,” "Why
Pick on Us?" etc. Then a monster
petition to be carried through the
streets of Paris on a decorated truck
and presented to the Chamber of
Deputies by the winner of last year’s
All-Meudon Beauty Contest. Finally,
taxpayers should apply to the courts
for an injunction on the ground that
location of the incinerator in Meudon
would reduce property values at
least 25 per cent.
This plan would surely achieve re
sults, and we estimate the total cost,
Including buttons, flags, hire of hall,
traveling expenses, secretarial ex
pense. attorneys’ fees and honor
arium for the lobbyist, at $9,702. As
it happens, this is exactly $1 for
every man, woman and child in
Meudon (census of 1901). Isn’t this
most remarkable? As It Is, the
voters have put the town to the ex
pense of holding another election,
and they will probably be licked In
the end. Well, some nations are Just
naturally backward, and that is all
i there is to it.
EARLY DAYS
There comes a day between the snow
I and flowers,
. When the frank earth, returning,
brown and bare.
Lies drenched with dream through
mystical, white hours.
Before the tiniest leaf or spear Is
there;
. It were as though the listening land
had heard
Incredible tales the roving wind
i would tell
Of skies that opened for a singing
i bird,
And fields that were a flowery mlr
j ncle.
These early days, when changing
light and gloom
Are on her virgin musings, I have
found
The earth more lovely then her opu
lent bloom;
And this hushed, eager watting for
| the sound
Of far-off bugles and the hidden
I drum.
More beautiful than flowers when
they come.
—David Morton, in Scribner's
Magazine.
A Specialist In Economy.
From the Washington Star.
I "Are you economizing?"
"All 1 know how." answered Senator
Sorghum. "I wouldn't dare ask for
an Increase of compensation. It Is the
recognized duty of the true statesman
to make business a* good as possible
for everybody except himself.”
Marking the beginning of a concerted
effort by many of the Nation's promi
nent university music departments and
conservatories to raise and stabilize
standards of musical education, the
commission on curricula of the National
Association of Schools of Music and
Allied Arts will meet on Feb. 2» at the
Eastman School of Music of the Uni
versity of Rochester, It is anno* need.
For Colds,
Grip, I
Influ*]?
enza i
and as a |A^
Preventive'll
Take^^j
LaxativeN
Bromo j
Quininef
^tablets
The First and Original
Cold and Grip Tablet
Proven Safe for more than
a Quarter of a Century.
The box bears this signature
Pijce 80c.
IT BEATS ALL
How Those Old, Creaky,
Stiff Joints Limber
Right Up With
Joiirtjase
Just rub on the new application
called Joint-Ease If you want to know
what real Joint comfort Is.
It’* for stiff, swollen, or pain-tor
tured joints whether caused,by rheu
matism or not.
I A few seconds’ rubbing and it soaks
'right in through skin and flesh right
down to ligament and bone.
| It oils up and Umbers up the joints,
subdues the inflammation and reduces
the swelling. Joint-Ease is the one
Igreat remedy for all Joint trouble*
and live druggists have it or can get
it for you—a tube for 00 cents,
i Always remember, when Joint-Ease
get* In Joint agony gets out—quick,
I Made Autos Register
Disgust with routine work is a fer
tile mother of inventions. A part of
the Job of C. B. McFarland, forest
ranger in the Cascade National forest,
in Oregon, was to keep track of the
number of automobiles that traversed
the government roads. It was tiresome
work, and mechanical. So Mr. McFar
land Invented a machine to do it. The
traffic counter, as he calls his device.
Is a small platform resting upon
springs, buried flush with the track ir.
a narrow place in the road. It is con
nected by levers to a counting m
chine on n post. Each car depresses
the platform about one-half inch,
enough to work the counting machine
but not enough to jolt the car.
A new stone-cutting machine is snid
to do all the work that Is done in lum
ber with a circular saw.
Sure Relief
FOR INDIGESTION
J|jiWPiGlsTK)^
> 6 Bell-ans
Hot water
254 AND 754 PACKAGES EVERYWHERE '
S.S.S. stops
Rheumatism
"MY Rheumatism is all gon^. I fee)
x a wonderful glory again in the free
motion I used to have when my days
_ were younger. I
can wank s. s. 5.
(for it-all! Do not
close your eyes
and think that
health, free motion
and atrength are
gone from you for
ever! It is not so.
v. 9. a w waning
to help you. When you increase the nuih
ber of your red-blood-cells, the entire
jystem undergoes a - .
tremendous change. Free Booklet
E-erythta, d,pend,
on blood-atrength. co.. m a. s. a.
Blood which is minus Bid*., Atlanta,
sufficient red-cells ,'or
leads to a long list of matlsm & Blood.
troubles. Rheumatism ■ -
is one of them.” S. S. S. -is the great
blood-cleanser, blood-builder, system
strengthened and nerve invigorator.
S. S. S. n sold at all good
drag stores in two sizes. The
larger size is more economical.
Ohe World's Best
_ oloodMedicine