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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 16 Mar 1922, p. 3

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t anlac Malses Each Bite a. New -Mr lve gystem is itly and smoothfrom your food abunof vital energy and ptBif re force of vigor to BMt aW «®*rgency, every bite. Is eaten with keen test and appreciation. If your meals are not a real event. It you do not approach the table mpv&c. :'v • >,* . "ij-i •V^K V'f 'V0'. - organ and tferagh ample eecratfaa of dtftstlve tut*. It then pronotca energetic actteft of all the Iwwat muscles and glands and enables the iood to pass through the digeatfva canal In the normal tin*. Sack Of the thousands of litti# duty it is to pick op the food and wad this «f ne bodfr are sttptitajted p> The is tbat food is taken cam of without distress of any aort in such manner us ,to derive the utmost benefit from it. If your appetite is net keen. If your food seems to dl* agree with yon, if you are underweight, narvoua, (irritable and lack energy, give Tart lac the chance to show you that it mr work a miracle with the most lively antlcipa* tlon of Its delimits, then yea «n only haif-llvlng, because f«a are only half fitting tha value of yonr food. Lack of «$potite, or distress fSranftadiilgtnf the appetite, ut both doe to th$ same causa failure of the digestive system to properly do tta Important work. The undigested food remaining In the alimentary canal may merety eause a distaste for more food when it cannot take care of what It haa, or it may undergo chemical and purification changes that cause acute disease. v^J^esides, these chemical changes produce poisonous substances that are carried to every cell and organ of the body and that cause all sorts 1 of distressing symptoms. Tan lac, the famous digestive tonic and body builder, haa achieved its wide success because it is able to invigorate the entire digestive tract. It acts to cause vigorous stomach preparation of the food, both through tils muscular churning action of that ' • - " ... • •••- • •<' In your condition aa It has In so many thousands of other eases. - If you are despondent, gloomy, with little taste for and enjoyment of life, try Tanlac and no doubt you will se# the clouds of gloom roll away under/ the sunshine of health. - You are entitled to, be healthy, vigorous, efficient and happy. Give yourself the chance to become so as thousands of others have, by taking Tanlac. Get Tanlac from yonr druggist thts very day. Why wait for tomorrow when Tanlac--and health--await you today? ¥*1" ' Overtaken. - Welwlsher--I hear young Scads* worthy is going to marry Miss Manchester. He ought to look before be leaps. Oldpal--He did. He took a glance ov«r his shoulder and saw she was jnpktty closing in on him. Tbeai*wa» too lata to leap. i Cry fear tar's Caatoria QuteM* "Influence, do** flUrttr D»b--HWeH, upon the skirts.'* think of short 11 Poverty tent a crime unlep It for* one with prison fare. Holy City In Early Days. Ancient Jerusalem stood on hills, now almost entirely molded together, and the intervening valleys filled with debris. Mount Zlon is that height on the southwest, the city of David, made conspicuous today by th» towers of the German ecclesiastical buildings for which the former kaiser gave the land. Mount Moriah is on the east, the site of Solomon's temple, sepaifcied from Mount Zlon by the valley of thte Tyropoeon, Mount BecetM la on the north and Mount Akra onibd northwest, the two latter reprethe crowded quarters of the aaodern'^ty.: \ ; • '--: -- Zero Count. ' Minister--"Yes, my boy, even the hairs on our heads are numbered." Small Boy--"Dad's ain't; he's bp Idheaded.-- 8pa re Moments; Any small bny In his drat feels sorry for his mother?" r. ^ • ^WARNING I " & SPIRIH Say "Bayer" when you buy Aspirin. ^Unless you see the name "Bayer" on tablets, you ai|i| not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physician^ er 22 years and proved safe by millions for i z • •» •y" rn. • Colds Headache Rheumatism^ I Toofhact#:-; Neuralgit ;."4 Neuritis Joimbago ^ Pain, Pain m TRAINING TO STAKES lowing Vegetables and Rowers i Upright Saves Space. Earache .*•••£. t J^ooept only "Bayer" package which contains proper direction*. "Bayer" of 12 tablets--Alto bottles of 24 sad 100--Druggist*. tt the trad* mark of Barer Itaautactaw of lUeoaaeCkaciderter of SaUqrUcaefl| Keeo the Children Well! • days many djfldren are coinplaliiingtrf headiHHMMrldiiieaa, stomach troubles, and trregmlar towato. If n»otbers only knew what # Resulta Are Obtained Prom Moft Planta by Keeping Off the Qround. •; ' A supply of large aM tnnall stakes is not a bad guess for tlie cottage garden. There are some vegetables that will give better results by being trained to stakes than if allowed to spread out on the ground. Often this is not only better for the vegetables, but it saves the space for planting some other crop. The same is true of some flowering plants that otherwise might spread over several feet of space. Most plants look better when properly staked and kept pruned. Sun ^ •A - ii - -w" - Casy to Cultivate. Mid plenty of air are fteceeiaty -almost any vegetable or flowering plant. Stakes can be used for several seasons if eared for after the growing season la over. KEEP THE WEEDS OUT Get After the Pests Before They r t Tike Your Garden. ;? General Weeding Every Few Days Will Assure Grower Garden to EU Proud Of. 'Koep the weeds onft?* ., To have a garden, eififer vegetable or flower garden, it is necessary to not only keep the weeds out, but to kill them. Weeds absorb the life of the soil. They f row fagj, and if allowed to get Moneymakers Gather the Sweet Front Bfossom% . Do Excellent Service In Cajrrying Pol> I en From One Plant to Another --They Are Worth While. Honey bees--two or three hives of them--will prove a valuable Investment to the back yard gardener. Most back yards have enough small fruit treeS, flowers and blossoming vegetables to provide attraction for the bees. They are among the busiest invaders Honey of the growing vegetation, and there •re not many blossoms which they will pnss by--and, at the same time, they carry the pollen from one plant to another. Thl%. is absolutely necessary, in some wr% to cause the plants to produce. When bees and birds do not carry the pollen from one plant to another about the only other chance is for the wind to perform the service. L<"t the bees do this Important duty whether they are honey or other kinds of bees. THE BUSS EARLY Garden May Be Destroyed Unless Insects Are Killed. Generous aiwf . Frequent Sprayings Ara Neceaaary to Insure Retufna Induatrioua Gardener. One of the principal of the numerous slpgans of the successful cottage gardener Is "Get the Bugs--and (Jet 'Km Early"!" Unless the bfagft are killed before they have time to breed, the gardener has about as many troubles as he has wben he has neglected the weeds. The majority of young plants are infested with different kinds of bugs. Flowers usually are as badly affected Getting the Weeds. start are hard fe £gbt with any degree of success* * The best time to get the weeds and to keep them out of the jrarden is to pull them out as fast as they appear. By weeding the garden and posy bed every few days, there will be no trou- j and apply at once, ble from the obnoxious pest. prepared "--*" A3 ^ Spraying Young Ptanta. as vegetables. The United States Department of Agriculture sayi: One of the principal methods of combating both diseases and insects which attack plants is treatment with fungicides and insecticides. Bordeaux mixture is used for a control of fungous diseases of mauy vegetables and fruits and as a deterrent of flea-beetle attack. It can be purchased in convenient package form from seed dealers or prepared at home from bluestone (copper sulphate), which costs 10 to 25 cents per pound, and fresh stone or lump lime (quicklime). Bluestooe, four ounces; quicklime, four ounces; water, 12 quarts. Or bluestone. four pounds; quicklime, four pounds; water, 50 gallons. Dissolve the blue stone in a wooden or earthenware vessel, using hot water. Dilute with half the water. Do not use In tin or other metal containers, as they would be spoiled. Slake the lime by adding water, a little' at a time. When reduced to. a milky fluid, dilute with the rest of the water and strain through doubled cheesecloth or a brass wire strainer of 18 meshes per Inch and pour into it the bluestone solution. Stir well This Is best when fresh for each using. SIDELIGHTS ON THE HOME GARDEN Don't brag about your garden, but dig and keep on digging. "A little l*nd and. a written by a maa who grew a good home garden. ' * * • Plants cannot thrive with their roots In water. Soil must be well drained garden crops are to succeed. Smooth and attractive root cannot be grown on rough land. It pays to prepare the soil thoroughly before planting. • • • It does not take a very large piece of land to produce all the food for a human being, and there Is still enough Idle land In and around cities and towns to grow all the vegetables of certain kinds required by the people of these towns. >• • • • A weed is any plant in the wrong plate. Vegetables too dose together are aa lajsriens t» 4*d> oilier as weeds. Thin them out before they are large enough to crowd. * * * A few crops well chosen aM properly cultivated are preferable to miscellaneous assortment--no one of which will supply enough vegetables to make a full serving for the entire family. • • • The Jerusalem artichoke will grow In any good garden soil, and should be planted three to four feet apart each way. with three or four small tubers in a hill. If large tubers are used for planting, they should be cut like Irish potatoes. Plant as soon as the ground becomes warm in the spring and cultivate as for corn. A pint of tubers cut to eyes will plant about 30> hills. The tubers will be ready for use In October, but may remain In the ground and be dug at any time during the winter. The tubers are prepared by boiling until soft, and are served with butter or creamed. They are also Bsed^or aalada tod picfclea. ER! MO1 WITH Hurry, mother! jBvan.a »lck child ihe •fruity" taste « *t)allfomIa VlC Syrup" and it aftver f*0a to often a* bowais. A teaspoonftol today may iMtt&it a alck IhOd tomorrow, if constipated. bUiosa* feverish. fretful, has cold, colic, or if stomach is sour, tongue coated, breath bad. remember a good cleansing of the little bowels la often all that Is necessary. Ask your druggist for genuine "California Fig Syrup" which has directions for babies and children of all ages printed on bottle. Mother I You must say "California' or you may get ajt Imitation flg syrup.--Advertisement. Try and Say It. automobile In Belgium la known as a **8uelpanrdeiooszn:itrapoorvegpetroleamrytuig." LItterally translated, it means "fast-horseless-wltbout-railspetrol vehicle." 8'tting Tight, ; "ftall the end seat feof days?" MUp against th« register, Louisville Courier-Journal. A SK your local dealer to ommend a practical^ orator. If you are niiafiiiij|L secure one you can do yourself, tinting and steiid^iCr;'%i -jpour walls to give beautiful: Instead ofKahomine or WJUPaptf; Bujr Ahbaadne from your local dealer, white and a variety ot tint*. -V'--, i package hu the doa and tilde' printed in red. By utter^ mixing Alnasdn* tints yon can accurately match draperies and rags and obtain nKfividnal treatment el cads room. ~Waf»for yiriiit MuggKtiio'u mi ALA8ASTDIE CORPART 'f1'* v^.\' i i ' Waste is a matter <jj| , tobacco quality We ttate it as our boneat WWthat the tobacco* nted In Chesterfield are of finer quality (and hence of better e) than in any other <%arette at the price. Lsggta 9 T»hmm€^ 4,a* V -- ? -J v '. 11 _ > 'X '/ •f * #'A 1%. ss W ' hp ?; f'y f:' * . » i. & A' %1 \ S • '• mm* WHY THE NAME MOONSHINE" GOT BACK AT BR'ER StMCQXr Foal Question Met Hortted flebq|W> From Colored Praaoher Surely Right on One Point. In earlier Years the Illicit Liquor Was Supposed to Be Made Only at Night. GAVE HIS NAME TO CALENDAB Pope Qregory XIII Left Lasting Monument-- Other Famous Heads of the Roman Church. Of all the long list of popes, Gregory XIII haa probably left the most lasting monument, for he framed the calendar we use today, and it still bears his name. Gregory completed his calendar in 1582. In more modern times a pope of outstanding personality was Pius IX, who In 1846 broke the age-old tradition that the pope should never preach a sermon. It happened Id this way. A famous preacher of the time., Padre Ventura, whose eloquence attracted great crowds, had arranged to preach at a church in Rome, but at the last moment he was taken ill and the disappointed people were about to disperse when suddenly the bells rang and it was announced that the sovereign pontiff had arrived In the church. The pope entered the pulpit and preached a sermon which :he historian of the time has described as a "simple, good, plain sermon, easily Intelligible to all." It was the first, tlUM a pope had preached for 300 yeara. ' Paternal Influence. "Whom does Charle8 take hla BNh si cat talent after?" "Well, hla father .never liked work." --Judge. Amerlc. calls the liquor Illicitly distilled, especially In the Alleghany mountains, "moonshire." The apparent reason Is that it is believed to be distilled at night and secretly transported without payment of a tax or the authority of official permit. The fact is, of course, that the secret sUlls work as hard in day as at night. England used the word In similar manner, though not in the same sense. Over there moonshine is liquor tbat haa been smuggled Into the country without payment of a tax. The smuggling is usually done by small boats from the continent, that laad at lonely shores at night, and the cargo is unloaded by the light of thO noon. It was this that gave the Lquor its generic name. ~ American moonshine Is raw, imaged and often uncolored spirits. British moonshine may be the finest brandy from France, the choicest rum from Jamaica. In the British Isles, especially Ireland, the popular name for homedistilled Spirits Is "mountain dew," be* cause it Is in the hills that it is made, far from the prying eyes of the excise man. : When men are sarcastic about women the women merely look at each other and smile. Bfahop Candler, of Atlanta, was < detuning a certain theological versy. "Such Idle controversies," b "remind mo of the colored who began a sermon with the "'Breddern and slstern, wh-- dO fust man, Adam, waa created, ha waa made outer wet clay and aet up afta de palin's to dry.' "A member roaa In the bade at tha church. "'Pawsoo,' he aaM, incredulously, 'does yo ser'ously state dat Adam waa made outer wet clay and aat %p afta de palin's to dryF " 'Dem's mah words, Br*er Stances; Dem's mah words I' " 'Den, pawson, who made de pai» in'ar " 'Br'er Simcox, set down,* said tha parson aeverly. 'Suck fool question* as yonrn would upset any ayatett'l^ theology.'" -v , Wben Loafer Docotnea a Pest. " MA loafer," said Uncle Eben, "deaf* do no special barm, 'ceptin' when ha tries to be mistook for a worker afcf inaisses on gettin' in 4a way." The less religion a man haa tta more her thinks his wife ought la What is cubist? whatlst? hav*. try Grape*Nuts y r '-m- : fa build supplies Nuts. man most Other itaaiar--I a" "

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