The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, November 19, 1932, ILLUSTRATED FEATURE SECTION, Page 2, Image 6
Green Feed for Laying Hens Feeding the laying hens green feed tends to keep them in good healtn and to promote egg produc tion, says the United States De partment of Agriculture. Green feeds are one of the best sources of vitamins for poultry. Mangels and turnips provide some succulence, but very little green feed. When cabbages are available at reason able cost some may be fed but gcod quality alfalfa also should be supplied. Alfalfa is valuable, not so much because of its protein con tent. as formerly believed, but be-i cause alfalfa leaves are rich in! miiw.als and vitamins, which are lacking in the mash ration. Alfal fa leaf meal 1, a ood substitute for fresh green feed and is much better thai germinated oats. • * • Planning for Canning Means a Full Pantry What can be accomplished by planning during the growing sea son for the food of the succeeding winter is strikingly shown in a re I.. .—— port received by the United State Depar ment of Agriculture fror Young County, Texas. Followin the suggestions of the county hom demonstration agent in the sprint Mrs. Ed Martin, a member of ; home demonstration club and wif of a tenant farmer, made a “gar den and canning budget,” to tak care of the needs of her family o four this winter. As a result, sh now has foods in her pantry valuer at $467.50. These include 120 cans of fruit 108 cans of starchy vegetables, 19 cans of leafy vegetables, 150 con tainers of meat, and 96 container of other foods, such as jams, jellier and pickles. Three years ago. Mrs Marlin obtained permission fron their land lor"1 to plant 8 peacl trees. 24 berry plants, and 4 grap< vines, which cost $4.80 altogether S 'e has since set out 40 more berr; plants. During the year she has sold 41i dozen eggs ant! used 414 dozer -'some of which were put down ii waterglass for the winter); sold 35‘ pounds of butter and used 6 pounds; sold $205 worth of crean and used ' 32 worth at home. —. »^ CHICAGO WOMAN DREADED CHILDBIRTH Told She Might Die, Woman Almost Crazy With Fear. “When little Joan was on the way,” reports Mrs. Marshall of Chicago, Illinois, recently, "I was sick and run-down. I just felt tired and mean all the time. My mother and friends told me it MRS. RUTH w as very dangerous for a woman MARSHALL to have a baby when she felt y “I was plenty scared. Even if I lived thru it, I was afraid my baby would be weak and ailing. I was so frightened I just had tne misery. My skin was terrible. I had an awful backache and was consti pated. I could scarcely do the chores. Even my husband looked at me with pity. Everybody kept telling me what a chance I was taking. 1 scarcely knew what to do. “About that time an old school friend who has four strong, lovely children, and is the picture of health herself, dropped in to see me. She was shocked by my con dition. “ ‘Why Ruth.’said she, ‘This is all your own fault entirely. It is so easy to help nature and protect both yourself and child 1’ “ ‘But how can I, Martha?’ I asked. ?just broke dowm and cried. “Then she told me about a Doctor Caldwell, wrho attended more that! three thousand births in fifty years of family practice without losing a single mother or child!” (The official Platt County records in Illinois prove the truth of this astonishing statement.) ‘“He originated a w onderful medi cine, based on years of experience. Expectant mothers wTho do not dare use strong, habit-forming cathar tics can take Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin at any time. It drives the body poisons out of the system, ?S-:-:;::Wa«^va¥»:¥:::::¥:¥SSSSa permitting sound sleep and health ful digestion. Nature does the rest. Why don’t you try-some, Ruth, and sec how it picks you up almost at once?’ “I began noticing the benefits of taking Svrup Pepsin almost at once. My liver became more active and bowel muscles stronger. Even my complexion began to clear up. Everyone noticed it. It was just like a miracle. “I am so grateful for my present good health and my fine strong girl. We are all so very happy we are looking forward to having an other lovely baby soon.” Mothers! Yon are only as strong as your organs. When these become run-down and your liver and bowels are weak, you should act at once. Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is not expensive and it is put up conve niently in large-size Dottles carried by most good druggists. Don’t take a lot of patent medicines w hich may be dangerous and weakening. And don’t ‘‘Just give up.” Get a bottle of genuine Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, take it according to direc tions, and feel the new energy and strength returning to your entire system! Don’t be subject to colds, heartburn, biliousness and other evidence of run-down system. Dr. Caldwell’s prescription is perfectly safe, and very pleasant to take. It was hard to realize that she was the same girl. Six months ago she was a wallflower. Women avoided her. Men called her “the girl who liked to sit down."’ She really deserved that name too because she was always complain ing about how bad she felt. Famous Tonic Helped Her Her mother first told her about St. Joseph’s G.F.P. Results started from the first. Soon she was developing pep and energy. A new light came into her eyes. Jt was the sparkle of health, the desire to enjoy life. The other night at one of the big social events she was “the belle of the ball.” Money Back Guarantee St. Joseph’s G.F.P. is a famous tonic that has helped womankind for over fifty years. It contains roots and herbs that aid in building up abundant energy and strength. Women thrive on it. It is so invigorating, so beneficial. Today, ask your druggist for the big dollar bottle of St. Joseph’s G.F.P. He sells jit on a money-back guarantee. 5 Culling By PROF. H. D. MUNROE There is a tendency among poul trymen and farmers to becom careless about the management o their poultry flock du. ng the sum *■ mer when egg prices are low. I s is at this time that the greates care should be taken. 1 Management problems hat effec j summer egg production are lice an< » mites, mash consumption and cull ing. ’ Even with low prices it is possibli ‘ to have a profit on a flock if eg( ; production is maintained abovi I fifty per cent. Heavy productioi « can be maintained during the sum } mer only by culling. jj * * * Results with Syrup i Better than Cotton ■j RALEIGH. N.C. (ANP)—In ad 5 dition to supplying a tasty food foi • the winter table, sorghum syrui - has paid farmers well for the tim< 1 and labor invested in the crop thii | past season. ' C. R. Hudson, in charge of ex ; tension work with colored farmer; for.State College, has insisted thal , growing sorghum cane and con | verting it into syrup be a part ol t!the program on every farm now. ,| Some indication of the value ol . this plan is given in a report re ceived by the extension worker I from McKay McNeill, local agent I in Johnston County. During the I past year, McNeill placed eleven demonstrations in sorghum grow ing. The average yield was 104 gallons an acre at a cost of 32c a gallon. At present price of 50c a gallon, this syrup returned a profit of $18.72 an acre. The average yield of cotton is about one-half bale an acre, which at a price of 8 centc a pound jives |a total return of only $20 an acre, lit costs about the same to grow !cotton as it does syrup. Figured on this basis, therefore, the cotton hardly paid the cost of production, while the syrup gave a profit of $18.72 an acre. BEAUTY HINTS Graceful Walk is Result of Pointing Toes Straight Ahead. As we look back now that ex tremely short skirted era was a test, all right. But, at that, I don't think it was as hard on the youthfulness of a woman as to day's long skirted one. She had an idea in the old days, at least, that she was fooling folk with the kiddish skirt. And a lot of other women were toeing out, so if her feet looked funny she had company in that respect and plenty of it. But today, with no leg to speak of Jo distract the eye of man (and woman), the feet come in for a heap of staring. That's one reason why we think this a harder period for the woman who'd like to ap pear younger. The other is that the lengthened skirt calls impera tively for a smart, snappy, young walk. Otherwise you’re sunk into middle agedness, at least. Women of the grandmother age, let's say, might be excused for the habit of walking with feet turned out. Many of them were taught to walk that way. Once taught and practiced for years, it's no easv trick getting the toes to point straight ahead. But women of the young matron age and younger certainly have not the excuse of faulty teaching to keep on turn ing those feet out at the ugly forty live degree angle. I warn you all that this walking business is going to be pounded in to you by every beauty and health adviser from now on. The beauty preachers simply can't let you go on turning those feet out" when you move or when you stand still, for that matter. You can't get any lightness in your step if you turn the feet out. You can't come up and down on the ball of the foot easily. And the chances are ten to one you’re now suffering some arch strain, if not out and out flat footedness from walking with the feet turned out. * * * You never saw a graceful wom an, a smart stepping one, a chic i person with feet acting that way. Feet have to be placed directly in front of you and walked on lightly to get any style in your movements. You've got to keep them pointing 'directly in front of you when you jstand. In fact, it is better to turn i ---- * i » guarantee to help ! you get a new start in life. No I case heyond hope. Stop worrying! Write me today. Information FREE. M. WILLIAMS, Ml Bergen Aft. Jersey City, N.J., Dept. F. in a little than out for appearanc sake and for the good of your foo action. Check up on those tootsies o - yours and see if you're makini 1 them do right by your appearance ■ Stand them and walk them bet or “ a pier of glass and don’t let then 1 9® practice until you have them go . ing straight ahead every time. I ; makes your feet look a couple o sizes larger to turn them out widi ’ i when you walk. And that ought t< ,| cure them, eh what? Congressman’s Daughter Continued from Page One ing his master was now so appar . ent that no one of us could doub i his guilt, vanished into the hallway Police whistles blasted. The in spector rushed to the window anc shouted orders to his men on th« sidewalk below. A cordon of Seoul cars closed about the hotel, ir readiness to prevent the butler's es cape from the hotel in case he : reached the ground floor. But all these precautions were un necessary. Hitchinson got no fur ther than the hallway. Patrolmen stationed there captured him anc lugged him, shaking a’l over, back into the room. ! TWe inspector faced him accusing ly. •’Hutchinson,” he said, “this is the second time you've tried to es cape what’ coming to you. Twice you have admitted that you are the person we>e looking for. Nov/ there’s no question about it — you killed * »ui uuvao; The !)eaten little man nodded his head in assent. “I guess you've got me,” he said. “What Lucas’s son just said was the trutf\ I did love the Congressman's wife. But she didn’t love me. I figured it was be cause he was still alive, and all her love was still for him. I was crazy about her; I wasn't in my right mind at ah. The only solution I could see was to kill him. I never dreamed I’d be found out. Lucas always had those heart attacks. He would have died soon anyway. And if that damned reporter hadn’t hap pened in here—” He shook h s fist at me. I grinned. And then, all of a sudden, I remembered that I was a reporter. I jerked out my watch, whirled, and shot out into the hall for the telephone. And what a story I gave Jimmy Stewart! Inside stuff, I mean. Jimmy gave it an eight column head over three editions. And he saw to it th"t I got not only a raise, but a promotion. I'm reviewing burlesque shows these days. Hot dog! THE END - i - n Advice to the Lovelorn “Dear Suzanne: What is your opinion of a person who enjoys clipping items (uncomplimentary to receiver) and mailing them anonymously? J. M.” An anonymous sending of “un complimentary” correspondence is a cowardly deed. Such communi cation should be ignored. * ♦ * “Dear Suzanne: I am 18, con sidered good looking, have person ality, and am popular with girls. I attract boys, but they soon grow; tired. What is the trouble? Edy ’j Ask one of the girls who knows you to tell you what's wrong, but don’t get mad at what she says. # * * “Dear Suzanne: I love a girl. We quarreled. Later, we talked to each other, but when I asked her to go out with me she always had an excuse. Brokenhearted. ” I wouldn't pursue that girl any longer when ther are so manv other girls in the world. TRY THIS HEW, MODERN WAY OF RAZORLESS SHAVING Magic Shaving Powder simply mixed with water—spread on the face—and washed off. Toar beard is off quicker and closer than yon ean shave with a razor. Magic Shaving Powder retards growth of hair; it ia antiseptic; clears skin of bnmps and pimples; prevents ingrowing hair. Used by women for removing superfluous hair. 35« at drag stores. Or, send 35c in stamps TODAY for big, f nil-size ean. Write Magic Shaving Powder Ce., Dept. K. Savannah, Ga. - [THE HUMAN r THING TO DO : Satin, velvet and crepes are al ; ways good form for evening wear, i This year, however, the couturier! ■ have approved of several materials ; heretofore unheard of for that : purpose. Our three models have ; chosen evening dresses of jersey, i corduroy and fine broadcloth. * • • In this country, pedestrians abide by the traffic rule of "Keep to the right.” * * * When walking on a city street, a lady never takes a gentleman’s arm unless the pavement is in bad condition or the thoroughfare is very crowded. » * * At tea time no one sits at the . table. If there is no small table on which to put the plate it is balanced on the lap. Note that in holding the teacup, the little Anger is NOT crooked. AGENTS WANTED GO INTO BUSINESS—SHI new an.i u*ed clothing. 100% to 300% profit. Satis faction guaranteed. We start ou. IDEAL RUMMAGE SALE CO., L-4004 State Chicago. ’ BRACE UP! Dry this "nightcap” Lazy muscles mean that poisonous intestinal wastes are sapping your energy. Why continue feeling run-down and sluggish? A"nightcap” of Garfield Tea, for several weeks will put you "on your feet.’* (At all druggists). Sample lOr: Garfield Tea Co.. |*.0. Brooklyn. N Y GARFIELD/tfZ dNohtbalJiuudiueUAinJ*^, Anyone Can \ Now Have a Lighter Skin When skin is satiny, soft and light, then smiles beguile and your beauty is charming. Dr. Fred Palmer’s Skin Whitener Ointment softens and lightens the darkest skin, clears up pimples, blotches and tan marks, and does away with that "oily, shiny/ look. Use this preparation regulaHy to make your skin soft, delate and charming. -This amazing Ointment is made in the famous Dr. Fred Palmer’s Laboratories where are also made those other beauty aids you know so well: Dr. Fred Palmer’s Skin Whitener Soap, Skin Whitener Face Powder, Hair Dresser and Hid De odorant, which may be had at all drug stores for 25 cents each or will be sent postpaid upon receipt of price. Dr. Fred Palmer's Labora tories, Dept. D, Atlanta, Ga. Send 4c in flamp* for trial sample of Skin Whitener, ) Soap and Face Powder. DR.FRED PALMER’S <Sfu'n clUhttener. ‘KEEPS YOUR COMPLEXION YOUTHFUL?