The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, June 14, 1928, Image 3

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    WOMAN WAS
ALL RUN-DOWN
11--—— *—
Helped By Taking Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound
Evansville, Ind.—“I am writing to
tell you how grateful I am that there I
is euch a medi
cine as yours for
sale in our stores.
I could hardly
drag around. I
was all run-down.
I have taken 12
bottles of Lydia
E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Com
pound bo far and
«m going to take
it until I am
well. My friends
notice the change in mv appearance
and my husband said today that I am
looking so much better and he wants
tne to continue taking it. I hope to
belp all women who are run-down
and Buffer from nervousness by rec
ommending your medicines.”—'Mbs.
Victor N. Schi.enbkuk, 44.Hazel
Avenue, Evansville, Indiana.
No More Distress
after eating or drinking
For correcting over-acidity and
quickly relieving belching, gas,
heartburn, sick headache, dizzi
ness, nausea and other digestive
disorders. Not a laxative but a
tested Sure Relief for Indigestion.
Perfectly harmless and pleasant
to take. Se nd for free samples to:
Bell & Co.. Inc., Orangeburg, N. Y.
Normalizea Digestion and
Sweetene the Breath
Bell-ans
Hot water
Sure Relief
ELL-ANS
FOR INDIGESTION
25jAND'75i RACKAGES EVERYWHERE
Archbishop and Reporters
We should enjoy knowing the arch
bishop of Canterbury. He makes pub
lic declaration that be Is a slow think
er and speaker and that he sometimes
■tumbles through an address, only to
And that the newspaper reporters
have caugh' his meaning and pre
sented It In perfect form. So many
people—not archbishops—are contin
ually complaining that the reporters
“never get anything right.”—Worces
ter Telegram.
Reporting Progress
We casually inquired of our ten
yeHr-old today how he was getting
along at school, and he replied: “Just
fine. We pulled a fake pass and went
through ’em for a touchdown, and
they didn’t euen know who had the
ball.”—Smith Oonnty (Kan.) Pioneer
On the Carpet
"Yonr standing in studies Is satis
factory but your deportment Is not”
“Will that keep me from graduating,
professor?”
"Well, if you keep on we may have
to give you a black sheepskin.”—
Louisville Courier-Journal.
Efficiency, In one phrase. Is keep
ing out of your pockets everything
cieept what you need there.
One Secret of Beauty
Is Foot Comfort
Frequently you bear people
nay, “My feet perspire win
ter and summer when 1 put
on rubbers or heavier foot
wear-then when I remove
my Hhoos my feet chill
quickly and ofien jny hose
seem wet through.” In every
community thousand* imw
use Atlrn'sFnot-Ease in
, the foot-bath daily and
then du-t the feet and
shake into the shoe* this
antiseptic, healing powder.
Full directions ou box. Trial
Package and a Foot-Ease Walking poll sent
Free. Address, Allen's Fool-Ease. L* Boy. N. Y.
Lo a Pi acts. Use Allea's Fool-Ease
•UJY NOW! W’KI.I. IMPROVED lfiO ACRES.
. miles Norfolk. Nebr 6u acre- hay meadow ,
pasture, halanee cultivation. Beautiful grove,
tine orchard, many evergreens surround !■
room House, large barn, poultry house. ho*
house. It' pens: corn crib, machine shed,
etc. Excellent condition. Friendly neighbors
IIS# per. tel »iin. ACME REALTY. 610 W. 4tli.
WAYNE. NKBR
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
Uemw»*»*l>*nuruir Ptof* Hair Failing
Koatorn Color and
Beaut v to Grty and Faded Hniv
•O'- Rial li.iOat HrogglrU.
" « t.« • 1 • i an |.«.t ... N Y
HjORF-STON SHAMPOO—Meal for use In
omiuM-tioii with barker’* lla.r ltai»nm. Make* the
katraofl and thiHy. 50 cent* by mail or at drug
gMa. Pisco I Chemical Work*, 1‘atchoguv, N. Y.
For Mosquito Biles
Sting of Ben and Venomous Insects
Try HANFORD’S
BALSAM OF MYRRH
tf Mm m aalkmiaed I* rdu4 raw bimi la* tka
Mm katda il a-t malt#
M.OIO IOMIII •..•XTr-*!?-.
• I0UX CITY FTO. CO . NO. *»1ttl
f
Out Our Way
a i* ^ ■ ■ ""»«■" i ■ .. —
By Williams
1—111 -. «■
A an' -The'Vwf. Both
HAD A DAV OF REST
'aTs HlOM press
LOAFin'
I
!
k r.vr.orr.
A 1 *vv= ;
Qtra. tn »CA ACRW-t me. *■
President's Veto Power Handed
Down from Old Monarchial Days
Extract From Statement by Congressman Shallenberger,
Fifth Nebraska District.
It is interesting to study the origin, the development,
and the decline of the idea of the veto power in governments.
The veto is the voice of autocracy, ifot of democracy. It was
born of the doctrine declared by Louis the Grand, when he
cried. “The state, I am the state!” It is a part of the doc
trine of the divine right of kings. Its purpose was to pro
tect the prerogatives of kings. It has come to be used to
defeat the will of the people as expressed by congress, their
voice under the constitution.
Calvin Coolidge has the veto power, because 2,000 years
ago Augustus Caesar asserted his authority to use it upon
the senate of Rome, and backed that assertion with an army.
Later the Caesars passed that power down to the kings and
kaisers that followed after them, until at last it came down
to English kings. When 150 years ago our fathers framed
our constitution and our laws, they adopted the principles
and practices of the unwritten constitution of England. Since
an English king still claimed the power of veto, it was grant
ed to our president in our own fundamental law. But the
veto power of the British king is as dead today in England
as William the Conqueror himself.
Not for 200 years has any English king dared to use the
veto power upon the parliament of England. If George V,
king though he is of Great Britain and Ireland and emperor
of India, were to attempt to use the veto power even once
upon the parliament of England when it speaks for England
it would end even the name of kings in England.
But here in free America the people may fight for years
for a bill dealing with the life or death of a great industry
absolutely essential to the welfare of the people. The de
mand for it rises in such a tide as to drive it through both
houses of congress by a big majority. Our government is
not a democracy nor an autocracy; it is a representative
government. Four hundred and thirty five congressmen and
D6 senators are the only voice the people have in the republic
that can speak for them in law.
At last the bill comes up to the president, and he passes
judgment upon us all. He takes his pen in hand and writes
“Veto!” I forbid it, like Caesar of old, and so ends tin
struggle of the people to get relief by law.
If a president still has the power that once belonged to
kings, to use it like a king is not in keeping with American
ideals.
A study of the history of my country convinces me that
if Washington, Jefferson or Lincoln Avere president today
and confronted with this great responsibility, they would
not defy the representatives of the people, but would recog
nize and respect their right to speak for the nation and sign
kh bill.
Jolt for Working Student.
From Century Magazine.
To wait on table, tend furnace,
.ell papers, jerk sodas and at the
ame time study toward a college
degree is a life that many Ameri
cans will defend, for perverse rea
sons, as ambitious and deserving
of credit. But quite bluntly it is
a life both vicious and absurd, a
life quite unworthy of a free man's
interest or devotion. Even Theo
dore Roosevelt, most strenuous of
modern livers, inveighed against the
folly of trying to work one's w°y
hrough college. His advice to the
intellectually ambitious young man
was: “Take a job for a couple of
years, save enough money to allow
vou to study leisurely until your
funds are gone, then repeat the pro
■ess.’’ And until every impecunious
.tudent can get a lat scholarship,
Roosevelt's counsel will be the souna
st advice a young man can heed.
College authorities know that the
»art ttme student is a poor risk
tnd that a high per cent, of under
graduate mediocrity and failure Is
•Jue directly to the strain and wor
ry of budgetry difficulties. Why
not put a little frankness Into the
'Ollege entrance questionnaire by
taking. ' Have you enough money to j
CANADA SHOWS GAIN
IN IMMIGRANTS OF
158.000 IN ONE YEAR
Ottawa, ont .* —An imrni
■rant to Canada crossed over the
jMindary Hoes o! the Dominion
I 'very two minutes of daylight bur
nt \9TS. according to the depart*
n»nt of colonisation and develop
nrm of the Canadian Port fir rail
way in a report Just made public
*irre
"Number of immigrants who »n
trod Canada during the year to
carry you through the rigors of cne
academic year? No? Have you any
money at all? No? Then go to
work and get seme. We shall honor
your persistence and good faith
when you come back with enough
money to support yourself decently
for one college year.”
Anyone who has drudged through
college for his board and room
knows that under such conditions,
life, study, food, youth and happi
ness are sorry myths. One job is
enough for any man. Two mean*
a thinning out somewhere. Thi e*
means slavery.
-- ■ ♦♦ ■-——
To Be Well Governed.
Richard Washourn Child in the
Saturday Evening Post.
The ideal of self government is
not dead. But is Is approaching the
point of truth and reality. The pur
pose of self government for which
men and women for some centuries
have given their al> is being veto
power against tyranny.
The real desire of mankind i« to
be well governed, retaining only the
power to demand good government
Good government is the least
possible government and the least
possible of laws It Is the best and
most of administrative government
taled 158.884. an Increase of 22 900
over 1938.” the report states Im
migration from the British J«!r* in- '
creased from 48 819 to *3.940 'hat
from the United States from 2€ 944
to 33 818 and from other countries
from 86.331 to 83.136
"Ontario gained the largest num
ber of immigrants, with a total of
39,228 Manitoba was second with
38.413 Western Canada got 'A per
rent, at the total
'lltatea of the United State* that
contributed most heavily to the Ca
nadian immigration were Mmhl
tan Mil; New York, M31 Wash
and the least and wisest of legisla
tive government. It is the opposite
of parliamentarism, as we know it,
which gives no answers, while man
kind hungers for the machinery of
quick, straight and courageous an
swers.
For the fulfillment of these de
sires there is astir In Europe real
laboratory experiments in govern
ment. They are going or. in Italy
preeminently, in Hungary, in Spain
and in Portugal, with its burden of
illiteracy. There are stirrings to
ward this end in many corners.
Unworthy would be one who
worked to destory the ideal of self
government.
Worthy, indeed, is the bearer of
tidings of the stretching forth of
human desire for good government.
What did they want—these human
beings? Self government or good
government? It appears that they
wanted good government.
-- «« -
Lesson of Knapp Case.
The conviction of Mrs. Florence
E S. Knapp, former secretary of
state for Me wYork, on a charge of
misappropriation of public funds
cannot be said to prove anything
one way or the other about wonmen
in public office. The case is of
more ordinary intrest, however, in
several particulars; and it is likely
to be used, as it already has been
used, to back up assertions that
women are out of place in politics
—from which it would be logical to
assume that if grafting is to be
done in public office it ought to be
left to the men who know from
experience how to away with it.
This ease has attracted special
attention because Mrs. Knapp was
the first women ever to be elected
to state office in New York and one
of the few women to be elected to
any important public office in the
eastern section of the country.
Mrs. Knapp has charged, and it
was used in her defense, that she
was being prosecuted as the result
of politics, she being a republican
and the charges finally being
pressed against her by Governor
Smith. There seems little basis,
however, for that defense. The
evidence seems to indicate that
Governor Smith was, in fact, loath
to press the charges lest he be
accused of playing politics; and it
was not until a thorough investi
gation showed strong evidence of
wrongdoing that the state’s author
ity was brought fully to bear in the
T *•» tV-rn inroc H nra H nn hnth
sides were given opportunity to be
heard, publicly. In the firsct trial
of Mrs Knapp the Jury disagreed;
in the second the jury found
against her
Whatever ether bearings the case
may have, the real lession of it is
that no faithless public official,
man or woman, should escape pun
ishment.
With River Working.
There is good reason now for be
lieving that within less that a de
cade government barge will be
parrying the farm produce of Ne
ora.ska, Iowa and the Dakotas by
water to the sea and thence by
ocean tran-port to both coasts and
to foreign markets. Those same
barges, on their return trips, will
bring to us lumber, coal, steel and
other heavy and nonperishable com
modities for consumption. The
freight saving will run into the
scores of millions, and the major
portion of the heavy industrial
handicap suffered by the interior
states on account of the Panama
canal will have been removed.
The government goes into busi
ness. It builds and buys barges. It
sells transportation service. It com
petes with the railroads And It does
it with the consent, however, re
luctantly given, of Calvin Coolidge.
stubborn opponent of Just such
public enterprise. It does It because
It is essential to the development of
the greatest and richest valley re
gion In the world, and to putting
that vallev unon an economic equal
ity with the rest of the country, so
far aa concerns Its transportation
need*
tngton. 1 600 Minnesota. 1.435: Cal
ifornia. 1005 and Masaachusetta,
! 038. With the exception of the
United Kingdom, nermanv sent the
largest number of immlgranta from
Europe. 9.130"
• • —•
t vr Hroadrasllnr
She When I'm talking you
might at least M*ten
Hr Yralil Aid send applause
earda?
— ■■mi \mr • •
IrohlUtn.
Waiver: * Would you like to drink
Canada Dry, sir?"
Customer I'd Ilk# to. but I n
lose only fog a »»** *
GREAT
AMERICAN
SYRUP
for children
Animals of the Wild
Not Dangerous to Men
No wild unlnml Is dangerous to man
unless man himself provokes the aid
mill.
The prevalent Idea among city-bred
human beings that wildest Africa Is
a man trap where leopards and the
like lurk In every other tree, waiting
to pounce on the tlrst passing human.
Is so much pish, and not a little tush
As a matter of fact, the most dao
gerous of wild beasts, unless driven
to desperation hy hunger, will step
aside to let you pass, provided you
don't make any threatening gestures
toward him.
Of course, there are a few excep
tlons, such us old, desperate, man
eating lions, who are no longer able
to stalk their natural prey, animals
suffering from previous wounds, or
Insane animals, sueh us the rogue ele
phants. Hut under ordinary circum
stances. a wild animal must tie hurt
or deviled before It attacks, or must
think It Is going to be hurt.—Wynnnt
D. Hubbard lu the Klko Magazine.
Memorial of Schiller
A hitherto unknown letter of Fried
rich von Schiller whs found et the
town of Aach, Czechoslovakia, h.v the
college professor, L. Hueller. The
letter, not dated. Is addressed to
Amalie von Imnoff, a niece of Frnu
von Stein, whose epic poem, “The
Sisters of Lesbos," was Included In
Schiller's Almanac of the Muses In
180U. It Is assumed that It was writ
ten during the last years of the greut
German author's life.
The More the Less
Editor (rejecting manuscript)—You
see, a story has to be Just so to get
into our magazine.
Would-be Contrlb— Well, what’s the
matter with this one?
Editor—It's only so-so.—Boston Mug
nzine.
Part Owner
Landlord (In court) —I want an
ejectment order against my tenant,
who lias paid no rent for a year ami
ten months.
Magistrate (smiling) —I le Is not
your tenant. Me Is your guest.—
Philadelphia Inquirer.
Charted Course
“Anyone can see." said the waggish
glazier ns his assistant handed him n
piece of glass he’d Just rimmed, “that
I've got my work cut out for me."—
Farm and Fireside.
Still Flowing
“What, again? Why, 1 lent yon
money to tide you over yesterday "
“I know, hut the tide Is still going
nut.”—Boston Transcript
Necessary Preparations
"l hear that your wife has l .Ueo op
golf."
“Well, she Intended to, hut the tai
lor was two weeks late with her knick
ers and I couldn’t get delivery on s
sports rondrter for her. She expect!
to start in nhont two weeks.’’
Just Once
"Did you ever see a room full ol
women perfectly silent?’’
“Yes. once. Some one had asked
which of those present was the old
eet."—Toronto Telegram.
■ . • —1—3
THERE Is nothin# that has ever t
taken the place of Bayer Aspirin ai
an antidote for pain. Safe, or physi
cians wouldn't use it, and endorse its
use by others. Sure, or several mil
lion users would have turned to some
thing else. But get real Bayer Aspirin
(at any drugstore) with Bayer on the
box, and the word genuine printed in
red:
APPETITE
IMPROVED
-QUICKLY
Carter’s Little Liver Pills
Purely Vegetable Laarthm
move the bowel* free from
pein end unpleacanc after
effect*. They relieve the eyatem of couatipf
tion poiwat which dull the deeire for food.
Remember they ere • doctor'* preecrlption
end can be taken by the entire family.
All Druggiite 2 Sc and 7Sc Red Package*.
CARTER’S ESS PILLS
^“^53l5wili not iniure human brings.
livestock, dogs. cals, poultry.
TCt Is deadly to rats and mice every tunc.
PoUona arc too dufirou
K-R Odors not contain arsenic phosphorus,
barium carbonate or any deadly poison
Made of pnvrdrfed squill as recommended
by (lie U. S Dept, of Agriculture in their
latest bulletin on "Rat Control.**
"Onr of «i»r good niatomm juit told ui fi?
gathm d 105 d» id rat* on h>afarm from t one
a ? ounce* package of K-R O We hear of
ntuuv ha-line 10 «>r 40 rataaUrr umi It R O.
uhkn la highly aucraaaful and ahnuYd pleaca
you * Wolgamoi al>rug Store, Rtchwoccl, O.
75c at your druggist; large size (tour time*
u- much) I.’ <mi Sent postpaid direct troa*
U: it dmler cannot »upplv you. BOLD ON
MONET-BACK Cl-ANTEE. T
K-K-U t ompan; Y. Spri__—id. OLlP.
KILLS-RATS-ONLV
Your Hands Need
Cuticura Soap
Every day to keep them »oh and
smooth. I lathe with either hot or cold
water and alwaya dry thoroughly. II
thapped. ted or rough use hot water
and Cuticura Soup, rubbing In Cuticura
Ointment alter drying, r afar tally at
night.
•aae •» "WI»I I a Mrf Mr. Tatam lb htf
‘ -J ■■■ 'Mil