a locomotive carve--Ig one of the Aown in a report ot£ road Track" an ducted at the Oil* The work, foremost ing con- Illinois. of the ic«, has beflki d TT" 1914 un- Wi Tel •?- • tmwy jiMfptiaf Kbcord- " latfnp&hftfce depart* " ^mA earn coun* the <£gb ty council; teachers'#aalaries, of men teachers hap been inai. - r cwjipp In 41 counties, the pay of t h ,%eB>iM teachers in 63 counties and ot lUl'liechers In 62 counties! For the ptlpl year 1921-22, will county paid tlfciA-hlghest average salary for all taadkoro with an average salary of $1«8TO.78. Lake county was next with ; to average salary of $1,«3j0£. Men teediern in Lake county received an f • nversge salary of $2,28MS. and women, $1,399.68. Thg largest aver- , ft#® percentage Increase In all counties Ifrom the preceding school year was In Ford county, where from fen average «f S80&21 yearly pay la 1920-21. teachers' pay was raised to 9956.41 in „• f ^ . 1.921-22--an average percentage inr '* _ -grease of 28.41. Men's salaries were U Increased ftom g8M-40 to $1,428J52, for im average increase of 61.524 per cent, £> ; _ find women'* pay from 1796.67 to y, $95&4l, fr,r an average increase of f.4 10,05 per cent In Ford! county. «!' Springfield.--The Illinois com'crop ^-pr--f»rospect w%» reduced 12,000,000 bush- > fl« during September due to continued v jflrought and unseasonable high tem- ; , jferature In the forepart of the month, ;t , Crowding crops to maturity, the crop ^ feport of the Illinois crop reporting v.^ervlce for October reported. These • jfondltlons while adverse to yield have ^.'increased the merchantable crop. New .' «orn will be available for market »^rly. The average condition of 80 ^,J>er cent' of normal on the first of Oc- * lober compares with the ten-year average of 77 per cent, and indicates a k «;#rop of 313,250.000 bushels, Thte t» ^,000,000 bushels above the total pro- •»" ifluetion of last season, but is 24,000- •f ®00 below the average production. Springfield.--A Sangamon county > farmer has erected a bam for hah- ^Ung seed corn that Is said to be a model for the purpose. Asa Moore's , place Is known throughout all this sec- K tion as one of the most modern build- ^ tj lngs of its kind in the state. It Is S . furnace-heated, electric-lighted, frost froof and equipped with elevator tervlce. The building is three stories '-^V. high and has 60 glass windows. Mr. •; *;• '* Aloore selects and stores his corn seed during October, but shipping does not j..- I>egin before the first of January. In |he intervening months the corn dryg ft-,. Jn the alow, natural vqpy said to be Necessary to proper germination. ' . Springfield.--All citizen^ of this *#tate are asked to assist in naming Illinois' 25 greatest women not now living by the Women's Universal Alliance of Washington. The names of the illustrious daughters of Illinois lire to be given on a tablet the alli- ,'Ance plans to place In the Temple of Womanhood which It la to build In » . Washington. Fer the best list of 25 Illinois women with a short descrlp- , (ion of their careers sent from Illinois, the alliance ofTers a prise of $50. |'r :|Uiyone over twelve years of age can |r .tompete. If s /V Chicago.--Constitutionality of the 'n ' , f apper-Tincher bill, known as the J.' *grain futures act," Is to be tested by > ; Ihe Chicago board of trade directors. - f lenry S. Bobbins, attorney for the - Aboard, who obtained a decision from flhe United States Supreme court declaring the previous Capper-Hncher v t ^fll unconstitutional, has given an f* ^/ SHPinlon that the present bill, which be- S .. |omes operative November 1, is ,un- " lonsrimtbaaL ^ St CBarles.--August Nelson, fifty, Was spoken of as "a man who never Jook a drink of any intoxicant, and fcever lost his temper," and as "*• jjnodel husband." But he tinkered : With Inventions, and' It is believed dlsr Appointment over jhls failure to perfect a perpetual motion device caused v y tdm to take his life by hanging hiaa- ^ >,'#elf to a tree on the bank of Fox river. % Urbana.--Each student at the Unl- , •„ terslty of Illinois costs the state of v ; Illinois $478 a year, according to stab' Cistlcs made public. The expenditures •f the state institution amounted to $8,965,885 in the fiscal yea# 1920-21, /\ • $3,437,614 being, expended on malntet Bance and operations. Bloomington.--Receivers Blerd and jtVheelock of the Chicago it Alton railtoad have announced they will recom- £'.£• mend to the United States District if * ' »#ourt that a short-time loan of $2,000,- *x> be negotiated in order to handle the large business in sight, to meet .. pressing Herts and rehabilitation needs, Belvidere.--Urged by church people $o pass an "ordinance prohibiting Sun- £ #ay motion pictures and other shows, the city councllhas decided to call a jfpecial election and put the proposition a vote of the people. Reck Falls.--Protestant churches of" k Falls and Sterling are raising a fund of several thousand dollars to ' flupport week-day religious education •f fn public schools. 4 -^4 Rockford.--Rock ford coal dealers - lave lodged a protest with the school against the recent contract with , |he Minonk Coal company for the wln- . ter's supply of fuel, charging the hoard ftas purchased coal of low efficiency «t an excessive price wttfceqt securing Competitive bids. Mount Pulaski.--BUss Frances Ball, . Slogan county tuberculosis nurse, will f, >ave charge of the health crusade . throughout the 133 rural, village and /"parochial schools In the county that r «HB1 be conducted daring the.school P Bock IriaiAHl marcta** licenM ^ '(JOT years old I~ Ir possession of Mr. Tind Mrs. J. B. Jones of this city. It ? announces, the marriagt. of Mr. Jones' grandparents, Martin Jones and Margaret Hatton, over a century ago. The I marriage took place November 28, >815, in a fort near the present site ^f the state capltoL ' / " Peoria.--By the wttl of the late , Fannie J. Murden, the bulk ot her $43,- ' ^•00 estate 1b left to the Presbyterian ^(borch and affiliated organisations. A Wunber of the philaiitiiroplc Institafflf the city are left $500 each. * ** * f, • bot, a«t&ag iHpd 4tf thearctf&^ juul the university. How rail Joints at curves act under the torture of bearing a locomotive, how curves of various degrees are affected by the stress, and what effect the stress has on curved track as * compared with straight track are some further facts revealed by the experiment. More th«q a million individual stress --•'t nients have been made since- thA beginning of the tests, and work Jms been done on railroads from the Atlantic to the Pacific coasts. Bloomington.--The Illinois stefw executive committee of the American Legion denounced Senator JSorah's plea for the release,of "political prisoners," State Adjutant William Q. Set- Uffe announced. Referring to the recent meeting in Chicago at which Senator Borah was the principal speaker, the resolution says: "There is no such thing as a "political prisoner," igaemueh as It Is impossible to become a convicted prisoner unless the laws of the United States are broken It is understood that by the term 'political prisoners' were included men who were convicted of treason against the United States, those who evaded and obstructed the draft act, and hindered the supply of food and munitions to the men lit the trenches." Springfield.--The threshing of oats, spring wheat and barley was completed under favorable conditions with the average yield per acre of the three crops respectively 28, 15 and 29 bushels. <}ats quality is below average due to much light-weight gifiln In southern counties. The state oats production Is forecast as 110,628,000 bushels, compared with the average of 181,842,000 bushels. Spring wheat production is estimated at 2,490,000 bushels, compared with 2,596,000 bushels last year and the average of 4,769,000 bushels. Barley production Is estimated at 5,365,000 bushels, compared with 4,555,^00 last year and the average of avenge 'of <6^21,000 boshels. • • „ Springfield.--Hard road contracts for 21 counties have been advertised by the state highway division. Bjds will be opened October 81. Road construction offered totals 102 miles and heavy grading 35 ft miles. Paving sections designated for bids are distributed among the counties as follows: De Witt, 4.88 miles; Roc it Island, 11.16; Schunler, 8.64; Whiteside, 1.69; Tazewell, 6; Perry, 3.71; Perry-Franklin, 5.24; Wayne, Q£7; Marshall, 13.84; Kendall, 4.12; Yorkvllle, 2.27; MeHenry, 4.36; Iroquois-Ford, 5.62; Iroquois, 12.48; Kankakee-Iroquois, 3.32; Kankakee, 8JS0; 'Knox, 2L92; Franklin, 6.83. Urbana.--Four students at the University of Illinois have been dismissed for periods ranging from six months to one year fcir violations of the honor system. All ot the alleged Infractions of the honor code occurred during the semester examinations last spring. Two of the students, upper classmen, have been dismissed for one year for dishonesty, the other two for six months also for dishonesty In examinations. SprlngfieU.--Vigorous refutation of a mysterious report broadcast to all newspupers of the state that the Illinois State Bar association Is opposed to the new state constitution was made by R. Allen Stephens, secretary of the association. The report that the bar association had taken a stand against the constitution was sent by some one-to the newspapers throughout the state In a circular. Springfield.--Reports indicate an ai> pie production for the total agricultural crop of 9,400,000 bushels, compared with 2,381,000 bushels last year and the five-year average at 5,273,000 bushels. The commercial crop fot Illinois Is placed at 1,556,000 barrels, compared -with 397,000 barrels last year. Wheaton.--One million three ban dred thousand dollars will be expended for good roads in Dupage county next year if the proposition to be voted on at a special election carries. It is planned to pave all of the north and south state roads In the county, connecting them with three east and west paved roads leading to Chicago. Herrin.--The death toll as a result of the Herrin mine rioting. June 21 and 22, was brought to 23 with the dehth of Ignus Kublns, an employee of the Lester strip mine. He suffered a gunshot wound In the right thigh In the rioting, and had been In a local hospital since. . Springfield.--The state' Supreme eourt appointed Judge Edward D. ShurtlefT oflttarengo a member of the Appellate court of the Third district, to fill the vacancy caused by tbe death of Judge Emery & Graves. Urbana.--The University of Iliinoi. library is so large that If an Individual person jpere to begin reading the books In *lt and read One each day, he would have to live more than 1,236 years to complete the task. The total flumber of volumes in ihe University Ibrary, which is the general college library, and In the departmental libraries number more than 450,000. Decatur.--A bowlder, said to be one of the oldest in this part of the country, Is to be placed on the campus of Millikin university in honor of tbe late Dr. A. A. Tyler. Adeline.--Evert Murra li -th* tallest man in Illinois, It is believed. Murra, who Is a farmer. Is eight feet In height. "Yes. we're a pretty tall crowd, we Murras," said Evert, "except my younger brother, who's only 0 feet 4 incites. My boy, who I* fourteen, is not «ulte tfjp teat la FAmi' ANIMALS FROM PARASITES iMMy^piMMnMpPfiajmntttiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiittsiiimitiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinti Printed Sifts, Costume Blouses, Shortr^ring Coah, Circular Cut Crepe Dresses vm SOT TO BE VORR Garment Long Has Had Milady's Apt proval and Is Style Very Mvali Qjpliwfe RelievesJ*es#Wy^ \:-W- Ugly Une* r,fvv';<. is the time of year alt elotheo, no matter how elegant and bow perfectly In repair they may be, look shabby and eld to their owners. Something new la the cry of the moment We are cot aulte ready for winter, i*e ara not quite throogh With summer, but we are ready for a new frock of some sort or* other, says s ffcshlon writer In the New York Times. We see hints of new styles and we (sel.Uke members of an old-fashioned era as we walk upoxf the streets In m height.' Rockford. -- Eighty three marital misfits will be Investigated at the forthcoming term of the Circuit court. This "is the largest number, it Is believed, ever filed 'or a »lngi$ term of cwt ln WinaaBegv One etf the New Printed Silks Made Up 'Into Draped Drsse fer Street Wear. abort aidrta. We actually need, for our peaee of mind, a new frock of some sort or description. Well, there are any number of betweeo- eeason frocks which will answer this purpose admirably, and this season more than ever before it seems they are appearing in great abundance. There are the printed silks, the costume blouses, the short, flaring coats, the circular cut crepe dresses. All or any of these are satisfactory for wear upon the street while the weather Is in that uncertain condition between warm and col 1, and when we Just cant possibly bear to wear our summer togs for another day. The short coats are, perhaps, the --nsatlon of the season. They have been adopted with great seal by those who lead the fashions In America. There seems every reason to suppose that their popularity will go right on for many months to come. They have their distinct economical advantages as well as their artistic merits In their favor. They can be combined with a partially vonr aklrt, provided It Is long enough for smartness, and th«y can be combined with one-piece fMMkn with tbe moat startling effect ipiVBW little coats are sometimes Uftde with taring lines, at ether times they afVfBMd* 14 fit closely over the hlpe. But they are always short fer coats, while possibly they might be considered long for blouses. One Is made along the flaring lines which in Paris have been more popular. Coats of (Us variety are coming Into our styles and wV flnd them, on the smart women, looking most ravishing. Some of them are made of suede; others are composed of those heavy, new, embroidered wrolen materials; some of them are made of wool brocades. Again, yon will find them made of heavy silks and duvetlnes. All are Heed with brightly colored silks, so that the linings become part of the coats, even If they do not actually fold over on to tha surface of the coatr to form an obvious band of trimming. Another coat Is made of a suede finished material, which is really a glorified duvetine. Its color la a deep chocolate brown and It Is made with a wide and rolling collar that buttons cloeely under the throat The~e are four dark brown shiny buttons arranged along one side where the coat closes. At the bottom of the little jacket there is a band of a lighter brown duvetlne material arranged to form a trimming and to repeat the color of the dress which is worn beneath. • > With these short coats either plain or very full skirts can be worn. It all depends upon the sine of the woman who elects to wear them. If she Is very tall she tan stand the plaited skirt with much more grace than If she is counted among the small ones of the earth. Indeed, for a tall woman a plaited skirt will be found to help out the Unes considerably, for in this era of long skirts she of many Inches of height must begin once again to look out for the lengthening of her lines. She cannot go too far in. this direction, for she runs the danger, always, of looking ridiculous. However, the day of good looks has dawned for her shorter sister, for these longer, fuller dresses have the effect of lengthening her lines and making her take on a sllmness of ap> pearance which has been her desire all along. For her these newer styles are the grestest boon. . From abroad we hear hints of kitted skirts to be worn with short and fi. > Ing coats. This Is always a style very much to be desired, for It relieves a possibly ugly 41ne, and the kilted skirt is something of which women, from a long way back, have always approved. * The jacquette blouses are taking the place of coats for wear at Just this season of tbe year. So. if there Is s new something needed for the wardrobe, one cannot make a mistake in buying one of these with becoming lines and contour. The blouses that are partially coats In design are made with wide sleeves --In some Instances with extremely wide sleeves--and they are always long waisted, with wrinkles about the normal waistline, and often with distinct bloused lines arranged over the hips. Usually there Is a Wide band at the hips, and often t^iere Is a buckle to fasten It snugly on one side. With the plaited skirt we have the practical long lines of the lstest Idea In a costume blouse. You can find them In all of the shops, or you can have them designed for your own separate Individuality. They ate handsome or they are commonplace. But the Jacquette blouse is the thing, and you will make no mistake If you decide to have one of than fer one between seasons. lesag ef the domestic animals that are kept on pastures during the summe# j«iilact a wide assortment of internal parasites that spend part of theliP.lifil cycle within the animal and pert of It outside. The Infection, says the United States Department of Agriculture, usually takes place In warm weather, as at that time there are proper conditions of moisture and temperature for the development of the organisms. In some cases there are Insects that act as intermediate hosts for certain parasites and of course udtfng tbe winter such hosts are not actlyei Some parasites of horses and cattle are carried by biting insects that Introduce them Into the blood stream of the animal. Several species of parasites spend part of their life cycle in dung beetles and through these beetles are taken In with grass and get Into the digestive tract of the animal. The ordinary house fly Is a carrier for one of the stomach worms of the horse. Various kinds of tape worms of poultry spend a period of their existence In house flies, snails and other lower animals. All these worms require also proper conditions of warmth and moisture for their development. Get Rid of Parasite*. From these facta about the habits of some of the well-known Internal parasites of domestic animals it Is plain that fall and early winter Is the most opportune time to rid the animals of them, and give them a chance to recuperate. Such an Interior cleanout also reduces the number of once a month through the year, and th#4ppited lambs have made better growth and grown more wool than that were not treated. At the age of (She hundred and twenty days, treated lambs have averaged 00 pounds each. Other worms of sheep are hard to get rid of, Vat carbon tetrachloride gives promise of, being effective for many of them. In the case of swine, oil of chenopodlum in doses of one dram for 100- pound pigs, and other doses in proportion, will remove the large round worms from the small Intestine. A dose should be accompanied with one to four ounces of castor-oil. This treatment Is given with a dfose syringe. Although worm treatments are given to hogs in a great many cases in capsules with a capsule gun, there Is considerable danger that owing to the peculiar anatomy of the pig's pharynx a capsule will be put In the wrong place. A greHt many hogs, say veterinarians In the Department of Agriculture, have been killed In this way. Treatment for Poultry. • treatment frequently used for round worms In poultry is made up by soaking a pound of finely chopped tobacco stems in water for two hours and thea mixing the stems and the water with half the usual mash ration. This amount Is for 300 birds. The feed which Is mixed with the tobacco Is given after fasting the birds for 24 hours, as usually they will not eat It otherwise. So far no recommendation can be made for ridding bens of other intestinal parasites. A word of caution Is necessary as Djtft Animals of Thia Kind Doing Hard Work During Summer Season « Are Entitled to Some Cars During Winter. Some Trimmed With Fur these outside or outdoor blouses are trimmed with fur In the most fascinating manner. There are bands of fur about the hips, and there are bands of fur across the sleeves, wide or narrow, as the case may be. Then, there Is often a fur collar. After all this fur trimming has been applied you have something which looks more like a coat than It does like a blouse, and which, at the same time. Is 2'^ht enough for wear during Ihe between-season months which, in a climate of this sort last for s good part of the year. Another advantage In this sort of costume is that it can be tucked under a top coat when the cooler days come along, and after that outer wrapping Is removed you are clothed In something that has every semblance of being a dress. So, you see, you cannot make any mistake about purchasing one of these blouses. They promise to last through a great many months and will be as good for one purpose as another. If yon wish to have your own blouses made, you can find the hfcndsomes t sorts of materials irilfc sKofil They have silk surfaces and wool backs. They are covered with embroidery; they are a mass of machine stitching making intricate and interesting patterns. They are rich and luxurious In many ways and have every semblance of being either blouses or coats according to the demands of the activities of your day. Then there are the printed sUka. They are much more beautifully patterned than they have been at any time during the past. Also, they are done on heavier qualities of silks. For these dresses you need nothing at all except the silk itself. It Is sufficient , to make the design that Is needed, but It needs to be handled In an artistic^ and thoughtful way in order that It shall show to Its fill and best advantage. « Jester Founded Great Hospital. St. Bartholomew's hospital, in London, was founded by the epatt jestar of Henry L chances of reinfection on the pastores the following spring. Winter Is a rest from relnfestatlon, but because animals have to resist adverse weather conditions It is doubly advisable to get rid of all parasites, to give the anlnuils an opportunity to use their feed In maintaining body temperature and In putting on fat or producing milk. There are probably hundreds of treatments recommended by various persons for worms, bote, and other parasites, most of which are useless or very nearly so. However, there are certain treatments that have been proved by experiment to be effective for certain parasites. It has been found that hots can be removed from horses by the use of carbon bisulphide. It Is given in six-dram doses, in capsules,- and a purgative is unnecessary. The horse Is usually kept off feed for 24 hours before the capsule is given. This treatment will also get the big round worms that frequently Infest the small Intestine. To get rid of the round worms thst are found In the large Intestines, use oil of cbenopodlum (oil of American worm seed) In <goses of 4 to 4% drams, with a quart of raw linseed oil or an aloes ball. So far veterinarians have very little to ssy about the treatment of internal parasites in cattle. Not a great deal of work has been done along this line, but copper sulphate has been found of some use as a treatment for stomach worms. Control Stomach Worms. This copper-sulphste treatment for •tomsch worms Is very effective In the control of stomach worms In sheep. A 1 per cent solution In water Is the strength usually employed. Three fluid ounces of the 1 per cent solution Is sufficient for yearlings and older sheep, and ltt ounces for lambs three months old and older. At the bureau of animal Industry farm at Vienna, VaJ, this treatment is given to the use of remedies tot parasites, which applies as well to medicinal treatment generally. Medicinal treatment for parasites and other conditions should be given only by or under the direction of properly qualified and Competent persons, otherwise serious damage may be done to valuable animals and little or no benefit result from the treatment. MAKE PROFIT WITH POULTRY Much Depends on Marketing of Prod* . Wta and Producer Should, i - Watch Prleea. - .; • part of the proffftft prniTt# keeping often depends on the marketing of products, says the United States Department of Agriculture. The producer should study the markets as to how, where and when to dispose of his goods to the best advantage. An attractive appearance Is of prime importance, and for this reason It Is well to make a study of the details of killing, dressing and packing. The requirements vary somewhat* different markets: ' Vteosands of dure a half-sick, nervottt^' condition when they sturdy, robust health and alt Its fold blessings If they only -know to do. People in this condition ft* Tanlac soon ends their trouble an#: builds up abundance of slmitlli. «a* ergy and vitality. Mrs. Paid Lavtea% «7 S. Fltrhugh St, Rochester, If. «y»: "Sometime ago my health an# strength left me all at once. I lost nineteen pounds In a short time sB0d> could hardly stay up. I gained flNtipf pounds on two bottles of Tanlac anj^ it has made me perfectly wen and? strong again." Nervousness and a run-down, tired* out feeling are but symptoms of hidden cause, which usually Ilea itt the stomach. Tanlac enables yon tgf digest your food properly, eilmtaatdj waste and regain your old tfcacj strength and vigor. Get a bottle tedafj at any good druggist--!Advertisement^ All natural action Is beauty ia 'ft tion. v; '-t The Same Oid Backache! Doca every day bring the eM backacn? Do you drag along with year back a dull, unceasing aeher Etvum find you "all played out"? Don't bo discouraged! Realise it is merely a sign you haven't taken good care of youraelf. litis has probably stuiaart your kidnqs. Take things easier foe awhile ana help your kidneys wMh Doom'* Kidney Pills. Then the beefeache, disxinesa. beadaehsL tired Isetings and bladder troubles will go. DOOM'S have helped thousands and should help you. lilt your a^fUtr/ An Illinois Cm Mrs. T. J. Lipsey. 1218 W. OftUetfu St., Vandalia, 111., s a y s : " C u t t i n g pains caught me In the email o£ my back and headaches troubled me. I also had dlczy spells, when my sight would become blurred. I felt depressed and nervous. My kidney: wore weak and tr regular in action.' A friend advised me to try Kidney Pills and after a short was benefited tat every way." GetBeeetaeAerBlewtMee DOAN'SVJK? FOCTER.MUJW--Ctt- VALUABLE LIVE STOCK FEED Silage Is Wsll Suited for All Kindt of Farm Animals, Especially for Dairy Cows. Silage Is well suited for feeding to all live stock. Dairy cows need It perhaps more than other classes of animals, because the succulence It supplies Is very necessary for large milk production. It Is a cheap and economical feed for beef cattle, from breeding cow to fattening steer. Sheep like it and it is well suited to their needs. Even horses and mules may be fed limited quantities sf gogd silage with good results. Urually Isnt Nature Wonderful. It Is said that the coconut palm will •apply about every physical need man--food, drink, shelter, fuel, ntsm> sils and. If need be. clothes. A Ooufll American proverb runs, "A coconuttree is a brlde'a dowry."--Boston Staanacrlpt "Mj 'i - -".'i i'm FREEZING POINTS OF MANY CROPS Object of Speoial Studies in Boreau of Plant Industty/ HOW TO MODERNIZE OLD DRESSES « j Panels and Belts Afford Easy Method of Obtaining Up-to-th*.Moment C«thes Styles. What fashion calls* the "new silhouette" Is, at first glance, so different from our hang-over clothes that we are depressed. It Is wonderful, however, how much can be done with panels and belts to modernize a costume. Silks, the various crepes, or lace can be combined charmingly wtith the original material to drape below the hem, giving the length and irregularity now in vogue. The length of the dress Itself, In many cases, can be Increased by removing the elastic at the belt allowing the line of the waist to Then an up-to-the-moment touch may be added by a thick (shall we say. clumsy?) girdle plaited from several strips of tbe panel stuff and fastened in front with a conspicuous buckle, below which the ends, falling loose of the plaiting for their final three inches, descend almost or quite A lace tunic draped over an old dress will create a new and modish costume. The Greek line, that Is, the Unbroken drapery from shoulder to hem characteristic of the present fashion, may be achieved by the lace garment • , . _ Becoming Shoe* , ' * lias been pointed out- by cialty shoe shop that women with large feet ought to avoid sand colored shoes, white shoes and shoes In tones of yellow. These shoes particularly tend to emphasize a foot of unusual size. Patent leather combined with these light shades helps make the foot look smaller, though patent leather alone does not disguise a big or Illshaped foot T*he safest wear for a large foot Is s shoe of dull black. The New Hem Linea. The circular hem line is noticed SH many of the new frocks as well as the handkerchiefs, or Irregular pointed lines. Experiments Being Conducted With Various Fruits and Vegetables [ \ Liable to Freesing in dllng or on Market (Prepared by the United Statee Department of AJ:rlcultur«.) The freesing points of a large variety of vegetables and fruits, which are likely to be subjected to freezing conditions during harvesting, handling, or marketing, have been tbe object of apecial studies in the bureau of plant industry of the United States Department of Agriculture. Between 15,000 and 20,000 determinations have been made, including the freezing points of 25 varieties of apples, 22 kinds of strawberriea, 18 varieties of potatoes, 19 different types of sweet potatoes, 19 tomato varieties, and many varieties of cherries, grspes, peaches, plums, blackberries, raspberries, cranberries, and some cut flowers, particularly peonies, roses, and lilies. Besides this general study, the work Is being continued with the principal fruits and vegetables which are liable to be In danger of freezing either in transit or on tbe market. In this work the methods of detecting freezing injury, the rate at which fruits and vegetables freeze In constant low temperatures are determined. The freezing points were determined for 18 standard varieties of Irish potatoes^ grown under the same cultural conditions, harvested at the same time, •nd stored at the same temperatures. <;V - ,i'3. The freezing point apparently varies with the variety and shows a tendency to vary with the family group. It has been shown that potatoes can frequently be exposed to temperatures much below their freezing points If they are not disturbed until the temperature is again above tbe freesing point PERMANENT SOIL FERTILITY Uas Limestone and Phosphate and Flaw Under Green Muti% Especially Clover. Produce your own nitrogen for fertility Instead of buying it. Do thia by using limestone and phosphate and by plowing under green manure, especially sweet clover, red clover or winter vetch. This is the basis of tbe Illinois system of permanent soli fertility. A. L. Whiting and W. R. Schoonover, at the Illinois station, found that such crops plowed under In April or May decompose with sufficient rapidity so that their nitrogen becomes available for corn or other crops the same year. Temperature and moisture determine the time when nitrate production in the soil win take place. The amount of nitrate that can be produced in the soil depends upon soil treatment. The decomposing sweet ot red clover may furnish as high as 96 pounds of nitrate nitrogen per acre, or twice as much as < >rn may take up In its critical growing period between June 25 and July 15. "Stable manure does not furnish nitrate so rapidly nor in such large amounts aa green nure, and should be applied as as possible to corn planting time.1* X ^ Mrs. W. L. Edmonda Oodar Rapids, Iowa.--"I have takan r. Pierce's Favorite Prescription and found It very helpful In troubles peculiar to women. It Is very strengthening to the Internal organs and eapo* dally does it eliminate suffering atr ^^ special times and regulates In thai proper way. My daughters have alaou taken the Favorite Prescription with!., ^ the best of results; they would suffer so at times that they would be com-. ' relied to stay home from work, but |f after taking this medicine they have-, ft not suffered since. Favorite Prescrip-rr* ^ tion Is the best medicine a young worn* J| an can take if suffering in this way,", --Mrs. W. L. Edmonds, 705 Second ^ Ave., W. The use of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pro*- script Ion has made many women hap»^ py by making them healthy. Get it at 1:1 |! tmce from your nearest druggist In -',1 ^ either liquid or tablet form. Write Dr. r' !f; Pierce, Invalids' Hotel in BoffMot N. Y„ for free advice. 00 YOU SUFFER FROM In tne Cradle. "Isnt the baby beautifa!!** "Yes; my wife expaAs movie any day now." m