The Syracuse Journal, Volume 24, Number 30, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 19 November 1931 — Page 4

~'■ 1 ' ’W' / .- Come, ye thankful people, come, ' • ■" Raiae the aong of harvest-home; | ' £sjL ■ • AU ia safely gathered in, ! J Ere the winter atorma begin; < .* < . ' God. our maker, doth provide . For our wants to be aupplied: . Come to God's own temple, come, ■ .. s .-• Raise the song of harvest-home. i ‘ ' / / . ■ * * *' ’■Of a > 1 * 1 *■ ‘ * ■A-.LJ h Sbßi®? /■ '\ ■ B* wMHHf Z/ LxW IwW/PC Ew§> ' ®Ep

a—- —— is Made Day National Persistent \\ oinan Editor United the Nation in Giving Thanks. - Ms Kt Kt The Impression seems to prevail In pome* quarters that the Women of the Vnlted States never accomplished anything worth while before-they were given the right to vote. Talk of that character Is A million miles from the truth. The women of America bare always been doing tine. big. worthwhile things, 11. O Bishop writes Id the National Republic. ■ At this particular season of the year It Ta> appropriate to tell about the woman who. after twenty years of patient effort, succeeded tn having an annual Thanksgiving celebration In this country observed on the same day by all of the.people. > The name .of this woman .was Mrs. •Sarah Jesepha Ha!.- IVw wmu n. ei " tbvr before' or since, have SCCOUb pushed more big things for the bettermeat of men and women. Probably few persons of the present generation ' card of Chis gifted woman. She was born at Newport. N. 11.. October 24, Ifs-s, and died In Philadelphia. April 30. 1879. She was not a college woman, but ytas taught by tier mother. In 1813, at the age of twentyfive. she married a lawyer. David Hale, a brother of Salma-Hale-. fiSterian arid at one time a member of Congress from New Hampshire. Nino years later she was left a widow with five children. She was a genuine, old fashioned American woman,„and did not da mot for governmental or individual at<L She was *qutte'content to go to work. In 1828 she became editor of the Indies’ Magazine, which had recently been started in Boston. She successfully edited this publication until 1837, when It was merged with GMey's l-adles' Itopk. Slie continued with the latter publication until 1577. Much Work Well Done. Editing a magazine is usually considered a pretty big job in itself. Mrs. Hale, however, seethed to find time for many other things. She organised the Seaman’s Aid society In Boston, which Is the parent of Mmllar organtaatibna now existing in most ports, life completion «>f the Bunker Hill monument was also partly due to the efforts of this little woman. She persuaded the women of New England to raise $30.000. for that purpose. The plan of educating women fo< medical and missionary service In foreign lands was inaugurated byMrs. Hale. She devoted a number of years to this effort, finally succeeding through the organization of the Ladies’ Medical Missionary society of Phlla-

Thanksgiving Day and the Self-Willed Young . f : k Turkey (a Story of Tragedy Containing a Moral) 4

imAm A"A-ahs-ad^—oAk—e*»—«*ak__aAfe M «dto There was a turkey-gobbler once. And, oh!But he was proud; His manner was quite arrogant. His voice was harsh and loud. He strutted up and down the yard. He pecked the baby's toes; And in a fit one day he bit The nurse maid on the nose. His father—and his mother, too— Were very much distressed; They railed at him and wailed at him Prom the parental nest. His unde said, “That Little brat Is getting far too perky!” He was. indeed, they all agreed An impudent young turkey. His grandpa, who was very old— And. therefore, very clever— Was much too horrified to scold (Which happens almost never I) He said, “I’ve lived for ten long years Respectable and docile .. , M His grandson tweaked his ancient ears.

I delphia; and the Woman's Union Missionary Society for Heathen Lands, in New York.Throughout her editorial work Mrs. Hale urged the practical advancement of women, advocating their employ-, ment as teachers mid the establishment of seminaries for their higher education. Thanksgiving in 1777. It was In the early forties that Mrs. Hale began her.campaign for making Thanksgiving a national holiday and Its celebration on the same day all over the country. It was then the custom for different localities to observe the occasion on whatever- day happen'd to strike tbe'r fancy. Following the surrender of Burgoyne nt Saratoga In 1777, the Continental congress had appointed a committee to recommend Joint thanksgiving for "the signal success lately obtained over the ' enemies of the Fnited States.’’ Ln 177 S Thanksgiving was set for Deeember 30, most of the states concurring in a uniform date, but there were other Thanksgivings in May, June ahd Deeember as the various states saw tit to order them. It was not until January, 1795. tleit Washington was authorized by coil gres-t to proclaim tt national Thanks- , giving, which he did for February 19. For twenty years Mrs. Hale wrote editorials in her magazine, and personal to governors and Presidents, in behalf of a national Thanksgiving day. Her efforts and patience were rewarded in Is,VI. when Lincoln saw the wisdom of her suggestions and decided to adopt the plan. From that day to this Thanksgiving has been celebrated by the entire nation the last Thursday of November. After the 1795 day of Thanksgiving in February, the festival was skipped ■ for’twenty years. In 1 SIS, when peace with Great Britain followed the War of 1812. congress resolved that 3a Joint committee of both houses wait U|x n the President of the United Slates and request that he recommend a day of Thanksgiving to be observed •by-the people-of the United States with religious solemnity and the offering of devout acknowledgments to God for his mercies and in prayer to him for the continuance of his blessings." Long Lapse After 1815. The day fixed for observance was April 13, 1815, but thereafter Thanksgiving as a national celebration fell tty the wayside, not to be revived until Mrs. Hale’s campaign moved President Lincoln to act In 1533. - Mrs. Hale's persistent efforts had wfavor for the idea In most states by the time the Ulvll war had arrived. Some states already hat! begun the observance of a fall Thanksgiving day nearly ten years before the national day In November was set aside. New York was one of these, and her representatives in congress tried repeatetlly to induce that body to name a day. Ln

ifc wi And said. “You poor old fossil.” The summer passed and autumn came, And still the turkey grew; For every pound of flesh he gained A pound of badness, too. He chased the chickens, young and old. His voice was loud and mocking— He never did as he was told. It really was quite shocking! At last his father came to him One cold November morning. He said, "My child, I’ve come today To give a dreadful warning . . . A year ago this very month Your recond cousin Mabel Was taken from us suddenly And served upon a table.” “It breaks my heart to see you prance ■ Before the public eye; Your mother is a timid soul And I was always shy . . . This is the month of dreadful doom!

1863 there were actually two Thanks- i giving days, the northern states having observed one in August for the victory at Gettysburg. Following the assassination of Lincoln. Mrs. Hale feared the holiday mk’htjie allow'd to drop. She urged the necessity of keeping the national fall festival as a "Thanks day for all good things given us by the Heavenly w|rL Mrs. Sarah Josepha Hale. Father.” Mrs. Hale wrote to ministers all over the country, urging them to help. The First Congregational church of Washington responded to Mrs. Hale’s plea, and sent a delegation to Presl- • dent Andrew Johnson requesting him to issue a Thanksgiving proclamation, j He accepted and the Presidents since bare followed bis example without be Ing petitioned, the states issuing sep- ! arute proclamations in keeping with the national edict. Mrs. Hale wrote many books and poems. The most famous of her poems were "Mary’s Lamb." "The Light of Home” and “It Snows." Perhaps the best known of her works Is “Woman s Record,' or Sketches of All Distinguished Women From the Creation to the Present Day.” first published in 1853. and enlarged In 1869. She went on writing verses and jingles for children, articles and novels for grown persons and editing her magazine until shortly before her death in 1879, at I which time she was ninety-one. Thanksgiving Let us pause a moment in our daily deliberations and give thanks for the many blessings we have received. Thankful for .oup health. our good friends, the rewards for honest toil, and the community and nation who-e prosperity is our ever-present concern. Let us be thankful of the right to be alive, no matter how hard the road of life may be; and It will help us to know that the sunshine always comes after the storm and the rainbow of prosperity is just ahead.—"Emy” Smith. Remember, child, remember! And though you strut the whole year ’round. Stay quiet in November. “For though your ways are wild and rough Beyond a doubt or question. Alas! I fear you're hot too tough For human indigestion!” The turkey-cock he stamped his feet. And laughed both long and loud; He would not listen to advice . . . He was so young and proud. But as he turned to stride away His feathers froze with fear, For in his path (oh, day of wrath!) The cook was standing near. He tried to scream, he tried to run ... . Alas! He was too late. And the young sinner went to dinner, Ah, me! . . . upon a plate. MORAL And the moral of this story, dears, Is very clear to you: Don’t be too proud nor gobble loud. Or you’ll be gobbled, tool

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL.

I STAGE COACH ii ;! •' TALES - ■ ii iißy E. C. TAYLORji The Gun Girl THE Gun (Jiri, a little more daring, perhaps, but not so quick on the trigger as the gun girls of the large cities today, made her appearance along the National pike as early as 1834. She was accompanied by four men, and it was only the courageous I conduct of Samuel Luman, stage coach driver, that this highway girl I and her highwaymen aides were re- ■ pulsed. Samuel Luman was one of the best ; known and'best equipped drivers on the old National road. He was a giant in stature, and reputed to he i fearless. He began driving a stage j coach in 1832. On August 12, 1834. his coach was waylai"d in the mountains between j j Piney Grove and Frostburg, Md. It was night, and Luman's teams almost i ran into a rude obstruction of logs, stumps and brush that had been placed across the road. The spot was lonely, and surrounded b.v a thick growth of pine trees. Luman was unarmed, and the only i gun among the passengers in the stage I coach was an old. brass pistol, which, however, was not brought into play. j As the stage coach reachetl the barrier across the road. <>ne highwayman stepped forward, seized the bridle and I ordered Luman to descend from his seat and surrender the mail and j' I money the coach carried. Luman rej fus<si. '•What do you want ?*’he temporized. ‘ We are traders," the highwayman • answered. “I have nothing to trade," said i Luman. "I am satis.'led with mv trap-, ■j pings and not desirous of exchanging l them." The highwayman holding the lead < team thereupon called out to one of J his companions, hidden in the trees by I the roadside to shoot. Luman. , The robber leveled his pistol at the , stage coach driver and pulled the trig- ; , ger. There was a snap, and Luman I i owed his life to the fact that the night air was damp and the powder would not explode. 1 While the highwayman holding the horses was turning the lead team around so that it faced the opposite | direction from the stage coach, the i girl called out from the darkness of ! the roadside, and ordered another highwayman to bind the driver. i one of the robbers mounted part way to the driver s seat, and wrapped the reins tightly around Luman's arm. Luman saw an advantage, and started violently lashing the highwayman with the ends of the reins. The beaten robber backed off. and as he tild so. the horses still attached to the stage coach leaped forward, broke ' from the. lead team, and leaped over the barricade on the road. The coach came within an ace of capsizing, but Luman's skill with the reins kept it on its wheels, and the coach and its passengers flew into Frostburg. Luman told the authorities that the. bandits he saw were till heavily disguised. He did not get a look at the gun girl or'two of the highwaymen with her who had remained in the dark shtidows of the pine trees. The , robber who held the bridles of the lead team, he said, wore a long dress like a Mother Hubbard, and the one who bound the reins around his arm wore a white vest, dark pantaloons and a black mask. They were never i captured. When the attack was first made on the stage coach, Luman told the passengers <>f the impending danger and asked their assistance, but they crouched jn their seats and made no i effort to help him or defend themi selves. They were all western merchants trawling east to buy goods, and between them they carried $60,000 in cash. When they reached the Highland house in Frostburg, of which George . Evans was proprietor, the grateful passengers took up a collection with i which to reward the brine stage I l coach driver. It was so ludicrously I small, though, Luman said later, that ' he indignantly refused it. I “They were a mean set." was his | i comment. ( Luman gave up driving stage ; coaches in lx"4». and for several years ! after that interested hitnSelf in detective work and punishing robbers of the mail coaches that rattled along the National road. His life was threatened so frequent j ly. however, that finally Lucius W. i Stix-ktoh. president of the National I Road Stage company, feared for Lu man’s safety. Luman then moved, east of Cumberland, where he continued his activities, and until recently lived in Uniontown, Pa. I .a. IJII. Western XewnMier t'aion.) Good Advice President Lawrence Lowell of Harvard. who recct.rly declared that there Is too much of the barbaric Roman and too little of the simple Greek spirit In modern Sport, was being praised by a group of. writers at the Algonquin. “In my undergraduate days," a successful playwright said. "I wrote a great deal of poetry. Tons of it got In the varsity magazines, and some of it even got in the Century and Harper’s-. “When President Lowell bade me farewell on my graduation his last , words to me were: “ ‘Good-by, then, and remember this —your best friend is the waste basket*" ■ , Adverti«emeat* as a Guide The advertisements In a newspaper are more full of knowledge In respect to what is going on in a state or community than the editorial columns are. —Henry Ward Beecher in “Proverbs From Plymouth Pulpit” Bearing Others* Misfortunes I never knew any man in my life who could not bear another’s misfortunes perfectly like a Christian.— Pope In “Thoughts on Various Subjects."

Keep Close 1 for Hog Cholera Owners Warned to Be on Lookout for Dread Disease. Because hog cholera is more prev- I alent in Minnesota than it has been for the last two or three years. Dr. C. P. Fitch, chief in veterinary’ medicine at the Minnesota university farm, | warns hog owners whose herds have ! i not been vaccinated to be on the look- , out for the disease and to call their local veterinarians immediately if anyi thing appears unusual in the health of their hogs. Failure to come to the i trough-and eat, or lack of vigor, are j indications that should be watched for. Prompt vaccination of all hogs not already immunized is especially recotui mended. Hog cholera is not easy to diagnose, he says. The early stages do not give ! distinctive symptoms, of even definite ■ j lesions or diseased parts, on autopsy. > It is highly important, however, that I an early diagnosis be made, as it is | prompt action that saves the day. i Speaking of the cholera situation in Minnesota. Doctor Fitch says: j "Hog cholera is very much like I death or taxes. It is always with us.-i The disease, however, is more commonly present during the late summer or fall months. Like other infectious diseases, it goes in waves. The last ! considerable epidemic of hog cholera was in 1924, This year cholera is not as widespread as in 1924, but there } is more in Minnesota than for the I last two or three years. Hog cholera j ’ is* hot a curable disease. It is. how- | ever, preventable. . The difficulty is i 1 that a farmer or hog raiser gets along ! very nicely for two or three years ■ without immunizing his pigs, and therefore thinks that hog cholera nev-' i er will strike him. Then is when it ' hits and hits the hardest. The only safe procedure is to vaccinate each year." *" _ ■ ' . New Ideas in Farming I u Confront the Juniors j- Juniors of today have problems to solve quite different in many ways, from those which faced their . fathers and grandfathers. An authority with the advantage of a broad outlook writes: “We have entered upon a new era i in the farming business. The boys and girls of this generation will have new farm problems to solve. They cannot make fortunes out of the rise in the value of land as many of their fathers did who bought land thirty and forty years ago at ten to thirty Collars an acre. Nowadays the important quest! 'n is not how much the farm will sell for in ten or twenty years, but what it will produce this year, and the years following. The. successful 'farmer of the future’ eantrot hope to succeed without keeping the best live stock and adopting the best farm methods.” Plant Culture It scarcely seems necessary to say not to attempt to feed plants with tea, coffee, milk, castor oil. oysters, raw meat scraps or dish water, but letters received almost daily state this thing is being done. When plants need water give fresh, clean water. When fertilizer is need-* ed. apply proper fertilizers, well-rotted animal manured, bone meal or specially prepared fertilizers which any seed store can supply. Fork this into the top soil or dissolve it in water and pour on the soil when the soil is moist, otherwise the roots may be injured. Do not get liquid manure on the plants, but pour it on the ground around the plants. Confine the Calves Where two or more calves are be ,ng fed skimmilk and are not confined in stanchions during the feeding period they often develop the habit of 'sucking each other's ears or bellies. ! Persistent sucking of heifers may | later result in congested quarters and | permanent injury. Not only should ! the calves be confined to stanchions while having their milk, but also until i tfieir faces are dry or until they have I had an apportunity to eat some ground i feed. Special steel stanchions are I built for calf pens which are ecommi- ■ leal to install and easy to keep clean, j —Wisconsin Agriculturist. Cake-Fed Calves Profitable Calves wintered on North Park hay I plus three-fourihs of a pound of cot- I tonseed cake per head daily put on almost three times as much weight :ts a similar lot of calves fed North Park hay only during a calf-wintering experiment at the experiment station of the Colorado Agricultural college, Roth lots of calves were exactly the game age, even to rhe number of days, it was emphasize<Lby 11. B. (island, assistant in the animal investigations. :n announcing the results of the wintering test. — and Ranch. Hens Work in Winter Hens went off the job late- In the fall and didn't come back until spring before Mrs. Jennie Wells. Livingston county. Missouri, built her Missouri poultry house. The house was completed late tn 1929 and Mrs. Wells put between 150 am! I*s hens in it. They started to lay early in December and laid all winter, spring and summer. Mrs. Wells says it will not take many years for winter eggs, laid by her flock, to pay for the house. —Capper s Farmer. Line Fence Posts The proper distance between line fence posts will depend to some extent on the live stock to be turned, but also very much on how It is put up. Where heavy, well-anchored end posts are used and the fence’ is well stretched, is is usual to put the line posts one rod apart and this makes a good fence for almost any live stock. Barnyard and lot fences should always be built of heavier material and the posts are usually put not farther than 12 feet apart. —Wallace's Farmer.

* —IMPROVED*****^ 1 UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL SUNDAY I chool Lesson (BY REV. P.,8. FITZWATER. D. D.. Member of Faculty. Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.) <©; 1931. Western Newsnaper Union.) Lesson for November 22 PAUL IN ROME GOLDEN TEXT—I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me. LESSON TEXT—Acts 25:1-12; 28: 16-31. PRIMARY TOPIC—PauI in the Greatest City of the World. JUNIOR TOPlC—Paul’s Life-long Ambition Fulfilled. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC—A Prisoner Pro’claims the Gospel in Rome. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPlC—Paul's Ministry in the World's Capital. G', [ I. Paul Appeals to Caesar (25.1-12). In order td -appreciate this action on the part of Paul it is well to get a synthetic grasp of the experiences which forced him to make this appeal. 1. His trial before Felix (Acts 24). The officials of the Sanhedrin were represented by Tertullus, a Roman barrister. He brought a fourfold i charge against Paul: a. A pestilent fellow (v. 5). b. An inciter of rebellion (v. 5), c. The ringleader of a sect (y. 5). d. A profaner df the temple (v. (5). To this charge Paul replied in a clear and dignified manner; setting forth the facts of his life, and demanded that his adversaries bring proof of their accusation. Felix was greatly moved . b.v Paul's testimony concerning Christ, j but postponed decision, expecting to ' receive a bribe from Paul. 2. Trial before Festus (25:1 12). Festus yvas the successor of Felix. I Two years had elapsed, but the Jewish hatred had not abated. Paul’s foes in Jerusalem sough.t to have him brought there for (rial, intending to lie In wait ano kill him on the way. Festus. willing to please the Jews, purposed to semi him to Jerusalem for trial. For this I’aul rebuked him. declaring that he very well knew that he was innocent. Seeing that it was impossible to get justice at the hands of Festus, he made use of his right as a Roman citizen and appealed to Caesar. Festus was taken b.v surprise and found himself in an embarrassing position, as he was unable to explain to Caesar as to why an innocent man should go to Rome for trial. 3. Trial before Agrippa (25:1320:32). This was occasioned by the visit to Festus of Agrippa and Bernice. Lpon their arrival, Festus told them of his perplexity. Therefore, they expressed a desire to hear Paul. Paul gladly made his defense- before them and appealed to them to accept Christ. Agrippa felt the claims of Christ upon him but was unwilling to yield, flow sad that a man should be so near to eternal life and yet lost! 11. Paul’s Journey to Rome (27:1-44). 1. The ship (v. (>). it was In a vessel of Alexandria sailing from Myra to Italy. 2. The company (vv. 2. 37). Two of Paul's friends. Aristarchus and Luke, were permitted to go With him. Besides these three there were 273 in the ship. 3. The storm (vv. 14-20). The ship made little headway on account of unfavorable winds; Paul advised- that they winter in . Fair Haven (vv. 9-12) but his advice was unheeded. In verses 14 to 20 we have a most graphic description of the storm. Tempestuous winds as well as soft breezes await God’s faithful ones. 4. Paul's serene faith (vv. 21-20). God is as near to his faithful ones on a stormy sea as in the quietude of the home. Paul was not only calm, but hade the people be of good cheer (v. 22). He promised them safety though the ship would go to pieces. 5. The ship's crew safe (vv. 27-4-1). All turned out as God had promised. liP spite of a broken ship, brutal soldier-. ami an unfaithful crew God’s word was true. 111. Paul’s Ministry in Rome (Acts 25:1531). 1. Welcomed by the brethren (y 15). Thev met him at the Appll forum, a distance of about forty miles, from Rome. This was the first time he was thus welcomed, 2. Paul's lenient treatment (v. 1G) He was allowed to hire a house and live apart, being guarded by a soldier. 3. Conferem-e with the leading Jews (w. 17 22). He allowed himself only three days to rest. His object was to have a fair understanding with the Jews. He explained .the reason for his being there. The result wa< that the Jews took neutral ground, hut expressed a desire to hear what Pau) could say in defense of a sect which was evil spoken against. 4. Paul expounding the kingdom of Cod and persuading concerning Jesus (vv. 23-31). He pointed out a real kingdom, the . Messianic Kingdom, with the historic Jesus as the King. The kingdom to Paul meant a definite reign of a definite person, not merely an improved state of society. This he showed from the Scriptures, He went through 'he Old Testament, carefully showing the kingdom teaching to be in harmony witn the law and the prophets. The Truth Urged Jesus urged the truth. He sought to get into men's thinking. He sought to win men to it. We need to urge it, too. Little can we do to get Jesus actually Into the life of mankind until we discover further the practical ethic of truth. Nor can we reach great experiences in life until truth is set going, and until it displaces some of our customary narrowness and selfishness. —Herald of Gospel. Liberty. Bible Never Outgrows There are many books in my library behind and beneath me. They were good in their way once, and so were the clothes I wore when I was ten years old; but I have outgrown them. Nobody ever outgrows Scripture; the Book widens and deepens with the years.—C. H. Spurgeon.

MercolizedWax Keeps Skin Young Get an ounce end use ss directed. Fine particles of sseU , akin perl oft until all defects such as pimples liver I spots, tan and freckles disappear. Skin is then soft and velvety. Your face looks years younrer. Mercolised V. st brings out the hidden beauty of your skin. To remova wrinkles use one ounce Powdered Saaolito d'ssolved m one-half pint witch hazel. At dru« storse. Western Devices Find Their Way Into Tibet Until Colonel Younghusband's expedition from India climbed and fought its way into Lhasa in 1904, Tibet was most effectively closet! to the outside world. Its very physical inaccessibility made it easy for its hardy and truculent inhabitants to> maintain their cherished isolation, while the currents of world progress swept by the mountain gates of the mysterious and forbidden land. However, we hear now that many of the devices of western civilization are beginning to find their way into the country, surreptitiously but surely. Seltzer bottles that make wh«er go uphill and safety razors to take the place of tweezers are among the innovations. Also the women are reported to be adopting, the lipstick, though soap has not yet been introduced. And since with the coming of modernity time becomes a factor In life, wrist watches have been seen In the lanes of Lhasa. Whatever the obstacles, trade will find away to satisfy widespread human desires, and contraband satisfactions are being “bootlegged" into Tibet much as they are in other lands. I 5> - 7) (I * i When TEETHING mates HIM FUSSY One of the most important things you can do to make a teething baby comfortable is to see that little bowels do their work of carrying off waste matter promptly and regularly. For this nothing is better than Castoria, a pure vegetable preparation specially made for babies and children. Castoria acts so gently you can give it to young infants to relieve colic. Yet it is always" effective, for older children, too. Remember, Castoria contains no harsh drups. no narcotics —is absolutely harmless. When your baby Is fretful with teething or a food upset, give a cleansing dose of Castoria. Be sure you get genuine Castoria with the name: gAS TO RIA Bright Boy I “Do.you know enough to be usefu) in this office, boy?" “Yes, sir; I left the last place-,be-cause the boss said 1 knew too much." Grandstand Hideaway Klukker—Do you enjoy baseball, Mr. Rukker? Rukker—No. I only go to get away from the bill collectors. Ocean “Tramps” A tramp vessel is' one which plcke up a cargo wherever possible. Miserable Backache? • in Heed Promptly Kidney and Bladder Irregularities A nagging backache, with bladder irregularities and a tired, nervous, depressed feeling may warn of certain disordered kidney or bladder conditions. Users everywhere rely on Doan’s Pills. This time-tested diuretic has been recommended for 50 years. Sold by all ■ druggists. ■ Doan's umne For a Beginner Self-respect will do to begin with, but self-abnegation is the only consummate virtue.—Round. ■M»t« aacK B lai or m«s- tasatr ■ ’ IM anTIMia—JI / F-Aiy OIX SLSNInato. lm|pfinMta«inaNl Al«o excellent for Temporary Deafness and Head Noises when due to ron<eMtion caused bv colds and FluA. O. LEONARD. Inc. 70 Fifth Ave., New York City W. N.’u7^HiCAG6 f _ NO. 46-1931.