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About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (April 10, 1930)
There’s scarcely an ache or pain that Bayer Aspirin won’t relieve promptly. It can’t remove the cause, out it will relieve the pain! Head aches. Backaches. Neuritis and neuralgia. Yes, and rheumatism. Read proven directions for many important uses. Genuine Aspirin can’t depress the heart Look ior the Bayer cross: Should Say Not! Clerk—Do you want kid gloves? Tommy (first long punts)—No, 1 want men’s gloves. True dyes are easiest to use! Dresses, drapes or lingerie look Hew when they’re re-dyed with Dia mond Dyes. No spotting or streak ing; neves-, a trace of that re-dyed look. Just rich, even, bright colors that hold amazingly through wear and washing. Diamond Dyes are the highest quality Dyes you can buy because they’re so rich in pure anilines. That’s what makes them so easy to use. That’s why they’ve been famous for 50 years. 15 cent packages—all dealers. DiamondoDyes Highest Quality for 50 Years Ant*’ Mental Power* The mental powers of ants, which Darwin referred to as perhaps more marvelous than those of man, have been the subject of close study by numerous observers. A Sour Stomach In the same time it takes a dose of soda to bring a little temporary relief of gas and sour stomach, Phillips Milk of Magnesia has acid ity completely checked, and the di gestive organs all tranquilized. Once you have tried this form of relief you will cease to worry about your diet and experience a new freedom in eating. This pleasant preparation is just as good for children, too. Use it whenever coated tongue or fetid breath signals need of a sweetener. Physicians will tell you that every spoonful of Phillips Milk of Mag nesia neutralizes many times its volume in acid. Get the genuine, the name Phillips is important Imitations do not act the samel of Magnesia Most statistics used in arguing are utterly worthless. Don’t Risk Neglect? Kidney Disorders Are Too Serious to Ignore. TT 7ATCH your kidneys! Sluggish W kidneys fail to rid the blood of impurities and permit slow poi soning of the whole system. If troubled with backache, bladder irritations and getting up at night, don't take chancesl Use Doan s Pills at the first sign of disorder. Used for more than 50 years. Praised the world over. 50,000 Users Endorse Doan’s: Mrs. O. A. Winter, 1145 N. Topeka St., * Wichita, Kant., uyn "I had such severe backaches 1 could hardly do my housework.i Headaches were frequent and my kidneys were irregular. Doan's Pills strengthened my back and regulated my kidneys." SIOUX CITY PTC. CO . NO. 15-1830. ^ —^— Out Our Way By Williamj T-V hamDS mat must muRT Cue am J / Be Av.u TV 3E «=>ERvAmTS SOME V-AANiOS HAm06 ( FAS'ER Cm •To T-V FACE, PRiOE Au\_ HA^Kl' \/SOME KAMOS BuT TVs is TV TmE "tp \ V WA\T DM | PR\OE , »F OME TmE \T \KAUE "V* WAiT A I TKE FACE \ l MUST HURT Om SOME 1 FACE- J WAS o>rt/ \ |k.-TvKE\R PRIDE. A MOSS X /V \emOuG\V SO , | lii^ _x |^KMow( o^y *' V—_ 1 '■ j. Rv*lU*MS UAI F OFF \ n*a.u »pat.orr. t-Ah-V-V v._ Bringing Electricity to Holy Land DAK ACROSS THE JARKUK TURBULENT JARKUK STJ3EAH. WHILE JORDAN RI\ i roHs< on, it will be bringing power, light and prosperity to the people of Palestine. After many years of planning, the ambitious project of the Russian engineer, Rutenberg is at last to become reality, and the Holy Land will be the scene of one of the largest electrical enterprises in Europe. Since the Palestine mandate be came effective the Holy Land has seen steady influx of poulation. And modern methods in working and living are fast superseding primitive conditions in even the smallest settlement. And so the hum of the dynamo is to sound its State May Provide Walks. Prom Detroit News. The humble roadside pedestrian who has been walking on the rough ill these years to avoid being pumped ditch-ward, and has been groping in the motorized public’s dust to follow the old-fashioned sport of seeing the countryside on foot, finally has been offered a kind ly hand in the form of the state committee of the American Society for Municipal Improvements. “Pedestrian sidewalks” are pro posed by John W. Reid, Detroit’s commissioner of public works, who s chairman of the committee, to check what he terms the ‘ appalling increase of pedestrian slaughter.” In a communication to the League pf Michigan Municipalities, Mr. Reid asserts that the killing of ped estrians has created “a nationwide iemand for pedestrian rights on the oighway, particularly through vil lages, parks and scenic drives which pedestrians have a right and a nec essity to use.” "Although organized motordom pas devoted the greater part of its power and attention to the improve ment of highways for vehicular use, mankind still Is created with feet instead of rubber tires," he wrote to he league. The suggestion for pedestrian sidewalks was Indorsed by the safe ty and traffic committee of the Detroit Automobile club when it passed a resolution proposing a pro gram of activity to provide such Cole Blease As Type. Prom Kansas City Star. The Senate debate upon the imendments to the tariff bill, which .vill restore a modified form of cen crship over imported books, should disclose to this country its true pa triots. There is Senator Cutting of Mew Mexico, fcr example. Who can etain confidence in his patriotism after he has taken the leadership in i fight for the dangerous principles af tolerance and free speech? And Senator Wheeler of Montana and Senator Tydings of Maryland, how dare we trust the conduct of affairs to men like there, who actually be u«ve that the American people can ■note of progress, and Jerusalem is to bask in the glow of the arc lamp. The turbulent waters of the Jordan, which at some points falls 100 feet, are to be utilized, and in addition to the harnessing of this power, 25 foot dams are to be erected in this river and the Jer muk River just above the con fluence of the two streams. A lake 750 feet wide and 6 miles long is to be built in order to hold the water necessary to generate the water power. After three giant turbines have done their work, the water will be turned back to the rivers. It is estimated that there walks in congested areas in Michi gan. Mr. Reid pointed out that al though only two states in the un ion have laws permitting the con struction of sidewalks along high ways at state expense, Holland and other European countries that have reached a population density such as America is fast approaching, have learned the expediency of side walks along main highways. “Gas" Tax Cut Is Sought. Prom Atlanta Constitution. The motorists of the nation are beginning to utter vigorous protests against the large gasoline and license taxes imposed upon them by the state legislatures. They claim they are being made the scapegoats for other people who should bear a larger share of the load of taxation In pre-Volstead days it was a favorite resource of legislators to get additional revenue by raising the license fees of liquor dealers, until in many states the liquor peo ple entered politics to elect friendly legislators in self-defense. Now the gasoline tax affords a ready re source and income states the tax per gallon has been hiked steadily to four, five and even six cents per gallon. In Pennsylvania the tax is four cents, with a provision that it shall revert to three cents on July first next. A fight is promised in the legislature between those who wish read a book without overthrowing their government But this country is not wholly abandoned to such menaces. There are still patriots among us. There is Cole Blease. How proud the citi zens of South Carolina must be of this sturdy advocate of the best American traditions. And their sen ator is proud of them. In the course of the same discus sion Mr. Blease remarked, 'Tf a man comes into this country and says, •Damn America,’ he ought to be hanged tor it. It Is treason.” We seem to remember that Mr. Blease was quoted as having ex claimed at a conference of govern- j will be an excess current of 6,301 volts, and this power will be trans formed to high tension and be thei conveyed to the principal trans former station. From this point the power will bo conveyed U Haifa and the settlement of Te) Aviv, the all-Jcwish city. It is expected that the Rueten berg project will bring much pros perity to Jerusalem and plans an being made for factories ant plants on an ambitious scale as calculated to bring the Holy Land in line with progress and modem achievement. Work is being rushed and it is hoped to complete th« various units bv the Spring. (international Newxreet) to keep the four-cent levy on anO the motorist associations that de* mand the promised reduction. If seems that the three cents levy wil) produce, with the license fees, some $55,000,000, w h i c h is mors than the highway department can well employ upon the load con st. -action and maintenance in a year. So the motorists appear to have a strong argument for the reduction. But gas taxes are too easily gotten and too increasingly large to be lightly gicen up by the legislators who want easy money to distribute about among their constituents. The fight that is on, therefore, in Pennsylvania will be watched with cnsiderable interest by motorists in other states who feel the weight of their gasoline expenses. •-♦ ♦ .— Q. When did the husking bee go oui cf existence? D. M. S. A. The husking bee has not gone out oi existence. In fact husking today is just as popular and due to the recent prizes offered more prof itable '.han in former times. It is true that husking bees are not the big social event of the fall season as they were a generation or so ago. Radio, automobiles, and good roads have chang'd the social life of the farm, but today husking is on a highly competitive basis, and sev eral states make a feature of the com husking contest ors in 1912, “To hell with the con stitution!” And maybe there is some thing to be said for his 1930 sug gestion. SUCH A NICE PARTY Harrisburg. Pa.—A party Is a nice place to spend the evening, Bozo Opacich believes, but he doesn’t like them when they get boisterous. He recently attended one at Chocken hill near here and had a fine time until the guests started whooping things up. Just to make the par ty interesting, they commenced to throw dishes, one of which caught Opacich on the noee and cut the end of it off. ’ Mothers find it magic for scuffs One touch of the dauber and scuffs disappear. Smooth, uniform color comes back to faded shoes. More than 50 marvelous shines—50 cents. Colors for black, brown, tan and wliite •hoes—a neutral polish for others. BARTON’S Dyan$hin6 I « SHOE POLISH Mk \necdote That Recalls Farm Life of the Past President S. H. Thompson of the .Unerlcun Farm Iturenu federation said on Ills return from Europe, where with .TO farmers lie had been studying European agriculture: "European farmers know nothing about motor plows or electrical inllk era They are living now pretty much like the farmer's wife of n generation ago. "A generation ago a preacher hold up t farmer and said: "‘How’s your wife today?’ "'About the same, reverend. Cei tnlnly no better.’ “‘Dear oie! Too bad. What seems to be the matter with her?* “‘Well, reverend, I can hardly .<*11 ye, but if she don’t get better pretty quick me and (be bort'l) he all knocked out doing her work.’ ’’— Detroit Free Press. Intrct-Catching Plants AH plants have interesting dinr scterlstlcs, but few are so endlessly mysterious nnd fascinating as are the insect-catching and insect-de vouring plants, of which Florida has an especially large number, com prising species of butterworts. sun dews, pitcher plants, nnd biudder worts. No less than five species of pitcher plants grow In Florida, says Nature Magazine, and t tie large flowers ore so remarkable in form that a writer in 1072 aptly called them “fantastical flowers.’* Yet the hollow, trumpet-shaped leaves, dot ted and veined with white nnd red and purple, nre even more fantastic than the flowers, and most fantastic of all are the means by which these handsome leaves lure nnd capture nnd devour their living prey, Sava the Surface Figgly—Is my face dirty, or Is It my Imagination? Wiggly—Your face Isn't; I do*’' know about your imagination.—West ern Christian Advocate. Got tip Must Be Siieecesl "Before Fame’s report ea» m heard," said Hi Ilo, the sage at Chinatown, “the tongue at gossip must grow silent through v^rineam* —Washington Star. Arc You Successful? Krum tlic day tliat • yOL'tiK man carts out Is seek his lira position t» me er.ti ot ni* business life. b« health nnd per sotul appearance have a world t# do with his tuo cess. If you are not physically up to the mark —appetite uncertain, digestion poor, in* a general sense of incapacity and weak ness. take I)R. PIERCE’S GOLDEJf MEDICAL DISCOVERY. It renew* the blood with the vital life-giving red corpuscles and promotes robust health, a clear skin, energy, pep. Get “GlIDf* from your druggist in either fluid or tablets. Ingredients printed on label. Market DUcumi** “Affairs of this company seem %m have turned the corner.1* “Going which way?” Poverty Is n great crime—matri monially speaking. Boschee’s Syrup soothes instantly, ends irritation quickly! GUARANTEED. •## Never be without \irrf n Boschee’s! For younc W l II€ and o)d, Boschee’s druggists Syrup Happy Woman Tells How She Lost 19 Pounds of Faf in 27 Days During October h woman In Mon tana wrote—“My first bottle of Kruschen Salts lasted almost 4 weeks and during that time 1 lost 19 pounds of fat—Kruschen Is all you claim for It—I feel better than I have for years.” Here's the recipe that banishes fat and brings into blossom all the nat ural attractiveness thut every woman possesses. Every morning take one half tea spoonful of Kruschen Salts In a gluss of hot water before breakfast. Be sure and do this every morning for “It's the little dally dose that takes off the fat."—Don't miss a morn ing. The Kruschen habit means that American Jewish Farmers The Jewish Agricultural society has estimated that there are 80,000 Jewish farmers operating a million acres of farm land In the United States. It is largely due to the ef forts of this organiaztion that the number is so large. Thirty years ago, at the time of Its inception, there were barely a thousand Jews on American farms. The agricul tural society not only offers scien tific advice, but lends money and as sists the farmers in many Instauces Id securing a suitnble location. It is one’s duly to be gay, occa sionally, to keep people from classi fying him ns a grouch. every pnrticle of poisonous waste matter and harmful ucids and gasew are expelled front the system. At the same time the stomach, liver, kidneys und bowels are toned up int the pure, fresh blood containing Na ture's six life-giving salts are carried! to every organ, gland, nerve and fibre of the body nnd this Is followed bp “that Kruschen feeling" of energetiw health and activity that Is reflected la bright eyes, clear skin, cheerful vi vacity and charming figure. If you want to lose fat with speed! get un 85c bottle of Kruschen Salta from any live druggist anywhere la America with the distinct under standing that you must he satisfied!j with results or money back. In DIZZY? ichy, bilious, constipated? 1 R NATURS'S IUIOT_ This mild, safe, vegeta sdy will havo you feeling morning. You’ll eajay rough bowel action with ightest sign of griping fort. So/e, mild, purely vegetable— at druggitU—only 25c FEEL LIKE A MILLION. TAKE 3L-I-.... ' " " 1 "■ "■ <g A reporter gets as tired hearing faked up stories us a judge on tfea bench. , When Babies Babies will cry, often for no apparent reason. You may not know what’s wrong, but you can always give Castoria. This soon has your little one comforted; if not, you should call a doctor. Don’t experiment with medicines intended for the stronger systems of adults! Most of those little upsets are soon soothed away by a little of this pleasant-tasting, gentle-acting children’s remedy that children like. It may be the stomach, or may be the little bowels. Or in the case of older children, a sluggish, con stipated condition. Castoria is still the thing to give. It is almost certain to clear up any aiinofl * ailment, and could by no possi-i bility do the youngest child th« slightest harm. So it’s the firs4 thing to think of when a child bao a coated tongue; won’t play, can’t sleep, is fretful or out of sort si Get the genuine; it always has C has. H. Fletcher's signature am the package. t