The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, October 30, 1930, Image 7

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Only an old and trusted friend
-would venture to speak so frankly.
A new pipe, or an old one^carefully
broken in with Sir Walter Raleigh’s
favorite smoking mixture, changes
everything. And why shouldnt it? Sit
Walter is milder and more fragrant.
And it has the hodyand flavor found
only in the finest of Burley, skillfully
seasoned and Ucnded. What more
could we offer any pipe smoker? What
matt could he ask?
ri
d
IT’S 15/—and mildtf
•—;--—— —
The Ideal
, Vacation Land
Smashing All Winter M.ong
Splendid roads—towering mountain
ranges—Highest type hotels—-dry in
vigorating air—clear starlit nights—
California's Foremost Osssrt Playground
One Reason
Hard times: A period when peo
ple quit feeding tlie cow and won
der why she gives less milk.
MOTHERS ARE
LEARNING USES
OF_MAGNESIA
From the beginning of expectancy
until baby is weaned, Phillips’ Milk
of Magnesia performs the greatest
aervlce for many women.
It relieves nausea, heartburn,
"morning sickness,” inclination to
vomit; helps digestion. Its mild lax
ative action assures regular bowel
movement.
Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia is bet
ter than lime water for neutralizing
cow’s milk for infant feeding.
All drugstores have Phillips’ Milk
OT Magnesia in generous 25c and 50c
bottles. Always insist on the genuine,
endorsed by physicians for 50 years.
WHITE SKIN
UZlIOtt makes old skin young. It positively
accomplishes four things for it is ■ skia tonic:
a tissue builder; banishes pimples; and a skin
orhitener and rejuvenator—or money refunded.
Thousands of women dept-rid ou Kremola to
keep their ekin youthful. Ask your Druggist, or
direct by mail prepaid. Price $1.25.
Write for FREE"B«a» to lane Kay, ear*
■r.C. H. Barry Ca„ 2875 t-MIshu—Aw-CMcngs. HI.
Recompense injury with justice,
recompense kindness with kindness.
—Confucius.
Boschee’sSyrup soothes instantly, ends
irritation quickly! GUARANTEED.
iff Never be without
aartrA Bofchee’zl For young
^ ,M5 and old.
Boschee’s
I druggists Syrup
Sioux City Ptg. Co., No. 44—1930
FARM BOARD TO
SPREAD GOSPEL
Gmphasis on Work of Body
to Feature Instruction
in Woodbury County
Washington — Special emphasis
jpon the work of the Federal Farm
board will feature Woodbury county
agricultural instruction this winter,
plans for which will be discussed
with officials of the farm board and
the ooard for vocational education
at a conference in Chicago in No
vember.
In making ihts .anouncement,
Dr. C. H. Lane, chief of the agri
cultural instruction division of the
latter board, said that his group is
not attempting to spread propa
ganda favorable to trie farm. The
aim “is to show what the board
can’t do as well as what it can do,"
he said.
This marks the second project
which the farm board will use this
year in its effort to spread its gos
pel. The other is the extension ser
vice of the agricultural department.
The Iowa work is under direction
of State Supervisors George F. Ek
strom and Hampton T. Hall of Des
Moines, who are expected to attend
the Chicago gathering. A number of
high schools in Woodbury *nd
neighboring counties are using fed
eral funds available under the
Smith-Hughes act, together with
corresponding amounts furnished by
the state in including agricultural
instruction in their regular courses.
The schools will try to expand
their night classes for adults this
winter, as part of the effort to show
how the farm board can assist
farmers. In each case the teacher
of the agricultural course will be
furnished every federal aid which
Scan be used to give the Iowa farm
er useful information. Dr. Lane said.
How Bees Talk.
From New York Times.
Bees have been studied for cen
turies and one would think that
new facts about them would be
hard to discover. But recent re
searches by Frof. Von Frisch, di
rector of the zoological institute
of the University of Munich, have
led to the discovery that bees com
municate with each other by danc
ing.
When Prof. Von Frisch needs
bees for experimental purposes, he
puts out some sheets of papier
coated with honey. He may have
to wait hours or days for a single
bee to come but as soon as one
has found the feeding place, hun
dreds may appear within a short
time all from the same hive. The
discoverer must have told . the
others, but how?
In order to clear up the mystery
Von Frisch had to construct spiecial
observation hives, with glass win
dows and a new arrangement of
the combs which enabled him to
watch the bees. Every bee had to
be numbered and Von Frisch man- j
aged to devise a handv code by >
painting the bees in five colors.
Bees were numbered up to 599 and
Von Frisch could readily distin
guish them while in flight.
The first bee to discover honey
was marked an * observed upon
its return to the hive. First it de
livered the provender to the other
bees in the hive. Then it began to
dance. For one full minute it
twisted itself to right and left al
ternately, then repeated the dance
on another spot. The dance ended
as suddenly as it had begun. The
dancing bee hurried to the exit
and relumed to the feeding place.
The other bees on the wax comb
were noticed to be very much ex
cited by this dance. They closely
followed its every twist and turn,
to the dancer’s body as possible,
and evincing great interest. One by
one they cleaned their wings and
antennae and left the hive.
Soon afterward these bees also
appeared at the feeding place. Up
on returning to the hive they
danced in their turn and soon a
veritable swarm appeared for
honey. Obviously the first be*
danced a message to the ether'.
--♦ ♦
TI1E OLD VICTROLA.
Last night I turned the radio
From Frisco to St. Peul;
Came jazz and ads and bed-tim*
tales.
And that was really all.
I wound the old victrola next,
And through the room there
rolled
The liquid tones of Alma Gluck,
Carusos notes of gold.
The radio gives pointers on
Tooth paste and coca-cbla,
But when I w?nt real music, folks,
I wind the old victrola.
—Sam Page.
Q. What is the cost of citizen
£hip papers in England? What
length of residence is required? M.
W. F.
A. The naturalization laws ol
Great Britain provide that in order
to be eligible, an alien must during
the 8 years prerod flog his applica
tion have resided for not less than £
years in his majesty’s dominions
of which not less than 1 year im
mediately preceding the applica.lon
must have been spent in the United
Kingdom. The fee, payable to the
home office, is fixed by the govern
ment of the day and is generally
about 10 pounds, of which one
pound Is payable on submission of
the application and the remainder
on the granting of the certificate
- - -——♦«
Q. What accounts for the direc
tion in which the Gulf Stream
flows? F. A. B.
A. The cc'arse of the Gulf Stream
is Influenced ',o a large extent by
the coastline. Alter leaving the
Gulf of Mexico it encounters the
. Bahama islands and is turned
northeastward, following the trend
of the American coast. On issuing
into the ocean it is met by the so
called "cold vail” which crowds in
towards the New England coast,
forcing the Gulf Stream water off <
oward the cil>1. Being farced far
ther and farther from tire coast it
is spread Into a fan-shaped dr ft of
continually diminishing depth.
MEXICAN CHIEF
LIVES IN EXILE
General Francisco Robles
Manzo Loses Fortune,
Retains Health
BY DENNIS LANDRY',
Jnited Press Correspondent.
Tucson, Ariz. — (UP) — There
resides In this border town a ranch
er who has a good idea of how Na
poleon felt when he was banished
to St. Helena to ponder the vicissi
tudes of war.
He is the former Gen. Francisco
Robles Manzo, 260-pound ex-under
secretary of war of Mexico, com
mander of Sonora and the conquer
or of the Yaquis. Today, he is a po
litical refugee from his native
country.
In the 1929 Escobar rebellion,
General Manzo served as com
mander of all rebel forces in north
western Mexico. With the defeat of
his army by the federate. he was
driven across the international
boundary, leaving behind him a
fortune accumulated after years of
labor in his home at Ortiz, Sonora,
Mexico.
Pespite his comparatively low es
tate here, the once noted military
leader may look across the bound
ary of his mother country to a
number of economic achievements
which will stand as monuments in
Ortiz to his enterprise. In making
his escape, he left behind 5,600
head Jt cattle, a $25,000 light and
power system, a modern water
works which he founded, extensive
ranching interests, some 200 miles
of improved highways in and ad
jacent to Ortiz, and modern bar
racks housing some 2,000 soldiers
whom he commanded.
“Whatever glory that was once
mine was wdped out in a moment.”
he said, smiling sadly. “But I still
have my wife and four children
and I am a good rancher—so per
haps I should not b? despondent.
There still may be brighter days
ahead.’’
And the once highly honored fed
eral officer, clad now in dungarees,
goes about his work as any other
Mexican laborer. And occasionally
from his lips sound Mexican Na
tional anthems he loves so well.
Incidentally, one of General Man
zo’s favorite historic characters Is
Napoleon
May Reopen Exclusion.
From Philadelphia Public Ledger.
The well-defined but quiet efforts
being made in this country to re
open the Japanese-exclusion issue
are creating much interest in Japan.
It is the only question which pre
vent* a full measure of amity from ]
prevailing between the two coun
tries and it vitiates Japanese-Amer
ican relations at every turn. The
state department has all along been
opposed to this immigration ban
and would be considerably grati
fied to see it removed.
Assistant Secretary of State Cas
tle recently gave out a press inter
view on the question. It will be re
membered that he acted as special
ambassador to Japan during the j
London naval conference and that i
a public appeal was made to him
at his farewell dinner in Tokio to ;
exert his influence to clear up the ■
matter. The Japanese spokesman I
on this occasion was Mr. Hanihara, J
ambassador to Washington at the
time the exclusion law was passed
and his diplomatic career wrecked.
When the question was called to
the attention of Representative Al
bert Johnson, chairman of the
House immigration committee, he
asserted that he had in mind an
amendment to the law which would
put Japanese citizens under the
quota system. But apparently Mr.
Johnson does not intend to move
for revision of the clause which
confines immigration to those aliens
who are qualified to become Amer
ican citizens So his proposal would
apply the quota only to those Jap
anese subjects who belong to the
Caucasian or African Negro races.
If this is as far as Mr. Johnson
Is ready to go, the Japanese will
remain entirely unsatisfied. What
they want is removal of the dis
crimination which puts them in the
category of backward peoples. They
do not care how small their quota
is. Opposition in Pacific coast j&ates
to any change in the law will prob
ably prevent a satisfactory adjust
ment in the near future. But if the
sense of justice of the American
people could prevail, the greatest
possible step toward insuring peace
in the Pacific would be taken with
out delay. Satisfying Japan on this
issue would be a measure of moral
disarmament of incalculable value.
HUNT NEBRASKA FOSSILS
Hastings, Neb.—(UP)—A series of
research projects and a search fox
prehistoric relics and fossils is be
in* conducted through the state by
five young men, under the auspices
of the University cf Nebraska and
tiie Smithaonian Institute, in an ef
fort to learn more about the prehis
toric races that roamed Nebraska
prairies thousands o! years ago.
RICE STRAW PAEPR
Rome,—Italy, which lias been
paying high duties on paper Import
ed from other countries for years,
now is establishing an industry to
make paper from rice straw. The
ministry of agriculture has charge
of the exploitation of this industry,
and scientists are now at work de
veloping machinery and processes
to make fine book paper from the
straw.
- ■■ ■ ■ ♦ ♦ - —
Here'* a Lesson Every Good Mer
chant Should Learn.
The managers and boards of di
rectors of Iowa county fair? are a
pretty wideawake lot. They readily
sense the real ralue of advertising
and are using rather more news
paper space this year than usual,
baring a real calamity they will
come through all right. — Upeneer
(la.) Reporter.
Q. How many American officer*
were killed or wounded :n action
during the Worl»i war? A. W.
A. Offioers killed in action, 1,668;
died cf wound* received in action,
586; wi milieu, not mortally, 6,47 L
Idea Worked!
Wise mothers find the things that
keep children contented, well, happy,
Most of them have found they can
depend on one thing to restore a
youngster’s good nature when he's
cross, fretful, upset.
The experience of Sirs. Wni.
Charleston, IKK! Gilmore Ave., Kan
sas City, Kans., is typical. She says:
“I have used California Fig Syrup
with Annie and Hilly all their lives.
Whenever they’re constipated or
bilious it has them comfortable,
happy, In a jiffy. Their wonderful
condition proves my Idea works.”
Physicians endorse the use of pure
vegetable California Fig Syrup when
hud breath, coated tongue, dullness,
feverishness, llstlessness, etc., show
a child’s bowels need lieip. Wenk
stomach and bowels are toned by
It; a child’s appetite and digestion
are Improved.
The genuine always hears the name
California for your protection.
IAXATIVE~TONIC Jor CHILDREN
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
Removal Dandruff Stopa Hail Failinp
Imparta Color and
Beauty to Gray aad Faded Hair
90r and II .W at Draagiita.
Bag Cham. Wk«. Patchoru«,N.V.|
MUKbSION 5HAMPUU — Ideal Tor uae in
connect ion with l'arkar'sH air llalaam. Make* lha
hair no ft and fluffy. 60 cent* by mail or at ilruy
cieta. 11 iacox Chemical Work*. Fatchorue, N.Y.
All Over
Country Policeman (at scene of
murder)—You can’t come in liere.
Itoporter—But I’ve been sent to
do llie murder.
Country Policeman—Well, you’re
loo Inte; the murder's been done.—
Vancouver Province.
Going somewhere merely to be go
ing somewhere suffers detlatiou In
about an hour.
Few men realty reform; they Just
*et I iretl of their vices.
Call for Definition
of Still Small Voice
The case of the woman who has
advertised for the owner of a gold
pin set with small diamonds which
she found 23 years ago, is described
ns one of troubled conscience.
Through a quarter of n century the
woman must have been stilling the
small voice within her that was re
minding her that she was keeping
something which was not hors and
which site was making no effort to
return to its owner.
What is this conscience which
abides with all human beings and
compels us to acts which we do n<*i
wisli to perform? The dictionary
definition is of no help in answering
the question. “The knowledge of our
own nets and feelings as right nr
wrong" explains nothing. The differ
ence between right and wrong is so
often a personal one, and when a
person wishes to justify an net of
Ills to himself It Is generally easy.
Wrong can bo made to appear right
to oneself if self-interest is allowed
to become paramount. But despite
the justification, conscience is never
wholly stifled.
It nags and nags at one and gives
no peace until, like the woman with
the pin, it finally forces wlint may he
called confession. The cynical Tal
leyrand said that to he happy a man
should have a good digestion and no
conscience. Possibly, bnt If it Is s<»,
practically no one is truly happy.
Conscience may undoubtedly lie fos
tered and wlint troubles one genera
tion may not trouble another. But
conscience is a fixed part of our
selves. something which is born with
us. It Is of the moral order of tlie
universe, a monitor implanted within
us by n Supreme Power.—Philudel
plilu Bulletin.
Wood Produced From Cotton
Synthetic wood produced from
compressed and burdened cotton ma
terial lias been perfected by a Clerk
enwell (England) man. it is said
to be indistinguishable from mahog
any, oak or any other wood, and can
he used in making furniture and all
kinds of house fixtures. Its cost Is
much loss than ordinary wood and
Its life will lie as long, the Inventor
says. It may he molded into any
shape or thickness and does not
warp. It. is expected to reduce Ihe
cost of houses as well as of furni
ture.
Given Back to France
In memory of Mrs. Anne Murray
Dike, American war worker, Miss
Anne Morgan, her associate on the
committee for devastated France,
lias presented to tlie French govern
ment the Chateau de Bleraneourt
Which tiie commit lee purchased fur
HEALTHY
COMPLEXIONS
,
Tells Men Over SO Mill
They SboiM Seygh
A famous ISrllish Physician—a
Specialist in Obesity—gliaa these mi
the normal weights for men operJU.
5 Ft. C inches Mb I*o imts
5 Ft. 0 •* 1» -
5 Ft. 7 “ MB -
b Ft. 8 “ MB -
5 Ft. 9 “ M7
5 Ft. 10 •• m
5 Ft. 11 JI8 *
6 Ft. 9 " 1*4 *
0 Ft. 1 MB *
0 Ft. 2 “ m "
Weights Include erdbaary unborn
clothing—Get on the marie* and m*r
if you a re overweight and bow muria.
The modern way to Hucr off fit
Is knowu as the Krnnriben Mct.SoC
—and It Is well worlJb a 4 eeekd
trial. •
Cut out pies, cake*, pastry aadi
Ice cream for 4 weeks, gr> light *m
potatoes, Imtter, cheese. cream amt
sugar—eat moderately of lean nmf,
chicken, fish, salads, green eegm*
hies and fruit—take asm hair t**»»
spoon of Krusehon Salts Iji a ghrm
of hot water every inorathg
breakfast—don't mis* a nmrnin*.
An 85 cent bottle of Eronrfesi
lasts 4 weeks—Get M ad any drag
atore In the world. —Ad*.
its wartime headquarter*. The Mm
toric chateau now becnaac* a nation*
nl museum, housing among many
valuable relics a coHcctto* shipriqg
the interrelation of France and
America.
NEW(glaring,
needs changing
less frequently
Selected crude oils and an improved process d
refining give new Polarinc——freedom from wax
and tar—less than half the carbon of old proeew
oils—unexcelled resistance to the thickening
effect of cold and the thinning effect of heat—
exceptional durability.
This modern motor oil consumes slowly—resist*
dilution—contains no unstable ingredients to
form crankcase sludge that clogs oil lines.
With new Polarine you lubricate your motor safely
and economically. You don't need to change *9
so frequently because it holds its body better and
stays clean longer.
Premium in quality, the new Polarinc is sold at
no advance in price. Consult the new Poburime
Chart for correct grade—25c a quart.
At Red Crown Service Stations and Dealers evay
where in Nebraska.
= ~~ e STANDARD OIL
COMPANY...
OF NEBRASKA _______
*‘A Nebraska Institution——— ,
COMPLETE REST ROOMS AT STANDARD OIL SERVICE STATIONS