Halsey enterprise. (Halsey, Or.) 1927-1929, May 03, 1928, Image 7

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    H J l/lT H Y
W A T C H IN C U B A TO R
W H ILE H ATC H IN G
F e e l T ir e d a n d
A chy?
Too O ften This Warns of
Sluggish Kidneys.
T
A M E ? S tiff? A c h y ? S u re y o u r
k id n e y s o re w o rk in g rig h t? S lu g ­
gish k id n e y s a llo w w aste poisons to
a c c u m u la te a n d m a k e one la n g u id ,
tir e d a n d a c h y , w it h o fte n d u ll h ead­
aches. dizziness a n d nagging ba c k ­
ache. A c o m m o n w a rn in g is to o fre -
o u e n t, s c a n ty o r b u rn in g excretions.
D o a n 's P i lls , a s tim u la n t d iu r e tic ,
in c re a to th e secretion o f th e k id n c y a
a n d th u s a id in th e e lim in a tio n o f
b o d ily w a s te . U sers e v e ry w h e re e n ­
dorse D o a n 's. A s ti y o u r neighbor/
i-1
D O A N ’S
p i 6 òcs
A S T IM U L A N T D IU R E T IC .T . K ID N E Y S
R u ler-M U b u rn C a Mfg Chem. Buffalo. N Y
S u re
Sourness, D izziness
H eartburn or Distress
after eatin g or drinking
Not a laxative but a tested
sure relief for digestive dis­
orders of the stomach and
bowels. Perfectly harmless
and pleasant to take.
N o r m a liz e s D ig e s tio n a n d
S w e e te n s th e B r e a th
I ihwgestkw J
6 B ell - a n s
Hoi wafer
Sure Relief
ELL-ANS
F O R 'IN D IG E S T IO N
'l hlle many successful poultry grow­
ers are now buying day-old chick* for
replenishing their flocks and for rais­
ing early broilers and pullets, there
are still a great number of small In­
cubators used on farms.
“Directions for operating these ma­
chines come with them,’’ says Allen
G. Oliver, poultry extension special-
lrt at the North Carolina state col­
lege, “yet In most cases these direc­
tions apply only to the mechanical op­
eration. We would not attempt to
give specific rules that would work
well under all conditions. The first
hatch may he made when atmospheric
conditions are Ideul, resulting in an
Ideal hatch of strong chicks; the next
hatch may give poor scrawny birds,
even though the Incubator ran per­
fectly. There are some few points to
consider, however, In hatching out the
early chicks this spring.”
The normal time for an egg to hatch
Is 21 days, states Mr. Oliver. Too
much heat means a hatch In about
1!) days, and too little heat, In about
22 to 23 days. The temperature at
the center of the eggs ought to be
kept nt 100 degrees. Moisture Is
next In Importance. The amount of
evaporation In the egg determines the
size of the air cell at the end and
the quantity of food left for the chick
when It hatches. This also deter­
mines the size of the young bird. The
operator of the Incubator should
watch the size of the ulr cell as the
hatch progresses and add such mois­
ture as is needed.
Ventllntlon is also Important, states
Mr. Oliver. This brings In pure oxygen
and takes out the carbon dioxide. The
egg Is a fnctory with the materials In
the shell ns the raw product. By care­
fully regulating the heat and watching
the size of the air cells It Is possible
to supply enough fresh air and the
correct amount of moisture so thnt
there will be little danger from lack
of ventilation.
Turning the eggs stimulates the
hatching chick to action and gives It
exercise and strength.
Value of Hen Depends
on Prices Prevailing
A hen may produce more eggs In
a year than any bird In the flock, but
yet Is not as valuable as some other
lien that produces less eggs. The hen
that produces the largest number of
eggs during the seasons of high prices
A * R u s ty N a il W o u n d *
will have the advantage In egg values
I v y P o is o n i n g , e t c .
another bird which is Idle at that
Try Hanford’s Balsam of Myrrh over
period, and which may produce more
] dealers are «etherised te rehnd yet
H e r the
eggs during the year. The real value
first kettle if set snited.
of a hen will depend largely upon the
persistency as well as Intensity of
production.
Definite records have
been kept at the North Dakota Agri­
cultural college of the good laying
hens.
“As an example, one hen produced
203 eggs In 1925, which were sold for
12 D ays’ F ree Trial
$0.75, while another produced 219 eggs
which brought $0.59. The second hen
To get relief when pain tortured hud laid 10 more eggs, hut the eggs
Joints and muscles keep you In con­
sold for 10 cents less due to the fact
stan t misery rub on Joint-Ease.
It Is quickly absorbed and you can that this hen did n greater proportion
rub it In often and expect results of her laying during the spring and
more speedily. Get it at any drug­ summer when eggs were chenp."
gist In America.
Use Joint-Ease for sciatica, lum­
bago, sore, lame muscles, lame back,
chest colds, sore nostTls and burn­
ing, aching fe e t Only 60 cents. It
penetrates.
PR r r Send n a m e a n d A d d re s s f o r II
I ixu t.4ay t r i a l tu b e to P o p e l a b o r a ­
Always have feed and water avail­
to rie s , D e s k 3, H a l l o w i ’. t, M a in e .
able when lights are on.
. . .
Face the henhouse to the south.
Make the north, east, and west sides
wind proof.
254 AND 754 PACKAGES EVERYWHERE
For Poisoned Wounds
Quickly Relieves
Rheumatic Pains
?
Poultry Notes
?
Joint-Ease
P A R K E R ’S
H A IR B A L S A M
Remove* I »and ruff HtopsHalrEolllng
Restores Color and
B e au ty to G ra y and Faded H a ir
•Or. and | i **» at I>rurr1 *t*.
K L O R E S T O N S H A M P O O - Id e a l fo r cm In
connection w ith P a rk er’s H a ir Balsam. Makes th«
hair soft and fluffy, ft« cents by m all or a t drug­
gist*. iliac«»x Chemical Works* Patchogue, N . T .
HEADACHE
RELIEVED
. . . QUICKLY
Carter's Little liver Pill*
h r k i Vacetabte LaxatNe
m ove the bowels free fro m
and unpleasant after
effect«. T h e y relieve the r v a t e m o f constipa­
tio n poison« w hich m any time« cause a dull
end aching head. Rem em b er they are a doc­
to r’« prescription and can be g iv e n w ith abso­
lute confidence to every m em ber o f the fam ily.
A ll Druggists 29c and 79c Red Package«.
p a in
CARTER'S E
lb
PILLS
A woman may not be able to drive
a nail, but at driving a bargain she Is
In her glory.
Personal Comment
by Mrs. G. E. Tower
8an Francisco. Calif.—"For th«
past seven or eight years I have tak­
en Dr. Pierce's remedies off and on.
that is. the Favor
1 1 e Prescription,'
innd the ‘0 o l d e n
fMedleal Discovery '
T began with these
when I was about
grown. The Fa­
vorite Prescription'
Is the best medi­
cine any woman
ever to o k . The
'G o l d e n Medical
Discovery' Is fins
for the stomach—excellent for a par­
son who Is rundown In health"—
Mrs 0 E. Tower. 1106 Laguna 8L
Obtain now from your druggist,
Dr Pierce's famous remedies
Write Dr. Pierce, President In­
valids' Hotel In Buffalo. N Y, for
tree uonfidentlal medical advlca.
•
e
e
Ground oats may he used for grow­
ing stock or laying hens when fed In
limited quantities.
a
a
N ew D ressesfor
Ih e School Gid
^ M A E MARTIN
T h o u s a n d s of
mothers with daugh­
ters of high school
or college age, have
problems like this
Little Rock, Arkan­
sas, mother.
She
says: “X don't be­
lieve I could have
put my daughter
through the last two
years of high school
and college without
the help of Dia­
mond Dyes. Dresses
long out of style
and
faded
were
made new with a
package or so of
Diamond Dyes and
the addition of a _______________
few dozen buttons and a little braid.
Sometimes two dresses were com­
bined and brought up to date In lines
that gave no hint of their past. Peo­
ple sever knew they were redyed
when I used Diamond Dyes. They
never take the life out of cloth or
make it limp. They always make
things fresh, crisp and bright,”
Diamond Dyes are true dyes, like
those used when the cloth was made.
Tinting with them Is as easy as blu­
ing, and dyeing only takes n little
more time. Insist on Diamond Dyes
and save disappointm ent They never
streak, spot or run.
My handsome new book, ‘‘Color
Craft,” will help you with your
clothes and home furnishing prob­
lems. Slxty-four pages of dollar-sav-
Ing suggestions, fully Illustrated In
colors. It’s FREE. Simply write Mae
Martin, Home Service Dept., Diamond
Dyes, Burlington, Vermont.
C h a ffe re d C D « n te r íe in m e n t.
IOR*
Death rates from henrt disease,
pneumonia, cuncer, tuberculosis nnd
diabetes were all higher In 1926 than
In 1925, government figures’ stiow.
“WORTH WEIGHT
IN GOLD”
Verdict of W om an W ho
T r ied Pinkham ’s Compound
a
l
.
THERE It n o th in g quite like Bayer
Aspirin for all sorts of aches and
pains, but be sure it « genuine Bayer;
that name must be on the package,
and on every tablet Bayer is genu­
ine, and the word genuine—in red—
is on every box. You can't go wrong
if you will just look at the box when
you buy it:
Aaplrln La
the trad« m ark o*
B a re r M a n u fa c tu re
of lio B o a c e tlc a c ld e a te r o f 8 a llC 7 llc a « l J
Trees of Past Ages
in Botanical Garden
Seedling trees of a species that
represents the vegetation of Florida
1IKMMK) years ago, during the glacial
epoch, have been added to the col­
lection In the New York Botanical
garden as the result of a scientific
tour of the state by Dr, John K,
Small. The trees, which are known as
Torrey«, or locully ns Snvern, belong
to the botanical genus Tumlon, and
occur nuturully In a small strip of
territory along the east hank of the
Appalachlcola river, In the Florida
panhandle. They occur nowhere else
In the world, though related species
are found In California, Japan and
China. They resemble yew trees In
some ways, and can be cultivated un­
der the same sort of climatic con­
ditions that favor the yew.
Beasts o f th e J u n g le
The Afrlcun wild buffalo, according
to Martin Johnson, Is one of the most
dangerous customers on the trull—"a
cutthroat from the word go.” The
zebra Is silly and stupid, "a first-class
rowdy.” The leopard Is a killer, “the
gunman of the forest.” The giraffe
he calls “the creature that God for­
got.” The elephants are "the fine, up­
standing, mlddle-chiss citizenry of the
Jungle.” The rhinoceros Is “always
fighting, always grunting, always look
ing for trouble.”
"I don't believe the average rhino
has a friend In the world, even among
his own kind.”—Detroit News.
Claire Meredith, the brilliant poet,
disembarking from a sumptuous liner,
talked to a New York reporter about
n retired actress who had condemned
severely the Immorality of modern
playa, modern dance» and modern
youth.
“She’s getting old," suid Miss Mere­
dith, “getting too old. When we gel
too old to set a bad example we be­
gin giving good ndvlce.”
W. N. U„ PORTLAND, NO. 18-1928.
H i» F a th e r ’s B oy
M o n e y T a lk »
“He says money talks.”
"Yes, he found thnt out as soon as
•te married IL”
IN S T A L L
E. 8. Harkness, the philanthropist
nnd patron of the arts who recently
guve $250,900 to the New York Memo­
rial hospital for the purchase of four
grams of radium, was talking at the
University club against g|»eculatlon.
Speculation Is demoralizing," he said.
“There was once a country preacher
who speculated tn oil stock. A deacon
asked him some time afterw ard:
“ ‘Well, doctor, what have you done
with that oil stock of yours?’
“ ‘Done?
I've been done.
Got
cheated out of It,' the preacher said.
” ‘No!' said the deacon. ‘No! How
com er
“ 'Why,' said the preacher, ‘1 thought
the stuff was valueless, you see. nnd
so I unloaded It on a greenhorn for a
song. But It turned out to be worth
thousands, and that swindler who
bought It from me knew It all the
time.”—Kansas City Star.
C H A M P IO N S
NOW
O n ce again C h am pion
r e m in d s y o u that to
e n jo y m a x im u m e n ­
gine perform ance dur­
in g t h e n e x t t w e lv e
m o n t h s y o u s h o u ld
install a com plete new
set o f spark plugs now .
ChtimfMon is th e b e tte r
spark piwM becuuM o/ it«
dt»M Me-ribbed lÜlimutv
it« core —• its two-ptec«
construction and Us *p*-
unuHsu electrodes.
G r im R e lic N ou / a F o n t
Near the FIJI village of Suva where
reigned "King'' Cakobau before he
gave his Island empire to Queen Vic­
toria as an expression of good will,
is a grim relic. It Is a heart-shaped
stone on which Fijian warriors In
their unregenerate days smashed out
the brains of their captives in war.
The stone, which has a depression In
the top, now Is used by the reformed
natives as a baptismal font.
Tully, N. Y.—"It hurt me to walk
or sit down without help and I felt
sick and weak.
My mother-in-
law took Lydia
E. P in k h a m ’a
Vegetable Com­
pound and sho
induced me to
take it. I am
now on the fourth
bottle and have
also used Lydia
E. P in k h a m ’s
Sanative Wash.
The
medicines
that will do for me what the Vege­
table Compound and Sanative Wash
have done are certainly worth their
weight in gold. I think I have given
them a fair trial and I expect to take
two more bottlea of the Vegetable
Compound.”—Mas. C harles Moa-
oan , R. F. D. 1, Tully, N. Y.
60/
Champion—For
a ll o t h e r co *
Bines including
pines
in
M odel I A
, Ford.
75/
C hampion
W h o ’s R esponsible?
Father—Here, Billy, you shouldn’t
lilt Harry. Because Hurry hit yon Is
no reason to retaliate.
Billy—Well, he retaliated first.
SparlC Plugs
WLDOLGLAS
SHOES
. j o 1” M
e n ,W o m e n
A B oys
JUDGE THEM
FOR YOURSELF I
T h e n e x t tim e y o u need a p a it o t »hoes, step In t o th e
nearest W . L D oug las store o r th e D oug las d e a le r in y o u r
lo cality. Y o u w i ll be c h e e rfu lly sh o w n a ll th e latest styles
and w e b e liev e y ou w i ll be c o n v in ce d th a t W . L D oug laa
shoes are b e tte r In q u a lity a n d style th a n hoes usually
offered at such reasonable prices.
M illio n s of satisfied
wearers k n o w th is to be true.
More than a hundred W . L. Douglaa a to m In the principal cities and
the moM reliable ahoe dealer, everywhere are now showing the new
Spring style.. A fair and rauare retail price rtamped on the ruler of
Douglas shoes at the factory, guarantees honest value.
R E M E M B E R : W e Nought oste leather before prices adsuinced
and are passing on to a ll our customers, old and nene, a
ing u-hnh amounts to almost $ 1 .0 0 -r -very (usir of
$4
M e n ’s $1 to $3—W om en’s $5 to $S Bovs’
to $5
Catalog of New Spring Styles mailed on request.
W . L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO.
173 Spark Street,
B rockto n, Mass.
T O M E R C H A N T S ! I f Douglas shoes are not sold In
your towu write today for catalog and agency for
A m erica’s lie u Known Shoes,
Always Keep Cuticura
Preparations On Hand
0»
T h e Soap, because o f Its absolu te pu rity
a n d e m o llie n t properties, is unsurpassed
fo r e ve ry -d a y use. A ssisted b y C uticura
O in tm e n t it does m uch to keep the a k in
an d acalp h e a lth y . C uticura S h a v in g Stick
m akes s h a v in g easy fur tender-laced m en.
C uticura T a lc u m la the id eal to ile t powder
A u tu m n W isd o m
Aunt—What does your new baby
brother look like. Junior?
Detective’s Son—He’s got small fea­
tures, clean-shaven, red-faced, and
rather balcL
X—
C h am pio n
fo r M o d e l T
Ford and Ford-
eon Tractors
S
.w
X
Soap S r Ointment
anti 6 0 Talcum B r Sold every­
where Hami'la each into Addraoe: "Oattmra Labor-
afertM. Dap» M Maltlan. om
M "
O t F “ C uticura Shaving Stick 25c.
H O O L FO R M EN
RECKLE OINTMENT S C
Tr.iefe, 1er BUSINESS, TRADES PROFESSIONS
for real M 'lif s r l f o n .
-, ’ ■ v ~ «Y .I
TOEF. R OOK L E T
A «k f.nsr d J ' . T l . r t i .
O r. C. H. B arry C o ., 2B 7B
M
te
Am., enteeen
I
K u ro ll a n y tim e , «end fo r lite r a tu r e .
O R E G O N I N S T IT U T E O F T E C H N O L O G Y
Illrlg .
P u r l la n d , U n -g u r
R. M. O. A.
S avin g M a h o g a n y
M a y b e So
Continued rubbing with linseed oil
gives a finish on mahogany that will
not be marred by hot dishes.
The cosmetic movement Is a cosmi»
movement.—Woman's Home Compun
Ion.
GENE SARAZEN
a
Danger from overfeeding is les­
sened if the chicks are fed often and
little at a time for the first few
days.
a
1
Preacher Surely Had
Right to Be Annoyed
a
Red mites may be controlled by
thoroughly painting the house with
carbollneum. Spraying coal-tar dip Is
also effective.
• • •
The greatest need of poultrymen to­
day Is not more hens, but better pro­
ducing hens. Hens that will return a
larger profit on the feed consumed.
• • •
Eggs going Into the machine are
Just as Important as the Incubator It­
self, In the spring hatch.
• • •
Many digestive troubles are avoided
if no solid feed Is given for the first
48 to 60 hours, In order that the yolk
In the chick's body may be partially
absorbed.
• • •
There are fonr different kinds of oat
feeds employed In chick feeds. Oat
flour Is used In practically all mix­
tures. It may be made at home if
one has a huller.
• • •
Rye, oats, or spring wheat, or other
spring grains would be very satisfac­
tory as a forage crop for geese.
• • •
Roup. In Its first stages, is nothing
but a cold—the result. In almost all
Instances, of drafty, poorly ventilated
poultry houses.
• • •
I
A good poultry house should afford
protection from storms and severe
weather because a little shelter from
the winds and rtorms will add to the
comfort of the fowls and thereby In­
crease the egg yield greatly.
B r illia n t
G o lf C h a m p io n
Says:
“ W hen it comes to the crucial moment,
I turn to a Lucky Strike. They leave a
soothing effect upon my throat. They’re
great, they afford a real pleasure.”
T he C ream o f th e C rop
—th e fin es t f la v o r —
th e g reatest e n jo ym en t
fifi
$ t W . Tn« Aroerte «o Tobecco O-
toasted”
, M anufacturer«
N o T h roat I r r ita tio n - N o C ou gh *