The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, November 20, 1924, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    WEAK, RUN DOWN
AFTER SICKNESS
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta
ble Compound Made Mrs.
Dube Well and Strong
E. Hartford, Conn.—“After a severe
sickness I was bo weak that I could not
I my motner tola me
to take Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegeta
ble Compound. The
first bottle helped me
so much that I took
six more bottles and
felt fine. I have just
given birth to a nice
baby girl and am
feeling strong and
well. So different
J_A»__T
» i ■ y . ifrom the way i xeit
before. I am taking the Vegetable
‘ Compound right along while nursing.
The baby seems to be in good health,
and my friends say they see a big change
for the better in me. Mrs. Eugenes
Dube, 69 Woodbridge Street, East
Hartford, Connecticut.
The Vegetable Compound is a splendid
medicine to bring back health and
strength. Many mothers have found
this true, as did Mrs. Dube. Ask some
of your neighbors and friends, for there
are women everywhere who know by
experience the value of Lydia E. Pink
barn’s Vegetable Compound.
Write to Lvdia E. Pmkham Medicine
Co., Lynn, Massachusetts, for a free
copy of Lydia E Pinkham’s Private
Text-Book upon “Ailments Peculiar
to Women."
Jazz for Wedding
At the recent weddipg of a popular
musician in London the wedding march
was played on jazz instruments and
the bridal pair made their exit from
the church beneath a triumphal arch
of trombones.
for Constipation
Have aided thousand* suf
fering pain and torments of
disordered digestions. A
harmless, effective vegetable
lBMunT*n’s P*w Paw Tenie makes
ysn well, keeps you youn*. nope
AT ALL DRUGGISTS ,
Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded
iniNYON'S • Serantoa, Pa.
I Household Necessity |jjj§|
For cuts, burns, blisters, rashes,
wounds, or skin troubles of any
kind. Soothing and healing. |!|j[
Keep it always in the house. In
tubes or bottles. I*ook for the
tradetnark“Vasellne” on every jj; |
package. It is your protection.
Chesebrough Mfg. Co. (Cons’d) I
State Street New York ijjjjji
Vaseline 1
PETROLEUM JELLY
Royal Governor Driven Out
Sir Edmund Andros, who for a short
time during the reign of James II was
; royal governor of New York and New
Jersey, was driven out of New York
In 1088 by an uprising led by Jacob
Leisler.
Are You Weak? Nervous?
Rundown?
Rocky Comfort, Mo.—'"I can rec
ommend Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Pre
scription for wo
men wno are in
a nervous and
rundown state.
When I had be
come weak, run
down, and in a
nervous state I
took Dr. Piercs’f
Favorite Pre
scription and
found 1t very
helpful in giving
' ' me strengtn anu
quieting my nerves. The ‘Favorite
Prescription’ is a splendid building
up tonic.”—Mrs. Earnest Kimbrough.
If you want to be well, ask your
dealer for this Prescription, in tablet
or liquid 'form. Write Dr. Pierce,
Buffalo, N. Y„ for free advice.
New Way to Plant Treat
A method of tree planting which Is
claimed to save six years’ growth has
been developed by the German depart
ment of forestry. The roots of the
baby trees are spread In the way na
ture Intended, Instead of up and
down ns Is usually done. German
foresters also suy that packing the
earth about young trees is wrong, as
It robs the roots of breathing space.
Hairs Catarrh
Medicine 2ldo,
rid your system of Catarrh or Deafness
caused by Catarrh.
SM by druggitlt for mr 40 ymn
| f, J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Otyc
A Good Hobby.
The pay may be good In dollar* and
cents.
And surely there’s nothing of fame,
fct those who have tried It find rich
recompense
In working with boys just the
same.
For what could be finer when years
shall have fled,
Than knowing that you had a part
In guiding a boy into paths that he
led
As a man, with God In his heart.
It keeps a man thinking In ways that
are right.
To share in the spirit of youth.
It gives to him something that helps
in the fight,
It helps him to stand for the Truth.
You come t«> believe that the things
that you tell,
The code of clean living you
preach—
Are something for you to live tip
to, as well.
As those whom you'ro trying to
teach.
There’s no finer hobby than this one,
I claim—
Than working and playing wi*h
Boys;
’Twill bring to you little of honor or
fame,
But lasting and real are. Its joys,
And what could be finer when years
have fled,
Than knowing that you had a part
I-n guiding a gang Into paths that
they led,
As men, With God in their heart.
—Charles S. Kinnison, in Asso«
elation Men.
Ancient Lacked Dictionary.
Ernest Weekley, in tho Atlantic
Monthly.
As to the ubiquity of ths diction
ary there can be no question. With
in the memory of the oldest now
alive there have been few houses—at
least of those possessing any books
at all—whose library has not includ
ed an out-of-date Barclay, an ob
solete abridgment of Johnson, an
early Webster, or some equally use
ful misleader of ihe mind that thirsts
for information.
It was not always thus, for ••the
dictionary,” as we TMderstun 1 the
word, is a comparatively modern
element in life. Dictionaflum is not
a classical Latin word, any more
than lexicon is classical Greek. To
the medieval scholar a dictionary
was a collection of "dictions” or
phrases, put together for ihe use of
pupils studying Latin. We find dic
tionarius first used in this sense In
the thirteenth century by an Eng
lishman, John Garland, and diction
arlum in the fourteenth; but the first
work published in England under the
English title “Dictionary” was the
famous Latin-English dictionary of
Sir Thomas Elyot. which appeared in
1538, the year before Robert Estien
ne, of tho greatest of all dictionary
making dynasties, published his Dic
tionnaire Francois-Latln. The word
lexicon—the neuter of the Greek's ad
jective lexicos, “relating to wo! ds”—
dates in its accepted current sense
from the Renaissance only.
The earliest lexicographical efforts
were probably made by Roman stu
dents of the Greek language and cul
ture. We are told that Cato learned
Greek at SO, a task which ho would
hardly have tackled without realiz
ing the importance of tabulating his
newly acquired vocabulary.
Teachers naturally compiled lists
of words and phrases for the use of
their pupils, and such vocabularies
would be copied and attain some cir
culation; but it is obvious that what
we call a dictionary was made pos
sible only by the invention of print
ing. _ __
Chicago In Palestine.
From the Reading Tribune.
A Chicago in Palestine is enough !
of a novelty to attract more than
passing notice. A sort of pocket
edition of the newest and most mod
ern of great cities is to be built by
one of the oldest of peoples. The
Zionists plan to construct a city in
the Holy Land for European Jews
who want to colonize there, or who
find it difficult to enter the United
States on account of the new im
migration law. Present plans call
for the expenditure of $1,000,000 and
the completion of the city in five
years.
It may he objected by American
empire-builders that “not much of a
city can be built for a million dol- {
lars." Yet some of the most famous
city-states of ancient days cost less
than that. A more plausible objec
tion is that "you can’t build a city
in five years.” Cities, indeed, take
time to grow. The intangible values,
which may be greatest of all, espec
ially require time to develop and
mature. Much is to be said, though,
for 1he modern method of planning
the material structure of a city com
plete to begin with, making adequate
allowance for all the municipal needs
of a community of any given popula
tion, instead of letting it grow hap
hazard.
Given the material “plant," the
rest will follow, if the city is one
which, in nature and location, sup
plies a natural need. Time will tell
that. The oriental Chicago may
never rival the occidental original;
but it should do the Orient good to
have a modest imitation of the big;
burly, hustling America original
Eat Sweets; Lose Weigh*.
From Popular Science Month’/.
Stout persons, anxious to “reduce”
usually make a special point of
avoiding sweets. This is a mistake,
for sweets offer a valuable weapon
to those who would lose weight. Too
much food is the usual cause of cor
pulence, and a slim diet offers the
obvious remedy. A scant meal,
though, does not seem so scant if
brought to an end with dessert, and
the practice of following lean meals
with sweets is recommended as an
aid to perseverance with a “reducing”
diet.
A Perfect Right to Look.
From London Answers.
Dorothy (at a dance)—"What are
you doing here, dear?" .
Marjorie—“I’m looking for a h'i*
bund.
Dorothy—"Hut you've got one."
Marjorie—"Yes, that’s the otw I'm
looking for."
A small electric lamp that can be
worn on the finger or held secure to
varlom objects by an adjustable clamp.
‘ < mg made in Europe, it can be
attached to the handle of a safety
b.or for shaving in the dark, to tools
for working on an automobile or *
clock for use at night.
Divorce Action Brings Out Deep
Irritation of Back-Seat Driving
From the San Francisco Bulletin
The worm has turned. Some worm, it is true, is always turn
ing, but the one to which we refer is the one that sits in the driv
er’s seat and turns the steering wheel. A man in the East has
sued for divorce because his wife is a back-seat driver. His com
plaint complains that she tells him when to speed up, when to
.slow down, when to turn corners, when and where to stop—in
*hort, when and where to head in. He says it humiliates and
mortifies him, especially when he has guests. And there is no
squelching her. The only escape lies in the severance of those
marital ties which at the time they were tied were supposed to
hold for this life and the next, to hold, indeed, for all time. Those
eternal bonds he prays may now be eternally disrupted.
It is not easy to say whether or not his prayer should be
granted. The best of women do it. It is either a gift or a nerv
ous affliction; we are not sure which. It was not so general in
the age of horses, because, as some sage has observed, “It was
the horse that had the sense.” Almost any woman would trust a
horse. Now they have a painful—and justifiable—impression
that a great, many men who are not competent to shovel coal into
a furnace without a severe backache are trying to operate these
private locomotives, with no rails to guide them. They feci the
need of some sort of traveling train dispatcher, and who could do
it better? Moreover, in many cases, they are the responsible
custodians of the family funds, and they see damage and disaster
around every bend.
Perhaps in the words of the old song, they “should be scold
ed, but not turned adrift.” Yet back seat driving is a weariness
to the flesh and a mortification to the spirit of man. That is to
say, it hurts his vanity, and interferes with his steering. And
wives should be careful about that.
It may be doubted that divorce is the right remedy. It would
choke the court calendars. Separation, without privilege of r^.
marriage, WNuld seem better, because, for example, this man evi
dently is a marrying man, having done it once, and if he is set at
liberty he will probably do it again, and the second wife will be a
back-seat driver, too. It might be better just to let him keep on
with the one he has. He is used to her. We believe in the eman
cipation of man, but it ought to come about gradually.
Pungent Paragraphs
Africa has the bigger copper mine,
but campaign year indicates that
America holds all records in brass.—
Nashville Banner.
It Is only a question of time until
the higher civilization must stop
and wait for the courts to catch up.—
Baltimore Sun.
Jud Tunkins says he doesn’t have to
go to any shows to be shocked. The
billboards are riskay enough for him.
—Washington Star.
What the fellow who calls it a
furnished house really needs is a dic
tionary.—Vancouver Sun.
How can anyone possibly tell
whether the ZR-3 and Shenandoah
have any military value until we are
advised whether the crew wear
spurs?—Detroit News.
And now it Is only a question of
time until the barber shops must
have male manicurists.—Jersey City
Jersey Journal.
You can’t expect a mere man ta
understand a sex that thinks a three
coronered olive sandwjch a square
meal—Stondusky Register.
,Of what avail is it to know your
fteighbor’s Income tax if you don't
know how he arrived at it?—Buf
falo Evening News.
Insipid Sentimentality.
From Police Magazine.
We are a sentimental people, and
too often the clamor of our heart
throbs muffles the saner thought
heats of our brain. Sentiment is a
beautiful, sometimes a sacred, at
tribute of character; but mere senti
mentality is the symbol of moral and
intellectual weakness. More especial
ly is this true when evidenced in
the masculine mind.
Perhaps the most common mani
festation of insipid sentimentality
is found in the expression, verbal or
printed, of a certain type of person
when some notorious lawbreaker
appears on the scene and meets his
just deserts. It would seem, at times,
that the greater the offense com
mitted against society the'greater the
outcry of maudjin sentimentalists.
The murderer has many times been
regarded by this hysterical type
more as a hero than as a civic men
ace. There are those today who
would abolish our prisons, or, fall
ing that, would convert them into
establishments of ease or even joy
ous entertainment. To segregate the
evil-doers caught in the commission
of their evils is abhorrent to these ■
silly, if sometimes well lntentionea
folk. It is strange how some men
and women will give themselves
over to sheer stupidity where the
emotions alone are involved.
There is neither sense nor logic
in pampering criminals. The indi
vidual who willfully breaks the code
established for the common good
must pay the price provided for his
transgression as formulated by the
wise men who conceived that code.
The perpetrator of a brutal and re
volting crime should certainly not be
the recipient of love letters and bon
bons. The emotional outcry of per
sons and the press against the proper
punishment of those lawfully impris
oned is an absurdity, appalling in
its implication of cerebral blindness.
The individual responsibility of the
lawbreaker is seldom taken into con
sideration by these tearful objectors
to Justice. The morally deficient, the
’'congenitally preverse, the tough and
1 accustomed criminal can never be,
in an;’ reasonable degree, true ob
jects for vindication and the aim of
silly men and women to ease their lot
In prison would be laughable were
not the efforts rrtade In this direction
so earnest and widespread. Prisons
are built primarily for punishment,
and crime is something meriting
punishment with every degree of
hardship laid down by the law.
As our population grows it is in
evitable that transgressions of the
law by Individuals should increase.
Condensed.
From Everybody’s Magazine.
Visitor: What small girls you employ
in your dairy!
Foreman: Ves. those are our con
densed milk maids.
The department of commerce an
nounces that the 1923 death rate for
Missouri was 1,221 per 109,000 population
as compared with 1.126 in 1922. This in
crease in 1923 ls largely accounted for
by increases in the death rates from
influenza (from 39 to 68), pneumonia
(from 107 to 120), diseases of the heart
(from 129 to 139), measles (from 1 to 10),
and whooping-cough (from 3 to 11).
Among those diseases showing decreases
In the 1923 death rates are diphtheria
(from 16 in 1922 to 12), tuberculosis, all
forms (from 95 to 93), small-pox (from
I to 0.1), and malaria (from 5 to 4).
WAS IT YOU?
Pearl Halloway.
An old man limped along life's
way,
His grief-bowed head was crown
ed with gray;
Somebody cheered his dreary
day.
I wonder—Was It you?
A lonely child, devoid of guile,
Looked up, and tears bedimmed
Its smile;
Smebody stopped to play awhile.
1 wonder—Was It you?
There'o always someone needing
aid,
Some trembling heart alone,
afraid.
Some load that could be lighter
made.
Can they depend on you?
To some extent frail humanity domi
j nated by Its passions can be guided
Into paths of rectitude by those as
| signed to the ministration of right
eousness. But all said and done, tho
one great corrective of criminal
tendencies is fear of punishment. If
that punishment is not forthcoming
and of drastic character, if the evil
doer is to be coddled and wept over,
law and order might as well be ban
ished once and for all from the
scheme of civilization.
French Premier’s Clothes
Ridiculed in Germany
Berlin.—The Germans are picking
on the French again.
This time it’s a fashion journal, too,
“The Tailor,” published In Hannover.
And the object of the attack is Her
riot, premier of France.
“The Tailor” accuses the French
premier of wearing badly tailored,
illfitting clothes—so bad, in fact, that
his clothes could be almost mistaken
for “ready-made.”
As pleasing contrast, “The Tailor’’
presents President Ebert, of the Ger
man republic, who Is always dressed
“properly and tastely, as benefits the
loader of a cultured people.”
The particular defects of Herriot’s
sartorial appearance, "The Tailor”
notes as follows:
The coat fits badly, Is wrongly bal
anced, and Is apparently worked
without horse-hair lining.
The vest has too many folds and
wrinkles.
The trousers are cut wrong, and
—horrors!—show no signs of press
ing.
"Herriot does little honor to the
land of elegance,” the journal re
marks, but excuses it with the fact
that he is a burdened politician who
neglects his appearance over his
ideals.
Moving of Boy’s Heart
New Feat of Surgery
London.—An astonishing surgical
operation has been successfully per
formed at West London hospital,
Hammersmith, on a 15-year-old boy
named Edgar Heath, of Hunworth,
near Hanwell.
Heath, while working on the porch
of a house, fell on to an ornamental
iron fence. One of the spear-heads
penetrated his left side over the
heart, pushing the heart over to the
right-hand side, but not puncturing
it. Part of the boy's shirt was push
ed around a lung, and the spear-heau
then broke off, leaving nine inches
of iron embedded in his body, with
only the butt protruding.
The surgeon, after administering
an anaesthetic, succeeded in extract
ing the spear-hcad and disentangling
His Status.
From the Kansas City Star.
“So young Pensmith is succeeding as
a poet?” asked witli a rising inflection
Prof. Pate.
“Yes,” replied old Festus Pester.
“I understand that a great many per
sons think he has no inferior.”
The birthplace of J. Kenlinore Cooper
Is to be saved by the Burlington (N.
J.) Historical Society. A portion of
his library, his writing desk, bin chair,
the bellows that stood by the fireplace
and other mementos of the days that
Cooper has made so memorable have
been preserved. Next door its the birth
place of Captain James Lawrence, who
said “Don't give up the ship, when the
Chesapeake battled the British frigate
Shannon off the shore of Boeton daring
the war of 1102.
Hit Opinion of Lenin
A good story comes from Russia. It
Is narrated that a band of pilgrims,
headed by an old peasant from Raya
zan, recently visited Lenin’s mauso
leum in the Red Square, Moscow.
Above the tomb, on a marble slab, are
Inscribed the words:
“Lenin Is dead, hut his works live.”
On reading this inscription the old
peasant, In the fullness of his heart,
blurted out: “Ekh, Hitch, Hitch! It
would be better If thou were alive and
thy works were dead!” The uncon
scious humorist was promptly arrest
ed for his blasphemous utterance.—
London Morning Host.
DEMAND “BAYER” ASPIRIN
Aspirin Marked With “Bayer Cross"
Has Been Proved Safe by Millions.
Warning! Unless you see the name
“Buyer” on package or on tablets you
are not getting the genuine Bayer
Aspirin proved safe by millions and
prescribed by physicians for 23 years.
Say "Bayer” when you buy Aspirin.
Imitations may prove dangerous.—Adv.
Two Persistent Voters
The town of Brooklyn, Conn., boast -
of two voters, who, for a small town,
are record makers. Fred S. Porter,
ninety-seven years old, has cast hi
ballot at every election for 73 years
and Gilbert (Glbby) Griggs, also n
voter, ninety-live years old, has never
missed an election since lie was twen
ty-one, 74 years ago, and, unlike many
voters today in the new-fangled way
of doing things, Glbby never scratched
a ballot In 148 town and state elec
tions.
Cuticura Soothes Baby Rashes
That Itch und burn, by hot baths
of Cuticura Soap followed by gentle
anointings of Cuticura Ointment.
Nothing better, purer, sweeter, espe
cially If a little of the fragrant Cuti
cura Talcum Is dusted on at the fin
ish. 25c each.—Advertisement.
Speaking makes a ready man
though not If the hecklers are too
ready.
I
“More Money from
H will open your eyes to new profits!
1 No farmer or etockman—large or
ra email—can afford to be without
y this valuable book.
The third edition Is bigger, better,
fl more helpful than ever before, Make this
fl your big profit ycsr. Hove healthier,
II heavier livestock to sell at better price*.
B One copy mailed FREE and Postpaid
fl to those writing at once. Get your
B copy now. Write todayl
| THE CAREY SAI.T COMPANY
ER Desktll Hutchinson, Kane.
IgARE^tzEP
I SAI.T PRODUCTS
Home Beauty Culture
The new scientific method by which you
may become beautiful. We teach you at
home by individual instruction. Send
name and address for information. Nova
Vitae Institute, 659 Bush St., San Francisco, Calif.
girlI Earn Xmas Money
Write for SO seU St. Nicholas Christinas Seala Sell for 10c
Jaet. When told tend ua $3.00 and keep $2.Q0. No wotk—
ust fun. St Kcfcslu, 2S14 Clenwood Ri, Dept. W, Brsekin,N. Y.
I SIOUX CITY PTG. CO., NO. 47-1924.
Teaching Japanese
‘‘The McKinley high school” sounds
ns though It might be Just around the
corner in one’s own home town. This
particular one, however, is in Honolu
lu, where the school department Is
about to start two courses In Japanese.
This is the llrst time an oriental Ian-*
gunge will he studied in the territorial
public schools.
SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSIST!
Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are
not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe
by millions and prescribed by physicians 24 years for
Colds Headache Neuralgia Lumbago
Pain Toothache Neuritis Rheumatism
Accept only “Bayer” package
which contains proven directions.
Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets
Alto bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists.
Aspirin Is the trad* mark of Bayer Manufacture of UonoaceUcacidester of Salicyllcacld
HEADACHES, biliousness, sleepless s|
nights, heaviness, are Nature’s
warning that intestinal poisons are
flooding your system. If this is allowed
to continue, you may become a victim of
serious organic disease.
Laxatives and cathartics do not over
come constipation, says a noted authority,
but by their continued use tend only to
aggravate the condition and often lead to
permanent injury.
Why Physicians Favour Lubrication
Medical science has found at last in
lubrication a means of overcoming con
stipation. The gentle lubricant, Nujol,
penetrates and softens the hard food waste
and thus hastens its passage through and
out of the body. Thus, Nujol brings inter
nal cleanliness.
Nujol is used in leading hospitals and
is prescribed by physicians throughout the
world. Nujol is not a medicine or laxative
and cannot gripe. Like pure water, it is
harmless.
Take Nujol regularly and adopt this
habit of internal cleanliness. For sale by
all druggists.
N i.i,i ol
Reo. u.s. rat. orr.
For Internal Cleanliness