The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, February 16, 1928, Image 3
Are You Really Well? To Be Fit There Must Be Proper Kidney Action. * / DO you find yourself running down —always tired, nervous and do* pressed? Are you stiff and achy, sub ject to nagging backache, drowsy headaches and dizzy spells? Are kid ney secretions scanty and burning in passage? Too often this indicates sluggish kidneys and shouldn't be neglected. Doan's Pills, a stimulant diuretic; increase the secretion of the kidneys and thus aid in the elimination of waste impurities. Doan's are endorsed everywhere. Ask your neighborI DOAN’S p,60cs A STIMULANT DIURETIC KIDNEYS fbncr-Milburn Co. M(g Chem. Buffalo.N Y - HEALTH HINTS Keep your vital organs active and you can forgetabout your health. Aid nature and she will repay you with renewed life. Since 1696, the sturdy Hollanders have warded off kidney, liver, bladder, bowel troubles with their National Household Remedy—the original and genuine I - Lost Her Nerve Visitor (to villager)—I’m surprised you never remarried, Mrs. Field. Mrs. Field—No, sir. Some’ow 1' ’aven’t got the pluck I ’ad when I was younger. I don’t think I could ever) bring myself to ask another man.—* London Tit-Bits. T Millions rely on HILL’S to end colds in a day and ward off Grippe and Flu. No quicker remedy for you. Be Sure Its^ Price30c CASCARA UININE Cct Bed But with portrait Term Was Correct Jerome—That’s my late wife. Rod—I didn’t know you were di vorced. Jerome—Fm not, but look at my watch. ^_I I No mother in this enlightened age Would give her baby sometblag she did not know was perfectly harmless, especially when a few drops of plain Castorla will right a baby’s stomach and end almost any little 111. Fretful oess and fever, too; It seems no time until everything Is serene. That's the beauty of Castorla; Its gent la influence seems just what hr needed. It does all that castor oil, might accomplish, without shock to the system. Without the evil taste.| It’s delicious! Being purely vegeta able, you can give It as often aa! there's a sign of colic; constipation; diarrhea; or need to aid sound, nat-' oral sleep. Just one warning: It la genuine Fletcher's Castorla that physicians recommend. Other preparations may bo Just as free from all doubtful drugs, but no child of this writer's Is going to test them! Besides, the hook ou care and femilug of babies that come* with Fletcher's Castorla Is worth Us weight In gold. Out Our Way By Williams / COME OM 'TOO B\GC' f^E —--j -Tramp > get out of 1\ ■ 1 ■ ' ■— — / HERE ! X RAVE EMOOGB j '* "Trouble gettmct a few ^ Ml Molts PRACTICE OUT OF 'Ij ,A, HP* >v3J BER WiTK OOT YOU REMiMDiMCr ft w I11YM£R OF T,-'e- Efe ;k AiDv-E R'cr. j ' ■ >—JL k 1/r~ i — " f \ mu, .** —- -—'mp tllill lllll That Telephone Habit By Fontaine Fox « ■" — ■ ■ . 11 .. :- - ■1 1 ■ > ■ i T I p & ^You WtRt 'T£LU(/<i Mr Agour thz po«rR GLAM^ i <io AKfAB / (®Fonuine Fox. 1928. Th« 4 Admiral Not Informed From tho Milwaukee Journal. Admiral Brumby, who had charge of the fleet that was trying to rescue the men on the S-4. didn’t know what it was all about. On the witness stand he admitted that he was not versed in the construction of sub marines, that he knew nothing about the details of what was going on down below. He had no explanation to offer as to why the buov lines parted and the position of the sub marine was lost for hours—precious hours. He didn’t know wh^ when an air line was finally attached to the salvage compartment to the tor pedo room, where the tappings of the men had been heard, was not also connected. In fact, he seemed not to know tha'; there was such a line in the construction of a submarine. So far as Admiral Brumbv is con cerned. vudeing by his own admis sions. he mieht as well have been ashore. He did not have the knowl edge to keen his hand on the opera tions at a time when hours, yes. even minutes, mav have meant thp differ ence between life and d^ath for men In the service of the country We submit that this self-revelation is about the worst that has been made bv any admiral. T* lends color to what Admiral Magruder said about ‘•swivel chair’’ flag officers of tire service. If there are many more like the lienri of the salvage fleet, it ie no wonder we have naval accidents, and after the accident, so our rescue ef forts come to naught. ♦ ♦ - Earlv Etpunrni of (lolf From the Philadelphia Public Ledger The golf age would have dawned In America a century earlier than it did if Dr. Benjamin Rush had only had his way. Recently was the 182nd anniversa ry of the birth at Byberry, Pa. of m<»t famuui physician of the Defensible Reform* From the Des Moines Tribune To put cigarets on the »ame level with opium or morphine would be manifestly unwarranted. To put them on the same level with alcohol would be equally unwarranted Do we not weaken our fight on the narcotics by creating the impression that we do not draw scientific lines? The use of tobacco, however, we may feel about it personally, u to tie pit with the use of coffee Moth tobaece and coffee are injurious to some people and perhaps everybody would be be'ter off without either But neither one has been taken oyer WORDINESS John Galsworthy But all over-expression, whether by journalists, poets, novelists or clergymen, is bad for the lan guage ...and by over-expression I mean the use of words running beyond the sincere feeling of writer or speaker or beyond what the event will sanely carry. From time to time a crusade is preached against It from the text: “The cat was on the mat.’” Some Vic torian scribe, we must suppose, once wrote: “Stretching herself with feline grace, and emmittlng those sounds immemorially con nected with satisfaction. Grimal kin lay on a rug whose richly var iegated pattern spoke eloquently of the Orient and all the wonders of the Arabian Nights.” And an ;xasperated reader annotated the margin with that shorter version of the absorbing event. How the late Georgian scribe will express the occurrence we do not yet know. Thus perhaps: “What there is of cat is cat is what of cat there lying cat is what on what of mat lying cat.’’ The reader will probably annotate the margin with “Some cat!” Revolutionary period. Golfers will hold that his pioneering advocacy of golf is still another title for fame for Dr. Rush But his urgings failed to implant here the game which he had seen played In Scot land In his medical student days at Edinburgh, the game which he de clared would add 10 years to a man’s life Dr. Rush's plea for golf was made in a book which he published in Philadelphia in 1772. He was then nrofeasor of chemistry In the Col lege of Philadelphia, and in 1789 by the state as a'cohol and the nar I tone drugs In the end we have got to keep all our reform movements on de lendble lines We are resorting to mere preju dice when few proscribe things we are not used to ourselves merely be cause we do not like them such as ! the length of women's skirts, and the Ukv. • • Q Who wrote the son*. Oarry j Owen?” HOC A. "Oarry Owen” Is lh» name of an cld song by Hamilton Clark It is j fou' d In Hlteheork’s Collection of Old Songs, published in ISM was to become professor of medicine in the first medical school in the United States, the institution from which developed the present medi cal school of the University of Penn sylvania. Walking was a form of exercise which Dr. Rush recommended above all others, and swimming next, in this book of 1772, entitled "Sermons to Gentlemen Upon Temperance and Exercise,” now treasured by the His torical Society of Pennsylvania in its great library. Fencing he praised too. and skating, jumping “and the active plays of tennis, bowls, quoits and golf.” Golf, however, was so little known in the America of his day that Dr. Rush felt obliged to explain what the word means. Here's an explan ation of the ancient and honorable game: Golf is an exercise which is much used by gentlemen in Scotland. A large common in which there are several little holes Is chosen for the purpose. It is played with little leather balls stuffed with feathers and with sticks made somewhat In the form of a brandy-wicket. He who puts a ball into a given num ber of holes with the fewest strokes gets the game. The late Dr. McKenzie, author of 'Essays on Health and Long life,’ used to say that a man would live 10 years longer for using this exer cise once or twice a week " Q How may shoes of persons working with Portland cement, and other such substances, be protected? N. S. A. Lime, Portland cement, lye. and other alkaline substances quick ly ruin leather Shoes worn by peo ple working with such substances will last much longer If kept welj greased Mixed. From Answers. London From heed to heel she was exqui sitely me deni, and the shopwalker to whom this fair young thing had beck oned fel. hi* heart beat ail the faster at the honor done him She a ked him where she could get •'pencils for the eybrosrs ‘ The shopwalker was Inclined to deaf nr’a, and he misunderstood her. "Tlw stationery section la upstatn, madam •" he began Hut I want them for eyebrows,” Interrupted the slim young woman, aom what miauled "Oh. hifhbtuw stuff! Better aa* them at the book counter " * mm mmmpb^mbhhhhhhmi i he Cream of the Tobacco Crop I BHPPM Werrenrath, Concert Star, Finds Lucky Strikes Kindly To His Precious Voice “In my concert work, I must, of course, give first considerationmy voice. Naturally, I am very careful about my choice of cigarettes as I must have the blend which is kindly to my throat. I smoke Lucky Strikes, finding that they meet my most critical requirements*-- "—— “It’s toasted” No Throat Irritation-No Cough, J RADIO ^<»ScobaTON ^9° v^^-odowng RECIPES r\ ^9^* Q°V It never goes back on you Sam Pickard says: "Radio is probably the great est boon to education since the printing press was in vented.” Mr. Pickard, for merly chief of the radio ser vice of the U. S. Department of Agriculture, is now a Fed eral Radio Commissioner. The Department of Agricul ture is the largest user of radio for informative pur poses in the world. 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