Walkerton Independent, Volume 53, Number 46, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 12 April 1928 — Page 3

Sylvia of the Minute

CHAPTER V—Continued —l3— “Oh, I say! Stop’ and have sandwiches and coffee with me I” she suggested chummily— not at all as a subordinate addresses a superior officer. “I can’t bear eating alone —It’s almost gross, isn’t it? Will you? I've heaps —we'll have a jolly lunch! I’ve a thermos bottle of hot coffee, good atrong coffee that I made myself,” she chattered as she began to set things out on the flat desk-top, feeling exhilarated at a bit of normal human association and talk after her weeks of strained, artificial relations. With this man. If they kept off of pedagogy, she could be herself —up to a certain point at least (though of course she would have to watch her accent). She almost snatched his hat and coat away from him as she directed him to draw up his chair before the array of dainty sandwiches, coffee and fruit which she had spread out. “But,” he said as he placed their chairs and they sat down, “why is my company all of a sudden so welcome? An hour ago it was, ‘You here again !’ ” “Well, since you know the very worst about me, I can enjoy a chat with you. I’ve been dying for a man to talk to! I’ve been almost driven to flirting with the wooden Indian in front of the village cigar store!” “‘Flirting’? I’m afraid I can’t play up. Don’t know how. Afraid I’ve always been rather a stick with girls,” he said dolefully, his eyes on her glowing face and creamy neck encircled by a fluffy, fluted white ruffle. What a brute he had been to make her cry—anything so dainty and sweet! “I wouldn’t presume to flirt with the county superintendent,” she reassured him, “who knows the very worst about me!” “The very worst —you’re sure?” “What further do you suspect me of? Not knowing the Presidents in order? Well, I don’t Nor the Twelve Apostles either. And I can’t name offhand the Chinese dynasties for the past five thousand years. Have some coffee?” She poured him a second cup and his heart thrilled to her as he saw how gay she now looked after her tears. He himself was lonely enough, In all conscience, and this bit of companionship with such an engagingly impudent child was, to say the least, very diverting. “You made this coffee?” he asked. “Teach that to the girls of your school find I’ll advise your trustees to raise your salary—and if they -taste your coffee they’ll do it!” “You put good coffee before learning and call yourself an educator! Men do like their comforts, don’t they? I wonder why I’m teaching school anyway, when American cooks are paid such huge wages. What do American cooks do with the millions they earn? Buy country estates and retire?” “American cooks?” he repeated reflectively. “How about foreign cooks? English cooks, for instance?” She felt a betraying warmth In her cheeks. He suspected her! No wonder, the way she so often spoke of American things, as though she were not an American? “I should think.” she answered calmly, “that with the terrible unemployment we read of over there, cooks ought to be cheap. I’m told. Mr. Creighton,” she changed the subject, as she leaned back in her chair with a sandwich in her hartd, “that you’re a terrible idealist. How do you manage it?” “I don't. Though the alternative is so self-destructive! Do you (am I to conclude), like most young people of this day, imagine yourself a cynic?” “How can one escape it?” I have a cousin who was a radical Socialist until he married a rich wife. I have an uncle who was a liberal in all his Ideas until a fellow-professor at his college was expelled for his liberalism—when my uncle changed his views. Believe in liberals with ideals? No, it’s asking too much!” She shook her head over it hopelessly. “Did you never know anyone,” Creighton asked, “to sacrifice something for the sake or his Ideals?” “You?” she inquired, looking at him over an expanse of sandwich at her lips. “Heavens, no! I was thinking of— Mr. E. D. Morell, for instance—” “Editor of Foreign Affairs,” she nodded —then instantly regretted her too-ready knowledge of this English editor. Wasn’t the mention of him a bait? Would an American be apt. to know of him? “Os course,” she hastened to add, “liberals all over the world must take heart from Mr. Morell’s steadfast courage and heroism!” “Yes —but —he isn’t very much known in America —how did you come to know of him?” “Read about him in The Nation.” He looked surprised. “I'm sure,” he said, “you are the only teacher under my jurisdiction that has ever even heard of that paper!” Conversation with him was, after all, too full of pitfalls, she decided. She was glad when the children’s returning to the schoolroom obliged him to take his leave. Her curiosity as to how much he suspected was fairly consuming her. CHAPTER VI Aunt Rosy was again at the Schwencktons’, and it was manifest that her brother-in-law was not “overly pleased” at her unexpected visit. Conversation at supper, in spite of her efforts to sustain It, seemed to languish. No one but Aunt Rosy seemed to be in the mood for this friendly chatting. “Susie tol’ me about your holdln’ up young Creighton and takin’ his watch off of him, Sam,” she said, “and jif I was you I wouldn’t like it so well that that fast young fellah got a footjftold in herewith Nettie so lovesick she don't know half the time what she’s about —” “I don’t know what you mean by >B ‘foothold,’ Aunt Rosy,” replied Mr. Schwenckton irritably. “H» stn’t been round here since.”

» By < HELEN R. MARTIN Copyrlsht by Dodd. Mead & Co. WNU Service “How do you know he ain’t? This after, when I got here, I seen Nettie makin’ sich chocolate futch and—” “Yes,” broke In Susie in a tone of grievance, “and mind what she done yet I She cooked my fire out, so’s I had to build it fresh to cook my supper!” “And when her futch was done a’ready, did she offer some to me and Susie? She did not! And what’s more, I don’t see none of It bein’ passed ’round to yous neither! What did she done with that there futch? Why, I seen her packin’ it ail up nice in a white box- and hidin' it good away! Who for? That’s what you'd better find out, Sam Schwenckton I Who for?” Nettie, her face crimson, muttered something about “a big nosey” and “buttin’ into other folks’ business"— but her father Interfered. “Be peaceful, both of you. I won’t have no wranglin’ at our meals. Till supper's through a’ready, Nettle can tell me who the futch Is for.” Nettie, flashing a look of hate at Aunt Rosy, subsided into a sullen silence. Aunt Rosy was certainly a very disturbing element in this household. It was because of her presence here this evening that Mr. Schwenckton found himself, greatly to his astonishment, not to say bewilderment and distress, iW' Im Jah t / F h 3 mJ* ij L ©iWv “‘Flirting!’ I’m Afraid I Can’t Play Up. Don’t Know How. Afraid I’ve Always Been Rather a Stick With Girls.” “up against” the younger generation in away tlfat was a shocking revelation to him of how times had changed. Incredible it seemed to his patriarchal ideas of family life that his own young daughter should dare to defy him—but here was the fact before his very eyes—Nettie stubbornly refusing to answer his questions as to what she had done with the fudge she had made. She admitted that it was already disposed of. But neither commands, threats nor coaxings would elicit anything further from her. • •••••• Meely was pledged for a rendezvous, about school-closing time, with St. Croix in the woods on the hilltop. This would be her first meeting with him since their wordless encounter in the Schwenckton kitchen the night of the “holdup” and Meely, as she hastened after school to the hill, was tingling with curiosity as to whqt he would, have to say of that dangerous momdnt which they had managed to come through so unbetrayingly. She was pretty sure that poor little

Embryo Lawyer Puts Up Successful Plea

Apparently lawyers are born and not made, if a delightful yarn published in the Manchester Guardian correctly illustrates the development of the legal mentality from a start in the cradle, writes the London correspondent of the Christian Science Monitor. There had been a certain liveliness in the ( nursery just before bedtime, with the , result that some of the furniture was broken. There was a fog of highly . conflicting evidence in the nursery, , and father decided that, failing |a full , and accurate account of what had happened, an anticipated holiday at Scarborough should be canceled. After some moments of deep thought his young son, who will probably some day be lord chancellor, summed up the position in a sentence: “I have said I didn't do it, but if I can’t go to Scarborough unless I say I did do it, I think I had better say I did it; but, if I did do it, 1 don’t know I did Groan ds for Suspicion “Look there 1” said the washing machine agent who visited the hamlet sufficiently often to be fairly well acquainted there. “See those men and boys —yes, and women, too —pointing at Uncle Skinner and grinning after he has passed by. What is tickling them?” “Old Skinner is a widower," responded the landlord of the taven at Squam. “He is also as stingy as stone soup, but they’ve found out that while he was up to the city last week he went to a beautie shoppe and paid a whole dollar to get manicured. And they are kinder putting two and two together and making twenty-two of it.” —Kansas City Star. Salt of the Earth The entire evaporation of the world’s oceans would leave a layer of salt feet thiclt

<>— —.— — Nettle's fudge had been made for St. Croix. “For all I know, he has been seeing her and has discovered that I am the teacher I” she speculated. Not that she believed he had been seeking Nettie. He was, for the time, too engrossed in herself. But Nettie, In hex adolescent infatuation, may have been thrusting herself upon him and St. Croix would not be overscrupulous in accepting gifts the gods offered. “I’ll find out about that fudge,” Meely resolved, “and if he is taking advantage of that ignorant child, I’ll protect her!” She wondered, as she went on her way, whether St. Croix would notice the coat she wore. The season having advanced too far for her gaudy voile frock, without a wrap, she was in a bit of a predicament, for her jacket suit was far too stylish for the Meely of St. Croix’ mental gallery and the only other wrap she had was this half worn-out coat she had used on the stfumer en route for America, an English tweed that had once been such a first-class garment she feared St. Croix would instantly detect its quality and style—he was so observant and informed in such matters —well, rather! If he did notice that her coat was a good English tweed and ask questions, how on earth should she explain? She would have to trust to the inspiration of the moment. “It’s almost unbelievable that I’ve come through so far without his dis- ‘ covering me! I'm —some —actress, I am! They’ll certainly have to notice me when I get to Hollywood!" He was there ahead of her at their meeting place and the nipping air of the hilltop had acted as an Irritant to both his passion and his temper. It was getting much too cold for these out-of doors meetings and he knew of no place under a roof where they could get together without risk of detection —especially as Meely’s father | had grown suspicious for some rea- ' son; he had brought old Schwenckton’s funny letter with him to show her; as a warning that she must be more careful; he would demand an expl»fhation from her ns to what she had done to rouse her father’s suspicion. Was there no way that he could have the girl except by taking her away from her home altogether? But of course he wasn’t going to get himself into th^ kind of a mess! Absurd to think of it! St. Croix still felt confident that ' when he nodded his readiness, Meely would be only too glad and eager to | come to him. Why he had put It off so long was a mystery to himself. Something about her nil along had seemed to check his being precipitate —though probably sho was just as impatient at his dallying as he himself was. But the time was surely ripe now and lie must delay no longer. “I’m very displeased with you." he began as they sat huddled together to keep warm, on the big flat log "What on earth made you do such a reckless thing, my dear, ns to send that box of fudge to my home? My mother got hold of It! Don't ever do such a fool thing again. Meely! What on er”th made you break out like that?” “Ach, well —you see, you gimme । them swell handkerchiefs and so 1 wanted to pay you back.” “Os course it was nice of you to make the candy for me—but to semi It to my home! My mother asked nil sorts of questions—she’s awfully worried —” “She must be awful stuck up If you’re so scared of her knowin’ you travel with me! But I knowed folks ■ a’ready that's got twlcet as much ns she's got and they ain’t so proud that they're ashamed to know me!" “My mother isn't •proud,' Meely—she's the gentlest, sweetest, dearest —” He spoke with such feeling that Meely, who so seldom saw him show feeling for anyone but himself, was impressed. (TO BE CONTINUED.)

it.” Father is reported to have retired from the discussion at this stage, without risking further discomfiture by cross-examination. Hotv to Get Lost A pompous elderly man, visiting a [ certain rural district, wished to inspect some ruins in the neighborhood. He inquired for the oldest inhabitant, and assailed him with such a host of needless interrogations that the ancient. personage presently lost his temper, and said: “i’ll tell thee a better way yet. Go straight down yonder, take fust turning through a tater field, past the Blue Boar, up Mileston hill, and over the common till you come to the Windy wood; go down till you get into the middle of that ’ere wood, and then ” “Well, and what then?” demanded the old gentleman. “Then,” said the oldest inhabitant, “I’m blowed if j 1 won’t be properly* lost I” —London Tic-Bits. Humane John came running into his father’s study with nose bleeding copiously, and, while first aid was being rendered, explained that he had received a blow from another boy. “WMI, did you hit him back?” Inquired father. “No, father, you see, he was smaller than me.” Father’s heart warmed at such chivalry. “And, besides, he was a poor boy—” Father’s face beamed at such magnanimity. “And you can never tell what those poor boys can do.” Money that a man burns seldom helps him to enlighten the world.

the । KITCHEN I CABINET!

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(©. 1928 Western Newspaper (Inion.) There is no Chance, no Destiny, no Fate Can circumvent or hinder or control The firin resolve of a determined soul. Gifts count but little: Will alone is great; All things give way before It soon or late. —Ella Wheeler Wilcox. PORK DISHES We like and use much pork. The average cook serves pork roast, chops, ham and bacon.

winch exhausts her repertoire. Did you ever serve a crown 1 roast of pork? If j not it is worth trying. Pork to have a delicate flavor

should be cooked with proper seasonings. Here is a method which will taste nearly as good as chicken: Select a piece from the loin of about two to three pounds. Cover with boiling water, using two quarts; add two stalks of celery, a small green pepper, half an onion and one carrot —all cut fine; two sprigs of parsley, one clove, one teaspoonful of salt, half a teaspocnful of peppercorns and simmer slowly for ; two hours or, better, three. Add more salt and cool the meat. Serve it sliced in thin slices. Mock Chicken Salad. —To one cupful of cold diced pork add three hard-cooked eggs, ore-half cupful of diced celery, one-fourth cupful of cooked string beans and one teaspoonful of minced parsley. Marinate with French dressing for an hour, drain and moisten with mayonnaise. Arrange on a platter lined with lettuce. Garnish with rings of green pepper and slices of tomato that have been । marinated In French dressing. Crown Roast. —Select a rack of pork which is not too heavy and have six ; or eight ribs cut from each side. Trim the ribs as usual, without separating them; then the two sections are put together with the ribs outside, skewj cred and tied. Cover the ends of the ribs with salt pork, du.t with salt. | pepper ami sage. Roast In a hot j oven for two am! three fourths hours. basting frequently. When done remove the park cubes and cover the ribs with paper frills. Not on a hot ' platter and pile the center high with . small cooked apples, cooked in sirup until tender but unbroken. The np- ! ph* sirup Is cooked down and then , the apples are *ooled In it until it I jeilies. Baked Pork Chop..— Dip each chop hi egg ami crumbs and 1 rown In hot fat. Place In a hot baking dish, dust with salt, pepper ard poultry dressing. Place on each chop a red apple cored but not peeled and cut into half crosswise. Pour over the chops one-half cupful of boiling water and : set intc the oven to bake until tender, adding more water If needed. Serve with n sprig of parsley on top of each apple. Tomatoes nre being recognized ns a vegetable exceedingly valuable to i the baby ns well ns to the adult, i The juice Is given to very young chilj dren ns well as the better known and appreciated orang** Juice. Salads, Salad Dressings. A salad dressing is of the most Importance. With a mayonnaise as a foundation one

may evolve innumerable deliglitful dressings. French dressing is another good foundation for m a n y different dressings. Kept ready mixed in a

pint jar, winch may be well rhaken , ' before using, one may add chopped I vegetables, condiments of various kinds, cheese and other foods to add j flavor and make many varieties. When one wishes a substantial dish I the following will be a good salad to ; serve: Luncheon Salad.—Take a head of crisp fresh lettuce and one cupful of finely cut celery cut into julienne strips. Take one-fourth pound of smoked beef tongue, cut in the same way; add one pimento, also cut into small strips, as well as a cooked egg white. When ready to serve line the salad bowl with crisp lettuce leaves, mix together the beef tongue, celery, pimento and egg white; dress with: Parisienne Dressing.—Take one cupI ful of French dressing, add the yolk of a hard-cooked egg mashed, a teaspoonful each of minced parsley and tarragon vinegar with paprika to make it quite red. Beat well and sene well chilled. Swiss Salad. —Take one head of lettuce, <ne cupful of cooked string ; beans cut into halves lengthwise, then i in inch lengths. Peel and chill four medium-sized tomatoes and cut into quarters. Cut four slices o z bacon into dice and cook until brown. Mix all together and garnish with the quartered tomatoes. Serve with a sour cream dressing. Beat a cupful of heavy sour cream, add two tablespoonfuls of lemon juice, one teaspoonful of salt, a teaspoonful of sugar, one-half teaspoonful of mustard, and a speck of white pepper and paprika. Chill well before serving. Makeup of the Majority There is nothing more odious than the majority; it consists of a few powerful men to lead the way; of accommodating rascals and submissive weaklings; and of a mass of men who trot after them without in the least knowing their own mind.— Goethe. Japan’s Many Islands The archipelago of Japqn consists of six larger islands with many hundreds of small islands.

Improved Uniform International Sunday School ’ Lesson' (By REV. P B. FITZWATER. D D.. Dean Moody Blbla Institute of Chicago.) ((E). 1928 Western Newspaper (Inion.) Lesson for April 15 TRANSFIGURATION AND SERVICE LESSON TEXT—Mark 9:2-29. GOLDEN TEXT —He that abideth in me, and 1 in him, the same beareth much fruit; for apart from me ye can do nothing-. PRIMARY TOPlC—Jesus Shows H!s Glory. JUNIOR TOPlC—Jesus Shows HU Glory. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC—What Faith and Prayer Can Do. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC—The Meaning of the Transfiguration. When Christ announced His death which was to take place on the cross, the disciples were unable to see how victory could issue from death. Jesus took with Him Peter, James and John into the mountain. In order to revive theli drooping spirits and restore their confidence He was transfigured before them. Two men from the upper world were sent to converse with Jesus about His approaching death at Jerusalem—the very thing about which the disciples refused to talk. The transfiguration is therefore a foregleam of the coming kingdom. I. Jesus Christ Glorified on the Mountain (vv. 2,3). He took the disciples "by them selves” and was “transfigured before them." This shows that the purpose of the transfiguration terminated upon the disciples and not on Christ. Christ's rebuke of Peter for nis unwillingness to hear concerning His death apparently for a time estranged the disciples from Him. To heal this breach an unusual transaction was required. His shining raiment was typical of that glory which shall be manifest when Christ comes back to the earth. His appearance on the moun tain typifies His visible appearance on the Mount of Olives (Zech. 11:4. 9). 11. Peter, James and John Represent Israel in the Flesh in Connection With the Kingdom (v. 2). Christ Is peculiarly the King ot j Israel. According to Ezekiel 37:21-27, the Israelites are to be the central people in the kingdom. This people ! shall be gathered from among the nations and united as one In that kingdom. in their own country. 111. Moses and Elias Appeared 'n Glory With Jesus (vv. 4-13). These men in the glorified state are | typical of the state of the saints In ' glory. Moses, who was once denied an entrance into Palestine, appears now in glory representing the redeemed of the Lord who shall pass through death Into the kingdom. Multitudes of tte Lord's own who have fallen asleep shall be awakened at Christ's coming and pass into the kingdom. Elias rep- i resents the redeemed who shall pass Into the kingdom through translation. : Some shall be living upon the earth when the Lord shall come, and they. , without dying, shall he changed ami thus pass into the kingdom (I Cor. 15: 50-53; I Thess. 4:14-18). 1. Peter's proposal (vv. 5. 6). So definitely was the method of the kingdom unfolded before Peter that he proposed to erect tabernacl* s for Christ, Moses ami Elijah It is true that the unveiling of the majestic per- . son of Christ and the panoramic dis play of the kingdom somewhat disconcerted Peter; yet he grasped its cen- | tral meaning and proposed to cele- I brate the advent of the kingdom which | had been prefigured in a tangible way. ; 2. The divine voice out of the ! cloud (vv. 7,8). God declared Jesus to be His he- I loved Son in whom He was well .pleased, if one would know what is pleasing to God. let him study Jesus I Christ, who perfectly did His Father's j wilt. 3. Jesus’ charge (vv. 9-13). He charged them that they should tell no man concerning the things which they had seen until He had j risen from the dead. IV. A Demonstration of the Purpose of the Establishment of the Kingdom (vv. 14-29). When they descended from the i mountain of transfiguration they wit- • nessed a great multitude in a state ot I perplexity. The immediate cause of this state was the grievous condition ot a | young man possessed with a demon (v. IS). The father of the young man had appealed to the disciples to cast the demon out, but they were unable to do so. When they brought him i unto Jesus, the foul spirit was rebuked and came forth. This young man’s state is representative of the nations who are oppressed by the i Devil. Just as this young man was grievously oppressed, causing him to cast himself into the fire and into the waters, so the nations today in their perplexity are doing the things which will result in their own destruction. The Devil will be peculiarly active in the oppression of men and na- j tions in the last days. This may ac- | i count for the turmoil among the nations today. The Golden Rule That we should do unto others ns we would have them do unto us. that we should respect the rights of others as scrupulously as we would have our j rights respected, is not a mere conn- ; sei of perfection to individuals—hut । it is the law to which we must conI form social institutions and national policy, if we would secure the blessings and abundance of peace.—Henry George. All Things in His Hand He has all things in His band; therefore I shall want nothing, He j will care for me. If I rush ahead and try to care for myself, that is always i contrary to faith; therefore God fc bids this kind of anxiety. But it Is His pleasure to maintain the anxious care of love, that we may help others, and share our possessions and gifts with them^-Martin Luther.

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Sport Circles Take to Bows and Arrows The famous old pustime ot archery, which has been undergoing a revival not only in England but in this country, promises this year to enjoy a fur ther popularity. Many London hostesses of last year included it in their morning recreation in Regent's park or Kew gardens, while in rhe United States, where the sj>ort was promoted by Maurice Thompson in 1878 and revived in 1913, It is estimated that no less than 2.01M1 college girls are taking their bow and arrow shooting seriously. Before the fnventh n of gunpowder no country had been discovered in which the bow was not the chief weapon for hunting and war. It lasted longest in the Americas, where it was the main arm from Patagonia to the Arctic circle. In the 178(>s In England the art ot the bow and arrow became the favorite national pastime, and the Toxophilic society then formed still ca p ries on. Before tennis and later golf ushered in the era of more vigorous spor. the how and arrow reigned almost supreme. “Used Cars” Not Wanted The used car seems to Me a world I problem. Polish motorists arc abandoning the custom o. selling their old cars only to their friends; the friends are becoming rich enough to .buy new machines. Dealers in Bolivia have refused to accept “trade-ins” on new cars and the government has 15 old vehicles it would like to sell at any price. Egyptian dealers have organized a used-car sales company to i handle all such machines. Rumania I once was a good used-car market, but I now motorists want the latest types and Improvements. Aeronautics Aids Farmer Aeronautics, after adapting the , windmill to its own purposes, is returning it to the farmer greatly improved as a result of the intensive research made by the aircraft industry. I Changes in the number of blades and the pitch of the propellers used to drive electric generators on airplanes at the army laboratories at Dayton. Ohio, have resulted in a new type of wheel for ordinary windmills. This increases the speed of revolution from six to ten times that of the old fashioned wheel. Figs Grown in Capital A tig tree is growing in the front yard of Mrs. Margaret Donohoe at 3822 Fifth street. Washington, D. C. It is 30 feet high, and its fruit is sweet and of good size, some of it i measuring more than two inches in I diameter. Last yeai the tree bore i 150 dozen figs and this year the yield | is estimated to he about 200 dozen. The tree was brought as a fig branch I from Italy seven years ago. and two years later began to bear fruit. To Honor Scottish Heroes Edinburgh, Scotland, is to have statues of Wallace and Bruce, the Scottish heroes. They wi 1 cost nearly $35,000. and $1,700 a year has been set aside for their upkeep. A statue of each hero will be placed on the castle wall an the side of the gateway looking down the Esplanade. The Wallace figure was designed by Alexander Carrie, A. R. S. A.. Edinburgh, and I that of Bruce by Thomas J. CapperI ton of London. Coal in Canada Coal regions of Canada are main ly tn Nova Scotia and British Columbia. There are some located in Sas- ; katchewan and Albert^.

Father’s Thought Daughter—But Jack adores me, papa. I'll let you see his last love letter. Practical Papa—l’d much rather see his pay envelope. Miserable With Backache? Too Often This Warns of Sluggish Kidney Action. 17 VERY day find you lame and achy—suffering nagging backache, headache and dizzy spells? Are the kidney excretions too frequent, scanty or burning in passage? These are often signs of sluggish kidneys and shouldn't be neglected. Use Doan s Pills. Doan‘s, a stimulant diuretic, increase the secretion of the kidneys and thus aid in the elimination of waste impurities. Are endorsed by users everywhere. Ask your neighbor ! 50,000 Users Endorse Doan's: Theo. G. Lightfield, retired farmer, 634 Chestnut St., Burlington, Wis., says: “Sharp twinges came in the small of my hack every time I stopped and made it hard to straighten. Mornings my back was stiff. My kidneys acted in such a way that my rest was broken nights. Doan's Pills cured me and I haven't tad any trouble from that source since.” [DOAN’S p «.< s A STIMULANT DIURETIC KIDNEYS fbster-Milbi nCo Mfg Chem. Buffalo.NY Alone and Alone “Do you love me atone, dear?” she whispered, as they snuggled together ou the sofa. “I do.” he responded manfully as he arose and closed the door when he thought lie heard her father approaching.—Portland Express. The Specific “Since my fiance rejected me, I cannot sleep at night. What shall I take for it, doctor?” “Another fiance.” Mothers, Do This — When the children cough, rub Mustercle on their throats and chests. No telling how soon the symptoms may develop into croup, or worse. And then’s when you’re glad you have a jar of A lusterole at hand to give prompt relief. As first aid, Musterole is excellent. Keep a jar ready for instant use. It is the remedy for adults, too. Relieves sore throat, bronchitis, tonsillitis, croup, stiff neck, asthma, neuralgia, headache, congestion, ple’Tisy, rheumatism, lumbago, pains and aches of back cr joints, sprains, sore muscles, chilblains, frosted feet and colds of the chest (it may prevent pneumonia) To Mothers: Musterole is also made in milder form for babies and small children. Ask for Children’s Musterole. l fe^ ; Jars&Tubes^^j^ is Better than a mustard plaster i ■ 1B wor, ar.d ’-Tt. One box will eoßviDee y-*o Vtltee ■ I W J^r rkia beantifui. Also cure* ecj«n*. F‘rv~< £1.25. I ■ 1 ■ Tree book et. A year deader er write [ K* 2575 Michigan Are.. Chxasß