The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 32, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 6 December 1928 — Page 3

gio Makes Life Sweeter Children’s stomachs sour, and need an, anti-acid. Keep their systems sweet with Phillips Milk of Magnesia! ' When tongue or breath tells of acid j condition —correct it with a spoonful of Phillips. Most men and women have been comforted by this universal sweetener —more mothers should invoke its aid for their children. It is a pleasant thing to take, yet neutralizes more acid than the harsher things too often employed fpr the purpose. No household should be without it. Phillips is the genuine, prescrlptional product physicians endorse for general use; the name is important. “Milk of Magnesia” has been the U. S. registered trade mark of the Charles H. Phillips Chemical Co. and its predecessor Charles H. Phillips since 1875. Phillips * Milk of Magnesia Ehnford’s Balsam of Myrrh Since 1846 Has Healed Wounds and Sores on Man and Beast Money back for first bottle 1 f not salted All dealers. . - That’s Not Nice. “I never worry about my husband paying attention to other women—he's crazy about me." , “But perhaps he has lucid intervals.” —Tit-Bits. Cold Need Cause No Inconvenience .Singers can’t always keep from; catching cold, but they can get the. best of any cold in a few hours —and so can you. Get Pape’s Cold Compound that comes in pleasant-tasting tablets, one of which will break up a cold so quickly you’ll be astonished.—Adv. Not So Sweet. i Life is a series ot contradictions. Use enough sugary phrases on a vain person and lie thinks he’s the salt of the earth.—Farm and Fireside. Snowy linens are the pride of every i housewife. Keep them in that condi- 1 tion by using Red Cross Ball Blue in your laundry. At all grocers.—Adv. Rural Definitions. Hi —And what’s a natatorium? Si —A natatorium is the old swimmin’ hole after it enters college. — o»o —a—■■■ «i I WHAT DR. CALDWELL i LEARNED IN 47 YEARS PRACTICE A physician watched the results of constipation for 47 years, and believed that no matter how careful people are of their health, diet and exercise, constipation will occur from time to time. Os next importance, then, is how to treat it when it comes. Dr. Caldwell always was in favor of getting as close to nature as possible, hence his remedy for constiJation, known as Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup epsin, is a mild vegetable compounds It can riot harm the system and is not ' habit forming. Syrup Pepsin is pleasanttasting, and youngsters love it. Dr. Caldwell did not approve of drastic physics and purges. He did not believe they were good for anybody’s system. In a practice of 47 years he never saw any reason for their use when Syrup Pepsin" will empty the bowels just as promptly. Do not iet a day go by without a bowel movement. Do not sit and hope, but go to the nearest druggist and get one of the generous bottles of Dr. Caidwell’s Syrup Pepsin, op write “Syrup Pepsin,” Dept. 88, Monticello. Illinois, for free trial bottle. MANY SCHOOL CHiLDREN ARE SICKLY

Mothers, for your own comfort and the welfare of your children, you should never be withouta box of Mother Gray’s Sweet Powders for children for use throughout the season. ‘ They Break up Colds, Regulate the Bowels, Relievo Feverishness, Constipation, Teething . Disorders, Headache and 1 Stomach Troubles.

TRADE MARK DON’T ACCEPT ANY SUBSTITUTE

Used by Mothers for over 39 years. Are pleasant to take—children like them. All Drug stores. Dan’taccept any substitute.' Trialpackage Free. Address MOTHER GRAY CO.. Le Roy. N. Y. r for RanK»»i 35'

STARTING MOTOR DURINGWINTER Main Trouble Is That Gasoline Does Not Vaporize Readily Enough. Os course the principal difficulty in starting a car'when it is cold is that the gasoline does not vaporize readily and combine with air into a combustible mixture. Understanding this, do not wear out the storage battery with the starter or your patience with the crank handle in a fruitless endeavor to start something. Use your head Instead of your arms. It will ; start easier, for neither headstrong i nor armstrong starters are worth l while. Open Choking Device. As soon as the engine starts It Is very important that the’ choking, device be opened partially, depending upon the temperature until the engine heats up, and then fully opened Otherwise the excess of gasoline will cause the engine to run sluggishly. Indeed', it may load up the cylinders with such a mixture that the engine may stop again. This in turn will make it harder to start the engine than before. Do not close the choker again if the engine stops from this cause. Get as much air in as possible while you crank the engine and thus approximate a correct mixture. If using of the choker device fails to start the engine the only thing left to do is to apply heat to the intake manifold. You may pour a little hot water over the manifold. The intake will get warm enough this way in a little while. But a surer way is to, wrap a cloth about the manifold and empty the teakettle slowly upon it. Extreme care must be taken nor to get any water on the high tension ignition terminals or in the float chain her of the carburetor. Water will not pass through the spray nozzle and ' a tiny globule will stick there and hold back the gasoline. Warming Device. > Practically all modern carburetors kljave some sort of. arising device to heat the gasoline and .air entering the mixing chamber.* Swie get air from a stove or hot-air ftirnace attached to the exhaust pipe, aijd some depend on hot water from- the cooling system. Neither of these will get into action, however, until after the engine has been running some time and will not help the cold morning troubles of the owner. If there is a hot water jacket on the carburetor, persons who drain the cooling system on cold nights will aid starting materially if they fill the radiator with hot water in the morning just before it lis time to start the engine. This | warms the entire engine, so that condensation is not likely to occur. — It Is Not Necessary to Prime Gas Tank by Hand The idea that when one runs out of gas and the vacuum tank has run dry, it is necessary to prime it by hand, is erroneous, according to a factory authority. A knowledge of how to refill the tank without leavI Ing the driver’s seat will save time ! and effort. Here’s how: Turn off the ignition and throttle down, then step i on the starter and turn the engine over a dozen times. This creates sufficient vacuum to draw gas from the gas tank to the vacuum tank, and fills it up. ready to go as soon as the ignition and gas are turned on again. Millions of Spark Plugs Are Now Used Every Year The 22,000,000 cars in operation in the United States travel approximately 220,000,000,000 miles annually based on an estimate of 10,000 miles ner car per year. These cars use 65,000.000 spark plugs a year. This means that one plug is used for every 3,384 miles a car travels.

GEARLESS CAR ON DISPLAY IN ENGLAND A godsend to the motorist —the “gearless” car—being displayed at the Olympia motor show at Olympia, England. Its speed is adjusted by a small “control” on the steering wheel, being, operated by Miss Kitty Brunnell.

Cause of Mishaps Six violations of the law are credited with being the most common causes of automobile accidents. The official report of New York state shows that during last year the most common violations were: Did not have right of way, 42 per cent; on wrong side of road. 16 per cent; exceeding speed limit, 13 per cent; drive off roadway. 10 per cent; failed to signal, 6 per cent; cutting in, 6 pei cent; various other violations, 7 per ■ent.

Warning Signal Light Attached to Oil Gauge While the oil gauge on the dash indicates plugged oil pipes by registering excessive pressure, or oil-pump failure by a low pressure reading, you may not happen to look at the gauge. The Illustration shows how to install an electric indicator lamp j that will Immediately call your atten- , tion to any oil failure in case you do not notice the warning of the oil j gauge. Procure an extra oil gauge and mount it on the back of the dash. Remove the glass. Mount a fiber or rubber block just above the gauge and on it fit a couple of light brass fingers arranged to make contact with the gauge pointer. The proper settings will, of course, depend on the characteristics of your particular car. Wire a dash Indicator lamp as shown. When the ignition is turned on tlye-Wilb will light until the starting of the motor runs the oil pressure rubberX BLOCK I 3TRIPS # LIGHT ' ff ON PASH Fl W ff IGNITION switch >7 Wk OIT TERMINAL fi pe from p i hlii'iiJlw / OIL PUMP I ft / jfiwl ‘SWITCH 2 -J TO OIL PIPE GAGE ON PASH — A Warning Signal Light, Wired as Shown in This Diagram, May Save Damage to Your Motor. up to the regular running point. If anything goes wrong with the oiling system, the gauge pointer will touch one of the fingers and the light will flash a warning.—Popular Science Monthly. Auto Stopped Instantly With Original Device A device which the inventor holds will save human life by stopping an automobile almost instantly has been perfected and a patent for it has been sought by Pasquale Strano. The mechanism, the inventor says, can be applied to any car. It stops the vehicle, he declares, by dropping under the rear wheels a chock, or shoe, the sole of which is fitted with a cork pad to prevent skidding. The shoes, which weigh about eight pounds, are fastened on a pair of rocker arms integral with the chassis. They are wedge shaped, and the points pass under the wheels. The wheels cannot pass over the chocks, Strano asserts, because the top surfaces of the shoes are fitted with rollers on which the wheels revolve if power is applied before the chocks are pulled up. .t. »♦« AXA AAAXA AA.t- ♦- >♦- -tW WWW WWW v v ip ■ip v v v W V V V AUTOMOBILE ITEMS On the highways and in politics, detours are the order of the day. * * * If the accidents caused by road hogs injured only road hogs, it wouldn’t be so bad. * * * Another good way to acquire a vocabulary is to try making the old tires last through the winter. ■. * • » Now that gear shifting is to be made easy, perhaps the automotive engineers will devise a silencer for brakes. • * * German railway ear manufacturers who turned to making automobiles to save their profits have found the venture a failure. » • • A partially clogged fuel line will permit the car to run up to certain speeds, then a popping noise starts in the carburetor.

Excessive use of gasoline is due to a faulty carburetor or intake manifold, or to keeping the engine cylinders at too low a temperature because the water in the cooling system is too cold. • • « There is merit in the proposition that one will not be run over by an automobile while attending church, but as an argument for church attendance it overlooks the traffic congestion that would ensue if everybody took the minister’s advice.

THE SYRACrSF JOURNAL

re NEWJ FEED POTATOES TO LIVE STOCK I Potatoes have been successfully used in fattening rations for both cattle and lambs and may also be fed in limited quantities to h js and horses. Farmers who have a surplus of potatoes this year may find it profitable to feed them to live stock. In the tests that were conducted at the Colorado agricultural experiment station, potatoes proved to be particularly valuable fed with grain and alfalfa to fattening lambs. A ration consisting of grain, alfalfa and two pounds daily of chopped raw potatoes showed a feed replacement value of $8.54 per ton for the pota- ; toes used. Fed to facetting beef 1 calves at the rate of nine pounds per I head daily, the raw potatoes had a feed replacement value of $5 per ton. i Potato silage made by cutting the potatoes into a silo with a 2 per cent addition of cornmeal gave practically the same net results. The only advantage gained in ensiling the potatoes was the ability to store the ensilage for an indefinite period. Starch is the chief constituent of the dry matter of potatoes and there is very little crude protein present, consequently a good protein feed is necessary to properly balance any ration where potatoes are used. Raw potaties may be safely fed to live stock if the daily ration is not too large and the feeding period not too extensive, according to E. J. Maynard of the Colorado experiment station. They are best not fed, however, to pregnant stock on account of their acrid taste and tendency to increase the flow of digestive juices "n the , stomach and intestine. Raw potatoes should be gradually introduced into the ration and if taken away, this should be done by degrees. Feeds, such as beet molasses and beet tops which tend to irritate the digestive tract, should not be fed at the same time. Although potatoes should be chopped up. they may also be fed whole. If fed whole, it has been found worth while to feed them to cattle in low bunk under a pole or beam. This method tends to prevent choking. , A low-priced root cutter, either hand or motor driven, is available, which has given good success at the experiment station. Cattle are least sensitive to raw potatoes. Large quantities have been fed in fattening rations with no bad effects. It is safest, however, not to feed too great an amount. Sheep also do well on raw potatoes. It is best to feed lambs not over two pounds per head daily. Horses are more easily affected by raw potatoes but small quantities, three to five pounds per head per day, may be used. It is usually better to cook or ..am potatoes for pigs. Experiments show that about 420 pounds of cooked potatoes equal 100 pounds of corn in feeding value if fed in a properly balanced ration. Raw potatoes proved to be only two-thirds as valuable when fed to pigs. If cooked the potatoes should be salted and the water in which they are cooked should be thrown away. I Blood Separators for Cholera Serum Useful Production of clear anti-hog cholera serum for use in preventing the disease which has cost American farmers $30,000,000 annually for the past 40 years has recently been materially cheapened by the use of centrifugal blood separators. Not only do these separators reduce the cost of the product, but they also increase the percentage of recovery of serum and eliminates waste. After the hyper-immunized pig has been bled, one separator removes the heavy corpuscles from the blood and another takes out the light, fatty sub- j stances. It is necessary to remove both the heavy and light material to produce a clear, colorless serum. The blood separators used are similar to the ordinary centrifugal cream separator. Similar separators are also used to clean and reclaim used oil from automobile and tractor crankcases. ! r Lambs Neglected Lambs are often considered the main source of income from the farm flock, but they are frequently undervalued and little attention given from the time of birth until they are sold. If j they have done well and made fair gains the seller is satisfied. When lambs are thus thoUgl/t of as the main income from the flock it is evident that extra care and thought must be given to them if greater returns are to be received. Good Beef Calves Mating an Aberdeen-Angus bull with Holstein cows would Result in a very good grade of beef calves. The Wisconsin experiment station has conducted two trials in wjiich they have used groups of steers representing high-grade Aberdeen-Angus and crossbred Aberdeen-Angus-Holstein. The results have shown quite favorably for the cross-bred steers. Prof. J. G. Fuller at Madison, Wig., would be happy to send you a copy of these reports. V Feed Beef Cpws Beef cows that are due to calve in ! the spring should be fed well enough I so they will be in fairly good condition at calving time. If they come off pasture in good condition/It will not be necessary to feed any gfain during the winter season. In addition to all the silage or dry fodder they will eat, the ration should include about five pounds of clover or alfalfa per cow daily. If no legume hay is fed, cottonseed <t linseed cake or meal should be supplied. st

DAIRY FEEDING METHODS REDUCE FLAVORS Offensive Taste Due to One of Four Causes. (Prepared by the United States Department ot Agriculture.) While milk producers are giving considerable attention to preventing losses due to sour milk, they too rarely recognize that other flavors and odors also cause an annual loss probably as great as that from sour milk Milk containing abnormal flavors and odors is rejected by dealers and consumers. Abnormal flavors result mainly from four causes, according to C. J. Babcock, of the bureau of dairy industry. United States Department of Agriculture. They may be due to the physical condition of the cow. to highly flavored feeds and weeds, to the absorption of odors by the milk aft«r It is drawn, or to biological changes tn the milk. If due to the condition of the cow or to feeds the objectionable flavors and odors will be noticeable just after milking and usually will not increase with time. Those caused by absorption develop only when the atmosphere is permeated with pronounced odors, whereas those due to biological changes become more apparent after some time has elapsed. Feeds and weeds impart flavors and odors to milk mainly through the body of the cow. although feed-taint-ed barn air may have some effect. The time of feeding, therefore, is an important factor to consider in preventing undesirable flavors in the milk, according to Babcock. In most cases feeds do not flavor the milk except for a few hours, although some feeds, such as pabbage, , when consumed in large quantities may still be noticeable in milk drawn 12 hours after feeding. For this rep son. he says, highly flavored be i fed immediately after milking—never just before. When fed as short a time as one hour before milking, such feeds as silage made from corn, alfalfa, sweet clover, or soy beans; and such feeds as green alfalfa, cabbage, turnips, rape and kale seriously affect the flavor and odor of milk. Green rye, green cowpeas, potatoes, driedbeet pulp, and carrots affect the milk only to a slight degree, whereas green corn, green oats and peas, green soy beans, pumpkins and sugar beets have practically no effect on the flavor and i odor of milk. Grain Should Be Given Before Roughage Is Fed Most farmers who feed grain and good silage or alfalfa hay to their milk cows in the winter time have learned that it pays to feed the grain before the cows are given their roughage. ! Some cows relish silage so much that j they will actually leave some of their grain in their troughs and clean up , the silage. Four reasons are cited by | practical dairymen why grain should i be fed before the roughage is fed. The I first reason is that heavy producing , cows will get the concentrated grain feed that they need to maintain their ' production and their body, the second | that the cows will relish the grain | more when fed alone, the third that I they will produce more milk and but- I terfat from a certain quantity of feed. i and the fourth one’ is that they will produce more during their entire lactation period. One pound of grain for each three pounds of milk produced per day is the usual amount fed. Four to six pounds is generally enough for heifers and eight to twelve pounds enough for mature coWs. With the grain the ?ow should be eating about one pound of hay and three pounds of silage for each one hundred pounds she weighs, that is. a thousand pound cow would eat ten pounds of hay and thirty pounds of silage per day. Improved Feed Methods Always Most Profitable The selection of economical feeds, the intelligent compounding of rations and the feeding of each cow in proportion to her production, constitute the principal factors in economical feeding. Prices of feeds vary greatly from time to time, so that in choosing those most economical the cost per pound of digestible nutrients in various feeds should be considered. Under normal price conditions, roughage usually furnishes digestible nutrients more cheaply than concentrates; and feeds high in protein, such as cottonseed meal and oil meal, furnish digestible protein much more cheaply than low protein feeds, such as corn and oats. Tie Herd Bull The herd bull should be 'fied "up or be penned away from the herd until late in the fall, as it is important to avoid having cows freshen during the warm months. According to the 1927 records of the cows in Kansas herd improvement associations, the ?ow freshening in the spring showed a return above feed cost of nearly $lB less than did the winter freshening ?ow. If no pen is available for the . bull, he may be tied by a chain from his ring to a wire cable. Winter Milk Rations 1 Excellent rations for dairy cows I maintaining a high level of winter milk production have been worked out at the Fredericton (New Brunswick) experimental station. The cows are given liberal quantities of mixed clover and timothy hay, with corn silage and roots. The meal ration is composed, for the most part, of one part bran, one part crushed oats, one part jil cake, and two parts brewer’s grains. One per cent of salt is added at mH’”

World Language*. > rival world languages have dished institutions in Paris, and th are preparing to present their .hiims to the League of Nations, seekng recognition as the international ongue. The Esperanto institute has been in operation for many years, and now conies the Novia) institute to fa-, vor the speaking of the Novial language. created by Dr. Otto Jespersen of Heidelberg. The volapuk. Ido. idiome neutral, occidental and latinosineflexible languages have no institutes. Mrs. Margaret Washington Tells How to Get Rid of a Severe Cold “Last August I took a very severe cold and it seemed that I couldn't break it up. I got so bad that I was confined to iny bed for five weeks, doctoring all the time without getting any relief. I had no appetite, naturally lost flesh. In fact, I had given up all hopes of ever getting any better. “A friend recommended Milks Emulsion and I commenced its use. When able to leave my bed I weighed 111 pounds. Now, after taking Milks Emulsion five weeks, I weigh 125 pounds, feel better than I have felt in two years, can eat anything, have no es- ' sects of the cold and work every day. I thank God and Milks Emulsion for restoring my health.” MRS. MARGARET WASHINGTON, 1699 E. 14th St.. Winston-Salem, N. C. Sold by all druggists under a guarantee to give satisfaction or money refunded. The Milks Emulsion Co., Terre Haute, Ind.—Adv. Keep* Health by Walking. While almost every doctor in rural New York makes his calls in an au ‘ tomobile, Geneseo boasts of a phyI sician. Dr. Edward W. Southall, who visits .his patients afoot. Doctor Southall is seventy-seven years old. He maintains that at his age self-pres-ervation should be of the first importance. and that a mild activity, such as walking his daily round of calls, gives him a full 50 per cent advantage toward attaining longevity. Large, Generous Sample of Old Time Remedy Sent Free to Every Reader of Tins Article More than forty years ago, in a small way, good old Pastor Koenig began the manufacture of Pastor Koenig’s Nervine, a remedy recommended for the relief of nervousness, epilepsy, sleeplessness and kindred ailments. The remedy was made after the formula of old German doctors. The sales were small at first, but soon increased, and another factory was added to meet the increasing demand. Today there are Koenig factories in the old world and Pastor Koenig’s Nervine is not I only sold throughout the United States i but in every land and clime. 1 The manufacturers want every reader of this free offer to try the old remedy at their expense. They will send a large, generous sample to every one who mentions this article. Try it and be convinced. It will only cost you a postal to write for the large, generous sample. Address: Koenig Medicine Co.. 1045 ; North Wells street. Chicago. Illinois. Kindly mention your local paper. Over-Generou* Soul*. Acquaintance with one or two su-per-generous persons never fails to emphasize the blessedness of giving over ‘ the blessedness of receiving.—Exchange. Hoxie’s Croup Remedy for croup, coughs and colds. No opium. No nausea. 50cts. Drug- , gists. Kells Co., Newburgh, N. Y., Mfrs.—Adv I One can never estimate a man’s salary by the work he claims to do. Most of what is called the “inferiority complex” comes from timidity.

10 minutes VW L —ll'4 drhr £MgNMa£i| / JHUk j flHSBBEgal JhVi How many people you know end their colds with Bayer Aspirin! And how often you’ve heard of its prompt relief of sore throat or tonsilitis. No wonder millions take it for colds, neuralgia, rheumatism; and the aches and pains that go with them. The wonder is that anyone still worries through a winter without these tablets! They relieve quickly, yet have no effect whatever on the heart. Friends have told you Bayer Aspirin is marvelous; doctors have declared it harmless. Every druggist has it, with proven directions. Why not put it to the test ? Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture °r Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid JF= , ■ - —X.

jMai "iM h®] |!j !l ‘ NL

HUSBAND DISTRIBUTES BOOKLETS Wife Tries Compound Every year the Pinkham Medicine Company distributes about 30,000.000

and I can truly say that it has dona me good. My neighbors and friends ask me what I am doing to make me look so much better. I tell them that I am taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.” PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM Removes Dandruff-stopsHairFalling Restores Color and Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair 6Oc. and SI.OO. at Druggists. Hiscox Chem. Wks. Patchogue. N. Y. FLORESTON SHAMPOO-Weal for use in connection with Parker’s Hair Balsam. Makes th® hair soft and fluffy. 50 cents by mail or at drug, cists. Hiscox Chemicid Works, Patchogue, N. x. RAMONA WALTZ Style z—Cos Dancing. FOOT PRINT SYSTEM, EASY TO NATIONAL INTRODUCTORY'<!SaJ^P z OFFER. SEND SOCFOR YOUR a PAGE; 9 IN. BY 12 IN. INSTRUCTOR. COMPLETE WITH DIRECTIONS. SEND TO HOLLYWOOD MODERN DANCE STUDIOS. 800 HOLLYWOOD STALOS ANGELES. CALIF. RHEUMATISM For 35 Years TRUSLER’S RHEUMATIC TABLETS HAVE GIVEN RELIEF All Druggists. Two Sites, 50c and SI.OO. Trusler Remedy Co. Cincinnati. O. | ' = England Grow* Les* Wheat. Engkind’s harvest of wheat this year is estimated at 1.201.1” tons, a decrease of more than 200,000 tons from that of 1927. APPETITE IMPROVED . QUICKLY Carter’s Little Liver Pills S=Ylls Pureb Vegetable Laxativ* fcacQ . move the bowels free from ■ Ir ' pain and unpleasant after . effects. They relieve the system of constipation poisons which dull the desire for food. Remember they are a doctor’s prescription and can be taken by the entire family. All Druggists 25c and 75c Red Packages. CARTERS PILLS W. N. U~ FORT WAYNE, NO. 48-1928 Considerate of Mother. A small lad who persists in leaving his wagon, kiddy car and other playthings on the good-natured neighbors* walk was requested in a kindly way to take his toys home. “I don’t like to take them home, ’cause mother don’t want her things mussed up with my trash,” was the boy’s lament. The housewife smiles with satisfaction a$ she 16oks at the basket of clear, white clothes and thanks Red Cross Ball Blue. At all grocers.—Adv. Americans Badly Led. The battle of Camden, August 16, 1780, was an overwhelming British victory over the Americans. The American army was practically destroyed as an organization. This branded General Gates f° r a,) time as an incompetent military leader.

Cuticura Talcum Powder For the Toilet and Nursery A Talcum Powder worthy of bearing a name that has become famous all over the world for sustained quality and purity for fifty years. You will be delighted with its fragrant, medicated efficiency as a cooling, soothing addition to your toilet, and as a sanative, antiseptic, deodorizing protection to your skin. An Ideal After-Shaving Powder. Sold everywhere. Sample free on request. Address: "Cuticura,”

booklet* from house to house. Mr. Ted Hinzman does this work in. Lodi, California. His wife writes: “It was in these little books that I read about so many women being helped by the medicine. 1 thought I would give it a trial