The Seminole Sentinel (Seminole, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 10, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 26, 1921 Page: 3 of 4
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THE SEMINOLE SENTINEL
20 PER CENT DISCOUNT ON
ALL TIRES
Tube Free With Every Casing
Now is the time to equip your car with new casings
and avoid tire troubles through the hot summer
months. We have a complete line of Lee Puncture
Proof and Racine Tires.
Expert Inspection
When your motor is not running right, or when
something else is wrong, then is the time to drive
over and let us locate the trouble. Our expert re-
pairman can oftentimes save you lots of trouble and
inconvenience.
Repairs At Lowest Prices
And when repairs are necessary, you will find that
we not only save you time but that we can save you
considerable money. The motor is the vital part of
your car and you will find that it pays in the long
run to have it overhauled by an expert, responsible
mechanic.
INSIST UPON GENUINE FORD PARTS
1
SEMINOLE GARAGE
PHONE MO
SERVICE CAH
POSITION AFFECTS THE LUNGS
A COMMON COMPLAINT
Why Persons in Poor Condition of
Health Are Unable to Sleep
While Lying Down.
--
In certain conditions of unhealth
persons breathe comfortably when
fitting, but cannot breathe comfort-
able lying down. Three English phy-
sicians explain this in the Journal
of Physiology by showing that lack
of oxygen causes shallow, quick
'breathing.* this again causes uneven
<'ventilation of the lungs. The re-
cumbent posture tends to accentuate
any irregularity in the expansion of
’ the lungs.
There are patients who have an
‘abnormally great drain of oxygen in
I lie systemic blood, and the oxygena-
tion of the blood in the lungs is in-
efliciently carried out, therefore the
blood is not sufficiently oxygenated.
TVh:'n they lie down the shallowness
of their breathing lends to decrease
this already insufficient oxygenation;
thus they suffer.
The Journal of the American
Medical association remarks’ that
corsets will help to increase this dif-
ficulty by hampering the expansion
of the lungs.
JUST AN OBSERVATION.
We can't understand why young
folks want to go up in an airplane
to get married. They can stay oil
earth and fall out quick enough.
LIVE UNDER Y. W. C. A. RULE
French and English Girls Working In
France Are Housed Like Their
American Sisters.
French and English girls working
in the offices of the American army
in Montoir, Tours, Brest and Paris
during the next few months, will be
billeted with the American Young
Women’s Christian association.
These girls are organized into the
army service corps and will be re-
sponsible largely for the clerical
work necessary in completing the
records of the American army over-
seas.
The girls at Montoir, 100 in all,
five in barracks. Those in the other
cities live in houses which the Y. W.
C. A. will secure for this use.
As the work so closely resembles
signal 'vrps work, Miss Vera Shafer,
who was director of that branch of
overseas work, will be in charge. The
plan for the management of the
houses is modeled after that of Ho-
tel Moderne, where 30 French girls
who worked in the American offices
at Tours were housed under the di-
rection of Miss Sarah Watson. The
house was run on exactly the same
plan as Y. W. C. A. signal corps
and hostess houses, and was a great
success, despite protests of many
French women that girls of their
nationality could not be allowed the
same freedom that American girls
were allowed.
ONE OUT OF A MILLION
Build What
You May
We Have the Material
Shingles, Sash, Doors, Glass,
Paints, Wall Paper
LUMBER
Fence Post, Stays, Eclipse Windmills,
Windmill Tower Material. Tanks,
Cypress Trough, Lime. Cement,
Brick, Nails, Staples, Etc.
#
Mammoth Lump and Giant
Nut Coal
Higginbotham-Bartlett Co.
E. R. Smith, Local Manager
R. R. Station, Seagraves, Tex. P. 0. Blythe, Tex.
r
The Old Reliable!
The Dallas
Semi-Weekly
Farm News
You get Good News and
the most reliable.
You get up to-date market
reports. You get the
latest foreign news. You $
get suggestions as to poul-
try and livestock ou the
farm, and you get the lat-
est farm news, and valu-
able suggestions as to how
i to farm.
Semi-Weekly Farm News
and the Seminole Sentinel
1 year
$2.25
Physician—Do you ever have any
trouble with your stomach?
Patient—Yes, doctor, getting it
comfortably full.—Boston Tran-
script.
WHEEL-MOUNTED DOG SLED.
Snow and ice are not perpetual in
Alaska, popular belief to the con-
trary, and while dog sleds are com-
monly used during the colder
months, they are of no value in the
summer, when the ground lacks its
covering of white. This latter fact
led a resident of the territory to in-
vent a conveyance to be drawn by
his dog team during the warm sea-
son. A sled of Indian design was
mounted on four small bicycle
wheels, and a steering column and
wheel from an automobile were con-
nected to the front pair. Five dogs,
hitched in the usual manner, draw
the wheel-mounted sled. The inter-
esting vehicle is illustrated in Popu-
lar Mechanics Magazine.
She—I’d like to ask you a ques-
tion.
He—Ask it, dear.
She—Am I the only girl whose
money you ever loved?—New York
Globe*. ‘
Magnolia Products
Are Best
Magnolia Safety Oil for your stove will give entire sat-
isfaction-try it, and be convinced.
Fill your car with that dependable Magnolia gasoline
if you want the best. A trial will convince you.
MAGNOLIA PETROLEUM GO.
CALVIN STARK, v\gt. PHONE 8H SEMINOLE, TEX.
THE SERIOUS OBJECTION.
The Dog Dealer—We don’t keep
them. Mexican hairless dogs haven’t
been in vogue for some years. But
your wife will like this beautiful
Japanese spaniel.
The Customer—Sure, she’ll like
it. But she’ll use my comb and
brush on the mutt.
THE STRAIGHT OF IT.
The Indianapolis French war
bride was heroically striving to mas-
ter the intricacies of the English
language. Slang especially mysti-
fied her.
“I cannot understand your
tongue,” she said to her husband, a
former member of a famous Indiana
regiment. “Before tie jeuner you
have taken me to buy bonbons on ze
Circle. You have ask-ed ze man
where is ze store. He has told you.
Then you have demanded, ‘Is that
straight?’ He has said ‘Yes.’ Ze
bonbon shop was not straight, for ze
Circle made it curved. I am
not understanding.”—Indianapolis
News.
NOT RICH, BUT—
“They’re in very comfortable cir-
cumstances.”
“What do you mean by ‘com-
fortable circumstances?’”
“They can afford to have all the
every-day necessities which are now
selling at luxury prices.”
CHANGED CIRCUMSTANCES.
“I thought you said you wouldn’t
mam him if he were the last man
rij) earth?”
‘•’So I did, but I had no idea then
; that lie would strike it rich in the
oil business.”
CLOSE ASSOCIATION.
“The prima donna has decided to
divorce her latest husband.”
“On what grounds?”
“She says he insists on sitting in
the same box every night when she
sings. As a result they have been
thrown together so much that he has
gotten on her nerves.”—Birmingham
Age-llerald.
IN HIS OPINION.
“You board dogs, eh?”
“Yes.”
“How do they behave as board-
ers?”
“Well, they don’t growl as much
as some other boarders I have met.”
—Louisville Courier-Journal.
SUITABLE REMEDY.
“Did you see where a federal com-
mission complains of a dental
trust ?”
“If they frame a law to meet that
ease it ought to be one with teeth in
it.”
Let Us Order
That Magazine
For You—
Can Save You Money
on Any Magazine
Published.
Come in and get our prices
before ordering.
The Sentinel
PHONE 78
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Stone, Harry N. The Seminole Sentinel (Seminole, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 10, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 26, 1921, newspaper, May 26, 1921; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth577608/m1/3/: accessed May 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Gaines County Library.