The Patton courier. (Patton, Cambria Co., Pa.) 1893-1936, November 08, 1928, Image 7

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    ALDWELL'S
THREE RULES
well watched the results of
1 for 47 years, and believed
itter how eareful people are
alth, diet and exercise, con-
ilk eccur from time to time.
ortance, then, is how to treat.
comes. Dr. Caldwell always
of getting as close to nature
hence his remedy for consti-
mild vegetable compound. It
m the most delicate system
abit forming.
r never did approve of drase
nd purges. He did not believe
vod for human beings to put
stem. Use Syrup Pepsin for
| members of the family in
biliousness, sour and crampy
1 breath, no appetite, head-
0 break up fevers and colds.
today, at any drugstore and
* three rules of health: Keep
1, the feet warm, the bowels
free trial bottle, just write
in,” Dept. BB, Monticello,
Old Sores
s Balsam of Myrrh
thorized to refund your money for the
rst bottle if not suited.
FEELING
IGHT?
Tatest Medical Wonder.
oice weekl New Life,
. Nerves, I shing Sleep
Vonder W r. The mos
ey. Send : bill and see,
Sayre, Pa.
» Last Word
out Girl of Today
and eriticize her; we
phize her, we wish that
er, more dainty and re-
ath we're always stalk-
e her talking, her elothes,
‘alking, her manners and
I, highty-tighty! she is
flighty and all her ways
wignified to see; she joy-
nd chatters, our old-time
tters and laughs at seri-
vith unabated glee!”
nd we her, we
letect her, we study and
vith all and
nd on her
to adore her) she’s just
re her for several thou-
Joston Transcript.
correct
smiles
looking
her
o'er
Vorry
You This Winter?
hrow-off & eold within a
contracting it. Anyone
the aid of a simple com-
omes in tablet form, and
to take or to always
nu. Don’t “dope” your-
catch eold; use Pape’s
nd. Men and women
y on this amazing little
vhoo’s Warning
1g in the region of the
» much to birds called
According to ap article
, these birds always fly
1 when they sense a hur-
2 while the inhabitants
the period of sunshine
veather which always
ore the storm breaks.
lean Sweep
shall I say in Bridget's
an’t say she stole.
y she carried all be-
treal Star,
Ss a dear teacher, but
TARTS
STOMACH
ver sus
st of the
sses of
:n have
ngs in
rders?
y, those
laches,
1 can’t
rstom=
respon=
e needs the soothing,
of a reliable stomach
-RU-NA—known for
as the World’s Greatest
ly. It clears away that
rrrhal condition which
people who never even
l trouble! One bottle of
ll soon tone up your
give you a new joy in
st has this time-honored
vait—buy a bottle and
oday.
ROUP REMEDY
VER OF CHILDREN
. 50 cents at druggists, og
NEWBURGH, N, Ye.
Landman un
EEE
2 THE
| SOCIETY
QUEEN
(© by D. J.
ND I was going to make
such an impression on those
stuck-up easterners!”
Portia covered her face
Walsh.)
«
and wept.
“There's more at stake than your
reputation with Eldridge and his
wife,” rejoined Robert Anthony, with
energy. “You obey the doctor's or-
ders and you'll come out of this with
your health unimpaired. If you don’t
«de as he said and stay in bed another
week—well, you know what may hap-
pen. Got everything you want? I
wish I could get a nurse or a cook or
something. But they're not to be per-
suaded to come out here to this half-
desert because of those enormous
wages they get in Rocky Hill. Well,
I hate to leave you. But I've got to.
I don’t believe they'll get here before
tomorrow at the earliest, his Nibs and
Nibbess. They'll just have to put up
with old Ben’s cooking, I guess. Salt
pork and hominy three times a day’ll
do 'em good!”
Portia let out one small pink ear
to receive his parting salute and then
descended intc the unfathomable
depths of her woe.
She was a good housekeeper. A
graduate in domestic science with hon-
ors, she did not know what she was
doing. Out here eighteen miles from
any town her house had an “air.”
Awnings she had bought with ber
littls pigs’ money. Candles about in
groups after dark—not horrible,
smoky kerosene lamps—cast their
glamorous light over the low, wide
house, open to the loveliness of the
plains night after being closed all day
to the heat and glare of the Texas sun.
It took brains—brains and muscle to
achieve them. And .ow when Bob's
“backer,” the great Eldridge, was com-
i. g for his first visit from Philadelphia
with his society wife—to be compelled
by a silly fall from a kitchen stool to
stay in bed for two weeks was a good
deal for an ambitious husband-adoring
young woman to stand.
She did not hear a car come gently
to a stop beside the east porch.’ Mis-
erable and disappointed, self-pitying
and apathetic she lay and endured
hours. Perhaps she slept.
“Your lunch is served.”
Startled and incredulous Portia lift-
ed her tear-stained face. Was she
dreaming? She tossed brown curls
from over her eyes and stared.
“Lunch?” she questioned stupidly.
“Yes, ma'am,” answered a thick-set
woman with a wide kind face, a fresh
rosy skin and twinkling blue eyes.
Portia Taunton glanced at the tray
in the strong hands of the aproned
figure beside her bed. Croquettes,
golden and crinkly; biscuit, marma-
lade and tea invited. She raised her
eyes to the kind face above this per-
fect lunch. Tears of happiness blind-
ed her.
“Oh, who are you?” she gasped.
“] am Elsie,” the sturdy creature
replied.
“Oh, why—” Portion gulped—*“Bob
have found you at last. I am
so glad. Could you stay a week, do
you suppose? [I have some terribly
stylish and important company due
any minute,” she said tremulous with
hope, incredulity and desire, “and
they have simply got to be impressed,
you see, for Bob's sake. I thought I
must
was going to show—" she was once
more her impulsive, frank self—
#'show that swell eastern Society
queen we're the right kind, that I'm a
help to Bob, you know, and he’s worth
backing—and how—"
“Yes, na’'am,” the guttural voice
sympathized. “Just don’t worry. 1
stay von veek, maybe t'ree veek. 1
cook to blease de so stylish frau! And
now you will blease eat.”
After lunch—she had been subsist-
ing on Old Ben’s and Robert’s culinary
atrocities for a week now—she essayed
a few orders with regard to her be-
loved menage.
“Please have the house entirely
gone over by tomorrow, early, Elsie,”
she said. “I'll make out the menus.
Mr. Taunton will send a truck in to
town for what we need. You do real-
ize, do you sot, Elsie, how important
it is that everything should be per-
fect?”
“But, yes, ma'am.”
Portia had a little bell and she used
it not by any means infrequently. She
told herself she was going to get her
money's worth out of this strapping
strong creature. She'd impress that
society queen in one way or another.
But his Nibs and Nibbess did not
appear the next day. Nor the next
nor the next.
“You'd think,” Portia complained
with frankness to her maid, “You'd
think even rich people could be con-
siderate, wouldn't you? But of course
a frivolous delicate society queen
wouldn't realize what a visit from her
to a poor woman would mean, Did
you close the doors, Elsie, and pull
the awnings away down? Go and pick
up that thread, It's annoyed me long
enough. Elsie, wouldn't you hate to
live the life of a social butterfly?”
“Oh, but, yes ma'am, I say I hate
ft! Me—1 like In
vork!
“And she'll be supercilious and dis-
agreeable or else silly and vain and
helpless. Well—1 wish she'd hurry
and come and get it over with, Did
you polish the silver, Elsie?”
“Yes, ma'am.”
“Elsie?”
“Yes, ma'am.”
“If these people are impressed and
we get this water control plan across
and get awfully rich here in this half-
THE PATTON COURIER
desert will you come and work for us:
I'm going to have ten children, you
know. I am Rooseveltian.”
“I tink 1 like do dat thing, ma'am.
It may be I vork for you den.”
The days went happily by, Elsie !
working, Portia commanding—unsting-
edly. Robert was rarely in the house.
Never had he seemed so husy. When
he came to the invalid’s room: his stay
was brief, his faee flushed, his eye
asparkle.
And then the doctor came and pro-
nounced her well. She was up and
dressed almost before he had mounted
and ridden away. She hurried to the
kitchen. Elsie was making biscuit. Oh,
the house did look perfect, And there
was everything imaginable cooked and
waiting on the pantry shelves,
“Elsie,” she cried breathlessly after
a glance out into the glaring hot day.
“You may go. Right away. There's
Ben with the truck just starting for
town. Hurry.”
Elsie took off her apron, climbed
stolidly up into the truck.
“Well, Elsie,” called Portia, “I'm sure
you know I am very grateful. You are
rather an extravagant cook, but you've
done really well considering every-
thing. Good-by!”
“Good-by.”
Well, that was over. Perhaps
though, she had better count the sil-
ver spoons and the linen napkins.
At about sunset—the spoons and
apkins had answered a unanimous
present at roll-call—she heard the
soft sound of tires on sand, the purr
of a motor. Ah! At last! The Eastern-
ers. She slipped into her prettiest
house dress, ran a comb through her
brown curls and was on the porch
when a huge blue sedan drew up and
stopped. Robert was on the front seat
with a substantial man in a perfect
motoring cap, his “backer,” it was to
be hoped. Robert alighted, followed by
his guest who smilingly and in most
friendly fashion shook Portia’s extend- |
ed hand. She turned eagerly inter-
ested, welcoming eyes upon the sedan,
the door of which Robert was holding
open. Mrs. Paul Eldridge was slow in
descending. Portia advanced with both
hands outstretched. But the smile died |
on her lips, her hand fell and stiffened
at her side.
Elsie!” she groaned and would have
subsided in a heap on the porch floor
but that the silk-clad arms of Mrs.
Paul Eldridge went about her. A hand
patted her shaking shoulders. A kind
voice murmured:
“It was such fun, dear child. Such
fun! But can you ever, ever forgive
me? If you only know how I have
enjoyed it all, how I needed just the
sort of vacation it was! My father
and mother were Kansas pioneers and
I have been homesick for the old life
—for months. I am so grateful to |
you!” |
“Oh, but I was so perfectly horri- |
ble!” moaned Portia.
|
And then 2verybody laughed, Mr. |
and Mrs. Paul Eldridge, Robert—and |
Portia Taunton, the last somewhat |
|
hysterically. And then came the gut- |
tural voice of “Elsie.”
“I like blace for mein man, too, von,
two, t'ree veek, He goodt vorker.” |
Death From Holding
Breath Not Possible
In the brain there is a definite spot
that is. highly sensitive to the amount
of carbon dioxide in the blood. A ecer-
tain amount of this gas is always con- |
tained in the blood and often it trav-
els a leng path, from the great toe,
for instance, before it reaches the |
blood vessels of the lungs to be ex- |
pelled by the breath. |
If this percentage of carbon dioxide |
exceeds a certain limit for exam- |
ple, when one holds his breath and |
therefore has not expelled the gas for
some time, so that it accumulates in |
the blood, there is exerted upon this |
spot in the brain an incredibly strong |
stimulus which is immediately carried |
along the nerves to the muscles that |
control the breath, rapidly setting
them in operation. |
We immediately draw specially deep
breaths in order to restore the carbon |
dioxide content of the blood to the |
proportion permitted by this spot in
the brain, which is called the respira-
tion center.
Since this small but important area
of the brain is infinitely sensitive to |
minute variations of the carbon diox- |
as,
ide content of the blood, we cannot |
voluntarily hold the breath long
enough to cause death.—Illustrierte |
Zeitung, Leipzig.
Out of His Jurisdiction
Nick and his baby brother were
both products of St. Vincent's hos-
pital, while little Dorothy Ann, next
door, was born at the Methodist hos-
pital. One day a little friend was ad-
miring the baby and wishing she had
one. Nick, seeling he had pretty
much of a pull at the hospital, said
he could get one for her, as all he
had to do was ask sister and she
would give him one.
As an afterthought, he said: “What
do you want, a boy or a girl?’ She
replied, “A girl.” He said, “lI sorry,
you haf to gc to the Mefodis.”—In- |
dianapolis News.
No Comparison at All
Mrs. Filmfan—That actor makes
more money than the president of a
railroad.
Her Husband—Sure! But then you
must remember this bird can do stunts
on a moving train that'd make the
president of any road dizzy.
Protect Homing Pigeons
Wisconsin homing pigeon clubs are |
appealing to hunters to exercise as
much care as possible not to wound
or kill valuable homing pigeons, In |
recent homing races a number of |
birds were killed
| value,
WATERPROOF SHOE
FOR WINTER USE
Especially Desirable in the
Case of Active Boys.
(Prepared by the United States Department
of Agriculture.,
Shoes that are to be worn in win-
ter weather, in slush or snow, should be
waterproofed to make them last, and
to protect the feet. This precaution is
especially desirable in the case of
active boys, who so often disdain to
wear rubbers at all, or who find them-
selves in wet, muddy places without
giving much thought to their welfare
or to that of their shoes, Here are
several simple waterproofing formulas
given by the United States Depart-
ment of Agriculture, which believes
that these formulas infringe on no ex-
isting patents or pending applications
for patents, although it assumes no
responsibility in the matter.
Formula 1—8 ounces natural wool
arease, 4 ounces dark petrolatum, 4
ounces paraffin wax.
Formula 2—1 pound petrolatum, 2
ounces beeswax.
Formula 3—S8 ounces petrolatum, 4
ounces paraffin wax, 4 ounces wool
rrease, 2 ounces crude turpentine gum
(gum thus).
Formula
4—12 ounces tallow, 4
nmnces cod oil
Melt together the ingredients of the
selected by
formula warming them
J
Petroleum and Beeswax Will Make a
Shoe Waterproof.
carefully and stirring thoroughly. Ap-
ply the grease when it is warm, but
never hotter than the hand can bear.
Grease thoroughly the edge of the
sole and the welt as this is where
shoes leak most, and completely sat-
urate the sole with grease. This can
be done most conveniently by letting
the shoes stand for about fifteen min-
utes in a shallow pan containing
enough of the melted waterproofing
material to cover the sole entirely. In
summer the quantity of grease used
should not exceed the quantity that
the leather will take up without leav-
ing a greasy surface. An excess does
no harm in winter. Rubber heels
should not be put in the grease be-
cause it softens them,
Surprise Sandwiches
Take marmalade, peanuts,
and cream cheese in equal portions;
mix thoroughly and spread on thin
slices of buttered bread.
orange
COOKING SAVORY
CREAMED CHICKEN
Fowl Culled Out of Regular
Flock May Be Used.
(Prepared by the United States Department
of Agriculture.)
Here's a delicious way of cooking
a chicken that is past its first youth.
Some of the fowls that are culled out
of the poultry flock may appear in
this dish, which is usually accom-
panied by rice or rice patties, or
placed on rounds of tender biscuits.
The bureau of home economics of the
United States Department of Agricul-
ture gives the following ingredients
and directions:
1 chicken, about 1, to 1 cup cream
314 1bs,, or 3 cups 1 cup flour
cooked chicken. 14 chopped green
1 cup chopped cel- pepper
ery and leaves 114 tsp. salt
1 qt. chicken broth 1-16 tsp, curry
1, cup chopped 8 drops tabasco
onion
Place the chicken in a kettle on a
rack and half cover with boiling water.
Cover the kettle tightly and simmer
the chicken until it is tender, adding
one-half teaspoonful of the salt to-
ward the last of the cooling. Allow
the chicken to stand in the broth
overnight in a cold place. Remove the
chicken meat from the bones and cut
it into uniform pieces. Return the
bones to the broth and simmer for a
short while so as to get off any small
pieces of chicken that cling to the
bones. Brown the celery, onion, and
green pepper in four tablespoonfuls of
fat removed from the chicken stock.
Measure the drained broth. For each
cupful of broth add two tablespoonfuls
of flour to the cream, and mix until
smooth. Add this cream and flour mix-
ture to the chicken broth with the sea-
sonings. Stir until thickened and then
add the chicken. Mix until well
blended and serve (over the rice pat-
ties).
Apple Chutney Pleasing
| than dirty eggs and at times an even
|
|
CLEAN EGGS ARE
MOST PROFITABLE
Clean, spotless eggs bring an aver-
age of three cents per dozen more
greater premium {is paid. When feed is
high and eggs plentiful this premium
is oftentimes the margin between the
cost of production and the selling
price. Proper housing of the flock and
careful handling of the eggs are nec-
essary in order to secure clean eggs.
“Shape, size and color of eggs as
well as texture of shell are deter-
mined by breeding and feeding; but, to
have clean eggs, one must have a
clean house and the eggs must be
carefully handled after they are laid,”
says C. F. Parrish, extension poultry-
man at the North Carolina State col-
lege. “The eggs should be gathered
once a day at least and more often
if possible. One soiled egg will soil
all of those in the nest.”
Poultry houses should be of mod-
ern construction with the dropping
| boards placed away from the nests.
These boards should be cleaned every
day as well as the running board in
front of the nests. Good, clean litter
should be provided and this should be
changed as often as is necessary. Hens
living in dirty houses and laying eggs
in dirty nests will soil every egg in
the nest. According to Mr. Parrish,
this automatically cuts one-quarter of
{ a cent from the price received for each
ege.
Mr. Parrish also states that per-
sons handling the eggs should be care-
ful of their hands. Sweaty hands
gather a certain amount of dust which
adheres to the eggs, causing them to
have a mottled, dirty appearance. If
the hens have a clean house and the
eggs are handled carefully, every
Relish With Luncheon | poultry raiser in the state should get
Make some of this delicious relish |
to serve with luncheon dishes during
the winter.
nomics vouches for the combination of
ingredients :
Apple Chutney.
3 lemons
3 gts. chopped ap-
ples 1
2 1bs. sultana
ns
1 qt. brown sugar
1 qt. cider vinegar 1 tsp. paprika
1 qt. dates, stoned 1 tsp. salt
and chopped 2 chili peppers
pt. tarragon vin- 1 onion chopped
egar Garlic
2 small cloves
—
Wash, pare and core the apples.
Chop them with the lemons, as the
acld will help to keep the apples from
turning dark. Remove the seeds from
the chili peppers. Mix all the ingre-
dients. Boil gently until the apples
are soft and stir the mixture occa-
sionally with a fork.
ney while hot and seal.
MAKING STUDY OF MERCHANDISING PLANS
Talking Over the Selection of Canned Goods With Home Demonstration
Agent,
ed States Department
0 iculture.)
The farm woman is not only a pro-
ducey but consumer of many
commodities. While her pantry shelves
may be lined with many delicious jars
of home-canned fruits and vegetables,
glasses of jelly or jam, crocks of
pickies, and other evidences of her
housewifely skill, it is also necessary
for her to buy a certain amount of
comniercially canned This is
especially true in some parts of the
country where the variety in what it
is possible to can at home is extreme-
ly limited.
The farm woman
little opportunity to
among several stores and thus form
her ideas of what constitutes good
Often all her purchases must
be from cne or two merchants in near-
by towns, She may not like the brands
they carry in stock, but unless she is
acquainted to some extent with other
(Prepared by the (
Ag
also a
foods.
sometimes has
“shop around”
brands, she can make no helpful sug-
gestions, but must take what is of-
fered. [It becomes important for her
to know how to buy with discrimina-
tion, how to know quality, and how to
get her money's worth,
Extension agents for farm women in
Illinois bave made food selection and
purchasing a part of the home demon-
stration program. The farm women
in the illustration are having their at-
tention called to such points as the
importance of reading labels carefully,
and the necessity for making compari-
between brands when
are opened. It is
compare the product put up by
ferent companies in respect to
flavor, the color of the fruit, the size,
shape, and number of pieces, and the
kind of sirup it is canned in. One
brand may be better for
and another for a different For
example, sliced peaches are sometimes
for less than peaches in large
sons different
cans
dif-
use.
sold
halves.
various desserts or for
ice cream; the latter would be better
for peaches filled with ice cream or
The bureau of home eco- |
|
|
[
| commodated
ground gin- |
| for
Bottle the chut- |
the added premium for his eggs, he
states.
Henhouse and Roosts
Are Crowded Too Much
The henhouse and roosts which ac-
several hundred small
chicks last spring are not sufficient
the birds which have increased
many times in size within the past
three to four months. Crowding
causes night sweating and the pullets
therefore get chilled when they leave
the house in the early morning in
search of feed. This means congested
SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSIST!
Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for
Colds
Pain
Headache
Neuralgia
Neuritis
Toothache
Lumbago
Rheumatism
DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART
Accept only “Bayer” package
eA contains proven directions.
Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets
Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists.
Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid
Wild Creatures Find
Little Time for Play
There is no five-day week, no eight-
hour day, no Sunday even, in the
wilderness, declares F. W. Schmoe,
Mount Baker National park naturalist.
“If you don’t work you don’t eat,”
is the slogan in the woods. Many birds
fly 30 to 40 miles to collect one meal,
Cougars and lynx travel long distances
over the rough land and in the
dense timber for every kill they make.
A bear spends all day digging roots
or eating berries. He works for every
dessert, and if he takes a day off he
does not eat.
“Some of the wild things, like few
humans, work hard in summer and
store up a surplus of food, then rest
for a season, while a few animals hi-
bernate in winter and do not eat.
Others not in affluent condition and
not given to hibernation work even
hardest in winter, for there is less
food to be found,” added Mr. Schmoe.
Mother and Baby Gain
Health, Strength
and Flesh
“T am so grateful for what Milks
Emulsion has done for me that I am
| writing you this letter.
lungs and air passages which even-
tually develop into colds and roup. |
It would be better to send one-half
market and
remainder
flock to
for the
the
care than to at-
| four months was so weak that
1dequately | to rest on the bed several times while
adequately |
tempt to keep more than one has ac- |
commodations for.
| Dry Poultry House Is
of Great Importance
important.
unfavor-
there is
condi-
poultry house is
Conditions outside may be
able but with dry quarters
little danger. To secure these
tions the floor should be elevated and
that
It is customary to put
A dry
so constructed dampness cannot
arise beneath.
| in coarse gravel or broken stone, then
| of cement
| is allowed to
advisable to |
the |
one purpose |
The former are very nice for |
crushing for |
whipped cream, or for broiled peaches. |
It is wise to know the cost of the
same brand of fruit, also, in different
sizes. It may pay to buy the larger
size, which may hold twice the |
amount in the smaller, although it
costs only once and a half as much.
Part of the demonstration consists
in talks by the store clerks and in the
sampling of various brands.
tions on ways of using canned goods
would also be appropriate in the
demonstration.
Sugges-
{ will be no
on this a layer of cement, then heavy
paper, then a two-inch layer
troweled smooth. If this
become thoroughly dry
roofing
before putting in the chickens there
danger from that source.
Some prefer a board floor, which gives
cood results, but it means a harbor
for vermin.
este se 4% 0 2 se sete ole ose se ode ste de ode Feat ste
Sesferte sere festistesfestesterterfesteerterterterte see fe feats l
Poultry Notes
Fe i% Fe oF s¥e s¥e oe ote s¥e se oe oF o¥e oe se o%e oe % oF 4% oe ae se 2% of
te stergesfesfertesfestofesfesfesfeseleofefeinlole
Pullets develop large, wide and deep
| 145 pounds.
and for
I had
“I had a terrible cough
dressing. In fact, after putting on one
stocking I would have to lie down and
rest before putting the other on. People
thought I had tuberculosis, but they
don’t think so now. I was so weak that
I could not care for my baby, who was
not getting sufficient nourishment to
give him any strength. But after tak
ing your Emulsion for a few months I
regained my health and now I weigh
My baby is one year old
We both
iK=
are
and weighs 30 pounds.
| in perfect health and we thank Milks
Emulsion for it.
“You can publish this letter if you
care to. I shall always praise Milks
Emulsion.” Yours truly, MRS. ED.
ROUSE, Shelbyville, Ind, R. R. No. 9.
drm sts under a guar-
Sold by all
antee to give s sfaction or money
refunded. The Milks Emulsion Co.,
Terre Haute, Ind.—Adyv.
Successful Failures
Many men
business but have failed at everything
They find it difficult to
have been successful in
else, keep
| good workmen because they never let
| them
bodies more readily when fed min- |
erals.
* * LJ i
Trying to get eggs out of a scrub
hen is like trying to get
a cornstalk fiddle.
* * *
day for
the
There is a market every
poultry, but the
co-operative market.
* * .
A cull pullet is simply a pullet that
does not exhibit the characteristics of
best market is
a well-bred and well-developed bird of
her variety and age.
* . Ld
management will
abundance of
Neither
take the
the right sort of feed.
$. wn
blood nor
place of an
birds of different ages
together,
to mistake lack of develop-
Where
running
taken not
ment for lack of size and
more care must be
vigor,
* * *
should
The henhouse floor be dry.
A concrete or board floor is more san-
ite than a dirt floor. Above all
things, old dirt and litter should be
replaced with fresh material.
* * *
Are your cockerels using up valu-
able ground and feed and otherwise
crowding your pullets? Get rid of
them.
music out of |
|
are |
|
Remember that the hens which lay |
the golden eggs are the ones that pro- |
duce them when they bring the high- |
est prices.
- 4% 8
The adult turkey is affected very
little by the gapeworm, but acts as a
carrier of the parasite by infecting
the premises with worm eggs which
are picked up by the chickens.
|
|
|
|
for
are
forget they working
them.—American M zine,
A woman's idea of making a name
for herself is to marry well,
: i ; a
Daughter of Mrs. Catherine Lamuth
Box 72, Mohawk, Michigan
“After my daughter grew
into womanhood she began to
feel rundown and weak and a
friend asked me to get her
your medicine. She took Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound and Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Herb Medicine. Her
nerves are better, her appetite
is good, she is in good spirits
and able to work every day.
We recommend the Vegetable
Compound to other girls and
to their mothers.” —Mzs, Cath-
erine Lamuth,
MEDITERRANEAN Cruise
ss “Transylvania®’ sailing Jan. 30
Clark's 25th eruise, 66 days, including Madeira, |
Canary Islands, Casablanca, Rabat, Capital of |
Morocco, Spain, Algiers, Malta, Athens, Cone |
stantinople, 15 days Palestineand Egypt, Italy, |
Riviera, Cherbourg, (Paris). Includes hotels, 1
guides, motors, etc.
Norway-Mediterranean, June 29, 1929; $600 up
FRANK C, CLARK, Times Bldg., N.Y.
Winter home sites or camp lots. On Dixie
8 Mile of tide water
property.
soil. High and
All $1 down 7
axes for 2 years.
ion. Send for map and price
t to property and camp this
s wanted.
, Dept. W, Hyde Park, Mass,
lots 50x
week.
mediate |
list, Drive
winter, Ag
N. P. DODGE
Agents Wanted.
Christmas Greeting C
Wonderful Assortment 21 Steel
Raised Gold and Silver, with ma
velopes, all different. Season’ reatest barg.,
$1 prep'd. Penn Sales iporium, Pa,
Co.,
BE A RADIO EXPERT
make
$50 to $200 a week. Radios big growth making
many fine jobs. Learn at home in spare time. Big
64-page book of information free. Write National
Radio Institute, Dept. 33, R 4, Washington, D.C.
RESTAURANT, CONFECTIONERY,
cig ys Al an, European plans; doing
profitable ss; Montoursville, Pa.; 19
iccount illness
balance terms.
Y.
roc
Bm Brokers, 1 Ww. 4 St, N
$425.00 PAYS IN FULL
NGALOW and lot in Florida,
NOBLES CORPORATION
N FLORIDA,
For a
NOBL
Salesman With
and mae
Brush Selling Experience
S Liberal and
ission. EF { 5 Ane guar
by Good Housekeeping Institute, State
perience. Donald Brush Co., Camden, N.
A NEEDLE FOR EVERY NEED! Over 140
he dar le
AIKEN,
rom the
le
NORTH
KANSAS CITY,
Revealed Through Handwriting;
t dis 2
S sed for 25 R,
Character
10 domir
Cutright, 1222
Ohio.
Ave.,, Akron,
W. N. U,, PITTSBURGH NO. 45..1928,
A Telltale Evidence
If a person is simple and fine with-
in, his home cannot be anything else,
regardless of its cost; if his 1 Is
to impress the world or to lead it to
believe him someth that he is not,
his house will bear the evidence of
it, subtle evidence, perhaps, but it will
be there.—Woman’s Home Companion,
The Woman Pays
Mildred (icily)—And shill I return
the engagement ring?
Frank—Oh, no, don’t bother; I'l
just have the notice of the next in-
stallment sent to you.—Life,
It’s only the brilliant sayings of the
first baby that go on record.
Bees almost
are not so wise; they
bles.”—Mrs. Eva Wood Howe
invariably sting without reason.
Daughter of Mrs. Eva Wood Howe
1006 South H. Street, Danville, Ill.
“I praise Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound for what
it has done for my fourteen-
year-old daughter as well as for
me: It has helped her growth
and her nerves and she has a
good appetite now and sleeps
well. She has ggne to school
every day ds bait the
medicine. 1 will continue to
give it to her at regular in-
tervals and will recommend it
to other mothers who have
daughters with similar trou-