Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 30 Apr 1925, p. 3

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mm Me HENRY PLAINDEALER, McHENRY, ILL. <7 •** XM u *ak*i MOTHER:- Flctcher's |Castoria is especially prepared to relieve Infants in arms and Children all ages of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and, by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. To avoid imitations, always took for the signature of Absolutely Harmless -- No Opiates. Physicians everywhere recommend it. THE BEST RECOMMENDATION ~ FOR -- Bare-fo-Hair Is tile number who are trying to imitate it. If Bare-to-Hair wu not growing hair on bald head* there would be no imitator*. If there is baldness or signs of it you can't afford to neglect to use "Font's Original Bare to-Hair," Correspondence GITCD Personal Attention W. H. FORST, Mfgr. SCOTTDALE - PENNA. If You Have H-' Cold in Head Itching Skin Pain in Back or Piles or know of a wound on man or beast that will not heal, try this oil. Write for the free Bottle and see how quickly it Kills Pain and Heals 35 Cts. at Drug Stores Return this ad and get a 1(V bottle tree. M. R. ZAEGEL A COMPANY S30 Eighth Street - - Sheboygan, Wis. FREE FOR RUN " Natural Proceeding Wifle--"Well, 1 declare! That coffee man has given me green coffee!" Hubby--"Roast him, my dear!" Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION 12k IHDiGESTJOMj 6 BELL-ANS „ Hot water Sure Relief BELL-ANS 25$ AND 75* PACKAGES EVERYWHERE FOR OVER 200 YEARS haarlem oil has been a worldwide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric acid condition*. HAARLEM OIL •WA.4BB!IA correct internal troubles, stimulate vital organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine GOLD MEDAL. Love May Yet Be Pa# on Scientific Basis The matrimonial reports of our day are undertaking to put love on a sound, scientific basis. Let us skip a few hundred years and behold the synthetic romance of youth and a maid of some generations to come. The young man, armed with a-stethoscope, a tape measure and the means of making a blood test, goes to call upon the lady whose charms have attracted him, ventures the Toledo Blade. He taps a vein, listens to the thump of her heart and to the wind whistling through her bronchial tubes, and ends his Iab6rs with a careful examination of the soles of her feet. Satisfied with the showing, he makes a request for a kiss and obtains one, duly hyglenlzed through a strainer whipped from a vanity bag. That la, he does unless the young womai} wallops him instead. A Lady ef Distinction la recognized Dy the delicate, fascinating influence of, the perfume she use*. A bath with Cutlcura Soap and hot water to thoroughly cleanse the pores followed by a dusting with Cntlcara Talcnm powder usually means a cleat, sweet, healthy skin.--Advertisement. Electric Cranes Valuable More than 3,000 of the scrap metal yards in the United States use electric cranes equipped with electrlc-magnets to handle their stocks of old iron and steel. Wild Animal* Being Saved A concreted world-wide movement undertaken tc protect wild animals-- proving to be successful. Great Britain started the movement with bird sanctuaries, and America followed. The first wild life sanctuary In the United States was Yellowstone National park. In Africa the movement has taken popular hold. Many types of wild life have become practically* extinct, as for Instance, the seacow, biggest of amphibians, and the bustard, not to forget the elephant In certain countries. F&r Few Days After Litter . la Born Animal Requires Good Attention.) i Oty K. W. CRAMPTON, Lecturer la Animal Husbandry, Maedonald College. Quebec.) For some ten days after the Utter is born the sow requires a good deal of detailed attention. It is during this period that the pigs get their start In life and the care and feed given* their mother determines to a large extent whether this start is good or bad. Once past the ten-day mark, however, the problem is pretty much one of feeding the sow for maximum milk flow. After the litter reaches thla age there is little danger of their getting more milk from their mother than is good for them. . The Nursing Period. This marks the beginning of the real nursing period and the ration of the sow will stand a change at this time. The rather light, cooling mixture used to start on is not strong enough to stimulate nor maintain the maximum milk flow Which now be- >mes an important consideration The ceding practice can also be altered to nclude a third feeding. It lias been found that three feeds a day to a heavily milking sow gives somewhat better results than where the feeding is done only morning and night. The instigation of the third feeding at this time may also simplify the question of the ration change.' As already suggested, the sow now » eeds more heavy, milk-producing stuffs, and nothing fills this bill betier than ear corn. When the time comes to make the change In the ration it can be done very simply by giving the sow ear corn at noon. In other words, the regular slAp feed given morning and night is not changed either In kind or amount, the increase and change being affected by using a noon feeding of ear corn. Six average ears of corn will add about two pounds of grain to the daily allowance and one has but to watch the sow when this is fed to be convinced that she relishes it. Furthermore, corn is an excellent milk producer, carrying pound for pound more energy-producing products than any other common hog feed. It is not to be Inferred that six ears of corn .at noon In addition to the six pounds of meal fed in the regular slop feeds will suffice throughout the nursing period. This is simply the first allowance which in Itself does Increase the feed some two pounds per day. A big sow nursing a dozen husky pigs will ueed further increases as titue goes on. These needs will be indicted and governed by her appetite though ordinarily a total dally allowance of 12 pounds of meal or its equivalent will be found sufficient for most individuals. These subsequent increases should be proportional in all three meals and the corn should not be allowed at any time to constitute more than one-third of the daily feed. When Corn Is Not Available. * For the man who has no ear corn the problem is a little different iu practice though the same in principle. Such feeds as hominy (yellow preferred), barley or rye will answer the same purpose as corn though not quite as efficiently. When these feeds are to be used they should be ground where necessary and added to the regular meal mixture in amounts up to onethird of the total mixture. The noon feeding under this plan will be a slop ,-- feed, the total day's allowance being divided into three equal feeds. In addition to the meal, don't forget to keep fresh wa^r before the sow at all times. This is quite important for sows in milk. It Is well to make the slop rather thick and then provide the drinking water separately. A sow's thirst is variable from day to day, and it Is next to Impossible to gauge how much she will want. If her water Is all included In the slop, there is a chance for too much or too little drink being supplied on a given day. Lastly, feed each sow separately. A sow should be fed to maintain as nearly as is possible her condition throughout her nursing period. No twb sows will require the same amounts of feed to do thh£ Then again, when they are fed In groups, there are bound to be some sows that will be kept away from the trough and Will not get their proper share. A little time spent in feeding and caring for the sow during this period will be well repaid later when the litter starts for market. : v . FENDS SISTER, NOW SEEK* BROTHER, M Scot, Aged 98, Has Been < Stoking Relatives fop ; SO Years. Get back that lost weight! WHEN you start to waste away to a shadow, when the 'color leaves your cheeks and your poor, tired legs will hardly hold up - your weakened body it's high time you started taking a fine tonic and builder like Tanlac. Tanlac willhuild you up and make you feel that life's worth living. Made from roots, herbs and bark gathered from the fourcorners of the Earth and compounded lUider the exclusive Tanlac formula, Tanlac is j ust what the poor, Starved body needs. First of all it cleanses the blood 4fcream and puts the digestive organs in order. You find, after a few days' treatment, tttatyou want to eat. Pretty soon the welcome color steals back into your cheeks god the scal«»* tell you that you're gaining weight. From then o*i it's only a saort time until y^u'rl feeling fit is a fiddle. Millionhof men and women have taken Tanlac with great benefit. Itf ore than one hundred thousand people have written us glowing tributes to this wonderful tonic. First Bottle Brought Improvement "Pains in my side and back caused me lots of trouble day and night. 1 could hardly walk my beat. Tanlac fixed me up quick. I noticed the improvement after the first bottle." * Patrolman Wm. J. Bader 324 Paul Ave., Belleville, 111. Trench Silos Popular in * Benson County, N. D. Seventeen trench silos were con1" •tract ed in Benson county. North Dakota, during 1924, after two demonstration silos of this type, filled the previous season, had been opened and the contents found in practically perfect condition, according to reports recently received by the United States Department of Agriculture. The two demonstration silos were dug and filled by two neighbor farmers of the county in 1923, under the direction of the county agricultural extension agent. Now there are trench silos in all communities of the county. Labor was the chief item in the construction of the silos, and most of the farmers making them were able to do the excavating during slack periods In other farm operations. The two demonstration silos were each dug in two days' time, principally with horses and a scraper. One is only 12 by 20 feet and 8 feet deep, the other slightly larger in area and 10 feel deep. One of those made in 1924 is 92 feet long. Covers were made of timbers placed across the trench with old fence posts covering tlieiu and wire and straw on top. By exercising reasonable care danger of the silage freezing was elimfhated. New Tork--Thomas Allen's quest «f half a century is not yet ended, tout It Is approaching a successful conclusion. He has found his long-lost SLA-" ter, Elizabeth, after 50 years of separation. He hopes. soon to find his brother, James. If James Is living, he is one hundred three years old. Elizabeth is one hundred twO and Thomas is ninety-eight. A Scottish soldier of fortune, VFBO roamed the seas without winning fortune, Thomas Allen knew he most sometime effect a reconciliation with his family. It's a small world, and the way time mows down peopleother people--It's a still smaller world. The Aliens are a long-lived family, and that's how he found Elizabeth. "My hunt became easier every year,** Thomas explained recently. "At first, when I traveled here and there and asked for Elizabeth Allen or James Allen I was always on the wrong track. But when I got to asking about Elizabeth Allen, a hundred years old, you know, it was very different. Tells Friendly Cop. of Tghoeo ds ebcrreeatd s Yeast Foam "I made it all myself" "The Art of Baking Bread" Northwestern Yfeast Cot • 1730 North Ashland Ave. Chicago, 11L * Afhotmf* to Same Thing There isn't any doubt that a couple cf men get the same-gratification out nf a day of spring fishing that a rouple of women get out of a day of spring shopping. "Two days ago I was In Montreal, i MRS. URQUHART I got friendly with a 'cop.* I told him, as I've always told every one that suits my fancy, what my one aim In life was. It was to find Elizabeth and James. I asked htm, not hopeful of any success, whether he knew an Elizabeth Allen who would be one hundred two years old. If she were living." " 'Well,' says this 'cop,' 'I dont know any Elizabeth Allen who Is one hundred two, but you ought to re- GETS REWARD Burbank Tomato First Of all tomatoes the Burbank is ohe of the best liked by gardeners at University Farm. The Burbank Is fully as early as Earllana and is better for the market because it is smoother and Is not subject to cracks caused by growth, says B. I. Burrell of the division of horticulture, University of Minnesota. It has been under test for four years at University Farm and has always made good. Burbank, the plant wizard of California, originated It. „ * Take Care of Alfalfa A good field of alfalfa is worth much planning and careful work. First decide to have alfalfa and then make plans to get It. The most successful results are obtained by planning for the field at least one year in advance. If, however, proper conditions are already at lmnd, plant it now. If these proper conditions eannot be secured now, then plant only a part of the acreage yon should have, do the work well, and you will have alfalfa. PROFIT FROM BABY CHICKS MAKE OVER RANCH IN IDAHO Mrs. Urquhart of Omaha wants every housewife to share her good fortune in possessing a handsome reward. Here Is what she says: "This Is the way I did It. I answered an ad by writing for a free 10c bottle of Liquid Veneer and I found it so wonderful for dusting and polishing that I told fifteen of my friends about It and the makers sent me entirely free and postpaid, a great big, beautiful $2.00 Liquid Veneer Polishing Mop." Then Mrs. Urquhart goes on to say: "I am very proud and pleased with the reward given for what I have done, so will take great pleasure in showing It to friends." Twenty thousand of these $2.00 Mops are going to be given away to housewives. Write for a free 10c bottle and ask for descriptive circular 1R telling how easily you. too. may have one of these mops. Address Liquid Veneer Company, Dept. L, Buffalo, N. JT---Ad*. What hit? "Say, Is a nightmare a dreamT* "No, foolish. A nightmare^ Is the milkman's horse." Entire Farming System Rebuilt by Poultry. (Prepared by tlx United States Departsssat ot AgriculMire.) A new line of work 5on the farm Some times rebuilds the entire farming syste^ somewhat like the House That Jack Built. This resulted from A trial which George Lucore, of Lincoln county, Idaho, made of commercial poultry work some three years fego, according to reports to the United States Department of Agriculture. Mr. Lucore started poultry raising on his farm with the purchase of 1.000 baby chicks in the spring. Before winter he built a laying house for his pul lets. This was a new type of house In his community, built from a plan which he and his county agent had worked out together. His method of feeding and managing his laying hens, obtained from the same source, was also new In that locality, and the neighbors were much Interested In the outcome. The flock paid all expenses of the venture within 12 months, the report states. He repeated his undertaking the next year with 2,500 baby Chicks, putting up additional houses, and has continued the work since. To ald*ln taking care of the problem of supplying proper poultry feeds, Mr. Lucore has been adding to his herd of cows, as he finds' skim milk his best source of protein. His cream output has accordingly Increased. Because he wants to be sure of as large a flow of milk as possible he has turned his attention to growing dairy feeds and ample pasture. So in equipplngjils poultry plant, Mr. Lucore has also developed a dairy Industry fend a carefully planned crop rotalhMa system for his farm. * When you know it has worked wonders for so many folks it's folly not to take advantage of Tanlac's help yourself. Don't put it oft another day. Get a bottle at your druggist's now and start the good work right away. TAKE TANLAC VEGETABLE PILLS FOR CONSTIPATION TANLAC FOR. YOUR HEAJLTH No Hurry to Move Bees That Are Quiet in Hive Bees which are getting along quietly In their quarters in the cellar should not be moved to locations outdoors until the pussy willow and soft maple are In bloom, says Francis Jager of the bee culture division at University Farm, Minn. To take them out the first warm, springlike day is to Invite heavy losses on account of cold winds and Changeable weather. In their search for blooms the bees fly long distances and If overtaken by chilling winds and Storms they are unable to reach the home port. Delay in moving them w|ll save much of this dwindling, as beekeepers call It. The rulb then Is to keep the quiet, orderly colonies in their quarters as late as possible--antil there are blooms nearby for them to work on. Exception to the rule follows If the bees are noisy and In bad condition. AH such Bhouldobe placed in their summer locations as early as possible and GTVAA * EFAAIWE to dean themselves. RUM lAcrefc Bro., (1 sows need exercise an not be too fat. . s s j i d In ordering garden seeds be sure to select standard varieties. • • • See that all young growing animals have room to take plenty of exercise, e • e When farms are selling cheaply is a good time for the young man to buy. • • • Careful cutting of the wood supply should help to Improve the farm woodlot. • • • buying Imported clover seed Is likely to be an unprofitable form of gambling. - ' e • • The factaee with several source* of income is the one who la reaping the largest profits. • '• • . Vegetables of like culture should be grouped. , Keep the vines together, the roots together, etc. * * . • •,< There's no hurry to take the bees from the cellar unless they are getting uneasy and noisy. Older settled states have turned with success from crops us a chief income to cows, pigs sod hens. "It Was Thomas, No Mistake About That." member that she probably got married sometime, and isn't using the Allen part at all.' " 'Right,' says I. 'Do you know any Elizabeth who might be one hundred two years old?" " 'That I do,' ssys he. There's sn Elizabeth McMurray lives somewhere around New York. In a town called Sparkill, three miles or so south of Nyack. Why don't you try her?'" Thomas did. He caught the next train for New York, took the first tram after that for Nyack, and then traveled out to Sparkill. Sturdy and Alert. Spry and hearty notwithstanding his years, he walked from the station to the home of Mrs. William Schuh, whose mother, Mrs. Elizabeth McMurray, lives with her, so the neighbors said. Time does Indeed chunge people, Thomas found, but there was something about the Aliens that Mrs. McMurray still possessed. There could be no doubt about it. "That's you, Elizabeth, Isn't it 7" aald Thomas. Mrs. McMurray peered through her glasses at the figure of the' old, old man with a vigorous Allen voice. It was Thomas. No mistake about that. "Yes, Tom, ... I was beginning to think you weren't going to come any more." Thomas now plans to start looking for his brother. Rumor had it that he was last known tot>e in Philadelphia. Possibly he died there. Thomas entered the British army 75 years ago«, He saw service-in every part of the globe. Every five years he came home to his people. The last tiinej he came home they were gone to America. The* quest began In 1875. Mrs. McMurray, long a widow, is supported in comfortable circumstances by her daughter and son-inlaw, who is superintendent of the Rockland county cemetery. If You Need»Medicine . ' You Should Have the Best Have you ever stopped to reason why it is that so many products that are extensively advertised, all at once drop out ;SF sight'and are soon forgotten? The reason is plain--the article did nof fulfill the promises 'of the manufacturer. This Spplies more particularly to a medicine. A medicinal preparation that has real Curative value almost sells itself, as like an endless chain system the remedy is recommended by those who have been benefited, to those who are in need of it. A prominent druggist says: "Take for example Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, a preparation I have sold for many years and never hesitate to recommend, for in almost every case it shows, excellent results, as many of my customers testify. No other kidney remedy has so large a sale." According to sworn statements and verified testimony of thousands who have used the preparation, the success of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root is due to the fact, so many people claim, that it fulfills almost every wish in overcoming kidney, liver and bladder ailments, corrects urinary troubles and neutralizes the uric acid which causes rheumatism. You may receive a sample bottle of Swamp-Root by Parcel Port- Address Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., and inclose ten cents: also mention this paper. Large and medium size bottles for sale at all drug stores. Richea Defined Riches do not consist In having more gold and silver, but In Having more In proportion than our neighbors.-- Locke. Your life, your property, your crop* are all wisely insured. But suikt from your car remains a gamble. And yet, by using only HNLH4 oil you can get the cheapest, moat *•? liable service insurance. MsaaHsts OFLT have the body and backbone to do <H# job of lubricating properly. HaaaHotor OS is service lllilll You can buy both at the sign. Monarch MauOsetaxtaf OST Council Bluffs, Iowa Toledo^ MonaMotor Oils & Greases GearThePores Of Imparities With Cuticura Soap Saep. Otomtnt, Till ia soM ' One Secret of Beauty. It Foot Comfort Frequently yoa bear peoplw say, "My feet perspire win-v ter and summer when 1 pot; on rubbers or heavier footwear- then when 1 remove my shoes my teet cbiol qnu-kij and often my Ins*-' •ecru « ei through, "laeiljjl I community thousands aowt OK A Sea's Feet-- ' , the foot-bath i then duet the fe shake tnto the •mirentk, healing LiieSsi. . FoHt)irectioaeoalMMt.l%Wr Package and a FOOUKA<«< Walking Dell eeati/. Ifcas. Addre»«, Allen's Fo««-£aat. Le Bay. B. V.. , Keep Stonack ad Bsvek Brfi By siftnf faabr the bamlsai vegetable, infants' and chDdrea'er MRS. wMsuna SVRUP brinffa utooiihiss, gntifjing remits In making baby's stomach digMS food and bowels move as they ahoold at teethinr time. Guaranteed free from nareotice. opta tee. alcohol and alt harmful in*redl> ents. Safe I satisfactory. ir THIN KINO or FLORIDA Come to Lynn Haven on 8t. Andrewe WRITE TO CHAMBER OF COlilfBRi WANTKD--KAKM OH HTOKK From owner. Semi description. D. WHITSL T18 Fourth Ave.. HUNTINGTON. W. v£ ONE DOLLAR BRINGS YOU POHTTUS booklet how to make bi« money In wheaflt Inside information. KENNEDY. S72. SOUTH BBNT>. IND. W. N. U., CHICAGO, NO. 18-192&. Accidentally Kills I Self \Skipntng Rabbit I Rome.--Eagerness to help his sister In preparing dinner caused the death of a young mechanic of this city recently. He took a sharp knife and began to cut a piece off a rabbit which was hanging on a nail fta the wall. Meeting with resistance In a tendon, he exerted so much strength that the knife, deviating from its direction, penetrated his heart. Dogs Bring Help Quebec.--Huskies recently added another chapter to the dogs' record as messengers of mercy by hauling several sledge loads of medicines to lumber camps along the north shore of the St. Lawrence. ^ Die* in Barber's Chair * New York.--Jacob Cohen, sixty-two, fell asleep In a barber's chair while being shaved. When the barber found he could not awaken Cohen he summoned a physician, who said Cohen had died of natural causes. o4 5-Passenger Closed Star for $750 ABIO, wide, roomy 2-door Sedan with generous ample leg room, front and rear. Compare its roominess with any other 2-door Sedan in its price class. Broad doors and a right hand seat that folds toward the drives* give ample space for easy entrance and egress. Wide windows and a one-piece windshield give clear vision. A ventilator in the cowl and two above the windshield provide fresh air without exposure to the weather. The body is finished in dark blue lacquer, with two white stripes. Top is artificial leather embellished with carriage guards. The radiator shell is nickeled. Powered with the Star Million Dollar motor, this car offers ea> ceptional value at a price which puts it within the reach of alL Sap* Low-cost TrvMsportatioit Star ma Cars •no SS20 STAB CAR PRICES j. _ c. JUmsfaag, MMk. TOURING ^ . . . $540 2-DOOR SEDAN . . COUPSTER r . . . $425 4-DOOR SEDAN . . COUPE . . * . . $715 COMMERCIAL CHASM . DURANT MOTORS * INC • Broadway at 57th Street, New York Dealers <uui Service Srartewi Threwskow* tfc* Ustel Stmtm mmd Plants: Elizabeth, N J. • Lansing. Mkk. * Oakland. C«L £• / ; - * '* % 'if ' "* • v3S * -;*1*iy • •'MStiiS: . , . # v*Ssi TV-*'*"

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