The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 31, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 29 November 1928 — Page 3

Mother Appreciates What Milks Emulsion Did for Her Boy *i am ■writing you in regard to our ton, who is fifteen years old. I want to tell you how we have appreciated ■what Milks Emulsion has done for him. He hadn’t been strong Since he xvas nine yea®# old, when he had cough and scarlet fever at the same time, ending up with Bright’s Disease. “By doctoring with specialists he finally got rid of Bright’s Disease, but he was bothered terribly with constipation. The only thing that would give relief was injections of warm water, and finally we used olive oil injections. “Last August a lady told us to try Milks Emulsion. This we did, and after taking three bottles of Milks Emulsion he hasn’t to this day had ; to have another injection. He goes j to school every day. eats his Emulsion right along, and is gaining and i doing fine. “I felt that I must write and tell you what a grand medicine Milks Emul- • sion is and what it did for our boy, hoping some other boy or girl will know what a great medicine it is. There isn’t too much praise I can say for it. Just refer anybody to us.” MR. AND MRS. JTM WILLIAMS, Kellerton. lowa, R, R. No. 8. Sold by all druggists under a guar- 1 antee to give satisfaction or money refunded. The Milks Emulsion Co., Terre Haute, Ind—Adv. Human “Bombs.” Target practice with men acting as “bombs” is popular among English aviators. Large targets with bulls, inners and outers, are drawn on the ground, and the object is to drop into the center. When each pilot has attained the position he considers nearest correct, he signals to a companion, equipped with parachute, who immediately leaps clear of the machine and , tries to score a bullseye. 0000000000000000000000000000 Any Woman Cm lookSiyiish MAE MARTIN 0000000 A 0000000 Most stylish-looking women are jus “good managers.” They know-simple to make last season’s tilings con form to this season’s styles. Thousands of them have learnec how easily they can transform a dress or blouse, or coat by the quick magic of home tinting or dyeing. Anyone can do this successfully with true, fadeless Diamond Dyes. The “know-how” is in the dyes. They don’t streak or spot like inferior dyes. New. fashionable tints appear like magic right over the out-of-style or faded colors. Only Diamond Dyes produce perfect results. Insist on them and save disappointy ment. ( My new 64-page illustrated boolK “Color Craft,” gives hundreds of ’ ? money-saving hints for renewing clothes and draperies. It's Free. Write for it now, to Mae Martin, Dept. E-143, Diamond Dyes, Burlington, Vermont. This Turtle Contented. The turtle whiHibpas lived in the zoological park in Washington for many years seems perfectly contented „in his grass-filleQ enclosure says Nature Magazine, It dines off carrots as '• contentedly as though he had never been accustomed to a diev\of thyrns in an arid wilderness whereMre had to travel miles for a drink. — Baby’s little dresses will just simply 'dazzle if Red Cross Ball Blue is used in the'laundry. Try it and see for your, self. At all good grocers.—Adv. Big- Business. “I hear Peg is going to marry a silk merchant. Pretty swell!” “Not so swell! He goes from house to house selling it on spools.” Many a man with a handle to his b name is cranky. “AS NECESSARY j AS BREAD” Mrs. Skahan’s Opinion of Pinkham’s Compound Saugus Centre, Md§<—-“I have taken 10 bottles of Lydia E. Pink-

Vegetable Compound and j would no more i be without a bob- I tie in the house than I would lie without bread. It has made a new i woman of me. I used to be so I cross with my j husband when I was suffering I that I don’t know

aow he stood me. Now I am cheerful and strong and feel younger than I did ten years ago when my troubles began.”—Mrs. John Skahan, 20 Emory St., Saugus Centre, Mass. tz ' i

I Ri ihlu ■ Fi io' Ri 'l ■ I DIXIE I FEVER AND PAIN I tablets! I l)t[H inhibit /(>) ■

rVTDTTKI COMMON WINTER POULTRY ERRORS I ’ In looking over the average poultry house in winter, the most common defects tire as follows: Bare, damp floor, upon which the fowls stand and sometimes get rheumatism; broken wmuows, letting cold air blow upon thekroosts or upon the fowls in daytime. Both the above will check laying, and are common causes of roup. Damp droppings left for weeks to heap under the roosts; lack of supply of water, obliging the hens to eat snow, thus stopping the eggs; lack of plenty of good, sharp grit, which alone is a sufficient cause of failure; lack of fresh meat and cut bone fed twice a week; overfeeding, overcrowding, and no inducement to scratch for a living. These are the most common and important mistakes, and those who wonder why their hens do not lay, will do well to go over the list. See that your house is tight, so that on cold windy nights the fowls will not suffer any more than can be helped. A good plan is to keep a barrel in the building, and the coldest nights put in the birds that are liable to have their combs freeze, and cover the barrel. Above all, do not crowd the fowls. During the long winter months, when they cannot exercise out of doors, they will need at least seven or eight feet square per fowl. Scatter some hay around and throw the grain into it. This will make them exercise and will be what they need, and the eggs will hatch better in the spring. Avoid feeding stimulants to fowls you are going to breed from, and do not give them any more food than they will eat up clean. The rest is very apt to be left and become filthy. Another thing is. pure, fresh water; do not fail in this. You may think snow will answer, but is is not good for poultry and will make them poor. Warm the water on cold days. Fowls are always thirsty, and a great deal of roup is brought on by allowing them to drink impure water.' Breeders Retain About Half of Old Chickens According to a study of the Missouri - demonstration farm flocks, the farmers retained 55 per cent of their liens from one year to the next. Breeders of light breeds retained 58.4 per cent as compared to 52 per cent for the breeders of heavy breeds. It is thus seen that nearly one-half of the flock is replaced by pullets. This is good management practice, for early developed pullets will lay more ecgs, especially during the winter periods, than will the old hens. In the case of the light breeds one would probably cull one-half each year. Thus if one starts with a flock of 100 pullets, he will retain 50 as one-year-olds. 25 as two-year-olds, 12 as three-year-olds, and possibly G as four-year-olds. This means that with breeds such as Leghorns. one can well retain them regardless of age, so long as they show 'Signs of having been productive in the past. However; with the heavier breeds practically all should be disposed of at the end of the second lading season, and a higher percentage will be removed at the end of the first. Poultry Facts The best remedy for lice on scrub' chickens is to get rid of the chickens. * ♦ ♦ If a farmer keeps chickens at all, he can afford to house them comfortably. ♦ * * Don’t make your hens pick a hole in the ice to get a little drinking water. » ♦ « The old poultry house may be remodeled and made more comfortable at very little expense. ♦ * * It is best to repair all leaks in the roof and sidewalls before winter, as dampness and drafts lead to colds and roup. No similar amount of money can buy as a few dollars will buy in pure-blooded Broiler chickens that are regarded in many quarters as a delicacy, are sent to market in too many cases in an unfinished condition. • • • • A warmer, better ventilated poultry house can be had if a straw loft is used. Poles or boards may be laid across the plates and covered with straw, hay or corn stalks. * • • Geese sholud not be used for breeding purposes until they are two years old. A gander may be used the first season. ♦ * ♦ Winter egg production is largely obtained from pullets that are well grown, properly fed, and carry a surplus of flesh. • • • Hens will be healthier if they are not subjected to too much I.eat. There is rarely any need of a stove in a henhouse if tile building is properly constructed. • • • It is a good plan to separate’the early maturers from the others and put them in a pen by themselves if the room is available. This will not hold them back and will give the other pullets a better chance to develop. • • • A straw loft may be a part of any poultry house that is high enough to provide plenty of head room for the operator. It makes the house warmer in winter and cooler in summer. It also absorbs a large amount of moisture that is given off by the birds.

Glozel Another Fake • -— I ■ ®

French “Discovery” Takes Place Among Other At* tempts to Fool Public. New York.—Last winter French public opinion was shaken to its i foundations, ’n away difficult for I Americans to understand, by the an j nouncement that discoveries at the little village of Glozel, near Vichy, tn | the valley of the Loire, had proved the existence of man in a high state lof civilization in fabulously pre- ; historic times. Now the Glozel ex- ! eitement is probably over. Those who ' believe that the mellowness of French ■ culture rests on a foundation thou I sands Instead ot hundreds of years ! old will have to took elsewhere for i theit evidence. Glozei probably will i take Its place among the scientific I fakes which from time to time engage 1 the popular attention, says the New York Times. Not long ago France was divided into Glozelites and antl-Glozelites. Ugly rumors of deception began to be heard. Objects said to have been picked up in the Glozel pits were found to be crude forgeries. The Glozelites replied that these objects had been planted by members of the opposition in an effort to discredit the discoveries. Finally the French . government took a Land and M. Bayle ' of the judiciary police was sent to ; make a thorough, examination. M. Bayle was a good detective, though not an archeologist His report, ren dered a few days ago, has apparently punctured the Glozel bubble. M. Bayle selected ten objects at random from the Glozel museum. The evidence of modern manufacture was overwhelming. A bit of grass I embedded in a supposedly ancient I piec« of earthenware was found un ; der the microscope to have all its cells i intact—something that could hardly have happened had it been thousands of years underground. Bits of thread lin other pieces of pottery had been I colored with aniline dyes, which were j not in use prior to the Twentieth I century. Bone instruments still had I gelatinous matter in the marrow In scriptions probably had been made ■ with modern steel instruments. ' Fakes like Glozel have been com mon and have usually been momentarily successful. Readers ot Mark Twain will remember the “prehistoric man” whom he reported having been dug up near Virginia City, Nev. An Unintended Hbax. This story, first published in the Virginia City Enterprise, on which Mark Twain was then a reporter, contained a detailed description of the position in which the supposed body had been found which, had it been carefully read, would have revealed the hoax. Nevertheless, it went far and caused great excitement. Almost as ludicrous, though in this ease seriously intended as a fraud, was the so-called Cardiff Giant, dug up at Cardiff. Onondago county. New York, about the middle of the last century. This strange object was found by a man who was digging a ‘well for a certain Mr. Newell, it was a huge figure, which might have been either a statue or a petrified human body, lying on its side and contorted as though in great pain. The thrifty Mr. Newell placed the remains, if such they were, on exhibition, and charged an admission fee to the thousands who came to see them. He even succeeded in interesting P. T. s Barnum. who was. in fact, accused Os having initiated the whole enterprise. His advertisements, more clever than truthful, made it appear that the leading scientific men of the day had testified to the genuineness of | the find. As a matter of fact the Cardiff Lt . § g Shoe Man Inherits Ancient Hammer s : o / Fenton, Ohio—O. S. Wilson, a O p South side shoe dealer of this § tillage, owns a hammer with a a g tiistory. Documentary evidence 9 I g in Wilson’s possession states S ' g that the hammer was first g S brought to this country from A g Scotland tn 1700 by Jessy Jus- g 5 tice. who used it in the con- p g struction of some of Phila- x a delphia’s early frame buildings, p g At Justice's death the hammer g p was bequeathed to his son and p g descending from one generation g p to the next, it eventually came g g into its present owner’s posses- g P sion about one month ago. The g g handle, undoubtedly made from g g a hickory sapling, was placed tn g S the hammer 83 years ago. p PPPPP<HSOOPOPB>OOOOOOPPBXKKW

SLEEP BROKEN 35 TIMES f DURING AN AVERAGE NIGHT

Observations by Investigators Show Men More Restless Than Women. New York. —You may think that you 4 sleep like a log, but you don’t. The fairly typical sleeper awakens, at least to part of his environment about 35 times tn the course of an ordinary night, and in -general men are more restless than women. These facts have been determined by H. M. Johnson, director of an tn vestigation at Mellon Institute ot in dusjrial Research, University of Pitt burgh. More than 90 different people have been under observation for several months during the investigation, and experts have recorded more than a quarter of a.million periods of rest to determine how much sleep people actually need and to get data about how t hey sleep Subjects ranging In age from six- j

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

Giant was a pure fake. The plan had been originated by Newell’s broth er-in-lsw, George Hull of Binghamton. Hull bought a block of gypsum at Fort Dodge. lowa, had It carved by a German stonecutter tn Chicago, and then planted it on the Newell farm. The strained position which aroused so much sympathy was due to the fact that the stone bad broken In transit, so that the original design had to be contracted within a smaller space. The stonecutter had done a good Job with a steel hammer, putting in pores and other body marks very industriously. Perpetual Motion. Many famous hoaxes have had to do with machines supposed to defy the law of the conservation ot energy by producing perpetual motion. One of the first of these was perpetrated by a man named Redheffer In Phila delphia about 1812. Redheffer an nounced that he had solved the proh lem of making a machine that would run forever. He was taken so seriously that the Pennsylvania legislature nominated a commission of distinguished engineers to inspect his in vention. The story Is told by Prof. Daniel W. Hering in his “Foibles and Fallacies of Science.” When the commission arrived on the scene at the ap pointed hour they found Redheffer absent and the doors locked, but were able to Inspect the apparatus through a barred window. They suspected fraud but were not able to gather final proof. Later the machine was taken to New York, where Robert Fulton, listening to the click of the cogs, made the discovery that it was being driven, like a steam engine, by reelprocatory motion. Fulton investigated and found that the motion came from a catgut cord, operated something like the driving mechanism of a modern dentist’s drill. The cord led through a wooden support to an upper room where an old man with a long white beard sat patiently turning a crank. The machine was destroyed by a mob. which for once resented being fooled. Keeiy’s Famous Motor. The most practical perpetual motion machine in American history was that of John W. Keely. which deceived not only the public but some of Keeiy’s closest friends for about twenty years. Keely was a Philadelphia • carpenter, uneducated but shrewd and with a convincing tongue. He invented what he called a “vibratory generator.” though It had several other names tn the course of its long history. In 1872 he organized the Keely Motor company in New York city and took tn enough capital to keep him going for a long time. His machine was first. demonstrated tn 1874. The inventor was full of the most high-sounding theories, some ot which, as Professor Hering points out. actually anticipated the modern notions of the powers imprisoned Id the atom.

Neesee Becomes Leaping Deer’s Bride 11 k.-bnF WmBKWtl-i OP I' Mr 'J i* MS / v Tl’l - c Chief Sachem Silver Star of the Wampanoag -ndian nation, oy old Indian ceremonies, made his daughter, Blushing Neeset Mabah, the of Leaping Deer, a brave of the Gay Head Indians. The ceremony was completed by placing a blanket round the shoulders of the pair bj? the chief. It was part of powwow of Marthas Vineyard Indians at Pondville. Mass.

♦>— ■ ■ ■ — '■ ——————— teen days to sixty-three years, ot both sexes, and of widely different states of health contributed to the experiments. One ot the reasons for the Investigation was to find out how little sleep is necessary. Persons absorbed in interesting work or play begrudge the interrup tions of sleep. They are rhe ones who want to know if there is any harmless way of getting along with less than seven or., eight hours tn bed, Johnson explains. “When a person falls asleep he loses most of his personal • dignity. He begins to behave much tike a vegetable, and he look* the part. He spends a third of his life asleep, and its effects persist through a good part of another third. “Even during the hours of work we are awake to only a small group of objects at anv one instant and are i asleep to all of the rest. An instant I later we are awake to a second group

He pretended to believe that in some mysterious way he could recombine the constituents of the atom and s< release vast stores of power. For twenty years Keeiy’s motoi seemed always on the point of be coming a complete success. Some little thing was always lacking and more money was always needed. Many ol his supporters finally lost faith In him. yet interest in the motor continued, and be seems never to have been completely out of funds. His laboratory was never thoroughly examined until after his death. Then it was found that the whole apparatus was a fraud. His “atomic energy” came trom an engine in the cellar. Transmutation of Metals. The transmutation ot metals has been the source of hoaxes and delusions almost as old us history. This was long supposed to be the principal occupation of the chemists, or alchemists, of the Middle ages, some of whom solmenly claimed to have achieved it. The delusion died hard —so hard that it lasted to a time when It is not beyond the bounds of possibility that it can be transformed into accomplished fact. The feat is a simple matter of knocking electrons out of atoms — simple, that is to say, though not so easy as yet to do. A favorite form ot scientific hoax — if the adjective can be used at all in this connection—has to do with attempts to predict the future. So we find that there are, and always have been, astrologers.. Even now intelligent persons may be found who believe that the movements of the stars have very much to do with the destinies of human individuals. If one attempts to list hoaxes and delusions one soon finds oneself Involved in a history of human chicanery and credulity. In this field belong many marvelous “cures” for the evils which afflict the human race, all the way from “touching for the King’s evil” to uttering Doctor Coue’s famous phrase about.. the daily improvement of one’s health. Blue glass. X-rays, hypnotism, bloodless surgery and countless other methods and devices have been put to both legitimate and illegitimate uses and it Is often hard to tell where science leaves off and charlatanism begins. All that is sure is that anyone who attempts to fool the public in an in teresting and sufficiently ingenious way. whether he digs up a prehistoric bean pot. Invents a perpetual motion machine of produces an infallible cure for hay fever, can count on a following. The Pig, Not the Cat, Came Back This Time Brentwood, N. H. —The cat comes j back, but so does the pig. Not long { ago Ray Pike sold a young pig to a , man who lives two miles away. The I pig was put in a bag and carried to his new home, which was a perfectly good one, but the little pig was not contented. He got out of his pen, traveled about a bit and two in days was back in his old pen. He showed i all sorts of affection when he saw his ■ mother, and she was just about as glad to see him, which is not always the case when pigs are separated for even a short time.

of objects, and asleep to some of the members of the group to which we were attending an Instant before. Thus the reference pattern of our sleep is continually changing, but at no time are we asleep to all the environmental world at once. “Sleep and waking are relative. Whenever we use the words we imply a certain kind of activity. Ordinarily they refer to motility. An organism is awake to those changes to which it responds by specific movement; to all other changes we call it sleep. Ln sleep it is motility which is suppressed; certain other vital activities are maintained, and some are intensified. “Os 22 college boys studied at Mellon Institute, the least motile stirs about once in 25 minutes; the most active once tn 7% minutes, the most typical about once In 13% minutes.” Portia* Not Wanted. Baltimore. Md. —Portias are not welcome tn the Baltimore Bar association. It has declined to admit four women proposed by the four ePy Judges

i «M^lKill Rats/) - Wonderfully Elective yet Safe to Use! is relatively harm- Many letters testify to the great merit of less to human beings, live- K-R-O. “One of my customer* put out • Stock, aogs, cats, poultry, yet IS guaranteed package of K-R-O and the next morning he to kill rats and mice every time. ticked upß2fullgrown rata. His dog got a good _ ___ _ _ portion of the K-R-O bait but it did not hurt AtoM Dangerous Poisons him.—The Gut Pharmacy. Sparta. Tetra.* * K-R-O does not contain arsenic, phosphorous. barium carbonate or any other deadly SOLD ON MONKT-BACK GUARAN* poison. Its active ingredient is squill as rec- TILE. 75caty ur druggist or direct from us ommended by the U. S. Dept, of Agricul- at J 1.00 delivered. Large size (four times as tureintheirlatestbuUetinon"RatControl.” much) $2.00. K-R-OCo.,Springfield. Ohio, K-R a O KILLS-RATS-ONLY

Small Girl Had Heard Remarks About Daddy Dr. Herbert S. Jennings, professor of zoology at Johns Hopkins, said at a Baltimore luncheon: “All biological science is opposed to temporary marriage, governmental maintenance of children, free love and other crazes that are advocated by certain stupid writers. “They who go in for free love get punished on all sides. A man had a daughter who was the apple of his eye. One night as his wife and he were entertaining half a dozen friends the child came to him and said: “ ‘Papa, how long do people live?’ “He patted her cheek and answered: “ ‘Our allotted span, my child, is seventy years.’ Everybody was silent while the little girl’s lips moved in mental calculation. At length she said: “‘Then you’ll live to be one hundred and forty, won’t you, papa?’ “ ‘Why, no. of course not.’ And the man and all his guests lauched heartily. ‘What on earth do you mean, child?’ “ ‘lsn't it true, then.’ said the little girl, ‘what everybody says about your living a double life?’ ” —Detroit Free Press. Archeological Find. A Bronze age cemetery, containing many decorated vessels of stone, bronze and clay, and including a tomb which dates from 1600 B. C. has been unearthed at the ancient site of Beth : Shemesh. near the modern village of t Ain Shems. in Palestine, by the arche- ! ological expedition of Haverford eol- ' lege. New York, headed by Dr. Elihu i Grant. Doctor Grant indicates that the objects carry the history of the ancient city back another 1.000 years. Coming Football Star. The football squad at York (Maine) high has a candidate who, for size, i would look pretty good to some of ' the college squads. He is Carleton Moulton, ap aspirant for center. Moulton is fifteen years old and tips the scales at 272 pounds. He is more than six feet tall and is a freshman. Safety Lamp for Miners. In a new electric safety lamp for miners’ use the lamp-holding mechanism is designed to prevent explosions when the lamp is shattered in a gaseous atmosphere. When the bulb breaks, the base is hurled out and the current is cut off. With Big Alimony. She —I suppose you know Alice married money. He — Oh. yes. They’re separated now. aren’t they? i She—No—just she and her husband are separated.—Life. There is nothing more satisfactory after a day of hard work than a line full of snowy-white clothes. For such results use Red Cross Ball Blue. —Adv. Fish a Centenarian. A four-and-a-half-foot muskalonge, caught by M. W. Withey at the government dam at Grand Rapids. Mich may have attained 100 years, according to Thaddeus Surber, superintendent of fish propagation for the state game and fish department. The Ruler. Door-to-Door Canvasser —Is the master of the house in? Young, Father (wearily)—Yes, he’s asleep upstairs in his cradle. There are millionaires .who have simply let their business associates make them rich. How lucky.

Aspirin SAY “BAsYER ASPIRIN” andJNSISTI \ . -I ’ . . . Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for Colds Headache Neuritis Lumbago Pain Neuralgia Toothache Rheumatism DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART 3 /% Accept /nly “Bayer” package which/contains proven directions., • * Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets F Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists. Aroirin Is the trad* mark of Bayer Maaatactar* of Monoacetlcacideater of SaUcvltcacH

Garfield Tea Was Your Grandmother’s Remedy

For every stomach and intestindk iIL This good old-fash-ioned herb home remedy for constii pat ion, stomach Ills and other derangements of the sys-

tem so prevalent these days is in even greater favor as a family medicine than in your grandmother’s day. iiXSIE’S CROUP REMEDY THE LIFE-SAVER OF CHILDREN Xo opium, no nausea. 60 cents at druggists, or KELLS CO., NEWBURGH, N. Y. Wanted. Agents in every town and county. Ladies or gentlemen, ladies - aid societies, girl scouts, sewing circles, etc. All sell our Blue Goose Cleaner and Blue Goose Bath Powder. Big profits and wonderful repeater. Exclusive agency to’ the right party. Mail us 35c in stamps and we will send you og» box each of Blue Goose Cleaner and Blue Goose Bath Powder worth 50c, together with full details of our money making proposition. Cleaner Products Company, 1310 T Athens Ave., Lakewood. Ohio. Agents or Brokers Earn Splendid Incomes building permanent business for themselyea with our high grade products. NORMASA.; mineral food, guaranteed results, rheumatism. neuritis, acid conditions. CAMETOL; penetrating greaseless ointment, amazing results. Protected territory. Free sales instructions. No free . samples. Full package Normasal and Cametol sent postpaid to prospective agents or brokers upon receipt of SI.OO and this ad. Silver Gate Laboratories. San Diego. Calif. Goodhair Soap I The ideal Shampoo Fot the Ly 'fl? >** Scalp - Dandruff -Falling Hair. W Wonderfully effective. Sold for fc? 7 30 years. 25c a cake. At Druggists or by mail direct. ' JrH FREL sample on request. HCTIMkfr&MTHE GOODHAIR COMPART SUMS ntfs ndlsßh(ss Cincinnati, Okie I Nasal Catarrh, Aching Muscles, Sore Feet, I Itching Piles. Cuts, Burns, etc. 2 Sixes, 20c and 35c. a|l I BE A RADIO EXPERT K SSO to S2OO a week. Radios big growth making many fine iobs. Learn at home in spare time. Big 64-page book of information free. Write National Radio Institute, Dept. 33, R 4, Washington, D.C. For Galled Horses Hanford s Balsam of Myrrh AU dealers an authorized to refund your money tor the first bottle if not suited. Germany Has Helium Gas. While sinking deep wells for water helium gas has been discovered in Germany near Frankfort. The find is said to be the first of its kind in Europe. Children are naturally happy and playful and when they complain of headache or dizziness, are cross and feverish, restless at night, have bad dreams and no “pep” for play, it is a sure sign of an upset stomach that can be quickly rem* edied if you give them MOTHER GRAY’S SWEET POWDERS They act quickly and gently on the bowels, relieve constipation,- cleanse the stomach and sweeten the feverish breath. They break up colds and <act as a tonic to the whole system. Children like to take them. This safe and pleasant remedy has been used by mothers for over 30 years. Nether Gray's Sweet Powders are sold by all druggists; accept no substitute. W. N. U., FORT WAYNE, NO. 47-1928. Libraries for Schools. Every school in the province of Saskatchewan, Can., is required to maintain a school library, and §lO for each room in, operation must be expended annually in the purchase of books from an authorized list.—School Life.