Halsey enterprise. (Halsey, Or.) 1927-1929, January 12, 1928, Image 7

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    GIRLHOOD TO
MOTHERHOOD
Cholera Serum
as Protection
Unusual Prevalence of Dis­
ease in 1926 Impressed
Farmers With Danger.
Iowa Woman Found Lydia E.
Pinkham’a Vegetable Com­
pound Always Helpful
Vinton, Iowa.—"When I was seven­
teen years old_I had to stay at
(P rep ared by the United S ta te s D e­
p artm en t o f A g ricu ltu re.)
Special reports made to the United
States Department of Agriculture
from 30 states In which co-operative
hog-cholera work is being conducted
indicate an Increased use of antihog-
cholera serum as a protection against
hog cholera. Apparently, the unusual
prevalence of the disease In the fall
of 192G did much to impress farmers
with the proteutial danger of the
malady and stimulated action In the
adoption of preventive methods.
Protection by Serum.
The spring crop of pigs received ex­
tensive protection by the preventive-
serum treatment, the number Immu­
nized ranging from 10 to 75 per cent
of the entire production in the 30
states, according to the reports.
There was also an increase In the
number of herds immunized. These
factors, no doubt, are largely respon­
sible for the sudden drop in the death
rate from cholera compared with that
of lost year.
The reports also Indicated at the
time they were submitted that, with
the exception of Arkansas, Maryland,
Michigan, North Carolina and Ken­
tucky, the other states had suffered
no greater losses from cholera this
year than they had In 1924 and 1925,
F or P iles, Corns
showing a sharp decline In the disease
B unions,C hilblains,etc. from the destructive wave of 1920.
T r y H a n f o r d ’s
Urge Sanitary Measures.
The department stresses the Impor­
B a ls a m o f M y rrh
All dealer» are authoriud to refund your money ior th«
tance and value of sanitary measures
first battle i f not »ailed.
in the raising of swine, not only as
an aid In the prevention of hog chol­
era but In preventing other diseases.
A b ility
Our national genuflection todny Is It also calls attention to the fact that
at the feet of ability. We bend the cholera Infection nmy reach well kept
knee to those who do things. Instead herds as well as those In Insanitary
of spoiling us, money has given a surroundings, and If not Immunized
greater sense of appreciation for the one will succumb ns quickly as the
expression of the arts. We will not other. After all the use of the si­
walk across the street to see the rich multaneous treatment Is the only
est son of the richest man. But we reliable safeguard against attucks of
will sland all evening In the back ol hog cholera.
a theater to have a wistful extra girl,
raised to stardom, make us boo-hoo Water Warmed for Fowls
like saps.—O. O. McIntyre In Cosmo­
Increases Laying Power
politan.
Experiments emphasize the impor­
tance of warm water for laying hens.
A summary of results follows:
Pullets drank 25.4 per cent more
warmed water than cold water dur
lug freezing weather.
G rippe an d F la
Water consumption was Increased
A n y cold may end in grippe or flu.
Take prompt action. Take HILL’S at
5 per cent per pullet and 4.2 per cent
once. HILL’S breaks a cold in 24 hours.
per 100 eggs laid by warming It dur­
Because it does the four necessary
ing average western winter weather.
things at once: Stops the cold, checks
Temperatures were above freezing 90
the fever, opens the bowels, tones en­
per cent of the time.
tire system. Cold9 rarely develop if
HILL'S is on hand to check them at the start.
White leghorn pullets laying nt the
They atop quickly when HILL’S is taken later.
average rate of approximately 00 per
Be safe! Get HILL'S in the red box. 30 cents.
cent In midwinter drank 0.20 pound
H I L L ’S
of water per pullet per day and 44
C a sc a r a - B r o m id e - Q u in in e
pounds of water per 100 eggs laid.
Drinking wnler for poultry nmy be
conveniently warmed with several
styles of simple electric heaters nt a
cost about the same ns for lighting
two electric lamps. Heaters of 75 to
100 watts capacity are about right for
warming two gallons of water. Spe­
cially constructed heaters to be ini
tnersed In water enn be secured for a
few dollars. In case of emergency a
hermetically-sealed electric soldering
Iron makes an excellent water heater.
Electric lamps may be used for wa
ter heating If they are supported close
Io the underside of the pan and both
the pan and lamps protected to avoid
heat losses.
home from school.
1 finally had to quit
school, I was so
weak. I suffered for
about two years be­
fore I took Lydia
B. Plnkham's Vege­
table Compound,
then I picked up
one of your books
and read It. I be­
gan taking themedl-
cine. Now I am a
------------------- housekeeper w i t h
six children, and I have taken It
before each one Whs born. I can­
not tell you all the good I have re­
ceived from It. When I am not as well
as can be I take It. I have been doing
this for over thirteen years and It al­
ways helps me. I read all of your little
books I can get and I tell everyone I
know what the Vegetable Compound
does for me.”—Mas. F rank S exless ,
610 7th Avenue, Vinton, Iowa.
Many girls in the fourth generation
»re learning through their own per­
sonal experiences the beneficial effects
of Lydia E. Plnkham’s Vegetable Com­
pound. Mothers who took It when they
were young are glad to recommend It
to their daughters.
For over half a century, women have
praised this reliable medicine.
COLDS
CARBUNCLESZ^DEATH
Boils and carbuncles cause »irony sometimes
death. Take no chances with home-made poul­
tices or expensive operations. One application
o f CARBOIL (a scientific antiseptic) quickly
•tops pain and drawa out core. (Jet a penerous
&->c box from your druyirist today and keep it
on hand. Money back if not satisfied. Don’t
accept substitutes—ask for CARBOIL by name.
BPURLOCK-NEAL CO., NASHVlkLC. Y c n n .
P A R K E R ’S
H A IR B A L S A M
Remove* I'«n d ru ff s top« H a ir Fail log
R e s to re s C o lo r a n d
B e a u ty to G r a y a n d F a d e d H a ir
Wx- and $1 o<) a t I>rurytp t«.
Hiact'« Ch-m . W k$. Patchnauc. W. T ,
tL O R ESTO N S H A M P O O - M - a I for h m In
Connection with Parker '» BairBaivam. Make» the
hair »oft and fluffy. 50 cents by mail or at drng-
ffiata. Uiacox Chemical Works, Patchogue, N. x .
Garfield
Tea
Was Your
Grandm other’s Remedy
1
iLIVETAR
0
L
FOF
L
m s s s is
N.w
J » ^ * .
L ife’s A d d e d P roblem s
G ra n d fa th ers on V acation
Life Is becoming more mathematical
every day. We are now urged to count
our blessings before eating, our cal­
ories while eating, our change after
eating and our sheep while going to
sleep.—Kansas City Star.
H en Lays T w in Eggs
J a y w a lk Into C art
O p p o rtu n ity
Fifteen grandfathers, whose ages
totaled 1,200 years, recently enjoyed
their annual two-weeks’ vacation to­
gether at Llttlehampton, England
They are members of the Browning
Hull Grandfathers' club of London.
The oldest In the party was eighty-
four and the youngest seventy.
A hen In Ulster lays two eggs at a
times, sometimes three. The owner ex­
plains this by snylng that the ben, a
last year’s pullet, had sunstroke when
a month old Since It has grown up
the hen has on four days a week laid
two eggs at a time, and bus twice laid
three.
Five per cent of the automobile ac­
Next thing for scientific breeders to
cidents of the country are caused by do Is to cross the carrier-pigeon with
persons who walk Into the sides of the parrot so that messages can be
moving machines. Like automobiles delivered verbully.—Wall Street Jour­
running Into the sides of trains.
nal.
NEW WHIPPET CAR
A MOTOR MARVEL
One of the sensations In the automo­
bile world la the perfected "Whippet”
produced by the Willys Overland, Inc.,
and It Is direct evidence that John N.
Willys, president of the corporation,
proposes to make good on his decla­
ration that “there can be no monopoly
In the light car field,” The perfected
car, and the price at which It Is
offered, placing It directly In compe­
tition with the lowest priced cars, has
centered the eyes of the automobile
Industry and the motor car world In
general on the enterprising Toledo
manufacturer. It makes him the first
manufacturer of automobiles to enter
the price field heretofore exclusive to
but one light car manufacturer.
The "Whippet,” which hns been In
production for more than 18 months,
bolds the national fuel economy rec­
ord of 43.28 miles to the gallon In a
test between Los Angeles and New
York City, covering a distance of 3,559
miles, under official observation of the
A. A. A. In a speed test on Rocking-
bam Speedway, Salem, N, H„ a
•■Whippet" recently attained a speed
of 71.0 miles an hour over a 50-mlle
route. This was officially timed.
The same engine that has accom­
plished these records Is the power
plant employed In the perfected
"Whippet,” now offered at the lowest
price In the history of Willys Overland
The "Whippet” was the first light
car to be equipped with four wheel
brakes, setting a new trend In the
light car field. The braking nrea of
the "Whippet’s” brakes Is greater
than any other light car.
Details of the perfected “Whippet”
disclose a wider range of colors, em­
ployment of full crown fenders, a
new cadet sun visor that Imparts a
smart military effect, and the addition
of automatic windshield cleaner, rear
view mirror, and a combination rear
driving light and stop light. These
additions make the “Whippet” the
niost fully equipped light cur built In
•he four cylinder field.
Various Trades Offer
Occupation to Blind
Blind men are employed In many
engineering factories. In one German
electrical concern, says the annual
report of the National Institute for
the Blind, more than one hundred
sightless people are employed, while
double that number are being trained.
Blindness.it Is said. Is no hindrance
to a man looking after two or even
three automatic machines. The aver­
age earning capacity of a blind oper­
ative in these works Is considered to
be about 80 per cent of that of a
normal-sighted man.
Ninety blind persons employed In
French engineering trades earn about
85 per cent of full wages, A motor
factory In America employs 44 blind
men, who are given the work for
which they seem most competent.
N a tu re’s E conom y
Inventions during the next two or
three centuries will. In the opinion of
many exiterts, probably be In the di­
rection of imitations of the wonderful
economy and the simple, direct meth
ods of nature. Take the electric eel
as an example. Its electric organ Is
in no sense a storage battery, but a
contrivance by which electric energy
Is liberated at the moment when It Is
required. At rest, the organ shows so
small an electromotive force that a
good galvanometer Is required to de­
tect It, hut a sudden nervous Impulse
from the eel's spinal cord raises a
potential of many volts, with very lit­
tle heat, nnd so small an expenditure
of matter as to defy the most expert
chemist to weigh IL Fireflies, glow­
worms nnd many deep sen fishes pro­
duce light without heat, nt a cost
which would mnke the price of a wax
candle an extravagant otitlny.
C orrect th e Fault
A p o th eo sis of th e Pancake
Whatever you dislike In another
person take care to correct In your­
self.
Sign In restaurant window—"Waf­
fles of Class and Distinction."—Bos­
ton Transcript.
M ig ra to ry B ird T rea ty
C anadian Lakes B eau tiful
A resident of Ohio, who had previous­
ly raised wild fowl under a federal
permit, but failed to submit the re­
quired report of operations nnd con
tinued to make sales and shipments
without renewal of the permit, was
arraigned In Federal court Ht Toledo,
Ohio, found guilty, and fined $300 and
costs.
To engage In the business of rearing
nnd selling migratory waterfowl, says
the bureau of biological survey, Unit­
ed States Department of Agriculture,
It Is first necessary to obtain a per­
mit from the secretary of agriculture
and then to comply with all require­
ments of state law.
These requirements are made under
the migratory bird treaty act regula­
tions to protect nnd perpetuate migra­
tory species of birds passing each
year between the United States nnd
Canada.
Among the seven reservations set
aside by the government of Canada la
the Rocky mountains there Is none
more beautiful than Wuterton Lakes
National park, which lies on the east­
ern slope of the Rockies where thesa
mountains approach the Internation­
al boundary. The park forms a rough
square with a long L-shaped section
added to the east, the whole having
an area of about 220 square miles.
L ets th e W o rld Go By
For the seventy-fourth consecutive
season, Mrs. Rlchaid T. Auchmuty of
New York has arrived at her summer
home, the Dormers, on the Lenox-
Pittsfield road. She hns never owned
nn automobile, has no listed tele
phone, no electric lights, no steam
heat In her villa, nor a radio. She
prefers to drive over the wooded
roads In an open victoria. Glowing
fagots In her fireplaces nnd kerosene
lamps furnish heat nnd light. She Is
In her ninetieth year.—Boston Globe.
It's the fellow who can’t talk on his
feet who puts his foot In his mouth
when he tries.—San Francisco Chron­
icle.
Profit b y P ast Errors
The past Is gone, and gone forever.
You may learn by your mistakes, but
do not he guilty of the sin ot constant­
ly worrying over them. Turn your
face toward the future. Give your
mistakes and blunders a decent burial
In the part, and let the memory of
them furnish you with Implements of
Industry by which you may operate
the gold mine of future possibilities.—
Exchange.
F ow ls in B iblical Tim es
Not That Sick
Girl—I want a nice book for an In­
valid.
Librarian—Something religious?
Girl—N.,, not now. lie's convales­
cent
Cure for O ptim ism
Feet and T alking
N e w e st A m erican Sport
Crltlc-luiltlng bus become in even
•n atet and more typical American
spe-» than framing prize fights or fix­
ing horse ruceg und championship
laseball games. The man who prac­
tices professional criticism In this
yenr tf our Lord lives constantly In
a metaphorical gashouse district, his
head and seat In imminent prospect
of bash and boot.—George Jean Na­
than In Vanity hair.
The neurologist says optimists live
longer than pessimiste. They might
If they didn't have such Ruhllme faith
In loose brakes.—San Frunclsco Citron
lele.
Cartridges are noted In the Old
Testament. The fatted fowl (1 Kings,
4:23) Is Interpreted us either goose
or duck. Cocks and hens were brought
from Persia two or three centuries be­
fore Christ. A tomb nt Marissa of
about 200 II. G. has a good representa­
tion of a crowing cock. Spnrrows and
other "twittering birds" were also
used for food.
It doesn’t pay to advertise unless
you are able to deliver the goods.
Beauty and Quality
in the
Perfected Jffiippet
COACH
F .O .B . F a c to ry
“ A QUALITY CAR AT THE LOWEST PRICE IN OUR HISTORY”
4-DOOR SEDAN
'5 8 5
Results of Limestone
Application on Fields
The result of experiment on 27 Illi­
nois experiment fields Indicate that
manure residues with lime Is the
most profitable system of soil treat­
ment over the larger part of the
state. Applications of limestone are
worthwhile. On light colored soils
limestone Is 20 per cent more effec­
tive with live stock than with grain
systems. Fine ground limestone Is ef­
fective with the first crop, coarse
ground may not be effective until th »
second or third crop.
A single application of limestone of
four tons per acre made 15 years ago
made a return of $33.04 per acre over
unfilled land In that time.
For every stomach
and Intestinal 111.
This good old-fash­
ioned herb home
remedy for consti­
Delay in making repairs doubles
pation, stomach Ills
and other derange­ the ultimate cost
• • •
ments of the sys­
Proper
and
prompt
attention to lu­
tem so prevalent these days Is in even
greater favor as a family medicine brication and repair should be the
first consideration in prolonging the
than In your grandmother's day.
life and usefulness of farm Imple­
ments.
• • •
Winter Jobs for the tractor: Grind­
Inflamed eyelid s or other
ing feed, snow removal, sawing wood,
eye Irritations. You will
running corn shelter and hosker
And a soothing and safe
rem edy In MITCHELL
shredder, crushing limestone, straw
EYE SALVE.
and hay baling.
HALL A RUCKEL
at alt
•
• •
New York City
druggists.
Rotation of crops Is of some bene­
OR. STAFFORD’S
fit In the control of corn smut since
the disease Is known to Increase In
virulence when corn is grown contin­
uously on the same land.
Spiwuh.J fo r - R G L T and cnl.W
• • •
hoar».-
It Is a good practice to go over each
mplement when Its use for the sea-
ion Is over, checking carefully the
nraa -oufh.w » Taken Inter
places where It needs repair, and
rxriy fo r te a m e d mevnhrar.«
o f throat and brxwvhlal tut»««
heu to makt the replacements or re­
■A LL A BrCML.
T ort
pairs when time la not ao valuable
loN T N e GLI
W here S w a tters A r t T aboo
In Ukrania, the southern Russia
province, superstitious natives hold
the common house fly In reverence
and make no effort to kill the pest.
Many persons regard the fly as a sa
cred animal.
FORMER PRICK
‘ 725
RED UC TIO N
’ 140
THE MOST VALUABLE CAR EVER OFFERED FOR SO LITTLE MONEY
New Low P r ia i
R eductions
Touring - ‘455
Coach - - 535
Roadster (2-posj ) 485
Roadster
525
Coupe - - 535
Cabriolet Coupe 54 5
Chassis
355
w ith ru m b le te a t
’170
90
170
90
200
90
A lt p ric e s f. o. b fa c to ry
Q u a lity S h o w n in O u tw ard B ea u ty —
W h'pp et introduced the vogue in light car design
compact bodies with low, fleet lines.
TH E W H IP P E T
NOW
lot smart,
READY
PrtnJtnt,
T h t Ifillyi-O 'vrrlanJ Company
Big 4-w heel Brakes— more braking surface per
pound of car weight than any other light car. You can
stop from 40 miles an hour within 51 feet
Rear G asoline
I ank—for utmost safety—with
vacuum fuel feed. T h is costs more to build, but is much
safer.
Increased Speed— W hippet superiority is also ex­
pressed in greater— and safer — speed; 55 to 60 miles per
hour, and many owners say 65
Greater G asoline E co n o m y — W hippet
holds
the A A A . Coast-to-Coast economy record of 43 28
miles per gallon.
O th er Im p o rta n t F eatu res — 164 inches of
spnngi, full force feed lubrication, faster acceleration, silent
timing chain, longer leg room, adjustable steering wheel,
lower center of gravity, tingle plate clutch, longer connect­
ing rods, banjo-type rear axle housing with removable shaft,
are among the many quality car features of the W hippet
FOR IM M E D IA T E D ELIVER Y
WILLYS-OVERLAND, INC.
TOLEDO, OHIO