Walkerton Independent, Volume 62, Number 52, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 20 May 1937 — Page 2
Walkerton Independent Published Every Thursday by THE INDEPENDENT-NEWS CO. Publishers of the WALKERTON INDEPENDENT NORTH LIBERTY NEWS THE ST. JOSEPH COUNTY WEEKLIES Clem DeCoudres, Business Manager Charles M. Finch, Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Year |1.60 Six Months 90 Three Months 10 TERMS IN ADVANCE Entered at the post office at Walkerton. Ind., as second-class matter. FROM THE THINKERS A God all mercy, were a God unjust.—Young. Mercy turns her back to the unmerciful.—Quarles. How much lies in laughter: the cipher key, wherewith decipher the whole man!—Carlyle. That laughter costs too much which is purchased by the sacrifice of decency.—Quintilian. There are few things reason can discover with so much certainty and ease as its own insufficiency.—Collier. Minds of moderate calibre ordinarily condemn everything which is beyond their range.—Rochefoucauld. The best evidence of merit is the cordial recognition of it whenever and wherever it may be found.— Bovee. We must not judge of a man’s merits by his great qualities, but by the use he makes of them.— Rochefoucauld. I will not be concerned at other men’s not knowing me; I will be concerned at my own want of ability.—Confucius. The wise man will not sin though both gods and men should overlook his deed, for it is not through fear of punishment that he abstains from sin.—Roman. BRIEF SCRAPS Freckles, like beauty, are only skin-deep. That’s all. Apparently there is another villain always “right around the corner.” Those whose duty it is to apply discipline, should not enjoy it too much. Lazy men with brilliant minds think out revolutions, but they never push them. If a man doesn’t like another he never smiles on him. That’s how “another” knows it. Winning success uses up too much of a man’s life. How much time has he to enjoy living? A word to the wise is usually more than sufficient. They’ve thought of “that” already. No use telling boys that war is always wrong when there are statues to soldiers everywhere. All the efficiency experts, if they could hold a convention, couldn’t think of away out of a depression. SCIENCE NIBBLES Dust storms uncovered evidence jf the Folsom man in Oklahoma. Rat’s milk has been found to be very much richer in fat and protein than cow’’; milk. Experiments at the University of California indicate neutron beams are twice as lethal to cancer as Xrays. The first hours of sleep are the soundest, according to the results of experiments conducted at the University of Chicago. Doctors at the Washington University School of Medicine believe calcium-rich diets may aid persons ! afflicted with leprosy. The chemical, porphine, believed the common ancestor of blood and chlorophyll, has been made synthetically r.t Antioch college. A scientist says it is possible to make spectacles which will enable color-blind drivers to distinguish between red and green traffic lights.— Pathfinder Magazine. IN GOOD OLD U. S. A. United States wilu life is valued at $1,000,000,000 yearly. Bird names are used by United States Navy mine layers. The United States is the largest consumer of sugar in the world. Crime costs every citizen in the United States an average of $l2O a year. The average cost of American ' homes built in recent years is about $3,800. Trenton, N. J., has 48 potteries and is the greatest pottery center in the United States. — Forty-nine persons died in 1935 in Miami, Fla., from injuries suffered in traffic accidents. California and Oregon are the | only states in which English walnuts are grown on a commercial ' scale. Statistics show that only one out of every 300,000 letters mailed in the United States is lost before delivery.
_ about: Curing Stuttering. CHIN LEE, ARlZ.—Away up here in the Indian country comes a newspaper, saying some expert at correcting human utterance has turned up with a cure for stuttering. But why? By his own admission, nearly all stutterers can sing and
most of them can swear fluently, thus providing superior emotional outlets in two directions. One of the smartest criminal lawyers I know deliberately cultivated a natural impediment in his speech. In courtroom debates it gave him more time to think up either the right questions
or to figure out the right answers. And one of the most charming voices I ever heard belonged to a Louisiana girl whose soft southern accents were fascinatingly interrupted at intervals by a sudden stammer—like unexpected ripples in a gently flowing brook. * * • How to Relax. T> EFORE I started out here, feeling somewhat jumpy after wrestling a radio program for six months, Jimmy Swinnerton, the artist, who’s one of the most devoted friends these high mesas ever had, advised me to try stretching out on the desert sands as a measure for health and complete relaxation and a general toning up. “Just lie down perfectly flat,” he said. Then he took another look at my figure. “Anyway, lie down,” he said. So today I tried it. Another friend, John Kirk, the famous Indian trader, helped me pick out a suitable spot on the Navajo reservation that was forty miles from the nearest habitation. But the site I chose was already pre-empted by a scorpion with a fretful stinger and an irritable disposition that seemed to resent being crowded. So I got right up again. In fact, I got up so swiftly that Kirk said it was impossible to follow the movement with the human eye. It was like magic, he said. • • * Speed Crazed Drivers. VX/HY the hurry, Sonny Boy? ’ ’ I see you almost daily. You’re roaring through populous streets or skidding on hairpin turns or whirling at sixty perilous miles an hour around the kinked and snaky twists of mountain roads like some demoniac bug racing along the spine of a coiled rattler. If I am one to say, you probably have primed yourself for this senseless speeding on that most dangerous of all mixed tipples—the fearsome combination of alcohol and gasoline. Or perhaps, like the blind mule of the folklore tale, you just naturally don’t care a dern. One thing is plain: Despite the high percentage of mortality your breed is on the increase. So, again, echoing the question which the coroner must frequently ask at the inquest, why the hurry, Sonny Boy? It can’t be that anybody wants you back at the place where you’ve been or that anybody else will be glad to see you at the place w'here you’re going. Really now, Sonny Boy, what is all the hurry about? ♦ ♦ • Civilization’s Predicament. FEEL it my duty to call attention to the following warning, recently published: “The earth is degenerating in these latter days. . . bribery and corruption abound. . . the children no longer obey their parents. . . it is evident that the end of the world is approaching!” However, it shou 1 d be added that this prediction is not, as might be assumed from its familiar ring, the utterance of some inspired observer of the present moment. It is a translation from an Assyrian tablet, dated 2800 B. C. So, if the fulfillment of the doleful prophecy has been delayed for 4,737 years it seems reasonable to assume that it may be some months yet before civilization flies all to pieces. ♦ * * Waning States’ Rights. AS I watch commonwealth after commonw'ealth below the Mason and Dixon line tumbling over one another to embrace centralized authority in exchange for federal funds for local projects, I’m reminded of a trip which a friend of mine out here just made. He’s a descendant of the Lees and he decided to pay a pious pilgrimage to the last remaining stronghold of the late Southern Confederacy. So he went to the only two states that voted last fall for states’ rights, making his headquarters in the ghost city of Passamaquoddy. He reports that, in both Maine and Vermont, the secession sentiment is getting stronger all the time and that there’s a growing tendency to name boys for Jeff Davis rather than Ethan Allen or Neal B. Dow. IRVIN S. COBB. © —WNU Service. Life-Time Food Estimated The average human being consumes during his lifetime 400,000 pounds of bread, 12,000 eggs, about 30,000 pounds of meat and 60,000 pounds of potatoes, declares a London scientist. Historic Spot on Campus Among historic spots on the campus of the United States Naval academy is the Maryland state capitol, the fifth place (1783-84) to be used by the Continental Congress for sessions.
I Washington! I Digest jgk I National Topics Interpreted 1 By WILLIAM BRUCKART I NATIONAL PRESS BLDG. WASHINGTON, D. C ■
Washington.—President Roosevelt, from the time he was Assistant Sec- _ .... retary of the Navy Building th e wiLson adthe Navy ministi ation, has always been regarded as a friend of the military forces of the United States. He has never been a fanatic about his position but has held consistently to the view that the military services must be protected against continuing political attack which would destroy their usefulness. Likewise, Mr. Roosevelt has constantly argued for a policy of building up the army, navy and marine corps. Since he has been in the White House, Mr. Roosevelt has taken care always to see that sound policies of development were invoked as regards the military services and his interest in the navy in this direction has been marked. In consequence, the President has brought about a program of building in the navy that, examined from any angle, must be considered as having established a splendid first line of defense for our country. Whether one favors a big navy or a small navy, I think it must be admitted that the navy is the first line of defense and so the President, being fully acquainted with developments throughout the world, has seen to it that our navy shall be in a strong position as our first line of defense. It may be, as some critics of the President contend, that the hundreds of millions expended under Mt. Roosevelt’s policies constituted too much of a fund in this direction; that we have no need for a navy as large as that now contemplated, and that the creation of a large navy indicated a policy of aggression by the United States. My own feeling is that these objections are not well founded. The turbulent situation in international relations, both in Europe and in Asia, seems to warrant a definite move on the part of the United States to be equipped. In other words, who is there that would wish our nation again to be caught without any worthwhile fighting units ready for action as we were in 1917? Further, although we are a peaceful nation, we must avoid a repetition of the 1917 conditions because we can not afford the waste of money that characterized the building up of our armed forces at that time. One reason for the comments that I have just made on the navy and President RooseNeutrality velt’s policies is Law the fact that we have a new neutrality law. It was passed just a day ahead of the expiration of the temporary neutrality law that was operative during the past year or so. This new law probably is as good as any neutrality law that can be written. It represents the work of men in congress who are very serious in their desires to create machinery that will keep us out of war, or at least will slow down our entry into international conflict. It lays down prohibitions against the sale of hundreds of items by American citizens or American corporations to any nation which the President may hold to be a “belligerent” nation, which is the way diplomats describe a nation at war. The law has a further important and interesting provision. It requires that if any belligerent wants to buy products in this country, commodities that are not prohibited by the neutrality law, it must come to our shores and get them and must pay for them before the boat leaves. Thus, it has come about that the new law is called the “cash and carry” neutrality act. That title sounds very satisfying. It sounds as though we will never make loans again as we did during the World war—loans never to be repaid except in some minor instances—and that none of our ships will become the targets of foreign gunboats because we are transporting munitions of war to any belligerent. Surely, this phase of the law will in a measure retard our entrance into any war and it will at the same time reduce the excitement in this country incident to the manufacture and sale of munitions of war because of the profits accruing under such circumstances. But, it strikes me that, after all, this neutrality law is likely to be a rather futile gesture. Having observed governmental action over an extended period of years, I refuse to kid myself. I will not say that the new neutrality act will keep us out of war because, very definitely, it will not. Let us see why. There are a thousand and one acts that a foreign nation can do to insult our national honor or damage our citizens and their commerce. These are called “overt” acts. When an overt act is committed, it is so easy to forget about the high principles stated in the present neutrality law. It can be repealed and a declaration of war substituted for it almost within ewenty-four hours. * • • There have been a good many millions of citizens of the United States come onto Look at this earth since the Facts the armistice of 1918. Among these are undoubtedly many who will learn of the present neutrality law with a feeling of safety; who will think that nothing now can happen and their mothers, wives and sweethearts will feel they need not worry about the time when these younger generations of men will have to march away, with drums beating and flags flying, never to return.
F JI Irvin S. Cobb
For their peace of mind, the present neutrality law certainly is helpful. My suggestion is, however, that they look the facts in the face. When one of these overt acts is committed, in we will go regardless of the neutrality law. I might advert to some of the things that happened between 1914 and April 6, 1917. President Wilson, a sincere advocate of peace, did the best he could to prevent our participation in the World war. It was a matter that actually brought about his re-election in 1916 because his campaign leaders used the slogan,' "He kept us out of war.” Events came through with such startling speed, however, that a month after he was inaugurated for his second term, he was standing on the rostrum before a joint session of congress asking for immediate passage of a resolution placing our country in the war on the side of the Allies and against Germany and the Central Powers. Two days later we were formally in the fight and then, once we were made a belligerent by the decision of our government, it became “a war to make the world safe for democracy.” I think I need not review all of the various slogans that were employed in the national propaganda to solidify our nation behind its military forces. There were many of them. The nation was ninety-five per cent behind the government in a war to end all wars. Hundreds upon hundreds of millions of dollars were borrowed from our citizens who bought, first, liberty bonds and later, victory bonds. For the first time in later history of our nation we had a tremendous national debt, more than ten billions of which were loaned to those nations with which we were associated in the war. The remainder of these funds was spent like money in the hands of a drunken sailor, ashore for the first time in the year. Nor is there criticism to be made of that spending because we were not prepared for war. So, while I do not now foresee our participation in any conflict within the next few years, I am quite convinced that Mr. Roosevelt has pursued an absolutely sound program in advocating a strong navy and a strong army. It will serve us well and will cost us very much less than if this building up process had to be accomplished overnight as it was in 1917. It may be surprising to a good many people to know that our army at present ranks as number 17 in the list of armies of nations even though our country is one of the largest and one of the richest in the family of nations. My belief is that if our navy is made to rank with the-greatest and plans are worked out as Mr. Roosevelt is trying to work them out so that our army will be possible of expansion, taxpayers’ money will be much better spent than through boondoggling or wasted through useless development of theoretical schemes. It certainly will be much more effective as an influence upon other nations than a hundred neutrality laws which, at best, are nothing more than the belly-wash of agitation. I feel rather keenly that the best neutrality policy we can have as a great nation, with territorial possessions and commercial interests throughout the world, is an armed force with which other nations will not invite trouble. ♦ * ♦ As the battle over President Roosevelt's proposal to pack the Supreme court of the Supreme United States with Court six new judges grows in heat, it becomes increasingly evident that members of congress are looking to the political aspects of the situation to a greater extent than obtained in the early stages of the fight. This circumstance certainly is working to the advantage of those who oppose the President’s scheme and it is interesting to look at the picture from that angle. My observation of congressional activities in the past leads me to believe that every President must expect in his second term a certain amount of defection, a certain amount of running away, among the supporters who stood by him unflinchingly during his first term. Os course, most of his stalwarts will stick by him through thick and thin but it always has happened that a rather deep fringe of his party will begin to balk or duck when they reach the second lap and know that the head of their party will not seek election to a third term. The reason must be quite obvious. All members of the house and one-third of the senate membership have to seek votes in their home districts every two years. With a President in his second term, the interest of these candidates for office must turn to what their voters think rather than what the President thinks. All of this has been related to lead up to the fact that there is great unrest in congress now. No one can foretell how serious it is going to be but it is quite evident that the President's court packing proposal has served as the springboard that can be used by many Democrats who want to make some plans of their own rather than be governed by national party policies. That is, they are now of the opinion that they must satisfy their voters at home rather than the President with whom they have joined forces up to now. © Western Newspaper Union. “Push” and “Pull” Those who depend mere on “push” than on “pull” are liable to get nearer the front.
li>
“The Halifax Explosion” By FLOYD GIBBONS Famous Headline Hunter 1 DON’T believe it hurts any of us to stop once in a while and take stock, to reflect how lucky we actually are. That’s one reason why I’m telling today the adventure of Mrs. B. A. Henneberry of New York, N. Y. It’s an incredible tale, this story of how out of two hundred people living within range of an explosion, only ten survivors remain—of whom Mrs. Henneberry is one. Mrs. Henneberry’s house was at 1406 Barrington street, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. Because the large row of houses was owned by a Mr. Flynn, it was known as Flynn Block. The day was December 6, 1917. At 8:30 a. m. the Henneberry children, all five of them, were getting ready for school. The two oldest children had just left the house, and the younger ones were eating their breakfast. A hundred yards out in the harbor, directly across from Mrs. Henneberry’s house, several boats lay at anchor, one of them carrying ammunition, for this was during the World war. The Ammunition Ship Exploded. Mrs. Henneberry, wishing to make sure the children had gone around the corner to school, as was her custom went to the front door and opened it. In the harbor, she noticed a cloud of smoke rising. She remembers hearing someone say, “MY GOD, THE BOAT’S EXPLODED!” Then a blast of air lifted her bodily. She lost consciousness. . . Mrs. Henneberry’s husband had served overseas with the second draft of the Sixty-thirds. On the day of the explosion he was in the hospital. When he heard the noise of the explosion, he said to one of his buddies, “The Germans have got us,” thinking it was an air raid. Just then one of the boys came in and said, “No, Ben, all the North Side is blown up, one of the boats exploded carrying ammunition.” When Ben Henneberry heard that, he said: “My family is up there.” Hastily he assembled some of his friends and started for the north end of the city. All the soldiers and sailors were out to help them. Throngs of Hysterical People. The city was roped in because all the people who had relatives living there were trying to rescue them—shouting and yelling and nearly going mad with fear and anxiety, so Mrs. Henneberry relates. If the people were not stopped—some of them—they would actually run into flaming buildings. Into this rush of hysterical human beings, Ben Henneberry pushed his way, making with agonized premonition for the unrecognizable mass of fallen stone and timbers that had been his home. When Mrs. Henneberry came to, after the explosion, she was lying in the cellar of her home. All around her she could hear people screaming for help. She was completely pinned by the large timbers and foundation of her house. She was lying on her back, and all she could do was to move her fingers, she says. One thing, and that only, saved her from being burned to death. Her home was so close to the water that the waves washed all over the demolished building, extinguishing flying sparks. Otherwise, Mrs. Henneberry says, “I wouldn’t be here to tell the story.” Not far off. completely crushed and buried under timber and debris, lay one of Mrs. Henneberry’s children. She could hear the child moaning and crying, but she could not move to help her. After a while she heard the child’s cries cease, and she knew she was dead. Then Mrs. Henneberry sank into merciful unconsciousness. Their Five Children All Dead. At three o’clock, Ben Henneberry, frantic with grief, came upon the unconscious form of his wife, and the scattered bodies of his five dead children. Os this 1 simply cannot write. No words of mine could ever portray this scene, nor would I if I could. Suffice it to say that the griefstricken husband and his friends assisted in putting Mrs. Henneberry on one of the numerous boats that were taking victims in relays to a hospital in the south end of the city. So extensive was the damage that all hospitals were jammed, victims were taken to the colleges for treatment and hospitalization. Mrs. Henneberry says she was taken to the “Women's College.” Some doctors and nurses from Massachusetts had been sent along, and she happened to be one of their patients. She was so badly hurt that she just lay numb for three weeks. When she got out of the hospital, she had to walk on crutches for a year. While Mrs. Henneberry was in the hospital, her family doctor came into the ward and was talking to one of her neighbors. Speaking of Mrs. Henneberry, he remarked how badly he felt, after being her doctor for so many years; for, he said, he could hold out little hope for her. When Mrs. Henneberry heard him say that, she spoke up: “No, doctor, I'm still here.” “He was the most surprised man I ever looked at,” Mrs. Henneberry says. Relatives in Massachusetts mourned her as dead. On Christmas Day they got word she was still alive —“The best Christmas present they ever got,” they said. © —WNU Service.
Nature Supplies Power and Ice From Volcanoes Sometimes Nature supplies power for nothing. The people of Larderello, in the Province of Pisa, Italy, live at the foot of an active volcano. Every unit of heat, power, and light used in the town is obtained from its 'fiery interior, thus saving the citizens endless expense and taxation. In addition, commercial borax is obtained from “blow holes" in the hillside, relates a writer in London Answers Magazine. The people of Styria, Austria, live beside another kindly mountain. This is “Der Erzberg,” the Iron Mountain, which is 5,000 feet high and contains about 300.000.000 tons of iron ore—fifty per cent of its volume. There is another iron mountain in Sweden—Kiirunavaara —which is 2,455 feet high and contains more high-grade iron than any other equal area on earth, for seventy per cent is pure iron. Needless to say, both these mountains have been exploited by the communities who live in the ityNature has also her own gasworks. Medicine Hat, in Alberta, has for years obtained gas and light from inexhaustible subterranean generating stations. There are a number of wells which supply fifty miles of houses and streets. Welland, Ontario, also has a natural gas supply, and so has some of the Mid-Western of the United States, but in the latter case gas is j Leopards Love to Fight Leopards are the slyest and most ferocious of the big cats, but they are too light of weight to be a serious threat to their cousins, the lions and tigers. Their one great quality is a love of fighting. When a Man Is Forgetful “When a man tells you he never said anything he’s sorry for," said Uncle Eben, “It don’t necessarily show he has a good disposition. It only proves dat he's forgetful.”
Adventurers’
sent by pipeline from Texas—where the wells are—Boo miles away. Mexico has a volcano that pro duces ice. This is Colima, which sometimes bursts into activity. By some freak, huge hails.ones faL ; continuously round the crater. | These are collected in special bins.' conveyed to distant towns, and sold in cases and hotels. The Tree Fish Among the strange creatures in Australia is the mudskipper. It swims, walks on land—why it even climbs trees. The fish, found in rivers oi Northern Queensland, are generally about 10 inches long. A real freak of nature, they have lungs in addition to gills. Their thick front fins are about the shape and size of frogs’ legs. On these they w’alk. A mudskipper usually goes ashore pursued by a crab, its mortal enemy. To escape, it ascends the roots of a mangrove tree, many of which grow near the shore. Thus it gets another name, “mangrove sch.” Isaac Watts, Hymn Writer Isaac Watts, the hymn writer, was born at Southampton in 1674. From 1696 to 1701 he was a tutor in the family of Sir John Hartopp. He became minister of the independent church at Mark Lane, London, 1702. resigning in 1712 because of ill health. Watts was a popular writer and his theological works were numerous. His tretise on “Logic” became well known, but his reputation rests chiefly upon his hymns. He died in 1748. Held Funerals for Cats Among the Egyptians cats were embalmed, funerals were held for them, families went into mourning and there was a death penalty for any one who deliberately killed a cat. Higher Than Niagara Big Manitou falls on the Black river of Northern Wisconsin, called the Falls of the Great Spirit by Indians, is higher than the Canadian , falls at Niagara.
Untie Mui Q Could We But Hear— We laugh over the “private lives” of the ancients. What will posterity think is the funniest about ours? It is softies who object to critics. Criticism — good criticism — is what there is not nearly enough of. But there are overwhelming oceans of gush. A good scold is preferable to a smearer of molasses. One regrets his past about as much when it has been full of empty boredom as when it has been full of sinfulness. A woman with little money, but much taste, will make a small, shabby house into “a vineclad cottage.” They Stand Alone— Dominating natures that always choose their friends, sometimes wistfully wish some one would choose them, just for a change. We realize what an offense swearing is when a woman indulges in it. You can not really like an egotistic man, but at times you admire him. We see now the weakness of a big nation. It spends too much money. Little ones seldom do. Foreign Words and Phrases Toute medaille a son revers. (F.) Everything has its good and its bad side. Laissez ces vains scrupules. (F.) Discard or lay aside those vain scruples. Je suis. (F.) I am. Ad nauseam. (L.) To the point of disgust. Pater patriae. (L.) The father of his country. Bon marche. (F.) A bargain. Chacun pour soi et Dieu pour tous. (F.) Everybody for himself and God for all of us. Chronique scandaleuse. (F.) A scandalous story. Empressement. (F.) Eagerness. Argumentum ad absurdum. (L.) An argument intended to prove the absurdity of an opponent’s argument. Entr'acte. (F.) Between the acts. "Quotations" V Just as we use mbney with business needs, so we need manners for our daily needs.— Michael Arlen. War is not a relic of barbarism, but the fruit of the system under which we live.— Devere Allen. The silver lining to the world depression is woman's chance to prove she real!v is man's helpmate.— Elinor Glyn. A man of forty is not too old to have made up his mind about many things and too young not to be willing to change it.—George Boas. /pjaoi. I KILLS INSECTS | ON FLOWERS • FRUITS I VEGETABLES & SHRUBS I Demand original sealed I bottles, from your dealer 3c yy Wild Anger Small fits of anger are like campfires that are likely to become forest fires if not extinguished.
Don*t Sleep When Gas Presses Heart If you want to really GET RID OF GAS and terrible bloating, don’t expect to do it by Just doctoring your stomach with harsh, irritating alkalies and “gas tablets.” Most GAS is lodged in the stomach and upper intestine and is due to old poisonous matter in the constipated bowels that are loaded with ill-causing bacteria. If your constipation is of long standing, enormous quantities of dangerous bacteria accumulate. Then your digestion is upset. GAS often presses heart and lungs, making life miserable. You can’t eat or sleep. Your head aches. Your back aches. Your complexion is sallow and pimply. Your breath is foul. You are a sick, grouchy, wretched unhappy person. YOUR SYSTEM IS POISONED. Thousands of sufferers have found in Adlerika the quick, scientific way to rid their systems of harmful bacter a. Adlerika rids you cf gas and cleans foul poisons out of BOTH upper and lower bowels. Give your bowels a REAL cleansing with Adlerika. Get rid of GAS. Adlerika does not g- pe —is not habit forming. At all Leading Druggists. WNU—A 20—37 Hold to lour Friends The friends thou hast and their adoption tried, grapple them to thy soul with hoops of steel.—William Shakespeare. To Get Rid of Acid and Poisonous Waste Your kidneys help to keep you «•!! i bv constantly filtering waste matter from the blood. If your kidness get functionally disordered and fad to remove excess impurities, there may be poisoning of the whole system aaa body-wide distress. Burning, scanty or too frequent unnation may be a warning of some kidney or bladder disturbance. You may suffer nagging ba'-i-he, persistent headache, attacks of dizziness, getting up nights, swelling, pu.bness under the eyes—feel weak, nervous,- all | played out. In such cases it is better to rely on * medicine that has won country-wida acclaim than on something less favorably known. Use Doan's Pills. A multitude of grateful people reconiaieoa Doan's. Ask Hour neiohborl
