Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Titusville Herald from Titusville, Pennsylvania • Page 4

Location:
Titusville, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

TUESDAY MORNING. DC mXJSVlllE HERALD JANUARY 8. 1929. itemllf (SI weeks) months, (28 months. (13 Br Bail outside of TltuiTlllj year.

$4.00 in first and second In other ttrlctiy in Do not send currency or or money order. Address all business and otntr communications to as OlaH Mattsr. KEKBEB ASSOCIATED MUCH The Associated Presi is exclusively entitled to the use for re, publication of all news dispatches 'credited to it or not otherwise in this paper and also the local news published herein. or AUDIT or CXBCUU.TIOV. THE LESSKK JOVS.

I Laughter and Jove and rnirlh And of friendships trial and true, A brave-hearted one or two: arr the joys of i The 1 best that this life can r.ivr i However we choose to live. garden of summer flowers. Books and an easy chair. i Small pleasures wliidi we 1 can share. 'Though little or nreat our powers (Arc the joys of our toilsome years I When the 1 end of the way appeass.

'Not fortune or fame or plaee Continue their charm for Not, even the arm stays stronp. The joys ol the hunt and chase. With its shnrp, insislcni cry. Grows wearisome by find by. And bravest of hearts requires Glad hours of the lesser kind.

The calm and the peace of mind JThat are found at his own hearth fires. jln friendships and flowers and mirth gathers (ho joys of earth. TUESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1929. OUR STEEL APPETITE. Yes.

this is the Age of Steel. Our civilization is built on More ami more, our coiriorts and luxuries as well as car working power depend on tells the story. Last year we used 959 pounds of steel per capita in this country. That is nearly half a ton for every man. wcunan and child of us.

How did we do'it? Look around, make a list of everything made Retrospective (terns From The Herald of 35 and 15 Years Ago. January 8, Little son of Mr. and Mrs. J. T.

Wolf. May avenue, dangerously ill with diphtheria. Charles Breene winner in potato race at the skating rink. Work of setting out frees at Fourth of steel used in your home and office jWard school grounds is completed. and factory, in transporting you and Edward Hoenig and J.

E. Fault rc- your gouds" and you'll soon to their studies at the University REAL DANGER LIES IN COMPLICATIONS Extra Precautions in Guarding the Health Are Necessary After an of for Its Treatment. N' By KOYAL S. COPELAND, M. D.

United States Senator from New York. Former of Health. Hew York City. "ATUKE planned the chest so that the heart and lungs might be protected against accident. Placed deep in this cavity and remote from Uio outer world, these vital organs are rarely involved in disease and then only by extension from fairly remote parts of the anatomy.

The lungs are suspended within a space sup- rounded by chest-bone, ribs and They are by a closely fitting tissue, called the "pleura." This same material lines the inside of tha cavity. Between this and the pleura-covered lungs is an empty space. just enough moisture is provided to permit the lungs, when they are filled with air, to slide over the che i st walls without friction. It is an aelmirable arrangement, allowing deep breathing without consciousness of the inflated air cells. Unfortunately, we are so situated that we cannot escape upsets in Nature's wise plans.

Amon? other ailments we are liable to have an inflammation of this delicate membrane. Then there is trouble. The slippery membrane becomes sticky. One membrane, instead of sliding over the other as it should, may become attached to it. Some part of the tissue covering the luntrs becomes adherent to the lining of the.

ribs. The disease which causes tills DR. COPELAND. to get an idea of the way steel enters into our lives. --Only during- the unr yea: 1 was this consumption surpassed.

War takes more steel tnan anything else. And in the wastage of manufactured steel is naturally far greater than in peace. of Pennsylvania. Tony Daub brings in fine string of hcrned dace, hooked in Oil Creek, near Hvdetcwn. January 8, 1914.

Death of Mrs. Charles Cannell. aged 70, at home. North Martin street. Miss Clara Leiplein gives pleasant It wastes pretty fast now.

though, in surpl ise pflrtyi lhc occn sion bc ns hcr friction, rust, breakage lescence of equipment. and obso- birthday. Ereedtown church sheds fall under Fortunately steel is the most plenti- we ght of 1 vy limv 1 Death of Mrs. David Pulton, aged C5 ful of our metals. Yet it won't last years, at home, South Drake street.

forever. The saving fact is that, Kelly returns to Bucknell uni- the iron ore deposits melt away, after visit with parents. draw more and more heavily on our aluminum resources, which seem inexhaustible. WHEN WE ALL TALK ALIKE. Prof.

Muyskens of the University of Michigan believes that in 25 years the people of this country will all talk alike. That is, as far as the sound of their speech is pronunciation and accent. The agency Daily Lesson In English By W. L. Gordon.

tnrbanco in the normal action of the UIIIRS is called "pleurisy." The t'onn I have described is sometimes "dry pleurisy." But It rarely stops here. In all probability the disease will progress. Then there Is a marked Increase in tho Quantity of fluid in the chest. The doctors speak of this accumulation ol fluid as an "etCuslon." This may bo BO great as to crowd the lungs, actually compressing them so they cannot be filled with air. In one Conn this effusion consists of a straw-colored fluid.

In another form tho pleural cavity Is filled with pus. Then we have "empycma." You can well believe that a large accumulation of pus within tho client is n. serious matter. There Is dan- KLT of general blood-poisoning, with rupture of the lung or cuest wall. Pleurisy conies on with chill.

lever, cousb and pain In the chest. Tho pain is very severe. It is a cut- tins, stubbing, sharp, most distressing pain. Every breath token increases tho asony. The fever runs to 101 or 102 decrees, or more.

It continues for a week or ten days. Difficult breath- ins anrl hard, dry cough are always present. In a favorable case the fluid Is gradually absorbed. The fever declines und after five or six weeks recovery is quite complete. Rest in bed.

strapping the chest with broad strips of adhesive plaster to lessen tho movement In breathins, und the giving of appropriate medi- cines, will hasten recovery. If the effusion is extensive, it may be necessary to puncture the chest wall to' drain away the Quid. This is the simple story ot a. most uncomfortable but, fortunately, not particularly serious disease. It ia necessary in every case, however, to guard the health for some time after recovery from the acuto symptoms.

Answers to Health X. Z. am Inclined to be stout but my legs are not developed rubbing them with cocoa butter be of any benefit? Exercise would be most brisk -walking, dancing, jumping, skating, swim- sdl brins about improvement. M. G.

treatment Is advised for hay fever? Are there any sections in the East where this trouble Is minimized? examination of the nasal passage will disclose whether or not there is an obstruction or catarrhaJ condition causing the symptoms. Serum treatment should be helpful if the trouble is merely due to Irritation, caused by some flower or weed. Seashore is perhaps locality where there is an absence ol flowers and grasses to any great extent. Nwripanti COMMENT row than is Free Press. possible You can tell a deer from another hunter.

When you pepper a deer with shot, it never Emp- WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: Do not for this transformation is to be the; say, "He gave me a boost." This--is a vulgarism. Say, "He assisted me," OFTEN talking movies. If so, the elocutionists now teaching oration Pronounce a-inel-yo-ra-shun, Hollywood actors the art of stage first a as in "ask," as in "me," as speech are assuming a pretty big re- Jin "no." second a as in "ray," accent sponsibility. Hadn't congress, or the syllable. or sc EN MISSPELLED: scallop; also somebody, better look into the matter? American Education Association, When the new bridge across the Detroit river is completed, customs inspectors will be able to take care ol 5,000 persons an hour, some of whom will have to stop and explain where they got Free Press.

Since Mr. Hoover can't talk Spanish he is likely to maintain the bestr of the Coolidge conversational Muncie Morning Star. are we going to learn from these "gab films?" ion-don English? Bostonian? New York- ese? -Or-the dialect of Chicago or New pi-leans'or California? Or a new mingling'of. them all? Who shall'set the standard? Or is the standard just to grow up without, any setting? will probably take a good deal more than a quarter of a century to standardize our national speech. And that Is fortunate.

We're too much alike already in nearly every respect. Soon there' may not be enough variety to make travel interesting. SYNONYMS: impending, imminent, threatening. WORD STUDY: "Use a word three times and it is yours." Let us increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: IGNORAMUS; an ignortant person.

"I soon found him to be an ignoramus." Chicago complains that' the price of beer has increased from 10 to 25 cents as the effect of racketeering. Somebody ought to report such profiteering to the prohibition News. Look and Learn By A. C. Gordon.

PROSPECTING BY AIR. Geologist's are going prospecting for gold in northern Canada in up-to-elate airplanes: -The -days of slow progress in a covered wagon and of prospecting on foot are over. would be a task Of years traverse that northern wilderness in the old. ways and make any thorough search for gold. The geologists who will fly over the region armed with spy glasses and knowledge will recognize quickly certain rock formations and creek bottoms which indicate "heathen" or virgin gold.

-When they have mapped these places the pick and shovel men $dll be sent out. This modern method is very nearly as picturesque as the old. slow one. It should be less d'iscouraging. too.

With eliminated and scientific ac; curacy taking its place, false hopes will not be roused. 1. What heavenly body's movements control the tides? 2. Who said, "God's in His heaven, and the government at Washington still lives?" 3. What country was inhabited by the ancient Incas? 4.

To what family does the lion belong? 5. What great river is in New York state? unsworj? on ClassificO Ail. page. The days are gradually getting longer and by and by it will be possible for SALE OF MEN'S FINE OVERCOATS GOING ON FASHION PARK-ABLER ROCHESTER MICHAELS-STERN REGULAR $30 TO $50 ALL THIS SEASON'S GOODS $22. WOMEN'S COATS and DRESSES Reductions in All Departments Arrests for intoxication in'the United States during 1928 rose, approximately 50 percent, according to a servey of the Moderation league.

It begins to apc as if the Eighteenth Amendment is. just about the wettest thing; in the Times Dis- uatch. ALL MADEIRA UNDERWEAR 1.4—OFF—1-4 Bennett Davis Corner Spring and Franklin Streets The parched gents who are claiming that the recent election of Mr. Hoover was a great victory for prohibition might, but don't point out that all the dry grape growers; voted for Telegraph. "Hormones," as they are called, are announced at $3,000,000 a pound.

Many will wait for the January clearance, State Journal. China claims to have discovered gunpowder and is now ready assist in the discovery of some method for averting its Evening Star. A member of the Kansas legislature a person to put off more until tomor-1 wants a state law that wd.uld compel a man to take a state examination be- 'fore entering the banking business. Not a bad one that should be applied to a man before he could become eligible for membership in the Globe. BIBLE THOUGHT -FOR Bible ThoHfbts a priceless after yeaa.

will la GOD'S CARE OF THE Lord executeth righteousness and judgment for all that are oppressed. Psalm 103:6. HARK! HARK! THE DC'GS DO BARK! SALLYS SALLIES is a grain of comfort in knowing that Uncle Sam, too, is having trouble balancing his budget, and his expenses are going up. That is. until you remember that this makes more for everybody else's budget.

Now thatJMr. Durant and Major Mills told, everybody how to enforce the Volstead act, somebody should tackle Uw job from the other end. Tell everybody bow to stop drinking. automobile turn-over that makes tbe motor industry one of our greatest tot thtvswne automobile turn-over we read iibout in Monday morning mwipftpers. of rUw modernistic art remind at painfully of the of war Muny ii swjitloivs in fntlicr's footSK'WS, Try Herald Want Ads for Quick Results.

HERE NOW! 1-2 OFF ON ALL LADIES' CLOTH AND FUR COATS AT GOLDSTEIN'S GET OF DANDRUFF BY USING Cnticnra Noap ASSISTED BY Cuticiira Ointment SOLD Soap 2Jc. Ointment 25c. and 50c. Talcum 25c. Sample cacbfrtt CuUcura," Pept, BF.

AJtiUdcn, SUCCESSFUL METHODS FOR COMBATTING FLU AND COLDS Follow These Not Fool With a Tried Safe Methods Look out for mild colds that one best and simp- in the head and throat. Don't let them get down into the chest and lungs. Don't expose yourself to damp or wet weather. Don't go out if you are feeling sick. Influenza, grippe, pneumonia or other serious sickness often come from THE DANGER Cold, "Flu" and Pneumonia Germs lest treatments was to take a steaming hot cupful of Bulgarian Herb Tea.

Why take any chances, why not be prepared to fight off your cold or "flu?" The right thing to do now is to go to your druggist, get a box of Bulgarian Herb Tea. Kill off your cold. Take it steaming a week. It will heat up'the chilled i.blood, increase the "circulaticin arid rid the bowels and intestines of poisons and multiply by the millions and attack germs Every family -will iiria Bulgar- the weak and the strong alike. Watch out for colds, they weaken your resistance.

The greatest danger lies in that "simple cold." Kill that cold quickly. It is of vast importance to clean out the entire intestinal tract, upper and lower bowels regularly. Keep the kidneys well flushed and freshen and strengthen the blood. Experience of 1918 The experience of the 1918 epidemic ian Herb Tea (purely; vegetable) a real blessing to have -on hanfl- in this time of need. Keep 'your system clean all' winter.

See' druggist Your health perhaps may depend upon taking this simple precaution. cents. If you of bad cold already, watch' out A cupful of is your protection against Taittftcks. I Adv. GOOD INTENTIONS DO NOT PROTECT YOUR FAMILY'S FUTURE YOU MUST MAKE A WILL LET US GUIDE YOU d)U (City SnuU 010.

OKI Pa..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Titusville Herald Archive

Pages Available:
44,641
Years Available:
1865-2008