Walkerton Independent, Volume 58, Number 26, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 23 November 1933 — Page 2

Walkerton Independent — Published Every Thursday by THB J NDE PENDENT-N EWS CO. Publishers ot the WALKERTON INDEPENDENT NORTH LIBERTY NEWS LAKEVILI E STANDARD THE ST. JOSEPH COUNTY WEEKLIES Clem DeCoudres. Business Manager Charles M. Finch. Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Tear $1.50 B'.x Months 90 Three Months 40 TERMS IN ADVANCE Entered at the post office at Walkerton. Ind., as second-class matter. FARMERS MOVE TO BREAK THE STRIKE Help lowa Deputies to Keep Highways Open. Des Moines.—Farm products moved to midwestern markets over highways patroled by deputy sheriffs and farmer members of the Law and Order league, an anti-farm strike organization. Cold weather, increased activity of deputies and growing opposition among nonstriking farmers drove thbusands of pickets from highways. Opponents of the strike claimed its backbone had been broken. , More than 100 members of the Law and Order league of Sioux City, lowa, escorted trucks loaded with live stock and produce to market. No opposition was offered by the few remaining pickets. At Appleton, Wis., near where one picket was shot to death and several others injured in the strike, 1,500 farmers booed and jeered Walter M. Singler, a strike leader who sought to enlist their support. Sheriff Joe Perry of Council Bluffs, lowa, disarmed a group of pickets carrying ax handles and announced the strike had been broken in that vicinity. The Missouri Farm association was placed on record at a Macon meeting as opposed to continuation of the strike. Leaders of the farm rebellion denied strikers were responsible for the burning of two railroad bridges in lowa. Railroad companies began rebuilding the bridges and, after appealing to Gov. Clyde Herring for protection, placed guards along rights of way. In scattered localities strikers car- . ried on their picketing with undiminished vigor. In Dane county, Wisconsin, they set up stoves in tents and announced the highway blockade would continue “for duration of the war.’’ Ten army rifles were stolen in Winnebago county, Wisconsin. Washington.—Better times for the farmer were predicted for the next crop year in an annual “agricultural outlook,’’ prepared and made public by the bureau of agricultural economics assisted by extension economists and specialists from the agricultural adjustment administration. The better times will depend, the re-’ port declared, upon holding farm production to its approximate 1933 level and upon an increased demand coming byway of a pickup in industries using nonagricultural commodities. The farmer, it was asserted, need not look abroad for assistance, but is to win in the domestic market whatever betterment comes his way. WASHINGTON BRiEFS President Roosevelt signed the nine-ty-ninth NRA code, an agreement covering the asphalt shingle and roofing industry. Postmaster General James A. Farley will work tne temporary employees of his department during the Christmas rush on the basis of a 60-hour week. Milton Handler, professor of law at Columbia university and former secretary to Supreme Court Justice Stone, has been chosen counsel for the national labor board of the NRA. । Charges that officials of the national recovery administration showed partiality toward large Hollywood producing companies in the formation of a code for the motion picture industry were denied by Gen. Hugh S. John- k son, the recovery chief. Brig. Gen. Joseph C. Castner, commander of the Third regular army division at Fort Lewis, Washington, was ordered by the War department to pro- ' ceed home and await retirement for I age. He will reach the statutory age limit of sixty-four years on November 18. Gets Life Imprisonment for Part in Kidnaping Kansas City, Mo.—George McGee, twenty-one, was sentenced to life imprisonment by a jury which convicted him of participating in the $30,000 ransom kidnaping of Miss Mary McElroy, daughter of the city manager. The state had demanded the death penalty, a verdict voted against Me- j Gee's brother, Walter, at a previous trial. George McGee denied he was Involved, but he was identified by Miss McElroy and her father, H. F. McEl roy, who paid the ransom. $60,000 Heir Found After 3-Year Search Las Vegas, Nev. —After a three- ' year search. Lewis Sweet, an automobile mechanic, has been located here and advised that his mother died June i 29. 1930, at Valley Falls. R. 1., leaving him sole heir to her SOO,OOO estate. Plane Crash Kills Seven Shrewsbury, N. J.—A New Jersey National Guard airplane, piloted by LiueL George R. Johnson, South American explorer and noted aerial photographer, crashed into a bungalow in Beach street and exploded, trapping in the flames Johnson, his passenger, and five occupants of the bungalow. Hardware President Dies St. Louis.—Richard Waldron Shapleigh, president of the Shapleigh Hardware company, died of a blood clot. He was seventy-four.

National Topics Interpreted by William Bruckart

Washington. — William Pitt, the younger, observed during his premiership of England that Self-Control consequences flowing for Industry fro,n the ncts of statesmen were the things that mattered anil the truth of his thought has had no better demonstration than in the turn of events which has followed adoption of the principle of the national recovery act. The acts of the statesmen, in this in- | stance, conducted the national government directly into the middle of private business, enterprise and initiative under the guise of partnership with the government. The consequence flowing from those acts is the slow, but certain, development of a new type of permanent self-control for industry. I am referring, of course, to the proposition that has come at once to be known as the “Swope Plan,’’ because it was Gerard Swope, head of the giant General Electric company. ■ who fathered the plan if, Indeed, he did not work out the details, and gave it the impetus to carry on. The Swope name is synonomous with big business and industrial leadership, hence the prestige that the Swope plan had from the start. But, whether business likes it or not. and whether the bulk of the people at this time agree with the principle, I have found few persons in a position I to survey the future who fail to see anything in the picture other than continuation of some of the NRA principles, and Mr. Swope’s proposal perpetuates them. Mr. Swope appears to recognize that there are numerous evils in the NRA system now obtaining and at the same time to recognize the necessity for a thorough housecleaning by business itself. In other words, the Swope plan contemplates providing business with authority to do the things NRA was organized to do but, in the nature of things, cannot possibly do. Since there are too many details to permit of a discussion of all of them in these columns, permit me to summarize the Swope plan as a logical set- , up for the control of all industry by itself, with a national chamber of commerce at the top. In the administration of that chamber, the federal I government would have a part, and that provides the necessary government supervision. The present system of codes for this and for that, hit and miss, enforced by men and women, who, in some cases, have had no practical experience whatsoever, would be superseded by trade associations for each industry. There would be the necessary regulatory committees in which the industrial folks themselves would be in the majority but in which the government would participate so that it knew what was going on. The primary responsibility, as becomes readily apparent, would be on the business interests and the government would horn in only when human avarice or crookedness upset policies predicated upon sound judgment and far vision. The program, too, would eliminate what observers here have feared constantly. namely, the building up of a gigantic bureaucracy in Washington. That is what is happening under NRA and one cannot be blind to it even while admitting the gains resulting from NRA activities. When Mr. Swope made bis announcement before the advisory and planning commission of the Department of Commerce, he barely hinted at that phase, yet it was plain he was aware of the growing tendency, since it is history how government encroaches further and further unless the people themselves call a halt. * • * Mr. Swope laid his plan before the council and the nation with the admonition that: Favor “If business does Swope Plan not , organize to conI r trol itself, either the state or the federal government will.’’ So the program was born, and it immediately received the blessing of the administration and expressions of good luck from various other sources. It may be, and probably will be, that enmity and petty jealousy will stick out for changes in favor of individual groups, but as far as I have been able to learn the structure has been set up and it is likely to stand as a principle. I mean by that, the chances are industry will choose in the end to accept what it may consider to be the lesser of two evils from its own standpoint; it will take either something built up from the Swope plan that will keep commerce and industry on.a decent plane, or it will have to swallow further encroachments from a governmental bureaucracy. It is to be remembered, that President Roosevelt has insisted that he is not irrevocably committed to any of the plans for recovery which he has sponsored. He has described them generally, as he said of the agricultural adjustment program, that it is experimental, a move by trial and error to determine what will end the depression. Consequently, It seems fair to assume that Mr. Roosevelt will support the Swope plan quite some time yet, even if it goes awry in the end. * ♦ * The President at last has launched out on a course of aid for the so-called heavy industries. He has determined on this program after long delay, and only after lie had been urged to do so by dozens of men who ought to have some understanding of the country’s economic problems. The public works administration loan to the railroads was the first step ami others have followed. It is a move designed to make capital available for expenditure by those heavy industries in the belief that those expenditures will encourage others in kindred industries to lay out some of their own resources, if they have any. so the normal cycle of money flow will be restored.

There can be no doubt, of course, • that every time expenditures are made for construction, re- : More Jobs, pair or remodeling, More Money jobs have been ,nade * available, ami when - jobs are made available there is more spending by those given work. > It is obvious that each of these add ‘ something to the country's buying pow- . er, but the question is, how much? That seems to be the weakness of the plan to help heavy industries, as it was the weakness of other plans in- “ volving expenditures. While the $135,i 000,000 that was loaned to about tweni ty railroads, for example, will start some folks to work, it will require a i good many more millions to carry that theory through to successful com- ■ pletion, according to the best judgment I have been able to obtain. But that fact is not one in criticism. It is pointed out merely in emphasis of another fact, namely, that this recovery is and must of necessity be a slow process. It will be so slow that most folks will lose patience and confidence In the future. That will help never one bit. Let us take the railroad loan up for consideration, again. It is small, comparatively speaking, but repeating that which was said above: it will result in jobs. The heavy industries after all are the big employers of labor, and If they are able to increase their pay rolls in however small amounts, there will be just that much momentum given to the wheel which must turn continuously if there is to be prosperity throughout the world. So as the other Industrial and agricultural recovery programs move forward with their varying degrees of success, the attempt to get those heavy Industries on their feet surely must be considered as a unit of the general plan and one that is highly important In the structure of eftnomic life. One of my correspondents wrote me an inquiry as to why the heavy industries had to borrow from the government when the banks are loaded down with money that is Idle. The answer simply is because there is ami has been lack of confidence among the bankers. The thing that is disturbing them is the uncertainty about the currency. They cannot tell, for instance, whether Mr. Roosevelt is going to use any of the inflationary lowers that he possesses. If he said he did not contemplate using them, my inforination is that a goodly number of bankers would be willing to make loans. But he has not said yet that he will not use those powers. And I want to say this in justification of the position the bankers have taken: they are trustees of their depositors' money and If they make loans, they have to feel reasonably sure they can get it back. With the uncertainty about the currency, they cannot be sure whether. If they loan dollars as they now are, they will get back a fifty-cent dollar or a [Hire greenback without anything to back it up. I hear a great deal of opinion along this line and I believe it is growing. • • • The first payments to farmers under the wheat acreage reduction program have been made. The Farmers Get first one was made First Pay to a farmer !n lowa from which state Secretary Wallace of the Department of Agriculture comes. I was told at the department that it just happened the first payment went out there. All details of the contract had been arranged and so the check went forward. It so happened, however, that lowa was one of the trouble spots in the farmers' strike, and the quick action to get money out there might naturally have been taken in hope of providing some of those farmers with a reason to quit the strike. It is the expectation of the Department of Agriculture that the wheat program will result in distribution of around $102,000,000 to the farmers. The acreage reduction signed up will take about “.sOO.OOO acres out of production next year, and the payments now being made represent about 70 per cent of what each farmer will receive. The remainder will be paid next spring when the farmers’ contracts will have been fully executed in the sense that the acre concerned has not been planted either this fall or next spring. ♦ ♦ ♦ Despite their “wet” leanings. Postmaster General Farley and Attorney General Cummings have had to decree that liquor advertisements in newspapers and magazines may not go into “dry” states. They have ruled that it Is proper for a newspaper or a magazine. carrying a liquor advertisement, to circulate in a state where prohibition is not operative under state laws, but otherwise the advertisement must not be circulated. I do not imagine it was a pleasant thing,for “Big Jim” Farley to do, because it was he who fought harder for repeal than any other high Democratic leader. And possibly the action was made more distasteful to Mr. Farley because it was another Democrat, | “Jim” Reed, of Missouri, who had | sponsored the law that barred liquor | advertising from the mails, when he ' was a member of the senate. Senator I Reed, always a wet, had put forward : the amendment barring advertisements j of liquor for the purpose of “seeing how far the drys will go.” They went, and Senator Reed had to vote for a provision of law that he knew was absurd. I have made numerous inquiries lately ami I can find no logical reason for barring the advertising, except that it is in the law. It does not occur to me that anyone will be made more thirsty by reading an advertisement that liquor can be ordered and will be delivered "if and when” repeal comes. ©. 1933, Western Newspaper Union.

IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL SUNDAY f chool Lesson (By KEV f u rIIZWAIEK u D„ Member of Faculty. Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.) ©. 1933 Western Newspaper Union. Lesson for November 26 j PAUL IN CORINTH LESSON I’EXT—Acta 18:1-17; I Cor. l:l-2:8 ' GOLDEN TEXT—Eor 1 .determined not to Know anything among you, , save Jesus Christ, and him crucified. I Cor. 2:2. PRIMARY TOPlC—God’s Care at Night. JUNIOR TOPIC— Paul Gets New , Courage. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC—How to Work With Others. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOP- j IC—Unify In Christ i I The establishment of the church at j Corinth is an example of missionary I endeavor for all ages. The method । j employed and the message delivered ; | which resulted in success then will re- I suit in success now I. The True Missionary Method (Acts 18:1-3). Paul came to Corinth a stranger In a strange city. His method of gaining a foothold was, L Finding a home (v. 2). This he found with Aquila and Priscilla who had recently been expelled fnnn Rome. Being of the same nationality, there was a natural affinity with them. 2. Toiling for dally bread (v. 3). Paul was of the same craft as his host. Every Jewish child was taught some trade by means of which he could gain his livelihood, should occasion require. Missionaries should not be above honest toil. 11. Preaching in the Synagogue at Corinth (Acts 18:4-8). 1. Compelled to toil for a living (v. 4). Though compelled to toil for a living, he did not lose sight of his main work. He reasoned In the synagogue every sabbath, persuading the Jews and the Greeks. 2. His activity Increased through the coming of Silas and Timothy (v. 5). This was caused by. a. Favorable report from the church at Thqssalonicn. This report put new vigor Into his labors. b. They brought pecuniary gifts from the Macedonian church (Phil. 4:15; H (’or. 11:9). Being now free from the necessity of tolling for a living, he could devote more time and energy to the preaching of the gos- , pel c. Slkis and Timothy became help- | ers to Paul in the work. 3. increased opposition (v. R). Paul’s Increased activity met with Increasing opposition. This can always be ex- ] pected. 4. Paul announces his purpose to turn to the Gentiles (v. 6). This was necessitated because of the opposition I and blasphemy of the Jews. | 5. Paul in the house of Justus (w. 7,8). He remained sufficiently near those whose hearts God had touched that they could easily find him. His success here was such that ('rlspus, the chief ruler of the synagogue, was converted. Paul departed from his usual custom and baptized Crispus. 111. Paul’s Vision (Acts 18:9-11). This vision was for the purpose of giving encouragement to Paul nt this time. His experiences In Europe were most trying. 1. "Re not afraid” (v. 9). The one who Is doing the will of the Lord need not be afraid. 2. “Speak, and hold not thy peace” (v. 9). The one who has heard the voice of God cannot refrain from speaking. , 3. ”1 am with thee” (v. 10). All who faithfully carry out the divine commission can be assured f the di- ) vine presence. 4. “No man shall sei on tbee to hurt thee” (v. 10). No harm can come to the Lord’s servant until his work is done. 5. “1 have much people in this city” . (v. 10). The one who goes forth with I the divine message can be assured that ■ his ministry cannot fail. The one who | goes forth in the name of the Lord, j preaching the gospel, shall have fruit ! for his service. IV. Party Spirit in the Corinthian Church (I (’or 1:10-18). In this church rival factions were contending against each other. Some were for Paul, some for Apollos, some ■ for Peter, and some for Christ. The ! cause of this threatened division was failure to see the true headship of the church. Christ Is the one and only Head, and the members composing his body cannot he divided. Membership and interest all center in Christ. By one Spirit all were baptized into the one body (I Cor 12:13). Sectarianism I is an evil to he deplored. The factious I spirit in the church mars its testimony i i and retards its growth. Those who ' understand the oneness in Christ will be joined together in the same mind and judgment. V. The One Supreme Message of the True Preacher (1 Cor. 2:1-8). It is Jesus Christ and him crucified. On the basis of intelligent assent to logical proposition, Christian unity is impossible. Prejudice and human limitations prevent men from seeing* eye to eye. Chrislian unity is possible only as the members of his body grow up [ into Christ. Unashamed A young convert tried to preach in I the open air. He could not preach • very well, but he did the best he could, i Someone interrupted him, and said: ' ‘Young man. you cannot preach; you i ought to be ashamed of yourself!” i Said the young man : “So 1 am, but 1 i am not ashamed of my Lord.” That is right. Do not he ashamed of him who bought us with his own blood. Beauty in Work If one puts his whole soul into hi), work and looks for its hidden values. ’ he may find it invested with a beauty ' and a delight that were quite unsus- 1 pected. 1 1 Find Charm of Work The most undesirable and unattractive work will develop charm If one 1 puts his whole heart into it and en- 1 deavors to do it better than it has 1 been done before.

BEAU TY TALKS By MARJORIE DUNCAN THE HOME FACIAL IT AXING arranged your beauty ar- * tides and adjusted your head band, you are ready for the first step in your home treatment. Pour a little skin tonic in one of the small glass bowls. Moisten one of the small pads in the skin tonic and add the cleansing cream to the pad. Start cleansing with' sweeping upward movements on the neck, up and around the neck, then on the face—three upward motions on either side of the face. Then around the chin, around the mouth, down on the nose and across the forehead. Always be sure to use an upward motion. Api>lying the cleansing cream with a moistened pad of cotton is the best i method and really cleanses the skin । thoroughly, not only removes surface dust, but penetrates the pores. Having applied the cream all over [ neck and face, remove it with cleansing tissues. They are soft and silky and do not stretch the skin—and are economical to use in the long run because they save your towels and laundry bills. Remove the cream just as you applied it—with upward sweep- j ing movements. Now, with the face really clean we ; go to the second step, which is: Saturate the large patter in the Iced I skin tonic. Start patting the neck, using a quick, staccato movement —a quick, slapping movement to whip up the circulation. Now up on the face, pat at the corners of the mouth, then across the mouth, then under the chin, then the other side of the sac patting briskly until your skin tingles. Hold the patter over the ice for a minute then knead under the eye and over the evelids. Ice again. Repeat, i This Is excellent for puffiness under the eyes. By kneading, I mean a gentle pressing and lifting motion, working from the corner of the eyes out to temple both alwive and below the eyes. Our skin needs exercise Just as our body does, and patting with the skin tonic is the wav to exercise it. Not just sponging the skin, but brisk patting for several minute*. This will stimulate the circulation, will help to normalize ’he oil content If the skin is too oily, or remove the flakiness we find In a dry skin. Don't use skin tonic indifferently—use it regularly— ; dally. The skin needs constant study. Notice that It is Inclined to be more dry in the winter and moist, normal or even a little oily in the summer. No’ice how certain preparations affect It. Treat it to the diet that seems to be kind to It. Tiiree things are necessary toward perfect results in caring for the skin: first a definite understanding of your ! own skin, sec -nd the choice of preparations suited to it. and third the per- | sistent use of these preparations in the right way. • • • APPLYING SKIN FOOD ALWAYS after cleansing skin with cleansing cream, spend a minute or two patting with skin tonic. I cannot etuphasize this too strongly. A good skin tonic should tone your i skin, help to keep it clear, glowing, the pores refined. The tonic in Itself ■ is an excellent "pick up" treatment if i you have only a few minutes to spare before an important engagemeat or , after a busy day. Most women need a skin food. Dry [ skin especially. And this type of skin I seems to be on the increase. Unless । your skin Is excessively oily, include j a good, nourishing and preserving skin i food in your home treatment. The ; proper movements for the application • of this cream are important. First movement—Apply the cream i with long, sweeping, upward move- j ment” all over neck and face. Then ! using palm and cushioned parts of the I fingers, knead the neck. Repeat at ' least six times. Remember kneading I is pressing and lifting. Second movement —To keep the con- I tour firm and for the important mus- [ cle in front of the ear—use the cushioned part of the fingers, start under I the chin and lift firmly—under the chin, under the contour (do not stretch | or pull, but press and lift) keep lifting and pressing until you reach in front of the ear. Knead about seven distinct movements. Do the movements slowly and practice in front of the mirror. Third movement —For the important muscles around the mouth and the line from mouth to nose —to prevent drooping and sagging: use three fingers of each hand. Start on chin and lift, lift, lift, using about six movements up from the chin —around the mouth to the side of the nose. Fourth movement —Use palms of hands, grasp chin firmly and hold it, tense slightly, use five movements, lifting each time, lift under the chin, i lift under the contour until you reach i below the ear. Do this movement ev- ; ery night and morning. It will rebuild and firm the contour. Fifth movement —To keep the eyelids full and firm: Place thumbs in i front of ears. Starting in the center j of the forehead, bend the index fingers. ; Now lift the brows, press slightly, lift, f now move fingers outward a little, ; press and lift until you come to temple. Repeat very, very gently under the eyes. ©, Bell Syndicate—WNU Service Presidential Terms If any President was ever a candidate for a third terra, it was Theodore Roosevelt. It depends upon whether or not his filling out of McKinley’s un- , expired term is really to be counted j as a first terra for himself. “T. R.” j at one time declared he considered it ! his first term. In later years his po- I . litical spokesmen held that it should ‘ not count as such. It seems to be mat- । ter of opinion. General Grant aspired to a third term, but his contest for the : nomination was unsuccessful.

Grain to Cows to Get Milk Supply Amount of Feed Depends on Butterfat Test, Advises Dairy Expert. By W. T. Crandall, New York State College of Agriculture.—WNU Service. The amount of grain required by a dairy cow depends to a large extent on the butterfat test of her milk. Where hay and silage are fed liberally, and when cows are not on good pasture, the following rates of grain feeding may be used: With all hays, except those of very high quality, feed daily one pound of grain for each three and a half pounds of milk testing under 4 per cent in butterfat; one pound of grain for each three pounds of milk testing from 4 to 5 per cent; and one pound of grain to two and a half pounds of milk testing 5 per cent and over. If a very high quality of clover or alfalfa Is being fed, less grain may be needed and the recommendation is: one pound of grain to four pounds of niilk testing below 4 per cent; one pound of grain to three and one-half pounds of milk testing 4 to 5 per cent; and one pound of grain to three pounds of milk testing 5 per cent or over. Every grain feeding table or rule must be adjusted to meet the needs of the Individual cow. Variation in the food content of certain hays should also be taken into consideration. A good practical rule Is: Feed such amounts of grain mixtures to producing cows as will maintain daily production during the first seven or eight months of lactation without rapid drops, and at-the same time will keep the cows in at least fair physical condition. Grain should never be fed so heavily that the value of the added milk will not more than pay for the extra grain. Points Out Advantage of “Gassing” Borers Peach growers who “gassed" their trees a year ago with I*. D. B. treatment for the control of peach borers can economize by omitting the treatment this fall, but all those who have not treated their trees for two or more years probably will be ahead by doing so nt this season, according to result* «»f n survey made by S. C. ('’handler, entomologist of the Illinois state natural history survey, in cooperation with the horticultural department of the College of Agriculture. University of Illinois. The peach borer is one of the hazards which has made the annual farm value of Illinois’ peach crop vary from total failure to $4.452.000 during the [Hist 21 years. Every fall growers puzzle over whether or not they should economize by omitting the treatment. Data collected In the survey help answer the question for this year. Thirty orchards In the largest peach area of the state were covered. < »nly 6.2 per cent wormy trees, a light Infestation, was found in ten orchards which had been treated with I’. D. B. at the end of the 1932 season. In contrast. 36.1 per cent of the trees were infested in ten orchards which were treated in 1931, or two years ago. This was almost six times the infestation in orchards that were treated a year ago. Over 54 per cent of the trees were found infested in ten orchards which were last treated in 1930 or earlier, or never treated at all. Give Pigs Iron Young pigs raised out-of-doors eat dirt and thus get iron. Those kept inside for several weeks after birth often suffer from anemia due to lack of Iron. By drenching the pigs with an iron solution once a week for six weeks, starting when they are three or four days old. the difficulty can he overcome. One-third of a teaspoonful of a saturated ferrous sulphate solution is a maximum dose for pigs less than a week old. and a full teaspoonful for a three-weeks-old pig. The solution is made uy dissolving a pound of dried ferrous sulphate in about a quart of hot water. The iron solution can he given the pigs by swabbing it on the sow’s udder. Merely adding it to the feed or water is not sufficient, stated J. I’. Willman of Cornel] university in discussing this problem before the American Society of Animal Production at Chicago recently. Farm Boys Make Money High school vocational agriculture students in 1932 in spite of low price of farm products had financial returns of half a million dollars from their project work carried on at home as part of their agricultural courses. After subtracting all expenses, these projects showed a labor income of nearly a quarter of a million dollars. The average amount earned by these 4.000 boys was $-*2. These figures are presented by the state department of vocational education as indicative of the trends in project work on Ohio farms —Ohio Farmer. Groundhog Locates Lime A groundhog was responsible for the discovery of a rich deposit of lime now being used as a fertilizer on southern sconsin farms, writes an Indianapolis News correspondent. Two hunters found a woodchuck hole dug in limestone, near Elkhorn, XVis., and an investigation resulted in the establishment of an unemployment relief project at the spot. Farmers of Rock and XValworth counties are being supplied with limestone from this unexpected supply. Barley, Bulky Feed Barley is a rather bulky feed, due to the fact that it contains over twice as much crude fiber as corn. As a general rule, says an exchange, northern grown barley is heavier and has a higher feeding value than that grown In Kansas. But irrespective of its origin, barley is seldom equal to corn for fattening hogs. It should be noted, however, that barley is more satisfactory for hogs weighing over 75 pounds than it is for pigs of lighter weight.

SOMETHING LIKE IT It was six-year-old Betty Anne’s first day in school. Grandmother asked the teacher's name. Betty wrinkled her brows and finally said: “Well, grandma, it's something like Miss Live Forever, but that isn’t It; wait and I’ll ask mother.” She ran to the kitchen and rushed back: “Mother says it's Miss Always.” A SIMPLE QUICK WAY TO RELIEVE ACID STOMACH HERE ARE THE SIGNS: ; Nervousness Frequent Headaches J i Neuralgia Feeling of Weakness ! ■ Indigestion Sleeplessness • Loss of Appetite Mouth Acidity ! ; Nausea Sour Stomach Auto-intoxication — : WHAT TO DO FOR ITs ;

TAKE —2 teaspoonfuls Os J Phillips’ Milk of Mag- ; nesia in a glass of water ; every morning when you • get up. Take another • teaspoonful 30 minutes ! after eating. And another ! before you go to bed. ; OR—Take the new ; Phillips’ Milkof Magnesia • Tablets — one tablet for ■ each teaspoonful as di- I retted above.

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If you hax’e Acid Stomach, don’t worry about it. Follow the simple directions given above. This small dosage of Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia acts at once to neutralize the acids I that cause headache, stomach pains , and other distress. Try it. You’ll feel like a new person. But —be careful you get REAL ' milk of magnesia when you buy—genuine PHILLIPS’ Milk of Mag- ■ nesia. See that the name “PHILLIPS’” is on the label. ALSO IN TABLET FORM Each tiny tablet is the equivalent of a teaspoonful of Genuine Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia. MEMBER N.R.A. Phillips JSAiIL of ALagnesia Bronchial Troubles Need Creomulsion Persistent coughs and colds lead to serious trouble. You can stop them now with Creomulsion, an emulsified creosote that is pleasant to take. Creomulsion is a new medical discovery with two-fold action; it soothes and heals the inflamed । membranes and inhibits p^rm growth. Os all known drugs, creosote is recog- . nized by high medical authorities as one । of the greatest healing agencies for per- । sistent coughs and colds and other forms of throat troubles. Creomulsion contains, in addition to creosote, other healing elements which soothe and heal the infected membranes and stop the irritation and inflammation, while the creosote goes on to the stomach, is absorbed into the blood, and attacks the seat of the trouble. O Creomulsion is guaranteed satisfactory in the treatment of persistent coughsand colds, bronchial asthma, bronchitis, and is excellent for building up the system after colds or flu. Your own druggist is authorized to refund your money on the spot if your cough or cold is not relieved by Creomulsion. (adv.) fMY POOR HANDS?) I WISH I KNEW I Wf / SOME WAY TO ( tF ( KEEP THEM OUT ?OF THE DISHPAN' ir"' BtsiljVfS HANOS / f I Ginso’s MARVELOUS l) IT SOAKS GREASE L RIGHT OFF AND I IT'S SO EASY \ ^ON MY HANDS J ~ ' L ia DO THE dishes quickly, easily. Use Rinso! Grease goes like magic. Rinso makes washday easier, too. L soaks out dirt —saves scrubbing. Cup for ' cup, Rinso gives twice as much suds as lightweight, puffed-up soaps — even in hardest water Recommended by makers of 40 washers .Try Rinso now l AMERICA'S BIGGEST-SELLING 7 g PACKAGE SOAP "We do our part*' M|B^HAT KF W ITCHES AND I K TRY RESINOL I ^^ ll ointment - i H KNOW IT WILL MwMK help you xxxwißl "Some time ago eczema brokeout onmylcg. After weeks cfspecial treatment during which time the itching and burning was so severe I could hardly stand it, I was told nothing more could be done for me. A friend of mine urged me to try Resinol Ointment, which I did. I am happy tosayithcalcdmylegcomplctely and I have never had any breaking out since.” —Mrs. E.F.® * Name on request. Pawtucket, R. L FOR FREE TRIAL size package ofßesinol Ointment and Soap with copy of our S’un Treatment booklet, write to Resinol, De u jhmeat W 4, Baltimore, Mar- la: '