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About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 8, 1925)
Brought up on a Farm ; As a young man Dr. Pierce prac ticed medicine in a rural district and was Known far and wide for his great guccsss i n alleviating disease. Ha early moved to Buffalo and put up in ready-to use form, his Golden Medical Discovery, the well-known ton ic for the blood, which Is an ex-1 tract of native roots. This “Discov ery” of Dr. Pierce’s clears away 'pimples and annoying , eruptions, tends to keep the complexion fresh and clear. It corrects the disordered conditions In a sick stomach, aids di gestion, acts as a tonic and enriches the blood. Vim Is sure to follow Its tise. All dealers. T: blets or liquid. German Housing Exhibit , The Dresden exhibition for the year1 11925 will be devoted to housing prob-I lems, settlements and city buildings.' Especial importance Is to be given to * scientific and technical section, Jxvhlch will show modem building ma jterlals and parts, special construction methods, modern building tools and auxiliary machinery used in construc tion. Next in importance will be ex hibits showing domestic necessities and modem conveniences, such as (household utensils, furniture and heat ing and ventilating plants. Models of ^dwellings and groups of houses are to 'be constructed in the open.—United 'States Commerce Reports. (DEMAND “BAYER” ASPIRIN 'Aspirin Marked With "Bayer Cross* Has Been Proved 8afe by Million* Warning I Unless you see the name “‘Bayer” on package or on tablets you (are not getting tha genuine Bayer (Aspirin proved safe by millions and (prescribed by physicians for 23 years. Say “Bayer” when you buy AsplrlnJ Imitations may prove dangerous.—Adrj Apartment in Log A hollow fir log, 22 feet long and 8 feet in diameter, mounted on a large; truck, was introduced to motordom by Mr. and Mrs. O. P. Cave of Longview, Wash. They proposed to show East-, erners what a real fir splinter from! the Northwest woods looks like. The1 interior of the log Is divided into a! combination bedroom and fiarlor, kitchenette, breakfast nook, bathroom! with shower and other conveniences, *such as electricity and running water,' Winter Desserts. Date Pudding 1 a molasses % tsp. salt 1 e. milk tsp. cloves % c. butter % tsp. allspice S c. flour U tsp. nutmeg 4 level tsp. Calumet % lb. dates, cut baking powder in pieces Melt butter and add to the molasses land milk. Sift together flour, baking jpowder, salt and spices, and add with Mates. Steam two and one-half hours. Serve with hard or creaaST »uce. Christmas in Hotel “I obeyed every adjuration of the advertisers this year,” moaned a Marlborough avenue father, "and did |my Christmas trading early. I bought, 'ell the present! for my two children! and my wife, ®ound a nice Christmas [tree, and made all arrangements for a happy holiday. And Just as I con cluded that everything was set for the /finest sort of day, one of the children icame down with scarlet fever. The Ihonse Is quarantined and I had to Impend my Yuletlde In a downtown (hotel. I call this tough.”—Detroit jNews. His Mistake She (who has just been kissed)— Alow dare you? He—My mistake; I’ll swear there ■twas a bunch of mistletoe there last Christinas.—London Punch. Foxy Elizabeth—Would It be too naive, jtnother, If I believed In Santa Claus just one more time?—American Le igion Weekly. Natural Power Utilized A laternl canal from a point near Basel, Alsace, to one Just below Jtembs, will utilize the natural fall of ithe river there so that it will produce/ 100,000 electric horse power. Don’t wait for time to heal that itching rash ^EGLECT of even the slight est skin rash, roughness; chafing or soreness may have serious consequences. Painful; disfiguring complaints like ec zema, ringworm, etc., all start in a small way. The safest plan is to keep a jar of Resinol Ointment ready to use at the first sign of skin trouble. It promptly stops itching and reduces inflamma tion and burning. The tiny pores readily receive this sooth ing ointment, C*d its healing influence is carried far below the surface of the skin. Resinol Soap is a favorite with thousands who like its generous lather, so refreshing and cleansing. At all druggists. Resinol Kid M’Coy Fights Life’s Greatest Battle Ihorki^k srej&av * jzmm THoic^. kid *F.cc«r sockets. fc. , ■ ■ . ? —----...iL’&J.i . ,, , .. % ■ ■■ '■«•• , Norman Selby, tbs famous Kid McCoy of by»gon« prise ring days, Is fighting his greateet battle, this time for bis life, in a Los Angeles court, where ha is on trial for the murder of Mrs. Teresa Mors, his sweetheart. His sister, Mrs. Jennie Thomas, wife of a well known banker of Eagle Rock, was the chief State’s witness against him, though she fought hard tor her brother. Selby's mother died while he was la toil, and he wears, on a chain, around his wrist, this locked portrait ot her. “Here’s Real “Christmas Shopping Baby” [i1 They will call him the “Christmas Shopping Baby" until another name is chosen. Mrs. Louise Partwlck. 19 years old, was buying some Christmas presents in a Toledo, Ohio, store when she suddenly turned to tbs clerk and asked her to call an ambulance. The ambulance came about the same time the baby did. Explosive Catapults Plane vatjktchx^ pi/awx v t -j An explosive discharge of 74 pounds of smokeless powder shot a seaplane from a catapult on the U. 14- 3 Mississippi into the air at an Initial speed of 55 miles per hour. The test, performed at Ureinertow, Wash was svccessful and marked the first time a plane has been thus launched. A Whale Like This Swallowed Jonah This Is how the Interstate bridge between Duluth, Minn., and Superior. WIs., looked after the steamer Martin E. Farr crashed Into the Superior approach in the early morning darkness. Wrecking of the bridge leaves the two cities with only one direct conne- ting link, a railroad trestle. M stortet.s have to travel 2# miles out of their «»' to get acrorj now. The hridge w«*i out of ctt«i'r-'isK»<nn a month or more. Now She Hears and Talks U .1 ....mm ...Ill Gwendolyn Caswell, 22, Chicago girl, had been deaf and dumb sine* ahe was a child. Then Burt D. Burley took her up for an airplane flight. When they came down, she could lisp a few words and she danced to phonograph music. A few more fllghta, It la believed, will restore her speech and hearing completely. The ahange In altitude Is doing It, doc tors any. “Marry? Why Should 1?” Asks Heifetz V I JASCHA HEIFETZ BY HORTENSE CjAUNDEf.S, NEA Service Writer. NEW YORK.—Of the world’s eligiblo bachelors, as well as the world’s greatest musicians, Jascha Heifetz is well at the head of the list. He’s handsome, talented, brilliant, rich and has an undeniable attraction for women. He has one of the most gorgeous studio apartments in New York, where he entertains New York’s most prominent society as well as professional folk. He’s one of the most popular men in New York. But he’s In no hurry to take unto himself a bride, regardless of the fact that every month or so the re port is circulated that he is about to start altarward. When I asked him why he dkln’t marry he answered with another question—“Why should I?" “Marriage," he went on, “is not advisable to an artist, especial!:? young one. Most often it hampers his career, and usually I think an artist makes a. very poor husband. “Women are important to him as inspiration, as Ideals and as friends. The first one who breaks his heart and shatters his illusions does him a great service so far as his art Is con cerned. But marriage imposes re sponsibilities that conflict with his career—and to the artist, his career must come first. “No « c.man wants to ho the second interest ir. a man’s life, but that Is what she inevitably is to the real artist “If he didn’t love his violin or his paint orush or whatever he creates more than anything else, he would not have kept on with it to the point of becoming an'artist. “To inako a woman happy, you should devote yourself unselfishly to fulfilling her desires." A,nd ho doosnt feel like doing that. However, don't let me discourage anyone with this interview.' He's still very young and has lots of time to change his mind. Isabel Rockefeller College Teacher [ml$y 19A&&1/ Miss Isabel Rockefeller, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Percy A. Rockefeller, of New York, and a grandniece of ' John D. Rockefeller, Is now a teacher ! of biology In Teachers’ college, Co lumbia University, New York City. Miss Rockefeller was introduced to society two years ago, but lias never been conspicuous In social activities. She studied advanced biology at Col umbia two years to equip herself to teacli