The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, March 24, 1932, Image 3

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    Ames la. — (Special) — Colu
weather during February resulted
in lower egg production per hen
than last year in the calendar rec
ord flocks, according to the monthly
report just released by the poultry
extension service at Iowa State col
lege.
The average production in these
flocks was 9.6 eggs per hen as com
pared with 11 eggs for the same
month a year ago. The 'average
price received per dozen was 11.4
cents as compared with 12.5 cents a
year ago. the report states.
Although the average expense per
bird for the last month was 8 cents
as compared with 10 cents in Febru
ary, 1931, the average "margin” be
tween receipts and expenses was
only 4,1 cents per bird as compared
with 8 cents a year ago because of
lower production and lower prices.
A large decrease in number of
hatching eggs sold also contributed
to a lower income.
The 10 high producing flocks,
however, had a margin between re
ceipts and expenditures of 9.2 cents
as compared to 10.4 cents a year
ago. This fact indicates, according
to W. M. Vernon, extension poul
tryman, that flocks properly cared
lor maintain production through
unfavorable weather better than
1 locks which do not have proper
teed and housing.
BELILVES DEAD MAN
WAS HER BROTHER
Des Moines, la. — (AP) — Miss
Elizabeth Costello declared Monday
night that the man tentatively
identified as J. W. Wilson who shot
himself at Council Bluffs, Saturday
night, may be her brother, Thomas
P. Costello who lived at her home
here.
The man was found in a boarding
house suffering from two self in
flicted bullet wounds and died Sun
day at a Council Bluffs hospital.
Tentative identification was estab
lished by personal papers and a
railroad ticket to Des Moines.
IOWA FARM BUREAU
HEAD TO WASHINGTON
Des Moines, la. — (AP) —Charles
E. Hearst, president of the Iowa
Farm Bureau Federation, left Mon
day for Washington to attend a
hearing with other farm bureau
leaders on monetary stabilization
calculated to bring about “a fair
return to the farmer for his pro
duce.”
Hearst is chairman of the feder
ation’s legislative committee.
IOWA LABOR FEDERATION
TO HOLD NO CONVENTION
Burlington, la. — (AP) — The
Iowa Federation of Labor conven
tion to have been held here in June
has been postponed a year, accord
ing to word received from J. C.
Lewis of Des Moines, state presi
dent.
Money appropriated for the con
vention is to be used by locals
throughout the state for relief work
in conformity with action taken at
an executive meeting in Des Moines.
WOULD EXTEND BENEFITS
FEDERAL FARM LOANS
Des Moines, la. — (AP) — Ex
pansion of the uses of the federal
crop production loans was advocat
ed here by Prof. R. K. Bliss of Iowa
State college, chairman of the ad
visory committee on Iowa crop pro
duction loans.
He said the aid of Iowa's congres
sional delegation would be sought
to make the loans cover cost qf
hired labor necessary to plant and
harvest crops and for purchase of
feed for breeding stock.
As interpreted at present, he said,
the loans cover only purchase of
seed, feed for animals used In crop
production and gasoline and oi' for
& tractor or other equipment.
CORRECTIONVILI.E SENDS
AID TO SOUTH DAKOTA
Correctionville, la. — (Special) —
Members of the American Legion
post here were instrumental in the
shipment of a carload of livestock
feed to Wagner, S. D. The car con
tained some hay and the balance
was grain. The hay was baled by
the members of the Legion and pur
chase of grain was made with $120
donated by Correctionville people
SPENCER, I A., COUPLE
MARRIED GO YEARS
Spencer, la.—(Special)—Mr. and
Mrs. John Vestergaard of Spencer
were married GO years ago, March
9, at Lomstrup, Denmark. They came
to America, with their children, in
1890, and for 27 years made their
home on a farm near Moorhead, in
Monona county, Iowa. They then
came to Spencer, where their two
sons, John and Andrew, are en
gaged in the contracting business.
A daughter, Mrs. A. C. Johnson, lives
in Moorhead. They have seven
grandchildren and eight great
grandchildren.
If a man were comparatively as
strong as an aunt he could lift 40
tons.
SYNTHETIC SPRING
A black glass bowl, all nicely lined
With paper mosses gay;
A cambric rose of coral pink,
A linen lily spray;
A fabric spike of hyacinth,
Some varnished leaves of green;
Some purple velvet violets
A-peeping from between;
A tissue cloud of maiden hair,
Of May time woods prophetic;
A golden jonquil made of cloth—
E’en spring is oft synthetic,
a —Sam Page
Frozen apples have been kept
four months without losing an ap
preciable amount of vitamin C.
Snyder’s Cough Syrup
Snyder's Cough Syrup will
help where others fail,
something new in cough
syrup, nothing like it on
the market. It will help
any kind of cough. Sold
only in $1.00 bottle. If you
can t get it at your rirug
ciistn. will send prepaid
for $1.00.
C. J. SNIDES, Craig:, Iowa
Competing Road Materials
V_
From the Council Bluffs Nonpareil.
The Sioux City Tribune informs its readers that form
er Gov. W. L. Harding is making addresses in various parts
of the state in which he assails Fred White, chief highway
state engineer, because the state has laid some 4,000 miles
of concrete highway and has built no bituminous or oiled
roads.
There isn’t any cause for concern in this case. Pro
ducers of another road building material have stepped into
Iowa to contend with the manufacturers of cement. They
have employed some ballyhooers to boost their goods and
knock cement.
These advocates of bituminous roads have arguments
with which to support their claims. Their materials have
merit.
As laymen understand facts in regard to paving all
materials other than concrete require a concrete base. With
this base and a surface of brick or asphalt the price ranges
higher than the cost of plain concrete which when used
wholly is made a little thicker than when used as a base
for some other materials.
Brick or asphalt surfaced roads are high class when
laid under sound specifications. But their cost is greater
thi»n plain concrete. Under which plan can the people who
buy paving get most for their money? This is the question
engineers have been required to answer.
Advocates may argue plausibly that a bituminous pav
ing is worth more than concrete—worth more than the dif
ference in cost if the bituminous specifications make the
price higher than concrete. In such a dispute not a great
many people in Iowa will take the word of a paid advocate
of one material over the judgment of Fred White under
whose direction Iowa has expended $250,000,000 in highway
construction with no taint or suspicion in any direction.
If advocates of bituminous roads care to dispute with
those who prefer concrete they will find it vastly more ad
vantageous in Iowa to argue the merits of their cause. They
will go up against a stone wall when they put their paid
emissaries up to question either the wisdom or the integrity
of Fred White.
Don’t Be Downhearted
Rest, Not Exercise Cure for Fatigu
| IIRED BUSINESS MAN SHOULD PRECEDE GOLF OR GAMES WITH
SHORT PERIOD OF RELAXATION
BY DU. MORRIS FISIIBE1N
Editor, Journal of the American
Medical Association, and of
Hygeia the Health Magazine
The hardest advice to make peo
1 pie follow in times of economic
j stress is the advice to rest.
The trend of modern life is to
j ward speeding up to a greater men
i tal strain and almost ceaseless
activity. As a result the life expect
ancy of man over 40 is less than it
was 25 years ago.
Many a business man feels that
the pi-oper procedure for relieving
Ills restlessness is exercise in the
form of handball, squash, calis
thenics, or golf. When one is tired,
relief will not come through physi
cal exercise but through rest. The
chief value of exercise is to pro
vide stimulation to the activities of
the body, not to relieve a fagged
mind.
The fatigue that occurs in in
dustry involves usually vary little
■>{ physical fatigue. Emotional fac
tors play a large part in fatigue.
Machine work, specialization of
jobs, and increased speed in indus
try have brought about fatigue due
ro monotony. When monotony be
comes intense, exhaustion of the
nervous system is likely.
The time to exercise is after
rest. Therefore, the business man
the white-collar worker, or the in
dustrial worker who has felt the
strain of his day’s activities should
precede any exercise at the end ol
that day by 15 to 30 minutes of
rest.
He will then take his exercise,
follow it with a warm shower
bath and have another fairly long
rest period before getting up for
the evening program, or before
going to dinner and then to bed.
This advice to rest is not neces
sarily to indicate that one should
give up his activity.
The best life is a useful one. Dr
C. E. A. Winslow refers to the ad
vice given by Nietzsche to “live
dangerously.” “Life is to be used
not hoarded,” says Winslow, "but
neither should it be wasted
i through unintelligence.”
One physician, asked by a patient
how to live long, said, “Get a slight
chronic disease and take good care
of it.” In all of our activities
health must be uppermost in our
minds, because without health there
can be no happiness.
Glorifying Yourself
By Alicia Hart
Nobody takes the old-fashioned
sulphur and molasses dose as
an antidote for spring ailments
these days. But the most modern
moderns still take tonics, though
usually they have no connection
with medicine!
The best tonic a tired woman
can take is some beauty treat
ments, tapped off with some new
clothes.
It may seem like an extrava
gance to go to a beauty parlor and
get a thorough workout, but it is
money well spent, if you can do it.
Certainly there is no tonic in
the world quite like that of seeing
yourself come to animation again,
when you have decided you are
about petered out. Certainly it is.
also, that the minute you do see
yourself looking better, you act
ually feel better!
I suggest a beauty regime for
this spring’s tonic. If you can af
ford it, a weekly hair and scalp
treatment, a facial and a manicure.
Most women cannot afford all that.
But no one lives who can’t afford
to give herself some kind of a
regime.
Bast spring a woman I know de
rided to take up clogging instead
of eating her noon lunch. She
drank a glass of hot water or ate
an orange and put in 30 minutes
clogging every day. The way it
set her up was remarkable. An
other woman might find the same
results in an hour’s dancing after
work. Still another might find the
equivalent by putting in a half
hour or so every single night in
her own rooms, exercising to
music.
Along with this exercise should
go care of your skin, hair, nails.
Being well-groomed sets you -up
quite as much as having new
clothes.
Are you brushing your hair and
giving it tonic every single night?
Do you pat your cheeks, chin and
under your chin the requisite
number of slaps each night and
morning? Do you always, no mat
ItADIO AMATEURS OFFER AID
Kansas City, Mo. — (UP) —Ama
teur radio operators throughout the
(vest have offered President Hoo
ver and his organization for un
employment service their aid in
transmitting all his long-distance
messages without cost. The object
is to save money for the unemploy
ment organization, so “every cent
can be used for actual relief work.”
CIRCULATE ANTI-RIOT PLEDGE
New Haven, Conn. — (UP) — To
discourage freshman riots the Yale
freshman student council has cir
ter how tired and discouraged,
take time to remove the day’s
grime and carefully oil your skin
for the night?
Well, these are all spring tonics.
Why don’t you take yours?
THE NEW LIVING ROOM.
The place where mother spread the
wash,
And oft by high fence barred,
Has long been known to all of us
As simply, “the back yard.”
Not any more! That name Is out.
Just read the recent ads;
Rechristening of that well-known
plot
Is ’mong the latest fads.
With chairs and tables, rugs and
shades,
It’s had, it seems, a boom—
’Tis called by those who know their
stuff,
“The outdoor living room.”
—Sam Page.
PREPARATION.
How still the day! With out
stretched arms,
All rigid stand the trees,
Like travelers marooned by storm,
With snow drifts to their knees.
No cloud skims o'er the low hung
sky;
Indeed, there is no break
Between its grayish, white expanse
And snow encrusted lake.
But something moves, ‘though we
can't see.
Life stirs within the roots
Of these stark trees, begins to rise
And tint the w'illow shoots.
This stillness, while the earth
drinks deep;
This death-like, sad repose,
Prepares the way for almond spray,
For lilacs and the rose.
—Sam Page.
A SALAD SUGGESTION
An unusual salad can be made
by combining shredded cabbage
with diced orange and grapefruit
sections. Add plain mayonnaise
and serve it on lettuce arranged
on individual dishes. For the buffet
supper, it is equally as interesting
served in a large bowl and gar
nished around the edges with let
tuce or parsley.
culated a pledge in which students
bind themselves not to participate
in riotous disturbances. Most of the
yearlings have signed, dooming a
time-honored but dangerous and
costly undergraduate pastime.
Not United.
From The Humorist.
Lady Visitor; And what brought
you here, my good man?
Convict: Well, madam, my father
said when I was a boy that he
fioped I would marry beauty and
brains, and I wanted to please him.
Visitor; Yes?
Convict: So I'm in jail for big
i a my.
OF INTEREST TO FARMERS
TIIE HOG SITUATION
Not too many hogs, but too few
consumers ot hog products, or too
small an amount of hog products
consumed by those who do eat them,
is this paper’s explanation of the
present low price of hogs. Last
month the government Issued its
report on the present and prospec
tive hog crop of the nation and It
was generally conceded to be very
bearish. At all events, It was re
garded as discouraging to hog
growers, and since then there has
been a general movement to market
hogs. Weights at this point have
been running 20 to 25 pounds lighter
than a year ago, and farmers ap
pear to be getting rid of their hogs
regardless of weight or condition.
The figures given out by the de
partment of agriculture indicate an
increase of 19.7 per cent in the fall
pig crop. Of course there were the
usual additions and deductions on
account of increased litters, de
crease in number of sows bred, etc.,
but allowing for everything of this
kind, the report indicates the num
ber of hogs on farms on January
1 was approximately 56,823,000.
This, of course, looks like a lot of
hogs but it must be remembered
that ours is a mighty big country
and the largest hog growing country
on earth. Furthermore, the estimate
of nearly 57,000,000 hogs is by no
means excessive as compared with
actual supplies of former years.
Back in January, 1923, the govern
ment reported 69,044.000, nearly 12,
000.000 more than show ud on the
farms and ranches of the country
in 1932. And it might have been ad
ded that in the meantime the pop
ulation of the country has increased
something like 16,000.000 to 18,000,
000. Before we jump at the con
clusion that there are too many
hogs in the country it may be well
to look back a few years. Former
January lsts, on which largest sup
plies on farms were reported, were:
1900. with 62.868.000: 1908. with 61.
300000: 1918 with 61,200.000: 1919,
With 63.800,000: 1923 with 69,044.
000: 1924. with 66,361.000: 1928, with
60.420.000. On January 1. 1930, there
were 53.238,000 hogs on farms, and.
with the exception of 1903. with
47.200.000, 1905 with 52.000,000 and
1926 with 52.148,000, w'ere the small
est of the present century. “An esti
mated supply of 59.000.000 hogs in
the United States at the beginning
of 1932 should not'be discouraging
to any hog grower. A glance back
through the records will demon
strate that the years of heaviest
supplies have not always been years
of low prices and that the years' of
light receipts have not always
meant prices. As has often been
i pointed out. the supply is only half
the story. The important item is the
demand. When industrial and com
mercial conditions are bad and
there is little or no export demand
for pork products, prices of hogs
are bound to be low regardless of
supplies. On the other hand when
everybody is busy at good wages
and Europe is looking for pork
products from America, prices of
hogs are more than likely to be
strong regardless of market re
ceipts. In a word, there are not too
many hogs in the country for a
normal pork demand at home and
abroad. It is the lack of this de
mand and not the size of the hog
crop that is responsible for prevail
ing low prices.
IMPROVING PASTURES
Bluegrass is the premier perma
nent-pasture crop throughout a
large section of the United States.
Early spring care is important. An
established bluegrass pasture can be
best maintained and improved by
disking it in the early spring after
severe freezing weather has passed
and before spring rains start. This
usually means doing the job in late
February and March in most blue
grass sections. Single-cut the sod
with the disk set nearly straight
and weighted so it will penetrate
three or four inches deep. In places
where the grass has disappeared
and weeds have come in, double
disk with the disk set at a sharp an
gle. A light top-dressing of manure
before disking is very helpful. If
manure is not available when the
land is low in fertility and where
no clovers are growing, it will re
spond profitably to the use of com
mercial fertilizer. A 20 per cent sup
erphosphate will usually fit this
condition. On good land carrying
considerable clovers a 4-12-4 mixed
fertilizer is desirable. In either case
about 200 to 250 pounds per acre is
about the right quantity. Following
the disk a seed mixture suitable for
the condition of the soil and its lo
cation should be sown. In all cases
In most Midwestern states a mix
ture of timothy eight jxninds, alsike
clover three pounds, Korean Lespe
deza three pounds, and orchard
grass six pounds per acre 1s suitable.
For fertile land underlain with
limestone add 10 pounds of sweet
clover to the mixture, and for flat
wet fields, either poor or fertile, add
five pounds of red top. No covering
Is necessary when these mixtures
arc sown behind the disk.
FEED AND YOLK COLOR
Egg-volk color depends upon
what {he hen eats. Such feeds as
yellow corn and the green leafy
parts of plants, especially of le
gumes, such ns clover and alfalfa,
when fed in -large quantities, will
color the yolks yellow. Wheat, oats,
buckwheat, white corn and beets
will color the yolks only slighty,
and the so-called light-colored yolks
are the result. Certain leaves will
often discolor yolks; for example,
two weeds—shepherd’s-purse and
pennycress. They appear in advance
of other vegetation in the spring,
which accounts for many grassy
eggs that appear in flocks at that
time. Rape produces one of the
deepest colored yolks so if a poul
tryman aims at a market that de
mands a light-colored yolk, he
should avoid feeding this green.
Birds that have access to dry leaves
of well-cured hay and those that
receive 5 per cent of alfalfa-leaf
meal lay the highest percentage of
pale and medium colored volks. The
value of eggs for food is in no way
~ FEED PLENTY MILK
Milk has a very definite place in
the feeding of poultry, especially
young chicks. Any chick ration
should have in it some dry milk,
probably about 10 per cent of the
mash. Seme poultrymen, wishing
to feed larger quantities and in a
palatable form, will find that evap
orated buttermilk can be fed in a
paste just as it comes from the par
rel, in little troughs, so that the
chicks will nqt get in it. Milk is
rich in vitamins, palatable and eas
ily digested, and is the most avail
able and important source of pro
tein in baby chick feeding. Mill:
led to tile laying liens and breed
affected by the color of the yolk.
As to the taste, when such reed*
as rape, fresh fish, turnips, onions,
and sometimes cabbage are eivcn In
large quantities, the flavor is likely
to be affected. In small quantities
there are no noticeable effects.
SOME GRAFTING HINTS
Fri*t growers find topworking
and grafting generally much more
successful when the cions are waxed
as soon as they are cut. A thin
coating of paraffin wax prevents
drying out. Cions coated with wax
start quicker and the mortality is
greatly reduced By using wax the
grafting season may be extended
much later than would otherwise b?
possible. This waxing treatment also
may be used on young trees and
shrubs before transplanting. Desic
cation or drying out has long been
recognized as the chief hazard in
transplanting trees and shrubs.
Demonstrations in a number of
places under varying condition*
have shown conclusively that dip
ping the tops of small trees and
such shrubs as roses in a wax have
greatly reduqed mortality following
transplanting. Some. orchardists
have even thought that by applying
a coat of wax they have been able
to revive newly planted trees which
remained dormant late into the
summer. At least there is u growing
interest in the use of wax covering
both bv nurserymen and fruit grow
ers. There are n number of pro
prietary waxes suitable for this pur
pose now available. These prepared
waxes are no daubt preferable un
less a large number of trees are to
be dipped. Trees and shrubs should
so far as possible be pruned before
dipping, to eliminate unnecessary
cost. A rather inexpensive home
made wax is made by mixing four
parts of paraffin and one part of
pick-up gum—a gluelike substance.
Parraffin used alone flakes off too
badly for outdoor use but does maka
a satisfactory covering for storage
or shipment of cions. Another satis
factory wax consists of one pound
of resin, three ounces of linseed oil
and five pounds of paraffin. The
temperature of these waxes when
applied should be about 170 to 180
degrees F. Metallic bands used for
shipping sprav' materials or Mmilar
containers can be used for dipping
vats. If many trees, or shrubs are
treated plans should be made to In
sure an even temperature of the
wax. Only the tops of. trees or
shrubs are immersed. The wax may
be applied with a brush if necessary.
It is advisable to add a small quan
tity of beeswax where extremely
high temperatures are apt to occur.
SELECTING ROUGHAGES
Poor roughages make it nearly
impossible to feed cows profitably;
good roughages solve most winter
feeding problems. Now is the timej
as spring seeding approaches, to
meet the problems for next winter.
When legume hay and silage are
available on a dairy farm the choice
of suitable concentrates is easily
made; these concentrates are rela
tively cheap. If legume haf is luck
ing two alternatives are open; one
is to buy the right kind of hay, the
other is to use the available non
legume roughage and supplement it
with concentrates that supply more
protein. Either alternative is gen
erally expensive. The man who year
after year tries to milk cows with
only poor roughage to feed them is
attacking an almost insurmountable
obstacle. Alfalfa is not only the best
hay for cows but is even more sig
nificant than any concentrate. It
can be grown successfully in most
sections of the country; the dairy
men in these sections had better lay
their plans now for a sufficient
acreage to meet the demands of
their herds. No acre on a dairy farm
will yield more profits than an acre
of alfalfa. In areas where alfalfa
canhot be grown successfully a
substitute must be provided. Red
clover serves admirably in this.
Some northern dairymen rely on it
solely. Again, soy beans are finding
highest favor, though only an an
nual crop that must be seeded each
year. They have greatest use as an
emergency hay crop if the alfalfa
or clover winterkills. Sweet-clover
hay is highly indorsed by some
dairymen. However, as an emerg
ency hay crop when abundant yields
are essential, the sweet clover does
not suffice. Some one of the le
gumes wilf be found suitable for any
section of the country. Complete
dependence for successful dairy
feeding cannot be placed upon
grass hays, cane, Sudan, timothy,
fodder or straw.
THE LIGHT PROBLEM
The successful use of artificial
lights in stimulating egg production
during winter is dependent to a
considerable extent upon the meth
ods used in stopping1 the lights in
the spring. They should never be
operated after April 1, and it is well
to use much of March for closing
them' down—that is, they should be
stopped gradually. Any sudden stop
ping of lights, resulting as it does
in the birds consuming less feed, is
very apt to be followed by an un
seasonal abnormal molt and by
cessation in production. If the lights
are operated as an evening lunch
it will take about two weeks to stop
them gradually, advancing the time
of lighting each evening, about 15
minutes, until the lighting period
comes just at dusk. If they are
operated as morning and evening
lights simply to extend the normal
period of daylight, they can be
safely discontinued when normal
daylight hours approach or reach
the hours during which the birds
have been lighted.
DOCTORING DOBBIN
The modern method of ridding a
horse of worms is to withhold feed
for 36 hours and then have a vet
erinarian administer 4 or 5 drams
of oil of chenopodium in a gelatin
capsule and follow immediately
with a quart of raw linseed oil.
Colts take less doses, in proportion
to their age and size.
ers during the next two months
will help to bring them back into
condition, following the heavy drain
of winter confinement and produc
ing they have experienced. Many
poultrymen will find it possible to
secure a supply of skim milk of but
termilk from creameries or milk
stations in their vicinity. Such a
product is cheap and can be fed in
large quantities with safety and
profit.
ITS GOOD FORAGE, TOO
On soils containing sufficient lime,
the most productive grazing crop
known today is feyeet clover.
NIP CHEST COLDS,
QUICK WITH HEAT
OF RED PEPPERS
Relieves Almost instantly
To breaV. up congestion, to rento. c free
circulation and stop chest colds ... to
alleviate the circulatory pninn and
achesoi rheumatism, neurit is, lumbago
. . . Nature has stored up in red pep
pers a marveIoustheropcuticht .il that
penetrates deeply into the skin v, it hout
blistering or burning and swiftly I .ineja
relief. Now this genuine ted peppers'
heat is contained in an oin ntent.
Rowtes Red Pepper R.ik. An you
rub it on you'll feel better. A ml'in 3
minutes relief come*. Drug ot< >< ■> sell
Rowles Red Pepper hub. Try it.
Indians in U. S. Army
The twelve lutlitin scpttis null re
maining In Uniied Slides military
service live In Ft. Ilnarhiii a, Arlz.,
In tepees of the unite gem ml pat
tern of those their A pit the mu enters
built. The dozen Indians me still
authorized by regulation*, although
scout plane squadrons have al
most completely replaced them.
Their last active service bast In the
I’ershing expedition in 1010.
Frank Confession
"So you want to marry m.v daugh
ter,’ >.iid the man. "Who put you
up to coming to me iibout ill"
"To tell the truth," sighed the
young man, “it was the banker who
holds toy notes"
Up-fo-Date Du< i>»
Mary's mother rat soil ;i largo (lock
of wllk tlui ks this year, Dm windy
day they all took to tin alt Mary
never had ‘pen them on the wing be
fore and ran to Iter mother saying,
“Oh, look, mother. Our dneha all
have nit planes P
Constipated
Ini'i adof lmbil t<’ niingphypfc •'}
or r trnng. Ir ritatlnjf porpeo/
taka-NATURE'S R*MU/*i
|R—thosafe,dependable, all- i
vegetable la.alive. MJkt § .
gentle, plcaaant—IRt— to- g Ml WieltJVsl
night—tomorrow alright. _ VU MOBWnW1
Get a 2Sc box. « Ai.U)UH»
The Att-Vcgetalfc <tu i
Wiong Hate
He—l'in growing ii>r v,nr#,
Slip—Well, y#u don't expert to
And i liein around'my neok,*do yon?
Bedridden wkiBi
RheumaSism
Rubs on gets
up ligbt away
Theios ni tiling 1ik*
Rood okl fit Joccbi
Oil fin i* Moving Uin
at hi t anil {mins of
NcuHtIb, Rhcnfnn
tism, Lumbago, Lha km lie, rJeurnlgl*
or sore Muscles. You tgib It un.With
out burning or blistering It *|nl«l<l/
draws out pain arid jnllnaim/idurL,
Relief comes before you tan count r Of
Get a smell bottle ft cm ycot druggist.
When He Would Knovr
“Was it n friend gn\e you that
cigar?”
“I’ll toll you when I've tit It.”
“llow forceful me right woids."
Hew Qne
Lost 10 Us. it » Week
Mr?. Hotly Luedt ke of Lnylen
writes: “1 me using Krufiehen to
reduce weight—1 lost 10 poniuh lo
one week ami cannot say too (no*h!
to recoin mono it.”
To take otT tut easily, 8AFMLY
ami HARMLESSLY—fake one half
teaspoonful of Kinsehen In » gins*
of hot watei In Ihc morning before
breakfast—It Is the safe way 10
lose unsightly fat an«l one In (Hq
that lasts 4 weeks cobW hut a Lillee
Get It at any dragster* In Arocilifl
If this tlrst bottle fails it ibnvliua
you this Is ibe safest way to lose
fat—money bat k.
Hut be sure and gel Kmtjphen
Salts—Imitations are itumevonsand
you must safeguard your health
Sunshine ////
—AH Winter Leny
At the roitniini Desert Rciori
d( the West—mci-eko! tllmoUm— worm sunny
days—clear stail'l nights— dry invlgeiollng
air—splendid toads— gcrgeCos mountain
scenes—finest hoteli - the Ideal v.inH,i home,
Writ* (,<c tt fhattvy
PALM SPIDRNGS
#'nMerwt'tf
^OVERT)??N€ is as essen
tial lo business as is tain
to growing crops. ft is the Icy
stone in the arch of successful
merchandising. Let us show you
bow to apply it to your business.