The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, March 14, 1935, Image 6

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    Foreign Lotteries
Are Put Under Ban
Postal Department Renew*
Drive on Swindle*.
Washington—The federal gov
ernment 1* strengthening Ha barri
er* against *weep#t*ke* and other
foreign lotteries. Custom# ln*t>ec
lion la being atrengthened at bor
ders and other porta of entry, and
a aerie# of net# has been woven
to enmesh ticket counterfoil*
■hipped back to foreign agent*. Seiz
ure* hare Increased rapidly In re
cent month*.
Forty thousand sweepstake tick
et* were confiscated recently by fed
eral agent* In po*t office* In Bos
ton and Philadelphia Three trunk
fnla were seized In an express of
Ilea In Hiiffalo. Quantities ranging
from single ticket* brought In by In
dividual foreign traveler* to hun
dreds of book a of the fllrnsey* smug
gled acroaa the Canadian border are
being taken almost dally by cuatoma
officer*. Mall sacks full of ticket*
and counterfoil* seized In post of
fice# all over Hie country are being
■hoveled more frequently now than
formerly Into the big furnace In the
basement of the dead letter office
at Washington.
Growth of Traffic.
Traffic In foreign lotterle* has
grown enormously In the United
State# In the last four year*. The
annual loss to the American people
la estimated at more than *10,000,
000. No estimate l# available of the
additional millions lost through
the purchase of counterfeit ticket*,
but single aelzurea by the govern
ment have Involved more than I.VKI,
000 worth of such "phonic*." Inves
tigation of a Cuban lottery whose
agent* were reported to hove *old
8,000.000 ticket* In the United States
revealed only 100,000 ticket* en
tered In the drawing.
Operators of the Irish sweep
stakes have boosted that they take
91,000,000 net profit out of the
United State* on a single lottery
This figure was greatly exceeded
last year, when more than 2,000,000
tickets at 92..V) each were sold In
this country on the Cambridgeshire
lottery operated by the Irish Free
State. Of the 2.000.000 buyerr there
were less thnn 1,000 winners. For
every winner there were more thnn
2,000 losers, and all who held coun
terfeits lost.
There are three Irish sweeps n
year, based upon the running of
the English derby nt Epsom Downs,
the Cambridgeshire at Newmarket
and the Grand National at A In tree
Other trig lotteries for width tick
ets are sold In the United States
are the French National, Cuban Na
Battle of New Orleans
Second Only to Yorktown
New Orleans.—The I’lalns of
Clialtnetto, Just below New Orleans,
where Andrew Jackson fought the
Hattie of New Orleans In 1815 and
brought to an end the War of 1812,
nre being beautified, marked and
made more readily accessible
through an added I'WA appropria
tion Of 140,000.
This announcement was made In
Washington on the heels of a report
from the Tennessee commission of
research ranking the Hattie of New
Orleans as second only to Yorktown
as n military event of significance
In the life of the republic,
“But for Jackson’s victory at
New Orleans,” says tho Tennessee
report, “England might have laid
claim to the vast Ismlslnna domain
. . . now carved Into 17 United
states ... on the ground of In
validity of title acquired by the
United States from Napoleon at
New Orleans In 1803."
Wake Forest College
Place* Ban on Hazing
Raleigh, N. 0.—Wake Forest col
lege, Baptist Institution for higher
learning, located 17 miles north of
here, will no longer tolerate haidng.
Expulsion will be the penalty. The
executive committee of the faculty,
examining W) students charged with
baelng, announced this decision.
BOO Abandoned Mine* Sealed
Pomeroy, Ohio.—Five hundred
abandoned mines In Meigs county
have been sealed since last March
by FEHA workers. The closing Is
expected to stop the How of pollut
ed water Into streams.
tlonal, Mexican National and the
Canadian Army and Navy lottery, j
The government recently confis
cated ticket* on a lottery In Mo
rocco.
Warning* to Po*t Office*.
Llata of name* of foreign aweep
atakea arid other lottery ticket aetl
era against whom frand order# have
(seen Issued by the government are
aerit each month to 15.000 poat
office*. K[»eclal compilation# of
name# and addreaae* go to twenty
four postal exchange station*
through which all mall for Canada,
Cuba. Irish Free Stale, France and
Luxembourg must dear. No money
order# can he drawn to these per
sona, and all mall addressed to them
must be returned to sender*. More
than 750 order# have been Issued
alnce laat August.
Since many persona are not will
ing to claim the returned letter#
and thereby admit complicity In a
lottery. In violation of the United
State# penal code, the cash content#
often go Into the United State#
treasury and the lottery counter
folia are destroyed. Coming In by
mall, the ticket# run a gauntlet of
watchful poatal agenta, adept at de
tectlng fraudulent material, no mat
ler how skillfully It may he con
cealed in rolled newspaper*, hooka,
clothing, and first class mall matter.
South African See*
With Borrowed Eye*
London.—After being blind
for year*, Mrs. Dspblne Muir,
South African norelist, sees to
day with the eyes of other
women.
She underwent the cornea!
graft operation at the hands of
a Welsh specialist. Dr. Tudor
Thomas. In each case, the nec
essary graft was taken from the
eyes of other women.
Doctor Thomas has an lm
presslre record with this type ol
operation, lie restored rue sight
of a man blind 25 years, a worn
an sightless for 30 years and
last June a woman blind all her
life.
Mrs Muir was disappointed In
one sense—she wanted the graft
to come from a roan's eye be
cause ‘‘I hare always wanted to
see through the eye of a man.”
She promised to dedicate her
nest book to Doctor Thomas
Needy Man Discovers
Dollar Is Worth $2,500
Spokane.—P. 1. Newman, unem
ployed the Inst four years, found an
JS04 dollar among his change and
asked a bank teller about Its value.
Pointing out that it was badly
worn, the teller offered him "a good
dollar” for It. Then Newman took
his dollar to the Federal Reserve
hank where, he said, they told him
It was worth $2,500.
“Napoleon House” Honors Disputed
Bitter Battle Waged by Two
New Orleans Factions.
New Orleans.—Two old land
marks In New Orleans’ Vleux Carre
are waging a bitter battle to win
the distinction of being erected a
century and a quarter ago as ref
uges for the Emperor Napoleon.
Decision given recently by His
torian Stanley (’Ilsby Arthur to a
dilapidated, little known place at
M4 Chartres street, shorn of Its
decorative Iron work, Is being hotly
contested by the numerous fans of
the long-recognised Glrod bouse at
QUILTED FABRICS
lit ( IIKKIK. Nil HOLAH
■ wmmaur-’"rr’ift—
k... iWifnfl'iWIMii Mi t n r rtr TT^y ■
A novel ust of Hie quilted I nitric
vogue Is shown In this new spring
ensemble. The crepe Jacket Is quilt
ed with the design of the printed
crepe frock. This unique method of
quilting plain material In the same
patterning ot the print with which
It Is made up Is being featured In
a l.lg way tills season. Designers
are also doing wonderfully clever
things with quilting In a trimming
way. Dresses and coats have quilt
ed collars and cnlTs and revers nnd
If not quilted then Intricate and
j designful stitching Is lavishly eui
ployed.
. 1 —■ ■ -
the corner of (“hartres and St. Louis
street, beautifully proportioned, ap
propriately fitted and topped by an
Imposing belvedere.
Arthur claims the Glrod house
was not built until nine years after
the little emperor’s death, while Gen.
Allison Owen, peer among New Or
leans’ Creole architects, contends
thnt recently discovered features
give the Glrod house definite con
nection with the colorful Bonapnrt
Ist episode In New Orleans history,
when a group of New Orleans’ loy
alists under the leadership of Domi
nic You, lieutenant of pirates,
projected an expedition to rescue
Napoleon from St. Helena.
The United States commission for
the survey of historic buildings ap
parently has sided with the Glrod
house advocates because lllchurd E.
Koch, architect supervisor of the
government studies, has preserved
In photographs and sketch every de
tail of the architectural beauty of
the ’’favorite.”
It seems now ns If the local float
ers of tradition are making a de
termined sally against everything
having to do with Napoleor In New
Orleans.
They recently published an elabo
rate statement to prove that the fn
mons New Orleans death mask of
Napoleon, reposing In a place of
honor In the Onblldo museum, along
with Doctor Antomarcehl. the do
nor, who claimed to have been Na
poleon's physician at the time of his
death, both are fakes.
Even the names of the Napoleonic
streets In uptown New Orleans have
suffered from the onslaughts of
those who apparently have no re
spect for the memory of Napoleon
The streets for five blocks on each
side of Napoleon avenue were named
for the Conqueror’s famous baffles,
but ‘‘Berlin street” right next to Na
poleon avenue lias been changed
to "General I’ershlng.’’
Bear and Hunter Fight
Grim Battle to Death
Kelso, Wash.—The Isolated Bar
Inof Island, Alaska, was the stage
for a grim tragedy discovered by
Curtis Barber of Kelso, employee
of a United Stntes government stir
veylng crew on the Island.
Itarher came upon the skeletons
of a giant Kodiak bear and a hunt
er. Apparently the bear hnd been
fatally wounded by the man, The
skeletons evidently bad lain be
neath a dense forest for many
years. No one could Identify the
hunter.
Dog It Fire Alarm
Canyoiivllle, Ore.—While (5. C
Wolfe was visiting neighbors his
house caught tire. Ills dog leaped
through n window of the burning
structure, run to the neighbor's
borne and led them buck to the
blaze.
Floods Inundate Parts of New York State
l*aUl roml, usually u well-traveled thoroughfare, lakes uu u desolute a(>i>carum.'e alter the overflow ol
Black creek Inundated a large area at Chill.
SEEN HEARD
around the
National Capital
iB? CARTER FIELD*
Washington.—No final decision on
Section 7A—the Wierton case—can
be obtained for one year. That is
, the inside view at the Department
■ of Justice. Lawyers there do not
see any way of short-circuiting the
| Circuit Court of Appeal and thus
getting the case before the Supreme
Court of the United States at once.
This means that NBA most he
extended by congress without bene
j fit of knowledge as to what the final
ruling Is to he. As a result the ad
ministration will press for extension
for two years, as originally pro
posed, without any attempt to re
write or clarify Section "A. This
had been agreed upon by virtually
every element concerned before the
decision in the Wierton case—at a
time, as a matter of fact, when
Washington thought the Wierton
case would be won by the govern
ment.
It is all the more essential now,
because nobody can tell In advance
| how to rewrite Section 7A so as to
! bring It within the high court’s
i views as to constitutional limits.
Prevailing opinion here is that when
the case Is finally decided by the
Supreme court the decision will re
verse tlie Wilmington court, and up
hold the government. And that tlie
decision will he by the same five
to four majority that divided the
court in upholding tlie government
in the gold clause case.
Hut naturally opinion in Wash
ington would be that, especially as
it was felt so strongly that the
case would he decided for the gov
ernment In the lower court That Is
the way Washington, dominated by
so many Now Deal lawyers and De
partment of Justice attorneys, func
tions ns to its legal thought.
It Is the reason Washington
thought it was a ten to one bet
that tlie high court would uphold
tlie government on the gold case,
although actually the decision was
by tlie tight vote of five to four,
so that any one Justice on the ma
jority side could have changed It.
Not Before Christmas
After ttie Supreme court decision
of the Wlerton ouse, which cannot
well he expected before next Christ
mas, there will undoubtedly be a
new attempt to rewrite Section 7A
if the high court decision should
be against the government.
Hut before that a lot of water will
have run under the country’s
bridges. It may well be that the
whole attitude of the administration
will have changed.
I’.est opinion is that some form of
NJtA will remain with us always.
It goes to the essentials of the New
Deal philosophy. Many lines of busi
ness. for reasons us far apart its the
poles, want some phase of it re
tained. In many Instances the chief
desire Is to prevent competitors
from “chiseling.” Hut in others this
is not the main motive at all. For
example, in the coal Industry the
saving grace of the code, ns far as
members of the Industry are con
cerned, is the price tixlng provision,
whereas in many lines price lixing
is anathema In the coal trade, how
ever, it Is generally admitted that
(lie Industry could never have been
brought together on any code what
ever had It not been for the price
lixing element.
Then along conies the Guffey bill,
which if enacted would remove this
one string that Is holding the Indus
try together for the code. Business
as a whole, if the National Associa
tion of Manufacturers can be ac
cepted as speaking for It, Is op
posed to the Guffey bill, which
would virtually make coal a pub
lic utility and impose drastic regu
lation. The United Mine Workers
are strongly for the bill.
The National Coal association,
which might be expected to speak
for the operators, has been abso
lutely silent, and Is expected to re
main so. But individuals in the or
ganization In Washington have de
clared heatedly that the hill is an
outrage.
Radicals, worried about the con
stitutionality of NRA In view of the
Wlerton decision, are strongly for
the Guffey bill, and anything else
like it for other industries. They are
Interested in the march townrd
stricter and stricter control of ev
erything by the government.
Utilities Campaign
For the first time since the pub
lic utilities came under attack, they
have begun utilizing in an organized
way the power of their army of
stockholders. And they had to
choose a time when there was an
other Issue, which was very much
more appealing—publicity for In
come tax returns.
The effects on the mull are pro
digious. They threaten to swell
postal receipts so much that I’oat
muster General .fames A. Farley
will not have to resort to fancy
bookkeeping to prove that the de
partment Is no longer In the red.
.lust as an Illustration. Senator
Marcus A. t'oolidge of Massachu
setts has been averaging 1.000 let
ters a day. Slightly more than 000
of ’tiese urge that the law provld
log for publicity lor Income tax re
turns he repealed, and more than
.'too protest against the drastic leg
islation intended to eliminate hold
ing companies.
In fact, the old-timers say you
Save to go back to the days of
191fl SDd 1917, when the United
States was drifting into war, and
there was an organized propaganda
against It, to get anything like a
comparable volume of mail.
Many senators profees that they
pay no attention to letters, which
are obviously Inspired by some
sucb propaganda. But when the
letters corne from voters in their
states whose names are big enough
to mean something to their secre
taries. this aloof attitude becomes a
mere poise. They are affected.
And in these two Instances—re
peal of the publicity provision of
the income tax and the holding
company legislation—naturally a
considerable percentage of the let
ters and telegrams come from influ
ential people, of whom a smaller
percentage are apt to be on friendly
terms, sometimes political support
ers. of the senators receiving the
mail.
Fight Over “Pink Slip”
As a result of the present deluge.
It is actually a probability and not
just a mere possibility, that the
"pink slip" provision will be re
pealed. Not without a fight. Sen
ator Robert M. La Follette and Sen
ator George W. Norris, both of
whom at different times forced
through Income tax return pub
licity provisions, will both fight
repeal. They will tie Joined by many
others. Rut expectancy now Is that
the provision will be repealed Just
file same. The house of representa
tives never was very strong for it.
In each case where It was enacted,
the resulting provision was a com
promise forced by the house. Roth
Norris and La Follette wanted, and
still want, the income tax returns
to be made a matter of public rec
ord. They resent the "pink slip”
Idea, which merely makes public a
small part of the entire return, but
also encourages newspaper publica
tion of the reported incomes.
Rest information Is that President
J evelt has no objection to re
i The treasury does not like the
provision.
His Position Stronger
President Roosevelt is not weaker
In strategic position than he was be
fore his two senate rebuffs. He is
immeasurably stronger. Stronger be
cause lie has progressed definitely
toward the position outlined In these
dispatches right after last Novern
tier's election—the happy and typi
cally Rooseveltlan position of being
in between two extremes.
Let us dismiss the World court.
It meant nothing but local sentiment
in the states which elected the dis
senting senators. The lineup on the
St. Lawrence seaway treaty will also
mean nothing. The motives will be
almost entirely geographical. For
example, even if Huey Long loved
and adored Franklin Roosevelt, he
would still have to vote against that
treaty, because almost to a man the
people of New Orleans think the
treaty would hurt their city by di
verting business it now handles to
the new route.
Rut consider a much more impor
tant question—(lie prevailing wage
tight In the work relief hill.
Immediately after the last election
it was apparent that hope for any
successful opposition to the Presi
dent in the 1930 campaign, as far as
the Republican party was concerned,
was very low, indeed. It also ap
peared that the menace of a new
radical movement was so far nebul
ous.
Hence the chief problem of Pres
ident Roosevelt, with most fear ns
to 1930 opposition from purely po
litical angles eliminated, became to
prevent an economic situation devel
oping wldch would endanger him. In
short, if in some way business could
be made better, so that the hope of
prosperity's coming nack under his
guidance should he strong in 1930,
there would be almost no threat
ened opposition to him in that year
at all.
In the Middle
He had attained his old favorite
position—in the middle; with ex
tremes on either side—each of
which would far rattier have Roose
velt continue in the saddle than to
have the other extreme victorious.
Just as In tlie preconvention maneu
vering In 1912 Roosevelt wound up
with the supposedly dry South en
thusiastically for him. It had turned
to him despite his wetness because
it feared A1 Smith might be named
otherwise.
The fact that Roosevelt, after the
1914 endorsement, stood squarely in
between the radicals and the ex
treme conservatives was obvious,
but had not been demonstrated forc
ibly to the country. Many shrewd
business leaders realized it. And
at the same time gave up hope. In
Hie face of ttiose election returns,
of getting back to ttie old order by
19,1(5. So they were ready to sup
port the President, mildly.
Then canie the work relief bill,
and the prevailing wage Issue. And
to the amazement of conservative
business men, hoping Roosevelt
could beat the radicals, the most
talked about candidate for the Re
publicans In 1919. Senator Vandeji
berg of Michigan—one of the few
Republicans to weather the 1914
landslide—voted with the radicals.
So did a lot of other Republicans
generally regarded as conservative.
And now friends of the President
are busy building backfires, ap
parently to turn a few votes In the
senate so as to prevent this long
step towards Socialism.
Copyrlsbt.—WNU Service.
Street Scene
By LAURA LINCHEN
®. MsCior® Newspaper Syndicate.
WNU Service.
PATUIC1A turned the corner and
trudged up another busy street.
Never had people seemed so much
like marching ants as they tiled
, past her, nor the world Itself more
like a dunghill of crawling In
I sects.
Claude, her stepfather, was wait
ing for her In the lobby of the
Maldridge. Mother worked, but
! Claude lived on a pension; be was
gassed or something once. Patricia
had Just come to live with them
I since Aunt Margot died. Aunt Mar
got understood. Patricia was a sen
sitive child that needed encourage
merit and patience. Her talent need
ed good soil nrd fair weather for
Its growth. Aunt Margot had nour
shed Pat’s literary Heed. But Aunt
Margot had died and Patricia at
nineteen was left dependent on
mother and Claude. Claude seemed
to hold some strange power over
mother. Patricia loathed him. He
was heavy and almost vulgar, and
the once good contour of his face
was flabby now. Claude thought
Patricia a moon-struck fool. He bad
told her to get out and find a Job
and make her own. Mother had
mildly added that It would do her
no harm.
Three mornings now had she
walked the streets and answered
ads, and made Inquiries. “Any ex
perience?” How could one say yes?
Some took her application; others
would not do that, it was a strange,
hateful world.
At the corner she Sow a voluptu
ous old negress wabbling down the
street. She was humming to the
swaying of her rippling fat. Pa
tricia watched her while waiting
for the green light. The old black
woman came up to her.
“Well, hello, honey, Miss Wilma.”
Pat stared at her, not replying.
"I know you all think you don’t
know me,” she went on, “but I
knows you. I knows you by that
pretty little dress you wearing."
Patricia felt embarrassed.
“Get out," she said hurriedly.
“I’m a stranger here in town.” The
light was green. Patricia hurried
ncross, but the old woman was at
her heels and talking loudly.
“Sho nuff. Well you and Miss
Wilma jus’ look so much alike, ah,
honey, you don’ know no one who
wants a good washwoman?” Well
this wns technique.
“No,” said Patricia kindly and
quickly realized her Indulgent tone
was a mistake; the negress was
walking abreast of her now.
“Well, yo’ all eouldn’ put a nickel
on a church calendar, could ya?”
“I’m looking for a job myself."
and Pat suddenly jay-walked to
shake her off, but the old negress
jay-walked, too.
“Dat’s right, honey, dat’a right.
You'll find one. too. Just depend
on da good Lord ... he makes
fo’ us all.” Well, that was a thought.
Then the old woman stopped to
confab with a street cleaner and,
Pat, seeing her chance, dodged
down the street. It was only a
little piece, however, until the old
woman came calling after her.
“Llssen, chile, you done run off
and pass'd up a sign In dnt winds
. . . You niustn’ nebbah pnss a
sign. Miss Honey.”
Desparlngly, Pat looked back.
"Why, sure enough, It says ’Girl
Wanted.’ I might go In." The old
woman nodded proudly and turned
back with her. Well, this was too
much.
"Listen, you stay here. I’d better
go by myself,” she said, but Just
as she was about to enter the shop
door the old negress caught up with
her.
"I ain’ gonna let you po’ child go
In there without no he'p,” she said,
opening her dilapidated purse the
while. “Heah, now, this gonna he’p
da good Lord do his work." She
took out a rabbit’s foot, and giving
It three moaning kisses, handed It
to the young girl. Laughingly Pat
took It. What a quaint old fool,
she mused, as she entered the place.
"I saw your sign In the window,
sir.”
"Oh, I forgot.” But then he was
staring round-eyed at the thing In
her hand.
"What’s that?” he said. Pat looked
down and felt the heat creep over
her chin and up her cheeks. She
gave a silly little laugh.
"Oh, that’s for good luck,” she
said. The man did not smile but
looked a long time at her Innocent
young face.
“All right ... all right . . ."
he said at length gruffly. "Report
In the morning. Place for a girl in
the office.”
The lady standing beside the man
ager gave a significant humph.
"I thought you wanted clerking
help,” she said.
"I did,” he answered, "but I Just
hired a woman for that. I forgot
to take the sign down.”
“They why In the world did you
hire this young thing for?”
"1 don't know," he mused softly.
“Did you see that rabbit’s foot?
Luella. do you remember how we
tied our wedding rings to the horse
shoe a full week before the wed
ding?”
Luella gave a snort and walked
behind the counter.
"Just Imagine people still believ
ing In such chnrms. I didn't have
the nerve to disillusion her, so
young."
SAVINGS-BANK GAINS
Mutual Having* bunk* deposit* tn
18 state* Increased m 1934 by *1(53.
980,092 u, *9,757,600387. and total as
1 set* of these bank* gained by *199,.
197334 to *11,1)55,498,096, both depos
it* and asset* being only slightly un
der record figure* for 1932, uncording
to Philip A. Benson, president of the
Notional Association of Mutual Rav
ing* bank*.
There also wa» on addition of $25,
750.405 to surplus, bringing that fund
to $1,192,028,224, or 12.2 per cent of
deposits. New York *tnte‘a mutual
suvlng* banks led the nation in gains
and assets, their Increase being $109,
715.244.
'I hey also led In deposit gains, the
Increase being $81,245,170.—Literary
Itigest.
WHAT TO DO
ABOUT
"Acid Indigestion"
A WAY THAT RELIEVES THE
CAUSE IN A FEW MINUTES
Many people who think they have
“weak stomachs” or “indigestion,”
doctors say, suffer in reality from
nothing more serious than acid stom
ach. And this common ailment can
usually be relieved now, in minutes.
All you do is take familiar Phillips’
Milk of Magnesia after meals. Tnis
acts to almost immediately neutralize
the stomach acidity that brings on
your trouble. You feel like a new
person!
Try this just once. Take either the
familiar liquid “PHILLIPS’ ”, or the
new Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia
Tablets. But watch out that you get
the Genuine PHILLIPS' Milk of
Magnesia.
ALSO IN TABLET FORM i
Phillips' Milk of Magnesia Tab
lets are now on sale at all drug
stores everywhere. Each tiny
tablet L the
equivalent of
a teaspoonful
of Genuine
Phillips’ Milk
of Magnesia.
Phillips^
5*? Afi/A cf Afajfieua
Reputation Counts
If one has a reputation for Judg
ment, his mere grunt has weight.
$SuE RUNDOWN, AILING?
Mrs. Ole Olson of 732*4
— 3rd St. No., Fargo,
i N, Dak., said: “Some
# years ago I was so run
j? down I was hardly able to
is do my housework — felt
t tired all the while and had
frequent dizzy spells and
headaches. Dr. Pierce s
Golden Medical Discovery
built me right up. I became stronger, b«*iucu
weight and felt 100% better.'
New *irc, tablets 50 cts., liquid $1.00.
Large size, tabs, or liquid, $1.35.
DON’T NEGLECT
YOUR KIDNEYS!
IP your kidneys are not working
right and you suffer backache,
dizziness, burning, scanty or too
frequent urination, swollen feet and
ankles; feel lame, stiff, “all tired
out” . . . use Doan's Pills.
Thousands rely upon Doan's.
They are praised the country over.
Get Doan's Pills today. For sale br
all druggists.
DOAN’S PILLS
Start the day feeling'
FITand ACTIVE!..
Don t let a sluggish overcrowded
system hold you back. CLEANSE
INTERNALLY WITH 6ARFIEL0
TEA. Get rid ot the wastes thato,
slow you up and keepyou tael- (A
Inc run down and Inactive. '
Usually works within 8 to 6
10 hrs. MILD but promptl '
At drug stores25c & TOca
L » l S I N O l\
/Chafing an<*
'Itching Rash
easily soothed by the
.bland medication of
\Resinol
BYERS BROS. & CO,
Good Live Stock Com. Service
Slock Yards-OMAHA