Walkerton Independent, Volume 51, Number 46, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 15 April 1926 — Page 2
Walkerton Independent Published Everv Thursday by THE IN DEPEN DENT-NEWB CO. Publishers of the WALKERTON INDEPENDENT NORTH LIBERTY NEWS LAK EVI LLE STANDARD THE BT, JOSEPH COUNTY WEEK LIES Clem DeCoudres, Business Manager Charles M. Finch, Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Tear z 11.50 Sir Months .$0 Three Months .50 TERMS IN ADVANCE Entered at the post office at Walkerton, ^nd., as second-elaas matter. Another bad feature about a ton| war Is that the laundry is delayed One thing that keeps up the price of veal is the popularity of chicken pie. Nowadays a nation has to be fairlj permanent to outlive its own wai debt. In some instances the real housing problem is how 'to keep youth at home. Making hooked rugs probably won’t become so much of a fad. A little too useful. A scientist says fish sing, but does not go so far as to affirm that they run the scale. The happiest marriages are those in which “ours” isn’t gradually metamorphosed into “my.” It is easy to tell. Those who love her best are the ones that tell her frankly how fat she Is. "Guess who this is" probably incited the inventor who is responsible for photos by telephone. A law may open the way for bribery, but it doesn’t multiply the kind of men who can be bribed. The only objection we have to short skirts is the exceedingly long list of stale jokes about them. It’s hard -to understand how the harmonica can come back unless the livery stable returns with it. Maybe this idea of mental tests for auto speeders suggests something entirely new in transmission trouble. Ireland reports a terrific slump in - the nightgown industry. Something else with which to blame the radio. When they don’t know what else to say about a situation a good many people at once pronounce it psychological. An exhaustive study of the new song. “Just for Today,” reveals no reference therein to the French premiership. The biggest thing the country ever did for the railroads consisted in locating Florida so far from New Eng- 1 land. Give him a coonskin coat, nine yards of scarf and a ukulele, and he cares not who makes the country’s laws. About all that can be said for city streets in slushy weather is that they are navigable by persons of light draft. Now they are commencing to modi- ! fy the charleston. A dance gets ou* j of date almost as quickly as a political platform does. Men have ever quarreled about the division of land and water, and now they cannot agree on the proper division of the air. The engraver had finally succeeded In inscribing 4hat Gettysburg address on the head of a pin. "There is,” he I observed, “plqnty of room at the top.” , Tom Edison says that he Is one hundred and twenty years old. It Is a great age. You can do most anything In the present era by pressing a but- i ton. The Italian censorship gives jobs to a number of worthy citizens who, in this country, might be nothing more than attorneys for some board or other. “It takes me an hour and a quarter to get a small furnace going,” com- , plained the baffled householder, “yet great forests have been set off with a cigar.” Byway of radio, Russia has heard American jazz for the first time. It is debatable whether this fact will improve the relations between tiie two nations. The college girl whose ribs were broken while she was playing basket ball probably had a grandfather who used to point out the perils of higher education for women. Probably it would be Impolite to say that one of the hearty chuckles heard by the prince of Wales was a horse laugh. We are slaves to every habit we cannot break, says a western minister, j Including the habits of eating and Bleeping. Enforcement of the law protecting fur-bearing animals doubtless will win i the hearty co-operation of all the fur- • coat wearers. Americans who have tried to fathom French menus scarcely will contribute toward a statue to the creator of pate de foie gras. Pretty soon there will be no Greek • letter combinations that have not been used, and what will the new fraternl ties do then? - The dear thing’s suitor who was stu b a help last year filling in crosswords has a successor who is teaching her the charleston.
111! l-M-H Illi I l-l-H -1-I- I -l-I-l-H 1 HOW TO KEEP WELL DR. FREDERICK R. GREEN Editor of “HEALTH” •«-l-l-I-l-I--l-H--l-H-l-l-W-bI-b-I-!--l-i--F4-4- <©. IS2B, Western Newspaper Union.) INTESTINAL TUBERCULOSIS SO MUCH has been written, talked, or broadcast about consunipi tion or tuberculosis of the lungs that many assume that It is about the only j form of tuberculosis that is of any importance. Yet this little enemy of the human race may and does attack practically every part of the human body. In a recent issue of the Journal of : Outdoor Life, Dr. Lawrasen Brown of Saranac Lake. N. Y., has a most Interesting article on intestinal tuber- ; culosis. Probably no one in Ameri- ' ca is better qualified to write on any phase of tuberculosis than Doctor Brown. His early association with Doctor Trudeau the pioneer worker in this field, as well as his years of experience at Saranac Lake, have given him an experience with this disease such as few men have had. . Intestinal tuberculosis, he says, is usually a late complication of consumption. It used to be regarded as a practically hopeless condition, as few patients ever recovered. It Is usually caused by tuberculosis germs coughed up by the patient from the lungs and swallowed. So the first : thing to do In preventing this condition is for all persons with tuberculosis to avoid swallowing any of the sputum. This cannot be entirely pre- ' vented but It should be avoided as much as possible. This condition comes on so slowly I and so inperceptibly that it is often j overlooked. Loss of appetite, nervousness and failure on the part of the consumptive patient to improve where j there Is no reason for It are the earlier I symptoms. Yet with only these slight ■ indications the condition may exist for a long time before it Is suspected. . As the consumptive needs every possible chance in order to get well, the । plan has been adopted at the Trudeau sanitarium of examining every patient in order to find which ones are . suffering from this disease and giving them proper treatment. The treatment of this condition was formerly just as uncertain and difficult as the diagnosis. That also has been । greatly Improved in recent years and by the same means—light. Only, while the X-ray from the electric apparatus is used in diagnosis the light used i In treatment is plain sunlight. The body Is accustomed to the sunlight by exposing first the feet and ankles, ( then the legs, then the shoulders, then the body from the waist down and ! finally the entire body for longer periods each day to the sun’s healing rays. TAKING YELLOW FEVER T-TOW does it feel to catch yellow ■*- A fever? Strange to say, although this once-dreaded disease swept the tropics almost every year for 400 years and millions of persons suffered from it, few of them knew exactly when or how they got It and none of these made any note of how the sickness dei veioped. In a recent Issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association appears an article by Dr. Henry Hanson of the International Health board of ; the Rockefeller Foundation, giving his I personal experience. In July, 1919, he Was asked by the Peruvian government to investigate end report on an epidemic of yellow fe^er at I’iura, one of the large cities ct northern Peru. Arriving at this city, he found nine cases of yellow fever In the lazaretto or local yellow fever hospital. In order to rule out the possibility of any of these patients having malaria, which in some of its tropical forms closely resembles yellow fever, Doctor Hanson made a blood examination in each case. While making these examinations, Doctor Hanson noticed that the tip of his index finger was stained with blood from one of these patients. He attached no importance to this, but In cleaning his hands with alcohol he felt a sharp sting on this finger, showing that there was a small break in the skin somewhere. The hospital was, of course, screened so as to exclude all mosquitoes, so he assumes that he acquired yellow fever through this break in the skin, although he might have been i bitten by an Infected mosquito at some time without knowing It. At any rate, five days later he devel- j oped a peculiarly sore throat, a strange i feeling of uneasiness and a taste of blood into his mouth. Headache and pain In the back followed, finally prostration so great he could no longer I keep on his feet. The principal sensation, he says, was general distress ; with distension and tenderness in the abdomen, so that it was distressingly i painful even to try to speak. He ! was in a delirium practically contlnu- I ously, and had .many strange sensa- i tions, such as floating in the air, fall- i ing from great heights and roaming through endless darkness. After the fever had run Its course and he had regained consciousness, he ' was principally aware of an overpow- I ering weakness and an intense hunger I and thirst. Several weeks were re- ■ quired for recovery which was eventually complete. Kingdom of Jerusalem The reigning house of Austria, until ■ overthrown in 1918, held title to the Kingdom of Jerusalem, founded in ’ 1100. The kingdom ended in 1187, but > was continued as a titular realm down I to our times. I Idea Brought Wealth The man who discovered that a candle, if taperod at tho end. would stick firmly into its socket, patented the idea, and afterward founded the largest candle factory tn the world.
/ P" 1 z I I T $ S 1 / x ’ x MmWi ■ ■ ’Hr - SltH / O W ~ Is j General I’ershlng la back on the Job again und posed for this picture. 2. —Secretary Wilbur bidding Commander Byrd bon voyage on polar flight 3. —Thomas L. Woodlock confirmed as Interstate commerce commissioner after a year s fight ,
NEWS REVIEW DF CURRENT EVENTS Worst March Blizzard in Years Leaves Damage in Its Trail. By EDWARD W. PICKARD W/< ARCH went out leaving in Its trail one of the most severe March-end storms in years. Extending from beyond the Rocky mountains as far south as the Rio Grande and as far east as New England, the blizzard area Included all regions except the Atlantic and Pacific seaboards. Dispatches from all points over the Middle West told of loss of life and i crippled transportation caused by the storm. Illinois, Wisconsin, lowa, Indiana, ami Missouri appeared to be the hardest hit. Rall and highway traffic was tied up at many points. At Kewanee, 111., hundreds of automobiles were reported stalled In huge drifts. At Havana, 111., a passenger train was held up by the heavy snowfall. The situation In Wisconsin was no better. Eleven inches of snow were recorded In Milwaukee, with street car and bus traqpportatlon blocked. Points In Indiana reported one of the worst March storms In history. Fort Wayne and Indianapolis had transportation blocked. At Dubuque, lowa, the snow measured IS Inches and 10 Inches nt Fort Madison. On the highways drifts of six feet were common. Trains Into Kansas City, Mo., were from G to 12 hours late, while In ad dltion to the three Midland Valley trains stalled near Foraker. Okla., two I Rock Island passenger trains were Imbedded In drifts near Enid, Okla. Other parts of the country, notably the Texas Panhandle, Louisiana, and Mississippi, also were affected. In southeastern Texas the storm reached tornado proportions, caused four deaths and property damage that Is expected to exceed .$1,000,000. Near Liberty, Texas, an 82-mlle-an hour gale destroyed 350 oil derricks. Advocates of the lakesto-guif waterway gained a strategic victory when the War department board of engineers, in Its report on the improvement of the Illinois river, recommended the Immediate construction of a nine-foot waterway with water diversion from Lake Michigan of 8,250 cubic feet per second. DESPITE the recurrent declines In prices of stocks in Wall street. President Coolidge and his cabinet In surveying the situation throughout the country find conditions satisfactory. The country Is properous and business good, according to the reports made for the information of the President, and the prospect is that an even greater business expansion is at hand. There Is little unemployment, and Indications are that everyone who is willing to work at prevailing wages can get work. There Is still a dull condition In the textile industry, but that, in the opinion of the President, Is due to causes laid In post-war readjustments. The President advises, however, an adherence to a conservative and cau- [ tious policy on the part of private enterprise and of the government Itself. There should be no departure from the rules of economy and sound financing by either corporations or the govI emment, he advises. With incomer tax receipts larger even than anticipated, there Is every Indication that business will go on expanding. Probably the future revenue will prove so much larger than was expected that fears of a deficit In the next fiscal year will be dispelled. The President, however, has given grave consideration to the various items on the legislative program of the house on which his advice had been sought by Representative Tilson (Rep., Conn.) majority leader of that body. In reply he pointed out to Mr. Tilson that congress had reduced taxes more rad- \ Ically than the executive had thought ■ safe at the time. The revenue, therefore, was reduced to such an extent that It would barely cover expenditures already authorized by law. Mr. Coolidge advised Mr. Tilson to proceed carefully on all proposals Involving an Increased expenditure. The
Sailors Rescued From Fast-Sinking Vessel New York. —Adding a brilliant chapter to the long tale of thrilling res- | cues at sea during storms of the past winter, the British tanker Shirvan was en route for Falmouth, England, with 28 seamen saved from the British freighter, Laleham, which left Newport News, Va., March 25. The Shirvan, racing to the side of the stricken freighter in a gale 400 miles oft Halifax, beat the liner Mau-
bill to raise the retirement annuities of government employees Involves such an increase, and while the Presldent favors higher annuities, he is not sure that the government can afford I to raise them as high as the bill asks. Increase In the salaries of federal Judges, on the other hand, is favored L by the President, since this would not require a large increase In expenditures. The outlay of $50,000,000 for new public buildings and a like amount for waterway development Is approved by the executive as Additions on capital account, but the pro- ' grams for increasing army and navy expenditures about $00,000,000 annually the President Is Inclined to view differently. TF THERE Is going to bonny chance * In the prohibition policy, program or legislation, there must first ho a change In the Constitution, according to Senator Borah (Rep.. Idaho), In commenting on the referendum pro posed by Senator Edge which asks the people to tell congress whether It "shall amend the national prohibition act, commonly called the Volstead act, so as to allow the manufacture, salp, transportation, and possession of beverages containing as great an amount of alcohol as is lawful under the Coni stltution.” Senator Borah declared that he saw nn possible way to deal effectively with the liquor question so long as the Constitution prohibits the manufacture, sale or transportation of Intoxicating liquors. Consequently, he believes that the first question In any referendum should deal with the amending of the Constitution. DEFINITE steps toward more rigid enforcement of tho liquor laws I were taken when the house unanimous- : ly approved the Cramton bill placinc the entire prohibition unit under civil service, and when Brigadier General Andrews, assistant secretary of the treasury In charge of prohibition enforcement, announced the creation of new divisions to cheek the flow of illicit beer and wine. Thomas E. Stone, credited with engineering the roundup of the nationwjde beer ring in Cleveland recently, was named by General Andrews to be superin’endent of brewery control. General Andrews also announced the i appointment of IT. Keith Weeks, his । secretary. t« be superintendent of wine ‘ control, to direct efforts to halt diversion of sacramental wine into bootleg channels. The Cramton bill would require all j present employees of the prohibition unit to qualify In competitive examinations for their places within six months. The scheme, originally suggested by the wets, was more recently taken up by the drys. PERMISSION has been granted by 1 the prohibition division of the bureau of Internal revenue to two large I breweries to manufacture a malt liquor j containing 3.75 per cent alcohol by volume and 25 per cent malt solids, to be sold to the public through drug stores without prescriptions or dealer ‘ permits. The permits were Issued to Anheu-ser-Busch company of St. Louis and the Pabst company of Milwaukee on a six months’ trial during which the breweries are required to aid the prohibition division In the prevention of the sale of the malt liquor to the public for beverage purposes. Director of Prohibition James E. Jones gave his consent to the new brew after chemists of the bureau of Internal revenue had reported fllat the tonic could not be used as a beverage. The senate confirmed the nomination of Thomas F. Woodlock of New York as a member of the Interstate Commerce commission by a vote of 52 to 25. Confirmation came after a five-hour executive session. In which the attack against Mr. Woodlock was led by Senator Wheeler (Dem., Mont.), who charged that he was under the Influence of Wall street. UNANIMOUS agreement on measures contemplating the creation of nn army air corps, under a second assistant secretary of war, and authorizing the undertaking of a flve-year construction program as a result of which 2,200 new planes would be added to the equipment of the existing air service, was reported from an executive session of the house military affairs committee.
retania, which also had swerved from its course at the first cry for help. The Mauretania resumed Its course for New York after Capt. A. H. Rostron had relayed a brief dispatch of the rescue by the Shirvan. Captain Rostron, who was In command of the Carpathia when she rescued the survivors of the Titanic in 1012, reported that the Laleham was nearly on heam ends with all Its lifeboats carried away. His message gave no details of the rescue, except that the Laleham was sinking rapidly.
i The bill, it is said, will embody many i of the major recommendations of the Morrow aircraft board as well as suggestions made by the Lampert investigating committee, the Lassiter board and Secretary of War Davis In his confidential program. M PPOXENTS of the Italian debt settlement were heard in the senate. Senator Robinson (Dem., Ark.) minority leader, led the attack. He assailed the “capacity to pay" theory governing the settlements made by the American debt commission. He demanded that Italy before receiving concessions from the United States show her good faith with respect to a disartnament conference. Senator Reed (Dem.. Mo.) asserted that the United States can collect a larger sum than proposed from Italy ‘'if we had some good red blood In our statesmen.” Senator Borah (Rep., Maho), chairman of the committee on foreign relations; Senator'Howell (Rep.. Neb.), Senator Shlpstead (Farmer Labor. Minn ). and other opponents of the Italian settlement also participated in j the discussion. Senator Robinson said the “capacity j to pay” standard is false and unreI liable. L’’l I'* *RTS to solve the Tacna-Arica boundary dispute by tho plebiscitary commission set up by President i i Coolidge have been abandoned for the ' pn 'ent in favor of direct negotiations between the United States and the governments of Peru and Chile. Both , Peru and Chile, the State department ' . announced, have accepted the offers of ■ mediation made by the United States i । and correspondence Is now going on between Secretary Kellogg and the I two governments over the question of ' the best method to go about settling ! the controversy. 't^HE French government's weak--1 ness was revealed in tiie chamber ■ of deputies on the request for emer- , gency funds to sustain state functions during April. War Mini.-ter Paul Painleve’s demand for 10.000,000 francs ($.‘150,000) credits to carry on operations in Syria were reduced 1,000.000 francs on the motion of Socialist Deputy Baron. The vote was 2GB to 265. Premier Briand, who feared a simj ilar attack on the appropriation for the j 1 war in Morocco, rushed to the rescue. I He pleaded with the deputies not to ; hamper him at a moment when peace i in Morocco was just over the horizon. 'He defended the much criticized | French refusal to consider Abd-el j Krim’s peace offers, and then an- | nounced France was about to make a counter offer to the rebellious Riffians. These terms are already formulated, he declared. Deputy Bj^ron, who has just returned from a first-hand investigation । of the Syrian rebellion, said he thought I it would be a good idea to hand over the Syrian mandate to Premier Mussolini of Italy. Great Britain win not continue to support Spain in her fight for a permanent seat in the League of Nations council and will definitely oppose any enlargement of that body except through the addition of Germany when the League assembly meets again in September. This change in the British attitude was announced by Sir Austen Chamberlain when he made a complete private expose of the recent British policy at Geneva regarding the League of Nations to a group of members of the house of commons representing both opposition and government supporters. lie kept nothing back, he declared, and even read confidential telegrams exchanged by the powers. Brazil will not be permitted to continue to veto Germany’s application for admission to the council in September, he declared. The League assembly will meet and re-elect temporary council members before the question of Germany’s admission again comes up and unless Brazil agrees In ' advance to withhold her veto, she will not be given a temporary seat In the next council. The place will be given to some other South American power. The foreign secretary declared British policy has been altered to meet public opinion as clearly expressed. * and his pledge to support Spain's aspirations, which was one of the causes of the difficulties at the last League meeting, has been formally withdrawn.
Reports that the American freighter Blair was in trouble were cleared up ; when operators here received a wire- : less from its captain saying the freighter has experienced no trouble ( and had not sent out any distress call. ' Naval communications received an S. O. S. signed “S. S. Blair,” but nothing further was hcurd. The Blair’s position was given by the captain as 1.302 miles southeast of Delaware capes, and was bound for Philadelphia and New York from Greek and Spanish ports.
I IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL Sunday School ’ Lesson ’ (By REV. P. R. FITZWATER. D D., Dean of the Evening School. Moody Bible institute of Chicago.) • 1926. Western Newspaper Union.) Lesson for April IS THE BEGINNING OF SIN LESSON TEXT—Genesis 3:1-24. | GOLDEN TEXT—For as in Adam all I die, even so in Christ shall all be made ’ alive. —I Cor. 15:22. I PRIMARY TOPIC—Adam and Eve j I Disobey God. JUNIOR TOPIC—The Result of Disobedience. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOP- ' IC—Playing With Temptation. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOP- | IC —The Temptation and the Fall. A look out upon the world proves i that man is not what he should be. It is not reasonable to suppose that J man is now what he was when he I j came from the hands of the Creator, i much less an improvement. The only | way of accounting for this Is by the historic fall of man as given In the Bible. The introduction of sin is the I only answer. 1. Man’s Probation (vv. 1-5). I 1. The place. It was the beautiful garden of Eden, j Man's environment was suited to his nature. The testing of the second Adam was quite in contrast. Instead j of in the garden of Eden with a com1 panion suited unto him. It was in the । wilderness with the wild beasts. 2. The necessity. I Adam was created with the posslbll- i sty of character, but not with char- | acter. This he could get only through testing. Alternative choice makes character possible. Free will is what made Adam a real man. Character Is the resultant of choice. 3. The means. It was most simple—just one prohibition. The tree of the knowledge of good and evil was forbidden. Alongside of this small restriction was 1 placet! a large privilege, the tree of life. Over against that which would bring death and sorrow was placed that which would bring eternal life. 4. The method. Satan, a personal malicious being, appeared in the guise of a serpent. He did not appeal directly to the man. He chose to appeal to the woman j through the serpent and through the ; woman to the man. a. He found the woman while alone. b. He insinuated doubt into Eve’s j I mind as to God’s Word and love. Satan’s method is the same today. He ' tries to get people to doubt God’s Word and then to doubt His love. c. He appealed to innocent appetite. He argued that there would be no harm in eating, but a great advantage. d. Eve gazed upon that which God had forbidden and lusted after that which God had prohibited. II Man’s Fall (vv. 6-8). The steps in the fall seem to have been rapid. From doubting God's love ' Eve went to doubting His word. From I gazing upon and lusting after that | which God had prohibited there was but a short step to indulgence. Eve not only disobeyed, but involved Adam In her sin. This is ever the way of the sinner. The drunkard is not content until he gets others to drink. A i profane man is not content until he ’ gets others to swear. Licentious men and women are not content till others are poisoned with their rot. Impure , young men are not content until they get innocent boys to practice their I vlces - 111. The Consequence of the Fall ' (vv. 9-24). God's holy nature is such that when l men sin. He at once manifests Him- | self on the scene. 1. A disturbed relationship with । God (v. 8). The introduction of sin marred man's familiar Intercourse with the Almighty. Adam and Eve not only hid from God’s presence, but when ; summoned by Him they began to ■ make excuse, and Adam even laid the blame on God. 2. The degradation of the serpent henceforth becoming the type of sin and Satan (v. 14; cf. Num, 21:9. John i 3:14 and Rev. 12:9). Satan’s doom was pronounced without trial. In the case of the man it was not so. showing that this was r O t Satan’s first offense. 3. The undying enmity between the seed of woman and the seed of the serpent (v. 15). This bitter enmity has continued from that day to this. 4. The ultimate victory of the women's seed (v. 15). Satan harassed the woman’s seed, j but on the cross the final stroke was made which crushed his head (John 12:31. Heb. 2:14, 1 John 3:8). This is the first gleam of the glorious gospel of Christ. 5. The judgment upon the woman (v. 16). * This relates primarily to h«ir as a wife and mother. 6. Man’s new relationship to the earth (vv. 17-19). The earth was cursed on his ac- ' count. Man must make an increased effort to exist. With his sinful nature. man would be in a bad state without the necessity of tolL 7. Death (v. 19). This includes spiritual and physical death. Sin brought all. 8. Expulsion from the garden (v ! 24). Then man’s nature was changed. , out from the beautiful garden he went. Prepare for Unexpected Let us prepare for the unexpected. : In certain worldly callings we obI serve an order of intellect that deals ' promptly and effectively with the un- । expected. In mid-ocean, when the - ■ passengers are thrown into panic bv ! sudden accident, the captain remains ; calm and confident, giving orders with perfect self-possession. . . . Somewhat thus should we anticipate the contingencies of life; cultivating a presence of mind and heart for the unknown that excludes panic and disarms peril.—W. L. Watkinson.
Don’t Let That Cold Turn Into “Flu” That cold may turn into “Flu,” Grippe or, even worse, Pneumonia, unless you take care of it at once. । Rub Musterole on the congested parts ■ and see how quickly it brings relief. Musterole, made from pure oil of mustard, camphor, menthol and other simple ingredients, is a counter-irritant which stimulates circulation and helps break up the cold. As effective as the messy old mustard plaster; does the work without blister. Rub it on with your finger-tips. You will feel a warm tingle as it enters the pores, then a cooling sensation that brings welcome relief. Better than a mustard plaster HAVE BUYERS FOR FARMS direct with owner. Describe, state loweat price. J. Johnson. 3216A. Lincoln. Nebr. CASH PAID FOR DENTAL GOLD, FALSE Teeth. Discarded Jewelry, Diamonds and Platinum. Cash by return Mail. Florida Gold ReI fining Co.. 21 XV. Adams St.. Jacksonville, Fla. BEA! TIFI L COMPLEXION bv beauty specialists. latest out; Formula SI.OO. J. E. Crlmer. 720 Plane St.. Burlington. lowa. 40 TO 80 ACRE FARMS 160 per acre up, where creamery makes nearly million lbs.; cannery cans 100 carloads annually. C. O. Grinde. Blair. Wls. The Reason Why Salesman —Can I sell you a vacuum cleaner? Lady—No, we have no vacuum to clean.—Allston (Mass.) Recorder. J / Nurse’s Advice Rid Her of Pimples Brooklyn. Mrs. Minnie Fensterer writes: —“My pimples and blackheads got so bad I feared it was eczema. I confided in a nurse friend of mine. I had been troubled with constipation and indiges- o tion for some time. She advised me to try Carter’s Little Liver Pills. You can see by my picture that the treatment has done wonders, and I am now free from constipation.” Chronic constipation many times causes pimples. Carter’s Little Liver Pills encourage the bowels to eliminate the poisons. Druggists, 25 & 75c red packages. A Possible Result “He was thrown out of his car, and it injured his leg quite severely,” said Doctor Pillsbury. “It may result in ■ making him lame.” “Well I Well I” returned J. Fuller ; Gloom. “I naturally supposed it ' would result in making him stutter.” —Exchange. Is Your Work Hard? Ie your work wearing vou out? Are you tortured with throbbing backache —feel tired, weak and worn out? Then look to your kidney*! Many occupations tend to weaken the kidneys. Constant backache, headaches, dizziness and rheumatic pains result. One suffers annoying kidney irregularities; feels nervous, irritable and worn out. Don’t wait.' Lse Doan’s Pills —a stimulant diuretic to the kidneys. Workers everywhere recommend Doan’s. They should help you, too. Asfc your neighbor An Illinois Case
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Alvin Mars, 1412 S. Water St., Shelbyville, 111., says: “Colds frequently settled on my kidneys and caused them to act Irreg-f ularly. The se-J cretions contained^ sediment and" scalded In pas-w sage. My back was* weak and when Im
stooped, sharp pains took me I through the small of it. I began I using Doan s Pills and the first box I I used rid me of the trouble.” DOAN’S' 1 ^ STIMULANT DIURETIC TO THE KIDNEYS I Foster-Milbum Co., Mfg. Chem.. Buffalo, N. Y. | DISPEL THAT RASH Why suffer when skin troubles yield eo easily to the healing touch of Resinol Keep Stomach and Bowels Right By giving baby the harmless, purely vegetable, inf ants’ and children's regulator. MRS.WSbO'JTS SA U? ’ brings astonishing, gratifyir ret.lts tn making baby's stor -ii doJ st »food and bowels in rc as , —j they should at tec* ng ' time. Guaranteed sea x, . from narcotics, opi- — j PWM ates, alcohol and ail e XsS harmful ingredi- ’ ' ent a. Safe and X/' I satisfactory. Alt
