The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, May 14, 1925, Image 3

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    NEARLY INSANE
• AT TIMES
Mrs. Saunders Tells how Lydia E,
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
Relieved Trouble of Change
of Life
l „__
Knoxville, Tenn.—“I took Lydir. E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound while
going wirougn ine
Change of Life. I
was very nervous,
could not sleep and
had melancholy
spells. In fact, I
was nearly insane at
times ana my mem
ory was almost a
blank. I was so weak
I could not do my
housework half of
the time and suf
f ereddreadfully with
my DacK. ray doctor said l would nave
to worry it out and I went through this
for three years before I began taking
the Vegetable Compound which I saw
advertised. I think it was eight bottles
tha» I took. It has been two years since
I took any and I haven’t had a doctor
since for that trouble, I do all my I
washing and ironing and I have gained
from 116 to 138 pounds. I feel so well
I think I do not need any medicine now,
but I advise all women who suffer phy
sically and mentally as I did to give the
Vegetable • Compound a fair trial. I
hope it will do as much for them as it
did for me.:’—Mrs. T. A. Saunders,
711 E. Depot Street, Knoxville, Tenn.
MontrealAmphitheater
The amphitheater now nearing com
pletion in Montreal for hockey and
other indoor winter sports is designed
to be one of the largest and best
equipped buildings of its kind in the
world. Ten miles of pipes are laid
over the arena surface and alter the
first ice is supplied it will take only
a matter of an hour or two to make a
new surface, so that after each hockey
game the ice may be hardened at
will.
Dog Given Decoration
Tiie mayor of Torquay, England,
decorated a fox terrier who tore burn
ing cotton wool from tlie bandaged
leg of bis injured master, saving liis
life.
FOR OVER
ZOO TEARS
haarltm oil has been a world
wide remedy for kidney, liver and
bladder disorders, rheumatism,
lumbago and uric acid conditions.
correct internal troubles, stimulate vital
organs. Three sizes. AM druggists. Insist
on the original genuine Gold Medal.
FIRST AID TO REAUTY
AND CHARM
Nothing so mars an other
wise beautiful face aa the
inevitable lines of fatigue
and suffering caused by
tired, aching feet. ALLEN’S
FOOT-EASE, the Antiseptic,
V Healing Powtder, insures
ui foot comfort. ItieaTol.
tot isccessuy. nnaaeit
in your shoes in tho
morning, Shop all day—
, Dance all evening—
then let your mirror tell
the story. Trial pack
age ana a Foot-Kaso
Walking Doll sent
rree. Aaarees Alien s tool*fcase, lc noy, n. i.
Solti at Drug and Department Siorjs.
Cuticura
Loveliness
A Clear
Healthy Skin
y Insured by Erery*day
^Uj^f^oticuniSMp
For Sale—Real Bargains
South Dakota quarter, $1,000. Mower
County, Minnesota, improved eighty,
$11,200. Also several Polk County,
Minnesota, farms all priced to sell
quick. Address Oot), Fosston,
Minnesota.
Kill All Flies 1 “MS40
Placed anywhere, DAISY FLY KILLER attract* and
kills ail flie*. Neat, clean, ornamental, convenient and
y sun. Made of metal,
rcaa’t spill or tip over;
will not soil or Injure
anything. Guaranteed,
DAISY
FLY KILLER
at your dealer or
- »* D/ lLArKR.'ia, prepaid, 91 zo.
*AROLD SOUEU3.IM D« Kalb Ave.. Brooklyn. N. X.
SIOUX CITY PTG. CO., NO. 20-1923?
The Old Home Town _
■y^EE WHIZ-1
" CANT FATTEM
I MORE THAN
* FOUR HEMS
ON THAT
urn-e- patch
Q' CARDEN
YOU SAY-:
YOU CANT
KEEP A
garden
AND A MEN^/
A/
NO-N0-ISAY^
i AUNT SARAHS'
D I66/N~/m
V^_ A3A1NJ? 7
srGJV
YOU OLD LOAFERS 1
WONT <SET ANY
BLISTERS FROM
HOE HANDLES HAN<5>N
vOVER THAT FENCE
\r^r
777''
IF ID KNOWN
THI5 BEFORE
I MARRIED
YOU - YOU D
A BACHELOR
i ED WURSLEF^WHO DELIVERS WASHINGS FOR
HIS WIFE, DECIDES ABOUT THIS TIHEoF THE
YEAR HOW MANY CHICKENS HE CAN RAISE
ON THE GARDEN NEXT DOOR.
. .. -~-ZZlI=
' © I93S BY MtA ttWVICt. INC *»-7- 25-^
Alarmists Say Japanese Plan
To Answer U. S. Maneuvers
Washington NEA Service, by Charles P. Stewart
Militarists, who abound here, are
all excited over reports that Japan’s
reply to the United States’ Ha
waiian naval maneuvers is to be
a set of maneuvers of her own, to
show how easily she could beat
such a fleet as this country’s—of
course in Far Eastern waters.
It Isn’t likely the Japanese think
they could defeat America anywhere
in the vicinity of the latter’s home j
shores. Possibly they don’t think I
they can defeat her at all. That
idea may be merely a complex some
people have got.
* * *
The expected Japanese maneuvers
are said to be scheduled for May 27.
This makes the Washington militar
ists’ complex worse. May 27 is the
anniversary of the Battle of Tsush
ima, in which Japan’s fleet destroyed
Russia’s, just 20 years ago.
“An apt reminder,” say the mili
tarists, “of the great sea fighters
the Japanese are and how necessary
it is to be ready for them.”
* * *
With all due respect for Japan’s
courage and not disputing she can
lick any fleet in the state of dis
repair Russia’s was in, the truth
is that the Japanese are known
among seafaring men as poor ship
builders, bad sailors and perfectly
impossible hands in an engine room.
• * •
The classic example of Japan’s
shipbuilding is that one of her crack
16.000-ton passenger liners, well
known on the Pacific and still in
service—with the Lord only know3
what weight of concrete and pig
iron in her hold, to keep her keel
underneath her.
This craft’s sister ship, which
preceded her, was built in England.
Her Japanese owners tried her out
satisfactorily. Then they told the
English builders they wanted an
other boat but would like to exam
ine the plans first, with a view to
possible modifications.
The builders, suspecting the Jap
anese of intending to do their own
building from the English plans,
made certain subtle changes before
handing them over.
Sure enough, the new vessel was
a Japanese product. Launching day
arrived. The ship slid down the
ways, hit the water and instantly
turned bottom side up.
Later she was induced to assume
a more dignified attitude, but it
The Harvard Lampoon.
An assistant postmaster general
has decided to bar the current issue
of the Lampoon, humorous Harvard
publication, from the mails because
it published a picture of the Goddess
of Liberty which was, according to
the assistant postmaster general
not sufficiently draped.
The assistant postmaster general
is right; while Truth is occasionally
portrayed in this country as naked
Liberty is usually heavily veiled and
obscured, and while a dear old girl
for whom brave spirits die. she is
often in her heavy underwear and
galoshes not worth the mortality
that she cost.
took English experts to persuade
her to do it.
* • #
Almost all foreign airplane in
structors who have tried to train
Japanese aviators testify to the Im
possibility of developing them into
first-class flying men.
They have courage and ample
intelligence to learn all moves to
6e made, but practically without
exception they lack the instinct of
gentleness with machinery. “Cruel
ly.” treated, it misbehaves.
* * *
Japan beat China in 1895. It
looked wonderful but now we know
there were few civilized countries—
even little ones—that couldn't have
done it. She beat Russia—on paper
—but had to accept the best terms
she could get, because in a few
more months she herself would
have been beaten.
She took Kiao Chau from the
Germans but the latter were out
numbered 1000 to 1.
* * *
To hear the Washington militar
ists preaching “preparedness,” you’d
think they considered Japan well
nigh invincible.
But ask them, as experts, what
showing they believe she’d make
against a first-class fighting power,
and their answer Is that nobody
knows—she might perform pretty
creditably, or she might crumple at
the first impact.
Married Teacher*.
Ann Arbor Times News.
Married women will continue to be
employed as teachers in the Bay City
public schools, the board of education
having rejected a resolution to hire
only single ones.
The decision appeals to us as wise.
Education is not a philanthropic in
stitution, intended to provide young
women with positions, it is too big,
too important, too necessary, to be
fettered with silly arbitrary rules.
It is not a mechanical device, which
can be set in operation by moving a
lever. There must be system, but In
the long run personality and personal
ability are the important factors to be j
considered.
Teaching is a profession. It is like- !
wise something of an art, and It most
certainly can be considered a career, j
And In this day and age a woman is !
entitled to a career, even though she j
has yielded to the human impulse to
take unto herself a husband. Capable
teachers are needed, and If capable
ones happen to be married, can that
circumstance be considered a sound
reason for rejecting their applica
tlons?
There is nothing disrespectful or
dishonorable about splnsterhood, but
If any profession Is to place a prem
ium on it, let something besides edu
cation lead the way.
Polite.
From the Passing Show, London
Master of the House—What did you
reply when the scoundrel said he’cj !
called to punch my head?
Maid—I said I was sorry you was out.
.
Notes of a musical Instrument that
are believed to have floated in the air
of Egypt 3,000 years ago, were re
produced at the University of Penn
sylvania by Professor Jean B, Beck,
who restored a small flute found In the
tomb of a noble of the time of the
pharaohs. The air enters through
silts in the sides of the reeds instead
of at the ends, as in modern in
struments. Each note and its octave
are sounded equally loud at the same
time, quite unlike any present-day
instrument.
Pungent Paragraphs
Women really aro superior. No
man could chatter cheerfully while
kicking his wife's shins under the
table.—Vancouver Sun.
Our contention la a man should be
at least 80 before he carries a cane
and twice that before he wears spats.
—Appleton Post Crescent.
It really was very sweet of Cuba
to produce 150,000 tons of sugar this
season.—Worcester Post.
Some people work themselves to
death seeking relaxation.—Kalama
zoo Gazette.
Tho sap rises these days about 12
o’clock unless it has an unusually
stern and efficient father.—Nashville
Banner.
Doc Evans says fat is a sign of
age, a cruel remark that Is going to
cause a lot of suffering in our neigh
borhood.—Quincy Whig Journal.
The old tire blows out just before
you make a mileage record with It.—
Morgantown New Dominion.
One reformer always turns green
with envy when he sees another re
former put over a blue law.—Little
Rock Arkansas Democrat.
Fathers and Sons.
From the Philadelphia Public Ledger.
A questionnaire answered by the
senior class at Harvard- reveals
strange reversals of form between
fathers and sons. The number of sons
choosing medicine as a career is
thrice the number of fathers; the
same proportion holds for education.
But only half as many of the younger
generation are electing a career In
business or in tho ministry. The
number intending to adopt the latter
calling is negligible—two students
only. Yet when Harvard was founded,
tho confessed Intent was to supply
learned clergymen when those who
had been trained in England passed
away.
In this land of the free agent and
the elective system, no profession Is a
family transmittendum. There is no
tradition that one son becomes a
soldier or another a clergyman. Twigs
are bent and trees inclined by per
sonal volition. It was the central
tenet of the Eliot creed at Harvard
that a man for his bread-winning oc
cupation should do what pleased him
and not follow an uncongenial pro
fession wished upon him by parental
choice. There are gains and there
are losses in the abrogation of the
old notion of a filio-paternal partner
ship. It is a fine thing to find a
business heritage linked through the
years by descent In a family; pride
in the accumulated prestige and good
Will Is an asset of demonstrable value.
But a young man leaving college
ought not to be forced miserably into
a lifework for which he Is unsuited
for the poor reason that his father
was engaged in it before him. None
should step into a career, though
ready-made, unless it fits him.
Sixty Years From the Ashes.
Richmond News Leader.
The 60 years-that have passed since
the departure of the troops and tho
beginning of the fire of April 2, 1865,
are, but the instant of a firefly’s
flashing in the long, long night of
history that lies behind. Yet there
probably are not 200 people now liv
ing in Richmond who remember the
full horror of a catastrophe the last
marks of which, economic and social,
are being effaced. The city that sat
in the ashes Is richer today in this
land of youthful recuperation than
men once dreamed she would be In
1925 as capital of a new confederacy.
No wonder wars recur where men
forget and die and nature covers up
and labor replaces loss. If only men
could transmit their memory of war
before it gathers glamour!
Next Best.
From Vlklngen, Oslo.
Parson—I didn’t have the pleasuro of
seeing you In church on Sunday!
Jensen—No, the weather wasn’t fit to
turn a dog out In. But I sent my wife.
Tho tomb of Edgar Allen Poe in
the graveyard of Westminster church,
in Baltimore, has been placed In the
care of the Baltimore Press Club. The
grave had been neglected of late be
cause the Edger Allen Poe Association,
which had been caring for it, was with
out funds. An offer by the Press Club
to maintain the tomb as a literary
shrine was accepted and a transfer
of obligations made by the Presby
terian committee, of Baltimore, owners
of the burying ground.
Children Cry FOR
Castoria is especially pre
pared to relieve Infants in
arms and Children all ages
of Constipation, Flatulency,
Wind Colic and Diarrhea; allaying Feverishness arising there
from, and, by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the
assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep.
To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of
Absolutely Harmless - No Opiates. Physicians everywhere recommend it
All that there Is to the ladder of
fame is to be admired.
Love may be blind, but the aveiage
mother-in-law Is an eye-opener.
Tanlac puts solid flesh
on scrawny bones
HOW can you expect to get
back your health and strength
as long as your body is scrawny
and underweight? Let Tanlac put
some good, solid flesh on your
bones, put your stomach in shape
to digest your food, purify your
poisoned blood! Then see how
much better you feel.
In our files are one hundred
thousand glowing letters of thanks
from men and women who have
been helped back to health and
strength by Tanlac. What it has
done for these folks it can surely
do for you.
Tanlac is Nature’s greatest
tonic and builder. It is compounded
after the famous Tanlac formula
from roots, barks and curative
herbs. It gets right down to the
Seat of trouble and makes you feel
right from the first dose.
Don’t put off taking Tanlac
another day. Don’t go on drag
ging your poor, tired-out, sickly
body around when this great
remedy can bring you quick relief.
In cases of torpid liver, rheu
Got Rid of
Neuralgic Pains
"I suffered four years from
indigestion and neuralgic
run. Now, thanks to Tanlac
am in perfect health."
A. R. Anderson
1505 Austin Street
Houston, Texas
matism, stomach complaint, low
ered resistance, indigestion and
malnutrition Tanlac will work
wonders. Get a bottle this very
day and start feeling better tonight.
TAKE TANLAC VEGETABLE PILLS FOR CONSTIPATION.
TANLAC
FOR YOUR HEAJLTH
---•
makes bread
that tastes better
Nothing has such
hunger-satisfying
flavor as the home
loaf made with
Yeast Foam.
Send for free booklet
“The Art of Baking Bread”
t
XL I ILL)r
“Nowondtr Ae men folks sat
twice as much of it”
Northwestern Yeast Co.
1730 North Ashland Ave.
Chicago, 111.
~ —_____——--■ s
I