The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, November 06, 1941, Image 7

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‘Hornets" for Uncle Sain—and Hornet's Nest
A view of the U.S.S. Hornet, the navy's newest aircraft carrier, is shown at left. The Hornet displaces
20,000 tons and has a speed in excess of 30 knots. Right: In the biggest single delivery of military planes In
aviation history, 123 Vnltee Valiants, basic training planes, roared over Los Angeles en ronte to army and
navy training stations. Some of them are shown, Just before the takeoff at Downey, Calif.
Scenes From Russo-German Front
j The Nazis occupy a captured Russian trench (left). One of the soldiers is taking a nap on the cold ground
of the bottom of the trench. The “gooiness” of the Russian terrain has had a delaying effect even on the
German war machine. From Berlin comes this picture (right) showing the Nazi’s own tanks with wheels en
meshed in huge gobs of mud.
Night Attack in Mediterranean
This photograph, one of the iqost striking of its kind ever taken, shows
a battleship of the British Mediterranean fleet in action as an Axis air
attack is repelled. Tremendous flashes from anti-aircraft guns firing
simultaneously to port and starboard outline the superstructure of the
battleship in lurid flame.
At National Youth Day Rally
y y
Pictured here, left to right, are U. S. Sen. Joseph H. Ball, of Minne
sota, Brig. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, Paul V. McNutt, federal security
^ministrator, and Douglas Fairbanks Jr. as they attended the National
Youth Day rally in New York. They were the principal speakers at
the rally.
First Ladies
Mrs. Ruth Licklider, who became
“Mrs. America” at a Palisades
j Park, N. J., beauty contest, is pic
tured as she was received by Mrs.
Franklin D. Roosevelt at the White
House. Mrs. Licklider is a red
haired Powers model.
! Bulldog Oueen
Champion English bulldog, Cefam
abley Queen, reads up on her an
cestry before showing at the thirty
first annual dog show, to be held In
Chicago November 29-30.
Wlmfc Twrntv I)te«l
V
A Chicago-bound air liner, flying low In a heavy fog near St.
Thomas, Ont., crashed and burst Into flames, killing SO persons. It was
the second crash on a major airline within 34 hours and brought the
day’s death trial to 34. This soundphoto shows wreckage of the huge
American Airlines Douglas ship which started its flight in New York. The
rreckage is still smouldering in spots.
Discuss Air Associates’ Strike
President Roosevelt directed the war department to take over the
C.I.O. struck plant of Air Associates. Inc., Bcndix. N. J. Photo shows Col.
R. M. Jones, left, and Maj. Peter Beasley, center, discussing reinstate
ment of strikers with Anthony Grimaldi, C.I.O. organiser at the plant.
Mil—but Luck)
V
IJ. 8. minister to Iceland, Mac
Vcagh (arrow), inspects damage
done to V. 8. destroyer Kearny,
which fared better than destroyer
Reuben James sunk while on con
voy duty west of Iceland the day
above picture was released.
Bomber Saboteur?
William Etiel, 22. paint foreman
at the Glenn L. Martin airplane
plant. Middle River, Md,, who was
arrested by FBI agents, charged
with acts of sabotage to bombers.
Closed Coal Mines Four Days
Pictured above is John L. Lewis as he appeared at a press con
ference before a truce brought an end to a strike of 53,000 miners in the
nation’s “captive” coal mines. When the picture was taken Lewis de
clared he was telling President Roosevelt “no” in response to a White
House request for a settlement of the dispute. But after a conference
between the President, Lewis, Myron Taylor, former head of V. 8. Steel,
and William Davis of the National Mediation board, the miners went back
to work under terms of a 15-day truce which called for further mediation
of the issues involved.
Harriman Reports to F.D.R.
■
w. Averill Harrlman, upon bis return from Moscow, where he had
been heading the U. 8. mission to Moscow, called at the White House to
have a further conference with the President. Photo shows him as he
was talking with members of the press in the reception room in the
executive offices of the White House.
Growing Fast
Unusual view of the bow of the
battleship Indiana, which is rapid
ly taking shape at Newport News,
Va. Construction work on the deck
of this 35,000-ton ocean giant is well
forward, and she is scheduled to
slide down the ways In December.
Lehigh’s Skipper
Capt. Vincent P. Arkins, com
mander of the torpedoed U. S.
freighter Lehigh, who gave an ac
count of sinking upon his arrival at
Freetown, Sooth Africa.
CREMATION
FOREST LAWN CEMETERY]
• OMAHA •
CREMATION
of the most modern type
Writ* to u« for booklet
Easy-to-Make Slip Cover
Brightens a Faded Sofa
GOOD-BY, old-furniture bluest
Make a slip cover like this for
your worn sofa—using a colorful
flower-splashed chintz — and the
whole room has a bright, new
look!
Making a cover is easy the pin
on way. No pattern needed! Sim
ply lay fabric on sofa and cut to fit.
• • •
Our 32-page booklet tells In detail with
step-by-step diagrams how to cover chairs,
sofas and auto seats the ptn-on way. De
scribes making of French, welted and
bound seams, box pleats, swag flounces:
suggests fabrics, colors. Send your or
der to:
READER-HOME SERVICE
635 Sixth Avenue New York City
Enclose 10 cents In coin for your
copy of HOW TO MAKE SUP
COVERS.
Name..
Address.•••••.
GAS ON STOMACH
May units the Heart action _
At the Hurt dm of aetreae amart man and women
depend on BeU-ane Tablota to eot tree fraa. Notoae
ttva bat mad# of tha faataat-artins modlrinoa known
for •yrnptometic- relief of gaetrie.hyperacidity. If Urn
FIRST TRIAL doeen't prove Bell-ane better, retm
bottle to ua and receive DOUBLfe. Money Back. 8a
How Big I Am!
It was prettily devised of Aesop:
The fly sat upon the axle-tree of
the chariot-wheel, and said, What
a dust do I raise.—Bacon.
rFOR WOMEN',
SHUT/
If you suffer from monthly cramps,
headache, backache, nervousness
and distress of “Irregularities”—
caused by functional monthly dis
turbances—try LydlA Plnkham’s
Vegetable Compound — famous for
relieving pain and nervous feelings
of women's "difficult days.”
Taken regularly—Lydia Plnkham’s
Compound helps build up resistance
against such annoying symptoms.
Follow label directions. WORTH
I . i
Old May Learn
It is always in season for oldi
men to learn.—Aeschylus.
"Cap-Brush "Applicator J
Am.lec IIAC« 11**40],
JUS* * GO MUCH NkBruta
DASH IN FEATHERS.^_
Silence a Friend
Silence is a true friend who
never betrays.—Confucius.
% COLDS
quick itj u-Xt
LIQUID
TABLETS
NOSE DSOM
COUCH DROPS
Today's popularity
of Doan’s Pills, after
many year* of world
MVViPVte wide use, surely mast
■ ■ *11 ■ ■ ■ ■ tie accepted as evidence
of satisfactory use.
■HPfHHW And favorable public
opinion supports that
of the able physicians
who test the value of
Doan’s under exacting
laboratory conditions.
These physicians, too, approve every word
of advertising you read, the objective of
which is only to recommend Doan's Pills
“ » good diuretic treatment for disorder
of the kidney function and for relief of
the pain and worry it causes.
If more people were aware of how the
kidneys must constantly remove waste
that cannot stay in the blood without in
jury to health, there would be better un
derstanding of why the whole body suffers
when kidneys lag, and diuretic medic*,
tion would be more often employed.
Burning, scanty or too frequent urina
tion sometimes warn of disturbed kidney
function. You may suffer nagging back
ache, persistent headache, attacks of dix
ainess, retting up nights, swelling, puffi
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all played out.
Use Doan’s Pills. It is better to rely on
s medicine that has won world-wide ac
claim than on something less favorably
known. Ash yonr neighbort