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About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 19, 1928)
1 i No mother in this enlightened age Would give her baby something she did not. know was perfectly harmless, especially when a few drops of plain Castoria will right a baby’s stomach and end almost any little ill. Fretful ness and fever, too; it seems no time Until everything is serene. That's the beauty of Castoria; its gentle influence seems just what is needed. It does all that castor oil plight accomplish, without shock tc the system. Without the evil taste. It’s delicious! Being purely vegeta able, you can give it as often as there's a sign of colic; constipation; diarrhea; or need to aid sound, nat ural sleep. Just one warning: it is genuine Fletcher’s Castoria that physicians recommend. Other preparations may be just as free from all doubtful drugs, but no child of this writer’s is going to test them! Besides, the book on care and nding of babies that comes With Fletcher’s Custoria Is worth its Weight in gold. from Kidney and Bladder Trouble. Don't f ■■■& let these organs ” make a martyr of you. Heed the first warning that “things are not right.” Drink freely of water and take Gold Medal Haarlem Oil Cap sules. A world famous remedy for kid ney,liver, bladder and uric acid troubles since 1696. fcQ ^ HAARLEM OIL At all druggists. In three sizes. Look for the name on the blue and gold box. Preferred to Wait Porter (on air pullman lu 1950) — Let me brush you off, sah. Passenger (with a glance below) — No you don’t. It’s an eighth of a mile down if it’s an inch. When You Feel a Cold Coming On. Take Laxative BROMO QUININE Tab lets to work off the Cold and to fortify the system against an attack of Grip or Influenza. 30c.—Adv. That tlie opium habit in Egypt is less than the use of alcohol was the declaration recently of au Egyptian medical official. There is a great deal that is pleas ant in human nature, but self-sacri flce approaches the divine. Winter’s Colds and Chills Throw Heavy Burdens on the Kidneys. pKXDS put ntrt burdens on our kidneys. When the kidneys slow up. impurities remain in the blood and are ept to make one tired and achy with headaches, dimness and often nagging backache A common warning is scanty or burning sorrel ions. Dob:; $ PiKi. a stimulant diuretic, in crease the secretion ol the kidneys and aid In the elimination of watte iaapui mas. Are endorsed by users everywhere A»k pour nrigMcr/ •»oux city rre co. no. h*.-* Out Our Way By Williams yoR Gom . pass "X lT AROOKlO* PLAlM \ Dim* not room sets \ /\PE COMiwor BACK' IKJ STYLE, AMO ID LIKE A / pLA\N SET FOR A CHANGE/ By Fontaine Fox I / Little Guatemala. Prom the New York World. Of Guatemala, as of all Central American states, we are accustomed to think in terms of minute splotches of color on a jumbled map where the North American continent tapers to the Isthmus. Actually, Guatemala is by no means so mindte as its size on the conventional small-scale maps would indicate; it is about the size of the state of New York, with a fifth of New York's population. It is the most northerly of the Central American states, lying next to Mexico, roughly square in shape, mountainous except for a small strip of land along the coast and with high plateaus that are healthful and fertile. Here cof fee, sugar, bananas and tobacco are grown for export. Guatemala is very old and very new. At one end of its civilization stand the old monoliths of the Quirigua ruins, whose inscriptions archaeologists have not yet succeeded in deciphering, but whose workman ship indicates that a highly devel oped culture flourished here at least 1.000 years before the discovery of America by Columbus. In sharp con trast with these honored relics stand a modern school system, a rapidly growing trade and a "progressive” government which is viewed with some concern by foreigners who re gard all Latin-American nations as in duty bound to conform to our tra ditional conception of them as sleepy, lazy and politically indifferent. A little more than a year ago dispatch es from Washington reported fear of a revolution following the December elections, but this revnlu'ion failed to materialize. In January the new ly elected government offered to mediate in the Nicaraguan dispute which had led to American interven tion Guatemala is a near neighbor Thought Fanning. From Christian Evangelist. Parmer: Thought you said you had ploughed the 10-acre field? Ploughman: No. I only said I was thinking about ploughing it. Parmer1 On. 1 see; you've merely tinned it over in your mind. • • Q Was Napoleon’s wife exiled with him? M C. A. She was not exiled She re turned to live with her family. ' # Q Was Patrick Henry a Roman Catholic? P P W A Me was a member of the Church of England. of Nicaragua, and the blundering American policy of last winter did little for our prestige. Lindbergh flew recently to a country where our stock as a fnendiy neighbor has not been soaring lately. He landed, when he landed in the capital of Guatemala. In a city situ ated 5.000 feet above the sea. sur rounded by green hills and with the temperature of a spring day on Long Island. Good motor roads lead from this city to interesting ruins of the old Mayan civilization and to moun tain ranges with high peaks. We shall now hear more of this country in the next five days than we have heard in the last five years And in view of our provincial indifference toward the rest of our own contin ent, a little new know'.-d^e of this sort will not do us any harm. - ■ ■ ■■■■■■♦♦ The Strauss Statue. From Time. Which Jew, by his services to the United States, deserves to be hon ored with a statue, was the question that the Jewish Tribune put to its readers. The decision gave the honor to Oscar Solomon Straus U850-1926), diplomat. He was the friend and aid of four United States presidents. For Grover Cleveland he went to Turkey as United States minister; at Constan tinople he protected the United States mission schools and colleges. For William McKinley he again went to Turkey as minister. William Howard Taft sent him there a third time, as ambassador Meanwhile he had served as Theodore Roosevelt's secretary of commerce and labor. President Roosevelt appoinied lum a United States member to the Per manent Court of Arbitration at the Hague in 1902 and again in 1908; Woodrow Wilson repealed the ap Iten Wirldrd 3 Wicked Knife. From the Glen Elder Sentinel "Have you seen the puture 'Ben Hur"?” a Glen Elder flapper was asked yesterday. "No. I won't go to see the movie. 1 once saw the real tiling In Kar ras City. The costumes were swell and I never will forget how Miami 1 got when that Jew came in and de manded hi* pound of flesh ' • • Q Please name two Polish men who (might in our Revolutionary war J. E O A. Tadouu Ku»ctu»»ko and CaM nhr Pulaaki art two dbtinguialtrti Poles «hc fought In the Revolution pointment In 1912 and again in 192u. President Wilson found his advice and services great help in getting the Covenant of the League of Na tions written into the Treaty of Ver sailles. Wherever Jews were harassed Mr. Straus used his public power to de lend them. He was pious in his re ligious observance, and always kept nailed to the door-posts of his homes a mezuzah, a small case containing the Israelitish creed “Hear, oh Is rael, the Lord is God, the Lord is One.” together with appropriate verses from Deuteronomy. Such a career, decided the Jewish Tribune readers, was statuesque. It deserved a memorial, and for that the magazine has started a cam paign. When the statue goes up it will be only the third statue publicly erected to a Jew in the United States. One of the others is in Manhattan, raised for Heinrich Heine, poet. The other is on the city hall square of Pater son, N. J„ and honors Nathan Barn ert, twice mayor of Paterson. Mr. Barnert began business in Paterson in 1855. four years after it was in corporated as a city. He prospered: became owner of silk mills; gave away his money—for a hospital, a nurses’ home, a home for the aged, a perpetual fund to provide dowries for poor girls. Last week he was still living. 89 years old and a very sick man. whom his daughter was assid* uously tending. —-— His Opportunity. From London Opinion. Visitor—I suppose you wife lis tened in when you were broadcasting. Professor Tweety? The Professor—She did. madam. And for the first time in nearly 30 years I had the pleasure of addx • mg tier without interruption. Law. From the Toronto Mail and Empire. There are mote curious American laws than the Volstead act. For in stance. professional boxing Is legal In New York and Chicago. It Is legal to take moving pictures of fights in either state But It Is not legal to ex hibit in one stale the moving pic tures u»ktn in another This Is nof exactly sense, but It ts uplift. Defeated IDuowlf. "How is It that /oure not going to mam Vera after all?** "Oh. 1 boasted a lot about my rich uncle In order to impress her. and now she • going to be my aunt." Have Kidneys j Examined By Your Doctor Tak# Salts to WaiA Kidneys if Back Paint You or Bladder Bothers • Flush your kidneys by drinking a quart of water each day, also take salts occasionally, says a noted au thority, who tells us that too much rich food forms odds which almost paralyze the kidneys in their efforts to expel it from the blood. They be come sluggish and weaken; then you may suffer with a dull misery in the kidney region, sharp pains in Hie back or sick headache, dizziness, your stomach sours, tongue is couted. and when riie weather Is had you have rheumatic twinges. The urine gets cloudy, full of sediment, the channels often get sore and irritated, obliging you to seek relief two or three times during the night. To help neutralize these irritating acids, to help cleanse the kidneys and flush off the body’s urinous waste, get four ounces of .Tad Salts from any pharmacy here; take a tablespoonful in n glass of water before breakfast for a few days, and your kidneys may then act fine. This famous salts is mnde from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined witli llthia, and has been used for years to help flush and stimulate sluggish kidneys; also to neutralize the acids In the system so they no longer irritate, thus often relieving bladder weakness. Jad Salts is Inexpensive, runnot In- , Jure and makes a delightful efferves cent lithia-water drink. After Marriage “Your husband never seems to send you flowers any more.” “That's all right. He puts that money Into life Insurance.” SIOUX CITY DIRECTORY Ship Your HIDES, PELTS WOOL and FURS to Bolles &, Rogers, Sioux City, low* Highest Market I'ric®* nod Prompt Keniros. LEARN THE BARBER TRADE MAClilN KKY CAN'T KILL IT Be Independent. write nr ten Bob Smith (Jen Mjir, BlOliX CITY IJAKHLK COLLEGE | WH Kolirth St HWIN Phillips Atw. ! 8IOCX CITY, IOWA 810UX KALLB.B. U Aiifn Doric All III ir di IS AUTO SALVAGE & EXCHANGE CO. 301 Jackson St. Sioux City, Iowa l>»t. HAVK* * SEI KO ENTERITIS Rf'MKDY WILL N.W E VOt h Tills. Let us prove it. Two gallon* fS.OO, aufflrlent for 1*0 r»t|j*. Ask for testimonial*. HofeienooH, Wank of Centerville. Shipped direct. Oli. If. II. SAYRE CKNTBRVILLS. 9. IX Anybody Wuntim; to Huy, Hell, Trade. n« inattei where loeated, write for DeBey’O Real Estate A Iv. Bulletin, Loitan, Kansas. For Wounds and Sores Hanford’s Balsam of Myrrh Money buck for Unit bottle If not Kilted All denlnrm. ~ -»..". ..1 The Gay Deceiver Mrs*. Print*—‘So your husband has been deceiving you, eh? Mrs. Sharpe—Yes, the wretch. I’ve been giving him 20 cents for Ids bus fare every day, and 1 Just found out lie's been walking to the otllce ant) spending the money. saves money because it outwears all other all-rubber arctics TIP NOTCH Corn Belts are the most economical all rubber arctics you cnn buy. They will protect your feet long after frail, flimsy arctics have worn out. Corn Belts are so much more substantial because made of the toughest rubber—and plenty of it. We put into it the sturdy strength that enables it to withstand theroughestgoing for months and months. Fleece-lined, 4 or 5 buckle, red or black. For dependable, distinctive boots, arctics and rubbers al ways look for the Top Notch Cross. The most reliable | stores carry the complete Top Notch line for men, women and children. The Beacon Falls Rubber Shoe Co., Bea con Falls, Conn. TOP NOTCH J. A GUARANTEE jSE' Of MILEAGE X JL Rubber Footwear In Itself “Tou pay you’re an nrfist, but how cnn you live on a joh like that'/” “That's the art of it.” When a girl shows a young man a photograph of herself she experts him to ask for it. A Poor Job Wife—1 think you're the meanest man nlive. Husband—That’s hard on yourself. According to your mother, you bar* been the making of me, ft Is never too late to rend. The whole world knows Aspirin as an effective antidote for pain. But it’s just as important to twou* that there is only one genuine Bayer Aspirin. The name Baver is on every tablet, and on the box. If it says Raver, it’s genuine; and if it doesn't, it i* not I Headaches are dispelled by Bayer Aspirin. So are cold*, and the pain that goes with them; even neuralgia, neuritis, and rlteumativm promptl" relieved. Get Bayer—at any drugstore— with proven directions. Physicians prescribe Bayer Aspirin; it does NOT affect the heart I