Jasper County Democrat, Volume 10, Number 25, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 21 September 1907 — OUR NATIONAL DANGER [ARTICLE]
OUR NATIONAL DANGER
Time to Cry a Halt Before a Panic Comes. The business spirit is crushing out the siweeter element of hbtne life. We are in danger of a great commercial decline, because men, as a whole, think only of getting wealth, There are thousands, both men and women, who do not take time to eat properly. They rush through life, and as a result we have an age of indigestion, nervousness, irritability, sleepless nights, and morose disposition. With the discovery of Mi-o-na tablets there is no longer any excuse for one to have ill health from stomaci) weakness. Mi-o-na strengthens the walls of the stomach, stimulates secretion of the digestive juices, regulates the liver and restores muscular contraction to the intestines and bowels, so no laxative is needed. Sick headaches, palpitation, bad taste in the mouth,, yellow skin, irritability, coated tongue and melancholy are a few of the many distressing results of indigestion. Mi-o-na never fails to dispel all these troubles. B. F. Fendig sells Mi-o-na in 50-cent boxes, and guarantees to refund the money if the remedy does not give complete satisfaction.
Where the Change Comes. ■We often hear some neighbor say, “Things were not that way when I was youi/g.” But they were. It is not the things that have changed, but ohrselves. Our prim and precise aunt may make a fuss because piece strolls down to lape In the summer twilight, but all tbe same she would have jumped at a chance to do tbe same thing thirty years ago. When he came along she went Mother grumbles because we sit out on the porch and talk a little late, but she forgets how the old man used to call her down good and hard because dad stayed pretty late when bd was sparking her. We think the circuses are bummer than they used to be and the clowns are not half as funny. But they are. The winters get just as cold and the summers just as hot The flies are as thick and the mosquitoes bite just as hard. About the only difference la that in the flowery days of our youth we didn’t have troubles. Now we do.— Osborne (Kan.) Farmer.
