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FINNEY OF THE FORCE
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Martyr to the Cause
You Can Go Now, Finney
JHE HAZELHURST NEWS
SAMMY CAZES
’ INTO A COUPLE
\Ol-' HAZEL EYES
He Met Her at a Dance Hall
First, Then He Encoun
tered Her Elsewhere.
Chicago.~Sam Ucciardi s an lo-
Justrious taxieab chauffeur. Now and
again, after a long turn at the wheel,
Sum loves to repair to a dance hall
and fling a terpsichorean heel, as the
saying goes, One evening while he
was thus applying himself to some
Intricate heel-and-toe effects his rov
ing eye caught the glance of a maiden
who appraised him and his move
ments with a smile that was all to
the berries.
Sam put in a few extra steps just
to show that his previous dancing was
only staple groceries and that for spe
cial spectators he had rare and endur
ing art, His success was stupendous,
In only a short while he was standing
!n the refreshing breeze that whis
pered softly through an open window,
and he was looking earnestly down
{nto a pair of hazel eyes while his lips
murmured a name that was increas
ingly sweet with each saying.
Sam was murqmrlng. “Nadine.”
Same Gazes and Learns.
She was Miss Nadine Milling. She
was seventeen years old. These things
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Searched Him Thoroughly.
and others Sam iearned as he gazed
into her hazel eyes and murmured
“Nadine.”
The night smacked strongly of au
tumn with a slight sting in the air
and a sniff of bonfires and the rustle
of leaves skating across the pave
ments. Sam was at the wheel of his
cab, his cap a-tilt and his nose, too,
breathing deeply of this autumnal zip
and taking life as lightly as woodland
elf riding aloft aboard a rose leaf or
as lightly as a chauffeur named Sam
in love with a girl named Nadine.
A lusty bawl from the curbstone
summoned him to business and Sam
took the wheel over. casting an eye
übaft lest some other driver crash
him behind. He pulled up and took
aboard two men and two women pas
sengers. :
After a short drive the two men and
two women stepped out. When Sam
looked up to present the taxi receipt
his eyes enlarged to something ap
proximating silver dollars, for he was
looking down the muzzle of a pistol.
The other man searched him thorough
ly and took all he had.
Loses His Temper.
Sam was mad. He drove furiously
up this street and down that. He
found a police squad. The squad ar
rested the robbers as they were way
laying another cab. The robbers were
taken to the detective bureau.
“This,” said a policeman, indicating,
“is Marge Roberts, twenty-one years
old. This is Rocco Allegretti, and this
is Dominic Pontoriers. And this girl,”
the policeman went on, “is—"
Sam’s jaw had dropped, oh, some
where about a foot or more and his
eyes were gazing into a pair of hazel
orbs.
“Nadine!” he said.
Maid Pours Oil on Fire,
Children Burn to Death
Sault Ste, Marie, Ont.—Six children
of Mr. and Mrs, T. Peyeur were burned
to death when the children’'s cousin,
Maria Peyeur, employed in the house
as a servant, tried to revive a smol
dering fire in the kitchen stove by
pouring kerosene on it. The woman
suffered burns from which she may
die.
The parents, with a baby and a
thirteen-year-old daughter, escaped
from the burning house, which was 20
miles south of Hearst, Ont.
Pays to Be Daredevil
London.—Miss Fay Taylor, twenty
four, advises angz girl with nerve who
wants a lucrative profession to go
into dirt-track motor cycle racing, Fay
should know, since she holds 20 cups
and half a dozen gold medals won in
motor cycle sporting events, and says
she is making a “barrel of money” in
exhibition races.
Shoots Father
Franklin, N, C.a=Jesse Oliver, forty
five years old, is dead as the result of
being shot with a gun fired by his
five-year-old son. Oliver, partly par
alyzed, placed the weapon against his
temple and asked the boy to'pull the
R b L TR i
Laying Hens Now
-
on a Night Shift
Artificial Lights Deceive
Pullets Into Increased
Egg Production.
The hens that lay New York's
breakfust eggs are about to go on the
night shift again,
The recently introduced practice of
increasing egg production by length
ening the short autumn and winter
days with artificial light in the hen
nouses has proved so successful that
it is expected to become almost uni
versal this year among the thousands
of suburban poultrymen in New Jer
sey, Connecticut and on Long island.
Hens Respond Profitably.
Proof that the hens respond profit
ably to the system of lengthening the
winter days by electridity has been
produced by Leslie M. Black, poultry
expert of the New Jersey Agricultural
callege, who publishes the results of
tests in the Farm Journal.
Black has tested 166 flocks of pul
lets over a six-month period. Of these,
48 flocks were tested without the aid
of lighting and were found to average
72.9 eggs per hen. The others, tested
under three different lighting systems,
all ran profitably ahead of that figure.
Three Lighting Plans Used.
The three methods used to convince
the hens that winter days are as long
as summer ones, and so keep produc
tion artificially stimulated when prices
are high, are these:
First—The evening lunch system,
when the houses are lighted for an
hour at night, between eight and nine,
or nine and ten. Second—The morn
ing lights plan, when the houses are
lighted before dawn. Third—The use
of lights both morning and night so
that the length of the day is made to
equal absolutely that of the night.
“This last system seems to give the
best results of the three,” the Farm
Journal’s expert reports. It produced
10.7 more eggs per pullet than when
no lights were used, 6.5 more eggs
than under the evening lunch plan,
and 1.3 more than the morning light
ing system,
Barley Produces a High
Percentage of Nutrients
Barley should be more widely used
as a stock feed, not only on account of
its high yield per acre but also be
cause of its nutritive value, says the
United States Department of Agricu!l
ture. The only feed crop that can be
compared readily with barley in farm
economy is oats. Barley produces
more pounds to the acre than oats
and has a higher percentage of digest
ible nutrients. Success in feeding bar
ley depends somewhat upon how it is
fed. Barley fed whole is too coarse
for best results, and if fed too finely
ground is pasty and unpalatable, The
best way of preparing it for live stock
is to have it coarse ground or rolled,
the latter way of preparation belng
common in the West.
Ewes Need Extra Good
Care at Lambing Time
The success of the sheep flock de
pends largely on the management.
(Good feed and care materially influ
ence the subsequent lamb crop. Preg
nant ewes should be separated from
the main flock and carried along in
good thrifty condition until lambing
time. They may be fed such succulent
feeds as roots and ensilage, the latter
in limited quantity, together with some
alfalfa hay, for the purpose of stimu
lating milk production. Good water
is essential during the pregnant period.
Potassium iodide should be given in
the drinking water twice a month or
in the salt kept before the ewes at all
times. Ewes in good, thrifty condi
tion are more likely to give birth to
strong vigorous lambs,
Agricultural Notes
Fences and gates tell what kind of
folks live with them.
* * *
It doesn’t cost any more to build a
good looking building than the other
kind. :
* * ”
If good results are to be expected
with the 1928 lawmb crop, the bred
ewes must be handled properly.
* & %
Sweet clover should be sown broad
cast on a well-settled seedbed at the
rate of 15 pounds of good seed per
acre,
* % »
Good, clean ringe will be of liftle
value in preventing disease trouble
us long as the ground adjoining the
house is dirty.
* % =
Wherever cholera occurs it must be
presumed that the disease has been
carried to the hogs in question be
cause there is no other way for it to
reach the herd.
*% % :
Four or five weeks before lambing
each ewe should have one-half pound
daily by weight of the following grain
misture: Corn, six parts; oats or
bran, three parts, and linseed oil meal,
one part. After lambing, the ration
should be doubled.
« & @
Corn belt farmers are confronted
with the problem of utilizing the
roughage produced on the farms as
well as the corn produced. There is
no more economical and desirable
method of doing this than establishing
Ready
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Children Cry
Baby has little upsets at times. Al
your care cannot prevent them, But you
can be prepared. Then you can do what
any experienced nurse would do—what
most physicians would tell you to do—
give a few drops of plain Castoria. No
sooner done than Baby is soothed; re
lief is just a matter of moments. Yet
you have eased your child without use
of a single doubtful drug; Castoria is
vegetable., So it's safe to use as often
as an infant has any little pain you
cannot pat away. And it's always
ready for the crueler pangs of coile, or
constipation or diarrhea; effective, too,
for older children, Twenty-five million
bottles werc bought last year.
(e £ IR
CASTORIA
e T A oY) B TRy
For Old Sores
Hanford's Balsam of Myrrh
Worms cause much distress to children and
anxiety to parents, Dr. Peery’s “Dead Shot"
removes the cause with a single dose. 60c.
All Druggists, .
DrPeervy’s
3% 7 W
( € Dead Shot For WORMS
~ it
Vermifuge
At druggists or 372 Pearl Street. New York City
Easy Come—Easy Go
She—Lucius, I cannot be betrothed
to you any longer.
He (with a superior manner)—Well,
there are others.
She—Yes, I know. I've just become
engaged to one of the others.
Will Cold Worry
You This Winter?
Some men throw-off a cold within a
few hours of contracting it. Anyone
can do it with the aid of a simple com
pound which comes in tablet form, and
is no trouble to take or to always
have about you. Don’t “dope” your
sclf when you catch cold; use Pape’s
Cold Compound. Men and women
everywhere rely on this amazing little
tablet.—Adv.
The government of Bolivia has
opened its private wireless telegraph
stations to the public to facilitate
communication,
IT STARTS
in the STOMACH
HAVE YOU ever sus
- that mostof the Gilagd
common illnesses of 778
men and women have @z’
their beginnings in fi'
stomach disorders? % 7HEST
That lost vitality, those i 8 &
frequent headaches, (It Eai g
that cold you can’t ;
shake off—your stom=-
achisprobablyrespon- B
gible. Everyone needs the soothing,
regular action of & reliable stomach
remedy like PE-RU-NA—known for
over fifty years as the World's Greatest
Stomach Remedy. It clears away that
congested, catarrhal condition which
afflicts so many people who never even
suspect their real trouble! One bottle of
PE-RU-NA will scon tone up your
digestion—and give you a new joy in
life! Your dmggist has this time-honored
remedy. Don’t wait—buy a bottl» ead
begin taking it today.
y
Grove’s
Tasteless
- »
Chill Tonic
The Old Standard Remedy for
Chills and Malaria. Itdestroys
the malarial germs in the
blood, Stops the Chills and
fortifies the system against
Malaria end Chills. 60c.
REMOLA .:5%
K
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curgs ecr »lfi'r % »gn‘h
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Or. C. M. Bary Co., 2975 Michigen Ave., Chicago