{ title: 'Cape Vincent eagle. (Cape Vincent, N.Y.) 188?-1951, November 18, 1926, Page 1, Image 1', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn94057709/1926-11-18/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn94057709/1926-11-18/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn94057709/1926-11-18/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn94057709/1926-11-18/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Northern NY Library Network
o V Hff inag'tt'ywiyffiWMwia H. ROY ADLEN, Editor and Publisher DEMOCRATIC IN POLITICS. PRICE FIVE CENTS VOL. 54 CAPE VINCENT, N. Y., TOTBSDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1928 State News. —The girls of the Massena High school have organized a basketball team. —The Potsdam fair society clearecl about §1,000 from the exhibition held' last fall. —The town of Gouverneur has placed 2,400 feet of snow fence in position. —The St. Lawrence county board of supervisors, in session at Canton, is being presided over by James H. Witherell, of the town of Depeyster. —The New York League of Wo- men Voters will meet in convention in Syracuse on November 30, Decem- ber 1 and 2. There will be delegates from 91 assembly _ districts. —Papers effecting the dissolution of. the Brier Hill Electric Light and Power company, which formerly had its headquarters in Potsdam, have been filed with the secretary of state. —The annual Northern New York conference of the Methodist Episco- pal church, will be held in Fulton the last of April. Bishop A. W. Leon- ard of the Buffalo area will preside. —Lewis county is to have a his- torical society. A meeting of those interested i n the project was held re- cently at Lowville and Mrs. C. P Kirley was chosen. chairman of a temporary organization. —The Presbytery of Syracuse will conduct a campaign during the first two weeks of December to create a a fund of $85,000 to be used in pen- snoning Presbyterian ministers after reaching the age of 65 years. —The board of supervisors of Oneida county recently adopted a resolution appropriating ?20,000 for the purchase of snow fences to be used on such highways as are desig- nated by the county highway officials. —Governor Nellie T. Ross, of Wyoming, will be in Syracuse as a guest of the New York League of Women Voters at their seventh an- nual convention at the Hotel Syra- cuse, November 80 to December 2. Mrs. Boss will speak at a dinner at the Hotel Syracuse Wednesday night, December 1. —A. complimentary dinner in honor -of—Justice Irving E. Devendorf of Herkimer, who will retire from the supreme court bench in the fifth judi- cial district at the end of the present year, will be given by the Oswego County Bar association on Saturday evening of this week. At the same time the bar will welcome Clayton I. Miller, of Pulaski, and William F. Dowling, of Utica, justice-elect. —Canastota's old fire engine, ac- cording to the Bee-Journal, has been sold for junk. The old engine was purchased in 1878 by the board of trustees, the president of which was Seward Stroud, and for a generation it was the pride of the local firemen. Jack Otis, local junk dealer, dis- mantled the engine and gave the Board of Police and Fire Commis- sioners $29.37 for the old iron. —The lowest fire loss ever record- ed in New York state—one-fiifth of one per cent,—ds shown in figures just compiled by Conservation Com- missioner Alexander MacDonald for the fire season in the Adirondack and Catskill fire towns which ended No- vember 1. In the fire towns of the Adirondack and Catskill regions there was a total of 245 fires for the year. This is the lowest total number of fires reported since 1917 when there were 234. CONFUSING. The employer called his secretary. \Here Jenks, take a look at this let- ter. I don't know whether it's from my lawyer or my tailor. They are both named Smith.\ And this is what Jenks read: \1 have begun your suit. Ready to be tried on Thursday.\ Subscribe for the Eagle. $1.50 a year. UNCLE SI BWUIL PUBLIC IS URGED TO FOLLOW DEPARTMENT REGULATIONS CAREFULLY. —o— With Christmas only a few weeks away, Uncle Sam is already making plans for the big influx of mail at that time and advising the public relative to the wrapping, packing, and mailing of Christmas packages. To give' their full measure of happi- ness and cheer, packages and other mail should be carefully prepared and reach the addresses in time to be in keeping with the purpose for which they are sent. Patrons are especially urged to ob- serve the conditions enumerated be- low, because compliance therewith will facilitate and expediate the treatment of their mail and thus con- tribute to the pleasure and satis- faction of all concerned. Prepay postage fully on all mail matter. Address all matter plainly and completely in ink, giving street address or box or rural route number whenever possible. Place sender's re- turn card in upper left corner of ad- dress side. Tags should not be used unless necessary, in which case a copy of the address and return card should be placed inside the parcel for identification if tag is lost. Pack articles carefully in strong, durable containers. Wrap parcels securely, but do not seal them except when bearing a printed label or in- dorsement reading: \Contents Mer- chandise, Postmaster: This parcel may be opened for postal inspection if necessary,\ together with' name and address of sender, as sealed parcels not so labeled or indorsed in printing are subject to postage at the letter rate. Parcels may not exceed 84 inches in length and girth combined nor weigh more than 70 pounds if for de- livery within the first, second or third zones or 50 pounds i n any other zone. Parcels may be marked \Do not open until Christmas,\ this being permitted in order to encourage early mailing.- - Written- greetings such as \Merry Christmas,\ \Happy New Year,\ \With best wishes,\ and names, numbers, or symbols for pur- poses of description may be inclosed with third or fourth class (parcel post) mail. Books may bear simple dedicatory inscriptions not of a per- sonal nature. Other written addi- tions subject parcels to letter post- age. Do not inclose letters in parcels, as doing so would subject entire par- cel to letter postage. Communica- tions prepaid at the first class rate may be sent with parcels prepaid at the third or fourth class rate by se- curely attaching the envelopes con- taining the letter or other written matter to the outside of parcels. Christmas seals or stickers should not be placed on the \address side of mail. Valuable parcels eight ounces or less i n weight may be mailed in street letter or package boxes at all classi- fied stations and branches, and at such numbered stations as are desig- nated to receive parcels. Parcels weighing over eight ounces cannot be mailed in street boxes, but must be taken to the main post-office or classified station or branch. Parcels containing meat, food products, cut flowers, or other perishable matter should be mailed only at the main post-office or one of the large classi- fied stations. The co-operation of manufacturers, dealers, and the public generally in the elimination this year of small- sized cards and envelopes to the end that the postal service may be re- lieved of the burden of handling them is desired. It should be sug- gested that in no case should cards and envelopes be smaller than 2% by 4 inches, a size somewhat larger be- ing preferable. THE AMERICAN SABBATH. Pulaski Democrat: No one with the best interests of our country .at heart will clamor for the elimination of our Sabbath or the further infringement on its meaning as a day of sacred use. Some coun- tries of other lands have so far re- moved restrictions that they have little that makes the Sabbath differ- ent from other days of the week Those who do not want the Sabbath Day longer, for rest and sacred mat- ters, have lost their interest in that which makes America as good as she is for happiness and a good place to rear children. Those who never had the responsibility of bringing up children may have and many do have little regard for those institution^ which have made our land woith living i n and a fit place to rear chil- dren. Those who have regarded n> any degree our schools and churches will not agree with one who suggests that our Sabbath Day should be turn ed into a day of amusement seeking. There are those in every community who care not for the church or the Sabbath, but when you look them up and see what sort of influence they, exert it will be found they do little for the better atmosphere of the community. Some people can always suggest what would be better but never stand ready to help make their suggestions a real working factor. Many have been clamoring for a change in the temperance laws but they have not been able to present; workable and acceptable methods or rules by which to bring about the Utopianism that they suggest would! follow. Keep your eye on the per-; sons who think everybody's notions are wrong but theirs for they may be found short of being as near right, as they think they are. CONSULTATION CLINICS FOR COUNTY. During the week beginning Novem- ber 29 a series of consultation clinics for diseases of the lungs is being ar- ranged by the Jefferson County Tu- berculosis Sanatorium with the as- sistance and co-operation of the State Department of Health. These clinics will be held in convenient places in the county. The clinics offer an opportunity for school physicians to send in all sus- picious children, malnourished, or underweight children. The X-ray out- fit supplied by the State Department of Health offers the great advantage of X-ray examinations. The attendance of former tubercu- losis patients- a t the clinics gives them a chance t o receive expert advice and further observation. When plans are completed notices giving dates, places and hours of the clinics will be printed, and physisians in the localities covered will be given admission cards for the patients whom they may wish t o refer. You Can Bank Here By Mail Banking by mail is sometimes a great convenience for those who live out of town or at a considerable distance from the bank. To take advantage of our mail service, make out the usual deposit slip and drop it in the mail with the checks to be deposited. Cash should be sent by registered post. A receipt will be forwarded to you the same day. Try this out. It may save you a lot of money. The Jefferson County National Bank Watertown, N. Y. DANIEL B. SCHUYLER, President CHARLES A. DUNHAM, Cashier A CENTURY OF STABILITY Homespun Yarn. Leisure hours are best earned by well planned work. Cover baked apples when they first start to bake and they will not get too brown before they are tender. A paint brush and some paint can often transform an assorted collection of furniture into a harmonious set. Several layers of light -weight clothing are usually warmer than one or two layers of heavy material. A strip of muslin or cotton flannel sewed to the lower edge of short blankets will keep them tucked in at the foot of the bed and 'allow plenty of covers for ones shoulders. One way to avoid paying high re- tail prices for meat is to cure and prepare your own supply on the farm. A Cornell bulletin, F 119, on this subject will be mailed to those Who ask for it on a postcard addressed to the state college, Ithaca, N. Y. PUNCTUATION RULES. Altoona (Kan.) Tribune: A man went into a printing office and asked the young apprentice what rules of punctuation he followed. The boy replied: \I set up as long as I can hold my breath and then I put in a comma, when I gap I insert a semi- colon, and when I want a chew of to- tacco I make a paragraph.\ The Fall flurry *&'**> W • IT'S SM0W/N6 ,V 7i\ , '/\!£'> TURKEY TALK. —o— When you select your turkey for Thanksgiving, one of the chief con- siderations is the amount and quality of the flesh of the body, especially the breast, back and hips. Plenty of flesh means plenty of meat for carv- ing, and there should be also a gen- erous amount of fat to insure a moist, tender turkey. The French always expose a turkey in the market with the back up so the housewives can better observe how plump the bird is. Feeling the end of the brest or keel bone and examining the spurs or the feet may give some idea of the age of a turkey, but these tests are not infallible so far as picking- out a tender turkey is concerned. Almost any turkey can be cooked so that it is tender, but it is, of course, easier to _ roast a young bird. The best method of cooking a turkey is that by which the flesh is kept moist and juicy. Cooking it in a covered roaster with a little water in the bottom in a carefully regulated oven will prevent it from drying out. The time for cooking varies according to the age of the turkey and its size. The custom of having a turkey -for Thanksgiving dinner dates back to the early New England settlers, who found turkeys wild and highly recom- mended by the Indians. Domestic turkeys are at their prime in the fall and their size makes them suitable for serving - to a good many people, so that the custom, for practical reasons, has continued down to the present. Around the House Crab Apple Pie. A crab apple pie tastes good right now, and another one early next spring, will taste just as good. Crab apples may be sliced thin and canned without sugar in a hot water bath to make pies at any time of the year. A well packed pint jar is about right for one medium-sized pie. Crab apples for pie do not need peeling and if their skins are red they give a bright color to the pie filling. To can the apples, according to methods which have proved satisfactory, wash and core them but do not peel them Cut them in thin slices, pack them in clean jars to within one half inch of the top and fill the jars with hot water. Adjust the covers and par- tially seal them. Boil the jars with their contents from sixteen t o twenty minutes in a hot water bath. Seal the jars, and store them until they are wanted. Know New York State 0 The Empire State, in New York city and Buffalo, has two of the ten chief ports of the world. Tie first decked vessel ever built in America was launched from Man- hattan Island in 1614 by her Dutch builders. She was 44 feet long and was named the \Orirust meaning \Restless.\ The largest Czecho-Clovak library in the world outside of Czecho-Slo- vakia is in New York city. It con- tains 11,000 volumes in Czech. New York state's yearly consump- tion of manufactured gas, one hun- dred and ten billion cubic feet, is greater than that of the whole coun- try in 1900, and her yearly use of electricity, ten billion kilowatt-hours, is more than the whole country used in 1910. . New York state leads the country in the production of linseed oil, wall- board, air-brake hose and aniline dyes. Fifty years ago the New York Stock Exchange listed twenty-one stocks and no bonds. To-day it lists more than 1,000 stocks and more than 1,3Q0 different bond issues. The-• largest grain elevator in the United States and the second largest flour milling center are both in New York state. Registration in the Empire .State for the recent election was 3,617,915, a third of, a million more than for the previous gubernatorial election of 1922. The total for the presidential year 1924 was 3,887,000. CLOSE h***********************-!B EC. 15 Aunt Ada's Axioms: The wisest people I know are the cheerfulest, and the cheerfullest are the wisest. Agrigraphs. Red raspberries, currants, and gooseberries are the hardiest of the bush fruits. Orchards plowed in the fall benefit both from better fertility and better distribution of labor on the farm. Let there be no strife between thee and me and between' my herdsmen and thy herdsman, for we be breth- ern.—Genesis. A national committee is trying to standardize poultry breeding stock, eggs, and chicks on the basis of pro- duction qualities and freedom from disease. A Cornell bulletin on the prepara- tion of eggs for market gives some good suggestions for the guidance of poultrymen who have a retail trade or for those who sell to wholesalers. Ask for F 133 on a postcard ad- dressed to the office of publication, state college of agriculture, Ithaca. N. Y., if you want a copy. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE SAYS BUOYS WILL BE RE- MOVED DECEMBER 1. Cherry Island and Cbaumont har- bor lights are to be extinguished December 1, and all buoys in the lake will be withdrawn after that date without further notice, mariners have been warned by the department of commerce. The official communication advises that all other lights and fog signals , b e discontinued for the winter at the close of navigation, except Rochester Light Station, Rochester East Pier Light, and Braddoek Point, New York, and aids at Conrieaut and Ash- tabula Harbors, Ohio, which will be maintained as long as required. This is taken as indicating that navigation on Lake Ontario will close officially about December 15, the customary date. ' Removal of the buoys, however, will add to the dangers of water traffic, exposing pilots not familiar with localities to rocks and shoals. The Canadian gov- ernment has announced that lights and markers are to be maintained as long as navigation lasts. While weather conditions actually govern, Lake Ontario and St. Law- rence river commerce is controlled largely by the date when insurance companies cancel their policies, a date usually preceding the actual termination of freight traffic, as many captains venture out even after tneir policies are taken- away. Although buoys usually are re- moved at a given time, lights are maintained as long as any shipping is known to be out. The record, at this end of Ontario, is December 25, resulting from presence of a \wreck- ing crew at work near the Galloups. In 1921, when the ocean freighter Clyde made its heroic effort to reach Chicago with a cargo of sugar from Philadelphia, lamps were kept bright on Ontario until December 18 t o pro- tect passage of the steamer. The Clyde, with two captains, as many pilots and a supplemented crew, put forth a strenuous effort to beat the ice with her 900 ton cargo but was forced to winter in Lake St. Clair. Bible Thoughts for the Week GET IT WHERE YOU WILL. Prospective holders of liquor pre- scriptions will be interested in an of- ficial notice sent to druggists and physicians from the headquarters of the Prohibition Enforcement Bureau, in Buffalo, stating that in the future it will not be necessary to have the name of the druggist written in on liquor prescriptions. Under the old ruling the name of the druggist filling the prescription was necessary on the certificate but now a holder can have the physician's prescription filled an any drug store desired. The new order takes effect immediately. A variety of potatoes which came from Japan, although worthless for culture here, seem .to be resistant to blight. Its hybrids give promise of a combination of blight-resistance and the good qualities of our common varieties. Cummings S Grappotte UNDERTAKERS Lady Assistant upon Bequest 'Phone 115 I Clayton, New York 0o & (ffbach £y Grace £ Hall Oh! little boy Hue, you're a wonderful boy, If only you'd learn how to play, If you would be pleasant and kindly and true, Forgetting yourself for a day, And if when the game..is against you, you'd smile, And not take your toys and run home, the while— Why, little boy blue, you could win over Fate, « If you'd leam how to smile—'while you wait! HE BLAMED IT ON THE TIRE. He didn't pump it full enough, Though all the air is free, He left it soft and spongy-like, And scooted on with glee. He skidded and he gridded And whooped through dust and mire And when it burst he cursed and cursed, And blamed it on the- tire. He drove it on the street car tracks With confidence superb; He bumped it on the lamp posts and He scraped it on the curb; He slammed it and he jammed it Any way he might desire, And when it popped, right out he hopped, And blamed it on the tire. He cut it on some broken glass, But said that didn't hurt; He kept right on through sand and mud And filled tne cut with dirt. It spotted there and rotted there And soon he howled in ire, When up i t blew, he blew up too, And blamed it on the tire. He put on chains that ground and chewed And gouged into the tread, He knew his wheels were out of line, \But what of that?\ he said. He whizzed along and sizzed along, He picked up nails and wire, And when it banged, his fist he whanged, And blamed it on the tire. Subscribe for the Eagle - - ' M - v UK yv \ You snatch at 'the prize ere the race is fe You- haven't the patience to see '^^/'ffiij \ That no man can have what he never riasVWon?^ Whatever his merits may be; JlIiH™--2 There isn't a thing that is worthy of hinir 5 *\ 5 ^^\ ^ That a real man can't get, if he tries with a vim; Lay your grievance aside—other boys aren't to blame— Grow a smile—and get into the game! Copyritht Dodd, Mead 6 Co, Inc. Sunday. A now commandment I give unto you. That ye love one an- other: as I have loved you, that ye also love one another. By this shall all men know that ye are My disciples, if ye have love one to another. — John 13:34, 35. Monday. When thou pasaoat through the waters, I will be with thee; nnd through the rivers, they shall not overflow thee; when thou walkest through tie fire thou shalt not be burned; nei- ther shall the flame kindle upon thee.—Isa. 43:2. Tuesday, la not this the fast that I & hava chosen? t o loose the bands $ of wickedness, to undo the j heavy burdens, and to let the * oppressed go free, and that ye j£ break every yoke?—-Isa. 58:6. * Wednesday $ They that wait upon the Lord . % shall renew their strength; they $ shall • mount up with wings as H= eagles; they shall run, and not i{; be weary; and they shall walk, sfe and not faint.—Isa. 40:81. % Thursday. sk Bless the Lord, O my soul, and J forget not all his benefits; who' * forglveth all thine Iniquities; $ who healeth all thy diseases; jf who redeerneth thy life from % destruction.—Ps. 108:2-4. * X Friday. % J Love not the world, neither * X the things that are in the world. 4 * If any man love the world, the J £ love of the Father Is not In him. * $ —I John 2:15. £ I | $ Saturday. * * * * Labour not t o be rich: cease * * from thine own wisdom. For % j riches certainly make them- * * selves wings; they fly away.— * * Prov. 23:4. !i. J it*-***********-************* BETTER SOCIAL ORDER. —o— The Manufacturer and Industrial News Bureau, battling for better business and industrial conditions, makes a plea for the support of churches of all denominations. It contends that churches stand for good business and economic conditions —religion is related to the social order, family life, public and private morality. If only one member of a family at- tends church, or one of the children goes to Sunday School, the cause of religion is worthy of family support. The Manufacturer pleads that every family in our great nation in- clude in its annual budget a con- tribution to support a religious or- ganization. This would be a good policy for the state as well as the family—there are too many half-starved and improperly supported churches. Red Cross Volunteer Workers Ever on Duty Claim tor the oldest volunteer knit- ter in the country is advanced by the Lincoln County Chapter of the Amer- ican Red Cross at Wiscasset, Maine. She is Mrs. h. A. W. Jackson, who keeps busy knitting stockings tor the Red Cross to send to destitute chil- dren abroad. The San Fedro, Calif., Chapter has a close second in a volun- teer knitter 85 years old. The annual report of the American Red Cross strosse3 tho service of vol- unteers. I n more than 3,000 Red Cross Chapters the officers and workers are volunteers. They will act as solicitors in the Tenth Annual Roll Call tor members, which the Red Cross will conduct from November 11 to 25. NOT TO BE CHEATED. Progressive Grocer: Mother—I wouldn't spank' baby tliis time, Robert. Wait till he does it again. Father—But suppose he doesn't do it again? Queer Places for Money Folks who distrust banks, like the Sydney (Australia) woman who burled $60,000 In gold in her garden, are apt to choose strange hiding places for their wealth. A few years ago a police court case revealed the fact that a London woman kept her money hidden In Iter mother's grave in a suburban cemetery. Quite a number of persons seem to put trust in the security of cannon as banking places. In a gun in a fort near Shoreham was found a parcel of jewelry, and in an old Crimean gun at Liverpool, England, a boy discov- ered a roll of notes, wrapped in a Sol- dier's discharge papers, to the value of over $500. War Over, But Red Cross' Nurses Are Ever On Duty Has the.romantic picture of the Rod Cross Nurse faded with the war days? It has been more than 12 yoara since that first contingent of brave women to go to the war zone sailed from America to make an undying record of service behind every battle front. For an answer to their whereabouts today, It Is only necessary to refer to any large disaster of recent years in which the Red Cross rendered relief. Wherever there was Injury and suf- fering the Red Cross nurse will ba found to have been on active duty. These nurses are enrolled under the American Red Cross as a reserve of the Army, Navy and TJ. S. Public Health Service, at all times ready to serve in war or peace. This reserve of Red Cross nurses aggregates 43,508 women who have met the highest standard in the nursing profession. The Roll Call for membership i n the Red Cross this yaar is November 11 to 25, when tht American people identify themselves with the broad services of the organization by joining ita ranks —Dr. J. T. Fowkes, Jr., has in- stalled an X-ray machine in his office, at Clayton. —Mrs. C. J. Eeeder, of Carthage, has been elected first vice-president of the New York State Federation of Women's Clubs. —The Jefferson County Automobile Club will elect new officers at the annual meeting, to be held in Wa- tertown November 23. —Miss Hilda Forney has been elected president of the Christian Endeavor Society of Hope Presby- terian church, Watertown. —Charles A. Eeilly, a teacher in the Watertown High school, has bufii secured to direct the newly organized adult choir of St. James church, Car- thage. —Eugene L. Burton, sheriff-elect, expended $210.90 at the recent elec- tion. B. S. Hayes and F. H. Moore, re-elected respectively to the offices of county treasurer and county clerk, each expended $100. Alfred E. Emerson, elected member of assembly, spent $100. —Mrs. Mary Coston, of Water- town, has commenced an action in supreme court against the New York Central and the Colonial Coach Lines, Inc., seeking to recover $50,000 damages for the death of her hus- band, who was killed instantly in a crossing accident at Pelts Mills, Sep- tember 10. The plaintiff has retained Attorney Clarence L. Crabb, of Wa- tertown, to represent her and the case is one of the largest and most important that has been brought in this part of the state in some time. —The grandfather's clock which be- longed to Noadiah Hubbard and which is said by some to be the first clock ever brought into Jefferson county, has been presented to the Jefferson County Historical Society by the Misses Emma and Katharine T, E. Lansing, of Watertown. The clock was in the possession of the late Miss Cornelia Lansing, who was a granddaughter of Noadiah Hubbard, and at her death the Misses Lansing gave the clock to the historical so- ciety as a historical piece of furni- ture having belonged to the first settler of the county. REFORESTATION DEPENDS UP- ON TIMBER USE. —o— The idea that to curtail the use of forest products is in the best interest of increasing our wood supply, is false, said A. Fletcher Marsh, vice- president of Marsh & Truman Lumber Co., Chicago, in a recent radio ad- dress. It is better to increase the growth of forest material rather than to curtail the output, he declar- ed. \The trouble with us Americans is not that we have been cutting our forests and using them, but we have not been growing new ones,\ Mr. Marsh states. \Now we are taking up that job. While we are waiting for the young trees t o get big enough for sawing, we must remember that the woods are full of aged and dying trees that ought to be cut and used if we are t o prevent waste—and that is as much conservation as planting a young tree. \Besidc-i you can only have so much land for forest growing, and if you let the aged trees stand in- definitely you put off the time when you can plant young trees. The truly productive forest is in perpetual mo- tion—old trees cominf? out and ri-«v ones coming in. It takes a certain volume of demand to make it worth while to bring the old ones out, and so start the rotation. Wherefore, you are justified, on conservation grounds, in continuing to use forest products whenever and wherever they seem to be better than other ma- terials, \Doing so, we shall have trees and forests, wood and ita products, in perpetual sufficiency.\ IMPROVE YOUR AIM. Cincinnati Inquirer: \1 see you have a sign in your store, 'We Aim To Please',\ remarked the irritated customer. \Certainly replied the proprietor, \that is our motto.\ \Well retorted the I. C, \you ought to take a little time off for target.practice.\ Join the Red Cross November 11 to Judicious Advertising Pays. Try It. Are You Tender It I s Well, Then, to Learn the Importance of Good Elimination. F UNCTIONAL inactivity of the kidneys permits a retention of waste poisons i n the blood. Symp- toms of this toxic condition are a dull, languid feeling, drowsy head- aches and, sometimes, toxic back- ache and dizziness. That the kidneys are not functioning as they should 13 often shown by scanty or burning passage of secretions. Many readers have learned the value of Doan's Pills, stimulant diuretic to the kid- neys, in this condition. Users every- where endorse Doan'a. Ask yout neighbor! DOAN'S PI ^ S Stimulant Diuretic to theKidneya Fo»ier-MUbura Co., Mfg. CUcm., Buffalo, N.Y.