The Syracuse Journal, Volume 22, Number 46, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 13 March 1930 — Page 2
bi>A f t - D<««KMKhL.' -'■' ? y 711*C jKSM H 13rW f E \ P IFH I i JUfts I ''■A.jSf> I M2l®£ I I—Coolidge dam. !n Arizona, which was formally dedicated by former President Calvin Coolidge for whom ft Is named. 2—Submarine VC. latest addition to the American navy, ready for its launching March 15 at Mare Island , navy yard in California. 3—John North Willys of Toledo. Ohio, new American ambassador to Poland. - : b — ;
NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS —L. President Hoover’s First Year Is Both Praised and Attacked. By EDWARD W. PICCARD XI WHETHER Herbert Hodver's first »V year ns President Is t<> be considered successful depends largely on the political Idas and economic convictions of the one who does tllie considering. The varying views op tin* matter were expressed he ; senate by Renntor Simeon I*. Fess of Ohio, / speaking for the administration party, and Senator Pat Harrison of Mississippi, speaking for the opposition. - Renntor Feas, especially praised .thePresident's efforts to combat, business depression, saying: ."I.; /regard' the handling of the economic forces that were playing toward disaster by the President as the most, outstanding ac- . complishment’ in the history- of the government of which I .have any knowledge on •economic lines." He said he was not entirely sure that It was possible to' avoid the cycles in business In whlelt a high business'level is followed by a depression "If it can be .done." continued-the Ohio sen- f ritor. "we have the leadership In the; ' White House that will do it ; f -r the President bus been . Working on* the: problem eight years." In dealing with other features of the administration record during-the yean Senator Fess discussed farm relief, - the tariff, the naval armament conference. other International questions,; -and, prohibit loti. Senator Harrison' said he wished to congratulate Senator Fess "on his audacity and nerve In speaking ex < planations of the niisaehievements; or. the a ifhd hist ration during the last } - "If the failure to solve big problems Is an achievement, this admin- - Istratlon -for-the last ‘year is a sn<4’■ ces«." said Senator Hanrlson. "If disgusting the farmers of the land is an achievement, then is a success. If dissatisfying labor is nn achievement, then this administration Isa success. If indecision upon the part of a President is an achievement. then President Hoover's first year is a great success," IINEMI’LOYMENT is of course one ' of .the immediate concerns of the government and furnishes ammunition for the opponents of tlje admlnis- - (ration. * | •' Secretary of luibo'r Janies J. Davis. , following n cabinet hievtijig At which the industrial situation was discussed, asserted that as a result of.the l?.dent's activities unemployment bus been held to less than one half that of previous financial crashes. Other ad- / ministration lenders expressed confidence that uhemplo.< ment would be materially relieved within the next s few-weeks federal aceto cles called; into action h-' the President., * . ” Senator Wngnerjd New York. Democrat, has Introduced a bill for stabilj. gatlon of industry by construction*, of . nnd the preyetiliotbof unemployment In .periods -,f>f-business depression, and appropriating SJtiO,OOo > * 000 for these [Hirposes. Secretary Davis opposes the measure, holding It ° Is unnecessary and provides methods too cumbersome for its use.< Opponents of our prohibition laws closed their Case before the house judiciary committee on Tuesday with the statements of a number of witnesses, the best known of whom were Breckenridge Long, former assistant - secretary of state, and Dr. Stewart Paton. p>sychlat>lst of Johns Hopkins. Three women also took the stand. Mrs. Robert W. Lovett of Boston, •Mrs. Cortlandt Nicol! of New York and Mrs. of Pittsburgh. Mrs- Lovett sounded the keynote of the testimony of. all three with a dec* larntion that the anti-prohibition .women are seeking the,same objectives as the dry women, namely, protection of children, h decrease in crime, and abolition of the commercialized liquor traffic. "But what have we today?" she demanded. “Drunken children, crime on the Increase by leaps and -bounds, an illicit liquor traffic Infinitely worse, than the open sal ooh." Mrs. Miller struck out at the W. C T. I’., which, she asserted. Is cprrupting legislative bodies with its political. tactics. Next day the drys began the introduction of'testimony with the first of ” some fifty witnesses from all parts of the country and from all walks of life. They led ort With Samuel Crowther, a writer who has been gathering information on the liquor question for a magazine; Edward Keating,. former , ' ' ■ ■ ■ / ' ' '
Congressman from Colorado; Dr. Daniel A. Poling, president of the World s Christian Eiujeavor union, and Henry M. Johnson, Louisville lawyer. Mr. Crowther said he had asked Thomas A. Edison and Henry Ford to attend the bearing but they were tin--able to do so. However, both sent telegrams warm y endorsing prohibition nnd the Eighteenth amendment. (t is noteworthy that so far most of . the drys emphasize especiallyzthe economic benefits the Country lias derived from prohibition, while most of the «<■'-. .dwell particularly on the alleged break down of morals resulting , from it. ' ’ CANADA is likely soon, to give the .Tu/ : - -th elp .ln i drying up the country. Premier May- [ Kvnzie King introduced Qjifhe house of commomr at Ottawa legislation desigtied to sjem the annual J.ltt.ixx ! flow of liqiipr across the. border, and | the measutv. it was predicted, would be i iiacted., It is an amendment to the export act| and Mr. King explainol that its purport Is “to authorize officials of the dominion government having charge of liquor in bond nnd the granting of clearances to vessels to refuse to ,r» l -ase such liquor or to grant such ciearlinces where the granting of i such relesw* or clearance in any .case would fmd itate the introduction of Intoxicatiitg liquor into a country 'there the Importation of such liquor Is forbidden by law." THE Rhode Island house of representatives passed -in concurrence a senate bill providing for submission to the pcoftl • a separate ballot at tire Novembef eleetibns the question: "The Eighteenth amendment to the Constitution 'of file Unitiid States: Rhall it lie retains!?" * x TOT a: ail to the surprise of those ' conversant with the grain trade, ci the grain rirarket became suth that he federal farm bbiard found it necessity to modify its activities in holsterin* up wheat prices through the Crain sKhilization corporation and the Farmers’ National Crain corporation. The change .in-policy, ns announced by Chairman Alexander Legge of the board, consists in abandonment of the arbitrary loan price basis est'.ib’.islic'l*’ by the board last fall. No more grain will be bought bn that b'sls. Mr. Legge said, though loaps will tn* made on the pre.sbhit crop trfli l July 1. Prices for wheat during the*week were unsettled and generally lower. Later Mr. Legge was quoted as declaring that a real embargo against shipping wheat from farms to terminal markets will be put. Into effect vniess farmers hold their stocks until storage facilities beCotno available. Ho said the bornd is endeavoring to avoid such <!rtist(c measures during the present grain etm igency. but that If railroads are unable to unload cars of grain at .terminals an embargo would become imperative, Officials of twenty five grain and other farm commodity exchanges held a secret meeting Ip Chicago and gave out the wort! that so far ns they were concerned the verbal warfare with the farm board was-emled. v "Me have decitled to shut up an.d get back to business as best we can under the silpation, despite what poliJicians and governmental spokesmen .may say or do," said one of th. engoans who Attended the conference. The general opiajofi of the meeting was reported t© t»e that the grain trade was aatistted with tbe-m< policy announced by the federal farm board, withdrawing the. fixed prices for wheat being paid to co-operatives only. SECRETARY OF STATE STIMSON x ’ sprung a surprise on the world with n statement in Loudon that the I’nited States Is willing to reducedts naval armament by more than 200,(WM) tons, if the fleets of the other naval . powers are reduced acconllngly. He said this In reply to rejvorts that the navnl conferern e-was likely to .result in an increase Instead of a reduction in the tonnage of the navies of the, world, and raid his plan seemed to be"acceptable to America and Great Brit-' ain, * France was still holding pp the proceedings of conference although;, I’rqmler Tarsieu obtained a good iority in the chamber of deputies. Ths French coi|tlnue to demand a tonnagq f of at least tons. If they are given this. -Italy demands the same total. But Great Britain's fixed policy Is to have a navy a's large as those <>f any two continental powers, and . to have 1,400,000 tons she must add 200.000 tons to the figure on which the agreement with the United States is based. That in a nutshell Is the situation; though there are many complicating side features. The subcommittee of the conference to which was referred Mr. Stimson’s resolution on the limitation and “hu‘maqizing" of submarines reported it
could do nothing until the French delegates resumed their part in the nego- . tiatibns. Premier Tardian sent Briand. Dumesnil and others over to Ix>ndon Thursday and -went himself on Saturday, so There was a prospect of i progress. | Mil. HOOVER'S commission to investigate conditions in Haiti is getting an earful —several of them, indeed. Immediately after its arrival in Port-au-Prince some twelve hundred native women prayed in public for an end of American occupation and then paraded througli the past the headquarters- of the commission, voicing an' appeal for the "liberation'' Os Hail f. itn - . daj s t lie com? missioners heard prominent leaders of the Nationalists denounce Gen. John IL Russell, the American high commissioner, as virtually a dictator whose puppet Is i’resident Borno. They demand • a free election of a ; president and one of them said: "If the council of state dares to elect a president on April I I Instead of per- ! milting a popular election. United States machine guns will sink all Haitians in blood." They still want the United States to help them in the sanitary service, but insist all other ] American activities should be abolished. Some asked that the commission supervise the election, but Chair- j man Forbes -told them this was ini- ‘ possible. The Dominican Republic has quieted I down after the resignation of President Vasquez and the installation of Gen. Rafael Urena, leader of the in- ; surgent movement, as provisional head of the? government. THURSDAY was denominated ’‘lnternational unemployment day" by • the MoslNnv Communists and parades 'and other demonstrations by the un- , employed werf. held in many cities in * Europe and America. In some places there were bloody encounters with the i police and in others there was no disorder worth mentioning. - ,■! Among the activities of the Communists should lie recorded the instigation an 1 management of a rebellion <>f 1-I.iMW) high school pupils in Manila. They struck nominally tiecause of alleged Insults by a woman teacher, and the. Reds Incited them so sanguinary encounters with the police. A LFRED VON TIRPITZ. who was T* lord high admiral of the German Hsvy during the World war and father of his country's submarine warfare. dio l in. Etmnhausen of bronchitis nt the age of eighty-one years. ’ ' Cablegrams from Japan told of the death in Kobe of Dr. Arthur T. Hadley, president emeritus of Yale uni.versfty. He succumbed to. pneumonia at the age of seventy-three years. Doc- ] tor Hadley was e«fiicated in Yale ami Berlin universities and joined the faculty of his alma mater in TS7'd. Twenty years later be was elected to the presidency, retiring In 1921. He was considered one Os the world’s leading economists. Other deaths included those of D. H. Lawrence, noted English novelist and poet. an<j_j’iscount Herbert Gladstone, youngest of William E. Gladstone. IL. lumber and’sugar combined In ' the sennfie -last-,week and brought about a vote of 47 to 39 in favor of an increase in the duty on Cuban sugar from 1.75 to* 2 cents per pound. Nine senators, most of whom are interested! in either oil or lumber. switche<! their votes, and the resulting combination smashed the DemocraticRadical Republican coalition that has has been having its own way in formulating the senate's tariff bill. During the exciting debate Senator Caraway and bthers charged that a deal had been entered! into, and there were warnings that the oil. lumber and sugar trade would l>e made a campaign Issue. The house bill increased the ; rate on Cuban sugar to 2.4 cents per j pouml. so nn increase in this duty is virtually certain when the senate nnd house conferees fix up the final draft of the measure. JOHN NORTH WILLYS of Toledo, Ohio, automobile nfhnufacturer. is the new American ambassador to Po- ‘ land. His name wns submitted to'. Warsaw for approval, which It received. and! the appointment was then announced! by President Hoover. The senate had no objection to the selection: A. Congressional approval O s legislation authorizing ratification of the German-American agreement for the. settlement of Germany’s war obligations to this country was asked by president Hoover. The proposed agreement 'provides for the payment to the United States direct of an average annuity of 66.iM)0,600 gold marts oxer a period of thirty-seven years arid a fixetF annuity of 40,800.000 reichsmarks for fifteen years thereafter. ■ l - (©, l»30. Wactcrn Newspaper Cnldm.)
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL.
STIR CREAM FOR UNIFORM SAMPLE Creamery Man Must Dip Into Middle of Milk Can. Have you been dissatisfied with ] cream test? Dili you ever imagine it I might be your fault as well as the ' creamery 's ■' During’the .cold weather your cream is very thick and full of lumps and chunks. Every creamery I receives several such cans daily, in : order" to give an honest test a uniform ■ ' sample must he taken from each can. The only way the creamery man can get a uniform sample to make an acj d urate test is to stir this cream to a smooth cd>nsistency. It would take ■ longer to stir this cold cream than | to churn it. He, therefore, dives down in the middle of the can and takes Ids sample for testing. If he took his . sample out of the bottom of tiie can it wouldn’t be fair to you. nnd at the ' top it wouldn't be fair to the creamery. Now. had] vou sent this cream to the creamery a smooth velvety consistency without lumps, there would have been no difficulty getting an accurate sample, which means dollars in your pocket. As soon as the cream is cooled. It’ is poured into the shipping can dir a vessel that hdtlds that amount and the ; whole stirre<l, not with a spoon or ladle, as this only stirs the cream around and around in the can without I mixing tire first .d ream with the last. But stir with a regular cream stirrer, the kind that creameries use,, with a broad lifting surface that will actually bring the bottom cream up and mix it witii tire trip. . Regularity in Milking Dairy Herd Is Essential Regularity has a dollars-and-cents value in handling the dairy herd! We sometimes xvonder if farmers as a class are forgetting this. In the neighborhood with winch we are best . acquainted it was once the custom on . almost- all farms to start milking at ; five in the morning in summer and six j in winter. The hour was seldom varied and plans Were always laid to be on hand at the proper time for ; chores, says a writer in .the Montreal Family Herald. Now, on these same ' farms, the cows are milked all the way from six to.eight o’clock, depending on how late, the men were out the night before. If there is j something flu in the evening the cows that were milked at eight* may be I milked again at five. This Is not a | universal condition but it is a true, statement of what happens on too ] many farms. These men are also frank to admit that they are not gets ting the milk that they «dhl years ngo before life became so hectic. We be.- i lieve that farmers are entitled to a i good time as well as any other class. ! Said good times, however? should not be allowed to interfere too seriously j with regularity in attention to the dairy cows. Nor is it necessary. The t men around who are still practicirfg old-time regularity seem to have their ! good times as well as their more care- , less neighbors. . Watch Cow’s Diet Prior to Her Freshening Date Cows about ready to freshen' should ! be kept handy to the barn where they may be watched and cared for. Equal ! parts ground oats and bran or two parts bran to one part corn meal are good grain feeds for the last two weeks. Cows should freshen in good flesh. The grain should be cut down just before calving.. ■ «; Cows after calving should get plenty of' water ami green feed with I the laxative grain ration. If no'pasture or green feed Is available, Use beet pulp soaked in three or four times its weight in water. The main . grain mixture should be - im-reused \ gradually, but grain should be fed sparingly until the cow is completely free of fever. I : Milk Production Cost on Wisconsin Farms I iA study of the cost of milk produc- ! tlon on 48 Wisconsin farms, made by the buread of agricultural e<oiiomiesj United States Department of Agriculture, and the University of Wisconsin. showed that the amount of man labor averaged 171 hours per cow annually, or 2S.minutes a day. This labor included milking, feeding, caring for utensils, and cleaning tb« barn, but not hauling manure front ■ the barn, delivering milk, or caring for young stock. Some farmers spent as little- as 20 minutes a day per cow, and others as much as«4‘. ' Feed for Calves Sinall calves have a limited capacity for feeds, Up to six months of age the calf should have milk as the principal ingredient of its ration. Supplementing the milk one may feed al-, salsa or clover hay and grain mixture. This makes for normal growth and development, furnishing "the necessary fsod in the best condition. At j the'time the calf Is weaned or slight- ; ly befpre, silage may be introduced ; into the ration as there is little of the , bulky feeds now being consumed. Useful Bull Pen A good bull pen, solves the handling problem completely. Bulls should not be allowed to run with the herd, especially during late fall and winter. The danger factor is greatly Increased,, due to the more or less dose confinement of the cows. Breeding dates cannot be kept and freshening time cannot be controlled. Where a safe, bull pen is not available, the bull should be confined in a strongest all if possible, he should be allowed some sort of exercise dully.
Testing Seed Is Important Task Ordinary Unglazed Newspaper Cut Into Strips Is Found Useful. Recent experiments at University farm with newspaper testers have de- : veloped speedy and cheap methods of i testing seed, particularly seed corn* Use Wet Paper. ] “Ordinary unglazed newspaper may be torn or cut Into strips about 8 inches wide and 12 to 14 inches long,” says IL K, Wilson, assistant agronomist of the Minnesota experiment station. "About six sheets of paper should be thoroughly soaked in water by kneading it into a wet roll. It is Important that all sheets be wet The strip of soaked paper is spread on a flat surface and kernels of corn to be tested distributed in the same manner employed in making a rag dolL About j 50 kernels can be placed in each doll. Next, another strip of several thicknesses of soaked newspaper is placed on top of the corn, the edges of the paper are crimped together and then rolled tinto a compact doll. The ends should be tied loosely and the roll placed in a two-quart fruit Jar. "This jar does not require a lid but should be turned upside down and set In a warm place. A small nail placed under one edge will permit air circulation. It is unnecessary to give any further attention to the test until the results are takee one week later. . Carefully Tested Plan. “This plan was carefully compared with the plan of placing a lid on the jar and punching a hole In it for air, which lias been recommended in some quarters, and gave 9 per cent higher germination and much more vigorous seedlings." Manure and Flies Are Big Menace to Health It Is a well-known fact that flies 1 breed in manure and that they are not only a nuisance hut also a menace to the health of both man and beast. It is equally well known that if manure is left lying In the barnyard till the corn is laid by a very large percentage of its fertility will be lost through fermentation and leaching, says the i lowa Homestead. If the bulk of the manure accumulated during the winter months can be hauled out before spring work begins there will be a chance of kilHng two birds with one shot—of reducing the fly nuisance and of saving valuable elements of fertility that are so much needed by our i soils. Let us get busy with the manure I spreaders as soon as possible. If there I is no better place for the manure than the pasture it may be used to advantage to increase its live stock carryIng capacity. Immature Grasses High in Much Needed Protein Rome tests which have been run on the feeding value of immature grasses by the Wisconsin department of agriculture Indicate that many people have , failed to appreciate the relatively 1 high percentage of protein which they i contained. Some samples of the first clippings of timothy and clover which were analyzed showed as high as 20 per-cent of protein on the basis of dry weight. Samples of Immature i ; June grass ran equally as high, while -a sample of immature rye was found . to have 24 per cent of protein. Mature timothy hay has only about 6 per cent of protein and rye straw would have but little protein when mature. .j Such figures as these would IndiI cate that when grain is fed to cows on pasture during the spring and early summer, such feed would not need to ;be as high-in protein as is sometimes considered necessary. ************************** 1 i Agricultural Notes ************************** Good land is constantly Increasing ? in value. Keep your soil and your soil will keep you. ■ j Cod liver oil should not be fed to - broilers the lasi two weeks before < marketing. It taints the flesh with the odor of the oil. ' A tractor that is idle ■in winter makes its owner no money. On jnost well-managed farms there are winter Jobs to do, such as sawing wood, | grinding feed, baling hay, building, terraces, etc. •• • ' Mulch paper is said to be' worth while for certain early crops of high market value and in some home gardens where,it is desired to eliminate cultivation and to utilize space to the best advantage. .• • • Slaked lime is very disagreeable to apply through a grain drill and only ad. few hundred pounds per acre can be applied at one trip over the land. i Lime-sulphur is valuable for the contrbl of cherry leaf spot, a fungous disease that has been causing considerable damage to cherry trees in this region in recent years. I The careful fruit or vegetable grower plans for his crops and their care I j sometime in advance of their actual needs. This is especially true regarding control of diseases and Insects which attack crops. •• • 1 Apples l>loom for four to six days and the flow of nectar is then stopped and the fruit grower should wait until the nectar is gone and the blossoms fall. One can spray better after the stamens wither and die. • • • Lead arsenate and nicotine may be used with bordeaux mixture, |o It at. the-same rates of dilutio.n at which these insecticides are recommended for use alone by entomologists and manufacturers, ' ■■■v • :■ 1
POULTRY FRESH AIR CURES CHICKEN’S COLDS Ventilation and Dry Litter Will Prevent Troubles. Chickens are unlucky in the structure of their heads, for it makes them susceptible to colds. Poultrymen should try to avoid conditions that will bring on colds, says Dr. E. L. Brunett, of the New York State College of Veterinary Medicine at Cornell university. In ihe head, in front of tiie brain cavity, are thin cone?; of bones located in chambers. The use of these. chambers is to provide a space in which tiie inlAiled air is warmed be-* fore it is taken into the lungs. When a chicken develops a simple cold, an excessive amount of secretion forms ■ in these cavities. As this increases, the poor drainage of the cavities allows it to accumulate. This accumulation is an ideal place for bacteria -to multiply and the resulting- bacterial growth makes tiie foul odor which is i often present witii roup. A simple, cold may be avoided or corrected Ly increasing the warmth with plenty of fresh air and providing j plenty of dry litter. If the first stage j’ is not checked the cold may end in i- roup with its characteristic head swelling and foul odors. Tiie opinion that roup is a conta- ! gious disease is not well founded, acj ’cording to Doctor Brunett, for there i is usually some underlying'condition j ' that is indirectly responsible. This may be tuberculosis, or worms, but ; whatever the cause it should be, removed before a cure can be expected. A third type of cold is more of a ’ distinct disease, commonly known as 1 bronchitis. This condition is acute I arid tiie birds die quickly. The cause ’ of the disease is not known. The best i treatment is to increase the tempera-? ture of the house, either by controlling the ventilation or by using brooder | stoves. In the early part of the outi break it is well to remove all sick | I birds and put them in heated brooder ■{ houses. Most of them xvill recover I when placed in heated houses. Some | i disinfectants xvill give relief, but quack remedies should not be used. i Investigate Cod Liver Oil for Laying Fowls The summary of experiments in I England witii cod liver oil for laying I hens, says: • ' (1) 'fowls not confined or in open-’ fronted houses do not require cod I liver oil to prevent adult tickets. I (2) Fowls confined behind ordinary : glass require some adequate source of vita mine D. , (") The cod liver ojl mixed to the . extent of 2 per cent of the grain feed supplied the vitamin* D requirements | of the fowls under experiment. (4) One per cent of medical cod ■ liver bil in the scratch feed may not be sufficient to meet the requirements of layers confined behind window glass. The source of oil used may be a factor. . , (5) It is not possible to state if-cod liver oil is beneficial to fowls not I confined or in open-fronted pens getting a normal ration that includes ; green food. Healthy Chick Program Brings Higher Returns Health sticks to clean chicks: By | following four simple points in brooding p< ultrymen Jan save 90 per cent ; of their chicks. (Not only more chicks ; will .be saved lAit they will be more profitable birds W> keep as layers ami ; breeders. Grow them clean, and healtli -j ami vigor will go with them through life. - - , The four points in the Kansas "healthy oiiick" program calls for clean houses, clean ground, ami clean j feed. . . By following these four simple rules ! ecz production has been increased 36 eggs per bird in farm flocks, ihis increase at 25 cents per dozen means an additional return of GO cents per , hen. Move Brooder Houses !j I'.rooder Imuses are commonly matte movable in order to change their loca’tion and keep the chicks on clean : ! ground. I But much of the.convenience of aj brooder house is lost when it is moxed to a point distant from other farm buildings. ‘ , The problem of finding clean ground : ! and keeping it free from disease germs t is a difficult one under average farm j conditions, but it is a .sure road to success. , ” — — ' Prevent Cannibalism Cannibalism may develop in a largf bunch of chicks, no matter how completely ted or how free from parasites. The liberal use of tar is about as effective as anything in checking it. Watch many times a day for those that have . been picked enottgh to draw blood and, daub the tar on the wounds. If you ! can find something that the chicks dis- ! like the taste of more than tar, use it.If that, fails try paring off the point i of the upper mandible, using care not to get too Culling Pullets Best An easy and efficient method of culling the nonprodueers out of the new hatch of pullets can be accomplished in the following manner, if each hatch has been housed separately. Keep the first 75 per cent of the pullets that come into production and sell the other one-fourth. By following this practice, few nonproducers .will be carried through the winter on high-priced feed ( at the expense of the birds that are paying their way.* Nonproducefs are’ always a liability.
B>K, JOHN—XT SNOWY i CLOTHESI 1 DID WAS 3AK THEM” No wonder Mrs. White threw away her washboard “TXTHEN I think of how I used to » VV scrub! Now I just make a tub of thick Rinso suds —soak —and rinse! That’s all. No washboard. No” boiler. It’s easy the Rinso way, and clothes come much whiter. "Rinso saves the clothes and sparek my hands. It s a real economical soap, I use it for dishes, too.” Great in washers Cups or cup, R inso gives twice as much suds as lightweight, puffed-up soaps —it’s so compact Rich, lasting suds, even in the hardest water. And it’s all you need—no -bar soaps, chips, powders, softeners. The makers of 38 leading washers recommend Rinso. You can trust your finestcottons and linens to its creamy // iJFA4 J suds. Get the BIG package gßSffPfEQjg KM today. MILLIONS USE RINSO ■Ph JI Pn I Op Tan«f B Hotel L if in the H-'orld | Forty-Sit The New Morrison when completed, will sjfori€S ritgn contain 3400 rooms Chicago’s MORRISON HOTEL Corner Madison and Clan Streets Closest in the city to offices, theatres, stores and railroad stations _ 1944 Rooms $ 2-un/f I Ail outside with bsth, y 1 I running ice water, bed- r I head lamp and Servidor. I 14 A housekeeper on each I . floor. All guests enjoy I S- garage privileges. e ||| .£ Great Water Project Texans contemplate spending $100,000,000 to make the mighty Brazos river work for them. It is a big task they have in mind for the ' river and its 8 tributaries.. They would irrigate thousands of acres of f ■ land, turn the wheels of many industries, develop electric power, supply drinking water and eVen use it for recreation. The Brazos river conservation and reclamation- district created to direct the project will seek the financial aid pf state and federal governments. — Indianapolis News. " The Tryst " "We'll meet at eight .o’clock as usual, Hans, and when one of us is late —” "I will vfcait, darling:” . , -1 -l Son Was Pale,, Thin—No Appetite
Clinton,lll. —“Some time ago my son was taken sick. The doctor said he had ‘typhbid fever.’ After several weeks of suffering! he was able to be up, but was .pale and thin, and had no appejite. He was .getting worse every day. I read of Dr. i’ierce's Golden
L Orlie M. Jofmson
Medical Discovery and purchased a bottle of it, and by the tirjie my son had taken half of that bottle he was fully restored do health, and is now a strong man. Every chance I get I praise Dr. Pierce’s medicines.” —Mrs. Wiley Jolbjson, 924 N. George St Sold by dealers. Fluid or tablets. Send Dr. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y., 10c fora trial of Discovery Tablets. FOR SALE—One of the best 300 acre farms in Des Moines county. Will divide Into smaller acreage. ,O. M. BURRUS. RTE 4. BURLINGTON. IOWA. JUpi I MPUS?I 9in your pale. Sallow checks. Truly 9 wonderful results follow thorough 29 9 colon cleansing. Take NR— jMfc. 9 NATURE'S REMEDY-to regulate 9 and strengthen your eliminative or3 9 gaM. Watch the transformation. ■* 3 — Try NR instead of mere laxatives. J MM, safe, parely vegetable—aldrnggnb.snlyZSe £ FEEL LIKE A MILLION. TAKE A MOTHER’S PROBLEM Is, how to treat her child who is peevish and fretty, yet not seriously sick. Many
Mothers say’ they always keep a package of Mother Gray’s Sweet Powders on hand for’ use when needed. They break tip colds, relieve feverishness, worms, constipation, headache, teething disorders and stomach troubles, and act as a tonic to the whole system. Equally good for older people. Sold by Drug- ' gists everywhere- ' .
UUU AZvVlrJf J*'*’ . •> TBADE MARK DON’T ACCEPT ( ANY SUBSTITUTE
Trial' package rent Free. Address, * THE MOTHER CO , RorwN.nf. - W. N. U., CHICAGO, NO. 10-1930.
