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Show .... 53' 1). S. Of WHOS Army Mans Oulpostsr Far-Flun- n Battle Fronts) g States Assumes Military Command In Area Many Times as Wide as United NEWS 1 ! THIS J ,Tf 1 1 L hair. That was May in Washington as It has looked for nearly a quarter But there was a of a century. grim signature in the upper corner of this picture framed by my office window that made the whole scene modern strictly, brutally, 1942. It was the s.lhouette of a parapet, the top of a tall hotel and on the penthouse roof a black cylinder pointed gun. But upward an that did not hold my attention. I have seen hundreds, if not thousands; of those guns in the past weeks. It was a doughboy under his rounded helmet sitting on the edge of the parapet kicking his heels into ..space as his watchful young eyes followed the skyline. To me he was the symbol of a million men scattered from the Arctic to the Antipodes, scanning strange skylines, soon to see them all turn red. Never in history has a nation sent a front its sons out to as as that which America is guarding today; never in history has such a terrible machine been built by a single people. In less than half a year a nation that yesterday spent less on its army than on its movies, its autos, or its cosmetics has begun to man the outposts of the United Nations. Gradually the United Stages has assumed military command in afl area ten, perhaps 20 times, as wide as its own borders. Boys from Florida and Texas live in iron huts in Iceland under an American commander boys from the Dakotas are sweating in Asiatic jungles boys from New England are fighting sandstorms In the African deserts American generals give commands In China, In the South Seas, in India and the Levaftt. . fh? car is still running though not so far in the East and the northwest Pacific we still have at least one teaspoonful of sugar for our coffee, 6chool begins, father goes to the office or the fields, there are still dishes to wash, shoes to shine, umbrellas to mend, babies to If it werent for these change. common, engrossing things human beings could not carry on while the whole world goes through the excruciating agony of travail that will bring forth something whose nature no one can guess. To survive this ordeal requires the dull, unthinking indifference of the brute or the faith of saints and wide-flun- g martyrs. Canada Struggles for Financial Independence Changing its business all around Is one of the biggest jobs this coun- Changing the business of a hundred million people is a long, hard job. Weve only really got down to cases since Pearl Harbor.' But when the President told us about forgetting the "creature comforts and the efforts that have been made since April 28 in Washington to carry out his seven program most point people began to realize that we are on the way. Recently I took a specially conducted trip through a section of the territory of our northern neighbor, Canada, where they have been busy changing ever since 1939. From the moment you get off at the busy station in Montreal filled with uniforms and the folks there to meet them, you realize how important Canadians are to Americans, how important Americans are to Canadians, and how vital U is that each of these good American neighbors see eye to eye, work together and learn to forget "border and breed and birth and to greet each other frankly and freely as brother Northamcricans. Canada is big a little bigger In than the United square miles States. It has a tenth of the people to support and develop this great heritage. Unlike the United States, d of the Canadians are s of and try has today. one-thir- French-speakin- two-third- g p Interdependency Today, bound together in the same cause, the United States and Canada are more interdependent than ever. They must share in the framing of a new world after the war. Canada has never accepted a arrangement with the United States. Canada's parliament has voted a free gift of a billion dollars to Britain. Canada, dependent on so much of America's output to sustain her war effort is struggling to maintain financial independence so that she can sit down at the peace table with no debtor's shackles on her wrists, no burrs on her tongue, as an equal counselor among the Northamer-icane s. But because the United States is a giant, financially and industrially, and Canada is small in comparison, she is deeply affected by what America does. That is why she is keenly interested in how the United States works out the program for checking inflation laid down in the Presidents message of April 27. Canada's war effort depends on th United States for certain which Canada neither grow In her fertile soil nor, fabricates in her factories. Canada has things America needs. You cannot go into one of the busy Canadian war factories without seeing the name of an American city stamped on some machine American machine tools is an essential which we have furnished Canada so that she could equip not only her own army and navy but help Britain to equip hers. And Canada has had a problem. She bought much mone from us than we from her. American dollars became as scarce north of the border ss corn pone (and it's hard to think of an American product unknown In Canada). Tourist Dollars One of the chief sources of American dollars was the American tourist. The tourist trade fell off with the beginning of the war. It has almost disappeared with the rationing of gasoline and tires. No Canadian can come to the United States and spend his money here (reducing Canada's dollar exchange) without proving his visit is strictly business. One of the clauses of the famous made bv Hyde Park agreement and Prime Minister McKenzie-KinPresident Roosevelt was "coToordination of price policies has begun, day that 14 months after it was laid down. For there can be no effective price control In Canada if there is no control in the states whose products she has to buy. If American prices should soar how could the Canadian government force its own merchants to keep prices down on the many things they get from the United States, or how could the Canadian war budget bear the strain if the many war products they must have from us (gas engines for instance, for planes and tanks and trucks) went up in price? , Canada began to study price controls immediately after her declaration of war with Germany in 1939. But it was not until December, 1941, that maximum price regulation went into effect. Since then Canada has been watching, waiting, hoping that we would follow suit, because there could be no Canadian price n ceiling unless there was a price ceiling. It would be a house with less than half a roof. 1, 1941, Canada On December froze prices and wages allowed fur unpreventable rise In the cost of living by granting a bonus in wages if the cost of living went up. It has, however, varied little, now if the Presidents program is successfully carried into effect, stabilization can be assured. We have followed the Canadian pattern. g "norlh-america- U. S. Influence BRIEFS: Over 290 Latin American youths are receiving aviation trainingjn the United States. Going against the Axis, one mess hall at Camp Roberts, Calif., has renamed a popular breakfast dish "Free French Toast. of Knoxville, Chester Bryant Tenn., suggests that Americans and other peoples ef the United Nations, busiIn closing all correspondence, ness and personal, use the words, Yours for Victory." all-o- But some American prices had already affected Canada. Take the typical case of the Canadian merchant who either had to sell grapefruit at loss or stop selling them because the United States was the If all tte merchants only source. had stopped selling grapefruit it would have had a bad effect because it would have meant a greater stra-on the market for other tomatoes, for fruits or vegetables instance, which happen to be in great demand for similar vitamin content both at home and In Britain. n 6, Hi Certificates Bim'r.wn,-- MEANING OF UNITY IN WAR EFFORT THERE IS NO DOUBT about America being collectively a unit back of the government in the world Contest iin whi 'h we are engaged. We are all of that unit. Every man, woman and child wants the government to win. But there is a difficulty. We must be more than collectively supporting the war. It must be more than a government war. It must be our war. We must think of what losing it would do to each individual and what stake each of us has in the dtfeat of the Huns and ut - the English speaking mixed with a heavy smattering of races drawn from as many different lands as our own population. Daughter I am in my mothers house, but mistress of my own wrote Kipling of Our Lady of the Snows as he called Canada whose wide vistas of lakeland, prairies, mountain and forest were too wide for eveq his facile genius to bring to a single canvas. Now she is a grown-udaughter who can speak to the motherland on equal terms. lend-leas- Consider briefly the great continent to the south of us, and see what bearing it may have upon Uncle Sams By LEMUEL F. PARTON victory effort. (As&oUdted Ne$ spupere- U Nl Service.) Time was, in the early days JEW YORK. It will come hard of the war, when South Amerto think of Gen. James H. Dooica was very much like Benito little as the Jimmy Doolitt'e who Remember that used to be the bantamweight buxirg Mussolini. of the stocky orator, poised on the champ Top Boxer , JJacer, Pac ,ficeoatt. fence of power politics, eagerAir StunterHe's But there's ly watching each move in the Now Gen. Doolittle ThenewTy great struggle to see which elevated general, nominated by way the balance of power was President Roosevelt, is none other shifting. And then, satisfied , than the tanned, that he had made the right wrinkled, rumpled, decision, jump into the roughhouse fighter and flier of a few his Italian legions. years back. He has grown gray with all-o- By BAUKIIAGE N-- PERSONALS tKeieased by Western Newspaper Cmon.i By CHARLES A. SINGLER WEEK 1 N'cus Analyst and Commentator . WNU Service, 1343 H Street, Washington, I). C. Spring has unloosed her fluttering gTeen scarf over the capital, the stark pattern of black branches against sullen skies was gone. Behind the classic portico of the Treasury building I could see, fiom fny high window, pointed tree tops like a jade comb in a gray dowager's DEPARTMENT South America, Led by Republic of Brazil, Now Closely United With U. S. After Rio Conference (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) i L CLASSIFIED . W- HMWCfc, I Its Own Borders. Friendly Neighbor to the South of US ' f-- in the air, and much of his hair has been wafted out into the since the days when he first became known as a speed demon. He won't be long in opening up his own fighting front, somewhere, somehow judging by the way he did the same in a boxing match in which we once saw him. His father, a carp nter and prospector of Alameda, Calif., took his family to Alaska and there young James bucked blizzards, mushed with sourdoughs and got generally for his latter adventurous career. Bark In the States, he enlisted in the army air service. Outside loops were to him just like skipping the rope and he quickly became the army's crack stunt-flie- r and racing pilot, instructing rookies at San Diego. He studied at the army's technical school at Dayton, Ohio, and later enrolled at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. In 1925, he won the Schneider cup for the army, hitting a speed of 232 miles per hour. These pxploits of his daredevil years qualified him for some adventures in demonstrating American planes to foreign governments. In 1928, showing off fighting planes in Chile, he fell from a window ledge and broke both ankles. The next day, when a competing German pilot went aloft to give his plane a sales workout, Doolittle had himself lifted into the cockpit of his plane, with his broken ankles tied to a rudder bar. Then by clever and hazardous maneuvering he forced his rival to the ground, and tore off around the tall a few snap-rolpeaks of the Andes. His stunt brought to the Curtiss company one of the largest contracts ever awarded to an American company. wind-strea- bair-ralsi- ls the racing driver, pulled up in a race to change a tire. There was a bit of bungling on the job. His French BARNEY OLDFIELD, Esprit The Thing mechanic That Slams Ouf spoke up: Piers in Jig Time 0 Id! what zis crew needs is esprit. "Go out and buy one!" bellowed We gotta win this race. Barney. It's like that in war. We cant buy the "esprit, although we are fanning up quite a lot of it. Somehow we've got to get the teamwork. In the meantime, there is observable in these parts a serial demteamonstration of fast double-plawork between management and labor, which is heartening. We cite the George Rogers Construction Co., demon finished a pier and shipway in 43 working days 25 days, or more than 30 per cent, faster than any previous record for a job of this type. This company has been slamming out similar piers since 1809. It is crucially important war work, as on these piers, fighting ships are repaired or remodeled. Theres no Involved Incentive plan for employees. The worke ers are shipbuilders who know what they are buildGeorge W. Rogers, ing for. grandson of the founder of the firm, and now Its head, says of "At mass meet his workers: ings of the various shifts on the job the men themselves have helped provide the driving force required to maintain the schedule. Mr, Rogers studied engineering at Cornell university, with no intention as of ever being a be calls his occupation. He went to Cornell and won his letters in basketball, football and track. 'When his father died, he took up the family busiress. In the last war, he served in the navy as a deck officer on a battleship, and did canvoy duty and saw With the submarines. action outbreak of this war he tried to get back in the navy, but they offered him three stripes and a desk and he decided he would be more useful in kicking out piers in a hurry which is an old family custom. He lives in Forest Hills, and has two daughters, one 19 years of age and the other 21. They are studying in one of the defense projects, learning to be motor mechanics, dismounting and assembling engines. y s, 700-fo- South AmcritVs attitude was much on this order for a long time. If Germany were to win in Europe, South America stood ready to move in a totalitarian direction. If Germany lost, she would be content with what might have to offer her. The United States was regarded as "the Colossus of the North and viewed with both suspicion and concern. The resented Uncle Sam; they distrusted him; they thought he was meddling. Shirt organizations, cut to the measure of Adolf Hitler's military tailors who were cutting up Europe on a pattern of their own, were flourishing everywhere throughout South America. Ih-rwas a picture that needed changing a pattern which could only spell trouble and plenty of It. Confronted with this picture, Uncle Sam evolved his good neighbor policy which already has gone a long way towards banishing distrust and bringing about that hemisphere solidarity so urgently needed to present a solid front against the Axis powers. No attempt will be made in this limited space to cover all the potentials in natural resources, or in men, munitions and ships, South America represents to the United Nations. And it is well that we bear in mind that we are bound to South America by much more than a thin neck of land through which the Panama canal has cut Its way. Spirit of Freedom Kin, We are bound to South America by cultural, traditional and economic ties. We are kin to it by the spirit of freedom. For the very same love of freedom which caused the Pilgrim Fathers to break awoy from Europes feudal ties caused Brazil to break away from Portugal Rio de Janeiro, with its magnificent backdrop of 365 mountain peaks a mountain peak for every day in the year was founded 55 years before the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock. Tl e conference In Rio de Janeiro was charged with significance, and the outcome of that conference, while it was not a total success, was so full of good import that every citizen of the United States can take heart from the results achieved. After the conference in Rio, In which Under - Secretary Sumner Welles and Foreign Minister Oswal-d- o Aranha of Brazil, former ambassador to Washington, were the principal figures, Brazil moved into top position among the ten South American republics a position which Argentina had enjoyed over a long period of years, and the Western began to turn hopeful eyes to the great republic of Brazil for new leadership In the solidifying of South America against the wiles and tricks of Axis propagandists. At least three countries which had been satellites of Argentina ParaUruguay-switc- hed Bolivia and guay, allegiances, and began looking hopefully to Brazil for guidance. As for Chile, she demonstrated at her last election how she felt about Latm-America- e Here are Just a few of the Brazilian "Good Neighbor guns, and their crews. In addition to many more guns such as these, not only In Brazil but other South American nations, Brazils good neighbor program calls for a largely increased Beet of planes and pilots to fly them. This South American nation, working with the United of bombStales sgainst the Axis, has received many "mass deliveries ers from the U. S. ft combi'ie nation of international brigands, for at that time Juan A. Rios, candidate for the presidency, was elected by a landslide vote. And while these two countries have not gone all the way, the steps they have taken indicate a definite trend away from the Axis, which is reassuring to say the least. They have pledged to cut business relations with the Axis, to bar war materials from going to the enemies of the democracies, and to combat totalitarian ii Duences within their borders. Argentina's and Chiles failure to at the Rio give full conference, however, has not been without its price. That price is the cutting off of special economic military and na- - wi-.c- h hemi-spher- e 4 f: .Ms i.' At Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Sumner Welles, tinder secretary of state and head of the U. S. delegation to the Rio conference of American republics, is pictured with a Brazilian naval man during a visit to the navy yard at Rio. A Brazilian warship is pictured in the background. the theory val aid under being that the countries that have either severed relations or declared war have exposed themselves to Axis attack and possible invasion. Lend-leascommitments will, therefore, preferentially be extended to those nations which have already made the breach. Chile, however, because of her long coastline and her small navy, will get modified treatment in regard to military and naval supplies. The smallest of the South Ameri3 can republics is Uruguay, with square mJes. Brazil, the largest, has 3.285,319 square miles with In It borders, an area larger than lend-leas- e The Vastness of South America The estimated population is 91,300,000. The Amazon river there is the longest In the world 3,900 miles. The Andes mountain system, extending 4,400 miles from Panama to Tierra del Fuego, Is the longest and highest mountain range In the world. It averages nearly 13,000 feet a dozen peaks exceeding 21,000 feet. Brazil, alone, la mere than 260,000 square miles larger than the United States. That South American nation territory covers 3,285,319 square miles. Paraguay with 61,847 square miles Is the smallest nation in South America, excluding, of couts, the three Guiana nations in the north. Natal, in northern Brazil, is the nearest American point to Africa. The wild, and hardy tribe of Patagonians live at the very end of Sonth America, along the Magellan strait. Some of Its most important products are gold, diamonds, caffee, nitrates, manganese, tin, copper, cattle, cotton, cacao and rubber. Wood Successfully Replacing Metal for Many Purposes Though historians skipped it, a wood age must have preceded .the Stone, Bronze, and Iron ages, but that oversight is now to be remedied A Wood age is going to follow them. We are now In the first phases of this new wood age. It is ushering in new businesses and reviving old arts was revealed in a survey of displayed consumer goods items at a targe merchandising center in Chicago, 111. the United States proper. Into these great spaces of mountain and valley Jungle and plain the whole of could Europe omitting Russia easily be enclosed. While Brazil with its 43,000,000 inhabitants and boundless natural resources represents a vast potential of power, it also represents a military liability because of that dane towards gerous Dakar, on the bulge of Africa. It will be recalled that the British and Free French forces battled to wrest Dakar from Vichy early in the war, but found the job too big and too costly. Dakar is 1,600 air miles from Natal, Brazil. World War I Ally. America has not forgotten that in World War I Brazil went to battle on the side of the Allies. With its big coastline and its jig reserve of vital war materials, such as rubber and manganese, and its leadermovement ship in the against the Axis, it is quite natural that Brazil should come in for the most aid from the United States. Brazil has an army of 100,009 men, the largest army in South America, and most of these men under arms are in the tone where her coastline bulges to within attacking range of the base of Dakar, Africa, The republic has about 300,000 reserves, and an untrained manpower of 1,000,000. Brazil not only controls the shortest invasion route across the ocean, but guards the southern shores of In the Caribbean gateway. northern Brazil air defense drills are held almost every day. The wild and uninhabited coastline offers many an ideal site for enemy submarine refueling operations, within but a few hours flying time from the Panama canal. In realization of this threat, air forces patrol the coastline. Brazil has two battleships, seven destroyers, two cruisers, and four submarines. Its air force consists of a sizeable armada of U. planes. Happily for all concerned, it is rapidly expanding its army, navy and air force. Happily, also, is the fact that Getulio Vargas, president of Brazil, is a great aviation enthusiast, who has a plane and a pilot of his own, and who knows what it's all about. Another item on the happy side of the ledger: Brazil has a sizeable merchant fleet, the second largest in the hemisphere. Warplanes and munitions are being made in Brazil's factories on a large scale; iron is be'ng mined from the hills and rubbe is being tapped from her rubber trees. America's desperate rubber situation may find at least a partial answer in BraziL Importance of Colombia, Among other vital raw materials which come from Brazil are bauxite, which is vital to the manufacture of war planes; quartz, graphite and mica, also castor oil, which d is used in the lubrication of engines. Colombia's position on the map makes her full with the U. S. a matter of vital importance. Colombia was among the first of the nations to declare war on the Axis. She has some 15,000 men under arms, and more than 250,000 trained reserves guarding areas close to the Panama canaL Colombia's principal export are coffee, oil and gold. Bolivia, shivering on her cold and barren mountain plat au, is more important in our war effort than most of us imagine. Since the fall of Malaya into the hostile hands of the Japs, the tin center of the world, at least for the U. S., has become Bolivia. Tm furnishes 70 per cent of her exports. Venezuela's vast oil fields are ol strategic importance in the war effort of the United Nations. The great bulk of this crude oil is refined at the huge plants on the Dutch islands of and Aruba. land-bulg- Vichy-controll- n old-lin- record-breaki- (Kiriltg ti S. CUU Reflected Heat Even on a sunny summer day, most of the heat in the air comes from .the land and water, little of it being absorbed by the air directly from the sun. J. Fuller Pep By JERRY LINK Japs. weather-beaten- bandy-ltgge- - - More on the artistic side are displayed scores of new woooenware products that come under a gift classification. Among these is a ta ble piece carved in the form of a lobster with a well in its back for salads or snucks. Then there is a variety of carved trays, and platters. Some of the latter have grooved outlines to fit the shape of turkeys, ducks, etc. Here are more items being made out of wood instead of metal: high-spee- Latin-Americ- all-o- o We had that individual interest in tiie First World war. We bad it largely because each individual had a definite part or place in it. W had Liberty bond sales, with a quota set up for each community, each county, ward, township and It was Joe Brown's Job slock. to see that Frank Mills bought one or more bonds, and it was Frank Mills' job to see that George Smith came across. When it was not bond sales, it was Red Cross, YMCA, Salvation Army, Knights of Columbus, or some other drive for war funds. In all these, quotas were set and it was up to the individual to meet those quotas in the field allotted to him or her. Such efforts included the school children. They brought their pennies and nickc-land dimes, and made sacrifices to do so. That war was the individuals war, with something definite for each of us to do, and over which we could, and did, enthuse. Through doing each individual job, we, individually, hated the Germans. The kaiser was the enemy, not only of our government, but of each one of us. To arouse the full force of Amerwar, ica, to make this an "all-ou- t' we must each have a definite job to do, and we will do it. Civilian defense is only a part of what we need. With that must be civilian offense doing something on the part of the individual that will hit the enemy. We need brass bands, flags flying and parades, of which we, as individuals, will be a part. When each of us has been assured a job to do, this will be an individual as well as a national war. When it Is that, there will be no doubt of Its being an "all-ou- t war. Fuller, says Aunt Netty, the other day. I oiks are liice wine. Some sour with ae, and some, like you, get better I" Mebbe." says I, pickin up that little compliment, that's because I feel so good most of the time. For, you know, folks, when you feel good your disposition's apt to be good, too. But to do that, you got to eat right, which includes gettln all your vitamins. And KELLOGGS PtP Is extra-ric- h in the two most olten short In ordiBi D. and nary meals vitamins too. Try It I Mighty fine-tasti- s O A deltcious cereal thmi tmpplu per 1 ounce terrtng 12 doily need of rttamm D; 4 S to US minimum daily need of ntamm Bu KILL ALL FLIES FI? theed envwhrre . arid kuis h in r I i t',w el I nJEZIEIEHJ proved thoustmds upon iho jiarnk of times t AIL-YEGETAE- LAXATIVE AND AMERICA ABOUT A YEAR AGO Daniel J. Schuyler, a Chicago attorney, said to America needs most It Is would arouse our sense of responsibility as nothing else could. At the time I wrote a piece about that statement which appeared in this column. In something of the same vein, 37 citizens of Dinwiddie county, Virginia, addressed a statement to the general public through the columns of the Southside Virginia News at Petersburg, Va. That statement calls for a prayer-lu- l appeal by the people for Divine gaidanee and spiritual support that will enable us. as a people, to carry on in these days of conflict with the forces of evil. That appeal represents the Christian virtues for which we are fighting. Its 37 signatures are of all types of citizens teachers, farmers, merchants, doctors, workmen, public officials, lawyers, bankers and others. It is truly representative, not alone of the people of Dinwiddie county, Virginia, but of the people of every county in every state. We are a Christian nation, and it is well that we make public acknowledgement of our dependence upon Divine guidance. YOUR NEWSPAPER A BULWARK OF UNITY THE COUNTRY NEWSPAPERS of America, those published in communities of a few hundred to a few thousand people, constitute one of America's institutions. important Ti eir editors of an earlier day pioneered from ocean to ocean. They aided materially in building communities and in developing those communities into market places and cultural centers. They were, and are, the spokesmen for rural America. Protection for the town and farm home is their province. They are listened to, and their views are respected in the legislative assemblies of the land. In these days of national peril, they, collectively, are a bulwark for national unity, maintaining the courage and patriotism of rural America. They are safe, aane and sensible, and atand four square for the America of yesterday, today and tomorrow. ... SINSE.. COMMON O great religious revival. .. afo.5 RELIGIOUS REVIVAL . . . me: "What .JGMrTiteed, etttHtne. Nmi, ( nu'iut fi'M rtifivem m Wii not ncoJ orlrijureiftjTJ.Uyr SI fail U'M Ml dt utem, Hfcrcud Somt-rsInc., Ai a. In Lie Kaiu THE YOUNG WOMAN STENOGRAPHER in Cleveland whose $25 a week salary was augmented to the extent of $40,000 by a bonus, must That feel exceptionally patriotic. bonus was paid out of profits the company that employs her made out of war contracts. Who gave them a contract that would permit of such profits? THE AMERICAN SOLDIER and sailor's idea of what they are fighting for Is the preservation of our form of government and our way of life and standard of living. In NR (Natures Remedy) Tablets, there are no chemicals, no minerals, no phenol derivatives. NR Tablets are different act different. Purely vetetabl a combination of 10 vegetable ingredient formulated over 50 years ago. Uncoated or candy coated, their action is dependable, thorough, yet gentle, as million of NR'a have proved. Get a 251 box or larger economy size. today ... EEEsnnaasE I Th Ammunition Needed lor Killing I SMTlMICEand COCKROACHES is S' STIAINr Iwm twz M yorw n. 35 and WNU f. oemOst M OO AJ AU DRUGGISTS 1942 W Idr litodHti Doit Neglect Them Ktttir iarviufl job. T I tk kidney beir task is U do to kao tb ftewmf biod stream tra of an oxemo of toue mpamita. Too net ( bnnf iir iUeif is oMtujfijr prwitinnf wmato matter ths kttineva must ramsv from tbe blood if fnod is to endur. V Sam tbs kidneys lad to functiea ao Nature intend'd, there is mention of maste that may eeuee bdr-w- d One may suffer eayr-harkaehe, peril Meet beadarhe,atta''e.so(d.zznfe, ffettiof up rweihnf, puffinm uadar the oyem (eel tired, nerroua, ail v m eut. Freeoent, eeaaty or beminf paeesreo are eeseetzmee further evidence ol kd Bey er btadoer d starbance. The rerouted end proper treatment Is d uretic med.cine to htp the kidnaye of etches et body waste. Lse Doan t fun,pcoeous have bad more Tbr tbsa forty yeare of pubL approx al. Are enooreed t he eminry over. Insist oo at ail kenf store. JlIk1! wm A- - I t i I I,, I |