m THIS McHENRY PLAINDEALER, McHENRY, Ht. DETROIT WOMAN RECOVERS Health Much Belter After : TakhfLyditLPSskl tarn's Vegetable Compoundi Dstroit, Michigan. --"Your little book ; left at my door wsb my best doctor. I I re ad it, then said to | my husband,' Please fo and get me some -ydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound. I want to take it.' The first month I took three bottles of Vegetable Compound and one of Lydia E. Pinkham's Blood Medicine, and used Lydia E. Pinkham's Sanative Wash. If you only knew how much better I feel! Now when my frienda say they are sick I tell them to take Lydia EL Pinkham's medicines. I give the little book and your medicines the best of thanks."--Mrs. Hamerink.3765 : 25th Street, Detroit, Michigan. In newspapers and booklets we are constantly publishing letters from women, who explain how they were helpedl by taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta- > ble Compound These letters should guide you. If you are troubled with pains and ner- Gay Hues Feature Late Fall -t)?*%*• help you. For sale by druggists everywhere. BABIES LOVE M1*1«0IBSVRUP JCMIitM'tinAlir PlwMint to »lw pl--imt to take. Guaranteed purely nr- •table and abeolntelr harm) na. It quickly wiiwum colic, diarrhoea, flatulency and other like dieordera. The opnn published formula appear* on Telephone in Tibet Tor centuries everything in the naittffe" of an invention or an Innovation has been barred from Lhassa, the Indian capital. In fact there are very few instances of outsiders who have penetrated into the city, but there are evidences of an awakening manifest in the expressed desire for some of the conveniences of the occidental world. The telephone forced Its way only a short time ago and at the present time natives are engaged, under the supervision of new world engineers, In extending the system so that in a short time there will be communication with what Is known as the "Roof of the World." Nothing needs a lie--Wtcepf ^ Hi. Help That Achy Back! Arc you dragging around, day after day, with a dufl, unceasing backache? Are you lame in the morning, bothered with headaches, dizziness and urinary disorders? Feel tired, irritable and discouraged? Then there's surely something wrong, and likely it's kidney weakness. Don t neglect it! Get back your health while you can. Use Doan't Fills, & stimulant diuretic to the kidneys. Doan's have helped thousands, and should help you. A$k your neighbor! An Illinois Cue Mrs. Pat Brady, 312 E. Campbell A v e . , R a n t o u l , 111., says: "I bad a steady ache In my back and when I stooped & sharp catch made i t b a r d t o straighten. Mornings my back wan stiff and Biiro and I felt |tired. I was dizzy, too, and my nluUc;i> --v act often enough. Doan's Pills rid me of the trouble.' DOAN'S "iP STIMULANT DIURETIC TO THE KIDNEYS Foatar-Mitbura Co., Mfg. Chem., Buffalo. N. Y. kidneys didn't mode of Infinite variety has been the favorite term used by critics to describe the fashions of the last few seasons, and they have again fallen back upon that hackneyed phrase to characterize the current autumn mode. Yet, writes a Paris fashion ^correspondent in the New York Herald-Tribune, there Is a vast difference between the artistic but aimless divertissements of the styles of last spring and fall and the equally extensive peregrinations of present fashions. The motivating force behind the widely varied details of the last two seasons has been the utter sameness of the basic elements of the mode. Boyish simplicity and straight lines had been a<g.*epted as axioms, and It was the not simple task of the designer to disguise these platitudes by the dexterous manipulations of such details as plait, flounce and tunic. Another means of differentiation employed by the Paris dressmakers was the use of new and distinctive materials. But as far as silhouette, waistline, sleeve and color were, concerned. It was patent that the timorous couture was i^ereEely content to follow the path df least resistance and rest upon its previous laurels. For Jauna Fills and Matron. A survey of current fashions shows the same varied scope covered at the recent openings as in previous seasons, but with this difference. Where before the numerous details represented efforts to diversify old themes, today they are significant groupings toward new style types--they are now coupled with changing trends in the foundations of the mode, and the new tendencies which have been Inaugurated this autumn will become more crystallized with the approach of winter and spring. The first general tenet which the fall mode discarded was the ideal of eternal boyishness--a heritage from post-war flapperl8m. The new styles mark a decided step forward in dress dignity, and while the Jeune fllle frocks are quite as youthful as before, the mature charm of the matron has been granted a separate and necessary sphere. The second autumn Innovation was the silhouette compromise. Not even the most radical critic believed that the slim silhouette could be dislodged from Its firm stance In a single season? and the Introduction of the flared hemline to partly share the spotlight with the straight outline has satisfied the most chronic malcontents. The newest Paris models pay homage to both silhouette types by continuing the straight line snugly over bodice and hips and confining the flare to the lowest sector of the skirt. Incidentally, the typical fail skirt Is about five Inches shorter than last >ear, reaching only to about fifteen Inches off the ground. Sleeves have left douht behind them and have become definitely and frankly narrow and long. Except, of course, in evening gowns. The myriad types of last year have dissolved Into this slender genre which has become one of the decisive landmarks of autumn fashions. The new waistline has Inherited wandering proclivities from its predecessor, but, as with other details. Its meanderings seem to be In a definite direction. An Idea of the diverse waistline interpretations may he had front the following data: The dlrectoire waist is sponsored by Cheruit, Charlotte and Martial et Armand. The hlgher-than-normal line Is exploited by Anna, Bechoff, Premet and Renee. Lanvin, Chanel and Molyneux are the leading exponents of the low linP. while nearly every designer includes models in his autumn collection which ROBBER, SORRY - ^ FOR HIS DEED, RETURNS LOOT ClearThePores Of Impurities With Cuticura Soap SSfcjStiBSSStJiSiSSSLStitilSSSiS-- [For6 rip, Influenza COLDS A Sneeze! A Shnrer! Quick! At the first sign of a cold take Dr. Humphreys' famous "77." Drive the cold out of your I?y8tem. Keep "77" handy for emergencies. Ask yourdruggiat for it today, or, write us. FREE--Dr. Humphreys' Manual. (112 pages.) You should read it. Tells about the home treatment of disease. Ask your druggist, or, write ua for a copy. Dr. Humphreys' "77," price SOc. and $100, at drag stares or sent on remittance (our risk) or G.O.D. parcel post. HUMPHREYS- HOtfEO. MEMCME CO. 77 AM Street. Nw Ywfc WARNERS TONIC Paid: Com. I ^5 I AIDS DIGESTION CORRECTS STOMACH amd BOWEL DISORDERS m off Drug Storms CHQUCAE co. MCWMMU, DR. HUMPHREYS* 3 suggest tlte normal waistlines. The tubular silhouette, which precludes any waistline, Is also a prominent fall note. The Waistline of Today. From which It Is evident that the waistline may be low, normal, high, dlrectoire or, on occasion, entirely out of the picture. Yet out ot these coafused tendencies there Is a distinct trend .toward the perceptibly marked waistline which will, from all indications, find a. normal haven by next spring. The tunlp has intruded Itself Into the fall mode in an unmistakable manner. An Important detail last season, It has been graduated Into an influence, and, manifesting itself principally in tunic-blouse effects. It assumes Its place as one of the milestones of autumn fashions. Even the color note, usually more subdued in the fall, has partly forsaken the black and white combinations which have stood out so prominently In recent seasons. Any one who remembers the Easter procession of last spring remembers also the remarkable outpouring of black and white effects--easily the dominating fashion note of that day. The autumn landscape has a different setting, and in place of the ubiquitous black and white, browns, particularly the leather shades, reds In tones .of russet and mahogany, and soft greens haves arrived to assert their Importance In^ the spectrum. Black and white effects have not been eliminated. Materials lollow recent precedents by differing essentially from foregoing seasons, but there Is no significance to this fact other than to emphasize tha growing importance of fabric styling in the realms of fashion.| Itibbed silks and woolens lead the new materials--ottoman, reps and bengaline being particularly pcpular, while last summer's vogue for crepe satin and kasha Is again reasserted this autumn. * Molyneux Offers Changes. * While he follows to a certain extent the prevalent tendency to trim gowns more elaborately than last season, Captain Molyneux has kept his characteristic line, and thus .makes gowns that are eminently dignified and weari.ble. He has instituted two drastic changes, totally eliminating both feathers and the scarf. To take the place of the former ne is using fine rolled pieces of tulle, each about ten inches long and weighted with a tingle tube bead. The straight line without any circular movement Is the leading characteristic of day and evening gowns. With Molyneux the skirt is from 12 to 1 l Indies above the ground, and his wuistline Is normal to low where It is defined at all. More often he makes straight dresses occasionally with a long over-tunic which reaches to within a few Inches of the skirt. In these cases a coat Is made to wear over the dress, and It Is of the same length as the tunic. A feature of the coats of his threepiece costume Is the little narrow cape reaching to slightly below, the waistline and sewn into the Mde seams of the coat, so that only the lower edge gives the faintest suggestion of a cape effect. Plaid Is very successfully allied to plain woolen materials, especially Cum berland tweed for traveling suits. Red also figures largely In the collection, both as a trimming and as a basir color. An amusing ensemble has s straight black kasha coat edged with a three-inch knotted black wool fringe, under the coat is worn a straight tunic dress of scarlet kasha with a scarlet knotted fringe that peers below the black fringe of the coat. Visible still below that Is a plain two-Inch band of the black underskirt. Hjmnted by Sick Woman'* Face, He Telephone» to • Victim to Make Peace. ' Muck Profit in . Well-Bred Bull .•JW Kansas City.--Surrendering to a troubling conscience and seeking to make peace with his victim a robber telephoned to his victim he was sorry and made good a promise to return stolen property. At noon. June 6, the robber entered the home of A. T. Stoneberger, Mrs. Stoneberger, confined to bed because of Illness, was the only person in the house. He threatened Mrs. Stoneberger with a revolver and forced her to tell him where he could And her silverware and money. He left with all the silverware and $12. The other' day • telephone call was answered by Mrs. Stoneberger's daughter. "I am th« man who robbed your house," the voice said. i : ^ Pays Dearly for Act.;-;-- • "You can tell your mother 1 aim sorry. 1 am paying dearly for my act. Not a day has passed since I entered your home without permission that your mother's face does not haunt me. > "1 wish I could return ail the property and the money I took from your home. But that Is Impossible. I have Animal SKoulcl Be Given Care and Management to Insure Good Condition. . (Prepared by the United State* Dtputrnttl of Agriculture.) One of the most important alms of the dairyman should be to have the services of a good, well-bred bull, says the United States Department of Agriculture, and then, having a good bull, he should be given the care and management that will Insure the greatest profit from him. He should be so fed and exercised as to maintain his activity and healthy, vigorous Condition. Grain to Feed,, The amount of grain to t&A to dairy sires varies from four to ten pounds, depending on the size and condition of the animal and the kind of roughage. A grain mixture recommended by the department as having been Used with success consists of three parts ground corn (by weight), two parts ground ' oats, two parts wheat bran, and one part Unseed meal. Another mixture suggested consists of three parts ground oats, two parts wheat bran, one part ground corn or barley, and one part linseed meal. Ground oats are considered especially valuable for bulls. Cottonseed meal Is not usually regarded with favor, especially when fed In large amounts. Some breeders think It causes impotency. On some farms the bulls are given the spoiled or musty hay or waste feed left by other animals. This is poor practice. It Is just as necessary to feed the bulls properly as the cows. The legume hays--alfalfa, clover, vetch, soy bean, cowpeas are excellent roughuge, and should be fed liberally If possible. If the non-legum'nous roughages, such as timothy or prairie hay, corn silage, stover, or fodder are fed, a grain mixture higher in protein should be used. Use of Silage. Breeders differ as to the advisability of feeding silage. Some maintain that a. considerable amount of silage Is likely to lessen the vigor of a bull and make him sterile. Others feed silage in lnrge quantities and report no undesirable results." So far as experimental work shows. It is probable that si.age does not have any direct effect on the breeding powers. Large amounts of silage, or other extremely bulky feeds, may have a tendency to distend the paunch so that the bull becomes too heavy on his feet. From 10 to 15 pounds of silage a day with other roughages can be fed safely without impairing the usefnlness of the animal. Dairy hulls should have plenty of water. This matter Is often neglected, especially when there Is not a constant . supply in the stall or pen and when the bull Is difficult to handle. A bull should be watered at least once a day during the winter and twice a day during the summer. FREE, If yon have # RHEUMATISM FAIN IN BACK! OR PILES Or know of a wound ob[£ man or beast that will nocP heal, try this oiL Write' for ti\e free sample bottle and see how quiddy It f Kills Pain and Heals every ac burns pile Sample bottle mailed free for If M. R. ZAEGEL & CO. 630 Eighth St. Sheboygan, Wk PAIN l&T' Art • .,#£:* 'w Best for ache or pain-- for wounds,4 and E Threatened Mrs. 8toneber(|er With a Revolver. sold some of It and lost some. The rest you will find under your front porch. "As f call you I are at the Union station getting ready to return to the Kast, whence I came. The dlreness of the deed which I committed has been brought home to me and 1 have reformed." Under the front porch of the Stoneberger home some of the silverware was recovered. CHOOSE FRIENDLY COLORS FOR HAT OR GOWN Moat of oa have Jcoown times of wavering about the choice of color for hat or gown, and often we have In the end chosen the wrong color. Then, though we wore what we bought bravely, we never really had the good of our money from It because pleasure and satisfaction In wearing was gone. This season almost every color shares in the array of exquisite materials. Some of these delightful colors will be becoming to some of us. but not all of them to all of us. Outstanding among the new colors are brilliant purple reds of the fuchsia type, ranging from a light tone down to a deep rich wine. Wine shades occupy a position of considerable importance, and there are three new shades of the rosewood variety. Some of the greens have a bluish tone and there Is a rich, dark green. Browns are to hold sway over grays. There are soft, gold-brown tones, creamy medium tans, sandy browns. and a deep reddish henna with nasturtium tones. If properly used,, color can bring bloom to your cheeks If they are pale, make your complexion lighter 'and fairer If It. is dark, tone it down if it la vivid or florid, and can bring out unsuspected beauties In your hair and eyes. These are your friendly colors. Matching Shade and Lamp A diminutive lamp of much charm that is suitable for a child's room as well as the grown-ups'. Is made of white china with a simple design upon the surface of orange birds with black Tings.' A white shade shaped something like a pHgodn is painted with the same colored birds. A Handy Traveler's Aid A thick plait of sewing silk of every possible shade is a great convenience, as single threads may be drawn out without any difficulty. Travelers will find this a much easier way of carrying mending materials about with tiiem. Straightline It Likely to Remain Through Year Rumors of new fashoins have crystallized Into definite facts, and as the new models make their appearance day by day one gains an Impression of several Influence? that have vitally stamped themselves upon the modes of the season. There seems to be every Indication that the stralghtllne will remain, although In many Instances It is given a new aspect by the introduction of godets often placed that the back of the gown still retains the fashionable flatness. Occasionally a frock is shown with certain details of cut and trimming that suggest a raised or normal waistline These gowns, however, are more frequently seen on slim young girls rather than on women of more developed figures. The silhouette which apparently Is to dominate the fall and winter season lemands a perfect supple foundation and women who have gone without some sort of a support during the coatless era are now hastening to |>ring their figures back to the reunited slim* ness. The old-time corset has gone, but the new affairs that have taken their place are marvels of cut and fit, and at the same time help to achieve a figure ot natural graceful lines. The mode calls for frocks of black satin or bengallne that are worn under stunning coats. $37S,000 Left to Boy Making $25 a Week Atlantic City.--Henry Roelofs, of Margate park, near here, who is twenty years old, works for $25 a week In Burl's radio repair shop and has a wife and a month-old daughter, will receive about $375,000 on October 11 left to him by his great-grandfather. John B. Stetson, hat manufacturer. He explained that he had Just .told his wife about his good fortune. "I thought I'd better tell her," he said, "she may be able to use the money. Anjway, I figured it would be hard to explain, if I didn't tell her what was going to happen, why I was bringing home so much cash on that day." Young Roelofs* fortune was originally $100,000. That sum was bequeathed to him by Mr. Stetson nineteen years ago. and ever since then It has been drawing compound-Interest, waiting for the boy to reach the age of twenty-one. He said he had not yet decided what he would do. and would not until he had had further conferences with Mrs. Roelofs. He think* It likely that he will go In business for himself. Soy Bean Hay Should Be Mowed Down Like Clover Well-cured soy-bean hay may be stacked or stored in the barn the same as any other hay. The best stage at which to cut beans for hay In order to obtain the highest feeding value Is not known exactly, but It Is generally consldere-i that tliey should be cut when the pods are,well formed and the lower ones filled. At this time the largest yield of hay per acre will be obtained, althought cutting earlier will give a larger percentage of protein in the hay. If cutting Is delayed too long the stalks become woody and there Is a heavy loss of leaves. Soy-bean hay should be mowed down like grass or clover and allowed to wilt In the swath, then forked into small cocks to cure slowly. Too rapid curing will cause the leaves to drop. If the weather Is unfair, place the hay In windrows after It has wilted In the swath and then after it has partly cured place In lnrge cocks. Three or four days of fairly good weather are ordinarily required to cure soy-bean hay properly. Surely an Antique Mrs. Newriclie--This table isn't very antique 1 don't see many worm holes : In it. Salesman--What do yoa think of this one, then? Mrs. Newrlch^--Why It's nothing but a box of sawdust. Salesman--That's Just It. madam.. It's antique! The worms have eaten* it all. • M r s . --We ndeffol t take it.* •. • Vv-.;. ' Step the Pate. The- hurt of a burn or * cat Cole's CarboUs&lve is applied. It heals quickly without scars. 10c and «c by all druggists, or send 30c to The J. W».. Cole Co., Hockford, 111.--Advertisement. Staid Affair "What la this?" "A lecture on gravity." "Seems to be plenty of It preseat.* Roots and Herbi Best forJCidneyi Daniel G. Carey, M. D. Increased Use of Pure Bred Sires in Kentucky Oldham county, Ky., owes an estimated Increase of $128,908 In annual returns from Its live stock and poultry to the growing use of pure hrel sires. This figure Is the result of calculations made by O. B. Nance, county agent for Oldham county, and reported to the United States Department of Agriculture. Mr. Nance based his reckonings on the difference between the percentage of pure bred sires used in his county and an average Vomputed from the percentages of pure bred sires used in two adjoining counties. He then combined with this figure data on the superior utility value of pure bred sires from such sources as the United States Department of Agriculture and state experiment stations. BACKACHE said Dr. Carey is a pretty sure sig« that all is not well with your kidneys. Delay may be dafigwous--thousands; of people dfe every year from kid>- -- ney troubles and many could be save# If the right medicine was taken In time^ i \ •I!!; C0CKLEBUR PLANT IS QUITE POISONOUS TO ALL ANIMALS Take Place of Wrist Watch The most chic little fobs are ornamental things to take the place of the wrist watch. The most popular ones are made of ribbon attached to a bar set with brilliants, smartly showy on black. Others are jeweled In colors or finished in gold and platinum designs, and some women affect a ribbon fob marked with their monogram In metal or enamel. Dog Guards Milk Attleboro, Mass.--Rowd.v. a bulldog belonging to Herman N. Collins, owner of a drug store.-has leaped Into a niche In dogdom's hall of fame because, when an epidemic of thefts of milk bottles broke out 'In Attleboro. he constituted himself the guardian of the dally supply that Is left every morning at his master's drug, store. Not even the policeman on the bent can coax Rowdy from his task until after Collins arrives to open the store Snake Stops Motor Grlsswold. Iowa.--A four-foot bull snake short-circuited the battery in the automobile of O. W. Barnes and caused considerable trouble before being discovered. When the car would not start Barnes blamed It on the batteries. but when this proved a mistake he lifted the hood to inspect the wiring. As he did so the snake attempted to strike. Barnes fled and friends killed the reptile •» Most Important to Prevent Animals Eating Weeds. (Prepared by th» Department of Agriculture.) Cocklebur plants are poisonous to swine, cattle, sheep and chickens, according to the experimental findings of the United States Department of Agriculture For a lonn time many people have been convinced of the poisonous property of cockleburs when eaten by live stock, but this belief was not shared In by everybody, some contending that the deaths reported due to cockleburs were caused by the mechanical action of the burs rather than by a*iy toxic effect of the plant. A series of experiments carried on by tlte department in the years 19'J0, 1921, 1922 and 1923, to determine the poisonous character of cockleburs is the basis of a report Just Issued as Department Bulletin 1274, In which It Is concluded that the cocklebur plant Is poisonous to swfne, cattle, sheep, and chickens. There were In all 67 experiments with swine, 11 wit.i sheep, 12 with cattle and 19 with chickens. To bvold the losses the most Important thing is to prevent the animals from eating the weed, says the department. If there Is a shortage of good forage, and animals find the young cocklebur plants/ they may easily eat enough to cause serious results. Feeding milk to pigs immediately after they have e ten cockleburs has proved to be beneficial, probably because of the fat content. Successful results may be expected also when such oils and fats as bacon Burned in Car Hammond. Ind.--Gasoline Into an auto whose nlng. while at Wristbag Novelty The latest wristbags, which often are dainty little affairs of chiffon and lace, have a brightly colored ring suspended from the bottom of the bag. Through this ring a gay handkerchief to looped. poured motor waS runa filling station, was set "on fire from the overheated engine and fatally burned Miss Harriet Yeager. sixteen, as she sat In the car. Exploding Pop Hurt$ Boy Peru. Neb.--Dean Shuey; twelve, was severely Injured when a bottle of Ice cold soda pop exploded In his hand. Heat from his hand caused the explosion. grease, lard and lln.eed oil are used as remedies. - While the burs may produce some tnechanlcal injury and while the seeds are very poisonous, stock poisoning, the department concludes, is caused by feeding on the very young plants before the development of true leaves. A copy of this bulletin may be had upon request, as long as the supply lasts, from the United States Depart' ment of Agriculture. Washington. D. C. Wheat Dockage Is Heavy, Say Government Experts When the grain comes through the thresher It should be looked over and If at all dirty or contains much "foreign mattef," such as weed seed, other grains, etc., with but few exceptions It will pay to clean wheat on the farm. The United States Department of Agriculture tells us that they estimate farmers of four spring wheat states shipped 11,600,000 bushels of dockage with their wheat last year. This could have been saved and the price paid for a higher grade If the grain had been cleaned at the thresher with a portable disk cleaner. The dockage can be used for feed, or ground and used for poultry at a siderable saving. Millet Seed Is Rather Effective in Fattening The several varieties of millet differ in the composition of their seeds, although the range is not great. Millet seeds, depending upon variety, contain 8 to 10 per cent water, 3 to ft per cent ash. 10 to 12 per cent protein, 2 to 10 per cent fiber, 52 to 09 per cent nitrogen-free extract and 3 to 7 per cent fat. The seed of barnyard millet Is twice as high in fiber as other varieties and is correspon Jingly low in nitrogen-free extract. Seed of the pearl millet has considerably more fat than other varieties. Millet seed should always be ground for live stock feed. When ground and fed with a good roughage in the man ner of other grain, millet seed Is « rather effective fattening feed. At the South Dakota station millet seed proved practically equal to corn for lambs and about three-fourths as ef feetlve as corn In feeding to steers and swine. Control Grub Worms in Corn Ground by Plowing Grub worms are controlled by ia'i plowing and rotation of crops. Grasj crops are n.ost susceptible to them and land that Is In grasses Is most liable to become Infested with the Worms. Therefore, when such a field Is badly Infested It should be followed by some crop that Is not seriously Injured by the grubs. They are not particularly injurious to wheat. If the soil is plowed soon and sowed to wheat the Injury from grubs next spring will not be very extensive Ewes Need Good Feed Ewes that drop twin lambs are more heavily drawn upon than those that drop only one lumb. As a gen erai thing, ewes that drop twin lambs are good milk producers naturally, and while they may be able to furnish sufficient amount to promote the rapid growth In their progeny the first few weeks, the strain is generally too heavy. When It Is desirable to rear two lambs to each ewe, attention must be directed toward supplying supplementary food as soon as they recover normal condition after lambing. Dr. Carey knew how to mfcr and herbs and for over 40 years hia famous Marshroot Prescription 7TT helped thousands of despairing people It's the one remedy for backache troubles. Don't take chances--ask your druggist for it by name--liquid or tablet form--equally good. 75c. If your local druggist hasn't It he can get It from the Carev Medical Laboratories at Elmlra, N. Y. Many a man finds It difficult to laduce his neighbors to have a opinion of htm. All things are produced and judga# bv time. Progressive il\e stock where use the silo. every- Market trends and price fluctuations merit more attention than tiiey have received. • • The (latry cow is the most efficient farm animal for converting roagfe feeds into human food. • • "• Open windows Ipvlte cold germs to step outside and stay there, anklet the health fairies come in. * • • • * Silage Is not a substitute for grain, but it is a 100 per cent substitute for pasture when pasture is scarce e • e Dairying will always occupy a proaelnent and strategic place in any successful plan for balancing agriculture : Well-Mer ted Success Honored politically and profession^ ally. Dr. F V Pierce, whose picturp - appears her% > made a succesp; f e w h a v S e q u a l l e d . H i ( pure herbal rent*' edies which havfc stood the test" for fifty year* are still among the "best sel|» era." Dr. Fierce'# Golden Medical' Discovery is a blood medicine and stomach alterative. It clears thaskin, beautifies it, increases the blood supply and the circulation, and pint* pies and eruptions vanish quickie, Thi» Discovery of Doctor Piercea pats you in fine condition, with all the organs active. All dealers have it. Send 10 cents for trial pkg. of tablets n= nr Pie ice. Buffalo. N V FOR OVER ZOO YEARS hi--. ..i oil has been a worldwide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric acid conditions. HAARLEM OIL B mwm eorTectInternal troubles, stimulali lHal organs. Three sises. All druggists. IfMiqfc SB original genuine Gold Mkoai|» - Get This Startling NeutBooki HOUDINf Maetmr o/AJf Thmm EXPOSES "Margery*' STp'al lSpi sJte Argamasilla Aa Spanish N •' ifaiia claiming X.-R*v • 1l4ancrr badicd tlx Sciairtfic (nvt*6|atiQg Committee, nearly wio«in« S2SOO prize. IHowUnl iiipmeiKerrricki tdk why the September. 1924. Scie»tifij wkhtMld uatit in HMctal firnH baeliminated. 1 HHooaa*d&innii m< pnaea Any •aaailla. wbo claimed abaKty to aee oimm vaults,wmtchea. bom. Many »cicori*» aa«h<*» dcatcd i\i|«ma»ill«'» claim*; Howdiwl 4uySc<» ted them proving the N'obleiata a ccnwwfc 5Thirty-two p**ee, FULLY tLLUS 1 KATEgf photographic repeodwctiocM and annfk anyone can tnn Sent Pm*tjrmid fwr $1. t bill, money ordee.oecbnckNOWl^. ADAMS PRESS 278 WMT 11 Vh Stmet latfcCir,