The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, March 01, 1928, Image 3

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    all your avails
For sleeping rooms — formal
parlors and reception halls —
dining room and living room
— for the library — and for
public buildings. Properly
applied it won’t rub off.
Write to US or ask your dealer
for a copy of our free drawing
book for children—" The Alabas
tine Home Color Book —ar,d e
free color card.
Write to ns also for our beau
tiful free book “Artistic
Home Decoration” by our
Home Betterment Expert,
Miss Ruby Brandon, Alabas
tine Company, 222 Grandville
Ave., Grand Rapids, Mich.
Alabastine— a po’vder in white and
tints. Packed i* 5-pound packages,
ready for use by mixing with cold
or warm water. Full directions on
every package. Apply with an ordi
nary wall brush. Suitable for all
interior surf aces — plaster, wall
board, brick, cement or canvas.
I
NATIVE BLACK HILLS EV KK4.HKENS AT
rotisonablp price* I or spring delivery. M. B.
HARRISON, Deerfield, S. Duk.
ON ACCOUNT OF EDITOR'S DEATH
must sell at ome. on* of beat paying month
ly paper* In Iowa. Established XX year,.
CHARLES WOOD. Traer. Iowa.
Anybody VVimtiiir to Buy. Sell, Trade, No
'matter where located, write for DeBeya
Until Ealale Adv. Bulletin, LoitHn. Kansas.
Stock and Feeder* for Sale
tthortage of feed enable* you to buy \ to
full blood Hereford weaned, dehorned calve*
and yearling steer*, worth the money In thl*
Hcctlou. In car lot*, even In *lr.e. The good
kind. W ire or write F. F. JOHNSTON, Stock
port. low a.
]j
I
, 1
’ I
i I
_ _ j
•-1
We are all temperamental If wa
wouldn’t behave ourselves should we’
suddenly fall heir to $500,000.
For Cold a, Grip or Influenza
aril as a Preventive, take I.axatlve
BHOMO QUTNTNB3 Tablets. A Safe and
Proven Remedy. The box bears the
signature of E. W. Grove. SOc.—Adv.
Amiable people who don’t care any
thing about you can wear mighty
thin.
Quart of Water j
Cleans Kidneys I
Take a Little Salts If Your Back
Hurts, or Bladder is
Troubling You
—
No man or woman can make a mis
take by flushing the kidneys occasion
ally, says a well-known authority.
Mating too much rich food creates
acids, which excite the kidneys. They
become overworked from the strain,
gel sluggish and fail to filter the w aste
and poisons from the blood. Then we
get aick. Rheumatism, headaches,
liver trouble, nervousness, dizziness,
sleeplessness and urinary disorders
often come from sluggish kidneys.
The moment you feel n dull ache In
the kidneys, or your back hurts, or If
the urine Is cloudy, offensive, full of
sediment, irregular of passage or at
tended by a sensation of scalding, be
gin drinking a quart of water each
day. also get about four ounces of .lad
Malls frig a any pharmacy; take a
Iablespconfid In a glass of water be
fore breakfast and In a few days your
kidneys may act fine.
This famous salts Is made from the
add of grapes and lemon juice, com
blued v lt!i Hilda, and has been used
for years in flush and stimulate the
kidneys; also to help neutralize the
uelds in the system, so they no longer
ciiimw Irritation, thus often relieving
bladder weakness.
Jail Mulls Is inexpensive; makes a
delightful effervescent Hilda water
drink which everyone should take
now and then to help keep the kid
ney* clean and active and the blood
pure, thereby often avoiding serious
kldncv complications
Im—-.~ -r .... ,i - ,|_ !■■■
• IGUX CITY FTO. CO, NO.
| Out Our Way
By Williams
VNEU.,1 SEE WHERE \ /tVAE'T WOm'T GA'M 'i
/Whew Puf TH’ EFFlOEMCT V a TR\MOr WvTH 'AT
mam r vworK ow That igoT* *-\E walks
oiler. AM' \F TH’ O'E MUCR SLOWER -ThakAV
romsToo slow tvaru colO oie Rom<£>. \\
-that spooT , 'Ll, \ He'o be better wvTh \
G\OE HIM A CAM WU»\ \a LOHciER CAM-RF O
A SHORT MtCvT AM1 MAKE \ GET FORMER OH CHE
Mm walk further—t j _\V !'v v/v
^ Qim«. »> h[* fetwyict me._
S^flLL* UfE
- -A '
j.fr’|
;g »g<k v s pat
| NO ONE RESPECTS A LIAR.
E. W. Howe.
I find great pteasure in a truth
ful man. One can depend on
! what he says, and learn from him.
. . . But. no one pays any atten
tion to a liar, or much respects
him. I have never known a really
successful man who was a liar.
Men of that disposition soon learn,
if engaged in real affaire success
fully, that untruthfulness is a
drag, like a suit of clothes when
In swimming.
"""
SONG
Oh. I would weave a little song
Out of the flowers of my heart.
And I’d entwine them one by one
With clever twist an1, nimble da't.
I’d add the bitterness of tears.
The sweetness of a soul-sprung smile,
The disillusionment of years,
The triumph asted for awhile.
I'd mix the colors of my moods
The tans and grays of dull despair,
the reds and golds that surge with
joy.
The hues of happiness and care.
And all the fragrance of a life
Would breathe itself into my song,
At times a crooning lullaby.
Again, a Hallelujah—strong!
And would you take my little song
And understand its softlike pleading?
Or would you crush it to the ground
And leave it bruised and bleeding?
Elsie Brodkey.
3244 Jackson St., Sioux City.
--—
“Sweet Are the Uses of Adversity.”
From the Los Angeles Times.
Five hundred thousand members
were lost by the Protestant church
es last year, is the startling report
of an official statistician for religi
ous bodies in America.
Reaction came immediately from
the headquarters of the Presbyterian
denomination and the following rea
sons were assigned lor the slump:
__ « _ J ___1 4- AM • Lnil 11 rn h _
x UC iuwciru UIWIM* , --
ing influences upon the spiritual life;
negligence of shepherds going after
the lost sheep; pruning of member
ships; the high cost of church affilia
tion. . . .
As to this condition of organized
Christianity, some facts are note
worthy. We spend more than 15 times
as much on ambulances at the bot
tom of the precipice in taking care
of crime as we do on fences at the
top. . . . Our bill for chewing gum
and cosmetics makes the cost of
churches picayunish.
It is possible that a greater candor
of the times in cutting out dead tim
ber from constituency rolls . has
something to do with the slump. We
may have been guilty of worshiping
statistics.
For the ministers to accuse them
selves of laxness is healthful. Con
fession is curative. But we question
whether any or all of these answers
are satisfactory. We mav even take
the worn groove of the line of least
resistance and blame it on the war.
It is good peace propaganda.
Can it be that the condition of the
church goes deeper? May it be pos
sible that we cannot stand prosper
ity?
All sunshine makes empty pews.
Clouds fill the hardest benches. Dis
asters drive to the knees. . . . Dean
Inge is credited with the saying that
the church’s success is her failure.
Victory is often our greatest defeat.
When folks are in trouble, they
dust off the Bible When their lcrders
are fuli of meat and their wardrobe -
full of clothes, the lines to the skies
tend to fall into disuse.
When the grades are rut down and
It is made easy to enter Yosemite and
Heaven, we lose the rest. The cost of
Christianity dees not seem to be too
great, but too little.
The blood of the martyrs mav yet
be the seed of the church. Light seed
has made slack harvest Mountains
of opposition yet lift to the skies.
t'p-To-Iiate Children.
"When l get married." said little
Bess. "I m going to marry a mintstei
and then tt won't coat anything for
a wedding fee ’*
"When I get married " returned her
playmate. "I’m going to marry a law
yer and then Ik won't coat anything
for a divorce ”
* ■ a^i# —■■■ ■ ■
q What la meant by companion
ale marriage’* 1 N.
A. Judge Lindsay it* ipcnnor de
fine! tt as follows; “Companionate
marriage ta legal marriage with le
galised birth control, and with the
right to divorce bv mutual consent
for child Was roupW* usually without
payment of alimony
Comic-Opera “Statesmen” Gradually
Giving Way to Normal Business Men
By Bruce C'atton. NEA Service.
The traditional statesman, with his frock coat, string tie
and silver tongued oratory, is extinct; and Senator Henry F,
Ashurst of Arizona sees no reason to bewail his passing.
“Today’s statesman," says Senator Ashurst to a midwest
real estate board, “is a businesslike gentleman in an ordinary
business suit, who either has wide knowledge of businesr
affairs or is doing his best to accumulate that necessary knowl
edge."
For this age, the senator explains, is the age of science and
business. We no longer have red Indians to kill, wild forests
to clear, menacing foreign enemies to repel. Our problems
call for the business man, the banker, the engineer and th*
chemist, not the politician.
There is nothing really new in 1 his statement. But it needs
to be emphasized every so often. We are too apt to try to use
19th century standards and instruments in a 20th century
world. It is up to us realize that the old order has passed,
forever, and that the America of today is not the America of
Lincoln's day.
All change is apt to be a bit frightening. It is easy to mis
take growing pains for the symptoms of mortal illness. Ac
cordingly, it is not surprising that a great many people are
worried over America's future. We find “liberals" every
where lamenting the passing of the old public interest in
politics, crying out that we will lose our liberties because we
are indifferent to elections and issues, shuddering at the fact
that power is passing to the harfds of the industrialist and the
banker.
We need to forget the romantic past and become realists.
We have no Websters and Calhouns today; well, what of it T
They would be helpless if they were here. Our national destiny
is being shaped less and less at Washington, more and more
in New York banks, Detroit auto factories, Schenectady
laboratories and the mills of Pittsburg and Birmingham.
Maybe this is too bad and maybe it isn’t; at any rate that is
the way of it, and the sooner we realize it the better for us.
When America adopted mass production it started out on
an entirely new tack in civilization. Never before did any na
tion set out to live by the machine. We have started on a
path from which we could not turn back if we would; why not
wake up to that fact and stop thinking in terms of 1880?
Upon what does our future chiefly depend? lake it or not,
it depends chiefly on that magic word prosperity. If our nation
is to be healthy and happy its factory chimneys must be
belching smoke. Yon can laugh at Babbit if you will, you can
lament ‘‘standardization” and “factory civilization” until you
are out of breath, but you can’t change that fact. It were bpst
to face it.
No one knows what the future holds. It certainly will he
unlike anything that has gone before. And are there not in*
dcations that it will be more dazzling, more splendid, as well?
AYe are being freed in a way our forefathers never imagined;
freed from toil, from poverty, from hunger, from the limi
tations of time and space. Presently we shall be free enough
so that each man, from the highest to the lowest, can begin to
develop his boundless human potentialities.
AVe are at the dawning of a new era. There is no need for
lamentation.
Not Bothering Gougers.
From the Milwaukee Journal
Secretary Hoover and Secretary
Jardine want congress to permit buy
ing pools to offset increasing con
trol of certain products by foreign
monopolies, which have the natural
instinct of all monopolies to raise
prices. Mr. Hoover says that the
world is dangerously near a rubber
shortage because of British restric
tion of output. Perhaps something
useful may be done by combined bu> - j
ing, through the rial cure for price |
boosting is stimulation of other
sources of supply. Senator Smoot j
said the other day that legislation i
cannot upset natural laws, but that's
, what the tariff is guaranteed to do.
i and maybe something can be done
Not mg to All.
From the Pathfinder.
Nearly 6Ob.00b.00U Christians recog
nise (his as the yeas 1928. More than
220.000.000 other persons (Moham
medans! know it as the year H48.
.sixteen million Jews call 11 SftSH The
Japanese calendar dates it 2587 and
file By/anftne calendar 7428.
• ♦ — —
Q Was Jumbo always a |ond
Itntpeird bea*l’ H W W
A. It t» said that durin8 hi* early
years in the London Zoo tie was ted
st tune* Hr biokr his tuslu in a
fit or raff In his tatter with Bar
Hum's cirrus he was considered a
| safe animal for children to ride while i
i in »he animal tent.
for our consumers of rubber and pot
ash; possibly something even for oui
users of coffee.
But what about our selling pools
the monopolies or practical mono
polies that boost prices on goods not
imported? It is very patriotic to gc
after the foreign monopolist; but. il
seems, downright unpatriotic not U
praise the home monopolist, what
ever he insists on charging so long
as it is still necessary for him t<
give employment to labor. The con
sumer would have some cause to get
enthusiastic If Secretaries Hoovei
and Jaidlne were out after thi
American gougers who hide behinc
the tariff as well as foreigners wht
gouge through restriction.
Fair and Warmer.
By Arch Jarrell In Wichita Beacon.
"When Oeneral Pershing left thv
hospital.' says the account of hts vis
it to Kansas City, "there was a warm
er. brighter atmosphere there”
We remember one day in February
IBIS, when the 3Sth division marched
more kilometer* than you d think li
stand in line ,'or hour* waiting for th«
general and Edward Albert Christian
tieorge Andrew Patrick David, prints
of Wales Finally they came along
and looked us over. After they had
left there was a «aimer, brighter at
mosptiere there.
The whole world knows Aspirin as an effective antidote for
pain. But it’s just as important to know that there is only t*n*r
genuine Bayer Aspirin. The name Bayer is on every tablet, ana
on the box. If it says Bayer, it’s genuine; and if it doesn’t, it is
not! Headaches arc dispelled by Bayer Aspirin. So are colds,
and the pain that goes with them; even neuralgia, neuritis, and
rheumatism promptly relieved. Get Bayer—at any drugstore—
with proven directions.
Physicians prescribe Bayer Aspirin;
it does NOT affect die heart
> t
iiaplrtn li the trade murk of Itaj-er Manufacture of Mouoacrtlcacldeater of Rollerl*oa>r*4
No Cure, No Hide
Knock-knees cannot t*«* cured, as
serts a Philadelphia physician. Worse
than that, though, they apparently
can t be concealed.
A Mother’s Health Should
be up to Par
Fort Scott. Kans—“Before my baby
came I took several bottles of Dr.
Pierce’s Favorite
Preemption and it
certainly was a won
derful help and bene
fit to me. It gave
me strength and
courage and my
baby is stout snd
healthy. I am only 1
too glad to recom
mend the ‘Favorite
Prescription' to ex
pectant mothers."
I—Mrs. Stella Judd, 531 N. Crawford St.
Favorite Prescription can l>e had in
, tablet form aa well as liquid at drug
■tores.
If you wish a trial package of tablets
Juat send 10c to Dr Pierce's Invalids’
Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y.
Write for medical advice. This carries
no charge.
Well!
•'Does you-all know what cistern
means?”
"It am de female of breddern.”
To Cool a Burn
Use Hanford’s Balsam of Mynii
Mom v bark for drat bottle If not nuitod Afl AmaAimm.
Makes Life
Sweet
For seven generations the NstitMl
Household Remedy of Holland for kaO
ney, liver and bowel troubles ha*
make life brighter for suffering men mmC
women. Begin taking them today
notice how quickly your troubles w*
vanish. At all druggists in 3 sues.
ME&i/
^^HA»RLIM OIL ^
Hat Many Application*
There are three different »>*■*«.<**»
to the word ■'jnnkeo." It was* Oral mgr
piled to nntlve* or citizens of the So*
England ntnte*, particularly those «C
old New England fumillea. Then Si
w«h applied by people of the Soaitaasi
states to nil the people of the
ern otates, In general. I>a*tty. * M
applied by the people of * her essDa
iries to nil citizen* and inhabitaats *t
the United Stales.
The Cream
of the
Tobacco
Crop
' «.
Lucky
Strikes
are the
Favorite
Brand of Paul Whiteman—
“It was hut recently, when I started to act as nuixU*r of
ceremonies with mybandat the Par amountThcatre, that
I realized how vital perfect voice condition was to a
performer. I have always been a consistent smoker
and fortunately, Lucky Strikes were my favorite brand.
I like their toasted flavor and, best of all, l can smoke
as often as I like, without fear of irritating my voice,
which is becoming a great -—5^ r''w 0 * .
asset in my work.’'
“It’s toasted”
No Throat Irritation-No Cou^h.