f I *'TT'S a fact, men. With this JL new Target Tobacco I roll from 30 to 40 cigarettes for a dime. And they're some ciga ■*ra rettes! They taste and look like _ ready-mades. It’s real cigarette tobacco and it’s so darned easy «ga to roll. I never thought I’d have the patience to roll my own, Bbut now you couldn’t change me. I’m havin’ the best smokin’ I ever had and I’m savin’ 4 bits a week. Whether you’re inter ested in savin’ or not, I advise you to step right into a store and slap down a dime for this 9 real cigarette tobacco.” D MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE For 20 ready-made smokes you pay 61 Federal tax (plus a staf tax in some states). With Target you pay only If. And your dealer offers you a money-back guar antee if you don’t say Target is better than any other cigaretta tobacco you have ever rolled. L- -J WRAPPED IN MOISTUREPROOF CELLOPHANE III < z ©"Jl* Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp. Louisville, Keutucky A PARTICULAR BUSINESS FOR YOU In your own home. No personal selling. Easy, profitable. Details free. Write Businc-s Plana Co.. Box 267. Denver. Colorado. Salesmen, Women, sell linpl’d Radium Tad for home Therapy treatment. Sure-fire sale. Big money making propo3!i. Write for details. Radium Products, Inc- 11 W. 42 8t..N.Y.C. Marriage Easy in Poland Young lovers In parts of Poland have adopted a motto of “marriage without priest, incense or vodka.” The new ceremony consists merely of the swearing of an “oath” before a local Communist worker, who then declares the marriage valid. An Ukrainian newspaper of communistic tendencies publishes the names of those thus united. States’ Bear Populations California had the biggest number of bears in national forests in 1930. having 8,984 black bears and a num ber of grizzly bears reported. This is as near to a definite census of bears as can be reached in this coun try. Alaska had 5,750 black bears and 2,800 grizzly and Alaskan brown bears. I>r. Pierce's Pleasant Toilets are the orig inal little liver nills put up 60 years ago. They regulate liver and bowels.—Adv. Useful Hobby “Say, dad,” cried the boy borne from college, “I took up horseback riding, too.” "Fine,” replied the father. “Now you can get a job its mounted p° Hcentan If you don't like the office.' Depends On Storekeeper—What'll you have, sonny? Little Chap—If eggs are 45 cent a dozen I want a nickel’s worth randy an' some eggs. Quick Growth A little girl who had been left ti watch the soup was presently hearu to sing out: “Olt, mother, come quick, tlie soup is getting bigger Ilian the pot.” A Sure Sign Mother—But what makes y* think ft's Sunday, Bobby? Hobby—Dad's wasltin* the car. Imaginary troubles fill the wor and no way to exercise them. Sunshine"' —All Winter Lnny Ar the Foremost Desert Rosen af the West—marvelous climate—warm sunn, Jays—clear starlit nights — dry invigorating •sr —splendid roads — gorgeous mountoin 'senes—finest hotels—the ideal winter home Wrlta Cl aa A Chaffoy PALM SPRINGS t'ttlifornia r Out Our Way By Williams THERE —WATCH THIS! \ / A wJ'iU. BALANCED THATS what VOU V MiND IS ONE THAT call. Balance _ th’ \ G»ts mad enough BOLL O’ TH* WOODS HAS 1 Tb FlGHT, ©OT HAS A strong desire to | enough fear of Hetch That crane man 1 a Blacv eve not \ ASLEEP — Bur HE ALSO I TO Ft&HT - 1 TH’.nK / HAS A STRONG DESiRE I HES WELL BALANCED / MOT TO GO UP TvH‘ " V Dl'Z-'ZV HEIGHTS OF "THAT RlCU’ETV LADDER. NOW ' SEE WHICH WINS, ANGER OR FEARy/ _MENTAL AMD PHYSICAL HALANCE RECORDS SHOW 1931 UNUSUAL Howard, S. D., Man Keeps Tab on Weather for 41 Years Howard, S. D. — (Special) — King Vosburg has kept a record of the precipitation in Miner county since 1891. His records show that during this period of 41 years only three other years have been drier than 1931. The driest years recorded were 1925 with 13.64 inches, 1907 with 13.77 inches, 1894 with 14.18 inches, and 1931 with 15.78 inches of precipitation. During the last . five months of 1931, 9.11 inches of moisture fell which shows that very | little fell during the growing sea son. The wettiest years in this period were 1908 with 31.79 inches; 1903 with 31.06 inches, and 1914 with 19.06 inches of moisture. The av erage precipitation over this pe riod was 21.564 inches. The records also show that 1.53 Inches fell in December, 1931, which was the wettest December since 1902 when two inches fell. With this generous amount of moisture in the ground and a deep covering of snow at the present time, the farmers in this territory are op timistic as to the prospects of a good crop in 1932. GREAT FORESTS AND LUMBERJACKS DISAPPEAR Duluth, Minn.—(AP)—The head of the Lakes and cities on the iron range remain the home for most of the lumberjacks in the northwest, but most of their work is not in the woods, it is revealed in a report here by Maj. P. C. Bullard, United States district engineer. Northern Minnesota and upper Wisconsin, in years past was ■swarmed with thousands of lumber jacks who each fall went into the woods not to return until spring with their “pockets filled with gold” after a winter of work at the sev eral saw mills. The saw mills hummed with ac tivity and the wide area of for ests was cleared after 20 years of activity in the lumber industry. The lumber industry was one of north ern Minnesota's largest, ranking next to iron ore. In the last decade or so, however, the lumberjack has been finding jobs in the woods more difficult to find and they turned to other occu pations, although the offerings were reported light. Millions of board feet of lumber have been shipped from the Head of the Lakes in previous years, with many seasons the shipments total ing more than 400,000,000. In recent years, however, only a small amount of lumber is sent from the Twin Ports and in 1931 the lowest amount since the industry was started in 1904 was sent from here. The total shipment for 1931 is listed at 20,000 board feet. Th 1906 when the industry was ranked at its peak, the shipments totaled 446,950, 000 board feet. Most of the mills have closed. The Rainy Lake Lumber company, with headquarters at Virginia, has been closed for the last few years. This company was considered the largest in the world. Cusson, the picturesque TOWN OF FREEMAN HAS NO FINANCIAL WORRIES Freeman, S. D. — (Special) — The city has entered the year 1932 with a cash balance of $9,192.14 in the treasury. The town has no bonded indebtedness, no floating warrants and no registered war rants. MANY ADULT INDIAN'S ATTEND NIGHT SCHOOL Flandreau, S. D.—Serving as a i community center for adult Sioux Indians of Flandreau and vicinity, the Flandreau Indian school is ; widening the usefulness ol tire 1 I Side Glances By George Clark \ I * REG. U S PAT. orr. © 1932 BY NEA SERVICE. INC. I "And (here’s no use trying to ch cat, judge. I'll be over here watch* ing ya.” _____ i ^ Agents to Spot Stills from Air In New War on Liquor Traffic ____ _ ▲ _. “capital'’ lumber village in former years, now has but a few residents. What lumber camps remain, are for manufacture of the products of the lumber, boxes, barrels, clothes pins, matches, toothpicks and pulp wood products. Most of the lumber in northern Minnesota is shipped by rail to either Cloquet or Interna tional Falls where pulp and insulate factories are located. In the far west and south saw-log camps continue to flourish, but not so in northern Minnesota. BUSINESS MEN* BUY FARMS NEAR ALTON Alton, la. — (Special) — With the price of farm land in this sec tion remaining at low prices, many business men of the towns are real izing this and investing in farms. Two transactions ^recently com pleted were the sale of the W. P. Gerst dairy, 80 acres to W. P. Wilt gen, carpenter, who has moved onto the farm and will farm it the com ing year in connection with his car- j penter work. The other transaction was a deal whereby F. D. Allen, barber, became the owner of the John Beckman farm east of Paullina. He will not occupy the farm but will keep it as an* investment and continue his barber business here. -A4 One inch of rain on an acre of land would fill more than 600 bar- j rcls of 45 gallons capacity each. school plant, and adult Indian classes recently have been organ ized. Adult classes are held in the eve ning and members of the school faculty are giving their time in teaching modern methods to In- j dians, who are advancing rapidly ! in their studies. So interested are these Indian men and women that some of them drive as much as 20 miles to at- j tend the classes. Cooking, home ; management, woodworking and au- I tomobile mechanics are being taught at the night school, and classes iu other departments are j Washington— —Flying dry agents are to be the government'! recruits in the war on liquor traffiq A nearly new three-place air* plane, captured in Texas from rum runners and a pair of pilot-prohibi tion officers will form the nucleus of an aviation department for tha bureau of prohibition. Liquor stills operating in the open are to be spotted from the plane and locations reported to ground crews wrho will do the raid ing, according to plans formed by Prohibition Director Amos W. W. Woodcock. “The use of an airplane, as I sea it,” Woodcock said, “will be Just an ordinary use of an obviously practicable method. "We expect the areas which now require several months of working in searches by ground parties may be covered in a few days. Besldea stills in the open are usually screened from lateral view whereaa they are not hidden to aviators.” The aviation section Is expected to be complete within two months. Areas particularly to be patrolled, Woodcock said, will be islands in the Mississippi river, portions of North Carolina and Florida, and wooded regions of southern Mary land. Spotting stills from the air haj been employed by the bureau pre viously vdth airplanes rented by the hour. to be arranged. The group of Indians known as j the Flandreau Sioux tribe comprise about 40 families living within • radius of about five miles from Flandreau. though some live at • much greater distance. These In dian families, with the exception of a few who are renters, own thei* own homes. Q. Is H. L, Mencken married? A W. S. A. Mr. Mencken is a bachelor. He lives in the family homestead i in Baltimore and his house is pra*- I sided over by his sister. i Mother of 7—Still Young THE woman who gives her organs the right stimulant need not worry about growing old. Her system doesn’t stagnate; her face doesn’t age. She has the health and “pep” that come from a lively liver and strong, active bowels. When you’re sluggish and the Sstem needs help, don’t take a lot “patent medicines.” There’s a famous doctor’s prescription for just such cases, and every druggist keeps this standard preparation. It is made from fresh laxative herbs, active senna, and pure pepsin. Just ask for Dr. Caldwell’s syrup pepsin. Take a little every day or so, until every organ in your body feels the big improvement. The next time you have a bilious headache, or feel all bound-up, take this delicious syrup instead of the usual cathartic. You’ll be rid of all that poisonous waste, and you haven’t weakened the bowels.You’ll have a better appetite, and feel better in cveiy way. The constant use of cathartics is often the cause of a sallow complexion and lines in the face. And so unnecessary! Would you like to break yourself of the cathartic habit? At the same time budding health and vigor that protects you from frequent sick spells, headaches, and colds? Get a big bottle of Dr. Caldwell’s syrup pepsin today. Use often enough to avoid those attacks of constipation. When you feel weak and run-down or a coated tongue or bad breath warns you the bowels need to be stimulated. Give it to children instead of strong laxatives that sap their strength. It isn’t expensive. Voices From the Past Phonographic preservation has not been altogether successful. Not all fecords have stood the test of time. At a recent hearing, a message re corded by Cardinal Manning could be heard clearly, a speech by H. M. 8tanley and n recitation by Lord Ten nyson of his “Charge of the Light Brigade” were partially reproduced. The lady who recorded Cardinal Man nlng’s message Is still alive, and tells how, after she had explained the working of (he Instrument, the great ecclesiastic said to her: "Ah, young lady, if you had lived a century ago you would have been burned for a witch!” Cleopatra is said to have had red hair. That was as near to being a blond as was possible in Kgypt. "INDISPENSABLE” for children “Cod liver oil is not a 'luxury,' but an indispensable food for young children. . , . Cod liver oil should be included in ihc diet of all children under l years of age, and it may well be given to all young children. . . .'' This quotation is'from the Governments pamphlet, Emtrytuy 1 ucU Relief andChU Hesltb. In Scott's Emulsion of Cod Livri Oil, you have a palatabb form of high-vitamin-test cod livii oil, easy for childnn to take. Scott & Bowne, Bloomfield, N. J. Sales Represi ntative, Harold F. Ritchie & Co., Inc , New Yurie. listen TO the Seett at Bourne tadic "Adventurtau a < '■’»»' von Lucknrr,” on Sunday ntfibl ui S:90p. m. ovot the Columbia Coaai-tv Comt fretwork Swede* Enjoy Long Life A Swedish record for longevity ■eems to be held by the Inhabitants pf the little parish of Kisa, In cen tral Sweden. The latest figures ■bowed that out of a population of 4,000, 92 persoons were over eighty, ■nd of these, ten were over ninety. Some years ago Kisa bad Sweden's oldest inhabitant, the farmer Sven Erik'-son, who died at one hundred and five and a half years A firm name sometimes Indicate* business Infirmity. A waitress should always wear * fetching costume. That Nagging Backache May Warn of a Disordered Kidney or Bladder Condition HEED promptly a nagging backache, with bladder ir regularities and a tired, nervous, depressed feeling. They may warn of some disordered kidney or bladder condition. Users everywhere rely on Doan s Pill*. The sale of millions of boxes annually attests to Doan'* popu larity. Your druggist has Doan'*. 1 Doan’s Pills X Island Bird Sanctuary St. Kilda, a lonely Island some ■even miles in circumference off the outer Hebrides, has been sold by the former owner, Sir Reginald MacLeod, to an ornithologist who wishes his identity to remain hidden. This buyer plans to keep the island in Its natural state so it may remain an ocean sanctuary for the sea birds which migrate there In great num bers. Under the- term* OH, the pro posed plan It will be possible for tourists to land and vlalt the hugo, island aviary, bill no buildings wlM be placed on the laihL Some peculiarities are virtues, hot most generally they are Irritating eccentricities. She Should Worry “I hear she has a cloudy past.” “Oh, well; she has a sunny pres ence.” Query “So this Is jotiv new building!' “Tes; setback." “How uiuck did It set y«>u back?” VANITY CASE Handsome case eou talnlns in); i or iiowi'ii w« i pun • •w' V"" lOceutaaud allttleofyourtime Hu*tcIK" MilW Oitout Uiti advertisement. (2) Write x.fcir<». runt ii.impleto iwUJtewnHoi parents of children or jouts adalla whv *>• vo«J}**> ■*«. *o fiintile ParalyiU. Spinal Cui urenTw Utp'WMKlMs. (3) , State which of above aminic.na tui fieilp#* #•<* w Api m, *• .tA McLain Orthopedic Sanitarian #15 Anhert/Ave., Si Ie«i». M*‘ J