Cleveland courier. (Cleveland, White County, Ga.) 1896-1975, August 27, 1926, Image 2
To Customers of General Motors General Motors is unwilling to leave to chance anything involving your satisfaction with your purchase of a General Motors car. This is why more than seven years ago the General Motors Acceptance Corporation was organized. It assures customers of General Motors who prefer to purchase out of income a sound credit service at low cost. In the General Motors line there is a “car for every purse and purpose,” and the GMAC Plan can be comfort* ably fitted to the individual circum* stances of buyers of assured income. The GMAC Plan is offered through General Motors dealers exclusively. Ask your nearest dealer to explain its advantages. # GENERAL MOTORS ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION operating the GMAC Plan fot the purchase of CHEVROLET ' PONTIAC ' OLDSMOBILE OAKLAND ' BUICIC ' CADILLAC FRIGIDAIRE ' DELCO-LIGHT ROILS fc# There's There's quick, quick, ^ relief positive, r in CARBOIL At a»*u«i.ocK« All Dmftftiat* t NaAu — Money back GuawnUg co. na>nviuc.tcnn. PASH PAID FOK 1TALHK TKETIT, GOLD SORE EYES Eye Lotion relieves boars. and oures sum and Inflamed eyes 1 n 34 to 48 Helps the pitdealer weak eyed eures 8A I,Tbill's. without pain. Ask your dTitUBist tor Only front ituformJitattehBary. P o. Bo* IS1. Atlanta, (la ©IW8S.O.C.. (24, f.) ■Do* fliet like '_yourreooIcmgr ? T3 EMEMBER, flies are more than troublesome. IX They come from filth to food. Get rid of them with Flit. Flit spray clears your home in a few minutes of dis¬ ease-bearing flies and mosquitoes. It is clean, safe and easy to use. Kills All Household Insects Flit spray also destroys bed bugs, roaches and ants. It searches out the cracks and crevices where they hide and breed, and destroys Flit kills insects moths and arid their their eggs. larvae Spray which flit on your garments. showed that eat holes. Extensive tests Flit spray did not stain the most delicate fabrics. Flit is the result of exhaustive research by expert entomol¬ ogists and chemists. It is harmless to mankind. Flit has does replaced the old methods because it kills all the insects—and it quickly. Get a Flit can and sprayer today. For sale everywhere. STANDARD OIL CO. (NEW JERSEY) DESTROYS Files Mosquitoes Moths Ants Bed Bugs Roaches **TTte can with the black band" A tnau always tells ills wife that lie doesn’t care wlmt the neighbors think —but lie does. Cuticura Soap for the Complexion. Nothing better than Cuticura Soap daily and Ointment now and then aa needed to make the complexion clear, scalp alean and hands soft and white, Add to this the fascinating, fragrant Cuticura Talcum, and you hove the Cuticura Toilet Trio.—Advertisement Nothing jolts an ignorant man quite ns much as being forced to say, “I don’t know.” CLEVELAND COURIER, CLEVELAND, GEORGIA, Run Down by Cor, % [ Apologizes to Driver | j Kansas City, Mo.—One man In g % ij | a million automobile Is Frank knocked Bruce. When him : | an g 3 ; down, bruised his body and tore § | ( his clothing, Bruce got to his •! feet, smiled and apologized to S ■ j the driver. i \ | “I’m sorry,” he said. "It was 2 1 all my fault i JEALOUSY OF SONS MOTIVE FOR MURDER Kills Wife With Hammer and Buries Body . Syracuse, N. Y.—Accosted by his wife as he tapped a barrel of wine In the cellar of his home, Agostino Izzo, fifty-one, killed her with a hammer, placed her body in a four-foot box and bad it hauled to a deserted spot on the shore of Lake Onondaga, seven miles away, police here say. “I killed her while the seven chil¬ dren were away,” Izzo sobbed to the police. “Not since then have I been able to rest I fall asleep and dream of her.” He was Insanely Jealous of his grown sons, Izzo told police In a de¬ tailed confession of his crime. His wife had argued with him over a check for $12.15, and he was about to drown his sorrows, he said, when she rushed at him with a butcher knife. Izzo said he grabbed the hammer to defend himself. His wife lunged with the knife and he swung, Intend ing to strike her on the shoulder, he said, but the blow landed on ber head. She fell dead. Immediately Izzo procured holy water and blessed the body of his dead wife. He dressed her In her best clothes and dragged Into the cellar the biggest box he could find. There by the flickering light of a plumber's candle he cramped her body Into the box, nailed on the cover and sprinkled more hqly water over It. He told the children their mother had gone to Detroit on a visit, and hired a truck man, Angelo Cannata, to haul the box out to the lake. Dismissing the cart man, he dug the grave. Into It he lowered the box, once more sprinkling holy water from his neighboring church and filled the grave with eurth. Then began the torture of his con¬ science. He could not eat Food gagged him. The children asked questions continually and nearly drove him mad. When he fell asleep he was haunted by the scene In the cellar. $150,000 Plot Spiked in Leavenworth Prison Leavenworth, Kan.—F.fforts of a j prisoner to avoid payment of a long- j distance telephone toll led to the dis¬ I covery of a conspiracy by convicts in the federal penitentiary here to swin- j die $150,000, the government Warden W. out of Biddle upward of j I. an- ; nounced on completion of an Investi¬ gation Into the plot. One of the prisoners, Jesse L. Greer, committed from Colorado for robbing the malls, tried to save himself the tolls by charging the call to the war¬ den and later altering the bill from the telephone company to make It ap¬ pear that the call was a call to a St. Louis business firm. The warden dis¬ covered the alteration. Greer had been able to forge the names of pris¬ on officials on fake Invoices, and ob¬ tained a check made out to a fictitious business firm In Denver. George F. Ames, a prisoner who was paroled early In the month, re¬ ceived the check at a Denver hotel and presented It to a Colorado bank. The check, drawn for $790.91, would have been honored, prison officials say, If the fraud had not been dis¬ covered. Greer admitted bis part In the plot and officials found 125 additional fake Invoices In his possession. Robs Police Station of Drugs on Display New York.—Morphine and cocaine valued at $1,000 were stolen from an exhibition case in fhe office of Capt Henry Scherb, chief of the police nar¬ cotic squad at police headquarters. The thief left no clew and no an¬ nouncement of the robbery was made either by Captain Scherb or Police Commissioner McLaughlin, whose of¬ fice is only a few paces away. Al¬ though the case contained jeweled and gold lamps, pipes and other parapher¬ nalia for the smoking of opium, none of these articles, valued at many thou¬ sands of dollars, wag touched. It is believed that the thief was a drug addict. There were two cases In the room. One of them contained gen uine narcotics and the solid gold and jewel-studded pipes and lamps. The other contained fake narcotics and replicas of the paraphernalia, The case of fakes was not disturbed, Boy With Play Pistol Captures Two Burglars Kansas City, Mo.—Two burglars en tered a South side home here and walked boldly out with their loot, but John Smith, high-school boy, saw them, so he, with a companion, cap tured the pair after commanding, “Stop, or I’ll blow your heads off.” John had a blank revolver used in a postponed Fourth of July celebra tlon. Mangy Hogs Not in Much Demand To Obtain Top Price Feed¬ ers Must Have Animals Free of Disease. (Prepared by the United Stntee Department of Agriculture.) The raising and marketing of hogs Is now a more profitable enterprise than It has been for a number of years. On June 25 the price of hogs iq the Chicago market ranged from $13.55 to $15.00 a hundred pounds. Swine growers and feeders are inter¬ ested In getting the top price. It Is Important, then, that the animals reach the buyer in good condition, well-finished, and, especially, free of disease. Depreciation In Value. The United States Department of Agriculture calls attention to the de¬ preciation in market value of animals affected with skin disorders. It fre¬ quently happens that hogs with mange are allowed to reach the market. This condition often affect* growth and fattening and makes the animals less desirable. The carcasses of such hogs have an unsightly appearance, the cuts of pork are reduced in value, and la some cases It is necessary to re¬ move the entire skin In order to make the meat salable. Hogs affected with mange In the advanced stage are con¬ demned as unfit for food under the federal meat Inspection regulations. It Is only reasonable for the packer to pay less than market quotation for mangy hogs, or refuse to buy them at any price. Hog mange Is caused by insect-Uke parasites called mites. The sores In the early stage are found oh the head around the eyes, nose, and ears, and from these parts they spread, accord¬ ing to the activities of the mites, until the entire skin is Involved, Prevent Mange. Mange may be prevented by keeping the hogs in dean pens or pastures, away from flfthy wallow holes and by the use of oliers or rubbing posts. Crude oil (petroleum) U effective In keeping the animals free of parasites, Including mange mites. While there are various types of hog oilers on the market, a simple home-made one may be arranged by driving a poet firmly In the ground and wrapping it secure¬ ly with gunny sack. Oil Is poured over the post from time to time to keep the cloth saturated. If a clean cement wallow Is provided, the oil may be poured on the water and In tills way reach the skins of the animals. A sand wallow may be utilized also In sections where hog lots are sandy. A space about 20 feet square is provided with side boards 8 to 10 inches high, the space filled with clean sand and the oil spread over the sand. The hogs will get the benefit of the oil in the sand hath. The sand should be changed from time to time, otherwise some of It may become hard. If the herd has become affected with mange, dipping will he found effective In destroying the mites. Full informa¬ tion concerning mange. Its prevention and treatment. Is given In Farmers’ Bulletin 10S5-F, a copy of which will tie furnished, as long as the supply lasts, upon application to the United States Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C. Scientists Join Battle on European Com Borer Andrew Boss, vice director of the Minnesota experiment station, attend¬ ed one session of the meeting of the corn belt committee on European corn borer control held in Chicago recently. Entomologists, agricultural engineers and agronomists Joined in studying and discussing the corn borer situa¬ tion. The entomologists predicted that the pest would reach Indiana this year and that ultimate invasion of the heart of the corn belt Is certain. Ohio experiment station men are co-operat¬ ing with the European corn borer committee, manufacturers, land own¬ ers and farmers In carrying on experi¬ ments for destroying with mechan¬ ical devices corn stalks and other ref¬ use which shelter the borer. Several parasites of the corn borer have been Imported from Europe and, according to United States department entomolo¬ gists, four varieties are becoming es¬ tablished In this country. Rum lACtsfe After the pigs are weaned It takes only sow sense to keep them growing. • • * Usually the fanner does not save money—he accumulates live stock and Other forms of farm property. • * • Don’t count your pigs before they’re weaned unless you provided farrowing quarters free from round-worm In¬ festation. 1 • • • Farming with just the hands and the feet goes hand in hand with de¬ linquent taxes. • • • In two months a field of weeds can sap the ground of moisture that would mature next year’s crop. * * • Fall plowing Improves the physical condition of the soil, kills insects, and i puts the land In excellent condition j for spring crops. 1 * • • ! For best results It Is as Important to 1 cultivate the young orchards it Is as j the potato or the corn crop. It culti¬ may also be necessary to continue the vation after the trees come Into bear¬ ing. Values of Oats and Corn Used in Ration Concentrates and Carbohy¬ drates for Horses. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) Oats are one of the b^st concen¬ trates for feeding horses. The pro teln and carbohydrate contents of this grain are better proportioned for this purpose than In the case of corn, says the United States Department *of Agriculture. The hull In which the oat kernel Is Incased, though of small nutritive value, greatly improves the physical character of the feed by adding bulk. Oats should be rolled or ground for very young horses, but may be fed to the mature animals either whole or ground. In order to prevent ravenous feeders from chok¬ ing it Is advisable to place a little chopped clover hay, wheat bran or a few whole corncobs In the feed box with the oats. While oats may form the entire grain ration for horses the substitution of two or three pounds of wheat bran will Improve the dally ration, provided it does not produce a too laxative effect. Com is more generally grown than oats In many horse-producing sections and for this reason and because it Is usually more economical to feed It Is often given preference over oats. Be¬ cause of the high carbohydrate con¬ tent more energy per pound is de¬ rived from corn than from any other grain suitable for horse feed. Since com Is somewhat low In protein it Is well to supplement it with a legu¬ minous hay. The combination of com and alfalfa hay as a ration for horses Is growing In favor. Equal parts by weight of these feeds very nearly make a balanced ration. In the ab¬ sence of legumes a little linseed meal or some other protein concentrate may be fed with the com. Com Is not only fattening and heat-producing but also very palatable. Horses un¬ accustomed to corn must not be changed to it suddenly because of danger from colic or other digestive disturbances. Corn Is generally fed on the cob or shelled, but sometimes Is used In the form of corn-and-cob meal. Tills feed, which is particularly suitable for horses which lack the necessary time or teeth to chew unground corn thoroughly. Is of about the same feed ing value pound for pound as shelled com. Certain precautions must be taken in feeding It, however, as when stored for a time It has a tendency to generate heat with the consequent formation of mold. For this reason it Is best to grind the grain only as needed. Several Advantages in Fall Freshening of Cow There are several advantages in having the cows freshen in the fall provided there Is a sufficient supply of labor available during the winter months. Cows freshening in the fall may be fed so that they will produce a good flow of milk during the winter months. During the latter part of this period the flow tends to decrease, but it will be increased with the stimulus of spring pasture. The period of smallest flow will be during the latter part of the summer, when conditions are not favorable for high milk pro¬ duction and labor can be used to ad¬ vantage In other farm work. Tills tends to equalize labor to a greater extent than when the majority of the cows freshen in the spring. Calves born In the fall make good growth during the winter and are able to make some use of the pasture in the spring. Calves born in the spring are not sufficiently mature to make much use of pasture even In the latter part of the same season, on ac¬ count of the annoyance of heat and flies. Sulphur-Lime as Summer Fungicide for Peaches The New Jersey Agricultural exper¬ iment station Is still recommending dry-mix sulphur-lime as a summer fungicide for peaches for the control of scab and brown rot. Four pounds of high calcium lime should be added to every 50 gallons of S-4-50 dry-mix used In combination with lead arsenate In order to avoid arsenical Injury. Growers making their own dry-mix should use eight pounds of lime with every eight pounds of sulphur when preparing mixtures to be used In com¬ bination with lead arsenate. It Is also recommended that the amount of lead arsenate be limited to one pound of the powdered form to 50 gallons of spray mixture. Special care should be exercised in measuring or weighing lead arsenate since more than the recommended amount may cause seri¬ ous Injury to twigs and foliage. We have never had any serious diffi¬ culty with dry-mix so far as staining the fruit Is concerned, says a writer in the Rural New Yorker. As a matter of fact, the fruit staining caused by dry-mix Is much less than that caused by self-botled lime-sulphur. Ideal Brood Sow The ideal brood sow has a long, deep body, of uniform width from shoulder to ham with a wide spring of rib, wide loin and a strong, evenly arched back. She Is medium to heavy boned and has legs of medium length. The heart girth should be full and the sides straight and even. The coat of hair should be smooth and fine. The jowl should be trim and there should be a complete absence of coarse fib lures about the head and of deeg creases and wrinkles In the skin. Enjou GOOD HEALTH Keep the free family from constipation well and happy ,. A SAFE, DEPENDABLE LAXATIVE Clear Your Skin With 4 Cuticura Soap to Cleans* Beat / Ointment to Absolutely Nothing Better PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM Remove* Dandruff-Stops Hair Falling Restores Color and Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair 60c and 11.00 Wks., at Patel Druggist*. Hiseoa Cheap. HINDERCORNS Remove* comfort Corns, 0*1 kiUie*. etc.. Mops all pain, ISo ensures by mail at to Drug¬ tbo feet, makes walking easy. Works, Patchogue, or N, Y. gists. LLUoox Chemical Relaxation “Did you have a good rest, dearT” “Yes, John, I went Into a few shoo stores.” We may be personally defeated, but our principles never.—Garrison. 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Dept, C, 1440 New York Send me book, illustrated, for which I enclose 13c [ ] or send me ten checked for which i enclose $1.00. [ 3 (Check which desired.) Name................................................ Address.............................................. City.............................State................ Your system needs 1 j Hancock Sulphur Compound If yon suffer from rheumatism, gout, eczema or hives, or If troubled with pim¬ ples, blackheada, freckles, blotches or other skin eruptions, your blood and skin need the purifying and healing effects of this tried old remedy. Physicians agree that sulphur is one of the best and most effective blood purifiers known to science. Hancock Sulphur Compound is the most efficacious way to use and benefit from Sulphur. As a lo¬ tion, it soothes and heals; taken inter¬ nally, it gets at the root of the trouble, 60c and $L 20 at your druggist's. If he cannot supply you, send his name and the price in stamps and we will send you a bottle direct. Hancock Liquid Sulphur Company Baltimore, Maryland Hancock Sulphur Compound Ointment — 90c and 60 c —for use with the Liquid Compound . WHERE NASTY, BITTER MEDICINES FAIL DR. KING’S ROYAL JJERMETEUR SUCCESSFULLY RELIEVES * STOMACH DISORDERS AS PLEASANT to TAKE AS A GLASS OF LEMONADE AT ALL DRUG STORES $1.00