_ __ I —gggjgM-—— .-aaa "Do^lmell a smmcircuit, or yoU^/pipe ? ” BUT why smoke a pipe that smells like burning insulation? . . .The poor chap probably never heard of Sir Walter Raleigh s favorite smoking mix ture. He doesn’t know there’s a tohacco so mild and fragrant it gets the O. K. of even the fussiest pipe-sniffer. He doesn’t know that true mildness necdn t sacrifice body, flavor and “kick.” He i doesn’t know he can smoke a pipe all daylong without getting himself or any body else all hot and bothered. In other words, he hasn’t met Sir Walter Raleigh. Some day he will. Let s hope it’s soon. How to Take Care of Your Pipe (Him No. 4) Don’t use a sharp knife to clean out the carbon. You may cut through the cake and chip the wood. A lot of little "wood spots" take away from the sweetness of a pipe. Use a dull knife or reamer. Send fer our free booklet, "How to Take Care of Your Pipe ” Brown & Williamson Tobacco Ccrpon..ion, Louisville, Kentucky, Dept 98. Sir Walter KaleiGh Smoking Icbacco o Cherp Oil From Shale The Swedish navy may be inde pendent of oil importation in tlie fu ture, thanks to recent developments of shale oil deposits on the moun tain of Kinnekulle, in the central province of Vestergothlnnd. By means of a new met hurl invented by Sven V. Bergh, a Swedish engineer, it is now possible to produce in thir ty-four hours between two and three tons of fuel oil out of sixty tons of shale at a price considerably below tire present market price of import ed oil. Hurrah ! “I can't remember tbe words of new song,” said the girl, returning from tbe show. “That makes It easier,” answered her father. “Now nil you've got to do to make home happy is to forget the tune."—Ion don Til-Bits. W/ienlttod Sours Lots of folks who think they have ••indigestion” have only nn acid condition which could be corrected in five or ten minutes. An effec tive anti-acid like Phillips Milk of Magnesia soon restores digestion to normal. Phillips dec: vay with all that sourness and g. right after meals. It prevents tlie distress so apt to occur two hours after eating. What ^ a pleasant preparation to take! And how good it is for the system ! Un like a burning dose of soda—whlct Is but temporary relief at best— Phillips Milk, of Magnesia neutral izes many times its volume in acid. Next time a hearty meal, or too rich a diet has brought on the least discomfort, try— of Magnesia SIOUX CITY PTG. CO.. NO. 13 -1930. | OF INTEREST TO FA RN1ERS ||| FARMS REFLECT SFREAD OF MECHANIZATION The progressive mechanization, which is effecting radical daily transioi mations in ui dustry, is also taking place, although more slowly, on tha farm. This is evident in the ^ steady replacement of beasts of burden by automotive vehicles. In the decade ending December 31, 1929, the total .lumber of horses and mules on farms in the bnited States decreased Iran 25.323.000 to 18,762,000. Between the same dates the number of automo biles and trucks on the farm increased from 2,285,681 to approximately 6.000. 000. In other words, the ratio of horses and mules to autos and trucks on the farm is now approximately 3 to 1, compared with 11 to 1 10 years ago. However, as the number of horses and mules decreased, their value per head increased, so that the total value of mules on the farm is even greater than it was three years ago, and the total value ol the horses has not shrunk in proportion to their numbers. From $67.18, as oi December 31, 1927, the value of the average farm horse increased to $70. 71, as of December 31, 1929. The value of the average mule increased from $79.82 to $83. The aggregate value of horses decreased from $973, 812.000 to $950,318,000, and that of mules grew from $439,320,000 to $441, 726.000. This replacement of actual horsepower by mechanical horsepower Jn the farm lends credence to predictions that the farm of tomorrow jvill be run on the mass production methods of industry, and that the farmer becomes a business executive employing large numbers of mechan ics and technicians in the direction of large scale productive and distribu | tive activities. ______ __ VALUE OF EARLY HATCHING It is generally considered among the more progressive poultry raisers, that eariy hatched chicks are stronger and more vigorous than late hatched chicks. Perhaps the strongest reason for early hatching Is that the pullets will be ready to lay early in the tall when egg prices rre high. A chick that is htched in June will not mature, even under favorable conditions, until Decem ber, and that is usually an exceed ingly unfavorable time for a young bird to start laving. It is too cold at that time of tne year unlen housing conditions are ideal, which is not the rule on the average farm. Experiment stations have for years favored early hatching of chicks, and have just published some fig ures on this subject that are very .arresting. Records from 46 flock owners show that for each hundred chicks htched in March and April. Bi.b oer cent were raised to eight veeks of age, whereas, from the same number of chicks batched in May and June, only 52.7 per cent were raised to eight weeks of age. No reason is given for this greater loss ox laie-hatened chicks, but we suspect that early hatched chicks get a better start under average farm conditions in March and April, owing to the fact that there is less danger of infestation from worms in those months than there is in Mav and June. In other words, it is easier to prevent worm infestation early in the season than later on. If we assume that an 8-week-old chick is worth 40 cents, then It can readily be seen from the above fig t.res that $12.80 was saved per ICO chicks hatched during March and Apiil. as compared with the same number hatched In May and June. With a flock of 500 chicks, this would amount t.o $64. a sum well worth saving. The chances are that the saving would be greater than this would indicatp. because early hatched chicks will lay more eggs during the pi.ile. vrar than those that are hatched late in the season. FORCING TIIE LAMBS The feeding of lambs, for the most part, has been very profitable for a number of years. As a matter of face, the margin between feeder and lat lamb prices has often been so wide that comparatively inefficient rations have brought good returns. This year the outlook is not quite so favorable for the feeder, and hence the importance of feeding the best rations available. There is a tendency among feeders of cattle arc! hogs to not feed enough pro tein to economically balance the ra tion, end the fame is equally true of lamb feeders. Unless a man keeps accurate feed records, which i3 practically impossible in the farm feed lot, it is difficult, if not Im possible for him to make compari sons between the efficiency of dif ferently balanced rations that he may be feeding from year to year. The best thing the practical feeder can do, there!ore, is to note the re sults obtained in feeding tests at our experiment stations, and use them as a guide in his own opera tions. It Is with this thought in mind that I wish to call attention to a lamb feeding test about a year ago, says an expert flock master. The object of this test was to as certain whether as good a ration as shelled corn and alfalfa hay could be improved from a money making point of view by the addi tion thereto of a protein supple ment. Most feeders are of the opin ion that when alfalfa hay is avail able at a reasonable cost,, it will not pay to add a protein suople ment at three times the cosft "per ton, but that when prairie hay, timothy or some other carbohydrate roughage must be fed, many do add a supolement. Let us see what the test has to offer on thf question. Eight different lots of lambs, 25 head each, were placed In the feed lot cn October 17 and were fed till January 5, a period of 80 days. Then lambs, of course, were as nearly alike in quality and con formation as possible, and they averaged a little over 63 pounds per heed when the test began. Lot 1 was fed shelled corn and alfalfa hay- Of this they consumed an PRODUCING EARLY BROILERS The production of early broilers ! s not so difficult at the present day .5 it was several years ago, due to ' better knowledge of brooding and ceding, particularly o: the value of unshine, cod-liver oil, glass sub titutes, and so on. Several thipgs, equire careful attention to get best results with early brooding. We oust have sufficient room for suf ficient room for brooding and avoid crowding more chicks under a oroooer stove or in a battery brood er than should be placed there, with mfficiepA hopper space so all chicks will have an opportunity to get nough feed to grow on, and we must clean the house frequently average, throughout the feeding pe riod, of 1.03 pounds of ccrn an< 1.49 pounds of alfalfa per head po: day. The average daily gam wai .246 of a pound per head. Tn« other seven lots were all given th» same feeds with the addition ol i daily allowance of .13 of a pounc of a protein supplement, such s; linseed meal, cottonseed meal, con gluten meal and different comb na tions cf these. Lot 2 received tha amount of linseed meal daily, Let 3 the same amount of cottonceec meal, and Lot 4, the same ameuni of corn giuten feed. These thret lots all made larger daily gains thar. Lot 1, without the supplement. shown by the following: Lot 2, .28’ of a pound: Lot 3, .299 of a pound and Lot 4, .305 of a pound. Whai is more, the gains were made ai lower cost Besides, these supple ment-; ed lots also brought from 3f to 55 cents more per hunorcc pounds on the market than Lot 1 which received no protein supph ment. Unfortunately, the lamb* we re purchased at a price the I mads them cost $13.90 laid down :r the feed lot, and had to be me. - keted at an average of $12.83. Cr that account, all lots showed a loss but tha„ does not affect the less r which may be drawn from tne re sults obtained. Feeds were figures at the following prices: Sheiicc corn, 70 cents a bushel; lir.seec meal. cottonseed meal and c:rr gluten meal, $50 a ton, and aiir.La hay, $15 a ton. With these figure: In mind, note the loss sustained fc\ each lot. For Lot 1, the los w»: $1.60 per head; for Lots 2 and 3 $1.13, and for Lot 4, 79 cents. Th is it will be seen th3t it paid v.ci. to supplement corn and alialla witr a protein concentrate. Those whe do net hove es good a roughage r: alfalfa or clover, should feed mere than .13 of a pound of supplemein a day. One fifth to one fourth cl a pound per head per day would cr better. LUNGER FARROV.'ING SEASON Penalization of haavy butchci hogs, excess lard production, popu larity of light loins, hams and o.n er cuts and risk incidental to carry ing hogs above 250 pounds are fac tors responsible for a movement tc spread the farrowing season over a longer period. Each summer a mass of hogs weighing anywhere from 250 to 350 pounds descends on the market, concurrently with a season al crop of packing sows that Ircrr the killer's standpoint serve practi cally the same purpose, with the usual result, a narrow and apparent ly illogical spread between the tvo Ironing out the hog production cvcle so far as the long period Is con cerned, may be a mere theory, but the position of the swine grown might be materially improved bj substantial reduction of average weight. Pall farrowing on a more extensive scale is one method oi in stitutmg this reform; another, far rowing at more frequent periods, making frequent turnover at lightei weights possible, thus insuring a laiger volume of popular-weight product, eliminating hazards initp arable from carrying hogs into heavy weight and giving growers the ad vantage of marketing at different seasons. Such a radical change in production methods necessitates equiment, intelligent dieting and up to-date methods in other respects Handwriting on the market wall means that lard handicaps the over weight hog and that popular denfbnd Is concentrating on light and mid dle weight meat cuts, a lesson pro ducers must heed. AVOID CHILLING OF EGGS Chilled eggs won’t hatch. Gather your eggs several times daily if you are going to set them or sell them to a hatchery. Most liatcheries keep a fertility and hatching record on every customer and if your eggs don’t hatch you are cut off and oit en never knew why. Putting eggs next to a hot stove is as bad as chilling. Keep them in a tempera ture of between 50 end 70 degrees. --- ♦♦ -- To prevent horses over-reaching, shorten the toes of the front shoes and lengthen the toes of the hind shoes. and provide sufficient he$.t. Unless these points are given attention, poorly grown and poorly feathered chicks will result, and tne mortali ty may be high. -♦♦ I.OOK AFTER MACHINERY Now to a good time to tnlnk about gett-ng all nnohines under shelter, to make a hat of all re poira and replacements needed for next year, and to make whatever Improvements may be needed. A card should be made out for each maonine as it is put away, notir.: whatever repairs or adjustments are needed, and thru the work done lat/rr in the winter && the farm work permits. Tou'r** Wrong About These. Robert igmaii. M, D.. in Cap p.r's Magazine. Her* is a hsi ol 20 ot the mistak en oeiitfs from which anyone can figure cut ills own delusional aver age: 1. It is almost iatai to eat lobster and follow u with ice cream. 2. Red-headed people always have quick tempers. 3. Winters were longer and colder when you were a child. 4. Dew falls. 5. Tan shoes are coder for sum mer wear uian black. 6. Shaving makes the hair grow faster, 7. Long, slender hands indicate an artistic temperament. 8. Marriage ol cousin? necessarily results in children ot Inferior in telligence, 9. A high forehead indicates « superior in elhgence. 10. A liqmd contained in the cen ter o." many goll balls will cause in stant, total blindness. 11. There is something in astrol ogy. i'2. AH Scotchmen are penurious. 13. All Chincre smoke opium. 14. Lightning never stuaes twice in 'he same place. 15. One hour’s, sltep before mid night is worth two after midnight. iti. Women are by nature r.ctter anti purer than men. 17. A square jaw is a sign of will power 18. Conscience is an infallible guide to conduct. 13. An expectant mother can ln flurr.ee the -"harac’.er of her child by fixing her mind on a subject. 30. If your ears burn it is a sign that tomconc is talking about you. Not one of these beliefs has any foundation in fact. Each has been subjected to (he acid test of sci entific inv:stigation and found wanting, coincidences to the con trary notwithstanding. Mr. Ifocvcr’s Big .Mistake. From Lincoln, (Neb.) Star. Will King, the giLed correspon dent of the Winn.peg Free Press, is sharply critical of Mr. Hoover. “Whatever may have been the good intention? of the pres.dent there is no one today that does not admit he made a fatal mistake in open ing up the tariff question," Mr. Kink writes in his newspaper. As an admired and re pec ted student of Amer.san politics. Mr. King al ways presents an interesting view but he ignores ;*>me recent history in arriving at his conclusions with reference to the president’s tariff mistake. Mr. Hoover has lost ground In the Middle West not because he opened up the tariff question but for the reason he has not kept hi# pledge. He promised to readjust the dut.es on farm products, and to leave schedules covering manu factured goods, except In a few isolated instances at present levels. That was to equalize the economic position of agriculture and indus try. At the special session of con gress called ior remedying the farm situation, the industrial bloc domin ating congress got completely away from Mr. Hoover and drafted a bill which would have Increased the in equities existing between manufac turing anti agricuitu e. For some reason Mr. Hoover has gradually permitted the impression to spread tha ho would sign a bill of the char: o.or of the Hawley measure. For thii reason tha central west feels the pc-.dent h.°s repuci a ted his solemn promise and has adopted the industrial view. The farmer is suffering severely today because of Mr. Hoover’s lack of ieadorrhip. There was one in dustry which stood up well in the ft.ee o', inrdequate tariffs until re cent months. That was dairying. But the consumption of butter sub s.ituies increased so much a year ago that the p ic:s for butterfat tumbled 12 io 11 cents below what they were in 1929. Still Mr. Hoover is taking no action to aid tne oaary farmer competing against cheap vegetable oils coming from the South Sea Islands into the United States duty free. That, writes Mr. King, is Mr. Hoover's grave mis take. He would not have suffered loss of prestige and friendly feeling If he had kept hds promise to read just the tariff dutiee. Alcoholic Death Rate. From New York World. There Is no need to embroider the figures reported by the Metropolitan Life Insurance company. These fig ures rest on a broad base—a survey of 10,000,000 industrial policies hi the Metropolitan company. They show that in nine yean of federal prohibition the alcoholic death rate among these 19,000,000 policyhold ers has Increased by almost 600 per cent over the figure for 1930, and that It Is now double the wartime death rate of 1918. They show, again, that the states In which the death rate from alcoholism Is In creasing most rapidly are states In the south and west as well as hi the east: Nebraska, West Virginia and Kentucky show a death rate high above the average, along with Massachusetts. Pennsylvania and New York. Finally, these figures throw some light on temperance in th? United States, under a soealied prohibition law, as compared with temperance in Canada, under a regulative system. The Metropolitan company fays: "In the wage-earn in:' population, at leant, the alco ho;ie death rate during the last eight years has been six times as high in the Usited States as in Canada.” We commend these figures to congress, to the presidents law en forcement commission, and espe cial ly to the small company of ex perts who are still demonstrating the superlative advantages of pro hibition. Q. How much butter will 100 pounds of milk make? G. L. A. The department of agricul ture says that the amount of milk required to make one pound of but ter depends upon the quality of the milk. Ordinarily speaking, milk contains f’om 3 to 3'£> per cent but ter fat. Consequently it would take 100 pounds of milk to make about Vi pounds of butter. Hard. From Tit-Bits. Is Goldberg a hard man?” 1 should say so. Did you notice his eyes?” ‘ Yes. One seemed to have a more human express on than the other.* Well, that one is made of glass.” Q. Are ihc parents of Dorothy Arnold, the missing girl, still liv ing? S. T. A. On December 28, 1928. Mrs. Mary Parks Arnold, widow of Fran cis R. Arnold and mother of Doro hy Arnold, died of heart disease. Dorothy Arnold vanished at the age of 17 on December 10, 19K* fWe&ti less i« :'a i ii T Some folks take pain for granted. They let a cold “run its course.” They wait for their headaches to “urear off.” If suffering from neuralgia or from neuritis, they rely on feeling better in the morning. Meantime, they suffer unnecessary pain. Unnecessary, because there is an antidote. Bayer Aspirin always offers immediate relief from various aches and pains we once lad to endure. If pain persists, consult yonr doctor as to its cause. Save yourself a lot of pain and rVwresnfart through the many uses cf Bayer Aspir'u. Pro tect yourself by buying the genuine. Phaser ■ safe. Always the came. All drugstore* BAYER ASPIRIN Aaoirin h tV i-ade mark of Bayer Mmufcr’jre of Monoaeotiraridenter «t fVftrnUmdf St. Mark’*, Venice, Reatored St. Mark's of Venice, Italy, is tin first of the three national cathedral of Euorpe to be restored. Workmen have just completed their task ol •JU years in making it safe for use The cathedral was built In 1063, and decorated and faced with marble by the Venetians after the fall of Con stantlnople. The structure was very weak, however, and large cracks np pen red in the walls. Workmen have been filling In the cracks, repairing flu* vault and replacing I he damaged stones uud mortar with concrete. The other cathedrals being restored are St. Paul's In Loudon, and that at Mnyence, Germany. Old things are always In good repute, present things in disfavor.— Tacitus. No Memory for Date* The Interviewer—SIwB I mention the year of your birth? The Movie Star—No. You may say I have just pawn'd my nine teenth birthday. I ran remember t’uit for years and tf« swcti a bother to change a date every tear. -.( Live Stock It Is estimated by the Horse An soeiitlloti of Amtrba thtt there are now 1'i..'itMMMH) horses and mules on farms in the United Slates, and 7. Father—Yes; but I have to ker* ;ho!r husbands on thrlr feet.—An swers. ^Babies FRET There are times when a baby is too fretful or feverish to be sung to sleep. There are some pains a mother cannot pat away. But there's no time when any baby can't have the quick comfort of Castoria! A few drops, and your little one is soon at ease—back to sleep almost before you can slip aw’ay. Remember this harmless, pure vegetable preparation when chil dren are ailing. Don’t stop its use when Baby has been brought safely through the age of colic, diarrhea, and other inInutile ills. Give good old Castoria nntti your children are in their teens I Whenevei coated tongues tell of constipation; whenever there’s any sign of sluggisSnar-s that needs no stronger nvrrikmes to relieve. Castoria is plcasant-tast ing; children love to take it. Bay the genuine—with Q»as. H. Fletcher’s signature on wrapper. Solid Reasoning Freddy—Wliat is an iceberg, Dad dy? Daddy—Why, It's a kind of a per manent wave, son. A wise man sees as much as he ought, not as much as he can.—Mon taigne. Precedes the Towels Mr. Goodsole—Cadger tells a piti ful ha (I luck story. Mr. I’stung—Yet it’* spot* a touch ing tale. When women kiss mA other It means about as much an a IsmbatOM epitaph. Old shoes made * new for less than { a penny a pair \ Scuffs disappear. Clean, uniform color return*. More than jo shines for jo cents. Black, brown, tan, white and neutral. BARTON’S DYANSHlNg • SHOB POLISH ; ^HOG RAISERS Get a ftag Grift ■'// A new patented device F*t*. ix mho# for ^' catching nogs. Catch any age to* in m» tile's time; merely attach a row In gi ip, place '(trip on stick, reach out and the ho* a cavrtlit. pave your hoi?s and save yourself this ota-jjn eoable work.One handle of grip ia modeled unhuMu-r hook. Jfor butchcr.i k purpot-es.madetoUat Itfrinne, ool she# 'steel and jaws of yr ip heavy canvrs 3oued. Order one today. Price $2.25. F. O. B. Chicago—tkupped C.O. D. THEPLADSON Mf G. CO.,4327 Elsten/ns. CMc «a