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Automobile Puzzle
“Have we plenty of gas now before
we start?”
"The indicator says one-lialf —but I
don't know whether that means half
foil or half empty.”
Make Work for Themselves
Men spoil women, and then try to
reform them—E. W. Howe’s Monthly.
people depend on Bayer
A Aspirin to make short work of
headaches, but did you know it’s
just as effective in the worse pains
from neuralgia or neuritis? Rheu
matic pains, too. Don’t suffer when
Bayer Aspirin can bring complete
comfort without delay, and without
harm; it does not affect the heart.
In every package of genuine Bayer
Aspirin are proven directions with
which everyone should be familiar,
for they can spare much needless
suffering.
u 1118 tra . da mar k of Bayer Manufacture
ei Mopoaceticaeidester of Salicyllcaeid
Modern Youth
After Tommy had cleaned out his
c icken patty, he passed it over to
>s mother, who gave him an inquir
“g look.
"I want a refill.”
nd°m tra , ry men wont si S n petitions;
mats a commendatory word said
lor contrariness.
. tins
super spray
?“ ce Y° u have used Tanglefoot
X y V°u will prefer it to all
r fly destroyers. Insects die
thf. eV - er r ®V ve — w hen you fill
Tanoifr l^'s deadly mist,
tanglefoot is absolutely safe.
tur P . r °i m °hjectionable fea-
costs less than inferior
2 n teS * kills
p a J , riCe * greatly reduced.
y less and get the best.
pi
ITv S3 1,11 ?*?>** sanitary and
j£wT economical destroyers*
tanglefoot
SPRAY
Open Herdbooks
to Best Cattle
Dairy Associations Over
looking Means of Improv
ing Their Breeds. ■,
(Prepared by the United states Department
of Agriculture.)
Dairy breed associations in the
United States are overlooking an im
portant means of Improving their re
spective breeds In keeping their herd
books closed to the many unregistered
high-producing cows of excellent type,
according to O. E. Reed, chief of the
bureau of dairy industry. United
States Department of Agriculture.
Speaking before the annual conven
tion of the Holstein-Frieslan associa
tion in Philadelphia, Mr. Reed suggest
ed the desirability of the national
breed associations giving “some study
to setting up a system of registry
which will permit entering in the herd
books unregistered animals that have
reached a high degree of purity for a
high level of production.”
Seems Like Rank Heresy.
Mr. Reed admitted this suggestion
might seem like “rank heresy to those
who have not thought the proposition
through,” but he called attention to
the fact that all cattle now registered
sprang from the common herd. More
over, he cited figures showing the very
slight difference existing between the
production of unregistered and regis
tered commercial herds today.
Of 100,000 cows tabulated by the
bureau of dairy industry, 70.000 were
grades and 30,000 were registered.
The grades, he said, produced 7,124
pounds of milk and 254 pounds of but
terfat a year on tiie average, while
the registered cattle averaged 7.878
pounus of milk and 303 pounds of
butterfat, a difference of only 754
pounds of milk and 19 pounds of hut
terfat in favor of the registered cattle.
New System Is Favored.
There are many unregistered an
imals of great productive capacity
and excellent type in the United
States today that could be made use
of in our breeding operations with
profit, he said. A system of register
ing such animals has plenty of back
ing, and it can be made genetically
sound. Great Britain, Holland, and
other countries famous for their fine
herds and flocks have used such a
system in the past and still follow
the practice of admitting animals that
have three to five top crosses of reg
istered sires. In discussing the plan,
Mr. Reed pointed out that It would
not mean an immediate wholesale reg
istration of grade cattle. If only three
top crosses were required for the reg
istration of females and all first calves
in the crosses were females, which is
improbable, he stated, it would take
ten years to get a female registered
in the herd book.
Preventive Steps for
Poults and Blackhead
Such tragic stories as come in about
“poults the size of quails.” “They get
a yellowish or greenish color drop
pings”: “they begin to walk slow”;
“they go light until they die,” etc.
This is the old enemy “blackhead."
The preventive measure is to rear the
turkey poults on ground that is not
pastured by chicks; to give them all
the sour milk they will drink, and
every third week to give epsom salts
in the proportion of a teaspoon each
per old bird, and a half teaspoon foi
poults.
The droppings of a flock affected
with blackhead should be kept cleared
away and burned or buried. Make
sure that the fowls are free from
mites and lice.
Do not keep as breeders birds that
have been cured of blackhead.
Food for Goslings.
Bread and milk, cornmeal and bran
mash are all good food for goslings.
One thing that tends toward profit in
geese-raising is that but little food
is required after the first few days
when grass is plentiful. But because
goslings are not always careful as to
diet they sometimes eat poisonous
weeds, principally young cockleburr,
and unless timely aid is given they
die. rt is best to feed them at least
once a day, and to include a little
lard or grease skimmed from liquor in
which vegetables have been boiled and
seasoned, to overcome the effects of
such poisons.
Agricultural Notes
.^x-x-x-x-x-x'-x-x-x-x-x-x-i*
Feed a dry mash.
* * *
Hoeing is the life of peas. Give
them plenty of it.
• • •
Sudan grass used for pastures Is
not nearly so hard on the land as
sudan grass used for hay.
* * •
One of the latest devices Is a con
veyor and self feeder for hating straw
directly from the threshing machine.
• * *
Vegetables will not develop satisfac
torily if the plants are thick, hence
judicious thinning is very important.
Don’t forget to take a daily lookout
for bugs and give them a shot of poison.
One bug can produce a big family in
short order.
* • •
Unless turnips are thinned just at
the right time they will be disappoint
ing. Get them pulled to reasonable
distances to permit growth.
ROCKDALE RECORD, Conyers, Ga., Wed., July 24, 1929.
What Will
you jtm
do %SJp
J ' v i
When your
Children Cry
for It
There is hardly n household that
hasn’t heard of Castoria! At least five
million homes are never without it. If
there are children in your family,
there’s almost daily need of its com
fort. And any night may find you very
thankful there's a bottle iu the house.
Just a few drops, and that colic or
constipation is relieved; or diarrhea
checked. A vegetable product; a baby
remedy meant for young folks. Castoria
is about the only thing you have ever
heard doctors advise giving to infants.
Stronger medicines are dangerous to a
tiny baby, however harmless they may
be to grown-ups. Good old Castoria!
Remember the name, and remember
to buy it. It may spare you a sleep
less, anxious night. It is always ready,
always safe to use; in emergencies, or
for everyday ailments. Any hour of the
day or night that Baby becomes fret
ful, or restless. Castoria was never
more popular with mothers than it is
today. Every druggist has it.
CASTORI A
f^^ULEm'S
Sulphur Soap
Skin eruptions, excessive
Contains perspiration, insect bites,
33y3%Pure relieved atonce by this re-
Suiphur freshing, beautifying toilet
and bath soap. Best for
Soft, Clear Skin
Rohland s Styptic Cotton, 25c
LS
I JLw J HEALED OVEHNBBHT
r Specialist's salve. Carbon,
■ j t ’ V stops pain instantly. Heals
BA jO worst boil ovemitht Get
Pk\l /-f Carboil from druggist, end
ML Y 1 painful bump quick. Spor
lock-Neal Cos., Nashville, Tenn.
Kill All Flies! TH disease
Placed anywhere, DAISY FLY KILLER attractß and
killa aU flies. Neat, clean, ornamental, convenient and
daisy" fly” KILLER
from your dealer.
HAROLD SOMERS. Brooklyn N. Y.
No Place Like Home
She —I wonder why they put corn
meal on the dance floor.
He —Oh, that’s to make the chick
ens feel at home.
Taste is not necessarily following
the fashion.
it
1 ' TO SHI
-i
“Before My
Baby Came”
“Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound puts new life
into me and makes my work in
the store and in tne house
easier. I took several bottles
before my baby came and am
always singing its praises to my
friends. I recommend it for
girls and women of all ages. It
makes me feel like life is worth
living, my nerves are better
and I have gained pep and feel
well and strong.” —Mrs. A. R.
Smith, 808 S. Lansing Street,
St. Johns, Michigan.
Lydia E- Pinktiam’s
Vegetable Compound
Lydia E. Pinkham Med. Gti./Lynri. Mat*.
SORE EYES Eye Lotion
relieves and cures sore and Inflamed eyes In 24 to 48
hoars. Helps the weak eyed, cures rO thout pain.
Ask your druggist or dealer for HAI.TEB S. Only
from 7 Reform Dispensary, i*. O. Box 161, Atlanta, tia.
4*4* •5* 4* 4* 4* 4- 4* 4- 4* 4* 4* v 4-4* 4* 4* 4- 4* 4* 4*4* 4*2- 4- 4-
t Dreams of Disaster, *
| Killed on Same Day f
v Buffalo, N. Y. —Mrs. Estelle %
% Schooeover, fifty, told her iius- *
* bund at the breakfast table that T
4. a dream she had during the <.
|| night was a premonition that
4* disaster would overtake one of *
1 them before 24 hours had passed, t
4* Arriving home after work, *
J Schooeover failed to find his %
|| wife. Deciding to go to a corner &
% store he walked past n group of
* persons standing over a pros- T
4. trate body lying on the trolley $
tracks. It proved to be that of £
4* his wife. She had been killed by f
* a traction car. |
-> ❖ 4* *:• *❖*4*4*->4-•>4- 4* 4- *-> * 4-+4*+
YOUTHS CONFESS
TO MANY MURDERS
Seek Revenge for Loss of
Relatives in Russia.
Moscow. —Having murdered a few
“Whites” In their village from mo
tives of political revenge, four young
Communists in the Chita district of
Siberia, now under arrest, acquired a
taste for the game and blossomed Into
ordinary bandits, according to their
confession to the police.
The boys were arrested last August
but the details of their strange career
of crime, over a period of four years,
have just been made public. The
Chita region was devastated by years
of civil warfare after the 1917 revo
lution, especially through the activi
ties of Ataman Semionoff, and this is
one of innumerable tragedies that can
be traced back to that chaotic period.
The four boys—Britzin, Filonoff,
Perilomoff and Pritupoff—had been
mere children when the waves of civil
strife rolled over their native village
of Aksha. All of them had lost rela
tives at the hands of the White in
vaders.
in 1924 they joined the Communist
youth organization in a group and be
came among the most fervid propa
gandists against the rich peasants and
White sympathizers. But words did
not satisfy them. Finding that the
Communists were opposed to acts of
individual terror, they decided to take
the law into their own hands.
One night a hand grenade was
thrown into the house of a villager
who had served under General Sem
inoff. Several persons were injured
and the perpetrator of the crime re
mained a mystery to Aksha inhabi
tants. Then a rich peasant known to
be anti-Soviet was mysteriously mur
dered. Others followed, the victims
being always Whites. The whole series
of murders, it now appears, was car
ried out by the four friends.
Fighter Fined, Then
Chooses Not to Appeal
Portland, Ore.—William McConnell
and L. B. Thompson, neighbors, fought
to a draw here recently.
They carried their fight into court
and both lost
“It is the judgment of the court
that both of you are equally guilty
of assault and battery. The fine will
be $lO in each case,” said Judge
Mears.
Thompson agreed to pay the fine,
but there was some doubt as to
whether McConnell would until the
Judge spoke up again.
McConnell wanted to appeal his
case. He was informed that no ap
peal could be taken when the fine is
less than S2O.
“I’ll be good to you and make the
fine SSO, so you can appeal,” Judge
Mears said.
No appeal was filed.
5-Day Sentence Worries
Man Serving 5 Years
San Quentin Prison, Calif. —Louis
Righetti, twenty-six, serving five years
to life for conviction in San Francisco
on three counts of highway robbery, is
one of those persons who believes In
crossing bridges before he gets to
them.
Louis confessed to prison officials that
it wasn’t the five years to life that
caused him to be worried.
No, Louis is worried because when
he eventually is freed from state’s
prison he must serve a five-day sen
tence in the Alameda county jail for
reckless driving. He was convicted in
San Francisco on the more serious
charge before he could start serving
the sentence for an automobile law in
fraction.
Ownership of Goose
Decided by Barnyard
Lackawanna, N. Y.—Two women ap
peared in court here to claim posses
sion of a goose, and it was only by
a unique decision that the claim was
properly settled.
The goose was taken first to one
home and allowed to walk in the yard.
Here the goose seemed at a loss. Short
ly after it was carried to the second
home and left alone. It strayed in a
:oop in the yard and honked away
nerrily. The court decided to award
be fowl to the second woman.
Fined Them Both
Taunton, Mass.—Can two men drive
the same automobile at the same time?
An affirmative answer to this question
cost Edward Collins and William Gor
man SIOO each in court here. Unable
to determine which was operating the
automobile, the Judge fined both on
charges of drunken driving.
Faith of Small Girl
Upset by Daisy Test
Rev. Earl Anderson, of Dallas, who
was recently jailed for contempt of
court —lie kept on building a Funda
mentalist temple in violation of a
court injunction—has a happy knack
of sharpening his points by means of
ancedote. Mr. Anderson said in a re
cent Y. M. C. A. address:
“The men who try to define and ex
plain God are as foolish ns little Ethel.
“Little Ethel, the foolish child, hur
ried from the garden crying.
“ ‘Why, Ethel, what’s the matter?’
said tier mother. ‘Did a wasp sting
you or something?’
“ ‘No, nutvver,’ little Ethel sobbed,
‘but I’ve just found out God doesn't
love me.'
“ ‘Foolish, foolisli child!’ snid the
mother. ‘How could you find out such
a tiling as that? God does love you,
of course.’
“‘No, lie doesn’t,' little Ethel
sobbed. ‘I tried Him wlv a daisy.’”—
Detroit Free Press.
A Modest Aim
Otto li. Kalin, the ricli patron of
the arts, was talking about art to a
Chicago reporter.
“High brow artists,” he said, “are
content to make a living. The low
brows want to make a fortune.
“A high brow wrote a play. It was
put on at one of the little theaters,
ns high brow theaters are always
called, in Greenwich Village.
“On the third or fourth night the
author turned up and said anxiously
to the box office man:
“‘Well, old horse, how’s she going?’
“‘Oli, very much better,’ said tiie
box office man. ‘Fewer and fewer
leave now before the end of tiie
show.’ ”
Toy Balloon Traveled Far
A Swedish toy balloon recently
made a safe crossing of tiie North
sen, and landed in Yorkshire, in Eng
land. It was given away, with many
hundred others, by a department store
in Malmoe, in the southern Swedish
province of Scania, and let loose by a
youngster there. On tiie diminutive
gas bag was printed tiie name and ad
dress of the store, for advertising pur
poses. The oilier day the manager of
tiie store received it in the mail from
a person in Yorkshire. It was deflated
and wrapped in paper, but undam
aged.
Sympathy
Hugh, visiting his aunt in Ihc coun
try, had been observing a robin’s nest
in a tree near the house.
He came in to bis aunt much trou
bled. “I feel sorry for that mother
robin on tiie nest. Her husband never
stays home.”
Damaged
“What’s she singing?”
“It sounds like Mendelssohn's broken-
Spring Song.”—Life.
A Limit
“Divorces are increasing steadily.”
“Well, we can’t have more than one
for every marriage.”
Humility may be admirable in the
presence of nature; Hut nature doesn't
care.
cost 50c a half-pint. But when
you get Black Flag Liquid, and
J put down 50c, you get 15c -
I change. For Black Flag liquid
■ is only 35c a half-pint, fact it’s
the deadliest liquid madef Killa
-A flies, mosquitoes, ants, roaches,
C 'mwVwM&’wmC bedbugs, etc. Quickly! Rarely!
" Money back if it doesn’t prove
„ its deadliness to you. i f
I J
BLACK FLAG
LIQUID “TS
Black Flag alto comet in powder form. Equally deadly. 15c, and up.
People who realize the importance of a
Clear, Healthy Skin use -1
mm
Cleansing Soothing Antiseptic
Sample free. Address: "Cutirars,” Dept. 87, Malden, Mass.
~—n WhoWantsto be Bald?
{ ;%'/* Not many, and when you are '
/ - ‘ZM&. getting that way and loosing j| afjfaL
f hair, which ends in baldness, aft' .yjfJ||P
you want a ?°°d remedy that
|l||' will stop falling hair, dandruff yk
mmm iarMi and grow hair on the bald head B/JH
BARE-TO-HAIR is what you § t f HI
want.
For Sale at AD Dealers In Toilet Articles
W. H. Forst, M£gr. Scottdale. Penn a.,
Makes Life
Sweeter
Children’s stomachs sour, and need
an anti-acid. Keep their systems
sweet with Phillips Milk of Magnesia I
When tongue or breath tells of acid
condition—correct it with a spoonful
of Phillips. Most men and women have
been comforted by this universal
sweetener —more mothers should in
voke its aid for their children. It Is a
pleasant thing to take, yet neutralizes
more acid than the haVsher things too
often employed for the purpose. No
household should be without it
Phillips Is tiie genuine, prescrip
tional product physicians endorse for
general use; the name is important.
“Milk of Magnesia” has been the U. S.
registered trade mark of the Charles
11. Phillips Chemical Cos. and its pre
decessor Charles H. Phillips slpc®lß7s.
Phillips
Milk
of Magnesia
— ■■■■ I ii ■
Girl of the Periid'
“Will site let you kiss liieje?”
“Yes, but site won’t glye. you any
help."
I i
A great many political rguns are
nothing but air guns. ; ,
To Cool a Burn
Use Hanford’s Balsam of Myrrh
Money back for first bottle if not suifledj All dealers.
PARKEk’S
HAIR BALSAM
RemovcflDandruff-StopßHairF&Uinc
Restores Color and
Beauty to Gray and Faded H^ii
60c. and SI.OO at Drugrirists.
FLORESTON SHAMPOO—IdeaI for use In
connection with Varkcr’a Hair Balsam. Makes the
hair soft and Huffy. 50 cents by mail or at drug
cists. lliscox Chemical Works, Patchogue, N. Yu
AGKNTN. To introduce now shampoo which
has wonderful tonic qualities; restoring beau
ty to faded hair; build up steady repeat
business; generous commissions paid daily.
Write for special premium offer that makes
all women buy..
Y. IHJ-KANA, Box 485, Syracuse, N. Y.
Klectric Appliances for every household duty.
Make homo comfortable. Reduced prices.
Write Alan Cos., G 5 Nassau; St.. New York.
Hasty Reply* l
Mr. 11., a genial host/ was enter
taining his old friend Jwith a few
camera pictures, reminiscent of their
happy school days.
“Do you know I won’t have mv pic
ture made any more,” skid tiie guest.
“I don’t blame you t ”j was tiie ir
remediable reply. \ J'
i SIIP !:
s MEDICIHAI {:
. voile,. !.