The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, September 12, 1935, Image 6

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    Popular Handbag
Er.sy to Crochet
B* GRANDMOTHER CLARK
No doubt our readers have noticed
the popularity of crocheted handbags
They are easy to make, cost very
little and make a smart accessory to
any outfit.
This bag Is made of cream color
crochet cotton In the attractive wafTle
weave stitch and measures 5^4 by H
Inches when finished.
Package No. 408 contains sufficient
Mountain Craft crochet cotton to
complete the bag, also one pair of
bag handles and Instructions. The
bag can be made up In about two
days and this package will be mailed
to you upon receipt of 40 cents. If
you want Illustration and Instruc
tions only, seod 10 cents.
Address Home Craft Co.. Dept B,
Nineteenth and St. Louis Ave., St.
Louis, Mo. Send stami>ed addressed
envelope for reply when writing for
any Information.
Man-Made Heat Exceeds Sun's
Without knowing It, man has been
creating artificial heat greater than
that on the surface of the sun. This
was discovered recently by the Gen
eral Electric company which devel
oped an accurate measuring device
to record the temperature of the hot
test of electric arcs. It was found
that the common carbon arc light
used In movie theaters, searchlights
and for other high-powered Illum
ination produces a heat up to 9,400
degrees Fahrenheit. The tempera
ture on the surface of the sun is
9,000 degrees Fahrenheit. The tung
sten arc produces even greater heat,
as much as 11,300 degrees Fahren
heit. Some welding arcs have gone
as high as 13,000 degrees Fahrenheit.
Keep Calm
A good deal of life Is learning not
to become excited.
m MOSQUITOES
mL FLIES*SPIDERS
Mm. anj
OTHER
IHSKTS
_11
Quick, Pleasant
Successful Elimination
Let’s be frank—there’s only one
way for your body to rid Itself of
the waste material that causes acid
lty, gas, headaches, bloated feelings
and a dozen other discomforts.
Your Intestines must function and
the way to make them move quick
ly, pleasantly, successfully, without
griping or harsh Irritants Is to chew
a Mllnesia Wafer thoroughly. In ac
cordance with directions ou the bot
tle or tin, then swallow.
Mllnesia Wafers, pure milk of
mugnesla In tablet form, each equiv
alent to a tablespoon of liquid milk
of magnesia, correct acidity, bad
breath, flatulence, at their source,
and enable you to have the quick,
pleasant, anccessful elimination so
necessary to abundant heulth.
Mllnesia Wafers come in bottles
at 35c and 60c or in convenient tins
at 20c. Recommended by thousands
of physicians. All good druggists
carry them. Start using these pleas
ant tasting effective wafers today.
WNU—U 37—35
«U4CI*V€A
Ike BcaI
Waimenl
^ USE
(Jnticura
SOAP amd OINTMENT
Sample each free.
Address: “Cuticura,” Dept. 24S,
Maiden, Mate.
Site Selected for New United States Mint
• * ___ ._
UNCLE SAM'S old mint in San Francisco, at Fifth and Mission streets, Is out of date, so a new one will be
erected on the block pictured here, now occupied by a rock promontory. The site Is at the Intersection of
Duboce and Buchanan streets at Market street, the other sides being bounded by Hermann and Webster
streets.
Thornton W burgessjy
- - *• .
ANOTHER GAME OF HIDE
AND SEEK
YOU remember tbe game of hide
and seek Danny Meadow-Mouse
played with Buster Bear? You re
member what a very dreadful game
it was for Danny? But hard as It
was for Danny, It didn’t begin to be
as hard as the gnme I.lghtfoot the
Deer was playing with the hunter
In the Green Forest.
In the case of Buster Bear and
Danny, the latter had simply to
keep out of reach of Buster. As
long as Ruster didn’t get his great
paws on Danny the latter was safe.
Then, too, Danny Is a very small
person. He Is so small that he can
hide under two or three leaves.
Wherever he Is he is pretty sure to
And a hiding place of some sort.
His small size gives him advantages
in a game of hide and seek. It cer
Llghtfoot Listened and Watched.
talnly does. But Llghtfoot the Deer
Is big. He Is one of the largest of
the people who live In the Green
Forest Being so big. It Is not easy
to hide.
Moreover, a hunter with a terrible
gun does not have to get close In
order to kill. Llghtfoot knew all
this as he waited for the coming of
the hunter of whom Sammy Jay
warned him. He had learned many
lessons in the hunting season of the
year before and he remembered
every one of them. He knew that
to forget even one of them might
cost him hts life. So, standing mo
tionless behind a tangle of fall
en trees, Llghtfoot listened and
watched.
Presently over In the distance he
heard Sammy Jay screaming "Thief,
thief, thief!” A little sigh of re
lief escaped Llghtfoot. He knew
that screnming of Sammy Jay was
a warning to tell him where the
hunter wns. Knowing Just where
the hunter wns made It easier for
him to know what to do.
A Merry Little Breeze came steal
Ing through the Green Forest. It
came from behind Llghtfoot and
danced away toward the hunter with
the terrible gun. Instantly Light
foot began to steal softly awa>
through the Green Forest. He took
the greatest care to make no sound.
He went In a half circle, stopping
every few minutes to look and listen
and test the air with his wonderful
nose.
Can you guess what Llghtfoot
was trying to do?
He was trying to get behind the
hunter so that the Merry Little
Breezes would bring to him the
dreaded man-scent. As long as he
could get that scent he would know
where the hunter was though he
could neither see nor hear him.
If he had remained where Sammy
Jay had found him, the hunter might
come within shooting distance be
fore Llghtfoot could have located
him.
So the hunter with the terrible
gun walked noiselessly through the
Green Forest, stepping with the
greatest care to avoid snapping a
stick underfoot, searching with keen
eyes every thicket and likely hiding
place for u glimpse of Llghtfoot and
studying the ground for traces to
show that Llghtfoot had been there.
©. T W. Burnegd.—WNU Snrvlee.
Ranger’s Uniform
Hangers of the United States for
est service have been fitted out with
new uniforms as shown above. It
Is of very tough material known ns
bronze green leather. The coat Is
of loose-cut, single breasted style
with leather buttons.
Some Folks Are Contented
a
rMA,.-nmnKwtl
ARE BETTER off!
THA^IH'Rejt .15
OF TH'WOf^LD f>
ifortECAH Ji;
60 BY TW' Vo
i^-AV
“Football Practice”
By ANNE CAMPBELL
WALTKlt'S got a grand excuse
When he’s late for dinner now
Father says: “Oh, what’s the use?”
Noting Mother’s frowning brow.
“You know fellows have to play I
Why were you so late today?"
“Football practice!” Walt will say!
Wish I were as big as he I
When I’m late I get a look
That would slay youl Walt can be
Late at anything. . . . "Why cook
If you’re never here?" . . . Pell-mell
Walt comes In I Dad says: “Well!
Well 1"
I am proud of Walter, too.
Just as Mother Is, I know.
Though she scolds the whole day
through,
Keeping meals annoys her sol
But I notice that a grin
Follows Walt when he comes In!
“Football practice? . . . Hope you
win!"
Copyright.—WNU Service.
Question box
t, ED WYNN, rhe Perfect Fool
Dear Mr. Wynn:
I am In love with a young lady
and asked her to marry me. She
said she would marry me If I prom
ised to love her “forever." What
shall I do?
Truly yours,
B. HIVES.
Answer: Don’t promise that. You
may not live that long.
Dear Mr. Wynn:
There's a man lives next door to
me who has a peculiar habit. Every
time he reads of a rich man dying
he cries for hours. Can you tell
me why he cries, as none of the
rich men are related to him?
Sincerely,
U. SEYMOUR THANME.
Answer: That Is very simple.
You say when a rich man dies,
though he Is no relative of the rich
man, your neighbor cries? He cries
because he is not a relative.
Dear Mr. Wynn:
If “time" Is money, why don’t
they make watches and clocks to
run fast?
Yours truly,
ANN I. TOBUSINESS
Answer: You guess.
Dear Mr. Wynn:
I am a man thirty-five years of
age. I am a manager of the hair
net department In a ,r> and 10c store.
1 rode m.v bicycle way out In the
country last Sunday. A wild cow
chased me for two miles. I found
out later the cow was mad because
she lost her calf, but why did she
chase me?
Yours truly,
I. NEVER SHAVE.
Answer: The cow most likely took
you for the calf.
Dear Mr. Wynn:
How Is It that In some apartment
houses you will find when they live
above the sixth floor married
couples haven’t any children?
Yours truly,
MISS SHONARY.
Answer: That only happens In
apartment houses without elevators
People living on the top floors don’t
have children, as there Is no way to
raise them.
€) Associated Newspaper*
WNU Service.
City of Roiu
Montevideo, which is the pre
ferred resort city of the people of
Buenos Aires, is called the “City of
Roses," Its parks boasting more
than S00 varieties of the flower.
p°YOU Know—
r" ■ ■—■■■■■ 11 ■■■■ i
That cigars a yard long are
common among the Indians
of the Amazon hinterland?
They are inveterate smok
ers and the long cigars ar$
smoked by the whole tribe
each cigar being passed from
mouth to mouth.
e Newspaper Syndicate
WNU Service.
Through JEAN NEWTON
A WOMAN’S EYES
iimimiimiiiiimiiiiiiiimMiiiiiimimiiiiiiiiiiimimmiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiii
TAKE A TIP FROM THE
GYPSIES
IN EUROPE, particularly In Cen
tral Europe, gypsies are a more
familiar element of the population
than they are In this country, where
they are regarded ns a curiosity.
In Slovakia, near Kosice, there
is a permanent settlement of gyp
sies so well thought of that they
were permitted by the state author
ities to have their own district
council and mayor.
And recently the council tried a
man who had beaten his wife.
Do you conjure up visions of red
tape, of laws designed to protect
the accused, of a bedlam of wit
nesses and talk of evidence as to
how he hit her and where he hit
her and what constitutes a blow un
til Indeed the victim began to doubt
her own Injuries.
Not with the gypsies. There was
no Gordian knot. The man was
brought before the council and Im
mediately sentenced to crawl home
on hands and knees, carrying his
wife on his back, and to publicly
bog for forgiveness. As a further
punishment he was ordered to stand
all night before his hut, bearing a
pail of water on his head, stirring
the water to prevent Its freezing!
Those gypsies have imagination.
haven't they, in their way of mak
ing the punishment fit the crime?
And the chances are that that par
ticular man will not again commit
that particular crime—which after
all Is the test of the efficacy of a
punishment.
I could think of several popular
crimes which might be more ap
propriately dealt with if we could
take a tip from the gypsies!
t) Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service.
Book
OLD FASHIONED BREAD
THERE are any uurnber of peo
ple who welcome a loaf of the
old-fashioned salt-rising bread. It
is not hard to make if the mixture
can be kept warm enough. The
following is a reliable recipe:
Salt-Rising Bread.
Place in two-quart bowl one and
one-balf cupfuls of boiling water,
cool to lukewarm. Add one and one
half cupfuls of fresh sweet milk,
also lukewarm; one teaspoonful of
sugar and two tablespoonfuls of
corn meal, with enough flour to
make a thin batter. Stir the en
tire mixture well, set into a heater
or warming oven or In water that
will keep the mixture at 110 de
grees. When the first bubble ap
pears stir down ; repeat, leaving the
dish uncovered. When the yeast is
double its bulk mix with flour to
knead. Warm the flour and keep
all dishes used warm. Make into
loaves, rise again and bake in a
moderate oven until well browned.
Keeping the bread warm during its
whole process of rising is very im
portant. The salt is added In the
last mixing, as salt has a tendency
to kill the growth of the wild yeast.
Cheese Ring.
Take one and one-half pounds of
cottage cheese, one teaspoonful of
salt, put through a ricer, then add
one can of chopped pimiento, one
green pepper and two tablespoon
fuls of gelatin which has been dis
solved In one-fourth of a cupful of
cold water. Place in a ring mold and
let stand several hours in the Ice
chest. Turn out on a lettuce bed
and surround with alternating
canned peaches and pears. In the
center place a grapefruit rind filled
with mayonnaise.
C Western Newspaper Union.
Two-Piece Frock
IIP A IP A KNOWS—I
L
“Pop, what Is a giraffe?”
“Jungle stretcher.”
© Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service.
This two-piece frock, like a man
tailored suit. Is of black jersey
tailored with black grosgraln rib
bon. The gllet is white pique. The
scroll brimmed hat Is black velvet.
—From Best & Co.
Corn Roast High Above New York
ACORN roast from com grown In the vegetable garden on the elev
enth floor roof of the RCA building In New York was held in the
Gardens of the Nations. The corn was roasted by 12 Girl Scouts over a
hunter’s fire built by them on a terrace of the gardens. The girls roasted
the corn to fulfill one requirement for their cook’s badge—the preparation
of an outdoor meal. Miss Mary Margaret McBride, nationally kaown
food authority, Judged their cooking abilities.
OVER ROMAN STATION
Uncovered by the low tide, 32 oak
piles 1,700 years old have caused the
discovery that the modern Durham
village of Plereebrldge has been
planted over the site of a once large
and important Roman station.
The modern village is located
where the Roman road known as
Dere Street crosses the Tees and
excavation has revealed that the
Roman camp was a few paces west
of the road. Nearby has been dis
covered the site of the Roman
bridge. The 32 oak piles were to N\
seen In the bed of the rtver when\
the river was low, and fragments
of Samian were found in the bank
nearby.
Week’s Supply of Postum Free
Read the offer made by the Postum
Company in another part of this pa
per. They will send a full week’s sup
ply of health giving Postum free to
anyone who writes for it.—Adv.
Laughter
There are not many things cheap
er than snpposing and laughing.—
Swift.
300 Candlapowar
"Liva” Pratsura Light
Don’t damage your eye
night with poor light
when you can buy a
genuine Coleman Lamp
for aa little aa (3.96. It
Modal 134
Skoda and
Globa
operates for 10 a night and gives •live” light
that protects year sight. No glass to break
— no wick to trim —no chimneys to wash.
Up to the minute in style; safety and long
life lighting service.
See Your Local Doalor—or write ns
for beautifully illustrated Folder in colors.
The Coleman Lamp and Stove Co.
Dept. WUlfl. Wichita, Kant.; Lee Angela. Calif.;
Chisago, 111.; Philadelphia. Pa. (SMI)
ASTHMA
WAS CHOK
ING HER
Got quick relief—
still in fine healtii
after 17 years
Dec. 8, I3ib—"i naa uhutmion
asthma for 17 years. After taking Nacor, I
could do my housework. That was 8 years ago. I
am still feeling fine."-Mrs. Mary Bean,Nashua,
Iowa. July 31,1933—“I continue in good health
and am still praising Nacor.”—Mrs. Bean.
For quick, safe relief from asthma or bronchial
cough ask your druggist for bottle of Nacor
KAPS (Nacor in capsule form).
NACOR MEDICINE CO, INDIANAPOLIS, IND.
Eczema itchihg
** Quickly soothe burning
torment and promote healr
irritated skin with -
Resinol
I
DO you suffer burning, scanty or
too frequent urination; backache,
headache, dizziness, swollen feet end
ankles? Are you tired, nervous—feel
j all unstrung and don't know what i«
wrong?
Then give some thought to your
kidneys. Be sure they function proper*
|y, for functional kidney disorder per*
mits excess waste to stay in the blood,
and to poison and upset the whole
system.
Use Doan’s Pills. Doan's are for the
kidneys only. They arc recommended
I the world over. You can get the gen
uine, time-tested Doan's at any drug
store.
LOS ANGELES
Most
convenient
deftest
accommodations
^Finest
meals / Grill
Eosy chairs sleep-inspiring beds Tavern
large rooms with luxurious fittings Coffee
Unsurpossed service and luxury Shop
are yours at amazingly low cost p
mr
■-'HOTEL
CLARK
P.G.B.MOKRISS>frr