Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 19 Mar 1925, p. 9

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s v m I f " V V * " W , " 1 « 4 « 1 ' i p t V J " f p w m o p p u m >w > W WI " y r ^ r I " q P f T F W ^ s J ^ " t § % >^?r - ]4<-?*KQ Jv /" *""; r^p-* "*-* , |*>* '" •* ^ -^jfc /,*&*<• <*M>"V«& .A4-'-.^-«e~^ijN',~-- w»wi«»»o»i» McHENflY PliAINDEAI/ER, McHEKRY, ', * ' - \ ,. /*V * i ¥56T «X?r r^4^:v^ >*"^'*"' 'W* **' f t•&*>** ^jkmjto.'iis.n ••**-*£» Lift Off-No Pain! EZOfS Ancient Fashions j Revived by Paris -fciftfesn't hurt one bit! Drop a littln "Freezone" on an aching corn, Instantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly you lift it rlghf off with fingers. Tour druggist sells a tiny bottle of "Freezone" for & few cents, sufficient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, and the foot calluses, without soreness or irritation. Sex Problem Reedly No Problem at All Bamona Trete of Wlntield, who has been 'adjudged the prettiest girl in Kansas, said the other day at a tea: "I get about a hundred letters by every mail from women who want to know how to escape wrinkles and improve their complexion and lengthen their laslies and so on. These letters are beginning to make me tired. I am beginning to feel like the bird dealer. "A man bought a canary from a -bird dealer, and kept coming back to the store every day to ask all kinds of questions about feeding it and bathing it and cleaning its cage, and I don't know what. One day lie said: " 'About naming my bl^d. You see, I don't know whether it's a male or a female. So, of course, I can't name It till I find out, can I? Well, thai, what's to be done?' " 'Ah,' said the dealer, 'just stick a lump of sugar between the bars of the cage, and if he takes it he's a male, and If she takes it shf^t a female.' " Cut'cura for Pimply Face*, ft® remove pimples and blackheads smear them with Cuticura Ointment. Wash off in five minutes with Cutlcura Soap and hot water. Once clear keep your skin clear by using them for daily toilet purposes. Don't fall to include Cuticura Talcum. Advertisement. (Cautious Kitty "Why didn't -you sign for the packages when the expressman came, Kitty?"' inquired Mrs. Brown of her new little country maid. With a very shy look, Kitty replied: "I ain't going to write my name in no strange man^s-. autograph album--not me."--Country vQentleman. DEMAND "BAYER" ASPIRIN Aspirin Marked With "Bayer Cross" Has Been Proved Safe by Million*, . Warning! Unless you see the name -Bayer" on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for 23 years. Say "Bayer" when you buy Aspirin, (saltations may prove dangerous.--Adv. Appropriate Name "I can never understand," said Thompson to his friend, "why you insist on calling yonr new house a bungalow." "Weil, it's very easily explained." was the reply. "In the first place the job was a bungle, and In the second 1 still owe for it." Croup Means Danger! Be, prepared to open the dangerously clogged throat the instant an unexpected attack .arrives. A well-known physician's prescription brings relief without vomiting, in IS minutes. It la the quickest known relief for Coughs, Colds and Whooping Cough, and has been vsed in millions of homes for S5 years. If you have children, get a bottle of this time-tried remedy--Dr. Drake's Glessco--at your drufclit. Only 60c a bottle.--Adv. To Preserve Shoe* Beeswax o rmutton suet may be rubbed around boots and shoes In wet weather to keep out the dampness. To preserve kid shoes rub them at night with a little petroleum Jelly and polish them in the morning. The treatment applies to patent leather. Sickness Protects Came 8teepinx sickness and malarial fever will perpetuate big game in Africa; the realization has been forced on hnnters that they cannot defy microbes when they Invade the haunts of the big mammals. in a Manner of Speaking Customer iri Chair (to new barber)-- I want a shave--can you manage tt? Modest Barber--Well, I'm willing to make a stab at it.--Life. With the exception of humorists, nearly all men are funny. A Woman's Health! •Joplin, Mo.--"I have used Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription and consider it a wonderful tonic for women and superior to any other remedy. It built me up in health and strength and relieved me of all the distressing f e e l i n g s , w h i c h usually go with feminine weakness. That is just what other remedies, which I had tried, failed to do." --Mrs. Ada Hatley. 1317 Virginia Ave. If you want to be well, start at once with this "Presc: iption" of Dr. Pierce's. Get it at' your neighborhood store, in tablets or liquid; or send 10c to Dr. Pierce, Buffalo. N. Y., for trial pkg* and write for free advice. ' It is considered su fait in these times to speak of the "Psychology cf Dress," and so one frequently hears the subject discussed at Intimate gatherings. The subject, says a fashion writer in the Nejv York Times, Involves more than merely the tendency of fashion, what Is likely to come next, just what Ingenuity the modiste will employ cr what is most becoming to be worn. Women really get down t6 fundamentals and influences, morale, history, periods, with as much thought and analysis as if they were regarding any of the fine arts. Briskly and with much sophistication the ultra-smart may chat of the most recently acquired Reynolds or Romney, of Italian primitives and old Flemish art just brought to light, of Aubussou and Gothic tapestries, of the Spanish paintings, and almost in the same breath of the latest ideas from this or that notable designer In Paris. It is like a leisurely swing back to the Old-World days, when dress was the most absorbing Interest in the life of a frivolous and overgroomed and wholly artificial society. Although It Is a long sweep from the extreme severity of Colonial times td anything like the extravagances of the Continental beau monde, the present geuerathe endless search for novelty. Return of Old Modea. Some of the style# of early periods have great fascination for the modern woman of fashion. Curiously, those that have the greatest vogue are the extreme opposite of the modes that hare startled thp oolite world for the FINDS DAUGHTER I1 AFTER 14 YEARS distorted waistline of a palnfnilj pinched-ln bodice. Bat nothing in these, in the stiff panniers or the heavy trains, had any possibility of artistic adaptation. Each has been molded and reshaped over and over again In tlon is arriving fast It is only in the tout ensemble that one catches a glimpse of reminiscent fashions, harmonized and modified often with the most delightful results. Erratic genius may flash a new conception. lacking the essentials of style and Aiste. It requires the poise of an artist to keep a fine balance of values in line and cclor, and the famous ones are those that present creations startling and nevertheless true. An exceptionally chic woman who is a conspicuous example of the best form In dress stopped for a little on her way to dinner to answer a compliment paid to the frock she was wearing. She Is tall, slim and patrician in bearing, and wears her clothes well. The gown she had on at this time was a Lanvin In shades of rose--not the delicate wild rose, or the La France rose, but the American Beauty shade. The foundation was made of stiff taffeta. The bodice was plain. The neck a modest decollete. Sleeves nonexistent, and the waistline marked at an almost ncrmal point. The skirt was the full gathered early Victorian, but without the crinoline or hoops. Over this was a top skirt of tulle, gathered full and crisp, the color Mother Traces Girl From Of* phanage to Farm.' Avon, N. J.--The successful ending •f a fe»fteen-year search for her lost daughter was confirmed by Mrs. Granden Thompson upon her return here from Middletown, Md., where she located Virginia Benton, eighteen, a daughter by a former marriage.* The girt was attending school while earning her living as a domestic on a Middletown farm. While Mrs. Thompson, then Mrs. Benton, was ill in Philadelphia fourteen years ago, and she and her husband were In financial straits, Virginia was placed in an orphanage. The home later burned, the child was sent elsewhere and the records destroyed. The mother lost all trace of Virginia. Nine years ago the girl's father died and Mrs. Benton married Granden Thompson. The search was renewed, resulting in the location of Virginia Just before Christmas. The mother, who now Is well to do. said that the demand of Miss Louisa Nelson, a Maryland probation officer, for proof of identity, had been satisfied and that Virginia will be allowed shortly to return to her mother's horn* Co-Operation Is ACHES AND PAINS ALL OVER BODY Hejps to Improve Quality of Live Stock More Than Anything Else. Thief? Not at All; He Was Favored Saitor Budapest.--One of the most unusual cases ever heard In Hungary recently was before the court in the little provincial town of Osll, when eight farmer boys, caught In the act. were charged with walking off with 20 , _ pounds of corn stolen from a widow a, shade deeper than the taffeta founda- j named yoeroes. Tl.ev not onlv pleaded not guilty despite the fact that tlrey Coat of Rose Kasha Cloth; Dress of 8and Crepe de Chine. last several years. The eccentricities of the Victorian age had little appeal to the woman who cares for grace and beauty. Any detail of the styles cf that period makes its reappearance only as a clever couturier introduces it in his general scheme. The bustle or 1880 was quite a different affair from the same motif shown in a 1925 model from one of the most Illustrious houses at Paris. The crinolines cf 1840 were impossible creations that made more distressing the tion. The trimming scheme was interesting. A line of gilt pailettes finished the neck and the deep armholes. The skirt, veiled with the claret-colored illusion petticoat-, was elaborated in the front with a large motif done In the pailettes. In crystal and pearl beads. A lavalliere of diamonds, sapphires and rubies hung from a fine gold chain over the bodice, and the silk chestnut hair was brushed in wavy lines quite fearlessly back.from a high, broad brow. This vision referred to her dress ss her favorite type, and said some engaging things about styles at the moment. Predicts Great Changes. "Great changes are near," she said, "and all in the direction of better things. This is a day of abbreviation in manner, speech and dress. There Is no time for courtesy, for proper consideration of anybody cr anything", and this idea dominates a woman's mood and taste in the selection of her clothes. It is a day of elimination of unnecessary detail, of artificialities. "For several seasons we have been content with a swathing length of crepe or silk, abbreviated at the top, also at the bottom, and draped to show the figure according to the non-Occidental ideas. We have gone the limit, and with the question of morale not considered. A fickle and more or less moral audience desires the opposite, meaning modest, picturesque clothes. One reason that the 'period' gown appeals to me is that it makes for modesty. It is decorative, quaint, dignified and dashing as a frock can be, all at once. Still it is uemure in a way. Credit is due to the designer having put this type cf frock forward, season after season, until now it has a recognised vogue and is a regular mode." In its latest adaptations the period gown is presented by both French and American designers with striking arrangement of lines and in some' enchanting colors. Yellow is the latest phase in color and is shewn in countless lovely variants. A clear bright amber taffeta, the usual bouffant skirt and plain basque, has motifs of gilt embroidery set at intervals on the skirt, which is veiled with an overskirt of plain tulle In a deeper shade of yellow, almost bronze. New and Winsome Shades One model la corn-yellow silk divides the length of the skirt with a diagonal piece of orange taffeta, carrying the line across the bodice snd over one shoulder. A piping of the deeper shade finishes skirt, neck and armholes, and a cluster of marigolds In the two yellows, with gilt-tipped petals. Is fashioned at one side of the waist. New and lovely shaded of blue are shown In the gowns of this type--lapis, periwinkle, hydrangea, hyacinth, delphinium, and more than there are names to fit. And some adorable things are done in all white, in frosty taffeta with clouds of tulle. One frcm the atelier of Madeleine Vlonnet Is caught at regular spaces with clusters of snowdrops, and another, designed by an American artist. Is fringed with •oft-stemmed white violets. These wide-skirted, qualnt-bodlced costumes Invite countless fapcles In embellishment, all of them intriguing. Such garments are not in any sense monopollzing the mode, but they are exceedingly popular at the; moment and renr resent a distinguished reproductleiL Another new-old style that is increasing in popularity Is the dlrectolre. Its lines of generous diversity suggest more suitable gowns and wraps fot afternoon and somewhat "dressy" street wear. But the narrow petticoat and the redlngote of brocade or trimmed silk, always with rich detail, go into the making of some striking costumes for dinner, supper-dances and the after-the-play parties at the smart dance clubs. The reverse of one fashion tendency is reflected in the comments of the up-to-date Parisian modistes who are making their evening dresses, especially the dance frocks, extremely shore Higher Hat Crowns Hats are higher--not in price but in crown. The small shapes now come almost to a point in many in stances. C>ne morning hat of black satin has a big tassel of ostrich attached to the point of the peaked crown. Another of similar shape is incrusted with lltti^ ornaments of gold and colored glass. TT Pink, Blue, Red, Green, Among Spring Colors admitted the theft, but produced a sealed document from the widow in which she declared that "she and her daughter Sarlka counted it an honor that Franz Kiraly (the ringleader of the eight) had considered tlieir hotn|i worthy of this distinction." The judge was nonplused. "I suppose the widow fears your revenge?" he asked. No, your honor," Franz Kiraly replied, speaking for the group. "You see, In our part of the country there is a custom by which every year, after the corn has been harvested, a large pot of cornmeal Is placed on the stove In houses wliere th^re are grown-up unmarried daughters. The lover of the oldest daughter must steal his corn. To facilitate the theft, the family leaves the house for half an h<yir after the cornmeal has been placed on the stove. The greatest disgrace that can happen to the family consists in the corn being left unstolen." The judge dismissed the case. (Praparad bjr tha United 8tataa Dapartmaat •t Agriculture.) The manner in which co-operative live stock sales are helping to Improve the quality of farm animals In Kentucky is described by a stockman of that state in a recent letter to the United States Department of Agriculture. The method is considered to be of general interest. "The co-operative sales we are having in every town of any size In Kentucky," he writes, "help more to Improve the quality of live stock ' than any other one thing. Before these were organized the traders came to our pastures and bought our stock or we shipped it to the big markets. Quality Made Difference. If we had good-quality stock we never saw it with that of other people where we could compare the difference. And if you did not get as much money for your stock as some one else did you generally thought you had shipped to the wrong man or your stock was not so fat as the other person's. You seldom stopped to think that quality made the difference. "But every man who brings his stock to these co-operative markets sees It run out in the ring and sold there. He also sees every one else's stock sold and has a chance to see the difference and to compare the difference In prices between good and bad quality. I have heard numbers of persons say that they were going to buy better ewes and a better buck. This applies not only to sheep but to all kinds of live stock." Analyze Replies. The foregoing comment is one of numerous suggestions made by farmer* who answered a questionnaire sent out by the United States Department of Agriculture in the Interests of live stock improvement. Department spe clallsts are now analyzing the replies of more than 650 live stock owner who have reported their experiences In raising scrub, grade, and pur„e bred animals. Mrs. Proctor Reports Great Benefit by Taking Lydia £. J Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Sharpeburg, I^ydia ] E. Pin Starved Vetetan Kills Self as Pension Comet San Francisco.--Hungry and despondent, Cllve Harris, thirty-two, American aviation ace during the World war, recently a federal vocational student at the University of California, killed himself with gas Just a few hours before the postman brought a government check that might have saved Ills life. The veteran's body was found by his landlady, Mrs. I. K. Hart, when she went to his door to give him the overdue compensation check. Mrs. Hart said Harris, a former lieutenant, had eaten nothing for several days, and showed great anxiety over the nonarrlval of "an Important letter from Washington." Harris was a lieutenant of aviation during the war, «<nd Is credited with having sliot down three enemy planes, p§pers found In his possession by Deputy Coroner Fiunk Berg, Indicated. His father is a mall carrier at Santa Cruz. "I really hate to encumber you with this body," he wrote In a farewell letter to his landlady, "but It can do no more than cause a little excitement. The United States veterans' bureau can pay for the burial." Barn Owl Proves to Be Quite Beneficial Bird Midnight lunches of the barn owl feeding in Ohio consist almost entirely of rodents. Rats, house mice, deer mice, and the destructive meadow mice which girdle fruit trees are leading features of its meat diet The barn owl is named "Momcey- Faced Owl" In many localities, the monkey-like white face being Its chief mark of identification. The feathers of the back are brownish-yellow, and the under parts are white with small brownish specks. Unlike many of its cousins, nature did not endow this owl with a set of ear tufts. Frequently reports are made of the discovery of a monkey-face owl, but too often the finder's curiosity Is not satisfied until he hauls out the shotgun and makes a successful execution. As many as 2,800 mouse and rat skulls have been found in the pellets at a barn owl roost. This owl is s valuable friend of man and the satisfaction of effective marksmanship and mere curiosity will not Justify its wanton destruction.--W. F. Rofkar, Ohio Experiment Station. Bad Practice Is Showiv . in Pasture Management Romance and drama share their thunder with animal industry, plant culture, and forestr^yn a new United j States Department of Agriculture motion picture, "The Green Barrier." "The Green Barrier" Is a two-reeler, punctuated with thrills. The Plney Woods of the South provide the locale and the story Is built about the longestablished but disastrous custom of burning the woods to "green up" pasture for cattle. The drai;na reaches Its climax when a woods fire, started by one of the characters, gets beyond control, driven by a high wind. The flames spread to the farm dwelling, and while they are fighting frantically save their home, the mother of tb» leading character is trapped in tl woods by the fire. The fallacy of firing the woods Is forcefully brought out. The importance of fire-resisting carpet grass, lespedezs, and other highly nutritive pasture grass Is stressed. The film also concontains good sound lessons in pasture management and reforestation. "The Green Barrier" was photographed In southern Mississippi and contains many scenes of rare beauty. Pa.--"I reeomnenl Pinkham's Vegetable Com* pound to all suffering women. I have taken four bottles of it and I feel 100 per cent better. I was dizzy and weak with no appetite, no ambition and with a tired feding all the time. I had aches and pains all over my body and had the headache • good d e a l . I saw your advertisement in the 'Pittsburgh Press' and thought it might help me. I have been greatly benefited by its use and highly recommend it for all ailments of women."-- Mrs. J. H. PROCTER, Box 1, East Liberty Station, Pittsburg, Pa. Such letters prove the great merit of the Vegetable Compound. These women know by experience the Denefit they have receivea. Their letters show a sincere desire to help other women suffering from like ailments. Let these expari* enees help you--now. In a recent canvass of women parchasere, 98 out of every 100 report ben» eficial results by taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Sold by druggists everywhere. •'•-"•ft J] SPOHN'S DISTEMPER Ji COMPOUND Manure Taken Direct to Field and Spread Best Manure is never better in quality than on the day it is made. There is always more or less loss in the manure pile, no matter how well it may be mnde or how well It Is protected. The manure pile will heat and through fermentation give off considerable ammonia. It Is true that In the manure pile this manure may be made finer and somewhat more available, but It never contains more plant food than when It is made.* Therefore, when the manure Is taken directly to the field and spread on fairly level ground you take It at Its best. Ammonia will not be lost through fermentation except where there is high beat and there Is not great prospect of this loss from that cause during the winter. FENCE POST PROBLEM SOLVED BY THE USE OF BLACK LOCUST Black Variety Grows Best on Alkaline or Sweet Soil Elephant Holds (Jp Train "Making Commuter» Walk Boston, Mass.--Commuters on the Boston & Maine railroad having occasion'to pass through Salem had to do a bit of unexpected walking when a two and one-half-ton circus el< phant became so ruffled over slipping on the ice at the railroad crossing that he would not get up until he was good and ready. "Chester" In an unwary moment put his foot down on a stretch of glaring Ice as he was about to board his private car and down he tumbled. Coaxing failed to budge the animal and prodding had no more effect, so there was nothing to do but to run trains to either side of the animal and make passengers get out, walk around the living obstruction snd board a train on the other side. Finally "Chester" tired of lying down, got up, proceeded to his car, and regular train traffic was resumed. The fence post problem, says Professor J. A. Cope, forester from the New York State College of Agriculture at Ithaca, has become serious with the slmost complete disappearance of chestnut in this country because of the blight. A grape grower In Chautauqua county who uses hundreds of posts every year has solved this problem by the use of black locust. He found that he could grow suitable posts In 15 years, and further, that these posts would last 15 years after being set Instead of the customary ten years expected of chestnut posts. In addition, he has been able to get another crop of posts from sprouts in ten years, because of the great vigor of the locust tree. As the black locust is really a legume, it grows best on a sweet or alkaline soil, and it is necessary to restrict plantings to sUch sites In order to make headway against the deadly locust borer. v In a trip to Chautauqua county, Prpfessor Cope says that all the volunteer stands of locust which he examined sJiowedVyldences of attack by this beetle, but thak on the better site** take chancer of yotrr honea «r ««lm lx<iO( laid up with Distemper, Inftaemc*. PLNLT IVY*. I^RRNJIUT, HMVM. COUGHS TR Colds. <iiv*» "SrOKNH" to both tho at«k •nd the well one*. The standard remedy for SO year*. Give "SPOHNV for Dor Dtotemper, «0 cent* IIJ8# at drag 8P<>HN MEDICA1 • " GOSHEN. PIS/O' c'So ugh^s I Qnick ReliefAplimnteflicJwmBp. I 35c Rnd 60c sixes ^ And externally o*e PISO'S Throat and Chat FOR OVER ZOO YEARS haarlem oil has been a worldwide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric acid coaditkxM* ^ HAARLEM OIL HSBDRA correct internal troubles, stimulate villi organs. Thrcx sizes. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine GOLD MEDAL. •% I " ::4 "M i where there was s non-acid soil, the locust had grown enough to practically nullify the work of the borer. Planting the 16cust with pine also helps to protect It against the borer, as the beetles like to fly around In th<> sunshine, and If the trunks can be kept in the shade, the beetles will not lay their eggs on them. Young white pines would certainly furnish the shade, and would also prevent the locust from making too many side branches, which are not desirable for posts. Such a mixed planting deserves trial. oats Poison for Gophers The use of strychnine-treated or wheat or freshly cut carrots or sweet potatoes sprinkled with powdered strychnine Is the best gopher eradication measure. For vegetable bait sprinkle one-eighth ounce of powdered strychnine on three quarts of freshly cut vegetables. Use an iron rod or a sharpened hardwood handle to probe the hole to the main tunnel. Pour a spoonful of grain or drop three pieces of vegetable Into the hole and cover with a clod. Fresh mounds as a rule are fan-shaped in arrangement Probe ten inches in front of the moond, not around the outside. what Fashions shown for early spring wesr have made It possible to get aomewbst of a slant on the prevailing colors for the coming season. For definite occasions or specific garments certain shades predominate, while in others the selection is wider. "Shell pink" wss the dominating note in one g^oup of costumes, while in another the center of Interest was a soft shade of blue known as "pervenche blue." This latter shade may be regarded, according to many reports, as a tint that will be strong in the spring. A. well-known designer features quite extensively "new blues" of this tone and also fuchsia shades. Pastel shaMes have been constantly mentioned, as well as expressed in ail manner of garments. However, red is closely allleJ with prints. An example of this is demonstrated by drvsses snd tunics In striking printed silks, the majority of which have a common characteristic In the white ground, and in which the design Is worked oat la red, or red and black. Generally speaking, prints stress high shades, many In single colors. Shades for the coming season also include "prunella," a fuchsia effect, Lanvin green and "wadreau," a tone of the beige order, among the outstanding colors. For the' younger generation, high shades, such as berry red. Lanvin green. Titian and French bloat will claim considerable interest. Plaits of All Kind* The vogue for plaits, box and knife edge, as ^ell as inverted plaits. Is giving freedom of movement in both skirts and coats. This is essential since the coats of the new two-pi*c« suits end Just above .the skirt heui. Metal Lace Metal lace, finely plaited lining of tnetal cloth, Is a combination for bail gown* over a popular WUtdt Wicked Needle at Ripe Age of Ninety Lewiston, Pa.--Amos Bowen, ninety, celebrated his birthday in company with his wife after sixty-one years of hsppy married life. Mr. Bowen was born at Allen Bank, Bedford county, December 25, 1884, snd worked on the farm as a boy. In 1866 he learned the tailoring trade and worked at it practicality all of his life until he retired to live with the children eight years ago. He still aftelds a wicked needle. Jail Hypocritee^ . t Albany, N. Y.---Assemblyman Frederick L. Hackenburg, Democrat, e! New York, Introduced a bill making hypocrisy a misdemeanor, defining the offense as interfering with personal liberty for hire oi profit. - Caught on Bridge Woodbine, N. J.--Trapped An a tofoot bridge, Tgariore Katzen, aged nine, saved his life by lying flat on his back between the rails while the train passed over him. Sex Quite Difficult to . Determine Among GeeSe Sex Is difficult to distinguish In geese, particularly if the birds are young. The gander is usually somewhat larger than the goose and has a shrill cry, while the goose makes s coarser, lower noted call. The male has a heavier, longer neck and a larger bead. Sex may better be determined by Inspecting the sexual organs or during the mating season by observation. The sphincter muscle, which closes the anus of the female is folded, and widening or sinuous if stretched, while a light pressure on the corresponding section of the male will make the sexual organ protrude. One gander is usually mated with two or three females, and after mating allowed to run in flocks Ave years is best age. RPM RCTSfc Surely Paid Jim Harry Tate is a well-known English humorist who has a peculiar brand of fun all his owt. The Irrepressible Harry tells the story how, at a meeting of a sma I holders' club, a somewhat dejected-looking member was asked: "Do you think poultry keeping pays?" "Well, no. 1 can't say that 1 do; bat 1 think It pays my sou, Jim." "How's that?" "Well, you Bee. 1 bought him the fowls; I have to pay for their keep, I buy the eggs from him, and fe them." No evil propensity of the human heart IB SO powerful thst it may not be subdued by discipline. Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION Three to • Market for Peppers K one lives near a city in which thefts Is any considerable Italian population, it will pay to grow a few thousand plants of hot peppers to supply the demand which is always In evidence In any market where these people trade, says the Rural New 1 orker. Peppers are llglit and clean and will keep several days after being picked. By proper methods of growing, in the latitude of the Hudson valley, one can have these peppers on the market from July 15 until Thanksgiving day, which is really a long marketing period for any so-called 't>erlsbable crop." Make plans now to treat potato seed with formaldehyde or corrosive sublimate. • • • • Buy your spray pumps and materials early and be ready to start spraying st the proper time. • • • Plenty of bedding for the cows doe* three things--keeps them cleaner, provides more warmth, and saves more of the liquid parts of the manure. • • • Don't forget that pure seed showing a high percentage of germination is Just as important to success in farming as pure-bred, high-producing live stock. INDKtSJX*j 6 BELL-ANS Hot water Sure Relief ELL-ANS 254 AND 754 PACKAGES EVERYWHERE Give the brood sow plenty of exercise, clean, dry quarters, and a wellbalanced ration, is the advice of swine extension workers of the state college. Clear Your Skin With Cuticura Soep to Qeasae Oinfaaut to Heal . Sweet clover may be sown, in the | spring, and if the soil is favorable for , its growth you can get considerable hog pasture from it during the summer anid fall. • • • • Sweet clover may be sown the same as red clover is usually sown, except that It should be sown rather early, .is it takes more moisture to germinaic sweet dover seed than fur red j seed. K Bcniark. Oder From t'umvmm YluUa TmUli BMLIILIFUL violin, boa. case, tnciuiL 14 IMMM> coxx]pJ«l« 111; woBdarful value, arrival pv poatmao. Prof. Rosa. 1T1 W TTth. Naw Tarfe. DR.HUMPtfREYS* "AT AT" 77: COLDS GRIP INFLUENZA W: V 5 J* ^ ¥ -|§

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