1 ."'. ROSEBURG NrWsikvifew.Tll'ESr)AY, siETEMB-R.2 f.. 1 926 FOUR. I1 IOSEBURG NEWS-REVIEW Issued Dally Except Sunday 4 ' ' Bfriulier of Tile Avauolntvd 1'reae. l The Associated I'i-uhh in exclusively entitled to the liso for ropubll itlon of all newa dispatches credited Id It or not ollwn-wltiu credited to Is paper and to nil local new publlwhed herein. All rltftiU of republics, on of special dlupuluhca horalu are ulno ruse.-ved. i. W. BATES EKT Q. BATES- nterod as second clans mutter May IV, 1920, at the past office at Roseburg, Oregon, under the Act of Marcb 2, 1879. . i SUBSCRIPTION RATES ally, per year, by mall . ally, six months, by mall . ally, three mouths, by mall ally, single month, by mall llv. by carrier, per month eekly News-Review, by mall, per ROSEBURG, OREGON, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1926. POLITICAL EXAGGERATION. 1 Tho country is now in for several weeks of intensive ampaigninir. We shall as usual hear much fervid oratory, nd bitter charges will be hurled back and forth. It will be celared that tho nation is at the parting of the ways, that t must choose between great perils on one hand, and a safe nd prosperous course in the tical chieftains, will call their opponents by implication ascals or fools, and before election day wo shall hear a great eal of hot talk, This spirit descends into every day con ersation, and some people'have never been able to talk pol ics on the street without getting mad about it. Such keen lterest in politics riiay be better than, the absolute indiffer ntism which so maiiy people manifest, who will not take the ast trouble to vote at elections and primaries, and are will- lg to shove off all responsibility on someone else. It at ?L.ast shows interest in tho duties of good citizenship, when J people get excited over political questions and have firm and "J"T'ggressive opinions. But the time has gone by when people ould be convinced by wild and sweeping statements. The ralors and editors who make such claims are sized up by n.J.lie common sense of tho people as being unable to see these 'uestirins in an unprejudiced light. A speaker or writer is lost convincing when ho seems to approach his subject in a C ,nspassionate light, allow due weight to the arguments of , , ,;is opponents, and gives them credit for what-ver good ideas -' jlicy niay have. Having shown that spirit, he carries weight vlien lie begins to state the points where lie feels' his own arty and candidate have a more nearly correct attitude. ' o 1 A TIP TO MERCHANTS. i Fall undoubtedly the most beautiful season of the year round these parts with its short colorful and' crisp days, uggests a change not only in attire but in thoughts and esires. To the wideawake business man the coming I days ""-pell opportunity in large, bold letters. And to those who are uick enough to grasp it the dividends will bo handsome hen the next season rolls around, says tho Portland Journal f Commerce. ' ' ' ' " . Change your windows frequently feature the fast cool -feather sellers to satisfy big appetites generated in the out-f-dooi's at football games and other sports. If at all possible, "r o up with the enthusiasm developed by this most virile of n mcrican games it will establish you as a live wire in your , . .cighborhood. 1 1 i vTake stock of your progress during tho hot summer , Jionths and map out a campaign based on your failures and ' - accesses of the past three months and watch with satis fiction tho steady r.i i::-ti;'g of yoiir sales. Keep in mind, too, that the fall months are the ones in jhich to build solid, substantial winter business for invar- 'v ibly those housewives who are pleased with you, your stock aid your service at this season will bo with you when cold .feather confines all shopping expeditions to the telephone. ' ii ' o ' Misfortune nnd misery do not lend themselves appropri stely to jest and unsympathetic comment, but the plight of urricano-swept Florida, long over boomed in a manner cal culated to arouse tho envy of other localities less aggressivc- y promoted, will not spare her from many a heartless quip ' - ;iid uncomplimentary allusion to what will bo regarded by . omc as established evidence of her unfavorable location cographically. The larger part of the nation, however, is umane enough to refrain from jeering at a prostrate neigh bor, and with this element tho uppermost thoughts are that Florida is a part of our country, that her people are fellow Americans and that in her present hour of dire need she is - "esci v'mg of all he assistance that can be rendered her. ho proclamation of the president of the United States, ap- eahng for aid for Florida in the great calamity that has -rather (m(!,,r hll8 anvthing .', .f,',V T t1""1 . lo-vaU'- If er.i!len her, will meet with a generous and prompt response. !' ,''.";;- -h'r '""-oh!i tZ,t Z iegional differences and promotion competition do not count !.u,iiier can go shopping for her 'mgV!i T'"'1 ,ni'"" 11 situations of this kind, and he who takes advantage o("ew ;'-' u"rUm w" '"! , 'if .vo feeMh'1t'l,'vourl lire' has nth an opportunity to indulge in fancied witticism proves Z'u Jlthi'r S,'' "t hi',!1" iniself a poor American citizen and a violator of the oldest i1"'-- "The fact thin we have ahso down' and spend an evening' with .iw in the world the law of humanity. i "'."'!:'.. 1"":sl."":1 "u"" """""" t'".l,!'.-' ''' '" !" : . Some parents say they can't help their chiM.-en with heir school lessons, as methods of instruct ion anil text- ooks are SO changed now. 1 ,, ... -CL-p along With the things -llOUItl UO able to throw light (..: r....... a ,..; i.;i,...,. iui ivu jiuni null 11 .111 aisiuj 1 istorv lessons vivid. Correct , . . .... 1 ,,.: 1 , aenmaiisnip, aim ineir seliool :le.' Tho old folks will also ,,uliMi,.llmi tV.i. tl.omi.l i.a The increase in the cost of operatinj; the 1S slate iov rnments has increased from about $r17.000.)()0 in 1017 to 1,01 1,000,000 last year. This may seem an astonishing : isc 111 incso charge p in that time, but th j pointed out that something over $ 100,000,000 has been pent the past year for highways, which is vastly more than .-as spent in 1917 for this cause. Wo have turned millions I automobiles loose 011 the roads, and wo must have hard ui-faces for them. Cut business ability is needed to handle ' heso big expenditures more than ever before. . I by The Newa-Revlew Co., I no. I'roBldont and Manager .8ocretary-Troasurer -14.00 - 2.00 i.OO yeur... .60 .50 2.00 opposite direction. Many po. " lint, if intellio-ent imrcnls wilt ., ., . , . the pupils are studying, they on them. Kead them Stne 1 1 u 1... ,1 , 111,11 .-.((: m im; iii.iuu iiiomu their faults in trninini.-n- nnd 11 , m i papers will not seem so Ulster - find that thev need a lot of thisiwashing it turns out without the 0- . The prices of everything have gone 111 . 1 , 1, r- , llllt does lldt account for It all. IUlt it A' pleasing feature of the' lic schools yesterday with the school building was the perfect organization that went along with each and every department in the system and the smoothness with which tho 1243 pupils were handled. City Superintendent M. S. Hamm is to be commended for the ef ficient way in which he had opening day. The outlook for mighty encouraging and with school building this city has taken constructive steps to bet ter educational facilities throughout the entire system, thereby maintaining a high standard of efficiency that should be a great satisfaction to the taxpayers of this school district.' , : A recent survey of the heads of 29 big railways, shows that nearly all of them spent long years in learning the rail road business from the bottom. Thirteen were college men who took jobs with long hours and nominal pay,, while 16 had only public school educations, and worked up from jobs as section hands, clerks and brakemon. An experience at the manual trades is a very helpful thing to an ambitious man. It would probably be found that most of the men who have made good in a big way, did so because tiicy knew their business from the ground floor up. The office job is softer, but it often fails to show up the heart of a business . ' ' ' .' .' ' ' ' 0 : :.. ' ; Quite a number of universities throughout the east are discouraging the practice among students, of taking "auto mobiles to school."'. It is claimed, the students who flivver around do not get as high grades as those who use their pedal extremities. !VVe think the' disclosure is quite right. Also, that too many automobiles are in evidence-oh the pub lic school grounds of this and other states. , : t, '"'-.'. 1 ,' '' o We don't want to; commercialize the misfortunes of olhcr'people, but wo do want to say right, here, that Oregon has all the accomplishments of the hurricane swept coast beat seven ways for Sunday.; Here the elements never get nway from the even tenure of .their ordinary habits--which is just about correct twelve months in the year every year. o ' i : ; : I . ; ; Well, brace yourself for the verdict in the Dempsey Tunney slugging match.. Tho big event is scheduled for Thursday evening. . ,: ; ;,, ;.i!4 i i i L- '. . l: in -' A -VT . JESSE A book abouc this bandit author nobly planned it, it kept mo much enthused. , It seems it is a libel to say that James was bad ; he often read his Bible, he, was, a pious lad. When not engaged iin rob bing, 'or' other'' lawless acts, he read, with; spirit throbbing, all kinds of soulful tracts. His heart was-full "W kindness. it made him sigh and groan, tiiat heathen ii'i their blindness, bowed down to wood and stone. His soul would often quiv er with deep and wearing pain, ho longed so to deliver the land' from error's chain. But he had aunts and cousins who looked to him for bread, and so he held up dozens, and shot them full of lead. By tearing up the trackage he stopped the railway train, and lifted wad and package from every weep ing swain. And jf a wight resisted the bandit stern and grim, James Wotted, weened and wisted that death would do for him. His hands were red ahd reeking with blood in business hours, but leisure found him seeking religion's fin est flowers. Although his wordly measures were desperate ly wrong, his mind was stored with treasures from Solomon, his Song. The author strives to clear him of legends that affright, and trying to revere him, I've sat up half the night. But all his pious motions will not conceal the tale of how, be tween devotions, he hit the murder trail. It is a common trouble, the one the bandit had, to try to travel double with good things aiid with bad. To sing the psalms on Sunday, to grovel and to pi-ay, and then iro forth on Mnnrinv tr, rhnni or rob or slay. Religion has no merit if laid aside at times, if people only wear it between their sins and crimes. And men who once were boosting this James, who'd rob a church, will loatlie him, now he's roosting upon a holy perch. New Idea in the Horton Washer Yearly models In nnloniohlles are soniethlni; the buying public In cn- tliejy familiar with, but llihi Idea as applie.l to washing mid ii-onim- iinncliines la Kumt-lhlng new. 11. la , '' ,lN,'n "-Review: 1 have of I Wash.-r Wilson. Inc.. iinlzni Ion , .'''! '.'."'I'1 "r ,'""' S'"d l'l man that has adapted this pollcv to tho "' 11:1,1 lo lllu liloi-ious Old 'isale of their nvmhuM ; - - u nasneia ami trailers .tin mic maiMM. gtuuautecu i-.il-, mode s, ZJZ - junstrntp in competition w ith other I "mr' . u,'al isaiistaciion to us that we can actu- j ally cut tho washing time in half, ' . " ' , ' . , V """ i"" 10 any oilier muclilne. Not onlv do ' ' l,l,v' l,lllt tremendous a.lvan- ,l"i:e. hut much of the success ot i,n ii;tim l8 ,,u, , ,no ,,ean sllgllloM tliitllliKo lo even tlio most fi-ni'lln m-tlrlc "Another Interesting bit of Inftir IllllMllll lit llliliunll ll-.,a lu flml fli-.:t Mortons worn maiuifactureil In' " , Manning, until recently a 1ST1, anil that Washer Wilson. ;"sl'le!U of Spokane, has leased Z , SI 'of this type In the west. 'maintain - tnir over 7G aliirea " j " r 8lu"a- DR. NE'RBAS tlENTIST .'Xalnleia Extraction Cm Whin Dolrd - Pyarrhta Curad - i Phone 488 Maaonla UldR. opening of the Ito'seburg pub addition of the new high planned his program for the the present school year is the addition of tho new high JAMES. I lately have ; perused : the j ; LETTERS FROM THE i PEOPLE . T 7- 4 "l"-u''lous OLD COUPLE r'T1'"- , Ami you will go home feeling mat i n world is Jusl as good and uZ tmlv Z, it ever was. tor you win havi yenlng Willi one of Iho grandest old couples In the world. TO years as prutector, lover, nun - ' r -- 1 -.. seetiieart, . ... ...aia mlK. mg, loyally, so take off vour hls and bow our heads In thanks '"at ttiere is still a I'a and Ma Day i'n the world. Thnnk tied ! a friend. j SPOKANE MAN TO EDIT 1 NEWSPAPER AT RIDDLE ' - the shop and equipment of lh(, ltldille, Enterprise which recently SA, '. i i " ! - "l,s,,l,,",,.1 ll'licatlon and Willi Myrt I soon again start publication III BiP"11" lilildlo paper. Mr. Manning has !"'" had Oimslilernhlii viuiriii In newspaper work ami should pro-l'lon built for the Sornes rooming vide the community with a good house. , . . ... .. . , .'' newspaper. I !.ar( crows nt work, on Reeds- port-Wlnchest-r Hay road. , Orders taken for fresh grape Oregon ami Washington will har Julco from the Overland vineyard, vest 60,000,1)00 to 70,000,000 pounds Leave containers at Brand's Road I prunes. Stand. ' Cottage Grove Heavy machinery Did You Ever , Stop to Think By Edson R. Walte, Secretary of the Shawnee,, Oklahpma, Board of Commerce. THAT every citizen should have faith; In the homo city, aud Bliow Itiulr 'laltb D' uotn words and ac tions. ' .( i ; ... . THAT men who express doubt as to the future of their home city are not usually the men who are best able to gauge Its future. . . THAT the citizens who push the homo, city to the .front are those who have unbounded confidence In its ability to forge steadily ahead in tho years -to come. Cities peopled with this class of citizens always. move ahead. THAT In every city there are people who should stop doing things they ought not to do and start doing tilings they should do. THAT some men with high Ima ginative minds who spend ihelr time building air . castles .should stop dreaming. Dreams never build. People of the home city should not be discouraged because some dreamers wish to wait and watch to see results secured by progres sive citizens so they can reap Borne benefits from their neighbors work. Every city has dreamers. Dreamers should wako up and become a wide-awake, active part of the homo city and do. their full share towards Its upbuilding. A city must have the thorough, enorgotlc and practical coopera tion of all Its citizens in order to keep In tho march of modern pro gress, , . . . ' , . (Copyright 1926.) .. HE SAT TIGHT By Wickes Wamboldt : It you found yourself the hus band of a woman whose family was rich and influential while you had nothing and were nothing and that woman and her family treated you lightly, and poked fun at you. aud made rather a joke of you feven betore company, what would you dp? Would you tell them where to go and when to get off? Would you slap the whole hunch In the face, so to speak, and turn your back on them or would you take their digs and laughs as just if part, of life's game, and go on patiently, quietly ana pleasant ly? :. , . .., . Tho' reason I am stating such a case :is because .1 just received a letter.i from a man I have known for ;tventy years. He married girl qui of a wealthy and influen tial 'fjiriiily. Ho was as. poor as a matt Could he who was on a small sulal-V.and had a mother and sis ter to support. -The girl's, family ilidn'tj think he stacked up so very high. 1 They treated him as some- thUig'tlhat Inspired humor. When interest in life Jagged at homo, or abroad ithey crawled onto him and prodded him up. I used to won dev. how he endured it, but he never complained. He never , hit back. Ho just took their knocks with at sweet Humility., Then one day he got a chance to go into business. And , there was whore his, wife's . family . did something for him besides kid him. Perhaps they wore a little con science stricken. Anyway, they loaned him the money, to buy out a concern that had fine prospects hut no capital. Ho prospered in his new .enter prise, llo worked hard nnd lutein- gently and economically. ,- The first thing people knew he was In dependently nch. The letter reived today tells me he has re tired from active buslnoss. The most difficult things he does now are to clip coupons and collect the rents of the office buildings . he owns, and to- hunt -nnd fish and lour nround in his high-priced mo tor ear. He Is having a corking good time nnd his wife's family It-cat him with respect too. It is natural to treat with Rpect. a man who has made good. Hut here- Is the big Idea. Absol utely that man won his success through - literally accepting the command to be meek. Had he been resentful and rebellious the chances are he would still be on his little salary -with, nothing to look forward to but a complicated old age. WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL REVIEW Mlhvniiklo Hand Forged Tool Company here pays $5,000 a month wages?' Med fori! New fireproof; Terminal Hoi el. costing $147,000 finished.., Sellwood Masonic, lodge . will liulld $50,000 temple here. Uosebuig New high school unit costing $1110.000 furnished, opens September 20. . Mulanomah $440,000 store, office mill apartment building started here. .. j Klamalh Falls Construction bo gies on 110-foot viaduct, to cost $1211.111)0. Kugeiie Keith Lumber Company buys Loud sawmill at Higdon, Coos ! liar branch, for $25,000. 1 stato gnmo department has re- 1 leased 84 wild turkeys and 10,000 ; pheasant, since June 1. Wheeler Brighton section of Roosevelt Highway, 2SS miles, to j cost S120.0SO... - . I Oregon spring wheat estimated : nt 1. '.HI3.000 bushels and winter wheat at 17.600,000. Klamath Fnlls Cold Storage ComiMliy will Increnso. plant to make 6,000 tons Ice a year, to sup-1 ply 1'arlflc express cars. Iliilnleri-Old . Menelfco j.umncr company mil sue maj 00 usea lor iB'TKt he.mlock mill. ., . four blocks on Maple street, street" will be graveled. I ItOOdSPOrt tight-room CXlen- FATE OF EX-ROSEBURQ RESIDENTS AT MIAMI NOT YET , LEARNED. Fragmentary lists of the casualty victims at Miami, 4 norma, appearing in, press dlspatcheB, aro being anxious- 4 ly scanned by R. W. Eaton, mechanic at the Chrysler 4 agency in Roseburg, whose brother-in-law and sister, Mr. 4 and Mrs. Harry Hunirnnr, and their child, former residents 4 of this city, moved to Miami 4 a year ago. Mr. Hummer, a 4 tool maker by trade,, was in parinej-snip wun Mr. Eaton at tho Chrysler agency. Inde- finite Interruption" of tele- 4 : graph service with Miami ren- ders It impossible , for Mr. 4 4 Eaton to get a message ot In- 4 qulry through and he Is watch- Ing the published lists of vie- 4 tlms as they drift to the out- 4 side 'world in the hope that 4 none will contain the names of his relatives. B. K. McLen- don, local real estate dealer. f is. also concerned , regarding the safety ot his sister, who 4 resides a short distance from 4 MW-rt -. , t ... u . t being taken to Mustek mine, Bo hemia district. Pdrtland Pacific Northwest Ra dio Exposition is. set for September 21-25. . . , ., . ; ... , Salem FuceIo of eat-lv hons are being sold, up to 5,2 cents a pound. North l'owder payld Lee & Sons ship 10 cars, lambs to Chicago. saiem rnew lora Duyer pays $25,000, for 31 Bilver foxes raised here. .- , , ,t ....... , - Steady demand for joggers in all fir-producing Northwest. Several big Oregon mills working two and three shifts, . ... .". - Pendleton $2,500,000 McKay re servoir, will be completed this fall. Salem Capital Business College moves into new quarters. Pacific Coast air mail, now in operation, declared best route in America. . .. . . . - Columbia River district shipped 4,345,273 bushels wheat, during Au gust. ., . . . Portland OTegon-Paclfic line will take several hundred tons Oregon prunes to Europe. . Bend Shevllu-Hixon ; Lumber Company gives State deed to Lava River cave park. - , .. " , Astoria .Coast cranberry, crop will reach 40,000 to 50,000 boxes. . Eugene Passenger train service begins over Cascade line, Septem ber 19. . 1 - .. Portland Admiral Oriental Blue Star lino adds three refrigerator ships to service. Portland Apple shipments to United Kingdom are double those of samo time last year.- Bond Deschutes Light and Power Company.. starts work on $75,000 power distribution system. , Lakovlew City plans complete sewer system, to he built early next year. . .. - , Contract lot for. 1.3 miles Crater Lake rim road, for $35,420. Wedtlerburn 11-mile Euchre Creek, section of- Roosevelt High way, will be graded and surfaced. Cottago Grove Work begins, on mammoth dry shed for Woodard Lumber Co. . . , . New berg Local stock, subscrip tions assure building of $600,000 unit of paper mill. .... Eugene Proposod new Presby terian Church will seat 1,000 per sons. McMlnnvlllc McMlnnville Tele phone Company wilt move into new office home, by October 15: -new $10,000 switchboard to be installed. Sheridan Local cannery will be greatly enlarged for 1927, after good run for 1926. - Medford Pears, are being ship ped out by trainload, up to 87 cars a day., .. Myrtle Point The School board votes to erect , new grade school building In 1927. ,. . . : .Myrtle Point Shingle mill and box factory will bo built 011 Halls Creek. . 1 , . i . , , Wheelor "Westwood shingle mill reopened ,for steady run. 1 Wheeler Westwood . Lumber Company contracts for several roll- I Inn fnnt nf Inn-a Corvallts Construction begins on Walters Insurance block of two stores. ..... Klamath Falis Johu. Lasky sells 1,000 cattle and 850 tons hay, at Merrill. ,. ... ... Klamath County recently shipped more than 90 cars cattle and sheep In one day. .. . Klamath County has 17 rurnl schools with teachers' living quar ters. Crook County sheriff will round up Ill-fed rango horses for fertil izer use. Cottage drove $17,000 building permits arc issued, during July and August. . Junction City Large new play shed built for grade schools. . Klamath Falls Heavy tonnage of wheat being received by local mills.. . . f . r: : Prlnovlle Railroad may be built from here, to meet Herrick road Seneca. MANTRAP ANTLERS Insurance GENERAL LJNES MUTUAL BENEFIT HEALTH AND ACCIDENT ASS'N The Largait In the World. Tho Coit About Half. Settlement! the Best. This la worth Investigating. . D. S. Beals, Agency , 109 So. Jackson St. Phone 628 I BP- ANSWERED Freckles If freckles were a dis ease, or even a uisiigurement,, a euro would likely be found for them, but since they are iho na tural thing to have during months when the sun Is tho strong est, no one should mind them. They are nature's protection for the skin and the health of the body, just as tanning Is this same protection. They are duo to color pigment acting like a sun snaue 10 screen off tho strongest rays of the sun. Then you bleach tho coloring you lose the protection, and you must neutralize the natural secre tions In tho skin while all the time new freckles will be forming for the natural process will not be stopped. The result will likely ba a coars- led skin very much dried .out "' , ', '.., ',. nftpr iile exer om the acids or chemicals that! back of the neck after 1 would be needed to act upon, the coloring and destroy It. 1 lie very fair skin that 1b usually of a fine texture must need the rrecmesio preserve it from injury,, and to health and the freBhneos, that comes from living out in the sun 'Shine, the wind, and water, v - : MIbs H. L. B. Try tincture or green , soap as a shampoo , wheu vnur hah- is verv oily, and fine castile soap at all other times. It Is possible that the mixture, you are using now as a shampoo does not aereo with your scalp. Do not trv to lose more tnan hvb pounds a month, and you will be I Wide fti f I 1 1 1 r 1 t urtl A- KinKrnT( , ONE-EGG CHOCOLATE CAKE TOMORROW'S MENU ' Breakfast Left-Over Baked Pears - - Cereal - Ham-Potato Cakes Muffins Coffee ' Luncheon . ,' - -French Toast . . - - ; Syrup Fruit Salad Cookies -.. , Cocoa Dinner . Cold Roast Beef Pickles Potatoes Beets Baked Apples Thin Cream One-Egg Chocolato Cake Coffeo . To make a one-egg chocolate lay er cake, cream "one-third cup of butter and gradually work into it three-quarters of a cup of granu lated Biigar. In a small bowl boat the yolk of one egg till light and to it add one-halt cup ot cold, sweet milk. Combine the two mix tures. Sift one and one-eighth cups qt pastry flour with two teaspoons of baking powder nnd a, pinch of salt, and stir this also Into tho mix ing bowl. Flavor with one. teaspoon of vanilla, stir in one square -of bit ter chocolate which has been melt ed to the very soft stage and, last, told in the stiffly whipped white of one. egg.,, . . , Baking the Cake: Even the least experienced cook knows that mix ing a cake is not the most critical part of the proceeding. Baking is of prime importance and many be ginner housekeepers buy one of the one-burner portable ovens which DietHealth . 1 mr yrJ '-!,. ? t YOUR BACK ACHES BECAUSE: '"Kidneys," said tho herb man. .tho kidneys to the bladder.) En-"Flat-root," said the shoe doctor, ilargement and inflammation of tho "Infected teeth," said the dentist, prostate may lead to backache, just "Prostate," said tho Q. U. doctor, as can pelvic trouble in womon. 'Pelvic trouble," said the gyne- (Pelvic troubles in women are not cologlst. . ! nearly so often the causu of back- "Mal-adjustment," said the ostco-laciie as Is commonly thought.) path. Mal-adjustment nnd impinged Impinged nerves, ' assured the chlro. "It don't ache," emphasized the C. S. "Overweight," piped Lulu Peters. Medical Herald. Now let mo comment briefly on I training that this implies and with a few of these causes. special training in orthopedic sur- Kidneii. If you wore to believe ' gery. the ads of patent medicines, you i It don't ache! It's all right lo would think that kidneys were thejsay It "don't ache" if it does not cause of all backaches. This islead you to ignore investigating not true. The fact of tho matter ;the cause, for. some trouble easily is that inflammation of the kid-1 corrected in the beginning may neys Is rarely the cause of ordln- go on to something serious. An ary backache.. If the kidneys are jache of any kind is a symptom of diseased so that they cause back-1 something wrong some place, and ache, the host of such kidneys I it's a beneficent plan of Nature to ccrtainly will know it for he Is a mighty sick man. Flat Feet, It throws' tho body Into a wrong position, with the re sultant strain. ' Infected Teeth. Yes. By furn ishing germs and poisons which Isottle In the Joints and muscles of 1 1 the spine (and elsewhere) and cause low-grade inflammations. I Prostate. The G. IT. doctor Is 'one who specializes in genlto-UB-inary disorders. The prostate is a gland situated atound the urethra in the bladder of .men. (The ure thra Is tho canal which leads from the bladder to the outside, The ureters are the tubes leading from . My nar rolloweri; Wnn ending for mtterUl witch offer yos, pleaa remember to enclois a tamped, elf-addreaeed envelope hearloe; your full name ana adrfreea. The pamphlet on reducing; and eralninR la the only one for which ron malt encloee ten cents In stampa extra. Addreaa your letlnrf to ma In care of thta paper. Make them aa brief aa poralbla. not over 30 worda, and type or write them legibly with Ink. Please alim your name 1 aa evidence of frood faith -wa will not uaa It In any way. Remember It la Impoaalble for ma to dlaanoae for you or to answer you peraonally. I ap preciate vary much the beautiful lMtera you aend ma and regret It te mr poialble t. Kn too lnd(Tldj4 adyto.. Th questions- yon ulr will ba I anawerad U 1 eoloma a aooa as possible tt tter ara af sanaral xtr I tat. IVib-1 forest 1a slaia4. selail4r SSTslSM It T smat aas, ts s m U Ulansu im I ksvn cKwb ..... Giro LETTERS building up your health so you could not look unnaturul. Ullly To reduce a doublo chin, throw your head fur back between your shoulders and go through U the motions of chewing until you have fully exercised all tho mus- cles ot the throat and chin. For the lump at tho back of tho neck, you can massage it with vnur finEer tins, which will act as an exorcise dooB, and for a special exercise, place your arms out to the right and to the left on the left on a level with the Bhoul ders, bend elbows and bring fore arm .back and place finger lips on the edge of the snouiuera, uuu then rotate the shoulders forward and back till all the muscles of the neck are fully exercised. Apply very cold wator or Ice to tracts the pores and will nuke the skin firm, so it will not have any tendency to Bag after the fat ty . tissue have Deeu uuaui uuu. A. A. I do not think a condition of nearsightedness , would cause putfiness under the' eyes; usually this comes from the liver or kid neys. ThlB .would also account for , the circles under tho eyes, I think ;. -i.niii.i en to the. doctor and get the right treatment for the doing something to correct your nearsighted vision, o1" n- upwi. uu. -------- Tomorrow A Youthful Chin. have a glass door (tho kind of oven which is used on kerosene oil ranges) so that they may see how the cake is baking without opening tho oven door. Thus, they will de tect nnv tendency to burn. Or they lean immediately remove tho cake I from the oven when they see It has shrunk from the sides of the pan sufficiently, giving evidence that it ! is done through. By iising a Fahrenhoit oven ther mometer, however, one can be '.rea sonably sure of accurate halting. After scraping the chocolate bat ter into two buttered layer, cake pans (I do not use wax paper be tween this cake and Its pan, as il seldom sticks), slip the pan into 'a' very liot oven' (between 500 mid 650 dog'rees Fahrenheit) and keep it at this same temperature for 211 or 25 minutes. It will be safe ta peok in the oven aftor 20 minutes. 'Layer cake pans very In size, and it. Is best to use rather small onea for this cako say, the eight-by eight-lnch-ln-diameter size. Other wise the layers will not be very high. (It desired this cako may be baked In a square single sheet.) Chocolate Frosting for a Two Layer Cake:" Into a bowl put ono and one-half cups of confectioner's sugar. Crush out lumps with a po tato masher, then stir In one table spoon of dry cocoa powder. In a cup mix one-half teaspoon of vanil la with two tablespoons of cold water. Add this liquid to the sugar cocoa mixture. Stir well and add one tablespoon of butter melted, Mien spread between and on top the hot layers. Tomorrow Baby's Sacque and Cap It in rTn. . rm lti m nerves. Yes, but very rarely for ordinary backaches. Be very care ful who does the adjusting and tin cloos tho impinging! See that they are regular physicians with tho preliminary education and after- warn. Overweight! Well, 'nuf said - You know what I think about overweight. It can cause moi:t any old trouble. (By the way, while we're on overweight, we might mention 1 that we have a "million-dollar" 'booklet on the subject. Thoso who are in need of it may have It by Rending a fully aelf-addreas- ed, stamped envelope and ten cents In stamps, with request. Al low two weoks for its receipt.) Mrs. K. You . should have Uiorough physical examination . (Continued on page 7.) ' lfr V JIXT WI