MARION PROGRESS. MARION. N. C., THURSDAY, SEPT. 19, 1929 There’s ^ace in the household guarded by Castoria. Peaceful sleep for Baby. Uninterrupted rest for Mother. For a few drops of pure Castoria will quiet liny fretful in(ant. Or put the little one Imi^ to sleep when there’s an upset dur ing the night. Parents, don’t try tc do without good old Castoria! It isn’t fair to the baby, uid it makes things hard for you. You ean’t give Baby medicine meant for Ifpown-ups—or shouldn’t! Castoria is Uie solution. It is always safe. It al ways does the work. And although it act* as swiftly as an opiate or a nar cotic, it contains neither. Castoria is purelp vegetable. Give it whenever there’s COTstipation, colic, diarrhea. No less than five million modern mothers have come to depend on Cas toria, for twenty-five million bottles were bought last year! Gret yours to- iay; don’t wait for some night when it’s Re^ed, and the drugstore is closed! Arthur Brisbane The Warship Question Cheaper Cars Coming? Standard and Shell Diamonds From Sugar Ramsay MacDonald arrives soon to talk over armaments at sea. He prob ably comes prepared to ratify official ly a program already agreed upon, substantially. He would not want to return with nothing after Snowden’s triumphant round trip to The Hague. The British, well informed by their separate air department, care little about surface ships for any future war. They know that ships will cut no figure. But they have 70,0(M^ miles of sea coast ta patrol in their empire. Their cruisers are really floating forts or police stations, boardins houses for marines that can be landed when needed, then moved on to soothe the next troubled spot DAIRY FACTS PROVED SIRE IS BIG DAIRY ASSET Quality of His Get Cannot Be Told )by Their Looks. If the President would establish a separate air department, appointing a head engineer with others under him, all controlled by Engineer Hoov er, to develop new ideas. Uncle Sam might not spend his life copying Ger many, Italy and Britain. And we would not worry about warships. Children p Cry for I C I SPELLS OF I BACKACHE ' *1 HAVE used Car- did at intervals for sixteen years, when I suffered from weakness, and it always helped me,” says Mrs. J. W. Jiniight. R. F. D. 2. Troy, Ala. *^ostly I was afflicted with bad spells of backache. At times I felt as if my back would break. I would drag one foot after the other, in a helpless sort of a way. and once I got down in bed. My husband urged me to take Cazdui. and I soon found what a fine medicine it really waa "When my second chfldwas little. I was in very bad I did not pick up as I have. I was we^ and sickly. I do not believe that I would have come through, bat for Alfred P. Sloan, Jr., president of General Motors, told stockholders he bought “a substantial interest” In Opel, great German automobile con cern, to develop German manufacture of automobiles rather than supersede it with organization and methods en tirely American. This country depends largely on ex port of manufactured articles, it is, therefore, interesting to hear from Mr. Sloan that in Europe his com pany in 1928, In dollars and num ber of units, sold more automobiles than any European concern manufac tured. Mr. Sloan plans for Europe^s the kind of car they'want at a price they can afford. Not so rich as we, they do not demand so much luxury. i Mr. Sloan, Mr. Ford and others in i this country may need to produce . here a cheaper car than any now of- . fered. j General Wood, head of Sears, Roe- ' buck, plans a car for $200. Henry ; Ford years ago showed the writer a ■ small, powerful engine, made for a ; car to sell at $250. He probably has ! kept the plans for that product i (By JAS. W. LINN, Extension Dairy man, K. S. A. C.) The sire is half the herd I Besides feeding, there Is nothing that determines the production of the herd or cow to as great an extent as breeding. In breeding it is important to have good cows, but regardless of how good or well bred one can only count on an average of one calf each year which will be the limit of the in dividual cow’s influence on the future herd. Such is not true of the sire. His in fluence in bettering or lowering the standards of the future herd is limited only by the number of cows to which he is mated. The dairy bull has two disadvan tages as compared with the beef herd sire in that the quality of his get can not be told by their looks, and it is more difl5cult to keep an aged dairy bull. If dairymen will realize that the older bulls may be kept in perfect safety by spending $100 or less on equipment, that the bull that has proved his worth is a sure way to build a better herd and that these bulls may often be bought at beef pi'ices, or at least at reasonable ! prices, more of them will be used and j better and more profitable herds will j be the result. | It is necessary to list the daughters of these aged bulls to prove their worth. Tlie Dairy Herd Improvement association is doing this in the best and most practical way, and hundreds of bulls will be proved in the next few years through this method. Perhaps the one thing that is doing more to encourage the use of proved ' bulls than anything else is the use of the bull association where bulls are ‘ owned co-operatively and moved from one farm to the next. This is espe cially true where the members are members of the Dairy Herd Improve ment association. ^^OCTORS quite approve the ^ quick comfort of Bayer Aspi rin. These perfectly harmless tab- l6ts ease an aching head without penalty. Their increasing use year after year is proof that they do help and can’t harm. Take them for any ache; to avoid the pain peculiar to women; many have found them marvelous at such times. The proven directions with every pack age of Bayer Aspirin tell how to treat colds, sore throat, neuralgia, neuritis, etc. All druggists. PVSPIRIN Aspirin IS th« trade mark ot Bayer Manufactur# of MonoaceUcacidester of Saliaylicacid teething babies DO \yELL,piNI Scott’s Emulsion Cardui” Take Thedfonfi BLACK-DRAUGHT «CoMtip«t>on,liK£gedio "I" DR. CALDWELL’S THREE RULES Dr. Caldwell watched the results of constipation for 47 years, and believed tlutt no maitter how earful people are •of Uieir health, diet and exercise, con stipation will occur from time to time. Of next importance, then, is how to treat H when it comes. Dr. Caldwell always wa« in favor of getting as close to nature M poflaible, hence his remedy for consti pation is a mild v^table compound. It can not harm the most delicate system and is not habit forming. The Doctor never did approve of dras tic lAysics and purges. He did not believe ihey were good for human beings to put into their system. Use Syrup Pepsin for yourself and members of the family in constipation, biliousness, sour and crampy stomal, bad breath, no appetite, head aches. and to break up fevers and colds. Get a bottle today, at any drugstore and ohflerve these three rules of health: Keep ♦ie head cool, the feet warm, the bowels open. For a free trial bottle, just write 'Syrup Pepsin,” Dept. BB, Monticello, Illinois. Professor Hershey of McPherson ' college told scientists at Minneapolis | that genuine diamonds of superb col- | or can be made by subjecting ordinary i table sugar to a pressure of ten tons i to the square inch. | He has produced such diamonds in ' his laboratory. In another laboratory, the senate, Mr. Smoot is about to prove that he can produce for friends enough money to buy all the diamonds in South Africa by subjecting ordinary table sugar to a tariff pressure of two cents or so per pound. ! Standard and other oil stocks have been going up despite the British in vasion by “Shell.” The 24,754,967 shares of Standard Oil of New Jer sey are worth about two billion dol lars now. That is just one fragment of old Standard Oil, built up by Mr. Rocke feller and chopped into pieces by a rampageous government because it was supposed to be worth “nearly a billion,” altogether. What old Standard Is really worth now, nobody knows. Including oil In the ground, ten billions probably would be a reasonable price. Mellon, needing $500,000,000 for Uncle Sam's use, invited subscriptions to treasury cerUficates. He was of fered $1,4^,000,000, almost a billion more than needed. He did not pay 9 per cent, or the Federal reserve 6 per cent discount rate, either. Mr. Mellon could have bought the $500,000,000 of certificates himself, and saved on Income tax. But he avoids all business connected with govern ment. And besides, he knows how to invest more profitably. In his government Mussolini held eight posts. Now the powerful Ital ian resigns sev«i of his cabinet offices, remaining premier and mflfister of in terior only. The king announces the changes by royal decree. Mussolini told him what to announce. The years are passing, Mussolini knows it and seeks to build a govern ment machine that Will survive. The Italian question is: “After Mus solini, What?” Twenty-eight European nations are working at a plan called “The United States of Europe Plan.” Germany j says she will join, but not if there Is an anti-American pact. That’s another hint to President Hoover and others responsible to make this' country strong enough to take care of itself. Doing business without advertising is like winking at a girl in the dark. Ho one knows it except you. Absolutely Germ-Free Milk Is Impossibility Clean milk should contain neither foreign matter nor bacteria of any kind. If milk could be obtained and stored, that was entirely free of bac teria, it would keep indefinitely. In view of the fact that absolutely germ- free milk is impossible to obtain un der practical conditions, it is impor tant to consider the ways and means of securing milk that is from healthy cows, free of foreign matter and which contains only a small amount of bac teria, none of which are disease-pro ducing. The tuberculin test is used as a means of eliminating cows that might pass tuberculosis germs through the milk. This test is prescribed by prac tically all city ordinances. In some cases cities require the cows to be tested or the milk pasteurized. Other cities insure a doubly safe product by requiring all the milk to come from tuberculin tested cows, whether it is pasteurized or not. Visible dirt in the milk Is not only a source of danger, but It Indicates carelessness in handling. Usually such milk contains a large number of bacteria. EXECUTORS’ NOTICE We having duly qualified as Exe cutors of the Estate of D. E. Hud gins, deceased, late of McDowell County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned at the law offices of Hudgins, Wat son & Washburn on or before the 10th day of September, 1930, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make im mediate payment. This the 5th day of September, 1929. Carter Hudgins D. E. Hudgins, Jr. John M. Oglesby Executors of the Estate of D. E. Hudgins. Why Take a Chance on Tires? There are scores of different brands of tires on the market — they all look pretty much alike—everyone claims he has the best—^there are all kinds of ‘"special of fers'’ floating around—it is no wonder car owners are confused. Here is one sure way to play safe. Buy a genuine Goodyear Tire from us — they cost no more — fre quently less. Our service is always in your interest— Prompt—Expert—Comiteous. Ballew Motor Co. Phone 225 Marion, N. C. NOTICE OF CHANGE OF THE DYSARTSVILLE-NEBO TOWN SHIP LINE. Notice is hereby given that appli cation has been made to the Board of Commissioners of McDowell County for change of the dividing line between Nebo and Dysartsville Townships so that that portion of Dysartsville Township lying North of the following described line shall be and become a part of Nebo Town ship, to-wit: Beginning at a point at the South east corner of Nebo Township line, at Bennett Mill Shoal, and runs with the West side of the present road leading to Harmony Grove Church and continuing on to and crossing the Nebo and Dysartsville Road to a point on bank of said road, then with the East side of said road Northerly to the forks of the J. C. Crawley Road, then with this road Eastwar'd- ly on the West side of said road to the West side of Gus Tate’s house, then in a straight line to the S. P. Tate Blankenship corner near the spring, then in a straight line East- wardly to the forks of the mail route road and the road leading to the Mode place and with the South side of said road to South Creek and crossing said creek with the old road to the Burke County line, then with said county line North 15 West to the forks of North and South Muddy Creeks, the present Nebo Township line. Notice is further given that the above application will be acted upon at the regular meeting of the Board of County Commissioners of Mc Dowell County, North Carolina, on Monday, the 7th day of October, 1929. By order of the Board. (Signed) R. F. BARNES, Clerk to the Board of County Commissioners. Upon the coming in of the fore going application for change of the dividing line between Nebo and Dy sartsville Townships, it is ordered that notice of such application be published as provided by law. (Signed) J. D. BLANTON, Chairman of Board of County Commissioners. Subscribe for the Marion Progress —^the home town paper. The circus Is now a trust, John Ringling having bought all of any size. The “What Is It,” sacred white elephant, Siamese twins, lady bare- back rider will soon come out on the ticker in stock quotations, as tli.4y do In real life, on the sawdust (®, 1929, 1)7 King Featorct Syndicate, lac.) Mahasl^e Sweeter Next time a coated tongue, fetid breath, or acrid skin gives evidenceof sour stomach —try Phillips Milk of Magnesia I Get acquainted with this perfect anti acid that helps the system keep sound and sweet. That every stomach needs at times. Take it whenever a hearty meal brings any discomfort. Phillips Milk of Magnesia has won medical endorsement. And convinced ^Ihons of men and women they didn’t have indigestion.” Don’t diet, and don’t I suffer ; just remembei Phillips. Pleasant I to take, and always effective. Phillips is important; it I Identifies the genuine product. “Milk of , Magnesia” has been the U. S. registered ^de mark of the Charles H. Phillips „ predecessor Charles H. Philhps since 1875. of Magnesia DELIVERS PERFORMANCE THAT ONLY BUIGK BUILDS Into the Marquette, Buick has built an extra margin of every quality that makes an outstanding leader. On the road the brilliant performance of this swift, smart new six is unmatched by that of any other car of comparable price. Nowhere in the thousand-dollar field can you find such thrilling response, such effortless speed, fuch big reserves of power. Only Marquette with its priceless back ground of Buick craftsmanship can oflFer such superlative performance at moderate cost. Only Marquette in the thousand- dollar class has on «nglne of aio.8 cubic Inch piston’displacement.Marquette alone provides the extra endurance \jnd ex traordinary econcmry of operation that Buick alone knoivvs how to build. And this handsome new six has even more to oflFer than supreme performance and economy! In its class, Marquette is the only cor with the remarkable new waterproof, dustproof, wearproof upholstery and the wonderful new non-glare windshield. A host of other exceptional features contributes to its completeness; Dustproof, tilt-ray heod- lights. Four Lovejoy hydraulic shock absorbers. Big, smooth, fully-enclosed brakes. Airplane-type stepped-size beor- ings. A completely sealed engine. Beauti ful, harmonizing finish, inside and out. Perfect fittings and appointments. Here is one of the smartestcars on the road . . . setting the style with new, low- swung, faultlessly tailored Bodies by Fisher ...and providing performance unmatched in the moderote-price field. See it-drive o Marquette today and know why the worid is saying: "A GREAT PERFORMERT BUICK MOTOR COMPANY, FLINT MICHIC^aki Canadian Factories I>'v»ion of G«n«ral Moton ' „ CHIGAN McLau9hlin-B«ick,0«hawa, Ont. Corporation - • ^ of M Buick and Marqu«H* Motor Car* *965 to ^1035 ^ t'ayment Plan, the If t price wheneomBarJng automobila F^iuaat. Marion Buick Company Phone 88 Logan St. Marion, N. C, W^beaer automobile. built. Buldc xriH