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'V / h Tk* Barm well Peepie Semtlmel, BarmwelU Thursday, October 24, 1935 \ energy The lonser i it™, the mere I am wrtain that the great difference be- tween men, between the feeble and the powerful, the great and the Insig- •ifleaht, la energy—invincible deter- nlnation. A purpose once fixed, then eath or victory. That quality which •<111 do anything that can be done In the world.—Buxton. NO UPSETS ^ \ V Th* proper treatment tor a bilious child TMtga STEPS 1.T0 RELIEVIN0 ' ^ | CONStIPATIOi WASHINGTO DIGEST yiat(}>na^ cJ&picit by WILLIAM BRUCKART A cleansing dose today; a smaller quantity tomorrow; less each time, until bowels need no help at ail. ANY mother knows the reason ** when her child stops playing, eats * little, is hard to manage. Constipation. But what a pity so few know -the ile way to set things rightl The ordinary laxatives, of even , Ordinary strength, destroy all hopes of restoring regularity. , A liquid laxative is the answer, mothers. The answer to all your worries over constipation. A Hquid can be measured. The dose can be exactly suited to any age or need. Just reduce the dose each time, until the bowels are moving of their own •ccord and need no help. This treatment will succeed with •ny child and with any adult. Doctors use a liquid laxative. Hospitals use the liquid form. If it is best for their use, it is best for home use. The liquid laxative they generally use is Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. Any druggist has it. From Australia A green frog which can walk on tellings has been found In Australia. SKIN-, iso*** 0 * For skin troubles—Itch, cracking, smart ing and soallng—there la nothing Ilka Dr. Porter's Antiseptic Healing Oil. There may be fancier preparations but nothing that will do the work like this famous otL It not only destroys the parasites that cause many skin troubles but at the same time, helps heal the •ore and damaged skin. The most stubborn cases of itching and scaling skin that defy every other treatment usuaUy yield to Dr. Porter’s Antiseptic Healing OIL Try It on your itching or broken out skin and see now effective It Is. Dr. Porter's Antiseptlo Healing OH is made by the makers of Grove’s Laxative Bromo Quinine and •old by aU druggists at SOo and «0o with guarantee of satisfaction or money Ambitious Man An ambitious man puts It Into the power of every malicious tongue to throw him into a fit of melancholy. A Three Days’ Cough Is Your Danger Signal No matter how many medicines you have tried for your cough, chest cold or bronchial Irritation, you can get relief now with Creomulsion. Serious trouble may be brewing you cannot afford to take a chance with anything less than Creomul- don, which goes right to the seat of the trouble to aid nature to soothe and heal the inflamed mem branes as the germ-laden phlegm Is loosened and expelled. Even if other remedies have failed, don’t be discouraged, your druggist is authorized to guarantee Creomulsion and to refund your money if you are not satisfied with results from the very first bottle. Get Creomulsion right now. (AdvJ Bis ProflU handling onr line used clothing, •hoaa. BatUfactlon guaranteed. Reliable. Experience unnecessary. CENTRAL JOB BING HOUSE. 1236 Jefferson. Chlcagw, Quick, Complete Pleasant ELIMINATION Let's be frank. Thera's only one way for your body to rid Itself of the waste mat* ten that cause acidity, gas, headaches, Uoated feelings and a dozen other dis comforts—your intestines must function. To make them move quickly, pleas- -antly, completely, without griping. Thousands ’"of physicians recommend Milnesia Wafers. (Dentists recommend Milnesia wafers as an efficient remedy \ox mouth acidity). These mint flavored candy-like wafen ire pure milk of magnesia. Each wafer i approximately equal to a full'adult dose of liquid milk of magnesia. Chewed thoroughly in accordance with the direo- tions on the bottle or tin, then swallowed, they correct acidity, bad breath, flatu lence, at their source and at the same time enable quick, complete, pleme- suit elimination. Milnesia Wafers come In bottles of 20 and 48 wafers, at 35c and 60c respec tively, or in convenient tins cotathining 12 at 20c. Each wafer is approximately aa adult dose of milk of magnesia. AU good drug stores carry them. Start using these delicious, effective wafers today. Professional samples sent free to reg istered physicians or dentists if request . is made on profeeiidnal letter head. SELECT PRODUCTS. iRcerperatetf 4402 22i4 9U Lees lelaa* CHr. N. Y. MILNESIA 7fe„„// WAFERS OrlTmU C* M A C f. L A WAFE-.A NATIONAL PRESS BLDG. Washington.—The President and his two chief relief advisers, Harry L. Hopkins and Secre- Get Data for tary. Ickes,~have Relief Job J U8t completed a cross-country tour and are now In possession or Informa tion on which to base the future course for management of the relief job this winter. What their plans are, beyond the use of the funds appro priated last winter, remain confiden tial but without doubt the country can expect to see some very definite changes In the practices that have been followed. The New Deal was swfept into the ^governmental control upon the twin arches of recovery and rellet The re covery arch seems to be holding up. The relief arch, I believe, can be said to be teetering. At least that Is the conclusion that must be drawn on a set of circumstances In which billions have been spent to tide destitute per sons over their distress only to leave millions of them still looking for gov ernment handouts. It Is quite apparent that Mr. Roose velt took his two relief advisers on his Western trip chiefly for the purpose, like the well-known bear, of going over the mountain to see what he could see. The word that has come back tq Washington Is that he saw some things that were not altogether encouraging. He found that his previ ous relief methods were not In high favor In the Middle West and on the Pacific coast. Hence there are some changes In prospect, i** New Deal opposition has character ized the President’s vacation trip westward as being. In part,- politics. Whether this be a fact or not, anyone can recall that there is an election In November, UKffl, and that shrewd poll- tlcians begin many months In advance to oil the campaign machinery and see that the gears mesh. It Is not at all unlikely, then, that while Mr. Roosevelt was sincerely examining the relief situation and attempting to as certain for himself what should be doM to make the going easier for those In distress, he probably had In the back of bis mind thoughts of how those same people would react when they go to the polls a year hence and find his name as the Democratic Pres idential nominee. • • * Some months ago Mr. Roosevelt an nounced with emphasis that the Job . of taking care of the Courting destitute must be Trouble turned biick to the states and private charity. It was, he said, no longer a federal proposition. A good many oh- . servers here felt at the time he made that announcement that he was court ing trouble. Those who took that view have found their conclusions am ply supported by the facts since de veloped. T* ,e President, indeed, has courted trouble and it Is a species of trouble that Is going to remain with him throughout a long, hard winter Just ahead. Probably he wilt be able to find a way out If, Indeed, a way out was not discovered while he and Messrs. Hopkins and Ickes were on their transcontinental tour. To the average person, however, the solution Is not so apparent. That brings us to a phase of feder al administration, a new circumstance and problem, confronting the nation. I describe It as a new problem which In fact It le when considered In the light of developments since the New Deal took control. It seems to me that U ought to be said the Roosevelt administration failed to profit by a knowledge of what has happened heretofore In the use of the dole. Just across the At-’ lantlc has been available a splendid demonstration of what the dole can and will do to a population. The Brit ish government listened to the appeals of the professional relievers and hu manitarians and adopted a dole. It has taken that nation four years to whittle away even a part of the situ ation It built up for Itself. Here is the crux of the problem: At any time a governmental agency begins to feed people, to clothe them and to provide them with the other necessaries of life free, by that act It Inculcates In those people—not all of them of course—a feeling that the world, and particularly their govern ment owes them a living. A certain percentage of them Immediately be come convinced that while the dole may be smaller than their weekly pay check earned In Industry, it comes without work. In fact. It breeds lazi ness. a • * So, Id this country now we bave a certain percentage of the population who arevKhplly un- They Don t . willing to work be- Want Jobe cause they have found that the gov ernment will take care of them In timea of stress. In consequence, this segment of the population is making no effort to obtain Jobs and la quite vocal in Its lambasting of a govern- sent that will not feed Ita people. In gdditlon, information that I get tom Industrial leaders, men who Xnow what labor problems are, tell «te that a percentage of the worker* jROSS-STITCH QUILT BLOCKS By GRANDMOTHER CLARK WASHINGTON. IT.L whom they have taken back on the jobs, taken them off of relief rolls, are unwilling to do their Jobs efliclently; they seek to fill in their time and just get by, and they resent any admoni tions from foremen or bosses that a certain amount of work is required of them If they are to remain on the pay roll. Some Instances huve been’ re ported even that workers of this type hire replied to their employer’s re quests for honest labor: “We v don’t care. We can go back on relief.’’ It is a tragedy. Unfortunately, It Is going to be with us for some years to come and when I make that state ment 1 do not mean In any way to withhold praise from those men and women who, when they get a Job, try to do an honest day’s work for a day’s wage. Obviously, most of the Ameri- ican people are of this latter type. But I believe It cannot be refuted that the American government’s ex periment with the dole has created several millions of new panhandlers. President Roosevelt has Introduced an Innovation into federal administra tion by making pub- See Expensive He whnt amounts to Year Ahead * preliminary sum mation hi federal financial requirements. He ordered It compiled and released for publication at this early date, he said. In order "that the country may know what con fronts It In the way of expenditures for the fiscal year beginning last July 1, and ending next June 30. A careful analysis of the summation and the revision of estimates of ex penditures for the current fiscal year rather Indicates that it will be the most expensive In New Deal history. This Is true despite Mr. RooseveH’e declaration that a sharp up-swing in business activity will result In a marked curtailment In relief expendi tures. The budget statement by the President was regarded in the nation al Capital as rather Illusory. In fact, some of Mr. Roosevelt’s own subor dinates entertained a fear that the thing would be regarded as having a political purpose. They felt that there was no call for the action and that It might logically result In pro viding New Deal opposition with new ammunition which it can use in criti cizing waste and maladministration particularly with respect to the relief programs. The summation shows that the ac tual deficit for the current year to date Is more than half again as large as was the deficit on the correspond ing day last year, despite the business recovery about which Mr. Roosevelt lately has talked several times. It showed further that even under the revised estimates submitted by the President, expenditures for the cur rent year will be $400,000,000 more than last year and $000,000,000 more than in the first year of the New Deal. The President In his statement assert ed that the deficit next June 30. will be $300,000,000 less than the last fiscal year, but If one digs Into the mass of figures it can be seen that this $300,- 000,000 has been simply transferred to revised budget figures for the works-relief program. On this basis then, some observers persistently Inquire where the sub stantial and sustained economy In government has been effected either by the administration or by the busi ness Improvement. It Is difficult to answer. * It Is more difficult, In the opinion of Chairman Henry P. Fletch er of the Republican national commit tee, because of the frequent refer ences which Mr. Roosevelt made dur ing his 1932 campaign to a program of enforced economy in government. Ever since the President began writ ing the New Deal budgets, capital ob servers have been awaiting the day when, under the pressure of political necessity or • sincere determination on his part to carry out his political promises, he would etart squeezing the excess out of those budgets. I think it is fair to say that there has been an Immense amount of water in the government budgets under the New Deal. Equally, I think It is fair to say that there has been a tremen dous amount of waste. Thus, the time apparently has arrived when the President must start to trini down these costs If the national debt Is not to get clear out of bounds. As a poli tician of the keenest type, Mr. Roose velt recognizes better, perhaps, than anyone else that the American people do not like to see debts piled up, debts either private or public. Consequent ly, It Is not an unsafe forecast make that Mr. Roosevelt will be turn ing soon to curtailment of expendi tures. It ha* been interesting to compare the budgets under the Hoover admin istration with those by Mr. Roosevelt Mr. Hoover always was optimistic about his budgets. In fact, they were always smaller than an honest esti mate of requirements called fqr. Mr. Roosevelt has been aa flagrantly pes simlstlc about bis budgets as Mr. Hoover was optimistic. The result, of course, has been that the Roose velt budgets were extraordinarily large and somewhat unjustified. 2 WMttra N*w*p*p«r Valoa. XI r/O Cross-stitch is about the simplest thing In handwork. Little girls make their stitches In cross-stitch. These six-inch blocks are stamped in cross- stitch designs on white muslin and little girls to grandmothers will en- 'Joj .jnaklng them Into everything from small dollies to pillow tops, scarfs and bedspreads. Easy to car ry around, working one at a time and then assembling into article wanted when all the squares are finished. Outfit^ No. 46-4 consists of 6 of these sfx-inch stamped squares and will be mailed to you for 10 cents. Address Home«Craft Co., Dept A, Nineteenth and St. Louis Ave., St Louis, Mo. Inclose stamped, addressed enve lope for reply when writing for any Information. Typewriter 221 Years Old The recent unveiling In VIenna v Austria, of a bronze bust of Peter Mltterhoffer, as the Inventor of the modern typewriter has brought to light records of at least two “writing machines” previous to 1864 the date of Mltterhoffer’a Invention. In 1850 G. A. Hughea of Manchester, Eng land, perfected a, typewriter but patent records at London show that aa early as 1714 a London engineer named Henry Mill received a patent for a “writing machine’’ for "Impress- Ing of cranserlbing of letters singly or progressively one after another, so neat and exact as not to be dis tinguished from print." There Is nothing further to reveal how sue cessful Mill’s machine was but It antedates all other typewriters. \ World's Most Famous Babies Eat Oatmeal The Dionne Quintuplets, wards of the King, eat the aame cereal that la eaten by millions of babies wlu> don’t get their names in the papers—oat meal The Canadian government chose a staff of special experts for the care of the Quints. And, these experts, their scientific knowledge endorsing the Instinctive choice of mothers the world over, have chosen oatmeal for the cereal of the famons five. ' 0 Oatmeal, eminent medical author ities agree, has an abundance of everything a child’s cereal should have—body building minerals, mus cle-building protein, and the supreme ly Important Vitamin B for keeping fit. Food science says that Vitamin B Is the best safeguard against those dangerous enemies of childhood— nervousness, constipation, and pool*- appetite dne to lack of that vitamin In the d(et. v Week’s Supply of Postum Free Read the offpr made by the Postum Company In another part of this pa per. They will send a full week’s sup ply of health giving Postum free to anyone who writes for It—A dr. Stop oa White From now on a white cane Is a stop signal In Memphis, Tenn., and motorists seeing one at an intersec- ttbn must stop until cane and owner get across the street. Only blind persons may carry the white canes. It’s a new ordinance. ^DOMESTICATED WOLVES Tbs Moscow zoo boasts of tw« wolves which apparently are aa tains and trustworthy as dogs. They were captured when they were puppies and ever since have been given kind and patient training. Their atter lack of vlciousness and desire to re turn to their native element seenM to Indicate the fallacy of the belief that grown wolves become dangerous even though they have been trained from puppyhood.—Pathfinder Maga zine. FREE! New Book Telia New Trappers Oet EXTRA MONEY RAW FURS iresriirBSVgs M/owaa rtiot we jow tun. MaOt* SEARS, MaO pi* R1m« man mwlthoot float i pins toga and Utaat edition olTlpa to.' Rural Route. Street Addrea oooeoeeooooooo-oeeewoo **•••«;* 9«WSu The Choice of MttUons KC BAKING POWDER Manufactured by baking powdar SpaclaHstS who make nothing but baking powder — under supervision of azpart chemists. Some Price Today os 45 Tears Ago 25 ooncag far 250 You can also buy rll S* minne nan fnr f So 2S ounoa can for Iff Highest Quality—Always Depaadabla MILLIONS OF POUNDS HAVE BEEN USED V. ' BY' OUR - GOVERNMENT MAKy CHECKS OUT WHY WARY) THAT'S NO WAY ID TREAT KR. JENKINS) DObir YOU KNOW HIS WIDER is the richest man IN TOWN? I DON’T CARE— HESJUSTj ANOTHER FUSSY CUSTOMER tO ME) TUtHERUMT If SHE HAD' HEADACHES/WO] INDIGESTION, < CUSTOMERS woum get] OUT OF here; alive/. I KNOW YOU'RE NOT If YES, BUT* ¥of COURSE FESUNO WELL, BUT. M.WHVSHOULD | NOT) flty NO . DlDNT THE DOCTORTEUJI ? COFFEE ATTENTION jd YOU TO ave UP COFFEE NEVER £td SUCH ^ ANO SWITCH TO POSTUM? HURTMEil TRlPE)- mary, if yourTthen -1 DISPOSITION OOESNT I SUPPOSE improve wetLrtwe > fu. have TO GET ALONE WITHOUT J TO TRY YOU! CUSTOMERS ARE j POSTUM) COMPLAINING) Curses/ THAT UCKS • ME/ I NEVER , COULD STAND UP AGAINST VWV IS MARY LEAVING? SINCE SHE SWITCHED To POSTUM SHE'S BEEN OUR MOST POPULAR WAITRESS* OH.DIOWT8HETRL YOU? SHE'S ENGAGED TO MARRY YOUNG MR. JENKINS WHO COMES IN HERE EVERY OAV/, I THOUGHT only chiUrwi had to aToid coffee... how could it have hose harming you/" iS" “Oh, many adults, too, find that tha caffein in coffee upeeta their servos, causes indigestion er pre vents sound sleep I** • e . If you suspect that coffee disagreea with you... try Postum for 30 day. It eontainf no relfrW^, It fe ■imply whole wheat and bran, roasted and slightly sweetened. It's easy to make, and costs less ^ half a cent a cup. Poetum is ddkaous and may prove a real hdp. A product of General Foods. FREEI y« free/ Mail the week’s supply of Out UAL Foooa, Settle Creek. Mich. . without - fs supply of w H.u.ie-as Street LATER CUT -State FHlfaenninlaWl* n.in. ~~~.A ■ aa .i—i- ~ address; Ososml Foods, Ltd, Coboorg, Out. • - (TUs etfcr expires July 1,1936) l.