r-fsw? fat&T McHBSBY PLAI»DEAUBE. McHENRY, U^U, :.JK^V^"-J|;' ... .;V^iVladr r'V:^ T.r cv*.«. 'fV„ .'•IR' ;,IKJ fe' • '•* «"^r - >T l^|.T UNTIL ARE BEST EGG PRODUCERS &S 5'iL*^ !& te-W-' &r\ f f j f . h^i' *&>"> r the D»lt«d 8Utw TIiihIhwI 0/ icrteiltin.) Bsm that demote too mtich fttaation •my la tfcu seasnn to the fall atjlee In tettiuwi not the kind that please the ftfck muf. It costs too much to iufSport tfeaai and they demand too long a vaoillMi period. But the ben that ^aan her old clothes until autumn has almost passed la the best oftho flock, for she has kept on laying since the previous fall or winter 80 now when you see a bird that looks •babbler than the others, do not condude that she Is at the no-account kind and that her smartly dressed •totem are the ones to keep. Take 8hort Vacation. ©f course some of the liana that aiblted earlier, say In August and September, are profitable enough to keep, but the cream of the flock Is made up of liens that do not change their feathers until October or November. Their molting will require only a few weeks and they will probably be laying again by the 1st of January. The poor ones, the early-molting loafers, will not begin until about this time, •ven though they have been resting since the middle of tlie summer. It takes one about two months and the other twice that long to get back into Jirodiiction. The poultry keeper who has an eye tor business will not neglect thla wornlooking late layer, for She is the beat profit maker he has. She needs § highly nutritious ration if she is to be In the best condition to start oik another year of high production. When aha quits laying and starts to molt she baa as much need for a ration strong In protein as she has when she is shelling out the eggs, as feathers are highly nitrogenous In their makeup. Tbey use the materials supplied by beef scrap, gluten feed, and oil meaL Tbe oil meal is very effective in keeping the feathers in a healthy condition. Hens that lay eggs late in the fall and in the winter are really producing 4omb aggs from 6.7 pounds of feed, and Leghorn pullets laid the Muaa number from 4.8 pounds. Simple mixtures are usually tba most desirable. As the fall advances and the days grow shorter the birds should be encouraged to put away as much feed as possible during the day so that their bodies will have plenty to work on for all of the 24 hours. A good handful of scratch grain for each bird at night will fill the crop. It is not desirable that the hens be made to work very hard for this feed. Be sure that the bens go to roost with a full crop. In ranking up ration* it la necessary to adhere to standards within certain limits, but some feeds may be substituted for others, as barley, wheat, and oats for corn. However, meat scrap and other animal-protein feeds can not be replaced by hlgh-vegetableproteln feeds. All changes should be made gradually, as sudden changes may decrease egg production. A greaJ many poultry men and livestock feeders now believe that if the animal lias a free choice it will select the ration that is most su'tnMe. At the government farm at Beltsville, Mrt., the following mash was made up by keeping account of tiie amounts of the different feeda a laying flock consumed : Samples of Balanced Rations. Mash. Scratch Mixture. If lbs. corn meat 1 lb. cracked Ctrn 6% lbs. meat acifSp 1 lb. wheat 1 lb. bran 1 lb. mt* 1 lb. middlings - , ^ Here is a simple ration that has given very good results with Leghorns, but that has proved too fattening for Rocks and Wyandotte*. Meat scrap, it will be seen, makes up over 25 per cent of the mash. Maah. Scratch Mixture. I iba. corn meat I lb*. cracked oora 1 lb. neat sera* l lb. oats For birds that are made too fat by the preceding ration, the following, "eHOSTHCTWt" CAUSESTBACEDY Woman Is Driven to Divorce and Death by Freak of Doctored t , Photograph. SAW WORK OF SPIRITS Ardent Believer in Spiritualism Takaa Her Own Life After Likeness of : Husband's First Wife Rsa#. • « paara la Photograph. $,_V • Topeka, Kan.--How ^ "ghost picture" was the cause of a domestic separation and subsequent suicide, aa example of the disturbing effect oftea produced by a freak practice frequently engaged in by professional photojpraphers, is related in an article la the Topeka Daily Capital. F. G. Willard, a photographer, tells toe following: Early In his experience as a photographer, said Mr. Wfllard, he was working in a big establishment In the East which made a specialty of retouching and reprinting old photographs or chromos. One day a middle-aged Irish woman came to the shop. She had been married recently, she said, to an Irish ward politician, whose first wife had been dead for some years. The present wife %as excitable and "high strung." All efforts to get a good picture of her husband had met with ill fortune, she complained. What she wanted was a copy of an earlier photograph qf her husband. Arm Around Bride's Neck. There was one drawback. The early photograph was taljen shortly after her husband had been married the first time. His arm was about his brlue'a neck. She explained that she wanted the bride removed, her husband's hand brought back In front of him, with no suggestion of enfolding another woman In its embrace. The photographer set to work and in a few days sent the woman a very good print of her husband--without the first bride and with a new arm cleverly painted Into the picture. In about six months he read with astonishment that the woman had left .ha? husband, who later secured a d! Hv' ;!V The Best Layers of the Flock and Those That 8hould Be Kept for Breeders Oo Not Molt Until November. i" • tt out-of-sessoa crop, for it is normal for the hen to lay for a time'ln the spring and early summer and rest for the remainder of the year. Profitable hens are really those that have the capacity to force their egg-making machinery, but they must have the right sort of feed with which to do it. That means feeding well-balanced rations "designed for the particular class, and sometimes for the particular breed. A balanced ration is a combination of feeds which furnish just the necessary amount of nutrients to produce the highest and most economical egg yields. The amount of feed needed to produce a dozen eggs varies with the kind of birds. According to experiments conducted by the United States Department of Agriculture general-purpose pullets produced a containing only 16 per ceit «f meat scrap but having considerable protein In other feeds, has been found a good one. Scratch Mixture. J2 lba cracked oorn lb. wheat -1 lb. oats 1 lb. barley Mash. * 1 lb. corn meqf' 1 lb. bran f •£' 1 lb. meat scrip 1 lb. middlings - 1 lb. ground oats Poultrymen resort to every possible means to get their hens to eat a great deal of feed, especially In the winter when the days are short. One way Is to cut the morning scratch feed to about half. The hungry bird then goes to the mash trough and gorges on the dry mash. Then to Increase the consumption of mash some of it is fed wet at noon and the tens will eat it when they would take no more of it dry. i i >iiji ui|j$ii in *frijii', iii'iii," ' ,, DARKENED CELLAR IS URGED ^ FOR STORING OF POTATOES Ex&wure to Light Quickly injures Quality of Tiber. **>'- Temperature Boat Suited for Proper Fjyaarvation Is One Ranging- 1 :|Jfrom 32 to 48 Degrees Large Pilee Are Not Favored. The object of 'storing any product Is to preserve its quality during as long a period as may be necessary or possible in order to permit its disposal at the most advantageous time. Investigations by the bureau of plant industry, United States Department of Agriculture, show that the temperature best suited to the proper preservation of potatoes is one ranging from 82 to 45 degrees. In regions where the powdery dry rot occurs a temperature of 33 to 36 degrees holds - V the disease In check better* than a higher one. ' it is found bast Hot to store pota- '"'V J toes in large piles when they are moist or covered with moist earth, as they quickly develop sufficient heat to lnjure the vitality of the tubers. If through unfavorable weather condltlojis It becomes necessary to store potatoes when they are wet and dirty, they should be spread out In a thin ' layer until they have become dry, after which they may be piled up. It Ss$-r\, Is not desirable to store potatoes to a ^ - greater depth than six feet > Potatoes intended for table use rifjp"' should always be stored In a darkl. i", V5 eoed cellar or storage house. Exposure to light quickly Injures tba quality of the potato for food pur- ;ij Unless the hawks on a farm are chickens, they should not be A hawk that la catching mice, is doing good -- ' Some ' Hawka Are | gophers and rabbits for the farmer. jfes. Apple Cnp la Smaller. Ttoe estimated apple crop thifr emm- '-"try over is less than half of what it in 1920l The Northwest has a greater proportion ft thla tbaa the 'Jjfjpa* and Mb. 7 " v -;'1n SMALL HOUSE FOR CHICKENS Now Lumbar Will Make Best Appear, anoa, but Packing Boxes Win- - Answer Purpose WelL In bunding a poultry house, new lumber will of course make the best appearing structure and will also be somewhat easier to work up because it can be bought In lengths most advantageous for the purpose. Houses for a few hens can sometimes be constructed from packing boxes, while used material or 'second-hand lumber, if it can be purchased cheaply and Is close at hand, will sometimes lower the cost of the house materially. Occasionally, also, where a high board fence Is available, the house can be built in the corner of the fence, thus saving the construction of the back and one side of the house. Care must be used to cover or batten the cracks, either by means of strips or by the use of roofing paper.- Construct the building so that the front of your henhouse will admit the sunlight. Send to the Division of Publications, United States Department of Agrlcul ture, for bulletins containing plan and illustrations; Farmer's Bulletin 880 Is a good one to have on hand. CEMENT FLOOR FOR FEEDING Farmer 8hould Remember to CUv* Slope to One Side to Insure Necessary Drainage. ^ Farmers who build cement feeding flows should remember to give the floor a good slope to one side. This Insures gt>od drainage, facilitates cleaning and makes It possible for the feeding floor to completely fulfill its function of providing a clean place to feed hogs. Some farmers have so located these floors - as to get a large amount of rainwater from rooffe of nearby buildings, which flushes the floor after each rainstorm and helps materially to keep them clean and >»****' . vjp : % Advantagee of Manwr^' Manure makes lean taimaTtet and flat farms fatter. "Look!" She Cried, "She's Coming Back! She'a Coming Back!" •orce. Then, on the heels of the separation and divorce, he read of the suicide of the woman. He did not know for several weeka what was the cause of the suicide. Then he saw the Irishman and asked him about it. "It was all caused by that picture ou made for her," the politician exilalned. "Right after the picture was made my wife became interested in spiritualism. Believed 8he Was Coming Back. "Then one day she came screaming into the living room-and dragged me Into the parlor. "'Look!' she cried, *she's coming back! She's coming back 1* ' 'I looked and there on the picture which reposed on the parlor easel was the faint outline of another form altting beside me. "Every day die watched the picture. It was uncanny. As each day passed the outline of my first wife became more distinguishable. I sprouted another arm in the picture, which seemed to reach out toward my first wife. "My wife declared It was a visitation of the spirit of my first wife returning from another world to point out the sin of remarriage. ' "Then she left me. After that it was a succession of weird spiritualistic seances with her until she became unbalanced on the subject. Time passed and I obtained a divorce. "Then one night I learned that she had been attending a seance, during which she believed my first wife appeared and condemned her for marrying me. As an upshot of this seance she killed herself. That's the story-- except that I burned the picture." DY1N6 DIRECTS RESCUERS Railroad Man Pinned Under Eft* 9ia« White Workers Seek to Release Him* Churchville, N. Y.--Dying and held beneath a heavy freight engine which had toppled Into a ditch here, wrecking locomotive and freight train of 88 ears, Michael Gerber, fifty years old, a New York Central engineer, of Newark, N. Y., directed his rescuers for more than four hours, while a physician gave medical aid and the Rev. Philip Golding, of Church ville* V Directed His Reseiisim ^ administered the last rites of Ms church. Gerber was finally rescued by members of a wrecking crew through the heavy steel mass that held him prisoner. He died soon afterward. Throughout the slow process of his rescuers cutting through the wreckage, the doomed engineer summoned all his energy to hold the heavy door of the fire box from swinging open /and emptying its hot coals upon him/ Escaping steam made the work of the rescue crew hazardous. The position of the man beneath the engine made It Impossible to use a hoisting crane to lift .the wreck , due to the danger of the fire falling on Gerber. The engineer collapsed just as the men completed their task of cutting their way to him. He was taken to a hospital In Rochester, where he died within a few hours. Both his legs were crushed, and In addition he suffered deep lacerations to the head and scalp and was badly scalded. Gerber was pilot of the first of two engines) hauling a freight train of 88 cars. The train was nearing Churchville at moderate speed when it ran Into an open switch. It is said, throwing the first engine and six cars into the ditch. MUSTARD GAS OUSTS SNAKES Drives Rattlers Out of Holes and Tjbty Are Killed by Ranehsrs in Washington. fftiffliia,' Wash.--By using flinwfhrfl gas, 53 rattlers were routed out of a den and killed by ranchers here. For years a huge pile of lava rock has harbored numbers of these snakes, from which they could not be driven, rhe Department of Agriculture finally suggested the use of some mustard gas, which was furnished a party made up of orchardlsta. The gas was freed in the porous formation through 150 feet of garden hose, and within 30 minutes, blinded and half-dead, rattlesnakes of all ages and sizes began wiggling themselves out of the Inferno. As they came within reach of the weapons held by farm lads they were laid low. Many communities bothered by venomous snakes are requesting some of this chemical to rkl Other sections of rattlers. Surgeon Sewed Cotton In Jaw, Is Sued. New York.--Lee Fisher Is suing Dr. Martin W. Ware because, he claims, after an operation on-his jaw a piece of gauze two and a half inches long was left In the wound. He asks $50,- 000 damages. Boys Fish, Older Folks Look On. Elyria, O,--The older residents here were kept at a distance by policemen while the boys of the town less than fifteen years old fished in the city park yd all Home Brew Caused Two V deaths in Windy City brew caused two strange deaths in Chicago recently. Sam Mlrobella, pouring wlhe from one cask to another in the basement of his home, lost his balance and drowned In a barrel of wine. Gabriel Trolh set fire to his house to divert the attention of firemen ffom his barn, in which a still had exploded. His clothes caught lire and be burned to death before help could reach him. WEDS AS FATHER IS DOOMED Boy, Who Testified Against Parent, Marries Day Judge Pronounced Sentence'. • * r • MMHletown, Conn.--RodjjTph Stfratte, married his sweetheart the same day the judge sentenced his father to die for first degree murder. Schutte testified against his father during the trail. He and his bride will live in the bungalow where his father attempted to kill his mother. TO IN SEA Peculiar Rites at Burial of Jai>- :fiese.-Saaor^r#™:,,; IRTV^RWVE AND TIIGNIFIED. ^OU^ te Western Minds the Ceremony Seems Rather Theatrical. The poop deck In the rear of the ship- was cast in mysterious shadows. The big wheel, the edge of the deck above, and the forms of men and women made sharp silhouettes against the sea, shimmering under the tropical moon. A long line of black clouds could be seen In the blue-black sky Just above the almost Invisible horizon. The throb, throb of the 'ship's heart and the swishing of the water past the stern were the bnly sounds, save an occasional whisper as passengers and crew quietly assembled to pay their respects to the dead. Above the propellers, a narrow white-draped platform had been raised, slanting over the rails toward the water. In front of this was a white-covered table ou which, barely distinguishable, were rice wtyh chopsticks, a dish of fruit, a dish of almonds (the favorite food of the deceased) and a vase containing scent sticks, which glowed in the darkness like r. group of tiny red stars, throwing off a wonderful fragrance on the torpid atmosphere. Suddenly a sharp wind swept the deck, sending the white cloths flapping as though anxious to break t^e uncanny silence. From the deck above came the voices of Japanese sailors, and a shuffling of feet down the steps. The burden was too difficult for measured tread as they appeared, carrying their dead comrade, sewn In white sail-cloth, heavily weighted. After placing the corpse cm the platform they fell Into their places In the long white lines of passengers and salt ore, leaving a narrow passage in front of the tahle. A bell tinkled, the engines stopped, and the captain, a gray-haired man, walked slowly forward. Bowing low before the body he chanted the speech to the dead in a choking voice. His voice rose and fell, now almost a wall, now dropping to Sow sullen notes, now a soft, comforting tone. The line of figures, on either side, swaying backward and forward In balance with the ship's motion, seemed to keep time to the cadence. f j The captain then reverently placed a glowing scent stick in the vase as a sign of his afTection. The remainder of the officers slowly approached In pairs and, bowing, placed their scent sticks In the vase. A signal from the captain, and two of the crew stepped forward and, lifting one end of the platform, sent their dead comrade to the deep. Then, gathering the offerings from the table, they cast them toward the white foam which marked the resting, place of a fellow sailor.--W. C, In London Daily Mail. Cutlcura Soap for the Complexion Nothing better than Cutlcura Soap daily and Ointment now and then as needed to make the complexion clear, scalp clean and hands soft and white.. Add to this the fascinating, fragreitt Cutlcura Talcum, and you have the Cutlcura Toilet Trio.--Advertisement. R-r-revengel H* had been bitter against the old top sergeant and to give a vivid outline of what he was going to do to him when he got out of service. Great was the surprise of a friend on meeting him about a year aftfer he had started wearing civics again to find him carrying a parrot which he intended giving to his old enemy. "How come?" asked the friend. "I thought you were sore at him." "Man, oh, man 1" gloated the other. •Tm gettr^g even. I taught the bird every word he knows."--American Legion Weekly. ANOTHER ^•r: ES6AI Krs. McCnber kmiti s I Opcntioi byTakkf Ipfifcf rakksa's VefetslitCtfK line • mM ^'^3 .,y«r -- •" - a worjfiown, baby, was born 1 suffered BL--"Altar *#1 mjmtk C#lrt C»rtott«»T»t Qnlrklr Rclirvm and taenia burning. Itching and torturing 1 •kin diseases It instantly stops the pain of burns. Heals without scars. and 60c Arnk TOUT druggist, or send 40c to Tb« J. W. Cole Co., Roc Word. HL. for ft Bask- •C*.--Advertisement. He Knew, The tramp shambled after the smartly dressed man carrying a prosperous looking bag. "Give us a couple of coppers, guvnor!" he pleaded. "Just somethin' to get some bread. Th!nk wot It is ter be friendless, despised, 'ated by all--" "Shut upi you fool!" said the man with the bag. To an Income tax collector." IN BUYtNG ASPIRIN ALWAYS SAY "BAYER" Look for the Name "Bayer* en Tab £ lets. Then You Neodc^ • -- 'i Never Worry; ' He Let It Stand. • Mistakes will happen in the best regulated families, especially If one of the number is slightly deaf, so while it sounds rather cruel to print, the following Incident wasn't nearly as funny as It sounds: The slightly deaf person met an old acquaintance on the street. This old friend was always making big deals and telling of them. When he stopped his deaf acquaintance he began talking excitedly. The slightly deaf man listened, but didn't understand a word. When the acquaintance had finished he said: "Congratulations. That's fine. Mighty glad to hear it," supposing, of course, that his friend was telling him of the successful consummation of a big deal. The acquaintance slightly taken back by tills, shouted that perhaps he didn't get him. With a rather long look upon his face the slightly deaf man replied that maybe he didn't. The acquaintance shouted as be started away: "I say I buried my mother-in-law yesterday." "AH right. I didn't understand you, but the congratulations still hold good." And both milled.--Kansas City Star. "Bayer Tablets of Asplr!n" can 1>e taken safely for Colds, Headache, Toothache, Earache, Neuralgia, Lumbago, Rheumatism, Joint Pains, Neuritis, and Fain generally. To get quick relief follow carefully the safe apd proper directions in each unbroken package of "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin." This package is plainly stamped with the safety "Bayer Cross.*" The "Bayer Cross" means the gen- .uine, world-famous Aspirin prescribed by physicians for over twenty-one years.--Advertisement ' left side that I not va& matm' floor unless! was all bumped Ing tomyeMa.1 tored with doctors but' relief and they I would fcsva taha*a an operating My mmftw inaMaA sa mv taking l£«a E. Pmkhanrs Vefat*- ble Compound sari I soon found relief. Now I can doditty own work and it IS the Vegetable OMB* pound that has saved me from an operation. I cannot praise year medicine tola highly and I tell all of my frisadi and neighbors what the Compotmd dU for me?' -- Mrs. MARGARET MCCHHSSR^. 27 S Frazier St., Georgetown, IEifiow. Mrs . McCumher is one of the uasMBBbered thousands of houaswivaa vte struggle to keep about their daily while suffering from aflwiAwt^ to women with backache, dwacbes, beadaehes, be&ring-down puna and nervousness,-- and if every such woomb should profit by her experience and giv* Lydia E Pinkham's Vegetable 0on» pound atrial they would get welL finally Free* uring Backacl Fanner's Wife Frea Torturing Backachei' iBdaitnc teekachd so intense that Sharp knives could not have hart m Mr*. A. J. Kobbins, of Qeebeck, Te regained health and happineea 1 Dodd's Kidney PlUa. Weakened Iddneye Made her eaee seem hopeleM. Her back muaclee wwa so stiff and weak ehe could not riao from a chair. Doctors, trea medicine--nothing pvi relief. Despairing, Mrs. Robbina _ Induced to try Dodd'a Kidney PtBa. In a remarkably short time ahe legatee* her former good health per manentlr freed from all kidney tBe. Mrs. Robbies writes: "I bad not 1 The Object of It. Mrs. Crawford--I don't see how you could join such a club when you don't see the object of it. Mrs. Crabshaw--You see, dear. It meets Monday, and that's the only day In the week I bad no place to go. taking Dodd a Kidnegr PUIa long before this trouble left me. 1 oannot any tea much in praise of Dodd'a." Sufferers from headaches, btckMbak dtasineaa, rheumatic pains or •wnlUa joints oar ret this same glorious, permanent relief. Ask your druggist Car DODD'S, the original--three tVs te name, or mall 60 cents direct to Doddfe Medicine Co , Buffalo. N. T.--a large box will be sent at once, TOUCAN SAVE$5019 Br mmh| j to at aB aik.. -- , MOTHER, QUICK! GIVE CALIFORNIA FIG SYRBf FOR CHILD'S BOWELS Jhraa a sick pfclld loves tba "fruity" taste of "California Fig Syrup." If the little tongue is coated, or if your child is listless, cross, feverish, full of cold, or has colic, a teaspoonful will never fail to open the bowels. In a few hours you can see for yourself hc»» thoroughly It works all the constipa* tion poison, sour bile and waste from1 the tender, little bowels and gives you a well, playful child again. --i Millions of mothers keep "California Fig Syrup" handy. They know a teaspoonful today saves a sick child tomorrow. 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 an Imitation fig syrup.--Advertisement ttat Guilty Conscience^ It was at a football dinner, and one of the diners had, well, he had dined, of course. About 10:30 p. m. be rose from the table murmuring something about sending a message to his wife to the effect that he would not be hope that sight An hour later, as he bad not returned, some of his friends went In search, of him. They looked in the lounge, the conservatory, and all over the place until someone remembered his remark about a message. "Let's look in the phone box?l' he suggested. They looked--and there he was In a heap in the corner. They woke him up. "Thank heaven I" he sighed as he opened his eyes. "Some one has Cfitm to ball me out at lasL" ;; ? Learning at a Discount. Too are willing to concede knowledge Is power?" "I don't know. Did you ever see a college professor trying to attract the attention of a hotel clerk when a multimillionaire was approaching the desk, accompanied by half a dozen ovjsrioaded bellhops?" BDSCHEE'S SYRUP ^ Allays Irritation, 8oothee and Haals Throat and Lung Inflammation. The almost constant irritation of a cough keeps the delicate mucous membrane of the throat and lungs in a congested condition, which Boschee's Syrup gently and quickly soothes and heals. For this reason it has been a favorite household remedy for colds, coughs, bronchitis and especially for lung troubles In millions of homes all over the world for the last flfty-flve years, enabling the patient to obtain a good night's rest, free from coughing, with easy expectoration In the morning. Tou can buy Boschee's Syrup wherever medicines are sold.--Advertisement. No Wonder. Biz--Whadjamean your insoamla la due to heredity? , Dix--My father was a night editor on a Greenland newspaper.--Boston Transcript. "* v Women Made Young Bright eyes, a clear skin dad a body lull of youth and health may tie yours if you will keep your ayst in order by regularly taking GOLD MEDAL Tha workTa atandard remedy for Udnsyt liver, bladder and uric add troubles, w enemies of life and looks. la use alas* 169& All druggists, three si fas U»k for the nam. CM MedU e* eeesy ead *ic»i m WMIm RATS and MICE MUST KILLED STEARNS1 ELECTRIC PASTE r ItMdyfer Um--Bottwr TkaaTVapa. ' XX recti oa« la U la WWT to. Rate. Mlos. Coekroaehes, AM* I tmtrojr food and property and SU'trnt' Electric Pmtt* tome tlMH to no from th« hut Mine tor water and fleet i" Kc and |l.Gd. Money baek If l» fUla.** U. S. Government bay* It. « OUIJA OIL. pronounced We-ja. trade registered. iiatcic Egyptian remedy Mi Rheumatism. Neuritis. Catarrh, etc. Bxtee* nal use. Sent postpaid for &0c by Wm. FuM Sole Dlat., Harford and Federal. Bait.. S4 DON'T WORK A1JL YOLK A wtai iareatment in liexia. the world'* greatM oil Held, should mean independence Infer* mation free. Tou can Invest from ten del> lara up. Write Alexia Petroleum Trust. TM W. T. Waggoner Building. Fort Worth. W. N. U., CHICAGO, NO. 49-1921. When you make money foilowiaf another man's advice you ought nevai to get through heing rrateful. ADUITDIMMHNCTOEUDr CAbCARA xCkdtre jC&U&tn Giant Eagle Fail* to Carry Off Girl. Vanderhoof, B. C.--A bald eagle with a wing spread of seven feet, attempted to carry away a nine-year-old girl from her home here. The eagle was beaten to death by a nelghbe$^ The child was not seriously hurt. Man 9tonea Dog, Breaka Arm. " Bowling Green, O.--When Bert Stevens hurled a stone at a dog, the bone In the upper part of his arm broke. Stevens was attacked by the dog, and threw the atone In self-d* faiM ' '-V: "" **37? 8&lf-Effaelng. Lifting yourself by your boot-straps •eems easy compared with the feat of the marsupials that the teacher In Harper's Magazine questioned Johnny about. "What are marsupials?" she asked the little fellow. "Animals that have pouches In their stomachs." came the quick reply. "And for what purpose do they use the pouches?" continued the teacher. Ignoring the slight lnsccuracy of the reply. "I am sure you know that, too." "Tes'm," said Johnny promptly. "The pouches are for them to crawl into and conceal themselves when pursued."-^louth's Companion. festernfenada Offers .Health aiuftfeotth act tied on her FREE hotneeteads or bought I ». Tjey have estabtiebed their oe» cured pcoeperity and Mtpcntaa (rain-crowns aectfciae of toe araMa re iaetill to be had •« eaay tecaNi Professional Pride. "My little baby girl," proudly pro. claimed the young dentist, "is only eight months old and Is getting a tooth." "Huh!" sneered the young chiropodist, "my little baby boy ia only sevan months old and is getUQg a cor^rb* Science and Inreatloa. • VU issWtMrtS ItOtfeMho haw* _ _ : fautatt attractive) homes and | Inthegn _ I provinces then FwM* Urt at SIS «• SM aatea --lead similar to that which t has yielded from 20 to 48 to the acre--oats, barie; and is tin ' abundance, while nriaiau horeae. cMSt, alMMp and boaeM equally profitable. Hia&c&c*ian»- en in WeiteraCanada have railed crops la aatasll season trorth more than the whole coat at (Mr Healthful climate, good neighbor*. < lea. The diaaate i •*"VJ