The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, June 16, 1939, Image 2
THE SUN, NEWBERRY. S. C- FRIDAY, JUNE 16, 1939
WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS BY JOSEPH W. LaBINE
German Comer on Munitions *
Makes U. S. Embargo Provision
Help Reich’s Cause, Is Charge
(EDITOR’S NOTE—When opinions sre expressed in these columns, they
sre those of the news analyst and not necessarily of this newspaper.)
— Released by Western Newspaper Union.
NEUTRALITY:
Co-operation?
German domination over lesser
European nations need not only
mean dependence on the Reich for
peacetime manufactured goods. If
such was the case last year, Adolf
Hitler’s aggression this spring add
ed military domination to the al
ready pressing economic leverage.
Reason: Already boss of Germany’s
mighty Krupp works, Berlin cap
tured the even mightier Skoda
plants when Czecho-Slovakia fell
before the conquerer. Until then
southeast Europe’s minor nations
(like Rumania, Greece, Turkey and
Jugoslavia) had Skoda guns and
shells to ward oft the aggressive
Reich. Today Skoda munitions go
mainly to Germany and can be
/ CZECHIA’S SKODA WORKS
It may change V. S. policy.
bought by lesser nations only in ex
change for concessions.
Aggravating the situation is the
Anglo-French rearmament pro
gram, which demands domestic
consumption of all munitions pro
duced in those nations’ plants.
Lesser countries get none.
This forceful argument against
current U. S. neutrality legislation
was apparently saved for the crucial
moment. Not offered early this ses
sion during house and senate com
mittee hearings, it was plumped in
their laps unexpectedly by Secre
tary of State Cordell Hull just as
the two houses seemed likely to give
neutrality an airing.
It seemed a fairly sound basis for
changing U. S. policy, isolationists
notwithstanding. Since the Nazi
government has become No. 1
source of military supplies, more
over since practically continuous
German mobilization aggravates
the situation, Mr. Hull joined Ne
vada’s Sen. Key Pittman in demand
ing repeal of the neutrality act’s
embargo provision.
(Thit provision stipulates that once
the President finds a state of tear exists
in any foreign conflict, the tale of V. S.
arms and munitions it prohibited.)
Best anti-embargo argument:
That it actually places the U. S. in
a position of co-operating with N?zi
Germany in freezing out smaller na
tions by depriving them qf muni
tions.
On the surface less pressing when
war scares have temporarily died
down, neutrality revision seemed
out of the question if congress is to
consider tax revision, relief appro
priations and social security and
still adjourn by July 15.
PENSIONS:
Revision
Downed in the house 302 to 97
was Dr. Francis E. Townsend’s
visionary plan to give everyone over
60 about $200 a month through a
$20,000,000,000-a-year 3 per cent
transaction tax. This was beaten
before it reached the floor, much to
the embarrassment of representa
tives who accepted Townsend sup
port last election. But by adjourn
ment time congress will probably
liberalize social security to start
paying 65-year-oldsters next year on
... r .
ONWARD
TELEPHONE—If the 560,000
telephone wires under one New
York corner were strung above
ground, 9,000 strings of poles
would be needed to carry them.
Laid underground, cable com
pactness has heretofore reached
such efficiency that one cable 2%
inches in diameter would carry
3,636 wires. Newest exploit: Plac
ing 4,242 insulated wires in a ca
ble the same thickness.
HANGOVER—Air sickness, dis
covered Dr. Arnold D. Tuttle of
United airlines’ medical depart
ment, results from lack of oxy
gen. Finding that air travelers
with hangovers suffered most,
Dr. Tuttle decided that morning-
after feeling is characterized by
pronounced want of oxygen.
Therefore he thinks mild doses
of pure oxygen should be an anti
dote for too much alcohol, open
ing the way for drug store oxy
gen bars.
r m
basis of their average previous
wages rather than on their pay
roll tax accumulations:
Method. Under present rules, so
cial security taxes would rise from
1 per cent to 1% per cent against
both employer and employee on Jan
uary 1, 1940; to 2 per cent in 1943;
2Vi per cent in 1946; and 3 per
cent in 1949. Probable revision:
Current 1 per cent rate against each
will be frozen for three years.
Results. At present a worker now
making $106 a month would get
nothing but a smqll lump sum set
tlement in 1940. Under revisions,
he would begin getting $25.75 a
month if single and $38.63 if mar
ried.
Significance. By cutting payroll
contributions and boosting pensions,
congress will upset the elaborately
planned program for a $48,000,000,-
000 old-age reserve account by 1980,
scheduled to draw 3 per cent inter
est as it grew through the years.
Proposed amendments, however,
are merely being realistic about the
fact that the current $2,000,000,000
reserve is ajl I. O. U.’s from the
treasury, whose interest is paid by
be rrowii.j more money and thus
raising taxes.
COMMUNICATIONS:
Free Speech?
Fourteen U. S. radio stations are
’‘international,” i.e., they direct
broadcasts to foreign continents
(chiefly Latin America) as well as
to home listeners. European stations
do likewise, but under government
orders they propagandize programs
in a way that the U. S. Constitution
would forbid as an impediment to
guaranteed free speech.
Surprised and puzzled, therefore,
were the 14 international stations
when Washington’s unpopular fed
eral communications Commission or
dered that beginning November 1
their programs must “promote in
ternational good will, understanding
and co-operation.” When time comes
to renew their year-by-year licenses,
stations must show their programs
have reflected the “culture of this
country."
What FCC denied was censorship,
nevertheless seemed th^t way to
more than one congressman.
PEOPLE:
Men at Work
Three new jobs for the following men
may soon make news:
GROVER CLEVE-
iLAND BERGDOLL, no
torious World war draft
[dodger, now in military
prison after returning
from Germany, says he
will use his wealth to re
lieve U. S. employment
by opening his Philadel
phia brewery and other
inherited property. Oth
er plans include a private
building project on his
j 24% acre farm near Phil
adelphia.
ADM. WILLIAM D.
LEAHY, retiring chief |
of U. S. naval opera
tions, whose projected |
appointment as Puerto |
Rican governor to sue-1
:eed Blanton Winship I
was mysteriously!
dropped, is now expect
ed to succeed Claude A. ||p
Swanson as secretary of &
the navy. Already pastaf
retirement age. Admiral ^-
Leahy is remaining as ^ ,
naval chief temporarily. <
JESSE JONES, Tex-
jan chairman of the Re
construction Finance
corporation, is expect
ed to be named admin
istrator of the consoli
dated federal lending
agency effective July 1
[ under President Roose-
Ivelt’s first government
reorganization plan.
[Mr. Jones may also ad-
I minister the proposed
[program of loans to
* small business.
TREASURY:
News Notes
June 15 is quarterly U. S. treas
ury refinancing time. Only re
financing this June is an offer to
exchange $426,554,600 in 1% per cent
notes maturing next September for
new five year, % per cent notes
maturing June 15, 1944. No new
money will be needed until Septem
ber. Other treasury news:
C. During the first 11 months of the
1938-39 fiscal year the U. S. operated
with a deficit of $3,240,467,092,
which will probably hit $4,000,000,-
000 by year’s end on June 30.
C. Secretary Morgenthau revealed
only 49 Americans had million-dol-
lar incomes in 1937, compared with
61 in 1936. Yet 6,350,148 people filed
1937 income tax returns, compared
with only 5,413,499 in 1936.
C. Okayed by. the senate was a meas
ure to remove the $30,000,000 limit
on federal bond insurance, though
the total debt limit cf $45,000,000,000
(to be reached next fiscal year) re
mains undisturbed.
PUZZLERS
Know your news? Answer all these
questions and you’re excellent ; answer
three and you’re good; two, fair: one,
poor.
North Sea
[BIRKENHEAD
1. In above map, note the spot
marked “X.” What disaster took
place there recently?
2. True or false: Homer Mar
tin’s United Automobile Workers
of America, big link in the C. I.
O., has refused to join the Ameri
can Federation of Labor despite
a squabble with C. I. O.
3. What infantile paralysis suf
ferer is returning from a pilgrim
age to France’s Lourdes shrine?
4. On what charge was former
U. S. Judge Martin T. Manton
convicted in New York city?
(Answers at bottom of column.)
- w
SENATOR HOLT
The question: Resolve or not?
John N. Garner and Postmaster
General James A. Farley fear a
showdown. Reason: If the resolu
tion were defeated after much-pub
licized Senate debate, the public
might interpret it as a vote of confi
dence in President Roosevelt, thus
encouraging him to run again.
Contrariwise, Republicans and
anti-New Deal senators favor a vote
immediately, win or lose. Reason:
The badly split Democratic party’s
No. 1 need is an immediate de
cision by President Roosevelt. If
the resolution carried, that decision
will be made for him; if it is de
feated, he will be forced to say
whether or not he will run.
AGRICULTURE:
Downgrade
In booming 1929 U. S. gross farm
income was $12,791,000,000. In de
pression-ridden 1932 it was less than
half, or $5,562,000,000. Returning
prosperity zoomed it to $10,350,000,-
000 in 1937. But in 1938, according
to bureau of agricultural economics
reports, it dropped again to $9,220,-
000,000.
This was not unexpected, since
farm income always fellows the gen
eral economic trend. Chief interest
ing revelations: (1) That, contrary
to popular belief, the U. S. farm
problem is not confined to a few
major crops like cotton and wheat;
(2) that the $482,000,000 in U. S. sub
sidies for 1938 was 31 per cent more
than in 1937 ($367,000,000), yet total
income went down anyway.
Two possible deductions: (1) That
all the U. S. government’s costly
farm relief measures have been in
effective; (2) that on the contrary
they have been effective in bolster
ing farm income during natural
“off” years.
Sample comparative incomes:
Crop 1938 1937
Com « 291,315,000..$ 248,914,000
Wheat 443.554,000.. 617,547,000
Oata 41.608,000.. 66,126,000
Cotton Lint . 575,741,000.. 770,377,000
Cotton Seed . 91,494,000.. 113,399.000
Tobacco 294.063.000.. 318.305.000
Truck Crops 318,176,000.. 360,204,000
Citrus Fruits 81,349,000.. 138.755,000
Apples 102,756,000.. 143,170,000
CatUe 1,165,079,000.. 1,237,422,000
Hogs 1,072,800,000.. 1,161,157.000
Sheep 163,055,000.. 194,956,000
Milk 1,778,813,000.. 1,960,922,000
Eggs 608,015,000.. 651.496.000
Answers to Puzzlers
1. The British submarine The
tis went down with a loss of 98
lives.
2. False. In a referendum
among 70,000 U. A. W. members,
96 per cent voted in favor of af
filiation with A. F. of L.
3. Fred Snite Jr. of Chicago.
4. Conspiracy to obstruct jus
tice and to deprive the U. S. of
his impartial services, ie., for
selling “justice.”
OATMEAL MEAT PATTIES
Sec Recipe Below.
POLITICS:
Showdown
When asked about a third term,
President Roosevelt promptly dis
cusses the weather, a habit chiefly
distressful to West Virginia’s anti-
New Deal Sen. Rush D. Holt. Strong
ly against a third term, Rush Holt
would need only a hint from the
Sphynx-like White House to demand
senate confirmation of a resolution
he has kept pocketed more than a
year. That resolution would forbid
a third term.
Paridoxically, two New Dealers
who least want a Roosevelt third
term are greatest battlers against
the Holt resolution. Both potential
1940 candidates, Vice President
When the Allowance
Is Low
Lucky is the homemaker who has
tucked away on her pantry shelf a
package or two of oatmeal, and in
her recipe file a half-dozen clever
suggestions for using it in her
menus. For oatmeal is a quick
change artist, and with a little in
genuity you can turn out a whole
array of tempting, unusual dishes as
delicious to eat. as they are inexpen
sive to eat.
For example, have you ever tried
making light, flavorsome raisin muf
fins with oat
meal? Or have
you used oatmeal
in a thick, hearty
vegetable soup
to give it that
“stick - to - the-
ribs” quality so
much to be de
sired for active
families? Had you
thought of using
it to stretch the
meat budget, by
making a little meat go a long way
in meat patties or meat loaf? You’ve
used oatmeal for luscious, soft,
chewy cookies, of course, but have
you tried it for making the crust for
a delectable apple pudding, or have
you substituted it for nut meats in a
rich-tasting torte?
You see, besides adding interest
and variety to meals, and doing a
first-class job of budget stretching,
oatmeal may be trusted to add a
large amount of low-cost food ener
gy to the diet. Oatmeal, moreover,
is an excellent source of vitamin B,
modemly called thiamin. This vita
min is absolutely necessary to en
able the body to transform food (es
pecially carbohydrates) into muscu
lar energy. Thiamin stimulates the
appetite, too, and it helps in over
coming constipation, and acts as a
prevention of nervousness.
Here, theit, is a brand new series
of carefully tested recipes, all of
which contain oatmeal, all of which
will be family favorites in your rec
ipe box.
Oatmeal Apple Torte.
(Makes eight servings)
CRUST:
2 cups flour
% cup oatmeal (uncooked)
% teaspoon salt
1 cup brown sugar
Vt cup butter (melted)
Combine the ingredients in the or
der in which they are listed. Re
serve one cup of this mixture for
the top. Pack the remainder into
the bottom of an eight-inch square
FILLING:
1 cup sugar
2 tablespoons cornstarch
% teaspoon salt
1 cup water
1 tablespoon butter
1 teaspoon vanilla
2 cups apples (pared and chopped}
Combine the sugar, cornstarch
and salt. Add the water and butter,
and cook over a
low flame for
about 10 minutes,
stirring frequent
ly. Cool and add
the vanilla and
apples. Pour the
filling over the crust, and cover with
one cup of crust mixture reserved
for this. Bake in a moderately slow
oven (325 degrees) for about one
hour. Serve warm with plain or
whipped cream.
Oatmeal Raisin Mnffins.
(Makes 16-18 small muffins)
1 cup general purpose flour
4 teaspoons baking powder
Vt teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons sugar
2 cups oatmeal
% cup seedless raisins
1 egg
1 cup milk
3 tablespoons shortening (melted)
Sift together the flour, baking pow
der, salt and sugar. Add oatmeal
and the raisins. Beat the egg, add
milk and melted shortening. Com
bine with, dry ingredients and mix
very lightly. Pour into greased muf
fin pans and bake in a hot oven (400
degrees) for approximately 20 min
utes.
Vegetable Oatmeal Soup.
(Serves eight)
2 pounds soup bone (% bone, %
meat)
2 tablespoons fat
2 quarts water
4 teaspoons salt
% teaspoon pepper
2 cups tomatoes (canned)
1 cup carrots (cubed)
Vt cup onion (chopped)
% cup celery (chopped)
% cup oatmeal or 1 cup regular
rolled oats (uncooked)
Remove part of meat from
cracked soup bone, cut meat into
cubes and brown lightly in hot fat.
Place meat, soup bone, water, salt
and pepper in soup kettle. Cover
tightly and simmer approximately
two hours. Cool, strain, and chill
sufficiently so that excess fat may
be skimmed off. There should be
6% cups of soup stock. Return stock
to kettle and add vegetables. Bring
to a boil, then slowly add oatmeal.
Cover and simmer approximately
% hour, or until vegetables are ten
der. Soup meat used in making the
stock may be cut in small pieces
and added. Serve with finely
chopped parsley, if desired.
Old-Fashioned Oatmeal Cookies.
(Makes five dozen)
% cup shortening
1% cups dark brown sugar
1% cups general purpose flour
% teaspoon salt
% teaspoon soda
3 cups oatmeal
% cup sour milk
% teaspoon vanilla
Cream the shortening and sugar
thoroughly. Sift together the flour,
salt, and soda,
and combine with
oatmeal. Add to
the creamed niix-
ture, alternately,
with the milk.
Stir in the vanil
la. Roll out to Vi-
inch thickness on
a lightly floured board. Cut into
2%-inch rounds with a floured oookie
cutter. Bake on a greased cookie
sheet in a moderately hot oven (375
degrees) for about 10 minutes.
Meat Patties.
(Serves six)
6 slices bacon
% pound beef (ground)
Va pound pork (ground)
1 egg (beaten)
1 tablespoon onion (chopped)
1 cup tomatoes (canned or fresh)
Vt cup milk
Vi cup oatmeal
% teaspoon salt
Dash of pepper
Line six muffin tins with strips of
bacon. Combine remaining ingredi
ents and mix well. Put into the
muffin tins. Bake in a moderate
oven (350 degrees) for approximate
ly one hour.
As a Breakfast Food.
Modern homemakers serve oat
meal porridge often and for variety
add chopped dates, figs, seedless
raisins, or dried prunes or apricots
(cut in strips) while cooking.
Get This New Cook Book.
Of course the man in your family
has very special recipe likes and
dislikes. So has every other he-
man. And, of course, they all like
a big, juicy steak, apple pie a la
mode, potatoes au gratin, etc. This
new cook book contains over 125 rec
ipes that men like. Send 10 cents in
coin to Eleanor Howe, 919 North
Michigan Avenue, Chicago, 111., and
get a postage prepaid copy of
“Feeding Father.”
, MpROVED
UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
S UNDAY I
chool Lesson
By HAROLD L. LUNDOUIST. D. D.
~ ody Bible Institute
Dean of The Moody :
of Chicago.
(Released by Western Newspaper Union.)
Lesson for June 18
Lesson subjects and Scripture texts se
lected and copyrighted by International
Council of Religious Education; used bar
permission.
PAUL WRITES PERSONAL
LETTERS
LESSON TEXT—n Timothy 1:1-0, Phile
mon 1-7, 21. 22.
GOLDEN TEXT—Study to snow thyself
approved unto God, a workman that need-
eth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the
word of truth.—II Timothy 2:15.
Letters—what interest we all take
in them I We go to town to get the
mail, or we stop our work at the fa
miliar signal of the postman. Too
little thought is given to the possi
bility that our letters may be a
means of blessing in God’s hand.
Paul has given us model Christian
epistles.
In considering our lesson it is dif
ficult to indicate specific verses, but
the reader can readily identify the
truth taken from the lesson under
each division.
I. Remembrance.
Paul did not write letters which
were impersonal and distant in spir
it. The warmth of a loving heart,
the refreshing recollection of past
fellowship, a gerfuine interest in the
joys and sorrows of his brethren
put love into every sentence of his
letters.
We need to learn the art of writ
ing letters. Even so-called business
communications may often carry a
touch of encouragement or inspi
ration. Personal letters should
certainly be a constant medium of
keeping bright the flame of affec
tion between parents and children,
brothers and sisters, and Christian
friends separated by distance.
Observe that the remembrance of
Paul had to do with both personal
and spiritual matters, and note how
naturally and easily the two blend.
There should be no need of being
offensively “preachy” in writing let
ters. The personal and spiritual in
terests of our lives should be so
close together that we normally
and without effort can put them
forth as one in spirit.
H. Inspiration.
Who has not had the unforgetta
ble experience of receiving a letter
just when its cheering word was
needed. Many a man has beer, saved
from despair and possible destruc
tion by such “a word fitly spoken”
which is “like apples of gold in pic
tures of silver” (Prov. 25:11). “A
word spoken in due season, how
good is it!” (Prov. 15:23).
We enjoy receiving such letters—
do we make an effort to write them
to others? OF do we excuse our
selves by saying, “You know I am
such a poor letter-writer!” when the
fact is that we are probably lazy or
indifferent to the needs of our
friends?
Notice that Paul’s inspiration and
Instruction to his friends revolved
around two points—his constant
prayers on their behalf and his faith
ful presentation of the teaching of
God’s Word. If we would follow his
example we must first really pray
and then study God’s Word for our
selves before we shall be ready to
pass it on to others.
III. Admonition.
Scolding has no place in a letter,
but kindly admonition is quite in or
der. Paul improved every oppor
tunity to urge his readers to per
sona] piety, Christian fellowship, at
tendance upon the means of grace,
prayer, and the study of God’s
Word. He also urged his young
brother in the Lord’s service to “stir
up the gift of God” which was in
him. The influence of the world,
the pressure of work, or some bur
den of spirit might cause a man to
bog down in the slough of despond
or of mediocrity. A letter from a
true Christian friend at such a time
might well be the means in God’s
hand of renewing holy resolves and
of stimulating renewed endeavor. Do
you think of someone who is waiting
for that kind of a letter from you?
IV. Co-operation.
Friendship and fellowship are not
one-sided. The very words demand
the existence and interaction of two
personal beings. “A man that hath
friends must show himself friendly”
(Prov. 18:24). Paul recognized this,
and when he wrote to Philemon he
gave him opportunity to respond in
loving obedience to a request while
at the same time he showed the
highest degree of Christian consid
eration and courtesy toward Phile
mon. The epistle is a “masterpiece
of persuasive tact and delicacy and
an enduring model of truest Chris
tian courtesy” (Ellicott).
No right thinking person is satis
fied to be the constant recipient of
the love and thoughtfulness of anoth
er with no opportunity to recipro
cate. The smallest child or the hum
blest individual who must receive
help wants to sho v his loving ap
preciation. A consiaerate friend will
therefore open such an opportunity,
not as a command or in a spirit of
expecting something in return, but
as an act of Christian courtesy.
Charming Patterns
For Smart Fashions
Old License Plates Useful
An old license plate comes in
handy when painting the woodwork
of a room. Be sure that it is clean.
Hold it against the wall to protect
the wall surface from paint smears
(Released by Western Newspaper Union.)
GotPa
fs Own Spirit
To believe, not because we are
learned and can prove, but because
there is a something in us, even
God’s own spirit, which makes us
feel light and truth as truth—this it
the blessed faith.—F. W. Robert
son.
IF YOU want to look slimmer
A than you are, and do it in the
coolest, smartest way possible,
make yourself a dress like 1756.
The skirt, paneled front and back,
and cut to a high, fitted waistline,
is beautifully slenderizing. The
bodice is adroitly gathered to take
care of bust fullness. Cape sleeves
flutter charmingly from a smooth
shoulder-line, and the' deep V-
neckline is your favorite. Make
this of chiffon, georgette, linen or
voile. You’ll be delighted with its
softness, coolness and chic.
Three-Piece Sports Ensemble.
No. 1755 takes care of three
things you’ll certainly want to take
on your vacation—and that’s a lot
to get out of one pattern. You can
make with it a sleeveless play
suit, a separate skirt that trans
forms it into a daytime dress, and
a bolero that makes the dress into
a little suit! Just think what a
blessing that will be, when you
come to pack! And all three parts
are just as smart and becoming
as they can be! Gingham, percale,
linen and pique are practical fab
rics for this.
The Patterns.
No. 1756 is designed for sizes 36,
38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50 and 52.
Size 38 requires 4Vt yards of 39-
inch material without nap.
No. 1755 is designed for sizes 12,
14, 16, 18 and 20. Size 14 requires
5% yards of 35-inch material; 10
yards of braid or bias fold.
Spring and Sommer Pattern Book.
Send 15 cents for the Barbara
Bell Spring and Summer Pattern
Book, which is now ready. Make
yourself attractive, practical and
becoming clothes, selecting de
signs from the Barbara Bell well-
planned, easy-to-make patterns.
Send your order to The Sewing
Circle Pattern Dept., Room 1324,
211 W. Wacker Dr., Chicago, 111.
Price of patterns, 15 cents (in
coins) each.
(Bell Syndicate—WNU Service.)
For MALARIA
For over 70 years, thousands
upon thousands of people have
proven by their purchases that they
consider Wintersmith’s the best
Tonic for Malaria. Wintersmith’s
must be good—or else it wouldn’t
be sold au over the South and in
21 foreign countries! . . If you have
Malaria, get a bottle today, and
follow the directions on the label.
WINTERSMITH'S
TONIC
Mistakes Make Humble
The best of men and the most
earnest workers will make enough
of mistakes to keep them humble.
Thank God for mistakes and t
courage. Don’t give up on
count of mistakes.—Moody.
SNOW-WHITE PETPOIEUM JELLY
Right Reading
It is not wide reading but useful
reading that tends to excellence.—
Aristippus.
TtxUr’* popularity
of Dean’s Pitts, otter
many yean of vorid-
wida me, aurely moat
baaaeaptadaaevidanca
1 of satisfactory van.
1 And favorable public
| opinion aupporta that
of tbo able phyaiciana
who teat the value of
Doen’e under exaetbuc
laboratory conditions.
Tbeee phyaiciana.
too, approve every word of adyertiaina
yon read, the objective of which ie only to
recommend Doan’s Pills aa a rood diuretic
treatment for functional kidney dieorder
and for relief of the pain and worry it
If mcro people were aware of how the
kidneys most constantly remova wactp
that cannot stay In the blood without In
jury to health, there would be better un
derstanding of why the whole body cuff era
when kidneys lac. and diuretic medica
tion would be more often employed.
Buruinr, scanty or too frequent urina
tion may be warninr of disturbed kidney
function. Ton may suffer naerine back
ache. persistent b adache, attacks of dis-
slneas, pettinc nichts. swellinc. pntt-
ness under the syce—feel weak, nervous.
* 1 IJseDn««'?f , in». It is battar to rely am
a medicine that has won world wide ac
claim than on eomethlnc lesa favorably
known. Ast yonr neighbor /
DOANS PILLS