The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, October 02, 1919, Image 3

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    . * .. .. —
Temperature anc Metals.
Im ii demonstration at the hondon
Ito.v.'.l institution of the effects of sud
den changes of temperature on •vari
ed- materials. Prof. H. Lees showed
that iron and murble could be removed
from low tempera I ere to (SO degrees.
Pahronheit. and changed hack from
boat to cold without cracking. Quartz
was shattered, though silica glass tens
'unaffected.
hove knows nothing about philos
ophy and cares less.
Were Built te Endure.
The Egyptian engineer who built the
famous water works at Aden eon
S'rticted the mns'inry so well that the
services of a plumber never bat e been
required. The a* water works were
built .’1.000 years before the Christian
era and are the most eelebrated and
antique in the world.
indefinite.
"What about that vacuum invention
of your friend’s?"
"Oh, there’s nothing in it.”
. uiimi—riausnu—■i—iw -ti—iw iw
The Effects of Opiates.
v ^TTMIAT INFANTS are peculiarly susceptible to opium and its various
s<kv | preparations, sdi of wliich are narcotic, is well known. Even in the
I emalteet doses, if continued, these opiates cause changes in the func
tions and growth of tho cells which are likely to become permanent, causing
imbecility, mental perversion, a craving for alcohol or narcotics in later life.
Nervous diseases, such as intractable nervous dyspepsia and lack of staying
powers are a result of dosing with opiates or narcotics to keep children quiet
in their infancy. The rule among physicians is that children should never
receive opiates in the smallest doses for more than a day at a time, and
only then if unavoidable.
The administration of Anodynes, Drops, Cordials, Soothing Syrups and
other narcotics to children by any but a physician cannot be too strongly
decried, and the druggist should not be a party to it. Children who are ill
need the attention of a physician, and it is nothing less than a crime to
dose them willfully with narcotics.
Castoria contains no narcotics if it bears t
signature of Chas. H. Fletcher.
, Genuine Castoria always bears the signature
“Life-Plant.”
There is a creeping inoss found in'
Jamaica called the “life-plant.” It Is
believed to lie Indestructible, by any
means except immersion in boiling wa
ter or the application of a red-hot iron.
It may ho cut up and divided in any
manner, and the smallest shreds will
throw out roots, grow and bud.
Knnui is merely old-fasliioned lazi
ness putting on lugs.
Senatorial Courtesy.
"WltiU'is senatorial courtesy f
"Senatorial courtesy," replied Sena
tor Sorghum, “consists largely in re
maining silent so ostentatiously that
anybody can guess what unpleasant
things you must lie thinking about.’'
His Preference.
“My husband reads me like an open
book.” “I wonder If ho wouldn’t
rather shut you up."
— THE MOST DANGEROUS
OF ALL DISEASES
No organs of tlie human body are so
important to health and long life as the
kidney s. When they slow up and com
mence to lag in their duties, look out!
Danger is in eight.
Find out what the trouble is—with
out delry. Whenever you feel nervous,
weak, dizzy, suffer from sleeplessness,
or have pains in the back, wake up at
once. Your kidneys need help. These are
rigns to warn you that your kidneys
are not performing their functions
properly. They are only half doing
their work and are allowing impurities
to accumulate and he converted into
uric acid and other poisons, which
are causing you distress and will de
stroy you unless they are drives from I
your system. , I
FOOLISH IDEAS SOME HAVE
Old Fellow Righteously Indignant at
• Fastidiousnes of the Guests
t of His Hotel.
('apt. I.indsey Polk, director of a
number of hotels, said recently in
New York:
'‘European hotels, even the best of
them, are inferior to ours. While 1
nils in Paris I saw an advertisement
of a fashionable new hotel, and the
boast the management made was that
it was as good as the best American
hotels, f was pleased with this trib
ute.”
Captain Polk smiled.
“Well,” he resumed, “our ideals are
high. No more hotelkeepers like the
old fellow who complained about his
rummer visitors:
“ ‘You wouldn’t believe the non
sense that is in them. They is al
ways wantin’ a clane tablecloth an’
chine sheets to their bods. An’ table
napkins, no less! I’ll tell you what,
there’s sure people In tl#s world that
think they ran go Into a hotel an’
make a convainance of it.’ ”
Hard to Digest.
Hinks-—The under crust to that
chicken pie you brought me was
abominably tough. Waiter—There
wasn’t any under crust to that pie,
sir; It was served on a paper plate
and you’ve eaten it.
Get some GOLD MEDAL Haarlem
Oil Capsules at once. They are an olj,
tried preparation used all over the
world for centuries. They eontain only
old-fashioned, soothing oils combined
with strength-giving and system-cleans
ing herbs, well known and used by phy
sicians in their daily practice. GOLD
MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules are im
ported direct from the laboratories ia
Holland. They are convenient to take,
and will either give prompt relief or
your money will be refunded. Ask for
them at any drug store, but be sure
to get the original imported GOLD
MEDAL brand. Accept no substitutes.
In sealed packages. Three sizes.
Satisfied.
The gray-haired stranger bent over
the desk.
“Are you the society editor?” he
asked.
“I am.”
“Are you the person who wrote up
tiie account of last night's big recep
tion?”
“Yes; anything wrong'with it?"
“That’s what I want to find out.
Look here. 1 notice in speaking of
my daughter you use the sentence:
‘She swept about the room with an
inherited grace that arrested every
one’s attention.’ Now, what was your
purpose in writing that?”
“Why, it struck me ns a first-class
opportunity for a neat compliment to
her esteemed parents; that’s all.”
“You are sure that you didn’t mean
to Insinuate that her father laid the
foundation of his fortune by selling
brooms!” •
“Certainly not.”
“Becnuse I did, you know.”
“I didn’t knpw it.’
"Then that’s all right. Good day."—
Dal Ins News.
Truth Hard to Down.
Truth is tough; it will not break,
like a bubble, at a touch; nay, you may
kick it about all dny like a football,
and It will be round and full at .eve-,
nlng.
Truth and a woman's age are not
on speaking terms. ,
11 1 ..—-*
Coffee Costs
Too Much
Usually in Money—
Frequently in Health
Instant Posl
l
is a delicious drink, of
coffee-like flavor, made
instantly in the cup.
Economical—Healthful
No Raise in Price
50-cup tins 30c 100-cup tins 50c
tWa by
POSTUM CEREAL COMPANY
Battle Creek, Mich.
Sold by Grocer* and General Stores
♦444444444444444444
'4 4
4 THE ONE WHO FOLLOWS. 4
4 - # 4
4- One day an old umbrella mender 4
4 brought his skeleton frames amt 4
4 tinkering tools Into the alley buck 4
4* of my office- As he sat on a box 4
4 in the sun mending the broken and 4
4 torn umbrellas. 1 noticed that he 4
4- seemed to lake unusual pains, test- 4
4 ing the cloth, carefully measuring 4
4 and strongly sewing the covers 4
♦ “You seem extra careful,” I re- 4
4 marked. 4
4 “Yes,” he ,«aid, without looking 4
4 up. “I try to dn good work.” 4
4 Your customers would not know 4
4 the difference until you were gone,” 4
4 1 suggested. 4
4 “No, t suppose not.” 4
4 "Do you expect to come back?” 4
4 “No.” 4
4 “Then why ore you so particular?" 4
4 “So it will he easier for the next 4
4 fellow who comes along,” he an- 4
4 swered simply “If l put on shoddy 4
4 cloth or do bad work they will find 4
4 it out in a few weeks, and the next 4
4 mender will get the cold shoulder 4
4 or the bull dog.” 4
4 ♦
4444444444444444444
-^
Life Reduced to Food.
Arthur Bullard, In Harper’s.
By New Year’s day, 191K, the comfort*
able classes of Moscow had lost all their
Illusions about the revolution. They were
bored by our insistent interest in it, and
preferred to discuss ways and means of
gutting more than their share of the
meager food supply. Every one had some
mysterious “method”—just as most In
habitants of the Riviera have a secret
“system”.for beating the bank at Montr
Carlo.
There were two Russian families in
whose houses I knew I could always get u
good dinner. The “system” of the Evalcn
kos was beautifully simple. They had a
good looking servant girl. She was: jgtlc^
methodical and hud worked out a schedule1
for having different soldiers call on her
every night in the week. Instead of choco
late creams, she exacted tribute from
them in fat fowls, suckling pigs and jars
of butter. The Evalenkos lived royally.
The other family—with marvelous bu?:i
ness acumen—had succeeded in trading
fcome useless thing like a munition plant
nr a gold mine for a eigaret factory. And
you could buy anything with eigarets.
They were tlu* most lavish entertainers in
Moscow. * They were not embarrassed if
even four or five guests turned up unex
pectedly at meal hours. Their tabic
groaned under the weight of “improcura
bles”—sugar, eggs, cheese. But their pride
was white bread, really white.
Tt was this very luxury which brought
my dinners with them to an end. On j
evening when there wore only a few
Intimate friends left the hostess explained
how they got it. They bribed the chief
surgeon of a war hospital with eigarets!
There was a still small hoard of while
flour in the hospital, reserved for the sol
diers who had had so much of their stom
achs shot away that they could not digest
black bread. Although every one present
at the dinner would have Insisted upon
being classed as gentlefolk, no one pro
tested at the infamy. But I could not cat
any more of that white bread, i never
went back.
Indifference.
Over my garden
An airplane flew;
But nothing there
Either cared or knew.
Cabbage butterflies
Chased each other;
A young wren cried $
Seeking his mother. \ >
Gay zinnias
With heavy head
Flaunted yellows,
And m&uves, and reds,
A hummingbird,
On the late fakspur,
Never knew what
Went over her.
Crickets chirped.
And a blinking toad
Watched for flies
On the gravel road.
They don’t care
How smart men are— ^
To go through heaven
In a flying car!
To a yellow bee
On a marigold
The adventure
Seems a trifle old.
—Louise Driscoll, in the New York Times
Eye of Money Genius.
""Paul Hutchinson, in World Outlook.
As far as I know, there is only one man
in all the United States who deals in quill
toothpicks. He is a Russian Jew, citizen
of the city of New York. Somewhere in
Bohemia he had a factory that took tho
pride of the geese of the then Austro
Hungarian empire and magically trans
formed it into an implement familiar to
many Americans. Then came the war. Thq
man in Fourteenth street knew that it
wouldn’t be long before the transporting
of toothpicks from Bohemia to Broadway
would become an extinct occupation. So
he sent this S. O. S. to the consular serv
ice of the United States; “Where can 1
get more goose quill toothpicks?"
Not long after that the toothpick king
traveled to the east, only to find that his
reply had come frqm a Methodist mission
ary, the Rev. George S. Miner. Mr. Miner
has business ability par excellence, fot
he -has equipped and carried on 117 day
schools in his province without a cent of
appropriation from the missionary board
of his church. “Pa” Miner’s schools am
for poor boys, but ho Is not in the busi
ness of making beggars of his students;
no boy enlists his help who does not show
ambition to help Himself. The toothpick
man saw all this, saw also the unlimited
supplies of goose quills to be found in
China, and straightway turned over the
production end of his business to this mis
sionary end his schoolboys.
In the city of Foochow, Mr. Miner had
built up a large higher primary school,
w'hich is the term used in China for a
school doing the last four years of what
Americans call grammar school work. The
first floor of the dormitory, by ripping out
a few partition* and installing a bit of
picket fence, was turned into a toothpick
factory. I w&s in that factory the other
day. Plenty of room, plenty of light,
plenty of air—and plenty of quills. Thirty
boys eat at long benches, in each right
hand a razor keen knife and a short piece
of wire. With a quick twist the left hand
would hold the quill in proper position;
on© cut, another, a thrust of the wire tc
clear the interior, and the toothpick was
done. The boy I watched had cut 7,20<
the previous day. The factory bad turned
out 110,000.
Generous.
From the Philadelphia Public Ledger.
Mrs. Callahan's husband had been quite
ill and the doctor had been trying to makt
her realize the gravity of the situation.
“Mrs Callahan,” said he, very seriously,
’•you must be at your husband’s side con
stantly, as you will need to hand him
something every little while.* ’
Whereupon Mrs. Callahan waxed indig
nant. “Niver, dochter! Far be it fnm m«
to hi; a man whin he’s down!”
•CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP”
IS CHILD'S LAXATIVE
'Vook at tongue! Remove poisons
from stomach, liver and
bowels.
Accept "California" Syrup of Figs
only—look for the name California on
the package, then you are sure your
child is having the best and moat harm
less laxative or physic for the Utile
stomach, liver and bowels. Children
love its delicious fruity taste. Full
directions for child's dose on each bot
tle. Give it without fear.
Mother! You must sny ‘‘California." I
— Adv.
BROUGHT HIM BACK TO EARTH
_
Liberal Suggestion Made by Old Souse
Was Not Exactly the Answer
Orator Desired.
The lljcrart society was meeting In
(hid Fellows’ hall. llev. .Tosluli Dob
son presided. Hon. .Tames Bolivar
McHenry, the noted orator from the
adjoining county, was speaking on
"The Feme Table," and the audience
was rapt in respectful attention.
“And that was what they conceded,”
he concluded. "I ask you, fellow citi
zens. what does this nation need?
What is her necessity, ns she leaves !
the far western shore and steps proud- j
ly across the Pacific, and in 'lie eye 1
of Hie world lays the hand of demoo j
racy upon the blow of the Orient? ;
What, 1 repeat, does she need?' , '
"Itubhcr bootsh,” hiccoughed the J
town souse.
Lift off Corns!
- t
Doesn’t hurt a bit and Freezon# j
costs only a few cents.
With your fingers! You can lift oft
any hard corn, soft corn, or com be
tween the toes, and the hard skin cal
luses from bottom of feet.
A tiny bottle of “Freezone" costs
little at any drug store; apply a few
drops upon the corn or callus. In
stantly it stops hurting, then shortly
you lift that bothersome corn or callus
right off, root and all, without one bit
of pain or soreness. Truly! No hum
bug !—Adv.
Not That Creed.
“I>o you believe in telepathy?”
‘‘No; 1 don't take to these new- ,
fangled schools. Give me it good old !
allopath every time." ! t
After all, the easiest way to do a ■
tiling is to do it; right.
!
; j
I
5c a package
before the war
5c a package
during the war
5c a package
NOW
| THE FLAUOR LASTS
SO DOES THE PRICE!
..
1
i
___17
FARRIS'C011C
If r f GAe EASY war
TO TREAT HORSE COLIC
No Drenching — A Child Can Give It#
• DOStt 00<s ttUAHANTCSO
Old Kentucky Mfg. Co., Inc., Paducah, Ky.
FUR COATS, ROBES, ETC.
Made to your order without extra
charge, With yoor first order we
give you a (6.00 pair of gauntlet
gloves. Send ws your hides, we
guarantee all work.
TWIN CITY FUR COAT AND ROBE CO.
1629 S. E. Filth St., Hinnesyolis, FI Inn.
GEORGIA COTTON AND
PEANUT LANDS
100 to 5,000 acre tracts—timber. Kaolin,
farms, $10 to $50 per acre. State your
wants plainly. Terms.
Turner & Lewis, Bibb Bldg., Macon, Ga.
HALM-KTTE TAItl.KTN for INDIGESTION.
No better medicine, marie by anybody any
where. You will be charmed with Ih dr effect.
25c a package. Free Hiiinple mailed on appli
cation. ISalm-otte Laboratory, 332 So. State
St.. Chicago. Dept. H.
Acid-Stomach
Makes 9 Out of 10
People Suffer
I'octors declare that more than TO r.or+~
organic diseases can be traced to Acid
Mtornach. Starting with indigestion, heart
burn, belching, food-repeating, bloat, sour,
gassy stomach, the entire system eventually
becomes affected, every vital organ suffering
In some degree or other. Von see these vic
tims of Acid-Stomach every where —poop!*
who are subject to n*rvo isness, headache,
Iruomnla. biliousness—poop c who suffer from
rheumatism, lumbago, sciatl a un<5 ache » and
pains all over the body i: is c.afe to say
thi't about. '.) people out of . 0 suffer to
e-tent from Aclrl-Stomuch.
If you suffer from Htom.ich trouble or,
e\en if you do not feel any tdomnch distress,
yet are weak and filling, feel tired and
dragged out, luck and enthusiasm and
know that somethin/ s wrong although you
c innot locate the exj.vt cause o« your trou
ble—you naturally want to get back your
grip on health as quickly as possible. Then
take EATONIC, the wonderful modern rem
edy that brings quick relief from pains of
indigestion, belching, gassy bloat, etc. Keep
your stomach strong, clean and sweet. Be*
how your general health improves--how
quickly the old-time vim, vigor and vitality
comes back! \
Get a big 60c box of EATONIC from your
druggist today. It is guaranteed to pleas*
you. If you are not satisfied your druggist
will refund your money.
Warn (Tim y6ur acid-stomach)
SIOUX CITY PTG. CO., NO. 40-191®.
ATTENTION!
Sick. Women
To do your duty during these trying
times your health should be your first
consideration. These two women
tell how they found health.
i Hellam, Pa.—"I took Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg
etable Compound for female troubles and a dis
placement. I felt all run down and was very weak.
I had been treated by a physician without results,
bo decided to give Lydia E. Piukham’s Vegetable Compound
a trial, and felt better right away. I am keeping house
Bince last April and doing ail my housework, where before
! I was unable to do any work. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound is certainly the best medicine a woman can
take when in this condition. I gi ve you permission to publish
this letter.”—Mr3. E. R. Crujllutq, R. No. 1, Ilellam, Pa.
Lowell, Mich.—“I suffered from cramps and dragging
down pains, was irregular and had female weakness and
displacement. I began to take Lydia E. Pinkhain’s Vege
table Compound which gave me relief at once and restored
my health. I should like to recommend Lydia E. Piukham’s
remedies to all suffering women who are troubled in a simi
lar way.' —Mrs. EliseII*im,R.No.6, HorSd.LoweU.Mich.
Why Not Try
IIYDIA E. S V I
VEGETA- WPOU D I