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Show THE MIDVALE JOURN AL Friday, October 11, 1929 Open Air Salesroor.n for Airplanes I Los Angele s Boy Needed Help Leroy Young, 1116 Georgia St., Los Angeles, is a "regular fellow," active in sports, and at tl1e top in his classes at To look at school. him now, you'd think =__.he never bad a day's slekness but his mother says: "When Leroy was just a little fellow, we found his s ~mach and bowels were weak. He kept suffering from constipation. Nothing he ate agreed with l1im. He was fretful, feverish and puny. "When we started giving him CaU· fornia Fig: S:qull his condition lm· pr ved qt,ickly. His constipation and biliousness stopped and he has bad no more trouble of that kind. I have since used California Fig Syrup with· him for colds and upset spells. He IH~s it because it tastes so good and I like it because it helps him so wonderfully!" California Fig Syrup has been the trusted standby of mothers for over 50 years. Leading physicians recommend it. It is purely vegetable and works with Nature to regulate, tone nn<l strengthen the stomach and bowels of children so they get full nourisl1men t from their food and waste is eliminated in a normal way. Fou million bottles used a year shows how mothers depend on it. Always look for the word "California" on the carton to be sure of getting the genuine. • WIN A BET! A email bottle that you can lay down but no one ~~~ can without the secrf't. Price $1. ~ :!ales Co.,229 Prospect,Belle vue.Ky. Hastl AS FIRST AID Use Hanford's JJalsa m of Myrrh rnoner All dealer& are authorized to refund your forthellrst bottle if not&uiled PRICES OF FEEDS \¥EIGHT Y FACTOR S Prices of feeos, and the nature of the feP.ds grown on the farm, are fac· tors which will enter into the planning of meals for the <lairy cow. C. L. Blackman, of the animal husbandry department of the Ohio State univer· sity, offers three suggested menus, which are economical under {}resent price condition!', when the various roughages mentioned are available. ~'he first consists of: 300 pounds corn and c~;b meal, or hominy or barley; 300 pounds ground oats; 100 pounds wheat b1·an; 100 pounds cottonseed meal or gluten meal ; 50 pounos llnseed oil meal. This shoulr1 be fed when alfalfa, with or without silage, Is available. When clover, with or without silage, Is available, Blackman suggests a mix· ture of: 300 pounds corn and corn cob meal or hominy or barley; 300 pounds ground oats; 100 pounds wheat bran; 100 pounds cottonseed meal or gluten meal; 100 pounds linseed oil meal. When timothy hay or corn stover, with or without silage, Is available, the following formula is suggested: 100 pounds corn and cob meal or hom· lny or barley; 100 pounds ground oats; 100 pounds wheat bran; 100 pom1d'l cottonseed meal or gluten meul ; 150 pounds linseed oil meal. "Other high protein supplements such as soy bean oil meal or distillers' dried grnins may be used to replace some of the cottonseed or oil meal If the price is In line," says the special· !st. Excellent Definition Te cher-"Wha t Is the definition of flirtation'!" IntelligPnt Pupil-"lt Is at· tention without Intention." Contentm ent of Cow Is Importan t Milk Factor It Is a well known fact that If a cow (opper.Rivet atoll Strain points Plus Extra Heavy ~rested Denim in LEVI STRAUSS Waist Overalls ·Insure lo.ng wear .. AN~W .. PAIR. FREE rin To Iden tify Gent;ine Aspi . Three Cow Menus Suggested Under Present Costs. IF THEY RIP Ask for Levi'S l?e!iah!eNerciKlndiJeJince/853 People will prevaricate pretty ex· te slvel;v to avoid a row. ONE PRESCRIPTION MADE FAMilY DOCTOR FAMOUS fs to produ0e to her nwximum capacity she must at all times be kept quiet and contented. Anything that disturbs this condition of the cow will have a tendency to lessen production and to form the habit of "holding up'' cf milk. All influences which conduce to the quietude and comfort of the cow will increase milk production while the opposite influence \Viii l;nve the tendency to lessen production and also has the tendency for the cow to ''hold up" milk. Any excitement or rough handling ?f the cow will have a tendency to caus~ a cow to "hold up" milk After a C(''V hus once formed this habit it is ver: difficult to break her of lt. Sometime!: this vice is the result of the excltemcn• when the calf is weaned. There is no cure for th!s vice. All that you can do Is to place. the cow in the most favorable circumst:>nces while the milking is being done. A very good way to do fs to teed u. <;! cow some grain or mill feed while the milking is being done. If the cow has not been fn:sh very tong it wlll h~lp it the calf is placed where the cow can see It. When this habit has become chronic the best thing to do is to sell the cow to the butcher. Cow Is Largest Manure Producin g Farm Animal The cow is the largest manureproducing animal on the farm and while its excreta is least rich in fer· tilizlng elements, the large volume places it as the most Important manure produced In mixed and dairy farming. Horse manure Is distinctly richer In nitrogen, phosphoric aci(l and potash than cow manure but Its open character makes it more liable to fermentation and unless carefully conserved It loses its valuable con· stituents quite rapidly. For this reason the best plan is to mix these two manures. Dairy Facts ~~~++++++++++{~~·++++++~ Supply the cows with water and salt. • • • Good pastures are almost as essen· tlal to successful dairying as good cows. • • • Seldom has any single act been 10£ greater benefit to mankind than that of Dr. Caldwell in 1885, when ..,he wrote the prescription which 'has carried his fame t6 the four corners of the earth. Over and over, Dr. Caldwell wrote tho prescription as he found men, women and children suffering from those common symptoms of eonstipatidh , such as coated tongue, l1ad breath, headaches, gas, nausea, biliousness, no energy, lack of appetite, and similar things. Demand for this prescription grew so fast, because of the pleasant, quick way it relieved such symptoms of constipation , that by 1888 Dr. Caldwell was forced to l1ave it put up ready for use. Today, Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, as it is called, is always ready at any drugstore. W N. U., Salt Lake City, No. 41-1921. \Vhen the cream churns slow It may be due to the cream being too warm or too cold, or too thin and too sweet. • * • Do not let milk In cans stand in th(> sun while waiting for the hauler, say Penn State dai~J~ specialist~. Provide shade, and cover with a wet blanket or canvas. Such simple precautions help to keep the milk cool and prevent loss. • • • 'fhc amount of grain to feed will depend on the condition of the individ· ual cows anti f\omewhat on the length of time they are to he drs. • • • Separat or·s f'houltl he wa~hed mornIf washNl only once in~ and ev<'nin;!". a day, it should he rinsed with water and then with a <lii'infectant solution. . . .. All dairy utensil~ Fhoul•l hP rinst'd \\'it h eoltl w:rter immedi:rtely after u<iJI;;. thpn wn~·hetl in warm water t·ont:•ining w . lrinr: powder·. and finally <><·•rldt'tl or rin .. ,.. ;. in a good solution. use or Bayer Aspirin every yea.r is proof T HEthatincreasing it has no ill effects. It is the accepted antidote for .Pain. It alwa.ys helps; it never harms. Quick relief when you've a. hea.dach~. or cold; or a.re suffering from neuralgia. or neuritis. Rheuma.tic pa.ins yield, too, if you 'U only give these tablets a. cha.n.ce. But you want genuine Aspirin, so look for the Bayer Cross on every tablet. The box always bears the name Ba.yer a.n.d. the word "genuine'! printed in red. Proven directioDS inside. ABPirln 1a the trade mark of Bayer Monoacetlcacidester View of the open air salesroom for airplanes, which Is at one of the busiest corners In Los Angeles, Calif., where nearly a quarter of a million persons pass daily. AIRPORT DESIGNED LIKE THE BEEHIVE Novel Terminal s Proposed .;.*~· ~ by New Yorkers. .~ew York.-In 11. few years the air traveler may loolc down and regnru a beehive on the earth with the same joyful anticipation thr.t an ocean tr&v· eler sights land. For thr beehive, one of the oldest forms of m·chitectun , inspired the newest plan for the nation's newest need, the airport, an':l Ol,le has been designed by !<'ranees Keally and E. P. Goodrich, New York architect and city planner. Goodrich Is In ChiLa, having been commissioned hy th~ Chinese government as consulting P.U~ineer in the development of a modern seaport at Canton and the la~·in.; out of a modern capital city at Nanking. His plans call for aviation development and he will use the beehive airport as a basis for this phase. This new aviation ter:·1inal strives to become an arcililectura l asset rather than a liability. And it looks ahead to the time when air travel will be much more common than today, Keally said. Come and Go System. "It is designed O'l<J that one-way traffic becomes au automatic feature," explained Keally. "Twenty-two air· planes and a dirigible can land while 22 airplanes can tal'e off-all at the same moment. "The average train leaving Grand Central station carries between 600 and 700 passengers; thus the air· port can handle about the same amount of traffic. "'.fhe design Is mad•! so as to focus and clear from one point all the high speed traffic of the city. Thus, vehicular tunnels .tnd subways can come right Into the r.lrport and discharge their passengers, who then hop ofl' In planes. "All planes will start from and ar· rive at;our terminals, which meet In Either the easta huge rotunda. west or north-sooth terminals may be used to the advantllge of the wind direction." The design calls tor an airport 6,000 feet in diameter, the tanding surface of which Is covered with cinders, with enough space left for a runway 350 feet wide for each plane, the length of the runway being 2,500 feet. "The landing surface has a 2% per cent grade so that airplanes arriving will be helped by gr·avlty to stop and airplanes taldng ofT wlll be helped by a down·Wll run," Keally continued. "A ~uge dome will cover the rotunda with storage space for several thousand airplanes supplied by twostory hangars. Above the dome will be a mooring mast for a dirigible and the top of the mast will be ex· actly 1,000 feet from the ground, the highest structure In the world. A City Jtself. "The outer crust of the domethink of it as the Inner and outer layers of a thermos bottle-wlll be fashioned Into a hotel containing several hundred rooms. Each fifty story of this hotel will have a terr·ace so that guests can watch Incoming and outgoing planes. "Passengers who arrive hy rllriglble will descend to hotel 01 to rotunda by eleva tors. In the rotunda will be ticket offices and an outgoing and incoming waiting room, with pub· lie health, immigration and o room in which traffic men of the airport will get the! r Instructions from men in the tower. In otlrer words, the airport will be a city il Itself." Routes to Foreign Landa United StatPs now lras 9,000 miles of air routes et nneeting it with lti foreign count1·ies, while more than 5,000 miles and at IPast four other nations will be addE'rl lc the system in the near futu1·e. ~'he F9r Women's Recorda Aviation records marle h~- women are to be controlled in eath country of tl.e world b.v n woman rPpr<'sPntative of the Federatkn Aeronauti(JUP Internationa le. * ~ * * **~· * ~ * ~ * ~ * * * *~ * ~ Minn. - Airplanes Duluth, have been called into use in transporting sportsmen to an,} from a wilderness which is said to be a veritable hunters' and fishermen's paradise, but which is inaccessible by all other means of transportatio n. The wild region lies only about 100 miles north of Du. Iuth, but, it Is said, scarcely has ever heard the sound of a gnu or the run of a reel. So plenti· ful Is the region said to be in game that a company operating an air line to lakes of the region guarantee their patrons th at at least one member of each party will catch fish and t h at all will see either deer, moose or bear on a flight of an hour or more. I1'lights to the region are be· gun at the air line's base at Eveleth, Jl.linn. ... ~ Wonder What Firemen Said ************************** *~ Planes Carry Hunters *~ to a Far Wilderne ss >!:~ *** ~ MB.nufaetur.:~ ot Sallcyllc&eld ~' ** ~ * ~ >!: * * * *~ * * ~ ~ Just because a fire alarm bo;x was numbered 31, an Anaconda (l\lont.) man thought It was necessary to pull the lever 3J times. All the apparatus fn the city responded and the firemen fol!nd the man industriousl y yanking the little handle when they nrriv<:d to extinguish a small fire on the porch roof of a dwelling. He hadn't quite reached bis total when he was Interrupted. Absorbine redueell etrained. puffy ankles, lymphangitis, poll evil, mtula, boils, swellings. Sllops lameness and allayspnin. Healssorea, euts. bruises, boot chafes. Does not blister or re- move hair. Horse can bewo:kcd while treated. At druggists, or ~2.60 postpaid, Describe your case for epeeial Instructions. Horse book 6-S free. G~tefolnser wrlte~: ':Havo tried everytlung. After 3 applications of Absorbine found swelling gone. Thank yol1 f or tb& wonderfal results obt&fntd. '"I will reeom• mend Absorbine to my neighbors". ~~MII'II"n- Railway Tiea of Steel To gl ve rail way ties of steel a thor· llugh test in comparison to those ot wood three railways of England have ordered large numbers of the new sleepers. One line will ln~tall 10,560 pressed steel ties, another 6,000. each weighing 192 pounds, an<l the third, 600. - llealth Giving 0§ I * * * *** Not Homemade aiDlt §pri: n: brea:< to hard are ties e Goof-"Hom CALIFOR NIA *~ Aren"t they'!" Spoof-"] don't know. I It's llard fo keep "easy money." * always buy mine." * * *~ Here 's one gran ddau ghte r * * *i<··X·****·X-*-lC··X·*·l:·-lC·***********.J<·-K·* SUBCOO LED FOG IS GREATE ST OF PERILS Solidifies in Layers of Ice on Aircraft. ~larvelous Climate- Good llotebo- Touri•t Camps-Splen did Ronde-Gorge ous Mountaim Views. Thewonderfu lde•ert ruorto/tloe We•l Wr/to Creo £ Chaltey who takes advice from elders S~hoolgir I learns simple health measur e Cambridge, J\.1ass.-~'he peril of lee forming on aircraft 01ay come from three meteorological conditions, according to Dr. Alt>xander 1\IrAdie, of "- 'i nTH all the talk there is nowthe Blue Hili Meteorological observa· VV adays about the independence tory, Harvard university. of the sub-deb generation, your re'l'hN•e are sleet, glaze and subeooled ~orter got a great kick out of hearfog. The last, he says, Is the most 'tng a grandmother describe how her dangerous. granddaught er was following a good va· tiny the tried and true method of improvold Subcooling means that colding her general health. por particles are actually slightly er than the freezing point, although .. My granddaught er, Margaret,"s ays still water. This condition occurs Mrs. Zcll of 6231 Catherine Street, when the air virtually is free from Philadelpha , "read about Nujol, dust and other particles, upon which was interested in it, so sent for a the drO[llets might solidify. sample." It seems she has been takWater expands when It freezes, and it,lg a tablespoon of Nujol once a day the minute particles of fog instead of stnce and expects to continue this freezing ten11 to spread more th!nly treatment. Already she has found an you because it works so easily and through the air until they come In improvemen t in her general health, regularly, in a normal fashion. contact with some other surfaee. Imher system functioning normally Nujol was perfected by the Nujol mediately upon such contact, as the where other remedies had failed. , 2 Park Avenue, New Laboratories di· solidify surfaces of aircraft, they about things best the of It can be boufht anyone City. That's York rectly Into a layer of Ice. In this case for the price o a ticket about harmless for as where just is It Nujol. the temperature of the droplets is deGet a bottle of is it as movie. even, WJOd a babies to or girls, young cidedly lower than thnt of the surit, won't you~ no try and contain! today Nujol Nujol For adults. for face upon which they freeze. upset packages. can't scaled It In drugs. or medicines Doctor McAdie says the best way to e~cape from subcooled fog Is to watch thermometer s closely and seek levels, You can't argue people out of their Exact justice has never been defined either lower or upper, at which temof propriety, no matter what so notions are there why be may this and peratures are higher. are. notions those law. the loopholes in When fibers of sweaters and the many hairs of fur coats become covered with Hash survive-~ jokes made You can't uplift people-mos tly behoar frost, 1t is a sure sign of subabout It and so does spinach. C!a use they hate to be pitied. cooled water. Glaze, which he says formerl.v er· roneously was called sleet, occurs when rain drops near freezing temperatur~s fall upon a surface which Is much colder. Real sleet Is due to ralndr·ops fallIng through 11 layer of air below freez· ing, which turns them Into frozen rain· drops. An airplane moving through such a stratum when raindrops are coming from a warmer area above is ln a dangerous zone, for the accumulating frozen drops stick to one another rPadily and so build up a peril· ous load. Presumably, If ll pilot rero~nlzes nc· curntely the sleet conditions, he can escape by climbing into the warmer level above. Startin g right Wh en Bab ies Rocket Plane Being Built in Germany Dus~eldorf, Germany.-A motorle!'s propellerlcss rocket alr·plane. with stream line "nrrow" bod.v for greater speed, Is under con~truction here at the l~spenlauh airplane factory. It was dPs!gned h.v III ax Valier, Inventor of the rocket a utomnhile. Liftpd into tire air h.1· another plane, the new plane is to tal;e off for it~ first flight hy merel.v setting off Its rockets and dropping the tow-line. A ont'·SPater monoplane, witlr n 3Q. foot 11 !ng s[lrt•ad, it net'ds neither motor no1· pr·opeller, hel'a use of its r·oeket s~·stPm of propnl:<ion. About 225 pounds in total weight are thus saved Babies will cry, often for no • apparent reason. You may not .know what's wrong, but you can always give Castoria. This soon has your little one comforted; if not, you should call a doctor. Don't experiment with medicines intended for the stronger systems of adults! Most of those little upsets are soon soothed away by a little of this pleasant-tas ting, gentle-actin g children's remedy that children like. It may be the stomach, or may be the little bowels. Or in the case of older children, a sluggish, constipated condition. Castoria is still the thing to give. It is almost certain to clear up any minor ailment, and could by no possi· bility do the youngest child the slightest harm. So it's the first thing to think of when a child has a coated tongue; won't play, can't sleep, is fretful or out of sorts. Get the genuine; it always has Chas. H. Fletcher's signature on the package. |