HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1930-09-25, Page 3The League of Nations Exists;
To Form the, Habit of Peace
A Far Nobler Aim than the Popular ,Idea that. the League is
is An Instrument For Forcibly "Stopping Wars.'
.The League of Nations Assembly "The whole conception of the
League as an instrument tor forcibly
-'stopping wars' is erroneous. The.
League's business is to make peace a
firm habit and 'international co -opera
tion the normal method ot human pro -
gross. Thegood schoolmaster, is not
he with resolutely throws disorderly
people out of the windows. The good
officer is not he who relentlessly
meets in Geneva this month, and, Pro -
feasor, Gilbert Murray iii "Harper's
1,tagazine, has a timely article on its
work. ' H1s reference to its ofacials,
and, more especially his statement
' thatthe League is not formed for stop-
ping .wars 'but to make -Peace a firm
habit; 'are of special interest.' He.
writes:
"The League of Nations may or may shootd down his men- it they run away.
not be effective. It is certainly indica ' "The success of the .League is not
pensable. It, would not now be possible to be judged by the four or five wars•
to conduct the affairs of the civilized which it bas nipped in the bud,•or the
world, in 'peace. for any length of time desperate quarrels—like that between
without'the League any more than it Poland and Lithuania—which . it just
would be passible to keep up the keeps within bounds,.but no mere.
necessary communications between "It is to be Judged by the passing
men in different countries without an of ten most difficult 'years without
International Postal'Unlon. _ I war; by the increased friendliness be -
"The. establishment of regular con- tween nations; bYt the tact that the
ferences had one result, which came Foreign Ministers of France and Ger-
as a Matter of .course, •but has proved many, instead et being remote and
momentous for the, government of the 'seml-hostile Potentates, are now
world. Regular conferences imply the friends who can trust' each Other end
existence ot •a Secretariat. There chaff each other; by the steady and
must be secretaries to prepare the rapid growth of. all the constritetive
agenda, to, make the necessary; 1n- international organizations with' their
queries, to execute tate decisions pass- splendid record of work: the Labour
ed,•to be there incase of emergency 10 Organization, the health Organization,
carry out' the'Council's instructions. i tit Economic Committee, the Mandates
"But few people in,1919 recognized Committee, and the rest.
the difference which the Secretariat •I "There is, no part of the League's
would snake in all international liusi- organization which has notgrdwn year
noes, In tire first. place, few people by year; and they have all grown be -
realized what a remarkable set of men cause the.world needed them.
and womea would be got together. The "The League started- with a dis-
salaries Were flied on a high scale, at 1
fraoted world, not yet at peace and not
least the Europe, so that men in good thinking, the thoughts that lead to
positions were attracted. The Secre• peace. It had as its material the ne-
etaty-General, Sir Eric Drummond; had tions as they then were, led by the
e very wide field of choice before him statesmen as they then were. There
in all the innumerable civil' servants is not, there can never be, any other'
and publicists who had attehe c the material possible. One sees in the
Congress of Versailles, and he chose Assembly and Council the faults of
with great skill. I this man or that; one ot them -vain,
"But another circumstance de- one lazy, one thinking chiefly of his
serves to be remembered. When the careerat home. One sees the special
'United States decided not to Join the prejudices or ambitions or ignorances
League many thought that the whole of on •
e country or another,
scheme had received a blow which. it "They .aro the same men, the same
would probably not survive. Cense- countries, as before. The , the rdin-
poor courage
all the peope of weak faith or try thing is that, met together in Ilia
poor hei rage thought it better p tions atmosphere of Geneva, with the eyes
their more ordinary occupations of fifty -odd nations upon them, they
and notfstake their fortunes on Ihesuc- do show a sensitiveness to general
cess of eke who offer. opinion, and a consciousness of their
"Those and offeredinenthemselves were duty not merely to their own voters at
w the mon women who had faith, as home but to a wider constituency
well as the outer necessary qualities,
and who cared enough tor the work "The nationalists become loos na•
of creating peace- to be willing to risk tionalist, the violent drop their viol.
their future upon it. The result has once, the boastful boast of their con -
been that there exists now a great cessions and not of their victortea;
staff of international °facials, mon of and almost every man goes home to
unusual abilities, whose business is in. some extent a missionary Writ new
ternational co-operation and whose cause to which most of his country*
professional self-respect is wrapped up mce pa a not awake."—Prom "Pub
in the preservation of peace.
Deadly Silo Gases w a 1 Owl L f s
'Treasure Chest Is
Found on Lost Ship
Overcome Farmer . You are the joy of my life. Thou
W119 wraps me in thy all enveloping
farmers Are' Warned to Test iuesk theo. I. press you to, my body and
ea that gave
Before Entering
• Before entering the silo the farmer
or anyone working •for him should
make sure that no, desalt. gases are
present, is the admonition of alio ex-
perts of the Dominion,Department- of
Agriculture:
• At Herron; North Dakota, the other
day, the Neidhardt family, father and
four children; had their liver snuffed"
out by what was- reported to be Me-
thane gas- The sheriff who attempted
to recover' the bodies was overcome•
and barely escaped with his" life, after.
his son had made two attemptsto get
hie father out of the silo,
.Methane and carbon dioxide are the
'two poisonous gases which are likely
to occur in any silo. They have their
origin in the decomposition of organic
matter. Methane 0114 is an.odoriese,
inflammable gas which occurs natural-
ly as the Product of the decomposition
of organic matter, and is frequently Theres' a certain young man whose
met with in marshes and mins, being friends, all call him Moses, . because,
more. familiarly known as marsh• gas. when he opens' hit mouth the bull
Carbon dioxide CO2 is a -heavy color- rushes.
an " you to me
for your warmth and. beauty of your'
nature. At twilight when the ,whole
world dreams and goes romancing, god
are my all, my only comfort, my Joy;
When the day .is done and: shadows.
fall I crawl, into thy welcome embrace
and dream ,dreams, roay dreams, gold-
en dreams, for` I know you are mine—
all mine, . I tingle at your touch.. I
thrill at Your every movement. You're
so warm, so yielding, tie :Glowing, and
I am once more at peace—the world
is. quiet and still—and I am alone with
You—My Bathrobe'.
Noone is perfect, and that's why we
all haves, chance to make, a showing.
Sweet YoUog,Thing "I'll' positively
never marry a man who snores"
Anybody—"Good,diea, but how are
you going tO find out?
Gold Found in Rotting
'less irrespirable gas which. oxtinguish-
es flame. Itis produced, by the• action
of acids on carbons, through fermea-
tation, and by the decomposition of
organic substances:
Both these gases may be• present in
the silo and owing to the fact that
they are heavier than air"as,they ac -
Pouches on Ill-fated
"Islander"
Olympia, Wash.—High hopes for
success of as fantastic and daring an
underseas adventure as ever was writ-
ten in fiction were raised here. when
Carl Wiley recovered a small portion
of the gold of the lost steamship
Islander. Rotting buckskin pouches
containing $8,700 of the metal were
recovered. That was merely a sam-
ple of what local backers of the Olym-
pia diver expect to recover.
Three hundred feet below the sur-
face of Stephens Passage and oft the
desolate Southeastern Alaska coast
lies the wreckage of the Islander. For
twenty -eine years -she had boon a
treasure chest waiting tobe opened.
On August 15, 1901, the ship was
steaming home. loaded with returning
miners from the Alaska geld field, She
carried a fortune in nuggets and, dust
estimated . at between $300,000 and
ten times that amount. At fult"speed
she struck an iceberg, lurched crazily,
and plunged for the bottom. Selenty--
two -passengers were carried to their
deaths.
Many attempts were made to sal
vage the great treasure, bilt all tulles
because of the depth at which the
Islander lay, and because of the rush-
ing current,
Five years ago Wiley made his first
'attempt. lie failed and, bis own re-
sources gone, 71e interested a few
small backers here and in Seattle.
This year he had constructed . in
Olympia a diving bell of his . own in-
vention. Atter months of failures
and accidents, It finally raised/the first
of the gold. In an .egg-shaped diving
chamber, Wiley operates a long claw-
like arm, probing through the debris
of the wreckage.
The fasteater has what you would
call• "galloping consumption."
Harry—"Where'do you want to go,
baby?"
Baby—"I wanna go buy -buy."
cumulate they force air away from the If you can be agreeable' till ten
•top of the silo.
As neither Methane or garbon. Diox-
ide will degenerate within a•few days
it Is always well. before entering a
silo during the filling season to run
the blower a sew minutes to insure an,
adequate circulation of air. At other
times,' a lighted lantern should be
lowered into the silo,to insure that no.
gas is present, If Carbon Dioxide 'is
present the flame Will immediately go
out.
There is Just as Much danger from
poisonous gases in the silo as there is
in an old well, but the danger is one
which may be easily guarded against
and is overcome by an adequate sup-
ply of fresh air. As ensilage is fed
from the top of the silo care should
be taken to see that the doors are open
to allow free ventilation. Fresh air
should be supplied es directly to the
top of ensilage as possible.—Issued by
the Director of Publicity, Dominion
Department of Agriculture, Ottawa,
Arctic Visitor Says
Eskimos Dying Out
Maude R. Warren, Writer and
Traveler, Fears Influenza
Will Erase the Race
Mra. Maude Radford Wessell, writer
and traveler, returned recently from a
three months' Journey within the
Arctic Circle, to the northwestoru
mart of Canada, with Akiavik as her „There are saves nuns in the vu.
headquarters. Site raveled alone, with( -ago and live either white women
tate aid of Indian and Eskimo guides,1 coitttected with the Anglican missions,
except when she went by airplane, i There is also one American woman
the most comfortable Means of travel I who runs the restaurant, She Is
in the Northwest. I Mos. Vincent Kost, a widow and
JC stt•oltg physique and indifferent former school teacher from North
N
who longed to escape the trivialities
ot modern America, but confessed she
would not care to endure it perman-
ently.
"In the winter there is no amuse-
ment at all, not even a pool table, in
the entire village," s'1e said. "Tiley
read all whiter, atter their day's
work is done. The newspapers are
brought in during the summer ant
they save them, in order, and read
them exactly one year later day by
day.
Twelve White Women at Akiavik
Ito hardships, Mts. Warren found tate
111e of -the frostier villages the "stoat
Ithrillhig adventure" she had known
.since her work in first aid stations
,during the war but sloes not recom-
mend the trip to the average woman
'traveler. "Bulldogs," or moose flies,
ea big as wasps and twice as voraci-
ous impaired the pleasure of sleeping
out of doors, she confessed.
Influence Wiping Out Race
Mrs. Warren returns an enthusiast -
tic i admirer of
the
Eskimo, a cheer-
ful and industrial people, but she is
alarmed lest they vanish lafrom the
The
Northwest within fifty
Eskimos are dying off in great num-
bers from the ravages of influenza,
and outer diseases brought in by the
white man," elle said. "They have
i
eat white man's food in-
stead
to 1
v
stead of the good caribou meat ana
fish which used to be their diet.
This summer I Raw them eating soggy
pancakes covered with syrup three
times a day.
"The Indians have an arrangement
with the . Canadian government by
which they 'take treaty; becoming the
,wards 'at the government, and aro
thus guaranteed against starvation.
'But the Eskimos, being a more fade -
pendent race, have no such arrange-
, out. The white man could not
'eurvtve within the Arctic Clrole with -
lout the Eskimo and the Indian."
Mrs. Warren found 'village lite in
Akiavik charmingly simple for one
1•
ses Wiii Be Used
To Classify Man
A new classification of mankind ac-
cording to the widths of theta 110505,
believed to be related to the climatic
histories of different races and prob-
ably ot considerable importance iu
racial evolution, has been proposed by
Professor John Cameron of Dalhousie
University, Nova Scotia, in a recent
antlouucement from the Wistar Insti-
tute, in Philadelphia.
The races with the widest noses and
most open nostrils, Processor Cameron
finds, aro tho negloes, the native
Australians and the former Tasman-
ian race, 11015 extinct. These races
live in ]lot climates, where a wide,
open nose probably helps to cool the
blood as the air passes over the nasal
membraues, much as a dog cools him-
self by panting.
The narrowest noses among the ma-
jor races of the world are found, Pro -
feasor Cameron continues, in the
European whites, but there is a very
small racial group with still narrower
noses and more tortuous nostrils.
These are the eastern Esquimos,
chiefly inhabitants of Greenland.
For races living in. such rigorous
winter climates as that of Greenland
11 obviously is desirable to have long
uarrow nasal passages so that the
extremely cold outer air will be warm-
ed as mucin as possible before reach-
ing the more delicate membrances of
tate throat or lungs, Professor Cam-
eron's fourth group of humanity as
classified by nose width includes the
Mongolians and the American Indians,
b
between
r intermediate
whichraces a e
the wide -nosed whites; just as the
Mongolian and North American cli-
mates are intermediate betweent the
extreme heat of Africa and 'he tropics
and the extreme cold of northern Eur-
ope.
SEPTEMBER
A. little frost oath morning,
A bluish haze each night,
Each day a hunter's yearning,
At eve a night bird's flight.
A. golden red at noonday:
A burnished sign of fall;
There's something that I must say,
Aad it's farewell to all.
The stench is in the marshland,
And the black ducks fly;
Their yearlings are all at hand,
And to the southward hie.
o'clock in the morning you'll still have
the balance of the day in which to be
disagreeable.
Goiter, (Just learning)—"Terrible 161
of birds about, boy."
Caddie—"Yea, 'epose they're follow-
ing us up for worms."
A noted doctor predicts that in 50
years all;men will be bald. Rut they
will still be buying their hair tonic
from bald-headed barbers.
Many Janitors do not keep up with
the times. They're still keeping cool
with Coolidge.
The women who are wearing the
new long skirts had better watch out
Lor prohibition enforcement officials
who may arrest them for screening
Joints.
Gladys—"How did you get into the -
habit of wearing a mustache?"
Harold—"Olt, it just grew 00 me."
Dakota. She trades in furs with the
trappers, who sleep on her kitchen
floor, paying two muskrat skins for
each meal. Tho meal consists ot
fish, potatoes, canned tomatoes and
mince pie. Mrs, Kest also performs
many other motherly tasks for the
wanderers of the northwest, making
their parkas and packing their ra-
tions when they start cut again on
the frozen trail.
"The people in Alclavik, however,
prefer the long lonesome winter to
the uncertainties of sunuu�,r, when
strangers come poking into their
peaeelul village, and inspectors and all
routine,
sorts of officials disturb their
This year they had two days of heat,
84 degrees, for which they were not
prepared. The Eskimo children, still
clad in their caribou steins, all had
the nosebleed and school had to bo
closed."
Pale Faces
Jared Nerves
You May Know the Breed
"My husband is a dreamer,” she de-
clares,
"A man of plans and visions!"
Which means six days of work a week
she shares,
To get rent and provisions.
A lot of folks seen to believe that
thrift consists in meeting their instal-
ment payments on time.
We ran across a fellow who thought
Babe Ruth was a chorus girl. We
classified him along with the man
who thinks an Israelite is a new kind
of a floor lamp.
Wise Crack: Ali crack and no wise.
Minard's Linirhent aids tired feet.
The man on the bridge addressed
the solitary fisherman. "Any busk?"
he asked. "Any luck]" was the alt
ewer. "Why, I got forty pike out of
here yesterday." "Do you know who
I am?" "No," said the fisherman.
"I'm the chief magistrate here, and
all this estate is mine" "And do you
know who I am?" asked the fisher-
man, quickly. "No." -"I'm the big-
gest liar in Norfolk."
MOPS'
▪ of T
les
Fa• r
uottoA
INOIaeeT'Ott
AntoorbinAlcii
"EAat•nURat
nsnAoAuta
o,Ons• iAUseA
1
What most people call indigestion is
usually excess acid in the stomaek.
The food has soured, The instant
remedy la an alkali which• neutralizes
acids. but don't use crude helps, Use
what your doctor would advise.
The best help is Phillips' Milk of
Magnesia. For the 50 years alum its
invention it has remained standard
with physicians: You will find noth-
ing else so quick ln'its effect, so harm:-
lees,
armlees, so efficietzl
The maple and the beechnut
Turn their ,gree, to gold,
And I've told you all but
SeptemUer's days are Odd.
TH1l HUNTER.
A Negro woman who had lost bar like foundation into which :tUe haus
Ono tasteless spoonful in water)
neutralizes many times its volume to
acid. The results are immediate, with
no bad after offect5. Once you learn
this fact, You will never deal with ex-
cess acid in the crude ways. Go learn
—now why,this method i5 supreme.
Be Sure to get the genuine Phillips'
Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physi-
crane for 50 years in correcting excess
a,cid5,' Each bottle contains full direc-
tions ---any drugstore,
Backward Babies
BRIDES
Due To Weak, Watery Blood.
Anaemia — impoverished blood —
conies so stealthily that it is often well
advanced before recognized. Fatigue
and 'discomfort, the earliest manifes-
tations of the trouble, are seldom
taken seriously. Soon the face be-
comes
pale; the nerves jaded;
heart palpitates violently atter the
slightest exertion; the appetite be-
comes fickle and before you realize it
You are in a terrible plight.
At such time, by enriching and puri-
fying the blood, Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills will build up the nerve cells and
correct the run-down condition. Con-
cerning them Miss Margaret Torrey,
Toronto„Ont., says:—"I suffered a
complete breakdown. My heart would
palpitate on the least exertion. Noth-
ing I ate agreed with me. I started
taking Dr. Tlrilliams' Pink Pills and
by the time I had taken several dboxes
I was ready for anything;
gain-
ed in weight and every distressing
symptom had loft me,"
You can get these Pills from any
dealer in medicine or by mall at 50
cents a box from The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
II IL t
off
p®
7101
tb
Illuanitsaate
Lost �°Literature• �%
Found in V erseSEA SLEU Cl1R SAL ., aIVUEL
_ I A1G trlth new 2•l, H,1' 1 , Iw u.+a
Thrive After Use of Baby's Own
Tablets
Derangements of the digestive or-
gans are responsible for most of the
alhnauts which afflict young children
and keep diem backward in develop-
ment. Baby's Own Tables regulate
the stomach and bowels, restoring
them to normal action and this is all
that is necessary to set the little sat --
reser safely on the road to health and
happiness.
Baby's Own Tablets are specially
designed to correct indigestion, eonsti-
Dation, colic; break up colds and sim-
ple fevers and to allay teething pains.
They are sold by medicine dealers or
by mail at 25 cents a box from. The
Dr. Williams' Medicine . Co„ Brock-
ville, Ont,
Classified Advertising
IFOR 'SALE
Canadian Professor Trans-
lates Aztecs Poems Said
to Date About 1000
Mexico City.—Much of the "lost
literature of the Aztecs" has been dis-
covered by John Hubert Cornyu, a
Canadian, who Is professor of Aztec
language and literature at the -Univer-
sity of Mexico.
Professor Cornyn bas encountered a
series of epic Aztec poems, which he
has translated into English and pub-
lished in book form under the title,
"The Song of Quetzalcoatl."
Professor Cornyn contends that
while Aztec documents have been de-
stroyed the literature was kept alive
by oral tranemisaion from generation
to generation and that a collection
was made by Bernardino de Sahagun,
a Franciscan monk, who came to
Mexico from Spain in 1520, eight
years atter the Conquest.
The poetry compiled by Professor
Cornyn is in style similar to Long -
fellow's "The Song of Hiawatha" It
deals with the gods of the ancient
Indians, with the setting at Tua, in the
State or Mexico, whieb. was the old
capital at the Aztecs. The principal
of the mythical deities with which the
"songs" deal was QuetzalbOatl, Goff Of
the Wind, who departed from Tula
atter a struggle with his lesions
brother, Titlacalumn, Gott of the
Moon.
Professor ('ornytm plans to depart
soon on a Lour 01 the United States,
where lie will lecture at schools and
colleges of the mysteries of tine Az-
tecs. He was educated at the Univer-
sity of Toronto and studied in the
United States, Germany and France.
Ile has been a professor at Birming-
ham Southern (College, and at South-
western University. Ile is the au-
thor of "Around the Wigwam Flee,"
and "When the Camp Fire Burns."
1"r, all "In perfect Condition. very fust
absolutely safe, splendid Itshbtg boat.
has special sedan bon nwn••r getting
larger model, NOW le' ed en elenrglan
Hay. Wilson Publishing Co 73 \del"Ide
W., T root,., Pox 27
Germany To Have
Fire -Proof Money
The Germans, tills fall ,are going to
be presented with a new kind of paper
money that has some renmarkabie
claims made far it. It is a new type
of paper currency guaranteed not to
burn, tear, or crumple, as the New
York Times Informs us:
The new notes will be thoroughly
woricmottike. The ten -mark and
twenty -mark denominations will be
made from steel -engraved plates. The
former will bear "an agricultural de-
sign," and the latter a pattern of in-
dustrial inspiration. Iu a white circle
a distinguishing water -mark will show
when tate paper is held up against the
light.
The money will be nude noninflam-
mable by spraying it with a metal, It
it becomes the general fashion to fire -
his way, some
mope in t
• of
paper
Y
fire-
proof
of our most Cherished expressions will
have to go.
The rich will no longer have "money
extravagant 'andthe ex ant will not g
to
burn,' t
be able to offer the excuse that then
1110110y "burns a hole in their pockets."
And to
„tau through money
which
is non -tearable" will be impossible.
The real point, of course ,is that this
fall "Germans armed with a wad of
bills that wild not burn, tear, or
crumple, may find their money lasting
well, even under the wear and tear of
a Christmas -shopping season."
Houses
ou
nd
WC
etc
E
Latest Invention
A week -end house, to fold up and
tante along on a Sunday's outing like
a week -cud
recent Ger-
man
incase is a
iuvoutiou, Strong but light-
weight wa118 are provided, hinged and
jointed so that they fasten together
easily when the house is erected or
can be taken down as easily as a tent.
There is a waterproof fabric roof, a
door and two windows.
about eight feet tong by six feet wide,
with living and sleeping space for two
or more people. For transportation by
road a shallow rectangular case .is
provided into which the walls and
other parts fit when taken down, like
a child's building blocks, into a traY.
When the house is to bo set up, tine
shallow box serves as its foundation,
needing merely to be laid down on
some reasonably level spot and tbo.
walls and root erected on top of it.
Two wheels and an axle are provided
to he fastened underneath this tray -
husband was attending his funeral.
Rastas had rarely followed the
straight and narrow pada., but 'the Par-
son conducting the service could dos
nothing but enumerate the deceased's
virtues the majority of which the
Negro woman had' never heard of.
She Listened for some time, but at
last could not stand it any longer and
burst out; "Parson, I think yo'ro
burying the wrong man." •
Minard's Liniment a household friend.
V. n
The inquisitive woman was worry-
ing the gardener. She asked a lot
of meaningless • questious. - 'What
steps do you take with the catmint -
ars?" sate asked next. "Well, mum,"
said the exasperated gardener, "I
takes half a dozen 5tep5 into our
nearest field and turns the caterpillars
round three times sothat they gets
giddy and don't Irmo* their way back."
is Packed, converting the whole pito
"trailer" which can be hauled behind
an automobile. It is possible, the in -
'venter maintains, to.constrnct the
house in two'sections so that a pair
of campers literally can carry their
house on their backs. The buck -to -
Nature movement is now so popular
in Germany, with a largo section of
the 'population using virtually every
week -end for some trip afoot or by
automobile, that the new folding house
is expected to be popular among Ger-
maws who distils*, to face rain, mud or
insects without more shelter than . a
blanket or a tent,
Quick Relief for
CONSTIPATION
BILIOUSNESS
BLOATING, ETC.
Minard's Liniment for Foot Aliments.1
When Morris and Rosebautn'return-
ed to lunch atter their meriting walk
of the pint' the :calms of Moerks's
hands were scarlet with sunburn. "01,
oil" exclaimed his old mother, "look
at his hands, Vat have you been do-
t
[ug dat your hands
Inside
should loop
like lobsters?" "I knew it!" said
Rosehautn, "I take lino ottt for a
1
MOW before lunch and he
vett d talk
1
business vltlt a man he met,"
Ho was moody and glum after the
dance, and his friend could hardly
get a word out of him. "What's the
matter?" he asked. "Didn't you get
on well .with the girl I introduced you
to?" "Well," said his friend, "I ask-
ed her three or four times it 1 could
see her Monte, and she said if I was
as keen on her Home as all that she'd
send mea photograph of 41."
"I shouldn't worry any more about
him, dear, After all, he's not the
only pebble on the beach" "I know
—Out the rest of the beach to so
stony."
•
Inhale'Mlnard's Liniment for Asthma.
Changing '' e;.t then
affects your health if yon are not
protected. Minard's prevents colds
and grippe; relieves rheumatism
and stiff joints.
sc refs
"THEY WORK
WHILE YOU SLEEP
Novi To Lose
24 Pounds of Fat
At the Same Time Cain in Physical
Vigor and Youthfulness and
Swiftly Possess a Clear Skin and
Vivacious Eyes that Sparkle with
Health. __—
Here's
_here's the recipe that banishes fat
and attractiveness every
into
blossom
all 1C natural
0 pan
possesses.
Every morning take one-half
teaspoon of Kruschen Salts in a glass
of hot water before breakfast.
Be sure and do this every morning
for "It's the daily dose that takes
off the fat "—Don't miss a morning.
Kruschen daily means that every
particle of poisonous waste matter
trod harmful penis and gases are
expelled from Lie system.
Modify your diet, and take gentle
exercise, The stomach, liver, kidneys
and bowels are tuned up, and the
pure, fresh blood containing these sits
salts is carried to every port of the
body, and this is followed by that
Krnsehen feeling" of energetic health
and activity that 1s reflected in bright
eyes, clear skin, cheerful vivacity and
charming figure,
t17E can never be sure lust what
V4/ makes a child restless, but
the remedy can always be the same.
Good old Castorlai There's comfort
in every drop of this pure vegetable
preparation,• and not Abe slightest
harm in its frequent use. As often as
your child has a fretful - spell, is
feverish, or cries and can't sleep, let
Castoria soothe and quiet him. Some-
times it's a touch of colic.. Sometimes
constipation. Or diarrhea -a• con-
dition that should always be checked
without delay. Just keep. Castello
handy, and give it promptly. Relief
will folloW very promptly; if it
doesn't, you should call a physician.
nOPeAPSB;NSERT
10 more L1 Ywa1ipt (SIbIL
91.25 811 Druggists. Descriptive Polder on rawest
A. O. LEONARD, Inc.
70 Fifth Ave., New York City
DO TSU
SUFFER WITH
HEADACHE?,
So easy to get quick relief and pre-
vent an attack in the future. Avoid
bromides and dope. They relieve quick -
r
ut a
ffect t
hcheatand arc very
l b
Y
it
dangerous. They are depressing g and
• only give temporary relief, the cause
of the headache still remains within.
The sane and harmless way. First
correct the cause, sweeten the sour
and acid stomach, relieve the intes-
tines of the decayed and poisonous
food matter, gently stimulate the liver,
start tate bile flowing and the bowels
pass off the waste matter which causes
your headache. Try Carter's Little
Liver Pills, Druggists 25e red picas.
FRO T ER
OF EIGHTEEN
Read Haw This rieclicane
Helps Tr -1,..,,t
Cardston Abort!), tn; t am fifty-eight
years old and the nt 'ten of eighteen
livingehildren.W0
live on a farm and
t am a very heal-
thy mother con-
sidering that I
have such a big
family to work
for, The druggist
first told me about
Lydia R Pink••
ham's Vegetable
Compound and I
have depended on
it for many years.
When. 1 had this Picture taken, the
photographer was 1 elbt g the about his
wife's ailments au I after1 told flim "
about the Vegetable Coonppnnct 10
went to the dru stole and Itoltgltt her
two bottles."—Mas 131 ,tt no .9,hrltaalx
BACH, Stu, Cardston, Ath.rl't.
ISSUE No. 39-'30