The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, February 16, 1928, Image 3

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    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. Countless
families are profiting by its
market and weather reports
and educational programs for
men, women and children.
Entertainment—travel—ad
venture, too—all at your fin
ger tips ac you turn the
Atwater Kent Owe Dial.
.Itwatrr Ktnt Radio Hour
retry Sunday night on JJ
auoaattd station!
YOU can trust Atwater Kent Radio
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This is its reputation. This is the
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Because so many do buy, the price
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Note the new low 1928 prices. Com
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ATWATER KENT MFC. COMPANY
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