The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, January 28, 1937, Image 7

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    Meet the Sea-Goin’ Cowdrey Brothers
Uncle Sam’s navy is one swell place to be! If you doubt it, ask the five husky Cowdrey brothers, from
Illinois, all sailors aboard the flagship Pennsylvania. They spend spare time cramming for advanced ratings
tests, and awaiting the day when a sixth brother attains seventeen, so that he can make out his enlist
ment papers. Photograph shows (left to right), Charles, Paul, Harry, Burnem, and Manley Cowdrey.
Five Years Old, and Still Mixed Up! !
Jane, Jean, and Joan Parisek (left to right), triplet daughters of Mr.
<md Mrs. Henry Parisek, of Chicago, whose parents can’t tell them apart,
celebrated their fifth birthday recently. The lollipops are a memento of
that event.
HEADS BOARD OF TRADE
Kenneth S. Templeton recently
elected as president of the Chicago
Board of Trade. Templeton, a mem
ber of the exchange since 1911, is
a partner of the cash grain firm
of J. S. Templeton’s Sons.
WISDOM ROOSTS
This wise owl has a lugubrious air
about him and no wonder. The bird
is deeply attached to Charles Kor
^ ret, of New York city, who found
nim in Bronx park and made a pet
of him. But Charles, unable to care
for the bird, took it to the Bronx
zoo, where he is pictured just be
fore he said good-by to his feathered
pal. The owl likes his perch, which
provides a means of gauging his
size, which is 4 inches tall; weight,
B ounces. The owl is one of the small
est of its kind on record.
Scientist Invents a iwFlu” Killer
.mm..
Inventor William Frank Wells, of the Harvard Medical school, Boston,
is shown with his “floodlight” germ killing apparatus. According to
Wells combination mercury and neon tubes with quartz glass tubing,
and ultra violet rays given off, filter the atmosphere about the lamp,
killing off all flu, and other germs. The apparatus—very successful in
experiments—has already been installed in several New York hospitals.
Nature Is Scene Painter in Winter Playground
This unusual camera study shows the great crags of Yosemite National park and the little people who have
their fun on them. To the right is the famous Half Dome in the distance. New ski trails have been com
pleted in the park and the season is now in full swing.
Scenes and Persons in the Current News
1—James Roosevelt, eldest son of the President, who has taken over a secretarial job in the White House.
2— French battleship of the Atlantic fleet now patroling Spanish waters as a result of the Spanish civil war.
3— Homer Martin, president of the United Automobile Workers (standing) as he discussed strategy with other
officials of the union in the automobile strike.
New Secret Service Chief Takes Office
Left to right, Frank J. Wilson, who has been appointed secret service
chief, is seen here with his chief, Henry Morgenthau, Jr., secretary of
the treasury. Mr. Wilson, the man who put A1 Capone behind prison
bars, succeeds William H. Moran, who retired.
ELECTED RABBI CHIEF
Dr. Isaac Herzog, chief rabbi of
Dublin, Ireland, who was elected
chief rabbi of Palestine by a coun
cil of 70 elders to succeed the late
Rabbi Kook. He is a man of great
culture in lay as well as spiritual
matters. He has degrees from three
universities and specialized in class
ical languages and mathematics.
The office of chief rabbi of Palestine
is a sort of ministry of religion.
AUTO EXECUTIVE
From riveter, boiler maker and
shop worker to executive vice pres
ident of General Motors corporation
is a brief career picture of William
S. Knudsen, General Motors’ prin
cipal representative in the recent
automotive labor situation. Knud
sen is widely known in the motor
car world.
I “Rusty” Takes Kinks Out of His Crew
Rusty Callow, University of Pennsylvania rowing coach, looks over a
trio of crew aspirants as they bend their backs to the ash at the season’s
first indoor crew workout. Crewmen stroking under the coach's watch
ful eyes are: George Nichols of Clinton, Ind., George Pepper of Phila
delphia. Pa., and William L. Disston (stroke) of Philadelphia, Pa. (names
in left to right order). This marked the start of Rusty’s eleventh year
at U. of P. as crew mentor.
Uninvited “Guest" Crashes into Living Room
An uninvited and wholly unexpected “guest” arrived in the home of Horace W. Miller, near York,
Pa., when the pictured car, driven by M. Carvell Rothrock, broke through the house wall to enter the Miller
home. Police allege that Rothrock was driving too fast around a curve, and they reported also that both
Rothrock and a companion who was riding with him were unhurt. The Miller house, however, was consid
erably damaged.
Of INTEREST TO]
M HOUStWIft I
Salted peanuts, freshened by
heating in oven, are very good
served with chocolate sauce on
vanilla ice cream. The young
people like this combination espe
cially well.
* • •
Wash metal door hinges occa
sionally with warm soapsuds,
wipe dry and rub with oil to pre
vent their rusting.
• * •
The corduroy clothes so popu
lar with young people will laun
der easily, if washed in mild soap
and plenty of warm water. Rinse
well, shake and hang up to dry.
• • *
When baking candied sweet po
tatoes turn them frequently to
permit even browning.
* * •
Solutions of soda potash or am
monia will remove grease from
unvarnished wood.
• • •
For white sauce, melt two and
a half tablespoonfuls of butter in
saucepan. Add five and a half
tablespoons flour mixed with one
third teaspoon salt and few grains
pepper. Add one cup scalded milk,
stirring constantly. Bring to boil
ing point and beat until smooth
and glossy.
• * •
To wash white silk collars or
ties, instead of removing from
dresses, put a clean towel round
the dress and then dip the collars
into a bowl of soapy water, rinse
and place on a hanger with towel
still round them. Leave to dry
and iron while damp. A great
deal of time is saved.
© Aaaoclated Newspaper*.— WNU Service.
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets made of
May Apple are effective in removing
accumulated body waste.—Adv.
Discouragement a Destroyer
Discouragement does not do
things—it disarms and destroys.
Quickest Way
to Ease a
COLD
1
Take 2 Bayar
Aipirin tablets
with a full glaaaof
water.
- .....
....«
2
If throat ia acre
alao, gargle with 8
Bayer tablata In
H glaaa of water.
The modern way to ease a cold is
this: Two Bayer Aspirin tablets the
moment you feel a cold coming on.
Repeat, if necessary, in two hours. If
you also have a sore throat as a result
of the cold, dissolve 3 Bayer tablets in
H glass of water and gargle with this
twice. The Bayer Aspirin you take
internally will act to combat fever,
aches, pains which usually accompany
a cold. The gargle will provide almost
instant relief from soreness and raw
ness of your throat. Your doctor, we
feel sure, will approve this modern
way. Ask your druggist for genuine
Bayer Aspirin by its full name — not
by the name “aspirin” alone.
I »
)
, _ i
Z FULL DOZEN FOR 2$C
Virtually lc a Tablet
Carving the Tombstone
Many a tombstone is carved by
[ chiseling in traffic.
Gas, Gas AH
the Time, Can't
Eat or Sleep
"The gas on my stomach was so bed
I could not oat or sleep. Even nsy
heart seemed to hurt. A friend sue*
Eested Adlerika. The first dose I took
rought me relief. Now I eat as I
wish, sleep fine and never felt better."
•—Mrs. Jas. Filler.
Adlerika acta on BOTH upper and
lower bowels while ordinary laxatives
act on the lower bowel only. Adlerika
gives your system a thorough cleans*
ing, bringing out old, poisonous mattsr
that you would not believe was in your
system and that has been causing gas
pains, sour stomach, nervousness and
headaches for months.
Dr, H. L. Shout, Now York, reporter
"Is addition to intestinal cleansing, Adlerika
greatly reduces bacteria and colon bacUU.”
Give your bowels a REAL cleansing
with Adlerika and see how good you
feel. Just one spoonful relieves GAS
and constipation. At all Leading
Druggists.
DAN-D-FORD V-8 PICK UP
i/2 TON OVERLOAD SPRING
Absolutely Silent. Guaranteed against breakage
^for 1 year. Reinforces dif
sryivrential bousing. Believe*
. .strain on rear cross mem
ber. In years of servlee wo
have not bad one broken
spring. Basy to Install. Ask
your dealer or write ns.
DAN'S SPRING WORKS. INC.. Ett. 1926)
1810-14 Cherry St. Kansas City. M«w