The Syracuse Journal, Volume 29, Number 2, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 7 May 1936 — Page 3

THURSDAY, MAY 7, 1036.

Si Up erne er w ;e © Science Service.—WNU Service.' Soundness of Sleep Matter of Position Not Time of Night One Cup of Coffee Promotes Restfulness * ' CHICAGO.—The wealthy but sleepless Hindu who is reported to have offered SIO,OOO for relief from insomnia might End it to his advantage to get in touch with research workers at the University of Chicago here who are investigating the problem of sleep. Not that they have found a remedy for insomnia as yet, but their investigations, which make use of a radio loud speaker and various special clocks, among other apparatus, are shedding new light on the factors that affect soundness of sleep. Depth of sleep is connected with changes of position of the sleeper’s body rattier than with the actual time as previously supposed. Norman IL Cooperman and Laurence Pal it* report from their studies, which have been conducted under the .general supervision of Dr. Nathaniel Kleltman. associate professor of physiology at the university . One cup of coffee taken before going to bed will cause a person to sleep with fewer changes of position than usual, but several cups will Induce unusual restlessness, previous research at the university has shown. Effects of Alcohol. Alcoholic liquors taken before going to bed will cause sleep with a marked decrease in movements during the early hours, but many more movements during the later hours of sleep. The temperature of sleepers drops about one degree during the first hours of sleep and rises one degree during the last hours. Sleepers change their position less in the first half of the night than in the last half. They average perhaps a movement every ten minutes for the whole night consuming by these movements a total of two to six minutes. The sleep experiments have been carried on In special rooms in the physiology laboratory and in one of the unl-“ verslty dormitories. How Sleepers Are Tested. Among the various devices attached to the bed of the subject is one which flashes a light tn another room where the experimenter is located when the sleeping subject makes the slightest move. The experimenter, who had wakened himself by alarm clock at. say, 2 a. m.. and has waited until 2:IS a. m. for a motion by the subject, then turns on the loudspeaker, softly at first, then at varying Intensity. When the subject awakens, he pushes a buster which sounds In the experimenter's room to Indicate that he is awake.-The experimenter then notes the intensity of sound necessary to awaken * the sleei>er, the time of night, and the time that elapsed between the motion of the sleeper and the stimulation by sound. Other devices attached to the bed of the subject record the extent and dura- > tlon of changes of position by the - sleeper. A system of weights and pulleys connected with the bed-springs records on a graph above the bed the extent, or amount, of motion of each change in position throughout the night. The duration of each movement is recorded by a device which starts a red clock and stops a yellow one at the beginning of each motion, and the end of the motion stops the red clock and starts the yellow one again. X. third clock remains running throughout. All three clocks operate by electricity. By comparing the number of minutes and seconds gained by the red dock as against the time at which it was set, and lose of the yellow clock as against the third clock which remained running, the exact time consumed by each motion can be computed. Mental Ailments Act Like Brake to Overworked Minds TORONTO.—“When the problems of life adjustment become too great for the individual to solve, mental disability may step in as nature’s way of calling a halt,’’ Dr. C. M. Hlncka. director of the Canadian National Committee for Mental Hygiene, told the Royal Canadian < Institute. Viewing mental disabilities from the psychological standpoint as the result of Inadequate methods of meeting the demands of life. Doctor Blocks pointed out that “such mental ailments may in reality be beneficial as they represent nature's way of working toward a cure by giving the individual a breathing spell before be makes another attack upon Ms problems. Os course,*’ he added. “such mental disorders, while protective to a degree, may go too far and finally end la the permanent disruption «g the personality. "Th* psychological approach to the study of mental end nervous maladjustments is proving Its value not only in leading to a better understanding of these disorders but also of many other physical aliments. It seems quite possible that medicine is entering upon a new phase of progress where as much attention win be given to the its adjustment as has to the past bee? give© to go urn and physical proc* mmnl» . -

Murdering “In-Laws” Considered Legal by Purari Tribe New Zealand Natives Have Weird Customs A CODE of honpr that inquires a man to murder his male inlaws and an efficient secret service system form part of the weird story of the Purari tribe in the interior of New Guinea. Only discovered within the past five years, the hundreds of thousands of savages, previously living with no contact with the outside world, have some of the most unusual customs of any tribe ever found. Almost two years ago, Columbia university sent Dr. R. F. Fortune to New Guinea to study the Purari. Doctor Fortune is still in Papua—in the interior—where the savages live. But his reports have been made public by Mrs. Ruth F. Benedict, assistant professor of anthropology at Columbia. Doctor ’Fortune is the first ethnologist ever to go into the Purari region. Spy System Maintained. But a spy system is maintained by the Purari to notify them of deaths of men in the prime of life in neighboring villages. Such a death Is a signal for hostilities to open. Death of a virile male is kept secret, if possible, and the corpse hidden. When a spy brings word to his village that such a death has taken place in a neighboring town, rejoicing begins. Interestingly enough, Purari warfare 'is conducted entirely between adjoining villages. The Inhabitants are related by Intermarriage. Both before and after fighting, warriors attend one another’s feasts, wakes, and dances. Sometimes the war is bloody, but more often, it is not Doctor Fortune describes two murders of “in-laws” he witnessed. “In the first case.” the ethnologist reports, “two brothers-in-law deliberately led their own sisters* husbands into an ambush, so making widows of their own sisters. “In the second a man was ambushed by his adopted son's elder' brothers, their kinsmen, and some men of another village commissioned by them at the usual price of three or four ovalum shells and three pigs.” In Purari battles. Doctor Fortune says, the women—related to one side by blood and to the other by marriage —are permitted to pass freely between the lines and stay with each side as long as they tike. The women resent the custom of murdering in-laws, but the men pay little attention to their objections. Sound Telescope “Sees” Fog-Obscured Ships and Airplanes WASHINGTON. — Battleships concealed behind smoke screens, airplanes hiding above clouds, in fact all sorts of objects, such as airports, buildings, mountains whether enveloped in fog, smoke, clouds, or total darkness, are made visible, It is claimed, by a new kind of “telescopic apparatus" described In a United States patent recently granted here to a Dallas, Texas, inventor. The telescope is Intended to penetrate through visible obstructions by transposing a reflected noise picture of the concealed object Into a halftone, ghost-like picture visible on a ground glass screen. Sound which readily penetrates smoke, clouds, fog and darkness, would be literally made to see. The invention intended to make this possible Includes a sound generator which looks, like an anti-aircraft searchlight, Rut unlike the latter it projects a beam of high frequency sound waves produced by a siren. The operator sweeps the sky or horizon with the sound beam as he witches a translucent screen before him. When the sound beam strikes anything a picture of it shows up on the screen. Vibrations Recorded. The picture is obtained thia way: When the sound vibrations strike an object, for example, a battleship, they are deflected and modified in varying intensities according to the shape and structure of the ship. These deflected vibrations are picked up and focused on a light controlling panel. The diaphragm in each cell vibrates with an intensity corresponding to the reflected sound waves focussed upon it. -This vibration varies a narrow beam of light admitted in the chamber of each ceil through one of the transparent strips. Here the MghCbeam as it bounces back and forth between diaphragm and mirror, is deflected and spread until it reaches the second slit to the mirror through which It is projected on the ground glass screen. Upon striking the screen the light beams emitted by the cells are diffused In proportion to their deflections. Thus, each cell forms an element to a sound picture of the battleship which is transposed into a corresponding visible picture element With the simultaneous projection of these elements on the screen, a composite, halftone picture, somewhat coarse, of the battleship becomes visible. R obot Painter Climbs WASHINGTON. — A robot smokestack painter which climbs up and down metal smokestacks under its own power, is described in a United States patent recently granted here to a Mlsrfteippi inventor. The device looks like a tour-wheeled scooter. It has an electromagnet which holds the robot fast to the stock, four tlon wheels,’ end an electric motor which drives the tractton wheels. In tog the paint, and a paint container.

CLUB IF .wP / /y “The Turn of a Wheel- . By FLOYD GIBBONS Famous Headline Hunter. WHATEVER you might say about gambling, it takes nerve to do it. The best of the professional card sharks are men .who can keep a poker face and never bat an eye when they’re betting their last nickel. Yes, it takes plenty of nerve to gamble with your money —but it takes a doggone .sight more courage to gamble with your life. I’ve got a yam here from Adventurer William Joseph Brinkley, of Brooklyn, N. Y., and unless I’m no good at all at reading between the lines of a story, Bill Brinkley is one of those lads who can keep a cool head and figure out the odds even at moments when his life is in the greatest of peril. If Bill hadn't had that faculty he wouldn’t be here collecting hit ten and Joining the Adventurers' club today. For back In 1915 fate tested out those iron nerves of hiu—and It was one of the most rigorous tests fate ever dished out to a guy, at that. Iron nerve or no Iron nerve. Bill admits he was pretty scared when it happened. Maybe “pretty scared” Isn’t quite the expression for it either. When It was all over Bill's,nerves felt more like putty than iron. Bill Had a Prosaic Job Checking Freight Cars. It was down In the town of Atlanta, Ga., where he was working as an interchange clerk for the Central of Georgia railroad. Bill was just a young lad then, and his Job consisted of checking up on cars that were to be switched from one line to another. It was during the June peach season and there was a lot of traffic on the line. The railroad yard was full of box cars and it kept both Bill and his partner, Willie Baker, on the Jump most of the time. The first Job In Bill's routine was to get the seal numbers on the cars as soon as a train entered the yard. Bill would got them on one aide while his partner, Willie, got them on the other. They were supposed to wait for those trains at the break-up track, but sometimes they would walk out to meet them and ride In on the first car. That's what they were doing when Old Lady Adventure swooped down and got Bill In her clutchee. They had walked out to meet the “Special” and the Special was late that night, so, without realizing It, they walked a little farther than they had intended. They met It quite a ways out of the yard when it was going at a pretty fast He Threw Hie Body Over the Rail Just in Time. clip. Willie caught the first car, but Bill let three or four go by before he could make up his mind to jump for IL He caught the fifth car, and since he was supposed to check the other side of the train, he started to climb over the top. But Falling Under a Train Isn’t So Mosaic! But Old Lady Adventure didn’t ever Intend that Bill should get. to the other side of that train. As he reached for the top grab-iron with his right hand the one he was holding with his left broke away from the side of the car. His body swung out from the side of the car and started to fall As Bill fell he clutched at the top grab Iron. Ho caught It, but hla weight broke the hold. Hla body twiated—ewung around between the cars. Then, as he dropped, his left leg hit the draw head. He ewung head downward and fell—under the train. “I lay flat on my back," says Bill, “and watched the bottoms of the cars whiz by only a few inches from my face. The wheels ground 0 past only a few inches from my body on either side. I lay for a moment utterly unable to move. Then my mind began to race. Underslung Hopper-Bottom Cars Meant Certain Death. “In a flash I had figured everything out. I had been lucky enough to land between the tracks —not on them. As long as I did not move I was perfectly safe unless —and there was the horrible possibility—unless there was a hopperbottomed coal car In that train. The hoppers of those cars are only a few Inches from the ties. If one of them hit me I would be mangled—mashed to a pulp—spread along a half mile of track." And there was a darned good possibility that not one but several of these hopper-bottomed cars were in the train. In long trains like the one Bill was under It was the custom to put short, empty coal cars between the refrigerator cars to cut down the aide away. Bill knew that. Hia mind was slicking on all four In hla moment of peril—taking In every consideration. There was Just one way out—a perilous way—but something told Bill it was a better risk than waiting for one of those murderous hopper bottoms. He began watching the wheels as they clicked by—gauging their speed and their distance. Courage Plus Quick Thinking Saved Bill’s Life, Where two care were coupled together the wheels were only about four feet apart, but between two wheels on the same car there was a space of forty feet If he could throw hla body over the rail as the front wheel passed, and get across before the rear wheel hit him—he’d be aafe. There was no time to lose, but Bill gauged those moving wheels carefully. He nerved himself and tensed every muscle. Then, as a front wheel flashed byf he started to roll. He hit the rail and started to go over. Would he get across to time? Bin didn’t know because his eyes were shut He didn’t dare look at the thing he was doing. Then, all at once, he felt himself go over the top of the ralL He opened hla eyes and saw clear sky overhead. He bad made It! “Then.” says Bill, “came the reaction. I began trembling all mmr and got sick as a dog. And to this day the mere sight of a hopper-bot-tom coal car can give me a bad case of chilis." ©—w»u Sarrica.

Primary Cause of Decay of Teeth Still Unknown Teeth may decay In spite of a completely adequate diet, it to shown by experiments at the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia university. Tests lasting three years contradict the theory, widely held la both scientific and toy circles, that tooth decay to caused by a dietary deficiency. •The practical significance of this finding to that, while we know it to possible to reduce the amount of caries or dental decay by Improving the diet, we now know that we cannot prevent decay completely by this last method,* Dr. Theodor Rosebury, assistant professor of bacteriology, who conducted the research, writes to Stientlflc American Magazine. “The reason for thia to that a deficient diet la a modifying influence rather than the primary cause of caries, which still remains virtually unknown." Doctor Rosebury tod live generaA«ka Visited to Nortb Scientists and ornithologists from all over the world Join with thousands of Americans who annually visit the Island of Bonaventure to view the great natural bird sanctuary where murrea. razoi-Wled auks, dwell to company with 300,000 other members of the feathered family. The birds share toe tourists interest with a geological phenomenon, famed Perce Rock, tn which the sea has worn a flOToot arch, chipping away each year from 3QO to tons : tff smiwi ■ - rock-

SYRACUSE JOURNAJL

tions of rats “a fully adequate diet." Over a period of three years, the rats continually developed caries. “This reßult," he explained, “checks with human experience to the extent that we know the disease occurs In human beings healthy to all other respects and giving evidence of adequate nutrition. We can produce caries more rapidly with diets deficient In mineral elements. But no matter how adequate we make the diet, dental caries to still produced.” To Drop Ibi to Drop Up Idiomatic phrases to the English language are the despair of foreigners; the phrases so rarely make sense If the words are considered separatelyThe idiom, “to drop In," meaning to happen In, as for a chat, to well established, and to an accepted part of onr speech. "To drop up* to not generally accepted, possibly because of toe otter incongruity.—Literary Digest A Fto* Motto That was a floe motto found fat toe pocketbook of aa aged and wealthy merchant wbo had been accidentally drowned: “If your hands cannot be usefully employed, attend to toe caMlvatlon of your mind." First Mwterw IwipWVSaßt The alx-year molars, which are toe flrst permanent teeth to grow, are sometimes called toe keystones of toe • "vT' ' ’’ ' ;

IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL SUNDAY I chool Lesson By RSV. P. B. fi’txwatkh. D. o. Member of Faculty, Moody Bible Institute of Chteaso. ft Weateru Newspaper Union. Lesson for May 10 EFFECTUAL PRAYER LESSON TEXT—Luke 18:1-14. GOLDEN TEXT—God bo merciful to me a sinner.—Luks 18:13. PRIMARY TOPIC — How Two Men Prayed. JUNIOR TOPIC — When Prayer Changes Things. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC—How Should I Pray? YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC—How Shall We Pray Effectively? From first to last the books of the Bible teem with the language and spirit of prayer. Prayers of every type are found In the Old Testament—personal confession and petition. Intercession, and especially praise to Jehovah voiced In private and public prayers. The present lesson offers definite instruction by a great Teacher. I. “Men Ought Always to Pray" (v. 1). Prayer la necessary to spiritual life. What breathing is to the physical body prayer Is to the spiritual existence. Men ought to pray under every variety of circumstance; In time of sorrow and burden, for strength to endure; In time of Joy and success, for grace to behave aright Prayer ought to be persistent even when the answer Is not Immediately recognized. “All men pray at times,” we are told. To the Christian alone belongs the faith-filled and persistent prayer. God hears and answers prayer, even when we do not understand the mysteries of delay. il. The Urgent Prayer of a Widow (w. 2-8). The picture here is of a helpless widow who was being cheated out of her property rights, coming to a godless judge for redress. Her only means of getting help was persistency to declare the justice of her claim. He compiled with her urgent request, not because he feared God or man, but to get rid of her. The point here Is not that God Is like this unjust judge, that be can be teased Into compliance, but rather the teaching is by contrast If through persistence the Judge yields, how much surer Is the help of a merciful God for the elect who cry unto him day and night, The believer’s prayer is to a covenant keeping God. This is why the truth concerning the coming of Christ Is of such meaning. The church should pray for the fulfillment of God’s promise, and not be disheartened and discouraged, as are some (II Pet 3:4). Though many may despair, we should be assured that genuine faith will abide and that the divine promise concerning the coming of Christ will be fulfilled. 111. The Prayer of the Proud Pharisee (vv. 9-12). L He took a striking attitude (v. 11). The Jewish custom was to stand while praying, but the word “stood” Implies the assumption of ostentation. He was self-righteous and trusted In himself. 2. He prayed with himself (vv. 11. 12). He was merely soliloquizing, pretending to thank God, while really complimenting nlmself. He congratulated himself upon his morality (v. 11). He claimed to thank God that he was not as other men: extortioners, adulterers. unjust, or even as the publican standing afar off. One who has been kept from the grosser sins ought to thank God, but should not set himself above his fellow men. as though the virtue were his own. He congratulated himself for bls religious merit (v. 12). He fasted twice a week and gave tithes of all he possessed. He thus Informed God that he did even more than was required. Implying that God was under obligation to him. IV. Ths Praysr of ths Humbit Publican (v. 13). How great the contrast in the prayer and spirit of the publican! He did not stand with ostentation, but tor very shame could not so much as lift up his face to heaven, but smote upon his breast, a sign of anguish and despair, and cried “God be merciful to me a stoner." That this heart-cry la Indeed the heart of the lesson Is indicated from the fact that it la cited aa the golden text. V. Christ's Testimony (v. 14). Christ makes it unmistakably evident that the attitude and petition of the publican meets with hla favor. Pharisees of every age. for their pride and self-righteousness are rejected of God. The spirit of the publican expressing Itself In the prayer of a penitent, will today %eet with the commendation, “This man went de wo to bls house Justified, rather than the other.” The heltover who weighs thoughtfully the meaning of this lesson will find much encouragement to prayer. He must be justified, knowing his sins forgiven in answer to penitential prayer. He must pray in spite of a natural Impulse to faint, to neglect the practice of prayer; be ought always to pray, and not faint He must learn the meaning of Importunate prayer; not to overcome God's reluctance, for be is ready and willing to answer, but for self- discipline and enkindling of faith. Having as a basis for prayer uttered the cry of the publican, he will not be guilty of the boastful utterance of the Pharisee. Right and Tran Set out In the very morning of your lives with a frank and man’’ determination to took simply for what to right and true In all things. ... Thia is the only way to know God’s will and do It You may not find It at once, but you have set your face In the true direction to find it The Peace Within Let not thy peace depend on the tongues of men; tor whether they judge well of thee, or ill, thou are not on that account other than thyself. Glory of God If I make the seven oceans ink, if I make the trees my pen. if I make the earth mv uaner the glory of God ran-

A Colorful Picture for Your Wall, Using Simple Embroidery Stitches

Pattern SSS7 In honor of spring your house deserves a colorful new wall-hanging such as this, which depicts roses and lilacs in their natural splendor. You’D enjoy embroidering it—lt’s so easy even a beginner will be won over to this delightful occupation. The lilacs are to lazy daisy—the roses in satin and outUne stitch; and you needn’t frame it—just Une it and hang it up. In pattern 5527 you will find a transfer pattern of a hanging 15 by iwffFiiffHTWfiffffirffmrThe Mind LOWELL Meter • henderson • Beil Syndicate.—WNU Service. mmnKSHSnmnSsn The Famous Men Test In the following test there are ten problems. In each one a man’s name to given, followed by the names of four professions, vocations or avocations. Cross out the particular occupation or pursuit in which the man is or was most famous. 1. Horace Greeley—capitalist, artist, editor, composer. 2. Nelson Eddy—composer, polo, statesman, actor. 3. Wesley Ferrell—actor, baseball, football, artist. 4. Norman H. Davis—actor, raDroad, religion, diplomat. 5. Vergil—historian, poet, philosopher, painting. 6. Nicholas Murray Butler—statesman, Communist, educator, banker. 7. Willie Macfarlane—Jockgy, boxer, golfer, tennis. 8. William E. Borah—t ck, senator, representative, judge. 9. James Montgomery Flagg—author, actor, artist, composer. 10. James Russell Lowell—artist, poet, composer, explorer. Answers 1. Horace Greeley, editor. 2. Nelson Eddy, actor. 3. Wesley Ferrell, baseball. 4 Norman H. Davis, diplomat 5. Vergil, poet R Nicholas Murray Butler, educator. 7. WilUe Macfarlane, golfer. 8. William E. Borah, senator. 9. James Montgomery Flagg, artist. 10. James Russell Lowell, poet Simple Method to (vet Rid * of Hitch-Hikers on Poultry Poultry lice and feather mites, like barnacles on a ship, spend their lives “hitch-hiking" in the feathers of your poultry, slowly but surely impairing health and production. However, of all poultry afflictions, this to perhaps the easiest to eliminate. A little nicotine sulphate tapped along the roost and then smeared into a thin film will quickly rid the flock of lice and feather mites. It to a wise precaution to do this at regular intervals. It to a simple and economical Insurance against the presence of lice on poultry.

Tin FIRST QUART Tells the Story Out of the experience of thousands of motorfats has been developed a simple method of comparing oil performance ... the “First ' Quart” Test. It fa just a matter of noting ET zvucaa how many miles you go after a drain-and- U r* /* refill before you have to add a quart. If you BA d (Mli/lA f are obliged to add oil too frequently, try the IJAk [j “First Quart” Test with Quaker State. See if you don’t go farther before you have to add that tell-tale first quart. And, the oil that r •tands up best between refills fa giving your motor the safest lubrication. Quaker State Oil Refining Company, Oil City. Pa. Rafail Pric0...354 pte Quart

20 inches; a color chart; material requirements; Ulustrations of all stitches needed; directions for making the hanging. Send fifteen cents In coins or stamps (coins preferred) to The Sewing Circle, Household Arts Dept, 259 W. 14th St. New York, N. Y. Turn Gadget and Motor Runs on Half Dozen Kinds of Fuel An invention allowing a standard make motorcycle to use any of a half dozen mineral or vegetable fuels with only a slight hand adjustment was demonstrated by Stefan Witkowski, Polish engineer living la Geneva, Switzerland, before some fifty technicians and reporters and an Italian observer. The omnivorous motorcycle consumed gasoline, gas oil, kerosene, fuel oil. and alcohol, doing about fifty miles per hour. The inventor says the motor will run Just as well on soybean oH and even operate on olive oil, though Its low caloric value makes the latter uneconomic. Witkowski also has installed bls Invention on the motor of a French t standard automobile which has run, he says, more than 60.000 miles. The Invention suppresses the carburetor, substituting for it what is termed an “injector,” working with a pump. Out of the Misty Past Grains of rice hermetically sealed, perhaps by accident,inside a Buddhist Image known to have been made 1,000 years ago, sprouted a few days after being planted recently. ■■ . j RELIEF IN 1 MINUTE! Apply New De Luxe m I ‘ 1 Dr. Scholl's Zino-padsE) ((I on any sore or sensitive I /—xW •pot oo your feet, toes, beeb, I / or on CaUoom, Bunions, or \ f Crime and you*U I have instant re- 1 XI (j lief I They stop 1 XVAM shoe friction and I I pressure; prevent • ■ |Z —\ tore toes and blis- i / f \ 1 ten; ease tight shoes. Also \ / Flesh Rolor; waterproof. \ I Sold everywhere. Ethiopia’s Saint St. Tekla Halmanout is the great Ethiopian saint. /jW4O. I KILLS INSECTS I ON HOWIES • FRUITS I VEGETABLIS & SHRUBS I Dtrnand original tealed ■ bottlen, from gotir daaUr 9t,V¥ NORTHERN MAMMOTH. SELECTED, State Inspected Strawberry Plante. Beavers. Blakemores. Dunlaps 26 -26 c: UM)-60e: J6O-lI.U. GOB-B.lt). Mastodons. 26 86c: 100-11.16. Latham raspberry plants, mosiao free, bearinc a*e. 26-S1: 100-BLB6. All prepaid to destination, aauic VAuav numskv . eauu, wise. | CLASSIFIED ADS | Basor Blades. Blue steel, double edse, money back guarantee. 100 for 11. C’ntveraal Sales. ITI N. State. Chieaao. Illinois. Live Distr. Wanted. Exclua. ter. Automo. dr Ind. contacts. Repeat prod. 1350. B. H. AUea. Railway Exehanxe Bide.. Chieaco. LOSE 1 POUNDS WEEKLY Safe. Inexpensive. Writs DR. WENDT CANTON. 8. DAK.