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A THE NEWBERRY SUN. NEWBERRY. S. a "World Varieties" Smash Hit in 1947 Baukhage Atom, U. N., Flying Disks, 'Hamlet' Fill Passing Year By BAUKHAGE Newt Analyst and Commentator. FLORIDA, 1947-1948.—The last pink blush of the setting sun has faded from the Indian river. The palm fronds are quiet and only the plaintive peep of the last wakeful bird can be heard over the whisper of the waters. A year has begun, but only the baby owlets realize that something is ■different. Life has begun for their generation as it begins each winter almost precisely at this day and hour. I’m looking through my diary. New Year’s Day — Little news, but down the street the church bells ring and for some reason I go to the bookcase and pick up “Pilgrim’s Progress.” Weave a long quotation into my broadcast and very glad I did—so many people liked it. Back through heavy snow to dinner. January 6 — Here is a red card with the seal of the United States on it: "House of . Representatives, ; ; *5 admit bearer to Radio Gallery.” A new. Republi can - dominated congress, the first in 14 years. The new “ins” riding high. The “o u t s" pretty gloomy. The Gal lup poll showed Truman at his low point (The crowd to hear the President’s mes sage is no bigger than the one which jammed the sen ate to see Senator Bilbo barred.) Cowboy Glen Taylor of Idaho, how ever, stole the Republican show. A difficult broadcast. It looks strange, indeed, to see Joe Martin and Sena tor Vandenberg sitting there presid ing with Truman below them at the aker’s desk. January 7 — Had a birthday but iidn’t record anything. It couldn’t iave been important. January 16 — Press conference at the Polish embassy. (What a change since I broadcast from the drawing room in the days when Hitler be gan to show his claws.) Now the Soviets have what Hitler took. No body believed a word of what the charge d’affaire said as he insisted on the purity of the government’s pre-election activities. Invited to tea for Otto (Hapsburg) of Austria. Couldn’t make it. (How are the mighty fallen.) January 30 — Broadcast from Koosevelt’s bedroom at Hyde Park. Just as he left it. Bedroom slippers, dressing gown, the last magazines that he looked at before he left for Warm Springs, Fala’s dog biscuit. January 31 — Broadcast from Poughkeepsie. It’s centenary of Smith Brothers’ cough drops — all the employees wearing beards. February 7—Palestine is boiling. February 15 — Took Elizabeth (godchild) through White House. February 19 — Dr. and Mrs. Stephen Palmer (pastor of my par ents’ church. First Presbyterian of Lockport, N. Y.) called. February 20 — Heaviest snowfall of year begins. Attlee announces India to be freed. February 27 — Baby senators’ din ner. Commentators as "pitchers" grill freshmen senators “up to bat” at Press club. I had Flanders of Vermont, McCarthy of Wisconsin and Robertson of Virginia. March 12—Broadcast from house radio gallery again. President's message on aid for Greece and Tur key. Announces "Truman doctrine.” Presidential party departs in Sacred Cow. Nat (Nathaniel Peffer, profes sor of foreign affairs, Columbia uni versity) addresses forum: “Get out of China—Chiang is a crook.” Late in March—A southern jour ney. Daytona Beach, Pensacola, filled with vague memories of my grandmother’s stories of her pre- Civil war days here. Lunch aboard the carrier Saipan. Birmingham, Anniston — southern hospitality and sympathetic audiences. April 9 — Back in Washington. Saw Maurice Evans in "Hamlet.” Very modem. Gravediggers’ scene omitted, Ophelia finds her dowers pressed in a book. However, I liked it. April 28 — Farmers don’t hate daylight savings time any more than I do. Washington on regular time, we get up an hour earlier. As hard for me as it is for a cow to change habits. April 29 — Poor Richard club of Philadelphia gives me their "cita tion of merit.” Had a very jolly luncheon. Wally sits next to me (Wallgren, cartoonist of the Stars and Stripes). Later the United Busi nessmen’s association gave me a public service shield. May Day — Mexico’s President Aleman addresses joint session of congress. Later we meet him for cocktails and an interview at the decorous Blair bouse, state depart ment’s guest residence for VIPs. Terrific crowd, heat, the poor Presi dent nearly pushed into the garden. "Viva Mexico, viva Estado Unidos!" May 16 — Called on Dr. Loudon, Netherlands ambassador. He tells me he is leaving. It’s not often you establish pleasant friendships with officials whom you may know very well professionally and socially. Dr. Loudon was an exception. Hate to see him go. May 29—Boys back from foreign ministers’ conference in Moscow. Baltimore Sun’s Paul Ward and Washington Post’s Ferdinand Kuhn addressed the overseas writers off- the-record. What they said con firmed other off-the-record confer ences with high officials. Not much hope for Russian-American amity. Couldn't Get Maple Sugar May 21 — Hear violent argument "Vermcnt maple sugar is better than Ohio maple sugar. . . .” Affirm ative: Presidential Secretary Wil liam Hassett of Vermont. Negative: Dr. Louis Tuckerman, bureau of standards, nuclear physicist of Ohio. Later broadcast my willing ness to judge if given samples. June 5 — Secretary of State Mar shall, at Harvard, outlines ideas on European recovery. June 11 — Dinner and forum. Dr. Chisholm, Canadian minister of health, gave a splendid talk. He be lieves it will take a lot of educa tion to change human beings from “the kind of people who go to war every 25 years.” Still no samples. July 8 — The air is full of flying saucers. So ares the airwaves and the newspapers. Typical mass il lusion. July 25 — Off for a week in New York state and 7 Vermont. Showed my wife scenes of my hiking days. Climbed Mount Mansfield again (on a ski lift). (Maple syrup, $10 a gal lon.) August 2 — Back to tropical Wash ington. Re-stocked office aquarium with guppies, black mollies, zebras, angel-fish and jumbo snails. August 11—Preview of film “The Roosevelt Story.” Good historical documentary, but commentary quite out of tune, for those who lived through most of it. August 19 — Tragedy — angel-fish succumbs and is eaten almost alive by the predatory, if sanitary, snails. August 20 — Bill Benton, director of state department’s "Voice of America” program, calls us in for criticism. He has a rather impres sive factual report on its effective ness. September 16 — Back in the ABC broadcasting booth at <the United Nations in Flushing, N. Y., to watch the general assembly re-convene. Too busy to make any diary entries from now on. September 27 — Returning to Washington. Progress at the assem bly seems to be caught in the “njets,” but there is a will to peace there which will hold the organiza tion together to the last ditch. October 14 — Interview with Stas- sen. In huddle with state department’s second-level experts. Marshall plan by no means ready. Paid for my own lunch. October 28 — Folks in Upper Darby, Pa., seem less interested in the ’48 presidential campaign than in the international situation. November 10 — Folks in Oak Park, 111., seem more interested in the ’48 presidential campaign than in the international situation. November 16—MC’d "Decade of Destiny" program on Richmond News Leader’s WRNL station for their 10th anniversary. Smithfield ham and more Virginia hospitality. November 17 — Extra session of congress opens. President’s Euro pean aid and domestic anti-inflation message received with polite but re strained enthusiasm by the major ity party. Delivered a learned discourse: "Journalism: Its Cau?e and Cure.” December 7 — Television inter view with Senator Flanders of Ver mont and Senator Lucas of Illinois on inflation. We didn’t do much to bring down prices, but our tempera tures rose slightly under the kliegs. December 12—Off to Florida. BOTTLE BABIES . . . Porkey and Jacob Werner of Baltimore, Md., must drink 17 gallons of water a day between them in order to go on living. They are victims of a rare kidney ailment that brings about body dehydration. Seventeen gallons of water ^reighs about 142 pounds; combined weight of the children is 54 pounds. NEWS REVIEW Panama Bases Denied; List Grain Speculators Unanimous rejection by Pan ama's national assembly of a treaty which would have given the U. S. the right to lease and man 14 mili tary and airfield sites to defend the Panama canal not only precipitated a diplomatic disaster but also left this nation in the position of a fighter without a left hand to guard his jaw. The action, strongly opposed by Panama's President Jiminez, left the U. S. with just one alternative— to pull out—since commitments had been given that no American troops would remain in Panamanian terri tory without sanction of an author ized treaty. Military officials later announced that the withdrawal of some 2,000 U. S. soldiers from the 14 bases sur rounding the canal would be begun immediately. That meant, probably, that the troops would be pulled into the canal zone proper, which the U. S. leases from Panama. This was, by all odds, the most crucial issue to arise in U. S.-Pan- ama relations since this country purchased the canal from France in 1904. And it was aggravated by the fact that the inability to man de fense bases around the canal left this most vital point in American military security dangerously ex posed. Rep. Albert Engel (Rep., Mich.), chairman of the house appropria tions subcommittee on defense, stated his belief that the national assembly’s 51 to 0 vote against the treaty was influenced at least in part by the Communist movement in Panama; and he suggested that the U. S. build a new Atlantic-Pa cific canal outside Panama if that nation continued to refuse use of bases. There did not appear to be much chance of further negotiations, how ever; the assembly’s rejection of the pact probably closed the door on that course. Some officials were speculating on whether the problem might not wind up in the lap of the United Nations for solution. SERIAL: Grain Opera Secretary of Agriculture Clinton Anderson, at the behest of the sen ate appropriations committee in vestigating commodity speculation on the part of government officials, came through with the first install ment of the “names” he had prom ised to name. There were 711 of them — big traders in grain and other commodi ties. But except for the name of the man who precipitated the inves tigation, Edwin W. Pauley, presiden tial advisor and special assistant ANDERSON’S LIST to Army Secretary Kenneth Royall, there were no spectacular disclo sures on the list. While there is no law against spec ulation, the current investigations ordered| by congress stem from re ports that government officials have profited from “inside” information on government commodity buying plans. Anderson’s 711-name list was the first installment in a series which the agriculture secretary will for ward to the senate appropriations committee, simultaneously making each list public. An estimated 14,000 names are available for such list ing. Meanwhile the senate appropri ations committee, as well as a house committee, were ready to start sift ing the rolls for possible irregulari ties and especially for leaks of in< side information. WARNING: On Prices The President’s council of eco nomic advisers, an astute group that sometimes functions as Mr. Truman’s conscience, has warned that the U. S. must return to "real price competition” if the present boom period is not to collapse into a shapeless economic mess. In its annual report the council sharply criticized “monopolistic practices” and declared also that: “Many industrial prices must come down at least in relation to other prices and many rates of profit must subside while reasonable profitability is established in other areas." The report surmised that the pres ent era of prosperity was "abnor mal” because of such factors as heavy exports, short crops and great military expenditures. To remedy the situation the council of fered these recommendations: Elimination of deliberate cur tailment of output as practiced by some labor organizations. Discontinuance of the practice big business of hampering the development of new, small busi nesses. 3 Development of natural re- • sources and increase in the in dustrial facilities of the nation. 1. by i 2 Dis . of Search for Researchers One of the adverse factors devel oping to hamper the nation’s post war program of scientific progress is a critical scarcity of scientists in certain branches of military re search, government officials have revealed. They discount, however, state ments that an aversion on the part of scientists to working on death dealing weapons is the primary cause of the shortage. Economic factors and a scholar’s normal desire for complete freedom in study, rather than any anti-mili tary philosophy, keep many of them away from government work, offi cials of the military and the atomic energy commission observed. Greatest shortage is in certain key personnel, it was disclosed. The need was stressed for scientist-ad ministrators who are capable of or ganizing and directing large re search projects of the type the gov ernment is sponsoring. Long-range planning is being directed at cor recting the situation. WHAT CAR DO YOU LIKE? 48 Auto Is Child of Evolution That sleek, snake-hipped automo tive beauty that you probably are on a waiting list for is a shiny ex ample of the "survival of the fit test" principle operating in the in dustrial world. It is the evolutionary descendant of 2,200 different makes of cars which have appeared on the market in this country alone during the 55 years since the first gasoline-pow ered automobile drilled down the pike. Of those 2,200 different manufac turers who introduced their prod ucts into the American scene, only 21 today continue in actual produc tion of passenger cars in the U. S. Nevertheless, this year’s models owe much to these enterprising manufacturers who failed to sur vive. Many of them, in the true evolutionary spirit, added some thing new that was incorporated into the cars we drive today. High on the list of major engineer ing contributions by companies no longer in production, according to the Automobile Manufacturers asso ciation's data, is the steering col umn control introduced by Pierce in 1904. Brush brought out a car in 1907 with coil springs, and in 1909 Hup- mobile caught automotive engi neers by surprise with its single unit power plant — engine, clutch and transmission. The center gear shift control by KingJn 1910 caused a sensation un equalled in the motoring public’s eye until Pierce-Arrow put head lights in the fenders in 1914. And the Dusenberg’s four-wheel hydrau lic brakes of 1920 were little short of revolutionary. When Eddie Rickenbacker brought out the Rickenbacker car in 1922 he added the aircleaner to automo tive equipment. The Franklin con tributed the covered running board to the automobilist with the "Pirate Phaeton” in 1933. Although all of these companies have disappeared from the field, the engineering discoveries they spon sored live on after them, and some of the refinements offered today are based upon improvements which were displayed in bold type in cata logues published around the turn of the century. Internal Parasites Cut Yield of Wool Year-Round Control Program Advocated Most of the emphasis on parasite control in sheep has been tied up with faster gains, better lamb car casses and prevention of damage to the intestinal walls of the animal. Attention of sheepmen now is be ing directed to the effect of internal Producers must be insect free. parasites on the yield of wool. Michigan State college is urging flock owners in that state to treat animals with phenothiazine to keep them in good condition and to get a heavier growth of wool. Pheno thiazine is administered as a drench or in pellets, or mixed with salt and kept before the flock all the time. A dependable year-round program calls for individual treatment of all animals in fall and spring, and use af the phenothiazine-salt mixture throughout the pasture season. This is the program being followed by progressive sheepmen to keep para sites in check. Soil Needs Nitrogen How lime, clover and crop resi dues increase the soil’s nitrogen and organic matter supply and thus boost crop yields, is shown by the chart below. This drawing summar izes results of tests at the Dixon soil experiment field by University of Illinois agronomists. All three plots in the tests were limed and the crop rotation on each included corn, oats and wheat One plot had no clover. The small grain straw was removed and the cornstalks were burned. This plot produced a four-year average of 57 bushels per acre. The second plot had the same LIME-NO CLOVER CORNSTALK* BURNED. CORN - 57 BU LIME ■ SWEET CLOVER CORNSTALKS BURNED. CORN • 81 BU. LIME-SWEET CLOVER CORNSTALKS. OATS AND WHEAT STRAW PLOWED UNDER. CORN-88 BU. m treatment, except that sweet clover was seeded in the wheat and plowed under as a green manure crop for com. The increased nitrogen and organic matter from the clover boosted the com yield 24 bushels. On the third plot, sweet clover was grown and in addition the corn stalks, oats straw and wheat straw were returned to the soil. The extra organic matter, nitrogen and other plant foods thus saved and returned in the crop residues gave the soil “what it takes” to yield 88 bushels of corn per acre. High Milk Producers Required for Profit The size of the milk wells is a true measure of the size of the milk veins. This diagram of the udder stmeture by Clemson Agricultural college shows the udder structure in detail. If the end of the vein is forked, two or three milk wells often may. be found on either side. A good mammary system is indi cated by a large udder, which gets its capacity in length and width rather than excessive depth, extend ing well up behind and forward. New Seed Disinfectant Suggested for Cotton Ceresan M seed disinfectant is being recommended for use against numerous seed-bome and soil-bome crop diseases, including seed-bome anthracnose, angular leafspot, seed decay and seedling damping-off oi cotton. The active ingredient of this new material is ethyl mercury p-toluene sulfonanilide, which has been successfully tested by colleges over a period of years under the designation of No. 1452-F. ‘Self-Service* Plan Expanding Marketing Revolution Is Under Way in Retail Stores of Nation. NEW YORK. — A quiet revolution in merchandising, spurred by the word "self-service,” is under way in retail stores from coast to coast. Established during the depression and expanded during the war, the "do your own shopping” idea is spreading from the grocery super markets. It is stepping into such diverse fields as drugs, hardware, home ap pliances, textiles and clothing. Some of the country’s greatest de partment stores are opening sec tions where the customer can be his own salesman. Supermarkets Spread. Here’s what’s going on: More and more supermarkets are installing complete self-service meat and vegetable departments. In many places the butcher has moved to the bade of the store where he cuts, weighs, price-tags, and packages meat far from the path of the customer. The packaged meats are placed in refrigerated cases and the shopper picks them out by cut and size just as she might' * select a can of beans. A similar procedure is being fol lowed with produce. Fruits and vegetables are prepared, weighed, wrapped in cellophane and refrig erated. Independent food supermarket op erators are branching out into the “department store” field. A recent survey showed that self- service stores now offer a variety of merchandise including drugs, cosmetics, wines and liquors, sta tionery, magazines, greeting cards, hardware, appliances, housewares and house furnishings, toys, flowers, variety goods and men’s, women’s and children’s wear. Big Stores Catch On. In one advanced “home center self-service” store the customer walks through 15,000 square feet of home appliances without ever en countering a salesman. Traditional service stores are moving toward the “get-it-yourself” system The government encouraged self- service in department stores and other large establishments to save labor during the war. Now even Ihe biggest stores are committed to the system in many lines. Macy’s in New York, for exam ple, has a self-service store which sells only fancy groceries. Where the stores are not going to “supermarket extremes” in self- service, they are making it easier for the customer to see, feel and handle the goods. Even jewelry departments in many of the big stores are follow ing the trend. If expensive jewelry were left out in the open, store executives say, there would be a field day for the light-fingered. So there’s a compro mise: Attractive glass display cases, where the customer can see everything on sale, even if she can’t touch it. Sioux Warrior to Be Honored By Monument in Black Hills PIERRE, S. D. — The likeness of Crazy Horse, first lieutenant to Sit ting Bull, famed chief of the Siouxs, will be carved in a Black Hills mountain—“honoring a race and a man who never surrendered, even in defeat.” The project already is past the blueprint stage. Korczal Ziolkowski, Boston born 39-year-old sculptor, already has purchased the mountain, which is 400 feet high, 500 feet wide and 750 feet thick. The memorial will be carved from the mountain of granite. It will dwarf even the huge busts of Wash ington, Jefferson and Theodore Roosevelt at Mount Rushmore less than 10 miles away. The memorial will show an In dian astride a wild stallion, with an outstretched hand pointing over the horse’s head. It will express the thought that “my lands are where my dead lie buried.” / Crazy Horse was the Sioux’s greatest fighter. Burma Signs Freedom Pact With British Authorities LONDON. — British Prime Min ister Clement Attlee and Burmese Premier Thakin Nu signed an Anglo-Burmese treaty of independ ence, preliminary to the ending of 51 years of British rule in the Far Eastern territory. The treaty, which will give Burma independence with no interim period of British supervision, must be ap proved by parliament. Royal assent is expected before the end of the year. Terms of the treaty were not an nounced. Cotton Crop Up 21 Per Cent, Agriculture Department Says WASHINGTON. — The agricul ture department reported that esti mates from various producing coun tries indicate this year’s world cot ton crop totaled 26,100,000 bales of 500 pounds gross weight. This is 21 per cent more than last year’s exceptionally small crop of 21,500,000 bales. Ten Obstacles Curb Control of Cancer Chief of Laboratory Reports to Research Center. NEW YORK. — Ten obstacles which hamper control of cancer hi the United States were named in a report to the American Cancer so ciety by Dr. Clarence Cook Little, head of Roscoe B. Jackson Memo rial laboratory, the cancer-research center destroyed in the Bar Harbor, Me., fire. The first two obstacles, the re port said, originate in the medical profession. One is fear of state medicine. This, Little said, leads to difficul ties in establishing clinics for detec tion and treatment of cancer. The second obstacle, the report asserted, is criticism of existing facilities rather than constructive effort to improve them. Third is impatience of lay groups with the slow progress in cancer research. Fourth, “violent dislike and dis. trust which a number of individuals in authority feel toward government activity in cancer research.” Fifth, belief of people generally that if they give money for cancer campaigns, that is enough. Cancer, said Little, also requires personal, individual effort if it is to be curbed. Sixth, willingness of those en gaged in local cancer education to let cancer compete in the public mind with other diseases. There is no competition, said Little. Seventh, overoptimism when clin ics and other machinery have been set up to help people discover early cancer. Follow-up is also necessary and without it people get a false sense of security. Eighth, lack of trained personnel. Ninth, lack of organized investi gating agencies for testing claims of cures for cancer. Tenth, need for more spiritual factors that will lead individual} to contribute part of their lives to the cancer combat. Boy With Dollar Pole Catches Record Rainbow OLYMPIA, WASH.—It doesn’t take age, experience and high- priced equipment to land a rec ord trout, three-year-old Michael Eckhout demonstrated. Michael had on display at his father’s store a seven and one- half-pound rainbow trout which he caught in nearby Patterson lake. It was recorded as the larg est trout ever taken from the lake. Michael used a dollar pole, a two-bit line and a big angleworm. U. S. Buying Canned Mexican Meat for Shipment Abroad WASHINGTON. — Secretary An derson has demonstrated that the department of agriculture will buy 50 million pounds of canned Mexican meat, but none will be for consump tion in the United States. The meat will be resold for export commerc- cially or used for relief food short age areas abroad. The purchase program is designed to help provide an outlet for Mexi can cattle, said Anderson. The United States is barring the shipment of Mexican cattle, hogs, sheep and goats, and fresh, chilled, and frozen meats to this country be cause of foot and mouth disease in some parts of Mexico. U. S. Soldiers in Germany Find Youth Plan Succeeding FRANKFORT, GERMANY.—The majority of American officers and men in Germany believes the ar my’s German youth program is achieving its goal of teaching demo cratic principles and curbing delin quency. A survey conducted by the arm3 showed that seven out of ten en listed men and six out of ten officers thought the program would help future peace. Forty-one per cent of all officers and 24 per cent of the enlisted men have participated in the youth as sistance program, the army said. Exports of Grain Increased 10 Per Cent, Depariment Says WASHINGTON. — The Agricul ture department announced export allocations of 871,800 long tons or about 33,669,000 bushels of grain and grain products for December. The December allocations repre sent about a 10 per cent increase over November. The November allo cations totaled 788,800 long tons, or approximately 29,514,000 bushels. Total allocations for the July-De- cember half of the current crop year are 305,500,000 bushels. Under the government’s food conservation program, the export goal for the full crop year is a minimum of 570,000,. 000 bushels. Home Builders Complain of Prices Charged for Nalls WASHINGTON. — Home build ers complain they sometimes have to buy nails at gray-market prices from bootleggers. National Association of Home Builders said the 125 men who make up its board of directors reported in a three-day conference here they are paying up to $20 a keg for naiU that should cost $8 to $10. CU/lL 9L So? A psychologist said that to enjoy life one must loce him self. Most of us know some one who we'd enjoy seeing start to enjoy life. A certain youtig man we know is extremely cautious. He always begins his letters, “Darling and Gentlemen of Jury.” /mxs# YMt/nes Trytemon //r Mfr/er- The juice of a lemon in a glass of water, when taken first thing on aris ing, is all that most people need to insure prompt, normal elimination. No moro harsh laxatives that irritate the digestive tract and impair nutri tion ! Lemon in water is good, for yoss! Generations of Americans have taken lemons for health—and generations of doctors have recommended them. They are rich in vitamin C; supply valuable amounts of Bi and P. Tney alkalinize; aid digestion. Nat toe sharp ar sour, lemon in water has a refreshing tang —clears the mouth, wakes you up. It’s not a purgative — simply helps your sys tem regulate itself. Try it 10 days, use CAUFOANIA SUNKIST UMONS Relief At Last ForYourCougJi TtiSSright to t&sesi of tha trouble to help loosen ana exjw« germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, to- flamed bronchial mucons mem branes. Tell your druggist to sell yoa a bottle of Creomulsion wlto Um un derstanding you mlist like the way n quickly allays the cough or yoa an to have your money back, CREOMULSiON for Cousrhs. Chest Colds. Broachitn AC “5-Star Quality” Oil Filter Elements have an exclusive safe guard in the Collector Tube Trap; It’s made of acidproof glass cloth, which can’t rot and thus allow pollution of the engine oiL Don’t take a chance on dirty 1 oil. Buy AC | and be sure. BUY WHERE YOU SEE THIS SIGN EMBARRASSED? Driven nearly frantic by itching burning of simple piles, that keep’ you fidgeting in discomfort? Countless sufferers are finding un told relief from such distress by bathing tender parts with the pure, gently-cleansing lather of Resinol Soap—then applying soothing, skil fully medicated Resinol Ointment. Why don’t you try this time-tested easy way to long-lasting comfort? RESINOL 0 ^ Promptly relieves coughs of CHEST COLDS MUSTerolE RUB ON Watch Youk Kidneys/ Help Them Cleanse the iSlood of Harmful Body Waste Your kidneys are constantly filtering waste matter from the blood stream. Bat kidneys sometimes lag in their work—do not act as Nature intended—fail to re move imparities that, if retained, may poison the system and apset the whole body machinery. Symptoms may be nagging backache, persistent headache, attacks of dizzinees, getting up nights, swelling, puffinese under the eyes—a feeling of nervous anxiety and loss of pep and strength. Other signs of kidney or bladder dis order are sometimes burning, scanty or too frequent urination. There should be no doubt that prompt treatment is wiser than neglect. Use Doan’* Pill*. Doan’* have been winniuc new friends for more than forty years. They have a nation-wide reputation* Are recommended by grateful people tbm country over. Ask your neighbor I Doans Pills