Newspapers / The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, … / Feb. 20, 1941, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE. CHEERFUL CTIERVb TK% <Jerrr\ oF *.11 ware. ^oirvj to be. Is in us r\ow tKey sty t.nd so TVke. orve good look tX. rrsc. u\d se.e. _ _ A president ir\ embryo. wc*" Pull the Trigger on Lazy Bowels, and Comfort Stomach, too When constipation brings on acid in digestion, stomach upset, bloating. dizzy tpclls. nas coatcd tongue, sour taste and had breath, your itQIBtd) i* probably "crying the blue;" because your bowels don't move. It calls (or Laxative-Senna to pull the trigger on those lazy bowels, combined wiih SyfUp X*vp?ln to save your touchy stomach from further dis tress. For years, many Doctors have used pepsin compounds as vehicles, or ear ners to make other medicines agreeable to your stomach. S ) be sure y?> it laxa tive contains Syrup IV p in. Iiwst 011 pr. Caitiweii's Lu.\.ii ivc t V :.r.a c^sbised w ith Syrup Peps in. See how wonderfully the Laxat ive Senna wakes up lazy nerves and muscles in your intestine; to bring welcome r< lit f from constipation. And the good old Syrup Pepsin makes this laxative so comfortable and easy on your stomach. Even finicky 'children love the taste of this pleasant family : ix.itive. l.uy Dr. Caldwell's- Laxative Senna at your druggist today. 'l'ry ? laxative that condor Uyo In Silence Silencc is the element in which preat things fashion themselves together; that at length they may emerge, full-formed and majestic, into the daylight of Life, which J hey arc thenceforth to rule.?Car iyle. FOR HEAD COLDS Just 2 drops Pen etro Nose Drops will insrantly start you on die open nose ' way out of cold Stuffed ?misery. Remember, free ar.d easy breath ing takes the kick ouc of head colds? helps cut Hown the time these colds hang on. So. for extra, added freedom from colds this winter?head off" head colds' misery with genuine Pcnetro Nose Drops. . . . rush out (logging miseries ?rush in vitalizing healing air. Agreeable Prof. Bjorn?Mr. Dzudi, what is your idea of civilization? Dzudi?It's a good idea. Prof., and I think somebody ought to start it. THIN WOMEN LOOK TOO OLD Women- needing the Vitamin B Com plex and Iron of Vinol to stimulate appotfte will see what a difference a j few lovely pounds make in filling out those hollows and skinny limbs. Get pleasant tasting Vinol AT YOUR DRUG STORE One Science a Genius One science only will one genius fit. so vast is art, so narrow hu man wit.?Pope. PERFORMANCE ? CONDITION ? HEALTH for prop BlacloEtm'? Ilck-A-Brlck In lh? feed trough. Stock do the re?t. No drenching. No dosing. Animal? keep In healthy working condition Nature's way. "8T0CK LICK IT?STOCK LIKE IT" SOLD by loading Southern Dealer? ONE PRICE ....... 25c II there is no Dealer near you, writ# direct to BLACKIWAN 8TOCK MEDICINE OO. Chattanooga . . Teim. TEACHING A CHILD VALUE OF PENNIES A child of a wise mother will be taught from early childhood to be come a regular reader of the adver tisement*. In that way better perhaps than in any other can the child be taught the great value of pennies and thepermanent benefit which cornea from making every penny count. pASADENA, CALIF ?A tall, wil ? lowy figure drifted recently across the California scene. He was headed for the solace of the South Seas to pon der his problemi and adjust himself to a strange future lie had never con sidered a year ago. One of the top stars of his profes sion, one of the smartest, this ad justment will call for exchanging an annual salary of $35,000 o year for a pay check calling Grantland Hire for SCO a month. And this is to ' hnppcn after one of the greatest j years he had ever known. I'm . speaking of Hank Greenberg of the Detroit Tigers. There is a big difference in what the owner of a big league ball club can pa.v an outstanding star and what our I'r.rlc Sam can afford to offer a private soldier. In this case the dilference happens to be 100 to 1 if you happen to get the wrong number in the draft. Greenberg. for example, is older than citiier Cobby Feller or Joe i Louis, who are not exactly starving. The spin of that draft wheel hap pened to cost him 535,000 a year? which is the way it should be and has to be in an existence which is now a triPe cock-eyed. Long Hank was on his way to Honolulu when I ran across him in specting i ho (loral beauty of Santa Anita before taking a chunk of the Pacific in his stride. Okay by Html; "As you know," he said, "I have a low draft number and I may be called in June or early July. Which is all light with me. From the way things are moving there may be a lot more of us called out by then than many people figure to- : day." Hank is already looking in the old P. of C., sometimes known as the pink of condition. "This season." he said, "I hope to be in the best early season shape , I have ever known. I may not have i many weeks to travel, so I can't af- i ford to waste any time getting started. I ought to be in good shape, anyway, to play on some army team." There is a good chance that by next summer army competition in baseball will be quite sharp. And there will be loud cheers from any division or corps that happens to bag the tall Tiger. "We'll have a tough job this sea son defending our title," Greenberg said. "The two toughest opponents we must face should be New York and Cleveland. Bob Feller can make almost any team look good, but Cleveland has more than Feller. Don't forget Boudreau and Mack at short and second. "The Yankees are sure to be bet ter than they were a year ago when they got away badly. Their young pitchers will be ready to pick up where the veterans begin to leave off. Through 1940 they had become fed up with too much winning. You know that can happen. "While I still think New York and j Cleveland are the teams to beat, the White Sox won't be far away and you]ll see a much better team in Fredllaney's St. Louis Browns, j The Red Sox must still get better r pitching. Aside from that they can I play with anybody." About the Tigers i "What about the Tigers?" I asked Greenberg. Hank grinned. "We were picked to finish fifth or sixth or maybe sev enth last April in the South," he ?!d- ,"stiu we won the pennant. I 11 tell you why. I think we had I the finest spirit I've ever seen in j baseball. We hustled through every ! inning of every game we played. There was no time out for inter i missions. Don t forget we still have a good ; pitching stall coming on, headed by Buck Newsom and at least three or four fine young pitchers. We still have Rudy York's hitting and I his greatly improved play at first. We have three infield veterans left who will be just as good as they ! were a year ago. Why? Because they are ball players at heart?be cause they have trains and spirit They are not through." "Suppose you are called away early m June?" I asked. , Th,^ J'6er!5 are no one-man team, Hank said. "I'm just an other fellow out there, doing the pest I can. You can never tell in baseball. Don't sell us too ?nort. Wise and Otherwise DLKASE count your change before leaving it, soys a sicn in a restaurant. That's where some customers take the count. A hen is the only creature we know of who can sit still and produce dividends. Therm are two aravs ol arresting a ftoll ball?one he/ore you swing, ami the other after you miss. A pessimist is a man who, when he has the choice of two evils, chooses both. Jumping at conclusions is the only mental exercise some peo ple take. His and Her Linens Easy and Effective EVERYONE'S favorite, these modern, easy-to-do designs. Embroider them on towel or pil low case and let your needlework score a hit. ? # ? Pattern 2588 contains a transfer pattern of 12 motifs averaging 4',2 by 6',2 inches: color schemes; materials required; illus trations of stitches. Send order to: Sewing Circle Needlecraft Dept. 82 Eighth Ave. New York Enclose 15 cents in coins for Pat tern No Name Address DON'T BE BOSSED BY YOUR LAXATIVE-RELIEVE CONSTIPATION THIS MODERN WAY ? When ynu feel gassy, headachy, logy due to clogged-up bowels, do as millions do?take Feen-A-Mint at bedtime. Next morning ? thorough, comfortable relief, helping you start the day full of your normal energy and pep, feeling like a million! Feen-A-Mint doesn't disturb your night's rest or interfero with work the next day. TVy Feen-A-Mint, the chewing gum laxative, yourself. It tastes good, if s handy and economical... a family supply FEEN-A-MINT To# For His Comfort Stranger (savagely)?You're sit ting on my hat, sir! Old Gentleman?So I feel, sir! And I hope in the future you will wear soft hats, and not these hard brimmed abominations. Pattern No. 2588 Must Be GOOD to be Consistently Advertised BUY ADVERTISED GOODS MERCHANDISE Farm Topics FEED RECORDS REVEAL COSTS Lead the Way to Improving Farming Practices. By S. B. CLELAND (Extension Specialist in Farm Management. University Farm. St. Paul) The farmer who wants to study his farm business should not over look the importance i'f good records of feed consumption by his live stock. Along with the cash and the crop records, the information on feed use will help show the way to improvement in practices from year to year. Records of feed consumption arc usually kept on groups of live stock rather than on individual animals. In practice the operator observes carcfully the amount of feed used in a day, and on this basis estimates the quantity fed in a month. In the record bc-ok, one page is assigned to each class of live stock, with dif ferent columns for the different kinds of feed. It is a good plan to check once in a while on the estimates by com paring the total feed recorded with the amounts of feed that have been actually used. By placing a value on his feed as he goes along, the farmer can readily figure his feed results in cost per pound of gain for meat animals and cost per unit produced by dairy herds. In order to study his feed records intelligently, the operator must have standards with which to compare his own results. Cow testing records supply convenient yardsticks for the daiiyman. Co-operative farm man agement groups use the average for the association in the various classi fications. Files of the county agent's office usually contain records of various feeding trials which afford good standards for comparison. The farmer who wishes to evaluate his records can do so conveniently by consulting the county agent and as sembling a set of standards ap plicable to his own type of farming. Nitrogen in Apples A 600 pound crop of apples from a vigorous tree 25 years old removes about one-third of a pound of nitro gen from the soil. For growth of its wood, bark, and roots such a tree uses about a half pound of nitro gen. The leaves used from a half pound to a pound of nitrogen in their growth and development, but this is restored to the tree and soil, and is not ultimately removed from the orchard. If loss of nitrogen by leaching can be prevented, a pound of actual ni trogen a year for a tree in full bear ing is an ample supply. Too much nitrogen checks the desirable color ing of the fruit. About 6 pounds of nitrate of soda or 5 pounds of sul phate of ammonia would supply a pound of nitrogen. Farm Machine Sales Show Big Increase Comparative study of the farm situation since 1935 with the five year period preceding the World war reveals that current pur chases of farm machinery and motor vehicles has doubled those made in the early period. The great increase was made in the purchases of motor vehi cles, while expenditures for other farm machinery averaged about the same. / The number ci horses and mules on farms was reduced from 25 to 15 million head and the number of hired laborers em ployed was about 13 per cent lower than in the pre-war years. The number of farms is about 10 per cent greater, the acreage cultivated has increased, and ag ricultural production is material ly greater than it was. Care of Orchard | Fertilization of the "orchard" in stead of the "trees" would do much toward maintaining good orchard sites through succeeding genera tions of trees, says Grover F. Brown, agronomist in the northeast region of the Soil Conservation serv ice. Nitrogen has been the chief plant food used in orchards with the re sult that cover crops often lack lime, phosphorus, and potash. Tests show, says Brown, that although trees in orchards may not respond to phosphorus and potash, the cover crops frequently do need these two elements. Scents for He-Meu After a heavy snowstorm in New Vork crowds gathered at the en trance to a certain perfume house. The reason was soon clear, for instead of molting the ice in front of the store with rock salt the jani tor had used rejected bath salts. In this and many other ways American manufacturers of per fume are trying to attract custom, especially that of men, whom they say are notoriously perfume shy. A large riding academy shampoos their horses with perfumed soap which leaves an exotic, pleasant fragrance which customers like. But for real he-men perfume sell ers have perfumes like the smell of old leather, burnt gunpowder, and wood smoke, to remind them of the hunting field. MOTHER give YOUR child same expert care used when QUINTUPIETS CATCH COLD At the lint aign of a chest cold?the Quintuplets' throats and chivt* art rubbed with Children's Mild M us t o role ?a product made to promptly relieve the DlSTRESS-of children's colds and resulting bronchial and croupy coughs. Relief usually comes quickly because Musterole is MORE than an ordinary "salve." It helps break up local con gestion. As Musterole is used on the Quints you may be sure you are u-in* just about the BEST product made. Alsoin Regular and Extra Strength for those preferring a stronger product. a - CHILDREN'S Man Is Affected Histories make men wise: poets, witty; the mathematics, subtile; natural philosophy, deep; morals, grave; logic and rhetoric, able to contend.?Bacon. Unite We Must We must all hang together or assuredly we shall ail hang sep arately.?Benjamin Franklin. GRAY HAIRS Do you like them? If not, get a bottle of Lea's Hair Preparation, it is guaranteed to make your gray hairs a color so close to tne natural color; the color they were before turning gray, or the color of your hair that has not turned gray that you or your friends can't tell the difference or your money refunded. It doesn't make any.dif ference what color your hair is and it is so simple to use?Just massage a few drops upon the scalp for a few days per direc tions like thousands are doing. Your druggist has Lea's Hair Prepara tion, or can secure a bottle for you. or a regular dollar bottle of Lea's Hair Prep aration will be sent you. postage paid Dy us. upon receipt of one dollar cash. P. <? money order or stamps. (Sent COD izc extra). LEA'S TONIC CO., INC. Bo* 2055 - - Ta.npa. Fl* Star Gazers No one sees what is before his /eet: we all gaze at the stars.? Cicero. 'All the Traffic Would Bear'' ? There was a time in America when there were no set prices. Each merchant charged what he thought "the traffic would bear." Advertising came to the rescue of the consumer. It led the way to the estab lished prices you pay when you buy anything today.
The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 20, 1941, edition 1
2
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