The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, July 18, 1930, Image 7

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DOROTHY DARNIT
BIGGEST MOUTH
EVER SEEN!
PAPA, THERE'S A BIG
ove
WHAT WAS HE
AN ELEPHANT?
} |
AFRICA
IN THE
NAW! THE KEEPER
SAID HE WAS A
HIP SOME THING
AND HE CAME FROM
AND ON THE LAND
| CAN'T FICURE
OUT WHAT HE
IS
HE LIVES
WATER
HERES A PIE | KIN
SHOW YoU HOW THEY
FEED HM WITH TT
DANGER! oPEN
YOUR MOUTH’
YES, MAVYGE
| CAN-TELL
FARM NOTES
Young pullets are very sensitive and
need regular treatment and careful
handling. Free range on clean soil and
plenty of green feed are essential to
good growth. Avoid disturbing pullets
or moving them to new quarters in
the growing season.
The addition of lime to lead-arsen-
ate spray for apple trees will prevent
arsenical injury when the fruit
washed. If abundant fresh water is not
available for rinsing, injury from
soluble arsenic can be avoided by a
lime water rinse.
Medicated salts are of no value
whatever in protecting livestock
against flies, says the U. S, Bureau of
Etomology. Some of these salts most
of them containing sulphur and com-
mon salt have been on the market
with the claim that they will protect
is
stock from flies.
Pasture is valuable for hogs but for
best results should not be grazed too
closely. Put in any one lot only as
many hogs as can get abundant feed.
Ordinarily an acre will furnish past-
ure for 5 to 15 hogs averaging 100
pounds. It is a good plan to have two
pastures and alternate them; then
they can be grazed fairly close and
will still provide good, succulent feed.
pasture crops that are allowed to ma-
ture do not furnish good feed for hogs.
RELIABILITY
Economy
PERFORMANCE
THE NEW FORD TUDOR SEDAN
»
YOU are buying proved perf ormance
when you buy a Ford. You know it
has been built for many thousands
of miles of satisfactory, economical
service.
Letters from users in every part
of the world show the value of
the sound design of the car, good
materials and accuracy in manu-
facturing. You sense a feeling of
sincere pride in the oft-repeated
phrase — “Let me tell you what my
new Ford did.”
Further tribute to the sturdiness,
reliability and general all-round per-
formance of the new Ford is shown
in the repeated and growing pur-
chases by government
police departments, and by large
industrial companies which keep
careful day-by-day cost
you want or need in a motor car at
NEW LOW
Roadster . . .
Phaeton let xe
Tudor Sedan .
Coupe vv &
Sport Coupe . .
De Luxe Coupe .
Three-window Fordor Sedan « o o
. Convertible Cabriolet . « « « o o
De Luxe Phaeton
De Luxe Sedan .
Town Sedan . .
bureaus, by
records. In
most cases, the new Ford has been
chosen only after exhaustive tests
covering speed and power, safety,
comfort, ease of control, oil and gas
FORD MOTOR COMPANY
ASK FOR A
consumption, low yearly deprecia-
tion, and low cost of up-keep.
They have found, as you will find,
that the Ford embodies every feature
an unusually low price.
(All prices f. o. b. Detroit, plus freight and de-
livery. Bumpers and spare tire extra, at low cost.)
Universal Credit Company plan of time pay-
ments offers another Ford economy.
“
NOT very far from wherever you are is a
Ford dealer who will be glad to give you
a demonstration ride in the new Ford.
FORD PRICES
$435
440
495
495
525
545
600
625
625
640
660
° ° ° ° ° ° ®
. ° ° ° ° ° °
° ° ° ° ® ° °
DEMONSTRATION
REDHEADS
The impression that redheaded
people are brighter than the general
run is widespread. A New York res-
taurant lately dismissed all of its old
staff of waitresses and now employs
. only redheaded girls, 55 in all. The
management reports that the service
had been greatly improved. Another
New Yorker, a manufacturer of
specialties, for years has employed
only redhaired men and girls, several
hundred of them.
Red hair is said by scientists to in-
dicate a strain of Scandinavian blood.
The Scandinavians have been rovers
for thousands of years, and have left
their strain in the blood of the people
of many lands. 1 am inclined to agree
with those who maintain that red hair
indicates a quick intelligence and a
high degree of nervous energy.
GAMBLING
Two brothers named Dougherty
bought for $1 a ticket in a Canadian
sweepstakes on the Derby horserace.
They won the grand prize of $179,000,
went to Canada and collected the
money. 1f they are ordinary human
beings, their “luck” will probably ruin
them. If they have more than the
averaze of horse sense, it may be the
foundation of a stable fortune. :
“Easy come, easy go,” is a rule to
which there are 1ew exceptions. I
have known many successful gamblers,
but only one or two who were able to
keep their money after they had won
it. One family prominent in New York
society owes its foundation to the
old Louisiana Lottery. After “clean-
ing up” in New Orleans the founder
of the family had sense enough to in-
vest his winnings in property which
has steadily increased in value, and
his grandchildren hobnob with the
Astors and the Vanderbilts. But for
every such instance as that, I could
point out a dozen where winning
something for nothing has literally
ruined men who might have amounted
to something if they had to work for
every dollar they got. g
NAMES
The newly-discovered planet will be
named Pluto, following the custom of
iving classical names, such as Mars,
enus, Neptune, Saturn, etc, to the
heavenly bodies. That is a more sen-
sible system than prevails in most parts
of this country in giving names to
towns and places.
A classical-minded official of New
York's early days gave names out of
ancient Greece and Rome to the un-
settled townships, whence we have
such’ cities as Syracuse, Rome, Utica,
Troy, Niobe, Ilion, Ithaca, Carthage,
Pompey and many others whose names
mean nothing whatever in America.
The early settlers lacked imagina-
tion. Otherwise we would not find in
one county in New York the towns of
Chatham, North Chatham, East Chat-
ham, Chatham Centre and Old Chat-
ham. Portland, Oregon, got its name
because the two men who founded the
settlement tossed a ¢oin to see which
Be came from
should name it.
Boston, the othee from Portland,
+
Maine, and the Portland man won.
And St. Petersburg, Florida, got its
name because the man who first settled
there was a Russian.
PIONEERING
More than four-fifths of Alaska is
as yet unexplored and unmapped. A
group of young American engineers
will start soon surveying a highway
through the Alaskan wilderness.
I talked the other night with a young
German nobleman who was about to
start for Peru in an airplane, with
American engineers, to investigate the
practicability of a railroad over the
Andes to open up new land for Ger-
man colonization. The same day I
met an American engineer about to
start for Abyssinia, to build a dam
there.
The world is still full of adventure
for those who have the same sort of
pioneering spirit which actuated the
forefathers of us who live in the
United States today. It will be cen-
turies before the whole world has been
fully explored or even partly settled.
WATERWAYS : :
There is a revival of interest in the
project to connect the Great Lakes
with the sea by a ship canal. Some
interests want to rake it an inter-
national route, using the St. Lawrence
River. Others advocate the taking
over of the Erie Canal, which connects
Buffalo, on Lake Erie, with Albany, on
the Hudson River. Army engineers
have reported that a 25-foot channel or
even a deeper one, all the way from
New York to Buffalo, is entirely
feasible.
The opposition comes mostly from
the railroads. The Erie Canal was built |
before there were any railroads ; other-
wise it never would have been built. It
made New York the dominant seaport
through which commerce to and from
the newly-opened West flowed.
CONSTIPATION
4p. RELIEVED
so o o« QUICKLY
This Purely Vegetable Pill
will move the bowels
: Yiu any pain and
AEE) depressing after ef-
fects. Sick Headaches, Indigestion,
Biliousness and Bad Complexion
quickly relieved. Childrenand Adults
can easily swallow Dr. Carter's tiny,
sugar coated pills. They are free
from calomel and poisonous drugs.
All Druggists 25¢ and 75¢ red pkgs.
CARTERS IZ: PILLS
BOOTH SAYS BEER
WILL MEAN SALOONS
New York.—One of the strongest
opponents of a return of beer and
light wines is Commander Evangeline
Booth of the Salvation Army who
has made it plain that in the experi-
ence of her great organization beer
drunkenness was more of a curse than
any other form of aleoholism.
“How ridiculous it is,” she said, “to
ask for a return of light wines and
beer and say in the same breath that
we do not want a return of the sae
RE as Lah ao
Brighten ¥ our Screens
Get Hilo Screen Enamel today. Paint
the screens now—open window time
is here.
Hilo Screen Enamel—Black or Green
—i1s easy to use, does not fill the mesh
and dries quickly.
Iteprotects screens
against rain that rusts and rots.
Satisfaction
,
or Money Back.
Guaranteed
The Risley-Major Co.
“Hardware for Every Ware”
Phone 60
1 brewed and sold and according to in-
loon. Wherever beer and wine
sold there will be a saloon. Under the
old law 90 per cent of the intoxicating
liquor consumed was wine and beer,
and a beer drunkard is a terrible spee-
tacle.” ;
The more congress studies the pro-
posals to modify prohibition to pere
mit 2.75 per cent beer, the further
away does it get from such modifica-
tion. The recent attempt by Repre-
sentative Dyer of Missouri to interest
President Hoover and his law observ-
ance commission in 2:75 per cent beer
seems to have failed. A public state-
ment by Chairman Wickersham of tha
President’s commission on law enforce-
ment indicated: that the commission
does not believe legalizing 2.75 beer
would solve any prohibition problems.’
Experiences in Canada indicate that
2.75 per cent beer is unpopular and a
beer with a much heavier alcoholic
content is now brewed. In Quebec a
very powerful 9 per cent beer is
vestigators is responsible for a vast
amount of drunkenness, especially
among women. [Bren
It is understood that few memb
of congress who were in public life
before prohibition would vote to re-
establish the brewers in legal busi-
ness. The brewers still hope to modify
prohibition as indicated in the state-
ment made by one to the New York
World, that the brewers would be
willing to pay the government $1,250,
000,000 for the privilege of reopening
their breweries. ;
[First National Bank
DALLAS, PA
* * *
Members American Bankers’
Association
* x 2
DIRECTORS
R. L. Brickel, C. A. Frantz, D. P.
Honevwell, W. B. Jeter, Sterling
Machell, W. R. Neely, Clifford W.
Space, Wm. Bulford, George R.
Wright x
OFFICERS
George R. Wright, President
D. P. Honeywell, 1st Vice-Pres.
C. A. Frantz, 2nd Vice-Pres. i
W. B. Jeter, Cashier
* % ?
ree Per Cent. on Savings
Deposits
No account too small to assure
careful attention
Deposits Payable on Demand
Vault Boxes for Rent
1g
Self-Registering Saving Bank Free