The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, November 22, 1923, Image 7

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    RED CLOUD, NEBRASKA, CHIEF
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Wreck survivors
tell how tobacco
kept them going
When foot! and water gave
out on third day, they
smoked until rescued
Perhaps they were only pirate? of
the sea, and deserved no great charity
from the hand of Fate. Nevertheless,
they were very much human beings
when they found themselves miles out
to sea adrift in an open boat.
With two days' supply of food and
water, they confidently expected to
be rescued in plenty of time. But
when tho third day passed and no
friendly sail appeared on tho horizon,
It began to look liko a case for Davy
Jones's locker.
Ono of tho victims, crazy with
thirst, suggested that they divide a
bottle of iodine and end tho agony
quickly.
"Tne tobacco hasn't given out yet,"
said another. "Let's stick it out a
while longer." And they did.
Late in tho afternoon of tho fifth
day a tramp schooner saw their dis
tress signals and came valiantly to
tho rescue.
"The only thing that kept us going
at all was tobacco," ono of tho survi
vors admitted when
ho was safely de
posited on dry land
again. "Wo smoked
and hcwcd, and
that sort of kept
us up."
Tobacco is cer
tainly a poor
substitute for
food and water
but under tho
stress of trying
circumstances
smoking a pipo
is a big help.
Pipes filled with Edgeworth
probably have no more soothing effect
than pipes filled with other tobaccos,
but most Edgeworth smokers some
how feel that they need Edgeworth to
get complete pipe satisfaction.
If you have never smoked Edge
worth, send your name and address
on a postcard to Lams & Brother
Company. They will be glad to send
you freo samples generous helpings
both of Edgeworth Plug Slice and
Ready-Rubbed.
Smoke a few pipefuls and judge for
yourself whether or not you wish to
become a permanent member of tho
Edgeworth Club.
Edgeworth is sold in various sizes
to suit the needs and means of all
purchasers. Both Edgeworth Plug
Slice and Ready-Rubbed are packed
in small, pocket-size packages, in
handsome humidors holding a pound,
and also in several handy in-between
sizes.
For tho free samples, kindly address
Larus & Brother Company, 80 South
21st Street, Richmond, Va. If you
will also include on your postcard tho
namo and address of your regular
tobacco dealer, your courtesy will bo
appreciated.
-To Rcla il Tobacco'Merehanls: If your
Jobber cannot supply you with Edge
worth, Larus & Brother Company will
gladly send you prepaid byparcelpoat
a one- or two-dozen carton of any size
of Edgeworth Plug Slice or Ready
Rubbed for the samo price you would
pay the jobber.
'0m
1 SSBJt
Even a dog banks his surplus bones.
WOMEN!
DYE FADED
THINGS NEW AGAIN
Dy or Tint Any Worn, Shabby Gar
ment or Drapery.
CDjamond dyes
Each lG-cent package of "Diamond
Dyes" contains directions bo simple
that any woman enn dye or tint nny
old, worn, faded thing now, even If
(ho has never dyed before. Chooso
any color at drug store. Advertise
ment.
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through the Bliice'e I
Indian reservation
'l'lit National l'i''i
of North Atner'm! ,
Tlmt Is tlu new tutor-
lllltloillll conception of
two systems tlmt lire
essentially out' In tlmt
tlii'.v represent geo
logically mill biolog
ically it continent rulh
it than two countries.
Detormlncd mid per
Mstcnt attempts at
commercial Inviislon ol
tlio iiittloiinl parks o
lmtli countries haw.
hugely brought uliout
this Interim 1 1 on u I
iaocniont. Tin Amcr
lent i Association for
tlio Advancement of
Science, the largest
scientific organization
In the world, with 12.
000 members In thu
United State unil Cnn
mla. spoke for both
coiintrloH when It re
cently passed n resolu
tion setting forth the
perils of the situation,
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2 DEAUTY IS INTERNATIONAL
3
3 The co-called national park3 of the world
arc not national save In name. They are no
more national than Is good music, classical
literature, beautiful pictures. They belong
to the world. We people of Canada feel
that the beauty spots within the United
States that have been designated as national
parks belong to uo as they belong to you.
They are but placed within the keeping of
the people of the States. We feel and we
hope that the peoplo of the United States
feel, that the beauty spots of Canada that
have been designated as national parks are
as much your park6 as they are our parks,
that they arc merely placed within our
keeping for the use of all. Beauty Is Inter
national, regardless of the form In which
It is expressed, and national parks arc but
the natural beauty spots of the world pre
served for the people of the world. J. B.
Harkln, Commissioner, Canadian National
Parks Branch, Department of Interior,
Canada.
Is agreed
In niiine;
Some men hurry through life as If
Widows were ehnsltiK them.
IcViirWnrlr HnrH?l
Is your work wearing you out? Are
you tortured with throbbing backache
feel tired, weak and discouraged? Then
look to your kidneys! Many occupa
tions tend to weaken the kidneys. Con
stant backache, headaches, dizainess
and rheumatic pains are the natural
result. You cntTer annoying bladder
Irregularities; feel nervous, initoblc
and worn out. Don't wait! Use Doan's
Kidney I'lUs. Workers everywhere
recommend Doan's. They should help
you, too. Ask your ncighborl
A Nebraska Case
'tnlto
MtJarf
B. F. Ellor, city
marshal!, Adams
Avenuo, Harvard,
Nebr., says: "My
back bothcrad mo
and it was nara
to bond or,
slralghten. I bent
ovor to lift n
plank and I wan
taken with awful
Bharn calns In my
hnclc. After ushlK
Doan's Kidney puis a few days my
back was all rlRht and I haven't
been troubled since."
Gt Doan't tt Any Stora, 60e Box
TS A M. KIDHEV
JLVft.i WF PILLS
FOSTER.MILBURN CO., BUFFALO, N. Y.
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By JOHN DICKINSON SHERMAN
OMPLI5TION of the Hanfr-Wlnder-mere
motor highway across the cen
tral Canadian Hockles shnrply em
phasizes the fact that the national
parks movement Is Just about tho
llvest non-polltlcnl issue of the times
In Cntmdu as well as In the United
States. An Increasingly Interna
tional aspect Is Its latest develop
ment. On both sides of the most
remarkable frontier In the world It
that national parks are national only
thnt natural scenic beauty Is Interna
tional; that there are no barriers between parks
save those placed by nature; that larger develop
ment of roads should give the people of the North
American continent easy access to the most
splendid recreation region of the globe.
It Is a credible prediction that the near future
will see a system of national parks from Mount
MeKInley In Alaska to Grand Canyon in Arizona
under a working International agreement that
will make It "a unique continental exposition of
Inestimable value to science and to the popular
education of future generations," a.s well as a
vast scenic playground for the people.
Tho immediate effect of the opening of the 101
mlle, two-way llanlT-WIndeniieru highway, making
passage by automobile possible through the (en
trul Canadlnn Hockles Is that It completes a ri00
mile circuit of Itocky Mountains, Yoho, Kootenny
and Waterlon Lukes Niitlonnlpiirks in Canada
and connects this circuit with the National l'nrk-to-I'ark
highway In the United States a gigantic
motor way that circles 0,000 miles through nine
scenic western states and touches Mount ltalnler,
Crater Lake, Lassen Volcanic, Yoseintte, General
(runt, Sequoia, Gland Canyon, .Ion, Mesa Verde,
Itneky Mountain, Yellowstone and Glacier
Nutiounl parks.
The Canadians call the highway from Hnnff to
Lake Windermere and on to the International line
at Klngsgate the HanfT-Californla liee-Line high
way because It keeps right on across a corner of
dilaho to Spokane and Portland and thence south
to San Kranclsco and Los Angeles, n distance of
l.tm miles. They call the other half of the
"Grand Circle tour" the Hann'-Graud Canyon
road ; this crosses tho International line at l'eskan,
Mont., Just to the east of Waterton Lakes ami
Glacier National parks. The forniaj opening of
the IJanlr-wiiiilermere highway this summer at
the point where It crosses the Kootenny river was
an International affair of considerable pomp and
ceremony. Old Glory was much In evidence. The
hand played the national ulrs. A notable assem
blage wns In attendance. Dr. King, Dominion
minister of public works, welcomed tho guests.
.1. Uoss Eakln, superintendent of Glacier National
park, was thu official representative of Secretary
Hubert Work of the United States Department of
the Interior. Tho speech-mnklng emphasized the
International Importance of the occasion. Then
the lieutenant governors of Alberta and British
Columbia, Dr. II. G. Lrett and Walter C. Nlchol,
cut the red, white and blue ribbon across the
mad and automobiles started east ami west amid
cheers
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Successful H
Treatment
of the Century M
CATARRH i
Tablets or
y Liquid
Sold Everywhere
iy
ALULU TODAY-DGT DELAY
Cbrc& CbZds iitSA Hoiinm
M La Grippe in 3 JDcaSM
M w.m. nn.t-co.,peTnoiT. ,.B
Knowledge Is not found unsought.
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Aspirin
Say "Bayer" and Insist!
Sememe)
Several motor highway projects on either side
of the International line are Important In this
connection. One Is a nearly-completed road that
will connect Buffalo park nt Walnwrlght, Alberta,
by way of Edmonton with Jasper, largest and
farthest north of the Canadian national pnrks. It
Is being built on r$00 miles of abandoned roadbed
of the Canadian Northern, from which the gov
ernment tore the rails In the World war to send
to France.
Another rond Is ncnrlng completion from Lnke
Louise to Field In Ilocky Mountains. This runs
on an old roadbed of the Canadian I'aclllc across
the Continental Divide. In time. It will be carried
through to Golden on the Columbia river.
A proposed Canadian scenic highway through
the heart of the Central Canadian Rockies runs
directly from BnnlT to Jasper park, IL'3 miles In
un nlr line, connecting at the base of Mount
Itohson at the headwaters of tho Frascr with the
Buffalo-Jasper road Just mentioned.
Three road projects In and about Glacier In the
United States have International Interest. The
National I'ark service has begun construction
on the Triinsmountain road across the Continental
Divide from St. Mary's lake to Lake McDonald.
Its completion will bridge the last gap In the
National Park-to-I'ark highway by uniting the
east entrance (Glacier I'ark) and the west
entrance (Bolton) of Glacier. It aNo supplements
the All-Canadian circle by a United States
Canadian circle much smaller than the Grand
Circle tour. The second Is the road being built
by Montana to parallel the Great Northern along
the southern boundary of Glacier, closing the
present gap between through east and west high
ways at this point.
The third project Is the Improvement by the
United States government of the Babb Intel na
tional Boundary road along the east sldf of
Glacier. In accordance with a decision by tho
comptroller general that the entire cost of a
state aid project through an Indian reservation
may be paid from the funds apportioned to the
states under the federnl highway act the Mon
tana state highway commission has submitted as
a federal aid project the Improvement of this road
83S9WmemW3KQ
NO INTERNATIONAL LINE
The tremendous and Increasing tourist
travel of the last few years Is proof of the
appeal to the people of the North American
continent of their national parks. The
United States and Canada stand together In
making more contented peoples by getting
the public into the great outdoor scenic
exhibits with which both countries are
supremely blessed. We live In peace and
friendship on the most remarkable political
frontier in all the world. But In scenic
beauty there is no International boundary
line nt all, no barriers save those placed by
nature. The extension of our National
Park-to.Park highway across the border by
the opening of such splendid connecting
links as the Banff-Wlndermero highway will
be followed, I sincerely hope, by the lager
development of national park roads In both
countries until the two peoples arc given
easy access to the finest Bcenlc attractions
of the globe Stephen T. Mather, Director,
National Park Service, Department of
Interior, United States.
ZapmamimaM
the Importance of an "unique continental exposl
tlon" and requesting "the people and the congress
of tho United States ami the people and tho
parliament of the Dominion of Canada to secure
such amendments of existing law and the enact
ment of such new laws as will give to nil units
In the International parks system complete con
servation alike."
The International pnrks system Idea has fnunl
much favor In both countries. The friendliest
co-operation exists between Stephen T. Mather,
director of the National I'ark service of thu
United States (photograph No 2), and Commis
sioner J. B. Harkln of the Canadian National
parks (photograph No? 4). In the United States
the Idea has been genernlly accepted by tho
"National Pnrks Army of Defense." which has ap
proximately -l.OOO.OOO members In alllllated nation
wide organizations. The National I'urks nssocla
ntlon, a leader In this army, Is promoting It.
"I thoroughly approve an International parks
system along the line and for the purpose set
forth by the A. A. A. S.," said Mrs. John D.
Sherman of the General Federation of Woman's
clubs they cull her the "National I'ark lady" In
Washington. "The general federation Is energetical
ly active In promoting national parks as 'National
Museums of Native America' and In bringing about
legislation for their complete conservation. Its
national council at Its last meeting passed a
resolution similar In effect to that of the
A. A A. K."
In Canada organization Is well under wny. Tho
Alpine Club of Camilla, which has twenty
branches, Issued a general Invitation to a meeting
In the fall nt Lake Louise at which was organized
the National Barks Association for Canada, with
directum representing the Dominion from Mont
real to Vancouver. Atllllatlon with organizations
of many kinds Is proceeding rapidly.
Here Is u Munition which shows the need of
concerted International action for the protection
of national parks against commercial Invasion;
A bill will presumably bu Introduced In the Sixty
eighth congress for the damming of Lower St.
Mary's lake, Just outside Glacier. Tills will raise
the level of Upper St. Mary's lake, Just Inside
Glacier, one of the most famous beauty spots
of Glacier, and destroy much of Its beauty. Three
fourth s of the How Is to go to the Milk river
Irrigation project of Canada. Two years ago the
International Joint commission was Induced by
Irrlgutlonlsts to recommend this project, but
neither government cured to act In the face of
popular protest. The bill per se stands no chance.
But the Canadian Irrlgatloulsts are planning to
iliini the CiMiadlan end of Waterton lalie, which
lies across the International line. This would
spoil me pari in uiu iiiku hi uiacier. ah "ex-
been nrranged to further
jf the St. Mary's lake (low
to stay In the United States In return for all
the flow to Canada from tho Waterton lake dam.
Glacier park Is protected by law; Waterton Lakes
park Is not. Ingenuity and persistence like that
can only be met by concerted International action.
As to the pictures: No. 1 shows the Bed Gates
of Sinclair canyon on the Banff-Windermere
highway In Kootenny. No. f Is a view of Mount
lidltli Cavell In Jasper. No. 3 gives a gllmpso
of tho buffalo herd In Buffalo park, near Wnln
wrlght, it fenced Inclosure of 1"8 square miles.
The herd, established In 1007, has Increased
mightily. In November 2,000 nnlmuls were killed,
leuvlng f,bW.
Unless you see the name "Bnycr an
package or on tablets you ars not get
ting the genuine Btyur product pre
scribed by physicians over wenty-two
years and proved safe by millions for
Colds Ilemiacho
Toothache Lumnago
Karaeho Itheumatlsm
Neuralgia rain, Pain
Accept "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin"
only. Kneli unbroken package contains.
proper directions. Handy boxes of
twelve tablets cost few cents. Drug
gists also sell bottles of 21 and 100.
Aspirin Is tho trade mark of Bayer
Manufacture of Monoaceticacldestcr of
Sallcyllcacld. Advert Iscment.
Usually the more the law costs tht
less Justice there Is In It.
GIRLS! HAIR GROWS
THICK AND BEAUTIFUL
35-Cent "Danderlne" Does Wonders for
Lifeless, Neglected Hair.
A glenmy mnss
of luxuriant hnlr
full of gloss, lus
ter and life short
ly follows n genu
ine toning up i
neglected scaIp-
with dependable
"Danderlne."
Falling h a I r,
Itching scalp and
the dandruff Is
corrected Immediately. Thin, dry,
wispy or fading hnlr Is quickly Invigo
rated, taking on new strength, color
rind youthful beauty. "Danderlne" Is
delightful on the hair; a refreshing,
stimulating tonic not sticky or greasy I
Any drug .store. Advertisement.
Nothing warms the congregation like
cold facts from Cic pulpit.
mj'
Mrs. A. Van Arnam
"&
?JK
" ' sfS$&.
v 'riii
chango of water" has
thu two projects, nil of
Davenport, Iowa. "I wish I could
toll to all tho world how much I owe
to Dr. PIcrco'B Favorlto Prescription.
I was ncarlng middle Hfo when my
last child cam nnd my health waa
miserable I had continuous pain bi
my right aldo. i took nine bottles of
Favorite Proscription' nnd can truly
Gay that I Buffered tho least that
time and my health afterwards was
bettor than It had vor been before
Whllo passing through tho critical
tlmo of llfo I dponded sololy upon
Favorlto Prescription' to keep me
veil and strong nnd it did not fail
me. I had nono of tho distressing
eymptoms most women havo at this
period, suoh as heat flashes and dizzy
epells. I camo through in oxcollont
health and am still Just as strong and
woll as I waB thirty yenrs ago, thanks
to thlB host of medicines, Dr. Pierco'a
Favorlto Prescription." -Mrs. Alice
Van Arnam, 1705 W. Fourth St.
Your health la most important to
you. Why not write Dr. Plorco'a In
valids' Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y., for
free, confidential, medical advico or
solid 10c for trial pkg. ot Favorita
Prescription Tablets.