Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 9, 1928)
Dr. Caldwell’s 3 Rules Keep You Healthy I — • Dr. Caldwell watched the results of ron&tipation for 47 years, and believed that no matter how careful people are of their health, diet and exercise, con stipation will occur from time to time regardless of how much one tries to avoid it. Of next importance, then. Is how to treat It when It comes. Dr. Caldwell always was tn favor of get ting as close to nature as possible, hence his remedy for constipation. f known as Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, Is a mild vegetable compound. It ean * not harm the most delicate system and Is not a habit forming preparation. Syrup Pepsin Is pleasant-tasting, and youngsters love It. It does not gripe. Thousands of mothers have written us to that effect. Dr. Caldwell did not approve of drastic physics and purges. lie did not believe they were good for human beings to put into their system. In a practice of 47 years he never saw any reason for their use when a medicine like Syrup Pepsin will empty the bowels just as promptly, more cleanly and gently, without griping and harm to the system. Keep free from constipation! It robs your strength, hardens your ar teries and brings on premature old nge. Do not let a day go by without a bowel movement. Do not sit and hope, but go to n druggist and get one of the generous bottles of Dr. Cald well’s Syrup Pepsin. Take the proper dose that night and by morning you / j 27 ft- ©*-€*£**>£££. M<7 AT AGE 83 will feel like a different person. Use Syrup Pepsin for yourself and mem bers of the family in constipation, biliousness, sour and orampy stomach, bad breath, no appetite, headaches, and to break up fevers and colds. Al ways have a bottle in the house, and observe these three rules of health: Keep the head cool, the feet warm, the bowels open. Wo would he glad to have you prove at our expense how much Dr. Cald well’s Syrup Pepsin can mean to you and yours. Just write “Syrup Pepsin," Montieello,Illinois,and we will send you prepaid n FREE SAMPLE BOTTLE. m*r a MTlTFIaM Women and Girls who Yw 4tn A ML A# are lovers Ct color to send for KRKK 4-color publication! entitled “COLOR NEWS.” *5.000in Prize Contest for those who are willing to use a little energy in this connection—No selling, just reeoiamend l ng. If you feel you can reoomnoenwEUNSET DYES and DYTINT, the new 10c Tim. write and we will enter you i n this Contest. Address Dept. K, North American Dve Corporation, I _Mt. Vernon, N. V BUY HIGH GRADE POULTRY FEEDS and Mashes direct from manufacturer ami nave money. Write for prices and particu lars to J. E. HALL, SAC CITY, IOWA. Ship Your HIDES, PELTS WOOL and FURS to Bolles & Rogers, Sioux City, Iowa Highest Market Prices and Prom^i Returns. Anybody Banting to Huy, Sell, "Snide, jiu matter where located, write for DeBev’a Real Estate Adv. Bulletin. Logan, Kansas. PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM Remov e.« I >and ru ff-s tops H ai r Fal 1 i n g Restores Color and Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair 00**. and $1.00 at Druggists. IUpcox Chen>. Wks. Patchogue. N. Y. VLORESTON SHAMPOO—Meal for nse in connection with Parker's Hair balsam. Makes the hair soft ami fluffy. 50 cents by mail or at druc Biate. Miscox Chemical Works, Patchogue, N. X. SIOUX CITY PTG. CO., NO. 6-1928. Machine Causes Sleep Rnn by clockwork, a newly designed machine emits for 40 minutes a con Btant humming noise which is said to be nseful in causing sleep in cases of Insomnia. And This Is Counted Good Legal Defense "Criminal trials are involved with so many technicalities nowadays,” said Attorney L. G. McCann, who at one time was a noted prosecuting attorney, “that unquestionably a great many criminals escape their Just deserts. Leniency to women witnesses was largely responsible for the opening wedge; and precedent, the bugaboo of all trial lawyers, has done the rest. "What could be more absurd than the testimony of Mike the Killer, re arrested shortly after doing time un der the name of Jones? “ ‘Now, Mr. Jones,’ coos the prose cutor, ‘isn’t it true that you were re leased from the penitentiary only a month ago, after doing ten years for murder?’ “And Mr. Jones, alias Mike the Killer, wiio has read the newspapers, promptly answers,‘I don't remember.’” — Los Angeles Times. I %>LDS PREVENT GRIPPE "FLU HILL’S arts with amazing quick ness. Colds are checked m a few hours. Complications are avoid ed—health fortified. Be Sure Price 30c CASCARA '$ QUININE Get Red Boot with portrait Flood Brought t,Gifts,t Many persons returning to their homes after the flood waters had re ceded in Vermont found unusual “gifts.” In one house a cow was found, alive and contentedly reposing on a sofa in a second-story room, and in the dilapidated library in anothei dwelling stood a small, white marble statue of the Venus de Milo, unharmed and as beautiful as ever, but it had never been there before and no one knew where it came from. Radius Defined Bill—“On what grounds does your futiier object to me?” Jenny—"On the grounds about the house.” Keep Fit This Winter Your Kidneys Must Function Properly For You to Be Well. WINTER is hard on the kidneys. All too often colds and chills up set the action of the kidneys and allow poisons to remain in the system. That’s why winter finds so many folks achy and tired; with backache, head ache, dizzy spells and scanty, burning kidney secretions. Doan’s Pills, a stimulant diuretic, in crease the secretion of the kidneys and aid in the elimination of waste impurities. Are endorsed by users everywhere. Ask your neighbor! Doan’s Pills A Stimulant Diuretic to the Kidneys ^ At ill dr aim, 60c • box. Fottrr-Milbum Co., M(|. Otrmitfi, Buffalo, N.Y. Protect Your Skin /11 ] T 1 i * 1 f D A Against The Weather vU 1 1 V U It, A Soap and Ointment will help \ ou. After motoring, golf or other outdoor pastimes anoint the fare and hands with Cuticura Ointment. After five minutes wash off with Cuticura Soap and hot water, rinsing with tepid or cokl water; dry tlioroughly. There is nothing better for keeping the akin soft and clear un der all conditions of exposure. frmp l< (HatNMt t Mr ftlma is Wati sfffyaWs Bg«gS|gr •«*— I .*■»**..> N* —r .. M-.-, sc.fc 1C_ Oui Our Way -— — — —-■■■■-■ By Williams —■ ■ -.’ .f 'y II 'YvAmv<1\TA c/~7.1 } 'TRAY' MVrOOG-HAS G*/ Hot -YR F •"/ GOT I CANT SS£ Tost •'AJG'STIE AH Got -YMETi CO"Z ^ £ does noT sleep vmitg n fyl £|je£ Gee. -That SA6V \ DOE.smT oerC t HIS* TasTC FOR music ' I CAmY i u»^0£P?51Ak»C> ; l rf- HE’S THE ; OwoV OnE / iu YaE mouseT YuaYcam t <ttp- ^ I ! i w\y&%.s \\w//fy j \NM MCtfP\£WE> (SeT'G-RAV. * "fl-lE LOWBROW.J Aunt Eppie Hogg the Fattest Woman in 3 Counties By Fox t .-.... . MYtfTLe WoftTLCr HAS irVSlSTETD -THAT SHf WAS ] A^SoLUT^UY S£ftl°US WHPtf SHE: ADv'iSep AU^T £ppi^ To ADOPT TH^ Kn/E^ET LETrVQTH SM^T. ^ I^ ^ i o ^ f I f °V> i (rFont«ine Fo*. 1*2*. The Bell Syndic** *. Inc) J IF I FORGET I've been too much alone of late, Too long adrift in starry skies; I feel a drowsiness that numbs All earthly pain, weighs dor my eyes As though dark opiate I had sipped. Distilled from night's empurpled dew. Oh. what if I forget to hide My high romance, unknown to you? When Day folds up his red gold tent, I seek his sandaled footp* ints, made Upon the western dun : of Time, And soon I Join his cavalcade. By chance some night if I forget To glide back home from poppied dream. Look up where comet swiftly flies, A part I'll be of its silver stream. —Marcia Lewis Leach in the New York Times. — ---. . - Dons Man’s Attire. From London Daily Mail. A beautiful princess, 19 years old. Clever and accomplished, who has been banished from Japan and re turned to her relatives in Pekin, had Just returned to Japanese territory. She is the Princess Chin, daughter of the late Prince Su, of the former reigning house of the Celestial em pire, who proved too big a handful for her Japanese foster parents to handle. Princess Chin was adopted bv N Kawashima of Dairen, a friend of her father, and brought up as a Jupanese Kir!, attending a girls’ finishing school in Toklo under the name of M'-s Yosluko Kawashima. She blossom l in culture and beauty, but in the past three or four years she has developed the principle of self determination to a marked degree. She scorned all offers of marriage Nat a Paying Concern. Prom the Weekly Scotsman, Visitor Do you find pouilry-kcep* Ine pays? Partner- Well, no. I can't say It pays me, but it (lays my son Mike. Visitor (low's that? Parmer Weil, you see, 1 b 'light him the fowls, 1 have to pay tor their keep, and buy the eggs from turn and he iiU them, • • Q What docs the importation <>f Jewels for watches sod clocks amount to? ft R H A. In of Jewels fur clocks and watches for 1VM amounted to •l7B10l.il, and of this amount Hwii* ociiaod fuihhh— worth. with both Japanese and Chinese suitors and announced that she in tended to devote her life to the task of replacing the deposed boy emperor of China upon his throne.. Finding that she could accomplish little or nothing as a girl, she kicked her silken kimono and her brocaded sashes into a corner and donned man’s clothes, scandalizing her foster rela tives by wearing these on all occasions and by choosing only young men as her associates. Her foster father was obliged to abandon the task of looking after this too lively princess, and she was sent to Pekin. Recently she returned to Dairen, traveling by steamer to Tient sin. having had fellow passengers and crew by the ears because of her be havior enroute. when she insisted upon being a man for the time be ing. -• « The Women of Iceland. From the New York Sun. In recognition of their political freedom, the women of Iceland are engaged in their greatest .ioint un dertaking This is the erection of a hospital already under construction as the largest in the country. It Is at the capital. Reykjavik So writes Fraulein Aslang Agusts dottir, president of the Y. W C. A. in Iceland. ‘ Every year we celebrate June 19. the day we got our vote.” writes Fraulein Agustsdottlr. "All through the years we have been col lecting money for the fund on that day. We felt we could not show' our appreciation better than by raising this fund.” Women in Iceland have the same legal right ns men to fill munieipal and state office. There is one wom an member of the attlng, Iceland’s parliament There are several women physicians and a number of other Return Engagement*. From the Wichita Earle. "Well, have you ever ween me with more than I could rarry?” growled a husband one dav recently when he Vfti having of an Amu* merit with hi* wife About the few lit tie drinks he did take just now and then. ~Wffl, perhaji* not/* *lfhrd th# wife, trying to a im thing* down a bit, 'but I have M*en you when you should have made two more trip* for your laid “ •# Q How lung have Pre»id**nt and Mr* Ctnildge berm married* PIIP A They were married October 4. , IBM women have taken university degrees. While girls are employed as clerks and stenographers, most of the agri cultural work and the cleaning and drying of fish for exporting is done by women. The Y. W. C. A. has a center in Reykjavik and is a member of the world's committee, the inter national movement of the Y. W. C. A. It reaches girls and women of many classes and occupations. ---— Q. Why was the custom of driv ing on the right side of the road es tablished in America? J. F. E. A. Gould in his "Right and Left Handedness" is of the opinion that it is due to the fact that the earliest colonists were not preponderatingly English. Among the first Puritan settlers there were many Dutch and to this France added her complement. They were from the continent where the custom of passing to the right had long been prevalent. During the early period of colonization, the peo ple were accustomed to traveling afoot and ever, in England it was customary for pedestrians to go the right even while vehicles went to the left. This custom of going to the right probably became fairly well established in America before vehicles were used to any great ex- | tent: When large w’agons or "schocrv- | ers” came Into use. the driver bring | right-handed sat upon the near wheel-horse. He therefore sat on the right to operate the brake with his right hand or foot. This was important in traveling over hilly country or ungraded roads It can thus readily be seen that under these various influences the custom of go ing to the right at all times became firmly established. Millionaire President. By Gerald W Johnson, in Harper's Hr publican leaders, now six months before the convention, are so strong ly convinced of the possibility of j electing a millionaire president of : flie United Mtalcs that they are giv ing scant attention to anyone rise, Mr Mellon is pri-hapa the ^erotid richest man in the country. Mr. Hoover la said to have made his first million at the age of 77. Mr. Lowden warned a Pullman. Mr. Dawes, before he entered politic*, was a poster among the great bank ers. Mr Lsmgworth'i family owns the heart of Cine nnatia business tatrtet. TWO HOMES MADEHAPFi By Women Who Used Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound "I have taken Lydia E. Pinkham’n Vegetable Compound and I think It In |tha most wonderful m t'did n • l ever (tried,” Is tho state 11 made by Mrs. Goldie Shoup of St. Joseph, Illinois. She declares that after taking the Compound ihe is In better health than before. Mrs. J. Storms of 29 Lano Street, Pat I_arson, N | tea: “i ran not Speak too highly of your medlrlne and 1 recommend it to all my friends.” These statements were taken from two enthuaiarfic letters which tell of the help that has been received from using the Vegetable Compound. Both Mrs. Shoup and Mrs. Storms were in a run-down condition which caused them much unhappiness. When women are suffering from lark of strength and from weakness, their own life and that of their family Is affected. When they leel well and strong and are abto to do their housework easily, happy homes are the result. Thousands of testimonial letters have been received from women In different walks of life, stating that tho Com pound has helped them. No More Distress after eating or drinking For correcting over-acidity end quickly relieving belching, gas, heartburn, sick headache, dizzi ness, nausea and other digestivo disorders. Not a laxative but a tested Sure Relief for Indigestion. Perfectly harmless and pleasant to take. Send for free samples to: Bell ft Co., Inc.,Orangeburg, N. Y. Normalizes Digestion and Sweetens the Breath FOR INDIGESTION 25$ AND75$ PACKAGES EVERYWHERE Enthusiasm can be overdone. Headaches from Slight Colds, Laxative BROMO QUININE Tabletn re lieve the Headache by curing the Cold Look for signature of E. W. Grove on the box. 30e.—Adv. Folly grows without watering. | The BABY | "V Why do so many, many babies of t»> tluy eseupe all the little fretful spells and Infantile ailments that used to worry mothers through the day, and keep them up half tlie night? If you don't know the answer, you haven’t discovered pure, harmless Oas toria. It is sweet to the taste, and sweet In the little stomach. Aud Its gentle influence seems felt all through the tiny system. Not even u distaste ful dose of castor oil does so mucl good. Fletcher’s Castoriu is purely veg» table, so you may give it freely, f lirst sign of colic; or constipation; o diarrhea. Or those many times wltn you just don't know what u ttie mat ter. For reul sickness, call the do< lor, always. At other times, a fe drops of Fletcher’s ('astoria. The doctor often tells you to do Just that; and always says Fletcher's. Other preparations may be just as Hire, Just as free from dangerous drugs, but why experiment? Besides, the lxx»k on care and feeding of habi-w I hut comes wdh Fletcher's (’astoria U worth Its weight in g**ldf Children Cry for