The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, February 10, 1938, Image 7

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    Ice Tears Away Niagara Falls Bridge
This twisted mass of steel girders among mountainous blocks of Ice is all that remains of the 40-year-old
Falls View International bridge which collapsed into the Ice-filled gorge below Niagara falls after resisting
an ice jam for 24 hours. This view of the famed “honeymoon bridge” was made from the American side. The
noise of the crash of the 4,500,000-pound structure blotted out for a moment the roar of Niagara falls, 500
yards upstream. Thousands of spectators watched as the girders buckled. Workmen who had been sent into
the gorge to strengthen the bridge’s supports narrowly escaped death when the crash came.
100 HOURS AWAKE
Miss Ruth Jitnmerson, nineteen,
of Unadilla, Ga., one of six students
at the University of Georgia who
completed 100 hours of voluntary in
somnia in a psychology experiment
“in the interest of pure science.”
Looks at Record Between Dips
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Far from the sidewalks of New York and minus his brown derby,
Alfred E. Smith, former governor of New York, is pictured reading his
newspaper between dips in the briny at a popular resort club at Palm
Beach, Fla. The “Happy Warrior” enjoys an annual mid-winter vacation
in the South.
I_.__
Farr Gives Tardy Handshake
.....mu —.,ui.. Mmrnzmwmmm
Tommy Farr, left, shakes hagds with Jimmy Braddock, who won a
surprising ten-round decision from the Welshman at Madison Square
Garden, New York, recently, as the two met in Promoter Mike Jacobs’
office. Farr, greatly disappointed over the result, said he had not seen
Braddock coming over to shake his hand. A day or two after their
amicable meeting, Jim Braddock announced his retirement from the ring.
Golfer Picard
Shows Affection
for Pet Putter
Henry Picard kissing the putter
that helped him win the Pasadena
$3,000 golf open over the Brookside
course at Pasadena, Calif. Picard
.
was victorious with a total of 276.
He made the final turn home in
35 which added to his outgoing 34
gave him a total of 69 for the final
round and 276 for the tournament.
American Locomotives Bound for China
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First of a shipment of 20 locomotives being shipped to China by American locomotive manufacturers from
Philadelphia. The shipment, one of the biggest made from the United States in recent years, was bought and
paid for by the Chinese government. Plans for getting the locomotive? past the Japanese blockade were not
disclosed.
Scenes and Persons in the Current News
1—“Big Bill” Thompson, former mayor of Chicago, illustrates his demand before congress for more water
for the Windy City canals by pouring a tumblerful down a drain. 2—Successor to the ill-fated Ilinderburg,
destroyed by fire while landing at Lakehurst, N. J„ last May, the LP130 nears completion at the Zeppelin dock
at Friedrichshaven, Germany. 3—Tom Glrdler, steel magnate, shown in a recent address declaring that co
operation between government and business will induce the greatest development the human race has yet seen.
Play Hug Becomes Educated
——BPBBBMWiUC——""irUtfllMto ■~TT——M—I1W—irrPTfmR^ti I 'MBHBHi
This young lady is going to get her education painlessly on a new
play rug for the nursery. Shown at the Merchandise Mart, Chicago, it
is decorated with nursery rhymes, story book characters and games
suitable for children of all ages. In this way the value of the rug docs
not decrease as the child grows older.
SI0,000 SMILE
Gerry Reed of Allentown, Pa., Is
$10,000 richer today because as a
newsboy he served his customers
with a smile. Reed, now eighteen,
was left that sum for his cheerful
ness in the will of Oliver H. Gen
ert, former theater manager and
baseball manager. Young Reed Is
an employee of the Allentown Beth
lehem airport.
1 I
300 Firemen Fight Spectacular Blaze
. ..*..——
View of the five alarm fire in a Brooklyn lumber yard which 300 firemen wih 35 pieces of apparatus
fought for hours. Nearby tenement houses were threatened by the conflagration and 150 persons, many of
them clad in night clothes fled from the menace of the flames.
HERE’S TO YOU
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Entertaining his tonsils with a
bottle of pop between sets in one of
his recent exhibition matches in
Australia, is Donald Budge, United
States singles champion. Following
recovery from a tennis slump that
brought defeat at the hands of John
Bromwich, young Budge went on to
give a bang-up account of himself
in the Australian meet.
“Bob” Bartlett Wins Award
Capt. “Bob" Bartlett, explorer who went to the North pole with Ad
miral Peary, receiving the National Service award from Mrs. Elbert
Williams, new national president of the Camp Fire Girls. He was given
the award for teaching Camp Fire Girls how to tell of their achievements
when they met in New York to describe their activities in life saving,
exploring and other fields.
Budget Lace Has a
Lavish Appearance
There’s loveliness right at your
fingertips! A file lace cloth that’s
easy to crochet of everyday
string, and quite the most beauti
ful ever! The two 10 inch com
panion squares are delightful to
Pattern 5895
gether, yet one, could be repeated
and used without the other. It
won’t be long until you’ve cro
cheted any number of these sim
ple squares to combine in “check
er-board” fashion. Scarfs and
small refreshment pieces are also
handsome in this choice design if
you use finer cotton.
In pattern 5895 you will find in
structions and charts for making
the squares shown; and for join
ing them to make various ar
ticles; material requirements; il
lustration of the square and of all
stitches used.
To obtain this pattern send 15
cents in stamps or coins (coins
preferred) to The Sewing Circle,
Household Arts Dept., 259 W.
Fourteenth St.. New York, N. Y.
Please write your name, ad
dress and pattern number plainly.
Tail Still a Tail
Abraham Lincoln once asked a
deputation: “How many legs
would a sheep have if you called
his tail a leg?” The deputation
answered promptly: “Five.”
“No,” said Lincoln, “it would not;
it would have only four, for call
ing a tail a leg does not make it
one.”
ARE YOU PALE, WEAK?
i insnurg, rvaua. —
Mrs. R. G. Ligon, 708
N. Grand St, says:"I
was in poor hrahh,
had lost weight and
lacked strength. I had
t no appetite, was pale,
" nervous and upset, and
felt miserable. I took
IJr. Pierce’s Favorite
-■ -ir * ioui^iiuu mini suuii
I enjoyed my meals,
regained my weight and strength, wasn’t
nearly so nervous, and looked and felt like
myself once more.” Huy at any drug store.
Impression of Pleasure
For all knowledge and wonder
(which is the seed of knowledge>
is an impression of pleasure in it
self.—Bacon.
Many doctors recommend
Nujol for its gentle action on
the bowels. Don’t confuse
Nujol with unknown products.
INSIST ON GENUINE NUJOL
Copr. 1987. SUnco lac.
They, Too, Are Warmed
Those who bring sunshine to the
lives of others cannot keep it from
themselves.—Barrie.
check*
COC COLDS
000 FEVER
LIQUID, TABLETS J fiLrst„^a^ .
salve, nose drops Headache, 30 minutei:
Try “Rub-My-Tlsin”-World’s Best Liniment
>nu/
I got my name
in the paper I
Only Newspapers bring the
news of vital interest to you
Headlines may scream of death and
disaster without causing you to raise
an eyebrow. But if your son gets his
name in the paper — that’s real news!
It isn’t by accident that this paper
prints so many stories which vitally
interest you and your neighbors. News
of remote places is stated briefly and
interpreted. Local news is covered fully,
because all good editors know' that the
news which interests the readers most
is news about themselves.
Now is a good time to learn more
about this newspaper which is made
especially for you. Just for fun ask
yourself this question: How could we
get along without newspapers?
KNOW YOUR NEWSPAPER