The Syracuse Journal, Volume 24, Number 49, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 31 March 1932 — Page 5

News Review of Current Events the World Over

Tornadoes Kill Hundreds in Southern States —An Insurgent House Killed the Manufacturers’ Sales Tax Provision of the Tax Bill

By EDWARD W. PICKARD

SPRING tornadoes that swept across tiye southern states took a toll of more than three hundred lives and caused property damage that will not be estimated for a long time. Other hundreds of persons were injured and a great many were rendered homeless. Alabama was the worst sufferer, the deaths in that state reaching a total of at least 246. Thirty-five were killed In Georgia, eighteen In Tennessee and two each in South Carolina and Kentucky. As communications were broken down over wide areas the lists may he enlarged later. To add to .the distress a wave of unseasonably cold weather .came, and farmers in the regions hardest hit faded the prospect of a planting season without implements live stock or shelter. The National Guard was called to the relief work in Alabama and tents, cots and blankets Were hurriedly distributed to the sufferers, while welfare agencies collected food and clothing. Gov. It. M Miller formally called on the people of the state to contribute to the relief of those In the storm areas and the Red Cross, of course, was on the Job promptly. In Tuscaloosa and Talladega counties It was found; necessary to establish 1 militia patrols to prevent looting.

A N IN ' s< ' ,i,:KNT house killed the A* saoo.o»*>.<»** genehil manufacturers' sale** tax provisions of the billion dollar tax bill in one of the most spectac-

ular swtsions In years. It marked the revolt of both Democrats and Republicans from party leadership. The sales - tax section was knocked out of the bill by a vote of 223 to 153. Wild cheering by the antisales tax forces greeted the announcement. Having adopted

a _ amendments boosting ,p j* IGuar' 1 Guar ' the individual Income and estate taxes and having restored ‘‘double taxatioti" on companies with plants abroad—all eatlmntedjfo yield around $100,000.000 In revehue in 193 H—the house Immediately took steps to raise the $300.ne.ossary to fill the hole In Vhe) hill caused by killing of the sales . tax. In throwing out the sales tax section, the house under lash of Insurgent Republicans and Democrats, led by Representative IJT (luardla (Hep.V, of New York, and Representative Itoughton (Bern.) of North Carolina, howled over the regular leaders of both parties arid overturned the program of its ways aud means comjailttee. As a result of the action of the house In wrecking the tax bill, congress probably will have to adjourn, over ttie* Republican and' Democratic national conventions in June, returnlng in session to.complete the legislative program, Senator Robinson of Arkansas. Democratic senate leader, said. Majority leader Henry T. Rainey (Bern., Hi ) said after adjournment : “The, house has rejected the Democratic 1)111 anil now is compelled to turn to the Republican bill proposed by the treasury in order to balance the budget. It will be necessary to provide for more thao-S.V)O.onO.OMO of revenue to take the place of the <ales tax.” : j ■, ■ \ f VYOR FRANK iICRPHY. of De- * troit. announced last Thursday las plans to have the city of Detroit stop paying interest on the S[iOQ.OOO.OOO debts owed hy the city. The' announceuient was made following a long telephone conversation with Senator James. Couxens, who was said to have approved the plan. /"SVER on the senate side there had grown a group known as the “ten per centers” who. under the leadership of McKellar of -Tennessee, undertook to do things In the way of government economy. This group Is already so large that It dominates the senate and on Tuesday that body by a vote of ,Y) to 29 sent hack to the committee pn •ppropriatlons the $124,090,000 state. Justice, labor and commerce appropriation bill for a mandatory cut of 10 per cent. Chairman Jones of the committee, who opposed | the move, said he would take this as a mandate to make almllar cuts in all the supply bills. Senator McKellar thought it would result In a saving of at least S2S.ooo.nno to the government. Appropriations for Interest on the public debt or payments to war veterans, which together amounts to more than 51.000.000.000. alone are to be exempted. During the debate Senator Blaine of Wisconsin offered an amendment to strike out the entire SI 1.000.000 included In the bill for prohibition enforcement. “It ts ridiculous,” said be, “to take money from the poor to a aalea tax and hand It over to prohibition spies, nefarious creatures wbo go about trying to see that some one does not take a drink.” His amendment was voted down without a roll calL pOES of prohibition In tha senate » ace following the example set by the weta in the bouse and paving the way to obtain a record vote, and tbe dry senators say they can have It On behalf of the wets Senator Tydlngs of Maryland offered a motion to discharge the Judiciary committee from farther consideration of resolutions for repeal or amendment of the Eighteenth amendment, and In support of this he presented a petition signed hy tweoty-fbor members. Wishing to give others a chance to sign, Mr. Tydlngs

said he would not press his motion until March 31. Under the senate rule# the petition is unnecessary. Senator Watson of Indiana, the Republican leader, sighed It with the understanding that this did not commit him to a wet position. The other signers were twelve Republicans and eleven Democrats. Representative royal c. Johnson of South Dakota, a Republican who used to be a dry, went to the White House the other day to discuss legislative matters with President Hoover, and in, ;»

the course of their conversation he told the Chief Executive he believed the people had a right to another vote on the prohibition question. Leaving the conference. Mr. Johnson said to the correspondents that less than 25 per cent of the voters of the country had had an oppor-

tunity to register their views on the national wet and dry question. He said that census bureau officials had fold him that 20,00(1.000 Americans had reached voting age-since the Eighteenth amendment was adopted; “In addition.” Mr Johnson said, ''there the World 'j.'tr who did -not have a chance l<r—vote -on prohibition,' The women never have had an opportunity to express their views through the hal lot. This Is a democracy and the people of this country are entitled to a referendum on prohibition," The Johnson expression of opinion came at a time when renewed pressure Is being brought on the White House by wet Republican leaders to Influence President Hoover to agree to the Insertion of a wet plank in the Republican platform. HOPE for the safe return of Colonel Lindberghs kidnaped baby revived with' the entry Into the case >f B. Wallace Caldwell of Chicago, a real estate man and member of the board of education. He made several hasty trips to Hopewell to confer with the colonel and. while refusing to mgke public his plans, told the press: ”1 possessed such information as 1 believed would be of value, and I turned It over to fi-e family. The situation Is extremely critical and 1 desire to give every possible assistance." . Mr. Caldwell was believed to be acting for the “'Secret Six." anti-crime group of Chicago, but this he would not admit. He Is a wealthy man and Is Interested in crime solution in an amateur way. and was thought to have-obtained his Informataon concerning the Lindbergh case by chance. The circumstance* led to the belief that developments in the matter might be expected In Chicago.

J\V DFLANTY. hivh commissioner • for the Irish Free State in London, notified J. H. Thomas, British secretary for the dominions, that President Eamon de Va-

lera Intends to abo|- • tah the oath of aliegi-. a nee to King George, which la taken by members of the Irish parliament, believing the Irish people madw this mandatory by their vote at the recent election. Mr. Thomas told parliament he had “grave information" from the Free State, hut did not present the

, President de Valera

Niaulsjpalace and cooferred witb the king for forty minutes and then joined the cabinet which took up the matter. Ms. Thomas then returned to the house of commons and announced that the government was determined that the Free State should not abolish the oath of allegiance, and had sent word to Dublin making the British standpoint “clear beyond the possibility of a doubt.” He said the same stand was taken regarding the land annuities. . President De Valera had declared he would also abolish the laud annuities, w hich amount to about 510.150.0Ut) and on which Ireland now owes the British government 4380.000,000. These annuities consist of money advanced by the British government to enable Irish farmers to buy holdings from landlords on a 60 year purchase scheme. Further trouble for Great Britain came from India where the All-India Moslem conference, representing 70.000.000 Mohammedans, decided to boycott the round table conference on Indian Independence because the demands of the Moslems have hot been conceded. The reeolutlon aai<d that If the British failed to settle ffie communal problem before the end of June the executive board of the Moslem conference will laubcb g program of “direct action.” A DOLF HITLER wasn’t being given much chance in big attempt to win the German Presidency from Paul von Hlndenhnrg. Ha was refused the privilege of broadcasting bis speeches, and then thirty Nasi newspapers and periodicals wera prohibited from publishing because. It was alleged, they were endangering the republic by their attacks on the government. They had printed Hitler’s proclamation denouncing the raids made by the Prussian police on 100 Naxi offices. Political feeling In Germany wak running high and the coarse taken by the government was not winning It any more friends.

PEACE prospects io the Orient grew brighter during the week, though there was a chance there would t>* further fighting before an agreement was reached by Japan and China. Parleys were proceeding quite nicely when Gen. Chiang Kuang-nai, representing the Chinese government, walked out of the conference insulted because the Japanese representative was Gen. Kenklchi Uyeda, his inferior in rank, instead of Gen. Yoshinori Shirakawa. The interruption was believed to be only temporary and the negotiators, including neutral foreign diplomats, continued hopeful. However, it was reported that the Japanese, instead of preparing to withdraw from the Shanghai area, were digging new trenches and erecting new barbed-wire entanglements, and there was complaint of the acts of their scouting planes. For their part the Japanese accused the Chinese of trying to advance into the zone of occupation. and said they were prepared to take strong measures to prevent •this. The revolt in the new Manchurian state was growing daily in strength and there were many fights between Japanese troops and the Chinese whom they call bandits. The latter* are under command of Tsing Hal. war lord of Kirin provlncj|,on the Soviet border who captured the city of Fu Yu.

R. C. Johnson

THAT the power question will be a major issue in the Presidential campaign la the substance of a declaration signed by fifteen senators and twenty-two representatives, and they assert that the "power trust” is trying to influence the selection of candidates. The statement, with the names of the signers, appeared on the frontispiece of a booklet issued by Judson King, directorsof the National Popular Government leagued giving an analysis of the, power stands of Presidential candidates. The signers included Senators Johnson, Norris. Nye. Frazier. Brook hart. Cutting and HoweU. Republicans; Walsh of Montana, Wheeler, McKel-? lar. Costigan, Dill. Gore and l>ong. Democrats, and Shlpstead. FarmerLabor, The analysis of the Presidential candidates. which Was not Included in the section endorsed by the legislators, described President Hoover as a “power trust President"; classed Governor Ritchie of Maryland and Newton D Baker as also on the “power trust" side, termed Alfred E. Smith as on middle around and listed Speaker Garner and Frnnklln D. Roosevelt on the “public Interest" side. IOWA'S Republican convention elected twenty-five Hoover delegates to the national convention and pledged 'the support of the Republicans of th* state to the President--Elsewhere in the Middle West the anlHloover Republicans were more active. In, Illinois they were preparing to put up slates of candidates for delegates who will oppose the candidacy of Mr. Hoover or of any man who Is not In favor of repeal of the Eighteenth amendment and of the reduction of cost of government so as to lower taxes. The leadership of this group, especially In Chicago, however, is not of a character to enhance their chances of succe.«_ ‘

DISPATCHES from Washington said it was learned ther£ that the La Toilettes were planning to enter Senator George W. Norris of Nebraska iu the Wisconsin Republican primaries of April 5. Neither they nor Norris believes for a moment the Nebraskan tan win the nomination, but the La Toilettes seek to have a delegation that will not vote for the President's redomination. This was the strategy they followed in 1928. Senator Wheeler of Montana, after a trip through the wheat belt, predict- j ed that if the Democrats nominate! a progressive the Republicans will , l«*se the Middle and Fax West. All of which Is scoffed at by the admlnia♦ration leaders, though they are daily Increasing their efforts in Mr. Hoover's behalf. , -jf[ Franklin D. Roosevelt won a big victory in the Georgia Presidential preference primaries, defeating by a vote of 10 to 1 Judge G. H. Howard of Atlanta. who ran for Speaker John N. Garner. TWO house committees, those on aj> propriatlons and on ecuoomy. are taking great interest in the movement to close up or curtail the activities of surplus shore properties of the navy. ~ Seven .stations now are under congressional fire. Whether they are closed or placed on a less expensive basis depends largely upon the question of whether the congressional desire for economy is stronger than its desire to cling to its pork barrel stations and yards. The properties under discussion Include: The Boston navy yard, the Charleston navy yard, the Portsmouth <N. H.) navy yard, the naval stations at Key West and New Orleans, th# ammunition depot at Baldwin. L. 1., aud the Newport naval training station. It la estimated that curtailing activities at these stations eventually would result In annual savings amounting to several million dollars. Appropriations for new construction also would be avoided. One plan calls for complete stoppage of sll naval activities at Nsw Orleans and Key West sod drastic curtailment of activities at Charleston. THAT tronbleaotne old qnMtion of American adherence to tbs World court la op again before our senator*.. In a letter to the senate foreign relations committee Secretary of Btatf Stimson said ha believes the revised protocol for American adherence “folly accepts* the senate’s reservation against advisory jurisdiction by the court. When this was read to the committee by Chairman Borah there was a storm of debate, and It was derided to ask Mr. Stimson to appear for questioning. Senator Johnson of California. who is one of the hottest opponents of the World court, said Mr. Stimson’s statement was at variance with what he has said heretofore. «X 1532. Wtutors Newspaper Cal**.)

i THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL.

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FOOD MAIN THING AS PULLETS GROW Oversupply of Chick Mash Not Wise. The success or failure of the poultry industry depends upon the care and feeding of the pullets during the growing age, according to Prof. R. S. ! Dearstyne, head of the poultry depart- ! ment at North Carolina State college. “Cockerels and pullets should be separated as early as possible,” says Mr. Dearstyne. “This eliminates crowding, which tends to retard development in the young birds, which means a small hen with a correspondingly low egg production.” The feeding problem, while often „ neglected, is of major importance, states Mr. Dearstyne. It- is a mistake to carry the young pullets through the developing period on chick mash, as such feeding tends to bring about an early lay and a molt when eggs are at a premium. The high protein feeds should be decreased when the birds i are ten old so as to bring them ! into lay about the first of October, he j says. ■ When the birds are fourteen weeks | old, a grain ration should he kept before them at all times and Mr. Dear- ! styne recommends that two-thirds : grain and one-third mash be fed until the birds go into the laying house. The consumption of grain may be regulated by keeping grain in the hoppers all the time and by feeding mash several times a day for limited periods. Flock’s Need of Protein Made Scientific Record Scientific research is lust a high- | sounding phrase to most of us. but that agriculture owes much of the advance if has made in the last half een tury to science is ihe plain truth. The laboratory yields its secrets only to its elect, but the results are often so sim--1 pie that a child can profit b. them. ! Examples of this are plentiful on the farm, and now comes an announcement from the research laboratory of a large commercial feed plant of a discovery which will inter?st poultry raisers, especially just now. Througn scores of experiments in feeding many thousands of baby chicks these scientists say they have proven that a proper synchronization of proteins In the feed is necessary to produce best 1 results in pigmentation, feathering, j growth. and viruliry. They refer to i 'the discovery as an Ingredient which no doubt will prove equally successful in all livestock rations.—Southern Agriculturist. Increasing Hatchability Hatciiability of eggs has been definitely increased by proper feeding of Hocks at .Ohio State university. A basal ration containing 30 (>er cent yellow corn when fed to birds in confinement, produced an average hatachability of only H6.it per cent. Skimmilk jdded to this ration showed considerable Improvement; and an outdoor 1 yard with bluegrass increased hatchability to 00.9 per cent. When the percentage of corn in the ration was Increased from 30 to 65. the Addition of soybean hay increased hatchability from 35.7 to 61.7 per cent; alfalfa hay to 50.4 per cent, and ] clover hay to 57.8 per cent. Bluegrass range Jumped it to 64 per cent. — ; Prairie Farmer. — Green Feeds Are Necessary An abundance of green feed is necessary at all times. A lack of It causes ill health and low pr<*duetlon. Greens are a tonic that stimulate the appetite They also aid the digestive tract to function pro[*erly. thereby securing for the 1 Irds a larger use from the feed consumed. Birds should be given all the greens that they can eat. once dally at a regular period. This Is best given at noon or Th the late aftemoonf Sprouted oafs l 4 one of the best forms of greens and should be fed when the sprouts are from one to three Inches in length.—American Fruit Grower. Poultry Facts Turkeys made a good return to Minnesota producers In 1931. • • • It Is difficult to keep a brooder house dry when It Is 'crowded. Moist litter helps spread disease. * * * -The White Leghorn flock on the farm of J. J. Blaagno of Augusta. Kan., averaged 230 eggs for the 1930SI season; the top ben produced 291 eggs. • • • In spells of dark, cloudy weather, cod liver oil In the ration Is a fine substitute for sunshine. • • • The Pekin dock has a creamy white plumage and a long, broad and deep body with a full breast and deep keeL Theirs It an Idea body formation for a market bird. • • • Ltghta In the laying bouse may not Increase the total number of egga laid In a year, but they do shift some of the heavy spring laying to the winter months when prices are better. * * * The year’s supply of egg cases can be purchased to the beat advantage when the heaviest withdrawals are made from cold storage • • • One hundred bens, laying heavily, will transpire three to four gallons of water aa vapor In a day. The nonlayers will give off only half aa much. • • • An outstanding example of what can be done In raising turkeys is the farm of A. Machou of Ontario, Malheur county, Oregon, where 2.000 birds have /been' raised successfully on ten acres.

IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL SUNDAY! chool Lesson ». ■ (By REV. P. R FITZWATER. D. D.. Member of Faculty. Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.) (®. 1932. Western Newspaper Union.)

Lesson for April 3 GOD IN CREATION LESSON TEXT—Genesis 1:1-5. **-«. . GOLDEN TEXT—In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth. PRIMARY TOPIC—In Ithe beginning —God. JUNIOR TOPIC—God the Creator. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC—The Maker of All Things. - YOONG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC—God in Creation. -V— Genesis, the bqpk from which the lessons of the quarter are taken, as its name indicates, is a book of bei ginnings. It contains the only reliable information we have of the origin of the heavens and the earth, plant and animal life, human life, human , institutions, and human relations. Without it we would be absolutely | Ignorant as to the origin of these funj damental things. The first chapter of ! the hook from which our lesson is 1 taken Is one of the most wonderful in the Bible. Indeed, it is the key to S the whole Bible. There is no known contradiction between the Bible and I real science. I. God (v. l). I He was before all tilings. He had | no beginning. Everything but God 'had j a beginning; God, the uncaused cause, is the cause of all things. “Before the mountains were brought forth or ever thou hadst formed the earth and the World, even from everlasting to everlasting. thou art God" (Ps, 90:2.) 11. The Origin of the Universe, (v. 1). It was created by God. All things came Into being by the will and act of a personal God. “Create" means "to I bring into existence that which had j no previous existence." The Hebrew | word translated “create,” according to ; reliable authority, is the strongest word which the Hebrew language has i to express the idea of the origination of substance. This opening sentence is one of tremendous weight. Os it Doctor Murphy says, "It denies Athe- | lain for it assumes the being of God. | It denies Polytheism for.it confesses j the one eternal Creator. It denies | Materialism for It asserts the c,4eation of matter. It denies Pantheism j for it assumes the existence of ;God j before all things and apart from them, j It denies Fatalism for it involves the (freedom Eternal Being” The | first four words of the Bible exhibit I the - one fundamental, all-pervasive principle of philosophy of every right life. In the beginning of the universe —God. In the beginning of nil science and philosophy— God. in the beginning of every life—God. In the,beginning of every year—God. In the beginning of every day—<tod. In the beginning of every business—God. In the beginning of every human relationship—God. In the beginning of every | thought—God. 111. The Degeneration of the Earth j (v. 21). Between verses one and two is a j clearly marked interval jof perhaps long duration. The earth, winch was created by God was later overtaken ini ! a cataclysmic judgment. The Hebrew word for “was” might just as well j have been translated “became.” Instead. therefore, the earth having been created a void or chaos, we see that it | became chaos through'-a judgment. In Isaiah 45:18 (he prophet expressly declares that God did not create the earth awuste, but that he formed it to be wfbabhet). IV. The Regeneration of the Earth , (vv. 3-25). As previously -noted, the second j verse of Genesis’does not'describe the state of the earth when it first came from the Creator's hands, but a changed condition which took place subsequent thereto. The following verses reveal a new effort of creative power by which the earth is again fitted up for the habitation of man. The power active in this reorganization Is the Holy Spirit. On the first day the voiegfof the Almighty was hipird saying. “LR there be light,” and the darkness was dispelled by the light. In the second day the expanse or firmament was made which separates waters above the firmament from thbse below It. The third day dry land appeared clothed with vegetation. The fourth day witnessed the appearance of the llghtholders, the sun, moon, and stars. They were not created j then, but set free from, darkness and | ruin. On the fifth day fish and birds j were created and on the sixth day cattle. creeping things, beasts of the field, and man. V. The Origin of Man (vv. 2G-31). He was created by God. This precludes the foolish idea that man ascended frbm or through the brute. Ke came Into being through a special creative act of God. This image and likeness is nos physical or bodily, but .Intellectual and mofa! (Epb. 4:24; Col. 3:10). God’s likenesS is reflected in man's tbree-fold nature. Man Is spirit, soul, and body (I Thess. 5:23). As there Is a trinity and unity in God so there is a trinity In man. Spirit is that part of man by which be has the power to know God. Soul is self-con-scious life, the seat of man’s emotions and desires. The body is-the seat of the senses, enabling man to have world consciousness. God made man to be a personality capable of having fellowship with himself, and with whom be could share his glory. SELECTED TID BITS The only time to knock is when you are driving a naiL • • • Some preachers' religion goea no farther than their white tie • • • A man’s prayer life Is affected by drought as well as the springs among the hills. • • • The most attractive thing In the world is the conversion of an outstanding sinner.

DAIRY 1 FACTS US

WHEAT IN RATION FOR DAIRY COWS Specialists Advise Its Use, for Good Results. Wheat may be substituted for corn In the dairy ration and good results obtained provided not more than 30 per cent of the ration is supplied by this inexpensive grain, say dairy extension specialists in the department of animal husbandry at the Ohio State university. The following rations, they state, make good combinations to feed with silage and alfalfa if wheat and soybeans are available: Corn and cob meal 300 pounds, wheat 200 pounds, oats 100 pounds, and soybeans 100 : pounds. Their second suggestion is corn and cob meal 400 pounds, ground wheat 300 pounds, oats 200 pounds, : cottonseed meal 100 pounds, and soybeans 100 pounds. Still another ration consists of 300 pounds of corn ; and cob meal. 200 pounds of wheat, \ 100 pounds oats, 100 poupds wheat bran, and 100 pounds cottonseed meal. It is best to vary the amount of protein in the grain ration with the roughage available. With clover and silage; 50 to 100 pounds of high protein feeds such as Cottonseed meal, linseed oil meal, soybean oil meal, gluten, etc., j should be added to each’ of the three • suggested rations. Only those high protein Jfeeds furnishing the most per dollar Invested should he purchased. ! With mixed hay, 100 to 150 pounds of | high protein feed are best added to | the rations, and if timothy hay and I silage are fed it is well to use from I 150 to 250' poundiTTf. high protein ! feeds with the rations. AM grains, the specialists believe, ' should be ground coarsely or finely j. cracked. Fine grinding Is neither neci ess ary nor desirable. Grass in Early Spring Not Sufficient for Cow • “How many Wisconsin cow testing I association members have given-the grass a fair start In spring, before | turning their cows out to graze op | Ft?” asks A. J. Cramer, superintendent of the state's testing associations. He points out that the average cow, giving 25 to 30 pounds of milk daily, requires 20 to 25 pounds of dry matter, and since grass in the spring Is about nine-tenths water, a cow would have to gather 200 to 250 pounds of grass | daily, to maintain herself adequately. "Foraging at this rate Is impossible; the dairy cow should be fed supplementary grain, along with early pasturage, if she isn't to be underfed, while the pasture grass' is still immature,” he declares. Cramer recommends sweet clover pasture as one remedy, but even then, some grain should he fed, ,he says, even as little as three pounds daily often greatly increasing the ipilk returns. . If the pasture Is good, he gives as a good grain mix—loo pounds corn meal. 100 pounds ground oats and 100 pounds wheat bran; and if the pasture tends to be poor, a mixture of 200 pounds corn meal. 200 pounds ground oats. 100 pounds wheat bran, and 100 pounds oil meal. .. Cows and Cold Weather A subscriber from Nebraska tells us that when cold weather set in his Cows dropped from 25 to >3O pounds of milk a day to 10 to 15 pounds a <t day. He also made some changes in feeding at about the same time cold weather set In. This is quite a drop In milk. Cold weather and changes in feeding are undoubtedly responsible for at least a part of the reduction in milk. Cows that are accustomed to being comfortably housed during the winter* months are not in condition to stand' stormy, cold outside temperature and conditions that are a normal part of winter. One cannot turn feeds into milk efficiently with cold air and Ice water. Cow barns need not be warmer than 45 to 50 degrees Fahrenheit for cows. There is a lot of difference, however; between 45 degrees Fahrenheit and zero temperature. Try it yourself. Don't blame the cow if she objects to too much cold air.—Hoard’s Dairyman. DAIRY NOTES Carelessness in feeding increases milk production costs. • • • Ask your county agent for bulletins and improve your winter evenings learning how to do next season's work more effectively. •• . • Raise heifer calves from only the very best cows, Penn state dairy specialists recommend. “Keep down numbers but improve quality," Is a good resolution for the dairyman. • • • A Wisconsin Dairy Herd Improvement association report states that it takes the profits from three of a dairyman's best producers to pay for having a scrub cow around. •[ • • • Lime Ridge Septime, a pure-bred Holstein owned and bred by Lime Ridge farm at Poughquag. Dutchess county. New York, gave 21,912 pounds of milk and 752 pounds of fat' in her thirteenth year. This record gives her first place in the United States for the year and sixth for all time. • • • At Chadron, Neb.. Lester Helser baa • cow that be baa to milk four times a day, she gives so much milk. He milks at 4 a. m.. 10 a. m., 4 p.m. and 10 p. m. each day. The cow gives 68 pounds of milk each day. •• • * Dairymen who have been testing milk and butterfat production for as long as four years estimate they are making $240 a year more, bn the basis of a ten-cow herd, than they were five years ago, according to a New York farm journal.

CHILD need REGULATING? CASTOR!A WILL DO ITI When your child needs regulating,, remember this: the organs of babi.es and children are delicate. Little bowels must be gently urged—never forced. That’s why Castoria is used by so many doctors and mothers. It Is specially made for children’s ailments; contains no harsh, harmful drugs, no narcotics. You can safely give it to young infants for colie pains. Yet it is an equally effective regulator for older children. The next time your child has a little cold or fever, or a digestive upset, give him the help of Castoria, the children's own remedy. Genuine Castoria always has the name: CASTORIA Japanese A Kite (or quick relief. A Soft, Clear Skin^ gives beaut; add freshness to your complexion. Use this sktu-purifyirg, toilet, bath and shampoo soap daily. Glenn’S h SulphurSoap per H'll’* Pure Sulphur HxtrPve, and Brown, 50c . It Isn’t what a man gives but the way he gives it that shows his true character. t Worms in your child ? zr Quickly/ Picking at nostril*. Gritting the ' teeth. Loss of appetite. These are symptoms of worms. Rid your child’s body of these ruinous parasites that sap health and strength. Give Comstock's Deed Shpt Worm Pellets. Prepared like confections. Children take them without suspecting treatment COMSTOCK’S WORMPELLETS ♦ I?? a Box i ot Druscjsts VMMr Morristown,N.Y. They will be a pretty happy couple soStong as a wife laughs at her jokes. Bedridden with Rheumatism Rubs on oil...gets up right away ■Bs? ■ There’s nothing like A M good old St. Jacobs ■ Oil for relieving the kaches and pains of Neuritis, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Backache, Neuralgia or sore Muscles. Ypu rub it on. With?out burning or blistering it quickly draws out pain and inflammation. Relief comes before you can count 601 Get a small bottle from your druggist. Solromm. Opening for steady worker by old reliable company sc link standardixod product&direot to u->r. Dept. B. American Asbestos Products Co., Cleveland. Ohio. Postal .Clerks Examinations everywhere scon. It Interested la civil service position write Secretary, Box 2223.Washington.D.C. Free EaUrSMMwt With Every Roll of Films seat us to develop and print l only 25c coin). La Crosse Film Service -. La Crosse, Wls. Every man has a grievance and he’ll tell you all about It upon the least provocation. s Constipated Instead ot habit-forming p A er strong, irritating purg eeW Hw take—NATURE’S RLXEDT M |BI #R—tbosafe. dependable, all- M ■V Wk 2'/W - NIGHT SS’.’srsr* The AB-Vtae*Me Laxatioe_ 111 in 111 i'ii'hi Some prejudices are very uafeful — especially among people you can’t reach with reason. NIP CHEST COLDS, QUICK WITH HEAT OF RED PEPPERS Reßeoes Aimost buUmtfy To break up congestion, to restore fie* circulation and atop cheat colda ... to alleviate the circulatory paint and aches of rheumatism, neuritis, lumbago ... Nature baa stored up in red pepper* a marvelous therapeutic beat that penetrates deeply into the slrin without blistering or burning and swiftly brings relief. Now this genuine red peppers’ heat is contained in an ointment. Row lea Red Pepper Rob. As you rub it on you’ll feel better. And in 3 minutes relief comes. Drug stores sell Rowlea Red Pepper Rub. Tiy it. ~W. N. U~ CHICAGO, NO. 13-1932.