When Food Sours Lots of folks win* think they hare "lndlgesli»u‘’ hare only on acid condition which could he corrected In lire or leu mluutof. An elTec tlve «n(i-acld like Phillips Milk of Magnesia soon restores digestion to norma' I ’hllfips rtacs nway with all that bo a mo as and gas right after meals. It prevents the distress so apt to occur two hours after eating. What n pleasant preparation to take I And how good ii is for the system I Un Itke • burning dose of soda—which Is but temporary relief at best— Phillips Milk of Magnesia neutral izes wroir limes Its volume in acid. Neat time a henr(y meal, or too rich • diet has brought on the leas! discomfort, ti*/— PHILLIPS L Milk . of Magnesia DAISY FLY KILLER IVrwl mpmhrr \ DAISY nv MILLXR attrarti and Mk aB tbs. W-at. clran, ornamental, eonrrnlant and . rheap. Lnata all «-» J aon. Mail* of mrtal. J ran' i,pill or Up ottr; ft'll not anil or injora J aiftklaf, Conran taad. JInalat upon DAISY FLY - 'miller from roar dealer. KAROL0 SOBERS. BROOKLYN. N. Y. Excellent Idea Mistress—Thursday is my at home day. New Cools flood. Tl's mine, loo. I'erhapu we can arrange to receive together. After a mail is dead, .von remem ber with greater satisfaction that you praised him to his taco while lie wad alive. An lonoivnl heart is a britlle tiling, and one false voiv can break It.— l.yfteti. Dealer* in Small Luts Original Bucket Sliops “Backet shop” Is another expres sion which has an interesllng origin. The old-fashioned stock broker* who were members of the New York stock exchange would not take an order to buy or sell less than 1(>0 shares of stork on margin. Thus those people whose capital did not admit to their furnishing the neces sary margin to trade in such a large amount were shut out from trading. A class of brokers, not member* of the exchange, sprang np who made a practice of accepting orders f»r odd lots. When Ihe total amounted to 100 or some multiple of I (JO shares, they would give a Joint order to some regular broker for execution. Thus the small orders were fitted to gether as the staves of a bucket, and the nickname of those intermediate brokers or Jobber* grew to he “buck et shop keepers.” “Gritty” Youngiter insurance companies would un doubtedly like to have all victims of automobile accidents of the same frame of mind as a four-year-old Lynn (Mass.) youngster when struck by a machine. The boy. running in and out of traffic, was bowled over when Ihe mudguard of one car graz(>d him. lie picked himself up In a hurry, ran to the sidewalk, thumbed Id* nose at Ihe public in general and I hen disappeared before | the driver of the machine Could get to the curb. Veteran Air Line An air mail route between Victoria. British Columbia, and Seattle Is Ihe oldest privately operated air line In the United States, and one of ihe shortest airways in the world over which foreign mail is flown. In eleven years It. lias clung to the same type of equipment. Noah'* Lament Noah had driven all the animals on hoard Ihe ark. “It’s a pity," lie said, “that we're obliged lo use primitive transporta tion. If we could have waited for blimps and airplanes we could travel fast and see where we are going.” Teaching Fiih to Read Fish have been taught to recognize the hag containing their favorite food by means of letlers at a Berlin uni versity. It Is claimed Unit they can even distinguish between Ihe letters “It” and “II." Rich Vein Minor—(Joofus uncovered a rich vein yesterday. Major—Yes, he sold a pint of his blood to the hospital for $o0. In the spring a young man’s fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love.— Tennyson. Praise great estates; cultivate n small one.—Virgil. Feen-a-minl is the answer. Cleansing action of smaller doses effective because you chew it. At your druggists— the safe and scientific laxative. FOR CONSTIPATION COULD HARDLY DO HER WORK Strengthened by Lydia E. Pinkham’a Vegetable Com pound Miadon, Tex.—'1 have used a good deal of your medicine ami alvraya lind IT irives wonaerim help. I was feeling so weakand miser able that 1 had to lie down very of ten and 1 could h a r d 1 y d o m y housework. 1 read in the paper how I.ydia Ik i’ink harn’s Vegetable Compound had helped other women who were in the same condition so J said t will trj it for myself. I am very much bettc. now anti I recommend this medicine, and will answer letters from women ask ing about it.”—Mrs. J. W. Albkrtson, 1015 Miller Avenue, Mission. Texas. PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM ClemoTea (landrull'-Stcp* Hair Faille y Impart* Color and Ueautr to Gray and Faded Knit fen,, nr, 1 fei.Ofe at Dragglat* Iti.co* Chi'in v/ka .l'nl' lyur.N.Y FLORESTON SHAMPOO — Idea! for oat in connectionwilhl*arkrr'»Ilair Balsam. Make* the hair *ofi and fluffy. 0(1 rent* by mail or at drug gist*. Uiicox ( hrmieal Work*. 1‘atchogue. N. Y. Sioux City Ptg. Co., No. 28-1930. If you remember your own child hood vividly, you know something nlitiul bringing up children, even ii you have none. All spirits are enslaved which serve things evil. Shelley. What the COMBINE ENGINE I j I operator The straw was damp and lough. The combine engine lost speed and power. The work went along slowly and was not well done. Appar ently the combine engine was not equal to the work. Then someone suggested NEW Red Crown Ethyl. What a difference this distinctly finer gasoline made. It kept that combine motor at full speed and power. The tractor was speeded up and acres more of clean-threshed wheat were handled that day. NEW Red Crown Ethyl will tell any combine operator how to gel a bigger day's work out of his machine—just as it daily proves to drivers of passenger cars, trucks and tractors that for economical operation and superior performance — there is no substitute for NEW Red Crown Ethyl. At Red Crown Service Stations aud Dealers and delivered every where in Nebraska. STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF NEBRASKA “A Nebraska 1n$titution>l COMPLETE REST ROOMS AT STANDARD OJL SERVICE STATIONS Out Our Way By Williams X Don’t caulThatVLocv^ —WES, lugv< — wimmiki' A I Bad lucv(— LAMP ER VASE TH' / TO w\N ATHkjCi FirstT-unct in -tv-v A c»ke tha.r mornini' aT a Picnic, at a Picnic. 6v T-V -riMEThJiEWv/E winners MURSEO T-AlNCtS c-wj.-O' -tLlC SAFEW-Trtno-rH’OAV, ~ , -Taw'mS VIAO KO 7 OF H, »Y NCA KKVtCI. ISC.J KANSAS WHEAT FARMER BETWEEN DEVIL AND " DEEP BLUE SEA AS HARVEST PROGRESSES lany Plan to Hold Grain in Hope of Better Prices Later BY GARRETT PORTER, United Press Correspondent. Kansas City—Wheat farmers in he broad fields of the southwest are .'otween two fires. Fast ripening grain demands im mediate cutting and low prices threatened losses to the farmers if they send the grain to market. July wheat touched 8914 cents in Chicago Monday, a new low since 1914. In Kansas city July wheat old at 82 cents this week. In some of the producing centers the price was as low as 70 cents. Many Hold Grain In the face of the threatened loss es many farmers chose to hold their grain. The harvest is half completed in Oklahoma and the Texas panhan dle. Combined harvesting and threshing machines work in north ern Oklahoma and southern Kansas counties this week. Operations in Kansas worked northward toward Nebraska, where the harvest is scheduled to open within a few days. In addition to low prices, Kansas faced a short crop. Below normal yields were reported from some of the best wheat producing counties of the state, and observers believe the crop may turn out to be only a third of the expected yield. Crop Below Estimates Ford county, which produced 7, 000,000 bushels in 1929, was expected to yield less than 3,000,000 this year. The last report of the state depart ment of agriculture estimated the per-acre yield at 11.7 bushels, fcut many fields that had been expected to produce 20 bushels to the acre' are yielding only seven or eight. Damage in Kansas wheat fields was attributed to a severe attack of the fungus root-rot diseases by L. E. Melchers, plant pathologist at Kansas State Agricultural college. Crop conditions in Oklahoma and Texas are somewhat better. The in dicated yield In Oklahoma is as good or better than preliminary es timates of 32,000,000 bushels and the Texas total is placed at more than 35,000,000 bushels. Missouri, with a June estimate of 19,500,000 bushels, reported yields in many cases better than the expected 13 bushels an acre. Nebraska's prospect* were better than average. Estimates placed condition* at be tween 80 and 85 per cent of normal, with per-acre yield* at from 19.6 to 30.8 bushels. Elevators Overflowing June estimates placed the total Increased use ef combines (above) has lessened need for fiei4 workers during harvest season. Hugo storage elevators, such as on* below, will house much of crop. yield from Texas, Colorado, Okla homa, Kansas, Nebraska and Mis souri at 289,327,000 bushels, but this figure was made on . the basis of a 137,000,000 bushel yield in Kansas. Elevators in the southern part of the grain belt are bulging with wheat, but the grain was not being moved to market. One elevator in Oklahoma, receiving 7,000 bushels in one day, sold only 200 bushels. The movement in Kansas also was less than expected. Reports indicated farmers expected to receive at least 20 cents more a bushel by holding their wheat. Farmers in the big wheat produc ing counties of southern and west ern Kansas received about 70 cents a bushel for their grain this week. The cost of raising the wheat is difficult to determine. Say* Costs Vary Many individual farmers estimate the coet at bet wen 80 cents and $1 a bushel, but the wheat farming cor poration claims it can raise wheat for 24 oents a bushel in an average year, "I would not attempt to estimate the per-bushel cost in Kansas be cause the costs vary so widely in various sections or the state, J. u. Mohler, secretary of the Kansas state board of agriculture, said. Short, crops, low prices and a sur plus of labor have brought a reduo tion in wages *for harvest hands. Ne braska farmers offered 35 cents an hour, compared to last year's $5 a day. and in Kansas growers wrere re ported paying the pre-war wage $3 a day. NO DROP IN BREAD Minneapolis—(UP)—The 5 cent loaf of bread is a thing of the pant, Minneapolis bakers said. The price of wheat and flour may go up, or down, but the price for at pound loaf remains at the 8-cent mark, where it wa3 set two yeaaa ago, and bakers have no present in tention to cut prlees. While bread prices remained sta tionary, millers reported that the price of flour had dropped 65 cents a barrel on first patents in the last month. Minneapolis mills were reported to be stocked with wheat to nearly, the capacity of their elevator spaoe, so that only small amounts of choice grain la actually being bought. Maybe They're Scotchmen Governor Buiow »n