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About The North Platte semi-weekly tribune. (North Platte, Neb.) 1895-1922 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 11, 1922)
11 THE NOttTII PLATTE SEMI-WEEKLY TRTRUNE. i IRL NOW WELL IRONS iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini Daughter Took Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound as Mother Advised Wauseon, Ohio. "My daughter al wayo had backache and leg-acho at cor- i tainperiods and could not be on her feet at those times. Wo read about Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegotablo Compound doing girls so much good bo she began to take . That is two years ago and she is a dif ferent girl since then able to do any work she wants to do al though she is still careful ?ot to do heavy work and so well anCLatrong. We recommend Lydia E. Pinkham's Vogetablo Compound to nil mothers with ailing daughters, and I give you permission to publish this let ter as a testimonial. " Mrs. A.M.Burk iioldeb, Route No. 2, Box 1, Wauseon, Ohio. Something out of balance will affect the finest clock, causing it to gain or lose. The proper adjustment made, all is well. So it. is with women. Some troublo may upset you completely. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound will correct thocauso of the trou ble and disagreeable Bymptom3 will disappear as they did intho case of Mrs. Burknolder'a daughter. Mothers it ia worthy of your con fidence. DIED in New York City alone from kid ney trouble last year. Don't allow yourself to become a victim by neglecting pains and aches. Guard against this trouble by taking VP Tho world's standard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles. Holland's National Remedy sinco 1696. All druggists, three sizes. Look for the name Gold Medal on every box and accept no imitation Dizzy Spells Are Usually Duo to Constipation When you are constipat ed, there is not enough lubricant produced by your system to keep the food waste soft. Doctors prescribe Nujol because its action is so close to this natural lubricant. Nujol is a lubricant not a medicine or laxative so cannot gripe. Try it today. areTyg Urar, tnin, straggly manes people very old. It necessary a bottle of Q-Uan Hair Color Restorer will bring1 back original color quickly mops dandruff. At all good drnggUts, 75c, or direct from Utuif-EHii, CLiaUu. Htku, Tna. L00KQL0?! Only those who love really know. Tho housewife smiles with 'satisfac tion as she looks at the basket of clear, white clothes and thanks Red Cross Ball Blue. At all grocers. Ad vertisement. A fool and his money Is a combina tion you don't meet every dny. New Shoes Old Shoes Tight Shoes all feel the same if you shake into them some ALLEN'S F00TEASE The Antiseptic, nenllnfj Powder cut " ir.Vn. thn frlpHnti frnill thfi ShOO. IreSll- ens tho feet and gives new vigor. At nlfiht, wnen your leei ro mi.-", owe ., .1 otnnllaii frnm nrullHtlO CIT (ldllClllC. (11114 o HUllbtl w iT--ri -! Sprinkle ALLKN'S KOOT-EA SE in the root-Dam ana enioy Wllnoui on nciic. , , . Over 1,800,000 poundt of Powder for the Idk the war. . In a Pinch. Ce AIAKIVS ruuT-isaan Cuticura Soap Is Ideal for The Complexion Stp 25c, Ointnnnt 25 and 50c, Talcna 25c. Wafrl. Salesmen to aell a farm necixlity on Twelve Month"' tSims without in'ere.t, 'nufactured by he oiaett ana uiuwi " ,v" .i,iv world. Men must have can. We pay w eekly expenses. Want men wno m " "V 1600.00 per month and who have had "Prl- . i nh ihn farmers. C31VS .n. of vnurse f In first letter. mr W. J. P. WEKKS... S2S-327 New York Mfn Illdg. ' . KiuikiM City, -Mo. T5fie americam LEGION (Copy for This Department Supplied br m American i.tmon News uerviee.j WANT HERO MEDAL FOR HIM Charles Crozler, New York, Plunged Into River and Saved Seven-Year-Old Boy. As Ohnrles J. Crozler of C18 Tully Btrcct, Syracuse, N. Y., was driving a truck across n Syracuse Ivrldgo he happened to look at tho river belnw. Crozler's casual glance un derwent a deald ed change, lie saw something In tho water. A small hand and fT, '"sHHB lust lovnl with the surface. Not many seconds clnpscd until Crozler was beneath tho surface of the water to see who was attached to the arm. The next thing he really saw very distinctly was the small wet body of n seven-year-old boy silhouetted against the white Interior of an ambulance. Crozler and William John Ilanley, Jr., whose life he had saved, were on their way to tho hospital. For his net of heroism his buddies of the Americnn Legion are helping In the movement to secure for him n Carnegie life-saving medal. A FUTURE AUXILIARY WORKER Bonnie Jean Kelly, Youngest Member at Organization of North Dakota State Department, The youngest member present nt the organization of the North Dakota state department of tho Americnn Le gion auxiliary was a little lassie only four months old. Bonnie Jean Kelly of Tim Running post at Devil's Lake Bonnie Jean Kelly. was Immediately ndopted by the en tire state department when she was presented as "one of the directors of the auxiliary's affairs tomorrow." Bonnie Jean's ather, M. P. Kelly, served ns first lieutenant of tho Ninety-third pursuit squadron of the First army. ORIGINATED THE GOLD STAR Medal Showing Appreciation of the Idea Is Presented to J. M. Buck of Omaha, Neb. A medal purchased with funds given by tho governors of many states, Gen eral Pershing and a hundred notnbles In civil and military circles, has been presented to J. M. Buck of Omaha, Neb., who originated the gold stur which was placed on the caskets of all war dead to be returned to this coun try from European battlefields. Omaha was a distributing point for the United States graves registration service. After the federal agency be gnn to return bodies from overseas, thousands of caskets passed through Omaha. Mr. Buck suggested to the Omaha American Legion that a gold star be plnced on each soldier's casket, The Legion Immediately accepted the Idea and through the Legion's orgnnl zatlon, the custom of placing the star on all soldiers' caskets In all parts of the United Stntes wns adopted. Every contingent of soldier dead up riving at Omaha was met at the rail way station by a delegation from the American Legion. Mr. Buck always accompanied the Legionnaires and su pervlsed the placing of the stars on the caskets. Tho medal was presented Mr. Buck as an expression of nppreel atlon of his work. MADE WORLD WAR PICTURES Three Myths. A man's nuto had broken down When ho crawled under It no crowd collected and attempted to advise him how to tlx It. A miner was entombed for three days and three nights as the result of a cave-In. When he was finally rescued It was found that bis hair had not turned snow white. A soldier wns on guard duty and was approached by an bfllcer who nsked him to give his general orders, Tho sentinel reeled them off, making many mistakes, and the officer cop rected him, thus revealing tho fact that ho knew them himself. American Legion Weekly. Capt. E. N. Jackson of Signal Corps Photographed Important Events During Conflict The history of America's part In the World war as told In pictures, from scenes of death and destruction In France to the gny pictures of return ing soldiers land lug at lloboken, was photographed by or under the dlreatlon of Cnpt. E. N. Jackson of the Signal corps. Ills work did not end .with the cessation of hos tilities. Perhaps his was (ho most Interesting role played by any member of the A. E. F. after tho armistice. When President Wilson went to France the story of his activities was photographed by Captain Jackson. Whether the presi dent shook hnnds with n Europeun soldier, signed an Important paper or hud dinner with a king, Captain Jack son was there with his camera. Today, the official photographs taken by Captain Jackson and his staff nre to be found In gnllerles, libra ries, public buildings nnd private homes In every part of the United Stntes. Mr. Jackson, no longer a enp- tnln, Is now' clicking the shutter ns one of the staff photographers of the New York Dally News. He spends his spare time at the clubrooms of the American Legion, Signal post No. 343, In New York city. GREETINGS TO THE TOMMIES Vice Commander Jackson Carried Commander MacNider's Message to the British Legion. The first man to cross tho American continent In an automobile was tho first man to cross the Atlantic ocean with a mes sage from Ameri can World war service men ex clusively to Brit ish Tommies. That niun Is II. Nelson Jackson of Bur lington, Vt one of the nntlonnl vice commanders of tho American Le gion, who recently represented the Legion at an annual meeting of the British Legion, mndo up of World war service men of the British Isles. During the war Mr. Jackson served in the Medical corps nnd for gnllantry in action was decorated with the D. S. C, Croix do Guerre nnd the Le gion of Honor of France. lie was promoted through the vurlous rnnks from lirst lleutennnt to lieutenant colonel. The greetings which Mr. Jnckson presented to the British Legion In he half of Commander Ilnnford MncNIdor declnred that: "No generation of our nations have been so closely bound to gether. Through the coming years It must he our mutual duty to so strengthen and cement these ties that from this great undertaking may coino peace to all the world." SPENT MONTHS IN AN ASYLUM New Zealand Government Is Probing Case of Subject Imprisoned at Elgin, III. The New Zealand government Is In vestigating the case of Robert M. Thompson of Chrlstchurch, World war veteran, who has Just returned to his home in New Zealand, nfter having spent several months In the asylum for the Insane at Elgin, 111. Thompson came to the United States after having his health shattered In the war. Acting on the advice of the Canadian government, which looks nfter New Zealand military pension ers In America, he called at the office of the veterans' bureau In Chicago. A week after Thompson first called at the office of tho bureau, he says that he found himself a regular Inmate In the asylum nt Elgin, receiving very poor food nnd Indifferent treatment. He finally succeeded in smuggling letters out to u former college friend who took the matter up with the asylum authorities. His release was arranged on the condition that ho leave the United States immediately. Carrying On With the j A . American Legion Jesup, la., with viewer than 800 population lias 130 American Legion members. Strangers seeking help In Correc tlonvllle, In., must be passed on by a committee of leading citizens, the business men nnd American Legion posts of the city hnvo decided Out of B56 men 270 were found to have some kind of physical disability in n canvass of former service men In Clay county, lown, conducted by tho American Red Cross and the Amerl can Legion. A delegate at the state American Legion auxiliary convention nt Cedar Rapids, In., was enthusiastically ap plauded when she stated on tho con ventlon floor that she ns "German In birth but wholly Americnn In spin It." She had two sons in service. When Baby Complains. THERE ARE MANY WAYS a baby has of expressing any pain or irregularity -or digression from its normal condition br health and happiness. A short' sharp cry, a prolonged irritated cry. Restlessness, a constant turning of the head or of the whole body, fretful. In these and other ways a baby tells you there is something wrong. Most mothers know that a disordered stomach, or bowels that do not act naturally aro tho cause of most of baby's smTorings. A call for tho doctor is the first thought, but in the event of any delay there should be ready at hand a safe remedy such as Fletcher's Castoria. Castona has been used for baby's ailments for over 30 years and has mer ited the good will of tho family physician in a measuro not equaled by any other baby's medicine because of its harmlessness and tho good results aohieved. And remember this : Castoria is essontiaily a baby's remedy and not a cure- all for every member of the family. What might help you is too often dangerous.' ' "when given to a babe. Witt Contents ISPlmdPj ES I Children Cry For mi t r-.nxmi.-n PER CENT. Actabfcrrcparation6rAs- tinglhcStomandBowclstf 0 $ w TtTtr-PrnmotlnDhicatioft Cheerfulness andRcstCwtaM neither Opium, Morprunc iw IincroL Not NAnco i w. 1 A i,tnfnl Remedy foC Constlpntionaiui Diarrhoea and rcvxnbiH'" LOSS OF SLEEP rosulUniflicfcfrwn- raclmileSinntareot - ii Let's Think It Over. Thero is such a thing as saying too much on any subject, and! the "gmmLstMid" talker sooner or later becomes, a bore. The truth is always welcomed, and the truth reiterated and confirmed is moro than welcome; it reaches your innermost soul. Fletcher's Castoria is aU its advertising has claimed for it Scrutinized .y the microscope of public opinion and used for over thirty; years it stands without a peer in the hearts of thoughtful, cautious,) discerning Mothers. And once used, mother love thero is no substitute for mother love will scorn to try a "substitute" or a "just-as-good".) Masquerading under many names drugs that are injurious to the tender babe have found their way into some households, but tho Ught of experience soon casts them out. Are they cast out before it is too Into? MOTHERS SHOUtD READ THE B00KIET THAT IS AROUND EVERY BpTTtE OF FLETCHER'S CAST0RUK' GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears tho Signature of Exact Copy of Wrapper. 9 THB CINTAUH COMPANY, NIW YORK OITV. mmmmmmmmMmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmsm' 10 Cents BRIGHTENS, REFRESHES, ADDS HEW DELIGHT TO OLD DRAPERIES PUTNAM FADELESS DYES dyes or tints as you wish Wrong Batch. "I never tusted such quder batter cakes." "IJey, you've fried my lioine brew." It Is said that no man can tell a lib and keep bis big too still. No wonder pcoplo like to wear shoes I VBuij KEY OVERALL Costs Less Per Das; To Wear TStem Which is Larger The Sun or a Cent The sun is the largest but you can hold the cent so close to your ey that you'll lose sight of the sua Don9f let a cheap price r a big can baking powder make you lose sigkt o quality CALUMET The Economy BAKING POWBEi Is the quality leavener for real economy in the kitchen, always use Calumet, one trial will convince you. BEST BY TEST The World's Greatest Baking Powder ' I " ' glg CT MADE UYA TRUffl JUDMH CONTENTS ll Micas bAU---3