Walkerton Independent, Volume 51, Number 20, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 15 October 1925 — Page 6

Walkerton Independent Published Every Thursday by TH K IND EPKN D KNT- N KWB CO. Publishers of the WALKERTON INDEPENDENT NORTH LIBERTY NEWS LAKEVILLE STANDARD THE ST. JOSEPH COUNTY WEEKLIES' Clem DeCoudree, Business Manager Ch axles M, Finch. Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Year ...,.(LBO plx Months. ........................... .90 Three Months .80 TERMS IN ADVANCE Entered at the post office at Walkerton. Ind., as second-class matter. Night brings out the stars; and trouble brings out the character. You never have to advertise a mistake —your friends do it for you. “Most of our educators are women.” That’s no news to married men. The war gave us many new words and a brand new definition of the word “loan.” About the only interest in life some men have is the kind their money brings in. The mall carriers have one consolation: Literature is getting lighter every year. Some debating club might argue whether golf or radio made Ananias each a Kar. Recipe for trimming a sucker: । First find somebody who thinks he knows it all. Science can do practically everything for the modern house but make a home of it. The fastest double play on record is Oil Stock Circular to Reader to Waste gasket. Nobody cares much what you believe so long as you don’t Irritate him by discussing it. Mix tin and copper and you have bronze; mix tin and brass and you have a road hog. The scientist who tells us that fish talk has said nothing about their reputation for truth and veracity. It isn’t typists alone who are able to increase their incomes materially by learning the touch system. A test is being made of New York air. There is an opinion that much of it will be found to be hot. Rule for success: Keep your ears open and your mouth shut Rule for eating watermelon: Vice versa. A dub golfer who recently took 14 putts on the first green of a course has renamed It Missing Links. Still, if the business end of a saxophone were only a little larger It wouldn’t make a bad flower-pot When this younger generation is old, । what do you suppose it will tell the next generation that it didn’t do? Pulling teeth is now a mathematical problem, a dentist explains. Yes, just a mere matter of extracting the root. Whatever been’”-' of the old-time swimming hoi» where a boy was O. K. in the one-piece suit he was born In? It isn’t the labor-saving Invention that plays the mischief with our well- j being but our labor-dodging proclivities^ The motto "Safety first” is still respected by earthlings, but It means absolutely nothing to an exhibition aviator. Having tried all kinds of modern music available, the public eagerly awaits radio transmission of what the Eskimos are singing. It must be fine to be rich enough to ; make leaders’ of charitable work content with your moral support. A contest was. held in New York j to determine the most popular food ' dish. Rhubarb got in on “Scattering.” In the old days there was nothing that corresponded exactly to the saxophone, unless it was the heaves. Keeping up with contemporary literature is like trying to chase a bee swarm—and it usuallj’ has the same results. More than fifty persons were killed in the United States over the weekend in automobile accidents, but some of them might have fallen out Os hammocks, anyhow. It just possibly will be looked upon with no little amazement in other sections of the country if the floating cake of ice from which a woman In Nome was rescued was the one the ice man brought. Relatives are people who come to visit you when the weather gets too hot for them to do their own cooking. Self-esteem : A state of mind, at Its lowest when the subjects returns from a vacation to find the firm has man- 1 aged to remain solvent. Swedish inventors have produced a building material that is Impervious to noise. This is what the times demand. with radios, phonographs, mechanical pianos, saxophones and family arguments. A London magistrate has decided that a Joke 15 years old Is public property. Does the gentleman mean to j Imply there are others? If a woman wears only a pound of । clothes at a time, why does It require ' the services of two large expressmen to lift her vacation trunk? London thinks France is able to pay both Britain and the United States about $50,000,000 a year. It looks as Jf France ought to be able to skin fool American tourists out of that much.

Hoosier News Briefly Told William R. Atkins of New Albany was elected president of the Regimental association of the Eighty-first Indiana, which was organized at New Albany for the Civil war, at the annual reunion. Punishment of criminals to protect society has been largely a failure. Dr. Max A. Blair, superintendent of the Central Indiana hospital for the Insane, told the state conference of social work at Vincennes. Three university presidents and the chairman of the Indiana budget committee are the speakers for the Indiana university alumni luncheon, October 23, at Indianapolis, during the state teachers’ convention. Clara Carl of Philadelphia, serving a life term for the murder of her husband, Frank B. Carl, and her father-in-law, Alonzo B. Carl, by poisoning four years ago, escaped from the Indiana women’s prison at Indianapolis. Two murderers. Clegg Payne of Gary, colored, who pleaded guilty to shooting his sweetheart after she had left him for another man, and Vincente Gomez. Mexican, who kilkd a friend in a quarrel over a suitcase, received life sentences from Judge Martin ) Smith in criminal court at Crown ) Point. Five men, all from Indianapolis, who are said to have admitted they were lying In wait on the side highway for liquor runners from Chicago, were arrested on the highway between Morocco and Ade by R. O. Dutcher, sheriff of Newton county. The men are charged with carrying concealed weapons. Harry Styner of Montmorenci, one time clerk of the state senate and widely known In Republican political circles, has been appointed first deputy of the state fire marshal's department at Indianapolis by Alfred Hogston, the new state fire marshal. This is the first appointment made by the new chief of the department. Mr. Styner succeeds John D. Cramer. "Achievements in the scientific field as related to medicine in the last quar- । ter century have lengthened human life several years,” said Dr. Thurman ' B. Rice of the state board of health, Indianapolis, at a session of the Indiana : state conference on social work at Vincennes. Strides have lieen made parr . 1 ticularly in the diagnosis, prevention and control of disease, he said. A prison warrant demanding the transportation of Morton S. Hawkins | of Portland, to Leavenworth. Kan., to 1 | begin his 15-year sentence, received In j Federal court at Indianapolis, was Is#bed by Albert S. Ward. United States district attorney. Hawkins has spent four months in the Marion county jail । since his conviction as a result of operations of the Hawkins Mortgage company. Although his twin sons were lost on the submarine S-51, sunk off Block IsI land, Frederick E. Techemaher of indianapolis. Is a strong advocate of the j navy as a training school for youths. | He visited naval recruiting headquar- : ters and said: "1 am proud that my sons were serving their country when they died. I think the navy is the finest possible life for any young man who wishes to travel.” Indictments charging conspiracy to commit a felony were returned against ■ D, C. Stephenson, Earl Kllnck and | Earl Gentry by the Marlon county , grand Jury at Indianapolis, which has been investigating a tire which dam- । aged Stephenson's Irvington home last I April. Stephenson Is now in jail awaiting trail on a murder charge In connection with the death of Miss Madge Oberholtzer of Indianapolis. The one-room schoolhouse is disappearing in Indiana and, according to j members of the state board of public i Instruction at Indianapolis, will be to- j . tally eliminated In a few more years. | Consolidated schools are gradually tnk- i i Ing the place of one. two and three- j i room houses of learning. As rapidly I as money is available, large and thor- ; oughly modernized buildings are be- ; s Ing constructed In every county in | the state. The stork was a more frequent vis- ' ftor in northern Indiana this summer ' i than in any other portkm of the state, । according to the state board of health j at Indianapolis. Thirty-one counties ’ had 2,091 births in July, or 21. S per j 1,000. Central Indiana counties ran ' ' a close second, with 2,052, 18.5 per 1,- । 000. Southern counties trailed with 1,- ! 117 births, but were second in rate per I 1,000 population, 20.3, making a total J of 5 ”60. James L. Bradley of Edinburg, has 1 been appointed acting assistant chief of the state motor police, it was an- | nounced at the office of Frederick E. , Schortemeier, secretary of state at Tn- ! dlanapolis. Bradley succeeds William Hamilton, who was suspended recently by Mr. Schortemeier. together with two other members of the force, who were arrested and convicted on a charge of disorderly conduct at Bluffton by authorities there. Andrew J. Jones, whose term as city i controller of Anderson would have ended December 1, became mayor of Anderson to fill the unexpired term i of Blanchard J. Horne, who resigned and took the office of city manager at Ft. 1 Tdale, Fla. For lio- first time In several days the New York Central railroad’s locomotive shops at Elkhart have been put on a full six-day weekly schedule Instead of five and a half days. Eight hundred and fifty employees are affected and the monthly pay roll Increased $20,000. With the final presentation of “The । Heritage,” the pageantal portrayal of ] the history of the Tippecanoe and the । Wabash river, before a crowd of more . : than 8,000 people, the centennial cele- ' bration of Lafayette and Tippecanoe ' county ended. William C. Mitchell, an Indianapolis attorney, was sworn in as assistant United States district attorney, following receipt of his commission from the office of Attorney General Sargent. Mr. Mitchell was burn at Martinsville and for a number of years practiced law in cities other than Indianapolis.

_ „ — ' ■ ■ Sr. 'Jf .. NBk ■ asnamuurnnxß f II -IM — : — g t M MF J Wt, iL Jnl I—Rescue of crew of Hudson bay steamer Bayesklmo from Ice floe In Ungava bay after their ship sank. 2 —Mrs. Gloria Vanderbilt, twenty-year-old widow of Reginald Vanderbilt, who Inherits the bulk of hla fortune of $7,000,000; 3—Wreckage of the Dixie Flier after two sections of the train crashed near Whorley, Tenn., one person being killed and fifty Injured.

NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENTEVENTS Aircraft Board Hears Col. Mitchell on Weakness of • America’s Air Defense. By EDWARD W. PICKARD t Y tITH SOU pounds of '‘ammunition” VV in the shape of documents and undaunted by his approaching courtmartial for insubordinate utterances. Col. William Mitchell appeared before j the aircraft board last week and repeated and elaborated on his charges that obstinacy and Inefficiency of high army and navy officials have rendered the United States utterly deficient In air defense. He read a prepared statement in nine sections, the main points of which are thus summarized : Development of air power has made it the chief weapon of national defense. navies and armies becoming subordinate and auxiliary to IL As airships can destroy any surface ships, the submarine becomes the backbone of the navy. The army, unchanged in constituent elements, will function us the last line of defense when the air and a*a forces have fulled to stop the enemy, or offensively only when con | trol of the air permits trnns;>ort of troops at sea. Anti-aircraft guns are ■ ineffective and always will be. crip- । pllng only a very small percentage of planes. The United States has no air forces worth mentioning and If in volved in war today would need from three to five years to develop an adequate air force properly equipped. ; : Great Britain could Invade America with a thousand planes In eight or ten ' days and a few days later would reach the heart of the country; and Japan could Invade America byway of Alaska. In future wars the nation losing con- ' trol of the air will capitulate to desolation by unrestricted air attack. An adequate air and submarine force would make this country invulnerable to attack, and the cost would be but a । fraction of that of the army and navy at present. Finally, the United States should have a department of national defense, comprising the navy, army, and air force, and a department of aeronautics, comprising military and civil aviation und aircruft manufacture. , The mission of the land, sea and air forces, said Mitchell, should be defI Initely stated by law. That is: “The army to be charged with the defense of all land areas; “The navy to be charged with the defense of all sea areas, on or under the watar beyond the control of missile throwing weapons from the shore or effective aircraft operations from shore bases; “The air force to be charged with the complete defense of operations and the aerial attack of all enemy targets I on sea and land.” To the self-asked question why the air service Is in such sad plight, Colonel Mitchell replied: "Because air matters are entrusted to the army and the navy which are handled and governed and dominated iby non-flying officers. They not only know next to nothing about aviation, but regard it merely as an auxiliary of their present activities and not as a main force in the nation's military equipment. Their testimony regarding air matters is almost worthless, sometimes mor^ serious than this.” Next day Colonel Mitchell continued his attack and criticized the navy for the Shenandoah disaster and the failure of the Hawaii flight. Then he was questioned at length by various members of the board and finally Chairman Morrow asked Admiral Fletcher of the navy and General Harbord of the army if they desired to put any questions to the witness. To the surprise of everyone, both declined to do any cross examining. Mitchell himself was evidently disappointed. ■ ■■ ■ IN THE naval court of inquiry at Lakehurst, Capt. Anton Heinen, former German Zeppelin pilot who instructed the crew of the Shenandoah, expressed the opinion that the wrecking of that airship was primarily caused by the failure of the officers In charge to heed danger signals that Federal Convicts Will Make Shoes Fort Leavenworth, Kan.—A $1,000,000 factory within the prison walls of the Fort Leavenworth federal penitentiary will begin making shoes for the men of the army and navy and federal institutions next January. One of the serious problems with which Warden W. I. Biddle has had to contend Is that of finding employment for his prisoners. The shoe factory will put to work 700 convicts now Idle.

were “shrieking out loud." Specifically lie blamed Commander Lansdowne, saying: "In my opinion the ship ran deliberately into the center of the : storm for at least half an hour after । danger signals had been shrieking out i loud. With the ship having sufficient ! power for steerage way, she easily ' could have got out of danger. I stand ready to prove this from the evidence presented to this court.” Captain Heinen criticized certain structural changes In the Shenandoah. an<l said he had heard from many members of the crew that they misI trusted the airship because of her con- ! dltlon. Lieut. J. B. Anderson, aerologist on the Shenandoah, testified that Commander Lanwlowne disregarded his advice to change the course. ANOTHER misfortune befell the navy |n the ramming and sinking of the submarine S-51 about twenty miles from Block Island. Strack by the steamship City of Rome, she sank Immediately and of her crew of 36 men only three were saved. Every effort to save the men Imprisoned In the vessel's hull wns made, but In vain. largely because of atomy weather and swift tides. After wveral days divers brought up the bodies of two of the victims, and operations to recover the others and to raise the submarine were continued Blame for the distressing accident has not yet been fixed. CnERMANY accepted the Invitation J of the allies to a conference on a security part, and this week the foreign ministers are assembled In Locarno, Switzerland, diacuaslng the terms of the proposed treaty designed to give lasting jwnce nt least to western Europe. The Germans sought to stipulate that their country should be purged of guilt for the war. but thia was firmly refused by England and France Probably the request and Its rejection were designed to satisfy the nationalists In both Germany and France. YA ISTINGITSHF.D statesmen from ' L' thirty-six countrie- are in Washington attending the sessions of the Interparliamentary union The conference wns o{>ened Thursday with addresses by Secretary of State Kellogg and Senator McKinley of Illinois and a response by Baron Adelswaerd of Sweden, president of the council of the union. Silly friends of various factions In foreign lands took advantage of the arrival of certain of the delegates to exhibit their silliness. For instance. Gen. Ricliard Mulcahy of the Irish Free State was mobbed, both at his landing in New York and on his visit to Philadelphia, by Irish republic sympathizers: and the Italian : delegates who are Fascists were attacked by anti-Fascist Italians in New Y ork. VO SETTLEMENT of the French ’ debt was reached because M. Calllaux was unable to offer terms that the American commission would accept, and the negotiations have been suspended indefinitely, the French mission returning to I’aris, However, a temporary arrangement was proposes! by Secretary of the Treasury Mellon and this was carried back by M. Caillaux for submission to the French parliament. which probably will agree to It gladly. This plan Is that France shall pay the United States $40,000,000 a year for five years and that at the expiration of that period the discussion of the definite funding of the debt shall be resumed. The sum suggested amounts to 1 per cent Interest on the total French debt with accrued interest. In reality the payments by France would be increased only $20,000,000, as she has been paying a like sum annually as interest on the A. E. F. war stocks she purchased In 1919. M. Calllaux could not commit himself on the American offer, because, as he explained, he was vested with full powers to reach a conclusive settlement but held no mandate to sign a temporary makeshift agreement. But he assured Mr. Mellon he would support the plan before parliament. Caillaux’s final offer, which was found unacceptable, was that France should pay $40,000,000 annually for the first five years, $60,000,000 annually for the following seven years, and $100,000,000 annually for the next 56 years, thus spreading payments over The men will be taught a trade; a small remuneration will go partly toward the support of their families and partly Into a fund at Interest, to be paid them on their release. The government will take a profit from production. The plant Is expected to turn out from 2,500 to 8,000 pairs of shoes dally when operating at Its capacity, but this will not be possible until skilled labor has been developed among the prison laborers. « When the peak of quality and quan-

68 years. To this was attached a "security clause" providing that France I might nt any time reopen the question i and attempt to show that the terms ! should be revised owing to her inca- । parity to carry them out. This was objectionable to the Americans, espe- j cially to Senator Smoot, ami rejection ; of the offer followed. Senator Borah । took a hand in the affair by going to the White House am! warning the President not to permit the American commission to grant to France easier terms than were granted to Great ’ Britain. Both he and Senator Smoot j told Mr. Coolidge there would be violent opposition in the senate to any such settlement as Calllsux proposed. Mr. Borah was highly displeased, also, by the makeshift plan of Mr. Mellon. MTCHTTCHERIN, soviet foreign • minister, balked In his attempt । to persuade Germany to stand with Russia against western Europe, is now said by Baltic diplomats to be trying to unite Russia. Poland and Turkey In nn nnti-Engllah bloc. He was In Warsaw recently and Induced the Poles to Instruct their delegation In Moscow to begin negotiations for a political agreement. This Is worrying the Baltic states considerably. Tchltcherln then went to Berlin to discuss a Russo Herman trade treaty. SECRETARY OF AGRUTLTT’RE JARDINE la getting tired of waiting for the Chicago board of trade to take «te;«« to prevent manipulation that causes wild price fluctuations I^ist week he Issued another warning, saying : “A failure on the part of the board to take these steps Immediately w|l! leave me no alternative but to Inaugurate action baking to suspension j or revocation of the designation of the Chicago board of trade us a contract market.* (■NOMMUNTBTS of Great Britain fared badly In the national congress of the Labor party in Liverpool, and the more conservative elements carried out their expressed detennina- ; tlon to rid the party of the Reds entirely. Chairman Cramp In his opening speech declared the Communists were a hindrance to the labor movement and traitors to its tradition. The Reds met their first defeat when the . congress by a tremendous majority refused to reverse a vote of last year ’ by which members of the Communist party were excluded from membership in the constituent Labor party. Former Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald, J. H. Thomas, leader of the railway tnen, and the chiefs of the miners all took severe whacks at the Reds, and the latter brought on their final nnd conclusive defeat when they demanded that MacDonald apologize to Russia for the action of his foreign office in making public the notorious Zlnovleff letter just before the lust election. ■yOUNG Robert M. LaFollette, Jr., 1 had a walkover In the Wisconsin election to fill the vacancy In the United States senate caused by the death of his father. His majority over the field was about 2 to 1. E. F. Dithmar of Milwaukee, who was the only “regular” Republican candidate after Roy P. Wilcox had been forced out by the national organization, ran second but never threatened the winner. The votes for the others were negligible. GOV. AL SMITH'S campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1928 was actually launched at a big picnic of the Cook county. Illinois, Democracy In Chicago. The popular New Yorker in his speech especially attacked the economy record of the Coolidge administration and promised to do much better in that line if he were sent to the White House. He made a great hit with the 100,000 persons who heard him. OVER the protest of Chairman O’Connor, the federal shipping board rescinded the resolutions designed to divorce the Fleet corporation from the board and readopted a resolution of 1921 under which the board keeps full control over the actions of the corporation. President Palmer of the corporation is likely to resign, for it is understood he accepted the office on condition that he have certain authority. Chicago business men are asking that the shipping board be abolished. tlty has been attained, the penitentiary will begin manufacturing footwear for the army and navy, and later a work shoe in addition for other Institutions maintained by the government. Six hundred wards of the government helped build the plant. Modern sanitary and safety devices and the latest shoe-building equipment will be used. Superintendent Warren F. Goldthwaite, in charge, came to Fort Leavenworth from Haverhill, Mass., where he had been with a shoe factory.

<XXXX>OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQ HOW TO KEEP WELL DR. FREDERICK R. GREEN Editor of "HEALTH” OOOOOOCXDCKXXXXDCXDCXXXXXXXXX* (©. 1928, We«ern Newspaper Union.) SPEECH DEFECTS IN CHILDREN YOU remember the story about the Irishman who went to Paris. When he returned his friends asked him what was the most wonderful thing he saw in that marvelous city. He says, "I’ll tell yez, b’ys, the most wonderful thing to me was to see little childer not three years old spakin’ French like natives.” Tiie ability to speak is acquired so early that most of us think of it jas natural. It is not, neither Is it inherited. It is learned very' early in , life from older persons and conse- ; quently the child learns and speaks the language which he hears. An Amer- j icon child placed at birth among Hottentots, says Doctor Blanton of the University of Wisconsin, would speak Hottentot and not English. Speech is so natural to us that it la hard for a grown person to realize just how hard it is for a young child to learn to talk. Fortunately, it hasn’t much of anything else to do, so it can give its entire attention to it. i The normal child Hegins to talk at fifteen months, sometimes younger. By the time it is three years old. it should be able to talk intelligently. Any 1 child who does not talk at two years should be given a careful examination. If by the end of the third year. It has not begun to talk, then there is probably some serious nervous or mental condition present. i In some cases, children do not learn to talk or will not talk on account of some error or wrong Idea on the part of the parent In rearing the child. Whatever the cause, the child that does not talk or that talks । brokenly or unintelligibly at three I years of age needs special examination and training. There are three kinds of speech defects which are common. The first nnd I the simplest is the lisp. Tills Is large- ; ly due .to bad habits. The child begins to lisp by pronouncing a word Incorrectly, usually by substituting one sound for another, as th for a This is bo "cute” that parents often not only do not correct it but even encourage it. It may be rate in n baby, but it Isn't cute In a grown man. Sometimes 9he«® lisps are no numerous that the child can only be understood by a few persons. Such a child can only be cured by patiently reteaching him to speak correctly. The second type Is indistinct speech or mumbling. Children with this deIfect are sometimes of a low mental condition, sometimes children who hav® been sickly In the first three years of life. Often they are spoiled by Indulgent parents who have not tried to correct their speech errors. The third type of speech defect Is stuttering. This Is found in nervous, high strung and sensitive children. It Is due to lack of proper nervous control. It cannot be controlled by will power. The harder the patient tries, the worse he stutters. It is not outgrown and It cannot be corrected by punishment About one person out of every twenty stutters to some extent at some time. BLOWING AWAY MOSQUITOES — ST. PATRICK drove the snakes out of Ireland. Another Patrick, a fellow countryman, is going to blow the mosquitoes out of Samoa. Probably one thousand years from now he, too. will be regarded as a saint, and with good reason, for mosquitoes are much more dangerous than snakes. Malaria is one of the scourges of the tropics. It Is carried by mosquitoes. so the prevention of the disease requires the destruction of mosquitoes. Millions of dollars have been spent In malaria-infested countries In ; the last ten years In filling in and | draining stagnant pools, oiling the surface of ponds and destroying ether ; mosquito breeding places. But these methods are slow and expensive, so an Irishman, with the I characteristic originality and shrewdI ness of his race, has worked out n ; cheap and easy way of disposing of । these pests. He is going to take them { out to sea and drown them. Impossible, you say? Not at all. It's a serious proposition, approved i by some of the leading English au- | thorities on public health. . Dr. Patrick A. Buxton of the London School of Tropical Medicine Is the inventor of the plan and he’s gone to the South Seas to try it out. How Is he going to do it? Ue has • found that at Samoa the trade winds ! blow most of the year from one diI rection and that the wind is strong : enough to blow away all the mosquitoes If It were not for the dense underbrush and thick tropical foliage on the islands. Doctor Buxton is going to clear away the underbrush and open up passages across the islands so that the trade winds can blow through them. This will blow the mosquitoes out to sea, dry up the j swampy land, wipe out the breeding places and not only rid the islands of I mosquitoes but also make the land fit for cultivation and make it possible to produce valuable crops. Many plans have been proposed for getting rid of mosquitoes. Only an Irishman would think of giving a mosquito a sea voyage and letting । Idin drown himself. Oldest Church Bell I Tne oldest known bell still In use is 1 In the parish church of St. Mary of | Loreto, at Villalago, in the Abruzzi } mountains. Italy, and is dated 600 JA. D. So that for over 1.300 years it has called worshipers to prayer. 1 ~ A Definition Our idea of a stingy person Is the fat lady who hopes she has gained weight bo that she will get her mon- । ey’s worth out of the scales when she drops her penny In.—Dallas News.

Bottle '« H In th® ’1 House i Vou Are w Always M Beady U T»N»t» ar /P ^P i Noiseless Rubber Streets Some of our scientists continue t® be more speculative than the widest prophets. Prof. A. M. Low predicts a future which will Include noiseless rubber streets, moving sidepatha at the rate of 20 miles an hour, one meal a day only, trousered woman, and "a mild oscillatory stimulant taken in a few moments” instead of sleep. Doctor Low speaks of “our universal longing for the future," but who would long for the kind of future he foreshadows or threatens? —Westminster Gazette. Operates on Swan A swan broke a wing during a storm at Belfast, A surgeon administered an anesthetic, amputated the wing, bound up the wing, and the bird made a good recovery. Well-Merited Success Honored politically and professionally, Dr. R. V. Pierce, whose picture

appears here, made a success few have equalled. His pure herbal remedies which have stood the test for fifty years ere still among the “best sellers.” Dr. Pierce's Gol den Medical Discovery is a blood medicine and stomach alterative. It clears the

skin, beantitles It, Increases the blood supply and the circulation, and pimples and eruptions vanish quickly. This Discovery of Doctor Pierce's puts you in fine condition, with all the organs active. All dealers have it. Send 10 cents for trial package of tablets to Dr. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. rlotchy skin need not annoy you. Pimple* Warbf h— d*. etc. are quickly dispelled by Resinol j^RNE^OUS AILMENTS j PRICE *1.50 Write for FREE BOOKLET U yvr dracrkM «m»o< wpplr erdw fsrwetrdmc prepaid, bf KOENIG MEDICINE CO. tO4S N. WILLI IT. CHICAGO* 4 WK" tq-nisht Tomorrow Alrt^kt KEEPING WELL An N? Tablet (a vegetable aperient) taken at night will help keep you well, by toning and strengthening your digestion and elimination. Used for over Get a 25<80x Chips off +he Old Block • N? JUNIORS—LittIe KRs One-third the regular dose. Made of the same ingredients, then candy coated. For children and adults. MM SOLD BY YOUR DRUGCISTsm WHY SHOULD ANYONE SUFFER WITH INDIGESTION OR ANY STOMACH MISERY? If you want to fix up your dyspeptic out of order stomach so that you can relish what you eat with not the least I bit of after distress, do what tens of thousands of people have already dona. Getting rid of gas, bloating, belching, heaviness and that feeling of near sufTo. cation isn’t such a hard matter as you may think —You’ve been getting hold of the wrong medicine —that’s aIL But better late than never—ask youi druggist for a bottle of Dare’s Menthu Pepsin—a real stomach medicine and • very pleasant one. For acute Indigestion j one or tw'o doses is enough, but when the trouble is chronic, two or three bot- ; ties mav be needed to put your disordered j stomach In good healthy condition and ! make life worth living. Making a start is the main thing, m why not get one bottle today with the j distinct understanding that if It doesn't help you the purchase price will be returned. BABIES LOVE |||| MRS.WINSUDW3 SYRUP The lafuU’ and Children’! Rerniater Pleasant to give—pleasant to ; take. Guaranteed purely veg®tableandabsoluteiyharmles». ■w A It quickly overcomes colic, B f. 3 diarrhoea flatulency and ■ ' '/ other like disorders, z Th® open pub!:»hed I^7 7 formula appears cn Sdjr, X* / every label. ^£*>l f A U DrugghU .