The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, August 19, 1943, Image 3

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    Foresight
Scout Bate—What on earth have
you woke us up at this time for?
It’s only half-past three!
Camp Cook—Well, I’ve heard
that a thunderstorm turns milk,
and as there is one now I thought
we might as well have our break
fast while the milk is fresh!
Fair Question >
mlSou>, my man” said the judge, *you
know that under our system of juris
prudence you are presumed to be its
nocent.”
“Then" replied the defendant, “why
all this effort to convict me?"
WOOL
BRING OR SHIP IT TO US,
ANY QUANTITY.
We bay eat right tbe lets running under
10W Ibe. each and make Immediate pay
ment. I*U of over 1000 lbe. each we
handle on consignment. In accord with
the government rules, obtain for you full
government celling prices, make liberal
advance now, with Final settlement in
about fear months.
LINCOLN HIDE & FUR CO.
| 728 Q St. Lincoln, Nebr.
Little Minds
"And what did you learn in Scripture
lesson, dear?" asked mother.
"Oh, all about the Ten Commandoes,"
replied Tommy.
CLASSIFIED
DEPARTMENT
GUERNSEY HEIFERS
HIGH GRADE GUERNSEY HEIFERS,
under one year and yearlings past. Also
springer heifers. Special price on four.
FRED CHANDLER. CHARITON. IOWA.
FEATHERS WANTED
FEATHERS WANTED, NEW OR OLD
Ship or write to Sterling Feather Company,
909 N. Broadway, St. Louis. Missouri.
Wanted—New goose, duck feathers, also old
used feathers. Top prices, prompt returns.
Ship to Farmers Store. Mitchell. S. D.
CREMATION_
FOREST LAWN CEMETERY
• OMAHA •
CREMATION
of the most modem type
Write to us for booklet
AGENTS
^ -
F Men and Women: We want a representa
tive In your community immediately, full
or part time. Experience unnecessary. Full
time men earning $50 to $100 weekly. This
is your opportunity for permanent position,
where pay is good and work is pleasant and
healthful. Write for full particulars.
Harrison Nursery Company, York, Nebr.
OPPORTUNITY
What have yon te trade for 360 a. ranch in
west. Oregon or property in Boise Valiev?
RALPH WHITE • Bowmont, Idaho.
FARMS FOR SALE
FARMS FOR SALE
15 years to pay — low interest — low
principal payments—just like payinK
rent. No red tape. V£'e own no farms
south of the Platte River or west of
Buffalo, Sherman, Valley, Garfield,
and Holt Counties.
0 Writs for list*. Specify counties in
which you are inierested, and we
will send lists with names of Super*
tniendents. Courtesy to brokers.
THE TRAVELERS INSIIRAHCE CO.
City National Bank Building
OMAHA_-_NEBRASKA
Judgment of Odors
That persons vary greatly in
their judgment of odors is shown
in a survey in which of 3,000 in
dividuals tested for their reactions
upon smelling freesias, 19 per cent
said that this sweet-scented flower
had no odor, 65 per cent said it
had a weak or medium odor and
16 per cent said it had a very
strong odor, reports Collier’s. Of
those persons who noticed the fra
grance, 86 per cent found it pleas
^ant and 14 per cent unpleasant.
Gas on Stomach
Relieved in 5 minutes or double money back
When excess stomach arid causes painful, suffocat
ing gas, sour stomach and heart ournr doctors usually
prescribe the fastest-acting medicines known for
•ymptomatic relief— medicines like those in Bell-aos
Tabu**. No laxative. Bell-ana brings oomfort in a
fifty or double your money back on return of bottle
to ua. 2S*c at all druggists.
WNU—U_32-43
May Warn of Disordered
Kidney Action
Modern life with Its hurry and worry.
Irregular habits, improper eating ana
s, drinking—its risk of exposure and infeo
tion—throws heavy strain on the work
of the kidneys. They are apt to become
i over-taxed and fail to filter excess acid
and other impurities from the life-giving
blood.
You may suffer nagging backache,
headache, dizziness, getting up eights,
leg pains, swelling—feel constantly
tired, nervous, all worn out. Other signs
of kidney or bladder disorder are lome
i, times burning, scanty or too frequent
urination.
Try Doan's Pills. Doan's help the
kidneys to pass off harmful excess body
waste. They have had more tbao half a
century of public approval. Are recom
mended by grateful users everywhere.
Ask pour neighbor I
y --
I_
. Horses Still Go to War
Herds of wild horses rounded up from the open ranges of
frontier Australia are being tamed and trained for military
work by American army forces there. Despite the ascend
ency of mechanization in warfare the horse still has a place
at the battle zones because of his mobility over difficult ter
rain. Most of the wild Australian broncos have never seen a
human, and must be transformed from nervous, galloping,
man-fearing beasts into steady, dependable, domesticated
horses. This is accomplished by a process formerly known
as “breaking” which American soldiers prefer to call
“gentling,” as the army horse is trained as gently and
humanely as possible so that he loses all fear of mankind.
Stampeding hordes of wild horses are guided into the swirling
water of a stream by Australian horsemen.
This is what usually happens the first time an attempt is made
to saddle one of the broncos.
Twrr~wini»iiiiiin[iniriiin m rrw imihi n iimw—i————mu iwi——n
After he becomes accus
tomed to the nearness of
man, the horse is run into a
corral, blindfolded and tied,
as a saddle is placed on his
back for the first time. When
released he usually tries to
buck the saddle off. During
the last two weeks of the
horse’s basic training, bron-.
co busters ride him until he
no longer executes wild gy
rations when something is
placed on his back.
Above: Saddled for the first
time, he races around the corral,
bucking, fighting and squealing.
Right: This is how they got the
saddle on. Below: Calm and
ready for duty, a trained horse
stands loaded.
Occasionally a fitly is born among the
wild Australian horses. Here is one
which has become a pet of the regiment.
She is being treated for a slight cold by
Pvt. J. Tuejer of Fort Worth, Texas.
Horses such as are trained in Aus
tralia will suim rivers and at night
they are an advantage over motorized
equipment because they can maneuver
without lights. The horse is quiet. No
other animal can, in an equal measure,
endure extreme temperature changes.
I
j <
By VIRGINIA VALE
Released by Western Newspaper Union.
PETER LORRE enjoys a
successful romance for al
most the first time in his vil
lainous career in Warner
Bros.’ “The Constant
Nymph”; he marries Brenda
Marshall. But he found
It hard to get out of character.
"When I reached into my pocket
for the ring, to marry Brenda," said
he, "I whipped it out like it was my
customary gui and almost tried to
shoot her with it!”
-*
Very young men who rebel at hav
ing to trudge along behind lawn
mowers these summer days ought
to know Paul Whiteman's story. As
a youngster he so hated to prac
tice on his violin that he smashed a
$60 instrument against the music
PAUL WHITEMAN
stand. His father made him mow
the lawn, at 25 cents a session, till
he’d paid for the fiddle. After that
his parents gave in and decided
that maybe he wasn’t cut out for a
musical career—and he took up the
violin in earnest!
-#
Charles Cobarn, who long ago es
tablished himself as one of the bet
ter actors of the legitimate stage,
arrived in New York recently to
find a different kind of fame await
ing him; three of his pictures were
running at once—“The More the
Merrier,” “The Constant Nymph”
and “Heaven Can Wait.”
-*
While directing “This Is the
Army” Mike Curtiz also invented
new military commands. During a
location trip to Fort MacArthur
some of the Fort’s soldiers were
within his camera range for a shot.
He grabbed the microphone and
yelled, “Tlbu men back there by the
house! Attention! Take a powder!”
-*- *
When John Warburton decided to
return to pictures after an absence
of six years, the studios just weren’t
interested. Then he was tested and
signed for the featured role of Gary
Cooper’s rival in “Saratoga Trunk,”
and immediately offers began to
pour in; two studios wanted him
“right away.”
-*
Warren William, back at work in
“Passage to Suez,” after months of
illness, has the farm labor shortage
to thank for his present excellent
physical condition. When he was re
leased from the hospital doctors pre
scribed exercise. Warren had half a
dozen acres of unpicked oranges
and could not get help. So he pitched
in, with the result that he now has
his health back, and also had one
hundred crates of oranges to send
to market.
-*
Pretty soon those Ameche broth
ers won’t know which career Is
whose. Don was established on the
screen when his younger brother,
Jim, tackled radio, using an as
sumed name till he’d made good,
then switching back to his own. Now
he’s master of ceremonies of “Here’s
to Romance,” and Don’s to begin
an air-series in the fall—also as
master of ceremonies. Meanwhile
there’s a prospect that Jim may
turn actor, if he can find a suitable
play.
-*
Samuel Goldwyn, who’s famous
for—among other things—turning
beautiful girls into screen stars, is
trying something different with Con
stance Dowling; he's going to let
the public discover her. You’ll see
her in “Up in Arms,” with Dinah
Shore and Danny Kaye.
That’s an amusing new program,
Arlene Francis’ "Blind Date’’; six
boys in uniform, one by one, talk
ing themselves into the good graces
of three girls, whom they can’t see;
curtains on the stage separate them,
but the audience sees all. Three
lads win their girls and an evening
at a famous night club.
-*
ODDS AND ENDS—At no doubt
you've heurd by now, James Stewart
(the movies’ Jimmie/ has been promot
ed, and is now a captain . . . Arthur
Allen, who plays “Dan’l Dickey” in
NBC's “Snow Village,” has a collection
of 145 flatiron holders . . . Joan Craw
forcTs checked in at IVarner Bros, to
start preparations for “Night ShiftP . , .
Announcer Ben Grauer hat a Central
Americun Indian belt wirven in colors
that make you blink what’s more, he
wears it .. . Ginny Simms’ definition
of the Mason-Dixon line (at least, her
friends credit it to her), “That’s the
division between youstU and youto
ruyif
r
Farmer* Can Raise
Spices Now Imported
Western Hemisphere Can
Supply All Needs
Every spice, seed and herb that
the United States has been accus
tomed to importing from the Orient
can be grown successfully in the
Western hemisphere, either In North
or South Arrferica, believes John A.
Sokol, president of a chemical com
pany bearing his name. In an ad
dress before the annual Chemurgic
conference recently held in Chicago,
he divided the plant products into
two groups, according to the climat
ic conditions under which they grow.
First, he said, is the temperate
zone, which covers central Europe,
the Mediterranean area, Russia,
northern India, and northern China.
The second zone would comprise the
tropics, semi-tropics, and particu
larly the East Indies close to the
equatorial area.
From the temperate zone we have
been Importing herbs, such as sage,
marjoram, thyme, savory, rose
mary, sweet basil, oregano, laurel
leaves, saffron, red peppers (pap
rika), and many crude drugs.
From the tropical zone we have
been importing peppers, cloves, all
spice, ginger, cinnamon, cassia,
nutmeg, mace, turmeric, etc.
The items in the first category,
namely those grown in the temper
ate zone, can all be grown in some
part of the United States, and the
items from the tropical zone could
be grown in some of our possessions
and also in Central and South Amer
ica. All of the items under spices
for seasoning and condiments could
be grown In the Western hemi
sphere.
That these particular items, he
said, could be grown in the United
States has been demonstrated.
Other seeds, such as poppy, cara
way, dill, coriander, celery, fennel,
and anise, have been grown in the
United States te some extent. None
of these Items are available from
Europe now and with the present
difficulties of obtaining these seeds
from India, China and other foreign
countries, there are prospects that
the growers would find these profit
able for the next couple of years at
least, Mr. Sokol thinks.
The herbs which have been grown
and cultivated here are sage, mar
joram, and basil, and an effort is
being made to increase their produc
tion in this country.
All of the products grown in the
United States have been found to be
of very good quality and most of
them compare very favorably to
the products imported from abroad.
Also with the American ingenuity
to adapt special methods of plant
ing, cultivating and harvesting,
much of the low labor cost in foreign
countries could be overcome.
Some tf the outstanding products
which have been grown successfully
In the United States are mustard
seed, grown In Montana and Califor
nia, paprika (the sweet grade),
grown in California, Louisiana and
South Carolina, and sage, mar
joram, thyme and basil, grown
in practically every state of the
United States.
Mr. Sokol continued that he was
not giving any figures of the quanti
ties' grown, but that he felt assured
that with the proper effort and co
operation of the various agencies,
American housewives and the food
industry can be fully supplied with
many of the spice seasonings from
products grown in the United States,
the tropical possessions, and some
of the South American countries.
A cross-bred Hampshire South
down, owned by Harold Nelson of
Morris, 111., won the blue ribbon and
the Pillsbury trophy at the Chicago
Junior Market Lamb show recently.
It weighed 75 pounds. Fifty-one boys
and girls from midwcstern states ex
hibited 258 lambs.
Farm Notes
More than one-third of the Horae
Nursing certificates issued by the
American Red Cross during the
year, ending June 30, were issued to
women in rural America.
• # •
Glycerine is now banned for use
in foods, tobacco, cosmetics, and toi
let preparations. Medicinal use has
been cut to 60 per cent of normal,
all because ef war demands.
I
SEWING CIRCLE
Jumper Set
'T'HIS should be a great success
right off—slim, simple jacket
topping a youthful, big-pocketed
jumper.
• • •
Pattern No. 8463 is in sizes 10. 12. 14. 16.
18 and 20. Size 12 jumper takes 3 yards
39-inch material, short sleeve jacket l1,*
yards.
Slenderizing
A FROCK like this can be count
ed on to make a woman look
her best. Smart, flattering and
definitely slenderizing.
• • •
Pattern No. 8457 is in sizes 36. 38. 40,
42. 44. 46. 48. 50 and 52. Size 38 takes,
with short sleeves, 4',i yards 35-inch ma
terial.
Pigeon Chutists
Carrier pigeons employed by
U. S. armed forces are today be
ing lowered from planes in crates,
suspended by midget-sized para
chutes. If pigeons were released
at 25,000-foot altitude from a plane
moving 400 miles per hour without
this protection, wing feathers
would be blown off by the blast of
air from the propeller, and birds
would freeze to death. After a
carrier has descended several
thousand feet in the crate, the door
•f the crate is automatically
opened, releasing the bird to do its
duty.
Due to an unusually large demand and
current war conditions, slightly more tima
Is required In Ailing orders lor a lew ot
the most popular pattern numbers.
Send your order to:
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT.
330 South Wells St. Chicago.
Enclose 20 cents in coins lor each (
pattern desired.
Pattern No......Size.
Name.
Address.. J
-—-•
—Buy War Savings Bonds—
!
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