Walkerton Independent, Volume 62, Number 33, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 7 January 1937 — Page 2

Home Heating yUJ Hillfc B > John Barclay Ulla Iv Heating Expert Getting Fire to Burn Briskly to Produce Quick Heat on Cold Mornings TXT'HAT a joy and comfort it is ’ * to get your home heated quickly on cold mornings! And how easily it can be done! Shake the grates gently. When a red glow appears in the ashpit, stop shaking. Next, open the ashpit damper and close the check damper until the fire burns briskly. Should fresh fuel be nec—Fir? essary, feed it on the fire in a thin layer. Give it time to burn well and heat the house, then add a full charge of coal. When the gases have burned off, reset the dampers for normal burning. This same rule applies should the fire get very low and almost bum itself out at any time. Be careful not to smother it with too much coal. Open the ashpit damper and close the check damper. When the fire again is burning brightly, shake the grates gently until the first red glow appears in the ashpit, add a full charge , of fuel, allow the gases to burn off, reverse the dampers—close < the ashpit damper and open the check damper. That’s the way to save fuel and cut down trips to the cellar. Foreign Words and Phrases Peu de chose. (F.) A small matter. Quid pro quo. (L.) One thing for another; an equivalent; tit for tat. Sic 'transit gloria mundi. (L.) Thus passes away the glory of the world. Unter vier augen. (Ger.) Between four eyes; i.e., tete-a-tete. Si quaeris peninsulam amoenam, circumspice. (L.) If thou seekest a beautiful peninsula, behold it here; motto of Michigan. Zeit ist geld. (Ger.) Time is money. Tertium quid. (L.) A third something; the result of the union or collision between two opposing forces; hence, a nondescript. Keep your body free of accumulated waste, take Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. 60 Pellets 30 cents. Adv. Failure. Then Success Failures may be the forerunner of greater success. only LUDEN'S MENTHOL COUGH DROPS will do these 3 things... and all for . •; 5/ Q Clear your head Soothe your throat Help build up your ALKALINE RESERVE WHEN A COLO STRIKESI • ARE YOU ONLY A THREE-QUARTER WIFE? THERE are certain things a woman has to put up with and be a good sport. Men. because they are men, can never understand a three-quarter wife—a wife who is all love and kindness three weeks in a month and a hell cat the rest of the time. No matter how your back aches —no matter how loudly your nerves scream—don’t take it out on your husband. For three generations one woman has told another how to go “smiling through" with Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It helps Nature tone up the system. \ thus lessening the discomforts from X the functional disorders which ' women must endure in the three ; ordeals of life: 1. Turning from -girlhood to womanhood. 2. PreP 3 —ing for motherhood. 3. Ap- ??? aching “middle age." Don't be a three-quarter wife; take LYDIA E PINKHAM’S VEGETABLE COMPOUND and Go "Smiling Through.” EMSgig MORNING DISTRESS isdue to acid, upset stomach. Milnesia wafers (the original) quickly relieve acid stomach and give necessary elimination. Each wafer gT equals 4 teaspoonfuls of milk BaNfiMKSd of magnesia. 20c, 35c & 60c. REMEDIES . rt-uppear in a Few Mays. Horne ' ac* possible with new organic ^■>*4o SW ‘-1 oiler. WAG•C CO.. Has »*»>«, Chicago, Hi. ———— — WtrUM, NFHRITIS, SCIATICA, s 1. . Gel relief in 5 d*y« < . back Free trfln offer. OSARK •»y, POPLAR BLl’i F, MO. -INVENTIONS -four < hpdlfhtf d invention* or iderni f SatW <• ’ on guaranteed i* f'e- * t t Patentee AXII Plr«?.»#il Akc. - • ( hirago. HOME WORK SALhi Ca, 144 Mkfa Alt , Newark, M. 1

© New York Post.—WNU Service, Remember When Sloan Got §40,000 Vi ithout Ridin' Nag O YOU remember ’way back when— A jockey received 540.000 because of a race in which he did not ride, own, officially train, or bet on ihe winner? That was in 1902 when the f rench filly, Rose di Mai, won the Prix de Diane at Chantilly. Tod Sloane, perhaps the greatest jockey of all time, had been barred for two years by the English Jockey club because he had committed the heinous offense of betting on his own mounts. So he had come to Paris and it was charged that he had worked the filly in trials for the stake. This annoyed the French Jockey club, which then had a tight working agreement with the British lords of the turf. The stewards contended that Tod had been refused a jockey’s license and consequently was not in good standing. So, as punishment for his reported appearance as an exercise boy, they expelled him from the French turf. Tod sued and the case excited comment over all the racing world while it dragged on into the highest court of appeals. Finally when the high-stepping jockey, who had arrived in Europe several years previously with a $250,000 bankroll, was down to his last pound the verdict arrived. It created a legal precedent for the turf but probably Tod never concerned himself about that. Starting with the $40,000 received in damages he soon was happily engaged in winning (and losing) a new fortune almost as large as the one he previously had accumulated. A group of American Olympic athletes were forced to replace their drinking water with light wines? That was when the U. S. team was on the way to Athens for the 1906 games. A stop was made a't an Italian port and customs inspectors noted the huge jars of mineral water. Such a new-fangled aid to the well-conditioned athletes was beyond the comprehension of the inspectors. Visitors always were trying to work new smuggling tricks on them and they thought they knew gin when they saw it. So they confiscated this contraband “gin.” But even though they were weak on Yankee notions, the Italians were as strong on international gallantry as they were on red tape. Even now there are members of that team who smack their lips as they recall the gallons of vino which replaced, at the inspectors’ expense, each drop of “gin” water. Bill Tilden turned down a $60,000 offer to turn pro? That wasn’t so terribly long ago at that—a matter of about a dozen

years. But since the lion of the tennis courts did make the switch he has harvested a crop of dollars that is not to be sneezed at. And his example has been followed by other lights of the racket game from Vinny Richards down to Fred Perry. The odds, though, are that Tilden’s

earnings are a good deal ahead of any of his fellow tennis pros. A player, dusting himself off at third base, received the greatest surprise ever to come the way of a hitter of a game-winning triple? That was years ago when Moose McCormick had been with the giants only a few days. He had been told to bunt but a ball came across the plate to his liking and he swung with full force. He was met at third base by a red-faced, highly excited little fellow. A season or two later Moose came to bat as a pinch-hitter six times in a six-game series while winning five of the games and tying the other with his hits. But such fame was in the future. Now the Bucknell youngster was feeling pretty proud of his present achievement. He slapped the dust from his clothes with one hand while he extended the other for the expected congratulations. Then he listened in awe. The red-faced little fellow was not in a congratulatory mood. Instead Manager John J. McGraw was fining Moose SSO for disobeying the order to bunt. Bob Fitzsimmons was preparing to win the heavyweight championship of the world from Jim Corbett at Carson City? A visitor one day discovered Ruby Robert standing just outside the Fitzsimmons bedroom door listening intently. Inside the room Mrs. Fitzsimmons could be heard lifting her voice i in prayer for victory. The fight seemed likely to be a tough one and the since historic solar plexus punch was as yet unknown to fame. So the visitor suggested that Fitzsimmons might profitably employ his time in like supplication. Ruby Robert considered the suggestion for several long minutes. Then he shook his head. •■Nope,” he said solemnly. “If ’e won’t do it for *cr, 'e won’t do it lor me.”

NOT IN THE BOX SCORE: I) IG-TIME baseball men who for *-* years have conducted their business with scant regard for the rights of customers probably will behave for a while now. The reason is they have been tipped off that continued mismanagement will result in a governmental bureau taking charge of the national game—in order to preserve it from the fate of the buffalo . . . The thirteen-year-old national diving queen, Marjorie Gestring, is an accomplished pianist .. . Contrary to reports, there is a stone on Tex Rickard’s lot at Woodlawn. There is, however, no marker on the great fight promoter’s grave and no provision for upkeep. That pass interference rule will j not be changed in spite of the clamor of the losers and the sillier reporters. So far only one sane remedy has been proposed although dozens were discussed and laughed down during a meeting of the Eastern Association of Football Officials, j This was Bill Crowley’s suggestion that only one pass should be permitted during each series of downs । in the last five minutes of each । half. It would minimize one of the two real causes of the trouble, the number of desperate heaves that are made when scant scoring time remains . . . Big league clubs wou’d do well to consider Smokey Joe Martin, sent to Baltimore by the Giants last summer. Since receiving a chance to play regularly Martin has become the best third baseman in the minors . . . Bill Powers, secretary of the New York Hockey Writers association and one of the game’s best informed reporters, was born in Florida. Giants to Put McPhail in Charge of Farms The Giants are planning to put Larry McPhail—who provided the

. Reds with night baseball and other circus features before departing suddenly from Cincinnati—in charge of their new farm system . . . Lee Handley, the young infielder the Dodgers tried so hard to get, has a weak arm . . The strident objections of one of the powers about the

throne prevents the Dodgers from making a deal foi Joe Stripp ... If Eddie Mayo, recently transferred to Boston by the Giants, can hit .260 next season the Bees believe they are first division bound . . . Mayo, by the way, should hit 20 points better than that when played regularly . . . The slump which caused Heinie Manush to fall into possession of th® Dodgers was due not so much k® failing eyes as a persistently ailing charleyhorse . . . The forwards for Pittsburgh in the Eastern Amateur Hockey league are Crossley Sherwood and Colin Sherwood. They are twins. Lawrenceville coaches speak with awe concerning the end play of fif-teen-year-old Puffy Bigler, son of Princeton's very good 1919 tackle. He is six feet one inch tall and weighs 175 pounds . . . Tony Justice, Gonzaga's 195-pound end, is anj other player who will bear watching in 1937. Big Brother Eddie, of the Boston Redskins, claims the kid । is due to be one of the nation's i best . . . Aside from the fact sidearmers always did worry him there w’as another reason why Wally Berger had hitting trouble last year. Pitchers found they could keep the big Bees’ outfielder under control if they threw at him . . . Ralph Guldahl, leading pro golf money winner, is not superstitious about it but his two Pekinese dogs are named “In” and “Out.” Ted Kid Lewis has found a use for yesterday’s newspaper. He uses it for wallpaper in his London case. Lewis’s son, Morton, is one of the more eminent British movie camera men and soon will visit Hollywood to observe American film methods . . . The Stadium club in London, where Georges Carpentier and Joe Beckett once drew 5175,000, is no bigger than New’ York’s St. Nicholas Palace . . . Jimmy Walsh, the hard-hitting lightweight champion, is England's best fighter . . . Benny Lynch, claimant to the world’s flyweight title, is a crowd pleaser while Johnny King, bantamweight, is fast and clever . . . Johnny McGoragy, Scotch featherweight, is durable and willing . . . Pat O’Keefe, who gained some measure of distinction while getting beat by the late Eddie McGoorty, now is a London pubkeeper. Comment on the legalistic legerdemain by w’hich baseball’s high commissioner insured the extinction of all independent minor league owners and enabled the rich Cleveland club to retain the sensational Bob Feller —“The Supreme court follows the elections. Judge Landis follows his 550,000-a-year salary.” . . . Art Chapman, probably the best playmaker in the National Hockey league, comes by his skating ability naturally, his mother having been one of the best figure skaters in the Winnipeg neighborhood. Incidentally he met his wife, who has won numerous trophies for speed skating, when the two of them were appointed instructors at a Winnipeg play- . ground. Walter Brown, the Bostonian who coached the United States Olympic hockey team, has discontinued his ; five-year-old practice of touring Europe with American amateur sextets each winter. Can’t get any fun . out of it any more. Feels that European “amateur” teams have so many Canadian ringers these days that it would take a pro outfit to beat any of them . . . Fritz Crisler and Jimmy Crowley should get together while considering the tribulations of a football coach. Because . of what happened to his very good ‘ defensive team this year Crowley must open up the Fordham attack for 1937. Princeton plans to stress ' a tight defense instead of the high , powered offense that faltered so

fc J I w Bill Tilden

GRASSHOPPERS AS POULTRY MENACE Feared in 1937; Are Host for Three Parasites. By J. D. Mlzelle. Parasitologist. College ot Agriculture. University of Illinois.— WNU Service. Warnings of a possible heavy infestation of grasshoppers in 1937 hold a menace to poultry flocks as well as a field crops. Grasshoppers have been found to be the intermediate host for at least three poultry parasites, chief of which are tapeworms and round worms. Poultry losses cost Illinois farmers approximately $4,000,000 annually. And 20 per cent of the annual poultry mortality, as judged by autopsy findings, is caused by tapeworms which spend a part of their life cycle in such intermediate hosts as grasshoppers, houseflies, stableflies, dung beetles, ground beetles, ' earthworms, snails, slugs, ants and Crustacea. It has also been found that poultry becomes infested with roundworm parasites by eating grasshoppers, earthworms, cockroaches, snails, pill bugs, waterfleas and dung beetles. However, few parasites are able to develop directly without spending a part of their life within an intermediate host. While proper sanitary measures will not prevent the grasshopper menace, good poultry management will go far toward the control of parasites with both direct and indirect life histories. Poultry owners will find that it pays to have clean, well constructed houses and equipment, clean yards and ranges, clean, well balanced feed and water. It is also important to dispose of diseased fowls and see that houses, troughs and watering utensils are kept clean. These measures combined with any other steps that will destroy intermediate hosts or prevent their access to farm flocks will cut down the heavy annual poultry loss and raise egg and meat production. Poultryman Advises How to Treat Colds in Birds To get rid of colds that have started in a poultry flock the first tL.ag to do is to isolate all birds showing signs of a cold, states a . North Carolina State college expert. As this trouble is usually caused by drafts and dampness together with poor ventilation, poor feeding, and overcrowding, the next thing is to look for and eliminate the cause. Check carefully on the feeding schedule and give the flock Epsom salts at the rate of one-half pound to each three gallons of water. Keep a good germicide in the drinking water while there is evidence of the trouble. The house and utensils should also be disinfected. Where the trouble is well established it is not economical to treat the individuals and these should be destroyed. Where commercial sprays for colds are used the directions should be carefully followed. Poultry Notes The principal cause of blindness in hens is worms. • * • Be sure to feed the old hens plenty during their molt. • • • A new British machine tests and grades 3,000 eggs an hour. • • • Young turkeys, or poults, require more attention than nearly any other fowl. • • • It takes from 4 to 12 weeks to tell whether a baby chick is male or female. The first indication of a hen quitting is a comb starting to dry up and old feathers easily pulled out. • • • A Leghorn hen in Japan is credited with a world record in egglaying. According to reports this hen allowed herself only four holidays and shelled out 361 eggs in 365 days. • • • Have plenty of nests. Nests are easily built but too often neglected, tion. • • • Putting all the pullets into the same laying house at the same time is not always a good practice for the poultryman. • • • The bureau of animal industry says that it costs the average midwestern poultry plant 2U cents a pound to dress poultry. This cost depends partly on the volume of the business done. • • • The average egg production of hens in the United States in 1934 was 76.7 eggs. Nevada’s poultry and egg co-op. eratives report business increased 366 per cent during the 1935-56 marketing season. ♦ ♦ •* When turkeys eat feathers the vice may be controlled by feeding । clover, alfalfa, or soybean hay. A supply of fibrous grains, such as ; oats, barley and buckwheat, helps ■ to curb the habit. ♦ ♦ * i Hen turkeys have a roving dis- ■ position and must be penned. I i Hens catch cold just as humans » do. Excessive moisture in the poul- ■ try house and drafts are often the ■ i causes. • • * ■ The Bronze is the largest of all I breeds of turkeys, the /American ’ Standard of Perfection calling for : । adult toms to weigh 36 pounds; ; ' yearling toms, 33 pounds; young i ■ toms, 25 pounds; hens, 20 pounds; > 1 and young hens, 16 pounds.

s Larry McPhail

Soil and Water Saving Is Urged Well-Planned Farm Program Plays Important Part, Expert Says. — Supplied by the North Carolina State College Soil Conservation Division. WNU Service. Soil conservation and water conservation go hand in hand, says E. C. Jernigan, project manager of a county soil conservation service. Both depend upon a wellplanned farm program in which soil-building practices play the most | important part. Five simple and inexpensive farm practices are suggested as contributory to soil and water conservation. They are as follows: First—Subsoiling. Break the land well and subsoil to a depth of 18 to 20 inches. This will increase । the water-holding capacity of the soil. Second—Terracing and strip crop- j ping. Break down the slope with a system of terracing and strip cropping that will slow down the ; water and reduce erosion. The 1 strips of close-growing crops will : add enriching vegetable matter to I the soil and make it capable of holding more water. Third—Liming. To improve the physical condition by neutralizing the acids and increasing the legume crop yields. Fourth—Rotations. Plan a rotation that will include as much closegrowing vegetation as possible. Fifth—Retirement of lands. Take out of cultivation and put to pas- I tures or trees all lands that cannot , produce crops at a profit. Summer Pest Attacks Can Be Headed Off in Winter Because winter brings a crisis in the life of all insects, orchardists and gardeners can do much in winter to head off some of the most dangerous and trobk?some pest attacks, advises A. C. Hodson, University Farm entomologist, St. Paul. Cleaning up and burning all garden refuse, weeds, sticks, and other trash in which insects may spend the winter will help immensely in gardens, orchards and small fruit plantings. Late plowing likewise exposes many insects to destruction by cold and birds. Orchard sanitation, particularly the destroying of dropped fruits, is important throughout the year in controlling codling moths, plum curculio and apple maggots. Scraping the rough bark of apple trees from the trunks and large branches kills many hibernating larvae of the codling moth and exposes others to birds and weather. The scraping has another advantage, particularly in old orchards. It exposes the oyster shell scale so ! that it can be more easily killed by dormant spray. Other insects such as the cane girdlers and tree crickets of raspberries, may be attacked during the dormant season. They spend the winter as larvae and eggs in the canes, and if injured canes are removed, subsequent damage can be eliminated. Many similar steps can be taken by the alert fruit grower during : . the winter to lessen summer insect troubles. I Water in Corn Corn that is well matured and weighs about 70 pounds per bushel will ordinarily contain about 17.5 per cent of water, notes a writer in the Indiana Farmer's Guide. Such corn has 3 to 4 pints of surplus water. If 10 bushels of this corn is put away for seed it will be necessary to evaporate about 4 gallons of water to make the seed safe from severe freezes and mold growth. A 70-pound bushel of corn may be safely stored under conditions that would result in molding and other injuries to more sappy ears. Farm Notes Pennsylvania’s apple crop is the best in seven years. • • • Ontario yields more than half of the Dominion apple crop. • • • Barnyard manure is an effective fertilizer for orchards and vineyards. • • • It costs three or four times as much to feed a cow in the manger as on pasture. • • • The beef cattle industry is sec- | ond in size only to the petroleum industry in California. Store sweet potatoes in a dry, | moderately warm place, such as the basement near the furnace, on | a shelf near the kitchen stove, near the chimney on the second floor, or in a warm attic. • • • Black locust, unlike most trees, is a legume, and like alfalfa, clover and lespedeza, improves the land by ■ fixing nitrogen in the soil. Green tomatoes have practically the same food value as ripe red ■ tomatoes and can be fried, stuffed, i preserved, pickled or used for pies. ; ' The New York potato crop is es- ! ; timated at 25 million bushels, which " is 11 per cent less than last year । and 22 per cent less than the aver- ’ age. • • • The census of 1930 returned 106 ■ farms with a total of 3,071 acres in the District of Columbia. ♦ ♦ ♦ > No definite trend upward or down- • ward has been noted in cabbage : acreage in New York state during the past fifteen years. ♦ • • 1 Ventilation of corn cribs by naturi al means is the most practical meth- ■ od for farmers to adopt to insure ; a better quality corn, says the col- ! lege of agriculture. University of Illinois. 1

I UNCOMMON AMERICANS • • • By Elmo © Western Q y.- Newspaper Scott U atson Union “Magnificent Failure” TN AIJL the history of missionary 1 work in America, there is no more remarkable record than that □f David Zeisberger. For 63 years he labored among the Indians and ’ during that time he traveled many thousands of danger - filled miles through the wilderness on foot and by canoe. He built no less than ' 13 Indian towns as centers of Chris- | tianity in a heathen land and he lived to see all but one of them wiped out of existence. He had failed but truly his was a “mag- j nificent failure.” Zeisberger was born in Moravia in 1721 and in 1740 came to Georgia where his church was organizing a mission among the Creeks. Next he was sent to Pennsylvania where he aided Count Zinzendorf in building the Moravian towns of Nazareth and Bethlehem. Beginning his work among the Delawares at Shamokin, Pa., he was adopted by the Munsey tribe of that nation. Then he went to New York where the Six Nations made j him a sachem and keeper of their , records, an unusual honor for a white man. When the French and Indian war began he was compelled to return to Bethlehem because both French and English were suspicious that his charges were partisans. After Pontiac’s conspiracy had been crushed in 1763 the Moravian led his flock to Wyalusing, Pa., and established two more missions on the Allegheny and the Beaver. Then the call for service beyond the Ohio came to him and in 1772 he founded Schoenbrunn (“Beautiful Spring”), , the first white settlement in the future Buckeye state. Next the town of Gnadenhutten was established and an era of peace began. But trouble was brewing for him. j Although Zeisberger restrained the Delawares from taking part in the Revolutionary conflict, he soon j found that he was under suspicion by both the British and the Ameri- I

cans. The British stirred up the Wyandots to break up the mission i at Schoenbrunn and its teachers j were tried as American spies. Finally in 1782 came the crowning blow, when a party of brutal Amer- j icans committed the hideous mas- | sacre of 96 Christian Indians at Gnadenhutten. The broken-hearted Zeisberger stat ted with the rem- j nants of his flock o' a journey which took them first to Michigan, , then back to Ohio and finally to : Canada where he founded Fairfield on the Thames river. In 1798 the Moravian Indians and their leader came back to the Tus- I carawas river in Ohio where Zeisberger founded his last town—Goshen. There his “long life of amazing fortitude, faith and patience” came to an end in 1808. Real Estate Promoter '|' HOUGH you may regard real estate promoters as products of modern times, the fact is one of the greatest “put over his deal” early in the history of the republic. His name was Joel Barlow and he was a lawyer, a diplomat and a poet, I which may account for the fact that once “his siren voice persuaded a group of French emigrants to seek a Garden of Eden in Ohio.” Back in 1787 two groups of land speculators, known as the Ohio Associates and the Scioto Associates, secured the right from congress to purchase land in the Northwest ter- I ritory with the almost-worthless Continental currency with which it had paid off soldiers of the Revolution. Then the Scioto Associates sent Barlow to France to dispose of these lands. They had nothing but an option on the lands but that didn't stop Barlow. He sold a tract of 3,000,000 acres to a French Scioto company which in turn retailed farms to peasants and artisans who were willing to emigrate to America. In the spring of 1790 some 600 of them arrived in Alexandria, Va. William Duer, head of the Scioto Associates, was filled with dismay for there were neither a o ents to meet them nor lands ready for them. Foreseeing the trouble that was ahead when hundreds more land- j hungry Frenchmen arrived, Duer hastily arranged to take over lands of the Ohio Associates, who owed him money. For this debt he got nearly 200,000 acres on the Ohio river opposite the mouth of the Great Kanawha. There he brought the Frenchmen and in October, 1790, the town of Gallipolis was founded. Rufus Putnam was engaged to build their huts for them but Duer soon found that it would be impossible to fulfill all the glowing promises which Barlow had made—to provide good homes and profitable occupation for the skilled artisans among them. By 1792 Duer had gone bankrupt, land titles were still in a bad tangle and the settlement of Gallipolis began to dwindle. For years thereafter congress had to listen to many a tale of woe from the victims before their claims were settled. Clog Almanac A clog almanac was a square piece of wood, brass or bone about eight inches long, which might be either hung in a room or fitted into a walking stick. It was a perpetual almanac, showing the Sundays and other fixed festivals. It was introduced into England by the Danes. New England Coast Fisheries Dorchester Point and the Neck, I South Boston districts, were the first ■ to establish fisheries on the New England coast.

Cu t lot Snug and Warn Three-Piece Set J ; 4 * Pattern 1097 Miss Five-to-Twelve will b 5 snug, warm and proud in a hand-crocheted cap, scarf, and muff-set of plain crochet, with picot-stitch trim. Pattern 1097 contains directions for making the set in 5 through 12 year size (all given in one pattern); illustrations of it and of all stitches used; material requirements. Send 15 cents in stamps or coins (coins preferred) for this pattern to The Sewing Circle Needlecraft Dept., 82 Eighth Ave., New York, N. Y. Write plainly your name, address and pattern number. Ambition of Man At four—to wear pants. At eight — to miss Sunday School. At twelve—to be President. At eighteen — to have monogrammed cigarettes. At twenty—to take a show girl out to dinner. At twenty-five — to have the price of a dinner. At thirty-five—to eat dinner. At fifty-five— to digest dinner.— Excelsior Springs Standard. If You’re Told to ^Alkalize” Try This Remarkable •‘Phillips” Way

Thousands are Adopting eV On every side today people are being urged to alkalize their stomach. And thus ease symptoms of “acid indigestion,” nausea and stomach upsets. To gain quick alkalization, just do this: Take two teaspoons of PHILLIPS’ MILK OF MAGNESIA 3G minutes after eating. OR — take two Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia Tablets* which have the same antacid effect. Relief comes almost at once — usually in a few minutes. Nausea, “gas” — fullness after eating and “acid indigestion” pains leave. You feel like a new person. Try this way. You’ll be surprised at results. Get either the liquid “Phillips” or the remarkable, new Phillips* Milk of Magnesia Tablets. Delightful to take and easy to carry with you. Only 25c a box at all drug stores. ALSO IN TABLET FORM: Each tiny tablet is W the equivalent of a teaspoonful of gen- ? nine Phillins’ a \", Milk of Mag- | sou. " L ' **l PM 1 ! I IPQ’ MILK OF ■ nlLLirO MAGNESIA “I Had a Friend” “What is the secret of your life?” asked Mrs. Browning of Charles Kingsley: “tell me, that I may make mine beautiful, too.” He replied: “I had a friend.” CHECK THAT COUGH BEFORE IT GETS WORSE Check it before it gets you down. Check is before others. maybe the children, catch it. Check it with FOLEY S HONEY * TAR. This double-acting compound gives qu:ek relief and speeds recovery. Soothes raw. irritated tissues; quickly allays tickling, backing. Spoonful on retiring makes for a c ugh-free sleep. No habit-forming, stomach-upsetting drugs. Ideal fur children, too. Don't let that cough due to a c id hang on! For quick relief^ and speeded recorrry insist on FOLEY’S HONEY & TAR. Be Sure They Properly Cleanse the Blood j V/OUR kidneys are constantly Alter* T ing waste matter from the blood stream. But kidneys sometimes lag id their work —do not act as nature intended —fail to remove impurities the! poison the system v^hen retained. Then you may suffer nagging backache, dizziness, scanty or too frequent urination, getting up at night, pub nest under the eyes; feel nervous, miserable —all upset. Don’t delay? Use Doan's Pills, J Doan’s are especially for poorly functioning kidneys. They are recommended by grateful users the country over. Get them from any druggist. These Advertisements Give You Values