Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 28 Oct 1915, p. 7

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DIFFERENT TYPES OF DAIRY ICEHOUSES Farmer'* Icehouse With Milk Room. CZfrepared by the United States Depart* !. ' . ment of Agriculture.) The dairy division of the United States department of agriculture Ua« been Investigating the different types of icehouses in use by dairymen, and has studied the advantages of each -type. Only a small number of the icehouses examined by the depart­ ment's specialists were built of new limber. In many instances ice was stored In the cellar under the house or barn, or in the corner of some building, such Ma woodshed, corncrib, or barn, or under the driveway leading to the tern, and occasionally it was simply stacked outdoors with no roof for pro­ tection. Where the Ice was stored in cellars, open sheds or in stacks, the loss from melting ,was comparatively large, depending on the ventilation, drainage and care in packing. Where the cost of harvesting ice is a small Stem, dairymen often say that it is less expensive to store in such places than to go-to the expense of building an up-to-date icehouse. Where ice is •tacked outdoors and covered with some form of insulation, it is neces­ sary to put up from 30 to 50 per cent more than the amount previously al­ lowed, so as to provide for the heavy shrinkage. The ice should be stored as near (He milkhouse as possible, in order to pate labor in removing it to the milk tank. A great many dairymen find it an advantage to have the milk room one end of the Icehouse. In this way the cost of a separate t&nkhouse Is eliminated. The small amount of time and labor required Ui transfer the Ice to the cooling tank generally acts as an added Incentive for the free use of ice. It is highly impor­ tant that the milk room, whether com­ bined with the icehouse or standing alone, be located so that objection­ able odors will be avoided. In comparing the different methods 0f storing ice, it was found that where the cost of ice was comparatively high it was advisable to spend enough money in building and insulating the Icehouse to protect the ice from melt­ ing as much as possible, but in cases where the cost of the ice was small ft appeared that the owners were often Justified in building a cheaper stor­ age with a relatively high loss of ice from meltage. The dairyman there­ fore should consider both the cost igf-construction and the cost of the lee in selecting the type most suita­ ble for his requirements. Some farmers store their ice in roQghly constructed bins. One of this sort was seen, made by placing large posts of Irregular sizes three feet in the ground and about feet apart, and upon these were nailed ji miscella­ neous lot of boards; no roof was pro­ vided. The shrinkage was reported from 30 to 50 per cent. Ice might be stored in this manner for some pur­ poses, but this method is not recom­ mended for a dairy farm. Further­ more a bin of this sort is very un­ sightly and is an indication of slack methods in farming. Where ice is cheap and building material high, it might be permissible as a temporary arrangement; but it is not so eco­ nomical a method as may appear at first sight, for the cost of the ice lost in the shrinkage would generally amount to more than the interest on the cost of constructing a serviceable icehouse. An instance was observed in which a corner of a woodshed, about twelve feet square and ten feet high, had been converted into an ice shed. This corner of the woodshed had been roughly boarded up and about 14 inches of sawdust placed around the Ice on all sides, top, and bottom. The cost of the building was very little, and the shrinkage was reported at about 20 per cent. The owner stated that softwood sawdust is a much bet­ ter insulation than hardwood saw­ dust. The icehouse in the illustration measures 15 by 20 feet on the out­ side and 8 feet high. At the front or south end a room 15 by 6 feet is partitioned off and used for a mflk room. The remaining space, 15 by 14 feet by 8 feet high, after allowing for* 6 inches of wall, 12 inches of sawdust on the sides, 12 Ipches on the bottom, and 18 inches on the top, will provide space for about 17 tons of ice. This house is built on high, Bloping ground, where the soil is porous, consequently the drainage is satisfactory. The founda­ tion is made of concrete (mixture 1 to 6), 1% feet wide at the bottom and sloping gradually until the top meas­ ures 8 inches. The sillB which rest on the foundation are 6 by 6 inches, upon which are erected 2 by 6 inch studding with 24-inch centers. On tike top of the studding rests a 2 by 6 inch plate, and the studs are sheathed inside and outside with rough boarding. The outside is then coyored with weatherboarding. The roof has a two-thirds pitch and is con­ structed of 2 by 4 inch rafters, v24- f®ch centers, boarded and covered with shingles. In each gable is locatinl a slat ventilator, 2*4 by 1% feet, which with the high pitch of the roof allows for an abundance of free circulation of air over the ice. The windows 3% by 2 feet, one in each eiid. The milk room is provided only with a movable ice-water tank, 3V4 by 4 by 3 feet, in which are placed the cream cans. A. rope and pulley which are fastened to the ceiling are used in transferring the ice from the icehouse up and over the wall and lowering it into the tank. The mate­ rial and labor for constructing this combination milk- and icehouse amounted to $125. The shrinkage on the 100 cakes in storage was esti­ mated at about 15 to 20 per cent. The ice in this house cost 2 cents, a cake, exclusive of hauling and storing. GOOD FEED FOR YOUNG FOftL Colt Should Be Taught to Nibble at Grain With Dam--Weaning Made Rather Easy Task. Are you giving that young foal the proper rare? To become a strong, sound horse, when matured the foal must be well nourished and given every advantage possible. The foal should be taught to eat grain very early. By placing the feed bo* from which the dam eats her grain now, the foa>. at about two months of age, will begik nibbling with the moth­ er, and will soon acquire a tfcste for the gr^in. A pen built ih one corner of the field made high enough to keep the mare out and allow the colt to pass under will make it possible to feed the foal grain with very little diffi­ culty. Allow the n^are in the inclo- oiirA TOUK frha fgol #AJ» tlZ&CS and it will soon learn to go in it- Belf. Keep a liberal supply of grain, preferably oats and bran, and perhaps some crdcked corn, in the feed box. To induce the dam to loiter about with the colt, have the pen near a shade tree or the Bait box. By weaning time the foal will have become thoroughly accustomed to eat­ ing1 grain and will wean very easily, besides being in better condition aa a result of this additional feed. SERIOUS DISEASE OF CALVES Diphtheria Is Very Contagious and Contracted Principally by Young Animals--Some of 8ymptoms. Calf diphtheria is a serious disease appearing among calves three to five days old. Infected calves refuse to drink or suck, have some discharge of saliva from the mouth and there are inflamed patches inside the mouth which gradually develop into ulcers. There 1b fever, and an offensive odor from the mouth. The disease is very contagious and is contracted princi­ pally by young calves and pigs up to six or eight months old, although oc­ casionally adult cattle and hogs have it. Dr. M. H. Reynolds of the Minne­ sota station advises treating the sores by first cleaning with a 2 per cent so­ lution of creolin in warm water and then treating twice a day with a solu­ tion of permanganate of potash, two ounces to a gallon of water, this treat­ ment to be kept up for about a week. The potash solution should be made fresh each time. Thoroughly clean up the calf pen and yards and spray with disinfectant. Handy Door Fastener. To prevent doors from swinging back and forthf staple a rin^ intb the door deal far enough from the end of the cleat so that it do«s not interfere with the closing of the door. Push the door back and fasten with a strap, with a snap in it. to the building. Have jthe strap eight or ten inches long and slack enough so that the door can be fastened. This will be found a convenient device for all doors or windows that are on hingeB and are to be left open. Neglected Fruit Trees. Neglected fruit trees are not worth *h« grouiid they occupy; besides they are an eyesore to everyone, and when infested with worms and Insects they are a constant menace to the neigh­ borhood. There ought to be laws prohibiting any man from allowing trees of this kind to remain on his farm. atomic FOR SCANDAL Though for a Time • tha Domestla r^pJSafce of the Deary Family Wag * '*•' Seriously Threatened. ; j /,,• A young married woman, whose hus­ band was of an exceedingly Jealous disposition, decided to have her din- teg room repapered, and telephoned to the nearest paperhanger to send one of his men with samples to her home that afternoon. Promptly at four o'clock the man appeared with the usual large Bample book, and Mrs. Newly wed ushered him into the dining room, as |»he thought the paper could best be decided upon when tried against the wall.. "No, I don't like that brown, Mr. Paperhanger. Try the buff," Bhe said. Then, "No, Mr. Paperhanger, the figure is too large in that; let me see that dark blue! YeB, I like that, don't you, Mr. Paperhanger?" "Yes, madam, that looks very well, but don't call me Mr. Paperhanger, that isn't my name." "Oh, pardon me, but what la your name?" Mrs. Newlywed asked, "My name is Love," the paperhang­ er answered, when £lra. Newlywed be­ gan to laugh. "Yes, Love," the paperhanger re­ pealed, somewhat uSttio d by the lady's laughter. Then sho straightened her face and was about to speak, when her husband strode into the room, with fire in hie eyes. "Get out of here, you infamous ras­ cal!" he thundered, shaking his fist' in the paperhanger's face. "Get out before I throw you out." "What's the matter with you?*' the paperhanger snarled. "What have I done?" "Done? Ask me what you have done! Here I just come home from a hard day's work and find you making love to my wife, and then you ask me what you have dore!" "Why, man, you're crazy! Why should I make love to your wife when I have one of my own? Your wife asked me what my name was, and I told her. W. E. Love. Now what have you to Bay?" and the paperhang­ er straightened up ready tor what might happen next, when Mrs. Newly- wed said: "Oh, Harry, don't act so! The man is telling the truth and I was laughing when you came in at the idea of having Love and Deary un­ der the same roof." This time the paperhanger looked mystified, when Mrs. Newlywed ex­ plained: "Our name is Deary, Mr. Love; this is my husband, H. O. 'Deary!" Needlessly to say Mr. fc>eary looked very much ashamed of himself, and Mr. Love is now debating whether he shall change bis name or not! Afire in the 8k/! With flames shooting up to a height of 50 feet, a Paris aeroplane on pa­ trol duty dived to earth just at night­ fall recently. The passenger threw himself from the machine, falling ten feet on to the roof of a house. The pilot, Benoit, came down, with the machine, but was burned to death before he could be rescued. Thousands of people wit­ nessed the accident, which occurred over the densely-populated quarter ot Vaugirard. The machine took fire at a height of 750 feet. It was then a mile from the Issy aerodrome. With remarkable coolness Benoit attempt­ ed to volplane into the Iray ground, but was not high enough. He managed, however, to swing the blazing machine down to the waste land close by, the aeroplane narrow­ ly missing the roofs of the houses and signal poets on the railroad as it dived earthwards amidst th^ cries of the horrified onlookers. KITCHENER AS A P HOLE WOULD COME AS SURPRI8K TO HIS SUBORDINATES. >V- Nevertheless, Graphic W&ur® 0een Drawn of His Friendship With Two Elderly Ladies- Unique Use of Gift. ' Many of the best friends at Kitchener, the great English soldier, administrator and secretary of war, are women, despite the popular belief that he is a grimly uncompromising woman hater. In a recent brief bi­ ography of "K. of K," Harold Begbie draws a most winning picture of his friendship with two of his elderly rel­ atives--"two dear, diminutive old Scotch ladies who lived in Phillimore gardens, Kensington, by name of the Misses Hutchinson; and Kitchener was no dearer to these charming spinsters than they to him. "He wrote to them brightly and boy­ ishly by almost every mail. Before he went to Egypt for his ad­ vance on Khartum, these dear old la­ dies presented him with a gold-headed •swagger' cane: and when the advance was accomplished and the photograph­ er arrived to make a picture of the general and his staff. Kitchener seated himself in the center of the group with this stick held so ostentatiously that the old ladies in Kensington could not fail to recognize it when the ph6- tograph appeared in the illustrated pa­ pers. He sent them roses from Gor­ don's grave at Khartum, and coats of the caliph from the Sudan." Their house was always his goal on hie return from distant service, and in it he was like a schoolboy, running up the stairs two at a time, whistling in his bedroom, going and coming as he pleased, and telling them such sto­ ries of his campaigns as no one else in London ever heard. They called him Herbert, pronouncing it "Hair- burrt" in the broadest Scotch, and would sit on either side of Dim "study­ ing his bronzed face with their small, smiling, shrewd eyes, teasing hi^ chaffing him, adoring him, and giving him sound advice." Later on in bis triumphal career their "Hairburrt" once wished to make the little old ladies a gift so valuable and unusual that they fe{t called upon to pause and consider before accept­ ing it. It was a gold casket--one of the many gold caskets presented to "K. of K." by the grateful corpora­ tions of provincial cities. "Do we need it?" propounded the first old lady, pointedly. "No, we certainly don't need it?" re- fieciiVeiy acquiesced her sister. "What coujfl we do with it?" pursued the first old lady. But the second had had time to think. "Hum," she suggested contempla­ tively, "perhaps we could use it aa a tea caddy."---Youth's Companion. s Submarine Treaftur*. A boat is now being built to locate submarine treasure. The new subma­ rine consists of a steel sphere, eight feet in diameter and capable of carry­ ing two workmen. It is designed to be lowered into the water from a ten­ der, but is provided with elec'rically- driven propellers by which it can be moved about In the water as it hangs at the end of the cable. One of its essential features is a Bet of four elec­ tro-magnets, which, when energized by current from the motors within the sphere, serve to hold it secur&ly to the steel hull of a sunken ship. Cur­ rent for the operation is supplied through a cable running down from the tender: In addition to thi8 equip­ ment It will be provided with electric <JrillB for piercing the side of the ship, and with a powerful searchlight for working purposes and for exploring the bed of the ocean when the exact location of a sunken ship is not known. Hew Far Soldiers Cdm Sea. Some interesting experiments have- been made in the German army with the object of discovering at what distance the recognition of one soldier hy another is reliable. For soldiers with good eyes it was found that a person seen once before could be rec­ ognized at a distance of 80 feet, while an acquaintance could be recognized at a distance of 300 feet, and an in­ timate friend or relative at a dis­ tance of 500 feet. The various parts of a ss&n 5 body can be distinguished and any decided movement can be detected by an ex­ pert rifleman at a distance of 300 feet. At 1,800 feet, a man appears as a spot on the landscape and cannot usu­ ally be seen if he keeps still or if his dress does not contrast with the back­ ground. Sailors, hunters and farmers can usually see twice these distances, probably on account of their constant training in making out the nature of distant objects. x Quiok Money-Make^. The first investment in raising pork is small and the pig is a quick money­ maker on the farm. He multiplies rapidly, and If you only furnish him good pasture, grazing ciops, pure water and. a little concentrated food he will rapidly gain weight at a small coat. Nightmare. Who among us has not at some time suddenly awakened with a sense of terror-and anxiety, in a cold sweat, and with rapid heart beat? One may dream of suffocation, or think he is being nailed down in a coffin. Perhaps as one i8 falling asleep, he awakes fcach time with a momentary vivid dream of being pursued, of choking, of being unable to breathe. What pro- dupes the nightmare? The censor was weak; certain latent dream, thoughts and emotions have succeeded in es­ caping its vigilance. Such dreams are continual disturbers of sleep and lead to insomnia, because the»subconscious Thepressedfemotions are continually es­ caping the censor with disguise or fusion, and s9 lead to a state of con­ stant mortal anxiety in the mind of the sleeper. r Place for Tools. Gather up the tools and small imple­ ments that usually are scattered all over the place at this season of the year, or you'll be the loser when the first snow falls and covers them up till thfcy cannot be found again during the whole winter. Right Kind to Keep. Don't make choice of droopy-tailed^ male birds; choose for keeping the alert-eyed, gamey, spirited members o| the flock that are up to size, weight milk x&m .Hwo •v; Tubular Headlights. 'A new electric bulb for headlights is tubular in'form, instead of being round, with the result that a much more effective light is produced. When a round bulb is inserted in the base of the headlight, rays from the fila­ ment have to pass through two and three thicknesses of the glass, on their way to and from the reflector. The tubular bulb, being but of Blightly larger diameter than its base, sends the reflected rays straight ahead with­ out any further interference by the bulging bulb in the center. The tubu­ lar bulb has another advantage, whicb may on occasion prove highly im­ portant. It can be withdrawn through the rear of the reflector, making it possible to use front lenses which are screwed on tight, instead of being hinged to the lamp. Popularizing the .Deaerta. On Thanksgiving day in 1913 many citizens of Phoenix, Ariz., ate their holiday dinners far out on the desert. They went out in automobiles, carry­ ing hampers of provisions with them, and they enjoyed their feast beneath a wonderful sky of green and purple. Automobiles have made the deserts accessible, F. H. Newell writes in the Youth's Companion. Until recently ypu could not travel over such dreary wastes at a rate of more than 30 milea a day, and you had to carry water for man and beast; but now, in a motor car, you can run 200 miles,, a day on the desert in almost any direction you choose, for the ground is ordinarily so fiat and smooth that roads are al­ most unnecessary. / Curious Italian Ambulance. There is a vast difference between real warfare and dress parade. Un­ der the exigencies of a difficult cam­ paign one must put up with makeshifts Improvised from the readiest means at hand. An illustration in point is to be found in a recently taken pho­ tograph of a curious ambulance used by the Italians in the fighting in the Alps. This is really a large sled, fit­ ted with two small wheels. The sled runners permit of hauling this ambu-* lance over bare stretches of ground. The sure-footed little donkey i8 the best means of locomotion for this type of vehicle. An ambulance of ordinary proportions could not be used on many of the narrow roads and pathways of the Italian Alps.--Scientific Americas' PUT ONE OVER ON BURGLARS Induatrloua Safe Blowers Found Only Irritating Note Instead of RtehM '.>• They Expected.. Burglars have been 80 busy crack­ ing safes on the upper East side with dynamite, nitroglycerin and lyddite, that it is impossible for flat dwell­ ers in that vicinity to keep pictures straight on the walls. The storekeep­ ers have been touched so often that they are beginning to get wise. In­ stead of leaving the day's cash in their strongboxes, they are Ailing them up with cOal and other uncom­ mon things. A clerk in a hat store in that section of town, after remov­ ing the money from the safe at clos­ ing time, left a note inside of it. A pair of burglars spent a busy set of hours in the hat .store, using section­ al Jimmies, "can openers" and every kmrgn device for successfully ap­ proaching the interior of the safe. When they had reduced the strong­ box to a shredded iron biscuit they looked into its riddled heart and found this note: "Well, what's the idea?" That was all there was in the aafe. It is assumed that the subsequent con­ versation was enough to explode the surplus nitroglycerin, but one of the annoyed felons took his indelible pen­ cil in hand and wrote as follows: "You , you can -- -- »- and furthermore, ! ! !" Whit b, considering what their feelings were, was putting it mildly--New York Times. THICK LOVELY HAIR Because Free From Dandruff, Itching, Irritation and Dryness. May be brought about by shampoos with Cutlcura Soap preceded by touches of Cutlcura Ointment to spots of dandruff, itching and irritation. A clean, healthy scalp means good hair. Try these supercreamy embllients if you have any hair or scalp trouble. Sample each free by mall with Book. Address postcard, Cutlcura, Dept.'XY, Boston. Sold everywhere.--Adv. WAS NOTED INDIAN TRAPPER SET ADRIFT BY ILLUSIONS Young Mortal Allows Himself to Be Swayed by Conditions That Sur­ round Him. ' \ There is no chance and no anarchy in the universe. Every god is there sitting in his sphere. The young mor­ tal enters the ball of the firmament; there he is alone with them alone; they pouring on him benedictions and gifts, and beckoning him up to their thrones. On the instant, and inces­ santly, fall snowstorms of illusions. He fancies himself in a vast crowd, which 'sways this way and that, and whose movements and doings he piust obey; he fancies himself poor, or­ phaned, insignificant. The mad crowd drives him hither and thither, now fu­ riously commanding this thing to be done, now that. What is he that he should resist their will and think on himself? Evdry moment new changes and new showers of deceptions to baf­ fle and distract him. And when, by anb'by, for an Instant, the air clears and the cloud lifts a little, there are the gods still sitting around him on their throneB--they alone , with him alone.--Emerson. • New definition. * i "The study of etymology," safff" the Philadelphia Record, "causes no end of trouble among that class of school children whose knowledge of English is limited to words which figure in the ordinary street conversation, and many curious results have followed. The custom usually observed by the teachers is to require such a definition of the word, then Its derivation, and finally a sentence in which the word Is properly used. The word "ligament" fell to the lot of a rather diffident boy recently. He defined it properly as "a band." but followed up the correct derivation with this remarkable sen­ tence: "I was wakened up last night by hearing a brass ligament going down the street." Peter McDanlel, Now Dead, Led a' Life That Still May Be Emulated by ^ V>.'- Those That Wish. ' ---- ' Not far from Louisville, but across the river, in Indiana, Peter McDan­ lel, a trapper, whose home was a solitary cabin at Beaver hole, on Fourteen Mile cre^k, is dead. He lived to be seventy-eeven years old. During the last 20 yeprs of his life he earned sufficient for his modest bachelor necessities by following a calling which in the popular mind is associated with the frontier during the period in which white men gradu­ ally worked their way westward from the Atlantic coast, and before there were transcontineptal railways. Every youth who is healthy Jls by nature an adventurer. -Those who have the hard luck to be born In flats and brought up in the streets may be­ come members of gangs and regard the peaceful and peace-guardiig po­ liceman as the natural enemy of their kind. But that is a perversion of instinct brought about by artificial environment. The boy whose bare feet feel the soil in summer time, and who fishes and swims and hunts, even where fishing is a waste of time, economically viewed, and hunting a matter of tramping about with a Ro­ bert rifle to murder innocent, unsus­ pecting insectivorous birds, longs to hunt and trap fur bearers and sell peltB, and fight Indians, like Leather- stocking, the Fenimore Cooper hero in whom were incarnated the ideal of normal boyhood. As a matter of fact, there still are many pelts to be gathered, a writer in the Indianapolis News observes. Quite an army of hunters and trap­ pers, all told, get their living by har­ vesting them in the remaining fringes of forest and along the water courses and ravines which civilization has not metamorphosed. It is possible still for a man to live, like Peter Mc­ Danlel, in a shack in the woods and depend upon his rifle, his traps and his dogs. If he may not dine upon bear meat, venison and wild turkey, as Daniel Boone did, he may at least have plenty of smaller game with his corn cakes. And "varmints" whos'3 fur is as salable as gilt-edge securities still are fairly numerous in sections of the oldest and most densely popu­ lated states. There are still forest­ ed areas where a man may build his hut of round logs, chink it with sticks or stones daubed with clay, get his water supply from a crystal spring and his fuel from falleijt or-<elled trees, and live beyond four score with­ out setting foot in. the settlements save for the purpose of bartering his hides" for pantry supplies and pow­ der and ball. MRS. THOMSON! TELLS WOMEN (low She Was Helped During Chftnge of Life by LyctiaE., Vegetable f' Compound. Bnkham'i II ffrifadelptria. Pa.--"I am jrfst of age and during Change of Life I suf­ fered for six yean* terribly. Itriedsav^ ' eral doctors bat DOM seemed to give OS any relief. month the painswera intense in bo ih sides^ and made me s« weak that I had t» go to bed. At lafl£ a friend recommeak ded Lydia E. Pinlfcr 'ham's Vegetable Compound to me and I tried it at onaa and found much relief. After that! had no pains at ail and ooold do 1of hoU'^nnrV Slid as always. For years I have praisai - ^ Lydia EL Pinkham's Vegetable Can|» pound for what it has done for aodfc : 1 and shall always recommend it as a w#»-' man's friend. You are at liberty tons® my letter in any way. "--Mrs.THOMSON 649 W. Russell St, Philadelphia, Pa. » ; Change of life is one of the moii 'ig, critical periods of a woman's existence . Women everywhere should remember that there is no other remedy known ftp carry vomen so successfully through this trying period as Lydia E. Pinkhaafe Vegetable Compound. If 70a want special inlilna write to lydia E. Pinkham icine Co» (confidential), Lyi% Mass. Your letter will be opened^ read and Answered by a wonuua and held in strict confidence. Warners 1 WILLOWS TO SAVE THE CANAL Rpots WiM Form We£, 8ays Inventor, and Prevent Landslides at Panama. E. Moody Boynton, inventor of the monorail system of transportation. Is convinced that willow trees can be made to stop the Panama canal land­ slides. He has written President Wil­ son .what he thinks should be done, and his letter has been forwarded to the isthmian officials. Mr. Boynton proposes that willow piles be driven close together along both sides of the canal where slides occur. These willows will grow. He says that the roots of each will spread out as far as 100 feet, all forming to­ gether a web which would hold earth firmly. Safe Pills are purely vegetable, sugar* coated and absolutely fros from injurious substances. A Perfect Laxative. For is* digestion, biliousness, torpii liver and constipation, they do not gripe or leave any bad af* fur* OCa n MW O box. If your drug­ gist cannot supply you, we will. Wrm/tBMjltt. Vimt'i Sal* biUIti C*. ~ " II. Y. m "'V < - MOONE'S ' Emerald 00 THE FAMOUS and UNEXCELLED ANTISEPTIC ami GERMICIDE For Varicose Veins, Ulcers, Hemorrhoid* (Piles), Eczema, Painful Swellings* Ab­ scesses, Sores, etc., only a few quired at an application. So ma E)werful is Emerald Oil that E« lands, Wens and Varicocele disappear wifh iia Price *1.00 "•--** « charges paid on receipt of price. Generous sample on receipt of 10c froiM Mini Ciwicri €•.. utpt. W. Baciwift Culinary Mechanic*. "What air them kitchenettes I hear teU of in the cities?" asked Deacon Hyperbole Medders, the somewhat honest agriculturist. "They're the places. Uncle Hy," ex­ plained Upson Downs, his city nephew, "in which are molded or cas.t or some­ how produced a flat d^waller°a round of mealettes."--Judge. If You Need a Medicine You Should Have the Best Although there are hundreds of prepa­ rations advertised, there is only one that really stands out pre-eminent as a rem­ edy for diseases of the kidneys, liver and bladder.. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root is not recom­ mended for everything. A sworn certificate of purity is with ev­ ery bottle. You may receive a sample sixe bottle of Swamp-Root l>y Parcel Post. Address Dr. Kilmer Jk Co.. Bing- hamton, N. Y., and enclose ten cents. For sale at all drug stores in bottles of two sixes--60c and 11.00, also mention this paper.--Adv. Misunderstood. "I hear they have an excellent curri­ culum at this school," said Uncle John, who was visiting his nephaw at col­ lege. "You bet your life we have," re* plied the nephew enthusiastically. "It's built of Btfeel and concrete, and seats 20,000 people. Coma nrer and I'll show It to you." 1 OON'T LET GRAY HAIRS Make Vou Look Old. Restore Natural Color by This Guaranteed Method. TtantluxuriouBdark, natural wbadeof hairjroa •o much detiire is wiibin your reach--easily, ln- expenHivelv. Simply go to your druggist and get a bottle of H.iv'k Hair Health. When applied [ to gray hair it caust** tiie air to bring back the original youthful color. Absolutely harmleHS. j n6€pa lien grr»j *rOui tiuGwiuf(. jcuparts life, luatre and beauty; removca dandruff; cleantten and tones 80alp. No one will know you are using anrlbing. Drtigglxt returns price if It fail*. *5c, 60c and $1.00 at drug a tores or direct on reeeiptofpriceaudtlealer'snatne. PhUoHay Specialties Co., Newark, N. J. Adv. Try Yeast. "80 you are going to atari a eryr "If I can raise the dough."--BOftait Evening Transcript. V 4 Man's Materialism. Perry Belmont, condemning mate­ rialism at a Newport dinner, said: "Take the average husband. Ccyild anything be more material than he? "Tell the average husband that his love is growing cold, and he won't so much as lift hiB eyes from the eve­ ning paper. 1 "But tell him that his consomme is growing cold, and--sip, he's off lor the dining room in 29-foot leaps." Its Case. "How is the Turkish army doing?" "From last accounts, it was in good running order." RfHlkCawlSwi WKy Mm! room •omjt away for "ktrfaia reofias" when<ro«caa the baot rocfiag at a rciMuU* price of jr*ar own local ^Certain-teed Roofing Jamaica has established several pub­ lic quinine depots to enable poor per­ sons to obtain the drug at cost. I L*«;: l-ranri*f« S^aitla louden DATCNTC Watsoa E. Pfl I r 11 I a intent lawyer,W. • w r>.c. Advice and t Bsws reasonshtfc Highest Nf« is guaranteed in writing. 6 rears for 10 yeers for S-plT. *">d la veers for uu<i the rvsponv.bliiij of our bin s-:u'dK bfhiDil iti'.j guarantee. Its quality til.' hitfhtotand Its priceibe lucs: reasonable. General Roofing Mfg. Compaajr Wufid'B latQ'At m>inu+actKTtrtoJ and Hnildifif l*a.L*r* 5«w T*k flty Baalai FfMafevvflfe Philadelphia Ailaatft «V»*ta*4 Bstrsh K La!» < taclnaatl kasszktJiv tiAasbiarg I UooJk7nn^ W. N. U., CHICAGO, NO. 44-191& Her Preference. Sfinday School Teacher--You must grow up to be good. Don't you want to be looked up to? Little Emma Wayup--No; I'd rather be looked around at.--Judge. When all others fail to please Try Denlson's Coffee. 10c Worth of Will Clear $1.00 Worth of Land Get rid of the stumps and grow big crops on cleared land. Now is the time to clean up your farm while products bring high prices. Hasting quickest, cheapest and easiest with Low Fn ing Du Pont Exploahroa. They work m Cold weather. Writm fmr Frem HanJbooJi of and name of ncanif dealer. DU PONT POWDER COMPANY WILMINGTON DCLAWJ Sound Travels Far. The steam siren, under 72-pound pressure, has been heard for 40 miles, in tests in the navy. The next most , powerful noisemaker is the steam | whistle, audible 20 milea, while the or­ dinary buoy has made itself bean! lfi miles. e stranger than notion, make It hustle to keep AG00DSM0K THE CHEW FOR MAIL POUCH TOBACCO

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