THE KeHBKST PLAINDEALBR, KeHEKRT, IfcX* FREE If you have RHEUMATISMS PAIN IN BACIC OR PILES Silk-Straight Outline all Openings have been the chief attraction In Paris for the past few weeks. Indicating what the modes for fall And winter will interpret. At the openings, says a fashion writer In the New York Hesald-Trlbune, one observA, perhaps noting a high « waistline on a Lanvln model, would immediately broadcast the return of ^ the directoire waist--another will be so impressed by a garishly-colored Patou frock that she will announce, ^ with some show of positiveness, that vivid hues will dominate the fall styles. The general confusion is emphasized by the deliberate efforts of • professional propagandists, each of whom complacently assures an anxf#-'/:£*] ious world that no new frock can be 0?:. smart unless it exploits some perhaps v • i* unheard-of or long-defunct accessory. * fi'/ The bewilderment resulting from! thwe cross currents and impulsive I >,*< conclusions is Indescribably more mis-' 3 > ? i leading than the uncertainty attending ' the prenatal prophecies of the mode.; Obviously It is Impossible to formu- I late an absolutely accurate picture of j the new mode until all the returns are j In. And even then a final decision mt^st be deferred pending the verdict of the ultimate arbiters--that portion of fashionable society which has been aptly named the creative wearers. Yet, save \frhere economy dictates. It Is not in the nature of milady to await the final pronunciamento of the Jury. ' And she invariably insists on acquiring at least a portion of her wardrobe while the new fashions are still In embryo. Her most accurate guide In making this selection will be found, not In the divergent early dispatches, but in the clothes which are being worn at the smart French watering places and race tracks. Defauvitle and Auteul present a far closer conception of the new autumn mode than the Paris openings. The latter represents only the Ingenuity of the designer, but the frocks worn at the fashionable resorts exploit ^ not only the advanced ideas of the couture, but what Is Infinitely more important-- the favorable reaction of •mart society. White Satin Twite A winsome frock seen at DeauviUe was a Doeuillet creation\conslstlng of a white satin tunic elaborately embroidered in crystal and jet over a white satin foundation skirt.. The tunic is very interestingly finished down the front and at the edges by a hem of finely corded white satin. An attractive dress which made its del>ut on the Deauville sunds was a sports dress of white kasha trimmed with composition buttons In red. The dress, which was in straight chemise form, opened at the left side. The novel feature was a short, narrow scarf which is given length by the addition of white crepe de chine, finely plaited. Another at Auteul had an extremely long tunic-blouse of white linen, embroidered its entire length In a spray design of vari-colored flowers. This • same design appeared on one end of the long red crepe de chine scarf. The skirt was of white plaited crepe georgette. With this costume was carried a novel parasol of white organdie, on which were appliqued flowers of colored taffeta matching those on the tunic. . A Jeune fllle modakln simple peas-, * ant blouse type with an odd-shaped panel formed by plaitIngs In the center front was attractive. Touches of embroidery In dark blue and gold emphasized the beauty of the paler blue. A coat-dress Is a typical fall style designed by Cheruit for Maude Lely of the Paris stage. It is developed in white kasha and trimmed with leopard skin. A touch of the barbaric la added through the (old belt and huge gold buckles. The outstanding characteristics of these models are the tunic blouse, the scarf, the plait and a silhouette which, though still straight, Is by no means simple. The tunic-blouse Is undoubtedly destined to be a most potent factor in the new mode; the scarf and plait are equally certain to return in ney and interesting versions and a more detailed silhouette, will undoubtedly distinguish the fail fashions. Brilliant Colors Are Used. Whenever white and black collaborate as a color vogue, they assume a benevolent, fraternal attitude toward the rest of the 8|>eetrum, and the Paris designers are taking advantage of this MAKES PLEA FOR ; > Fall Asleep on Floor Near Fatherfs Cell White Kasha Coat-Dress, Collar and Tie Ends of* Leopard Skin. generosity to Introduce a medley of vivid colorings which presage a brilliant autumn palette. Black and white combinations have lost none of their importance In the realms of fashion, but the bright-colored frock is equally significant in the advanced fall models seen at the smart French resorts. The race courses have looked like flower gardens with their toilettes in crescendos of color. Dresses in dark tones, notably black and navy, are highly printed, embroidered or appliqued in riotous hues. White backgrounds are similarly decorated. Black lace gowns are mounted on foundations of iiesh tone, pure white or black, and a color note is introduced in the accessory or in some component part. Thus a lovely black lace frock from Callot, made with a triple-flounce lacc skirt, has underneath this skirt a broad hlp-encircllng sash girdle of pink moire, the ends of which are revealed at the left side. With this is worn a delicious hat, one of the new poke-like cloches. This particular bat is made of printed chiffon, the design being large poppies in tones of yellow and pink, while at one of the sides are posed huge silken petal poppies. As an added touch of color there is a large crepe georgette handkerchief tucked In the bodice of the dress and matching exactly the color of the pink sash. Colors Are Much in Vogue Shaded chiffon dresses In several having passed through tones of one color, usually yellow or mauve, are much In evidence at Deauville. Several models of this character, designed by Jean Patou, attracted favorable comment at the recent races. Patou's chosen color for these ombre effects Is a tanlsh yellow, which gradually shades almost to brown. Madeleine Vionnet prefers mauve, for which Incidentally there is an excessive vogue. Mauves, violets and purples are seen in combination with almost any color. In their own range they often tone to red^or blue, emphasizing principally the orchldee pinks or the periwinkle and hyrdangea blues. Among the lovely toilettes noted are . s«me in perhvlukle blue chiffon In which the scarf ends are a rich orchldee pink and the hat trimming is of large bunches of osprey dipped In the adme vivid purplish pink. Occasionally there is noted a toilette all In one color with every detail dyed In harmonizing tones. Thus on occasions the felt hat,, the leather of the shoes, the stockings and the fabric of the gown each gives evidence of a single dye pot. Brilliant flashes of color are sometimes added in side panels which flare in funnel shape at one side. A charming dress worn by a well-known Parisian actress at a Rltz hotel dinnerdance, was In shimmering silver cloth, sheath fitting and molding every line of the figure. From one side of the skirt there burst a cornucopia-shaped panel covered with showering fringes of ostrich feathers. Almost every costume of neutral tone, or of black or of white Is enlivened by color In the hat, the scarf and the parasol. In the new scarfs these brilliant color spots appear frequently at the ends. Large handkerchief squares are folded to form oblongs and are then lengthened by means of crepe de chine panels of some emphasizing color. Ossining, N. Y.--Tears of sympathy trickled down the cheeks of attendants In the death house at Sing Sing when the daughter and son. three and two years old, respectively, of Frank Minnlck, a Buffalo prisoner, fell asleep on the floor of the corridor outside the door of the cell occupied by their father. Deathhouse guards obtained pillows and blankets for the children, while their mother and father, who had not seen each other since be was brought to Sing Sing two months ago, talked together for the last time. MEN IN HARD FIGHT TO BEAT OFF SHARK Sea Monster Attack* Fisher• men in Sbnall Boat. THIEF WHO HAD .m* MENACED UFE Los Angeles, Cal.--Saved from death after a struggle of an hour with a huge saucer-eyed shark with double rows of spear-shaped teeth, which sought to devour them, Richard Gunther and Donald Cavanaugh are seeking the body of the giant killer which they hope to keep as a souvenir after it is washed ashore. Gunther and Cavanaugh, who 1s fourteen years old, were fishing In an open boat a mile offshore from Newport beach when the shark attacked them, evidently attracted by the bait. The huge killer, 20 feet long, circled the boat several times, then raced toward it and attempted tot seise the boy. Commanding the youth to crouch In the bottom of the boat, Gunther grabbed a spear which he keeps In the boat and slashed the shark with it This only seemed to Infuriate it. It attacked again, dyeing the water with its blood. Then it seized the gunwale In its jaws and tore a jagged hole In the craft. " Just as Gunther, exhausted, believed he could no longer ward off the shark, two men {p a boat, nearby, attracted by the boy's cries for help, came to the rescue and renewed the attack. Apparently mortally wounded, the shark swam slowly away. Something N«w in Biouief-- Becoming and simple are blouses that are edged with a trimming of the material put on# after the fashion of rlckrack braid. Whimsies of Fashion of Interest to Women Until very recently plaids were relegated to tl.j wardrobes of the juvenile members of society, but this season has witnessed a change of heart toward these most decorative designs. In the sheerest stuffs aa. well as In the more usual woolen and cotton plaids, plaids play a most Important part in tli fashions of the day. .• One of the best known French designers is responsible for several extremely pretty models fashioned of plaid chiffon,^while another makes a stunning co t dress of plaid taffeta In shades of red. brown, green and yellow. Nothing could be smarter nor more striking than a three-piece costume of the blue twill In which the gay plaid lining matches the straight belt less tunic that reaches almost to the hem of the skirt. Another exceedingly clever way of using plaids Is In the form of an evening cape made of plaid taffeta in pastel colors This is cut on circular lines and Is trimmed with a deep black cbantilly lace. It Is worn over a frock of pale blue taffeta. Nothing could b£ more practical than the children's clothes > t^he present day and never have the youngest members of society appeared to greater advantage Parents now realize that a mlnlc urn amount "f clothing means a maximum amount of health. Nonessentials are dispensed with and the suit oi frock of the modern small person Is the briefest affair that leaves a greater part of the anatomy, exposed to the health-giving rays of the sun. Plaits add much to the attractiveness of frocks which are noticeably shorter than the dresses seen earlier in the season. Skirts are rapidly getting back to the length of two seauids ago and it is said that in the modes of autumn the shorter length will prevail'-'- Liquor Tested on Rats Lands Couple in Jail Omaha, Neb.--Thirteen Fleek rats, penned in a cage In a chemist's laboratory, were Instrumental In government agents obtaining conviction of an Omaha man ai d his wife on a liquor selling charge, with subsequent sentence of a year in Jail and a heavy fine for each In Federal court. The question of sampling the liquor which the pair sold was brought up In court, and to determine whether It was fit for human consumption, the agents submitted it to a chemist. He fed it to the rats and then watched their reaction. x The rodents displayed many of the characteristics of an intoxicated human. the chemist reported. Not one died, rather they all thrived, he declared on the witness stand. Although defense counsel questioned the admissibility of the experiment as evidence. It was allowed to stand as Indicating the potency and possibilities of the liquor for beverage purposes. "Too Happy to Live"; Rich Youth Kills Self Quebec.--The body of an unidentified young man who apparently had committed suicide because wealth had made him "too happy," was found beside a limousine bearing a New York state license, near St. Come de Beauce, close to the Maine border. A note pinned to the coat read: „ "Do not mind me. My name would be useless to you. But I wish the world to know that I committed suicide because I was too happy. I always got what I wanted In my life. My parents are millionaires. 1 do not find life good enough to remain In it.. I have a strong longing to find out what there is in another life." There was a ballet woand- In the head. Banker Shattuck Asks Mercy tor Man Who Had None for.Hint, raris.--At the end of a trail of geance that led half way around the world and cost two lives, hundreds of thousands of dot; rs, Albert R. Shattuck, American millionaire, found-- pity. The story goes back to a day in 1822, when the soft-spoken butler in the Shattuck home on Washington square. New York, turned with a snarl upon his employers, and blew sharply on a whistle. The gardener and one of the kitchen boys dropped their masks of servility and became snarling bandits, like their chief. Three other apaches, waiting outside, were admitted. Revolvers and ugly knlTes were whipped out. No Hesitation to Kill. The astonished banker, his wife and four loyal servants were driven down to the cellar at the pistol's point. There Mourey insulted Mrs. Shattuck vilely. Only the certainty that the apache would not hesitate to kill restrained the white-haired millionaire from violence, into an airtight wine vault the bandits forced their victims, with curses and degrading remarks. The door was slammed shut upon them and locked. * Death was but a few hours away for all, as the air was bad and scarce. Upstairs, the bandits swiftly ransacked the house, took Jewelry valued at $70,000 and made away scattering them over the world. ^ Sortie were caught, bat Moarey disappeared. , Inside the vault. Shattuck alone kept his head. With a dime's edge and a broken penknife, the banker attacked the binges of the heavy steel door. Loosening the screws with the Dies When Success Is Within Her Grasp San Jose, CaU--Driven by fear that she had failed In her final examinations, pretty Miss Ina Sarah Lots, twenty-one-year-old student of the State Teachers' college, shot herself in the head and died, while a letter telling she had passed her examinations was in the postman's bag. The girl had failed one examination last winter, after she had been attending the college for two and a half years. She was reinstated, given another* chance, and she was taking her final test. For several mornings she had been rising at three o'clock to cram with facts before she entered^ the day's examination. Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. David Lutz. heard her moving about in her room. At five o'clock they heard a shot. Roused from sleep, the girl's father ran to her room and found her lying In a pool of blood, her books, papers and notes by her body. She died a short time later. On the morning delivery of mail the postman brought a letter from the college, telling the girl she had passed her tests. Very Smart A frocK of brilliantly colored, large* flowered chintc is a very smart thing to possess for country wear. Drink of "Smoke" Fat' New York.--When W. P. Beft*er. city fireman, saw ten men taking a drink of "smoke"* on an Kast river pier he anticipated consequences. Be knew that the concoction was a mixture of denatured alcohol and water, popular along the water front. After the bottle had made two rounds, six of the men began a war dance and the remaining four fell off the pier. Beaver and a nearby swim* mer went to the rescue. They saved 1W0 but the ether wo were drowned. ffmuit tr tk* CalM Statae Department of Acrtooltwe.) As a part of the extension program on dairying In the western states the United States Department of Agriculture has prepared three sets of dairy exhibits, each different from the others, yet all emphasizing the same fundamental factors underlying successful dairying. The main theme in these exhibits la, It pays to keep good high-producing cows and feed them well. What Exhibits Show. One exhibit gives the results of cowtesting association studies. It shows a poor .cow, representing a large group, that averaged 150 pounds of butterfat a year, with an income over feed cost of only $26 per cow. Contrasted with this Is a good cow, representing another large group, that averaged 300 pounds of butterfat a, year, with an income over feed cost of $74 per year per cow. The owner of the low proi ducers had to house, feed, and care for three cows to get the same Income over cost of feed that the owner of the good cows got from one. These exhibits also show that the way to get high producers Is to use good bulls, keep records, of production, cull the herd, and raise heifers from the best cows. Having got good cows, the suggestions are made to feed liberally, have good pastures and use them properly, provide silage for winter feeding, and be sure the ration contains sufficient mineral matter, which It Is suggested should be supplied by feeding plenty of alfalfa, clover, or other legume hay. \ Work for High Quality. One part of these exhibits Emphasizes the Importance of producing dairy products of the best quality. High quality Is associated with such fundamental practices as clean cows, small-top milking palls, thorough washing and steaming of utensils, quick cooling of the milk or cfream to low temperatures, and finally quick and frequent delivery to market. Another section compares dairy cows with a single and double-track Driven Down to the Cellar Pistol'* Point. Sought to End Life Where Son Is Buried Worth Bergen, N. J.--Charles Alexander attempted suicide on the grave of his son In Falrvlew cemetery, according to police, who found his body stretched on the^'grass-covered mound which Indicates the spot of his son's interment. The police state Alexander went to the cemetery and remained at the grave throughout the night. It Is said poison was used by the brooding man In his suicidal attempt. Physicians at a local hospital declared be will recover. Edgar was the son's name. Seven years ago, at the age of nine, the boy ias killed In a railroad accident. rallroadL As the double-trade railroad does more than twice the business of a single-track railroad, so the cow that produces 300 pounds of butterfat a year yields more than twice as much income over feed cost as the cow that produces 150 pounds of butterfat a year. FOR PAIN Frequent Cultivations 1 Essential for Potatoes Potatoes are a quick crop In growth, hence they require very frequent cultivation for best growth and maturity. Most farmers do not cultivate, their potatoes often enough to make the crop as profitable as it might te. Three or four cultivations will keep the weeds down In a potato patch, but It requires six or eight or more cultivations to produce a fine potato crop. Every cultivation probably pays better than for any other cultivated crop. It must be remembered that the potato crop suffers readily from continued dry weather, and that frequent cultivations are practically the only means bv which the moisture can he conserved. Frequent cultivations also set free much plant food that would otherwijse remain locked up in the soil. It requires only an hour or Jwo to run over quite a good-sized patch of potatoes with a horse and cultivator, and the resulfs are far better than when a hoe is used. Or know of a wound o®;' mart or beast that will not heal, try this oiL Writ®, for the free sample boctw; and see how quickly it Kills Pain and Heals Beat for every ache or pain--for wouod% burns and piles. Sample bottle mailed free for 2/ stamp* M. R. ZAEGEL & CO. 630 Eighth St. Sheboygan, Wis. 1 ' o No Recommendation "What do you think of mud as a •, beautitier?" ' "Well, it hasn't dot)* . much for the turtle." : Roots and Herbs Best for Kidneys Daniel G. Carey, M. D. % BACKACHE said Dr. Carey Is a pretty sure si)|il that all is not well with your kidneys. Delay may be dangerous--thousands of people die every year from kid* ney . -- j - gav^| If th 5 t . »In Hm+, •*! the atmost difficulty, he pried the door open and tottered, with his wife in his arms, into the cellar. Just as every one was on the point of collapse. From that day, Shattuck swore vengeance upon Mourey. He did not talk of It much, but private detective agencies learned quietly that there was no limit to the reward If they could trap the apache. Mourey was heard of first In this country, then in that, hunted day and night, but always eluding pursuit. Shattuck kept on the trail. It led to the Indies, then to Europe, then to Africa. Still the bandit kept ahead of the international police put on his track. Justice became the banker's one aim. Some called it vengeance. Then Mourey was trapped. A woman was the leader In the deed--his sweetheart, with whom he kept In touch throughout the flight. Trapped With Sweetheart. I Growing bolder, the bandit came to Paris, or rather to a little villa outside the city, where bis sweetheart used to meet him. One day the gendarmes of Paris followed her to the villa and a revolver battle ensued before Mourey threw up his hands. One was mortally wounded. First an attempt was made to have the apache king taken to New York, bnt it was decided the French charges against him were the more serious. The Jury found Mourey guilty as charged, resisting an officer with violence. which resulted in the fatal wounding of the police. The Judg^ sentenced him to die on the guillotine. The Shattucks. their long pursuit ended, wrote.to Doumergue: "Justice cannot Ignore pity. This man has expressed regret for his crimes. We believe he Is sincere." Ruling Is Announced on Grapes Sold in Boxes Lug boxes containing grapes are required by the federal food and drug act to be marked to show the quantity of grapes In the package. If they are shipped Into Interstate or foreign commerce, according to a recent announcement by Dr. C. A. Browne, chief of the bureau of chemistry. Un'ted States Department of Agriculture. The text of the letter follows: "The federal food and drugs act classes as mlsbranded an article of food If It be In package form and the quantity of the contents be not plainly and conspicuously marked on the outside of the' package. Information relative to marketing practices gained through Investigations at points of production as well as of distribution and consumption Justifies the conclusion that grapes In lug boxes, whether lidded or uncovered, are food In package form within the meaning of the act. The containers should therefore be labeled with a plain and conspicuous statement of the net contents In terms of the largest unit, either of avoirdupois weight or of dry measure, contained In the package." Cottonseed Not Favored as Protein for Poultry One of the objections to cottonseed meal for poultry feeding Is Its unpalatable quality. Birds will not eat as much of the mash when It has cottonseed meal In It as they do when It contains animal proteins. When bone ash such as precipitated bone, bone flour or raw bone Is added to :be mash It has a tendency to Increase the value of cottonseed meal and the birds will eat It much better. A very good supplement to a mash containing cottonseed meal Is chalk, 2 pounds. 2 pounds bone meal and 1 |>ound of common salt to each 100 pounds of mash. Cottonseed meal has not been jpopulsr with poultry keepers as a source of protein for poultry and this ls^ doubtless due to the fact that it is not very palatable. Green Stuff Important for Flock of Pullets Very often In the late summer the range on which the pullets are being reared runs do^n until there is nothing left but a baked soil and a rank stand of weeds. Real grass feed which the chickens can eat Is essential to normal growth. Shade and fresh cool water are nlso Important. Do not feed over ten per cent meat In the growing mnsh as a high pro teln ration will mature the pullet instead of developing growth. Thirtyfive pounds of cornmeal, twenty-five pounds bran, twenty-five pounds middlings, ten pounds meat scrap and five pounds bone meal Is suggested. Milk may replace the meat, but do not leave out the bone meal particularly In this case. * Goslings Get Diarrhea Goslings sometimes have diarrhea and digestive disorders aa a result of heavy feeding with sloppy mashes or drinking stagnant water that is quite unclean. A good mash for goslings can be made of equal parts corn meal, bran, middlings and rolled oats ml^ed with skim ^ullk. Perform a postmortem on any goslings that die, and note the condition of the Internal organs and contents of the crop. Usually there is little trouble raising goslings when they have plenty of fresh.green grass and shade. Dr. Carey knew how to mix and herbs and for over 40 years his famous Marshroot Prescription T77 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 tab* let form--equally good, 7."c. If your local druggist hasn't it he can get It from the Garev Medical Laboratories at Klmira, N. Y. Time Would Tell Fresh--Say. prof, how long conld I live without brains? Prof.--That remains to he seen. ; . Tobacco for Worms A good treatment for the flock when intestinal parasites, such as worms have been found, is to use tobacco dust, which can be purchased or made from home-grown tobacco. The treatment Is to feed the dust in the mnsh, at the rate of 2 pounds tobacco dust to 100 pounds of mash. Confine the birds during ihe treatment, and then plow up the penyard, so the worms will -not be taken up again. Kill Striped Beetle Ffer the striped potato beetle nse lead arsenate either as a spray or dust. As a spray use it at the rate of 3 pounds of powder to 100 cations of water or 9V4 level teaspoonfuls to one gallon of water. If used as a dust mix with pure gypsum or sulphur, or dilute one. pound with 10 pounds of hydra ted lime. Apply whenever needed, covering all parjs of the plants. Help Cure Green Hay Dfjr salt has some effect in helping to cure green hay, both from Its moisture absorbing and its preservative action, but if enough Is applied to have any materlul effect, it will make the hay too salty to be palatable. It Is better to let the hay cure In the field than to try- to cure it with artificial methods. Hairs Catarrh Medicine rid your system of Catarrh or Di sfii-- caused by Catarrh. Sotd by drusgwtt Mr 40 ymn F. J. CHENEY & CO- Toledo, OMfr ; BIG ULCERALL HEALED "Here Is another letter that makes me happy." says Peterson, of Buffalo*. "One that I would rather have than a thousand dollars. "Money Isn't everything In this world. There Is many a big-hearted, rich man who would give all he has on earth to be able to produce a remedy with such mighty healing power as Peterson's Ointment, to sell at aU druggists for 60 cents a large box." Dear Sirs:-- "I was an untold sufferer from Old running sore and ulcers. I had tried most everything without any relief from pain. A friend told me of your wonderful ointment and the first box took away the pain that had not left me before In years, and after using Just nine dollars' worth of the salve i am cured. The ulcer was 9 Inches by Inches. Is all healed and I can walk. Never, never will I be without Petereon's again "You may use this to recommend your ointment. If you wish. I cannot «ay pnough to praise it. Tours truhr, Mrs. Alhrrt Southcott. Lyndonvllle, If. V." Mall orders filled by Peter Ointment Co.. Inc.. Buffalo. N. T. ) :i~ BABIES LOVE M&VM3iC*rS SYRUP MEDICAL TREATMENT HAS LITTLE VALUE IN CASES OF ANTHRAX & Cattl^ and Sheep Are Most Susceptible to Disease* Viper Had Poiaoned Beer r Budapest.--Martin Remler, a barkeeper In a local cafe, and one of bis customers drank a glass of beer each from a freshly tapped keg and a few seconds later botli dropped to the floor dead. When the keg was broken open the body of a viper was revealed. The snake Is assumed to have crawled through the bunghole before the keg was filled at the brewery, the viper discharging its poisonous fluid Into the beer during its struggle against drown* (Prepared by the United States Departmeat of Agriculture.) Anthrax, an acute infectious disease affecting animals and occasionally man, has broken out In several southern and western states, the United States Department of Agriculture announces. Reports from veterinarians of the bureau of animal Industry show that the most serious outbreaks have occurred in Mississippi, Louisiana, Arkansas, Texas and South Dakota. Cattle and sheep are most susceptible# but none of the domestic animals are exempt. Anthrax Is caused by a germ which multiplies rapidly in the body, especially in the blood, and produces polsonottp Eubstances which cause death. The germs probably are most commonly taken In with food, though they may gain entrance also through wounds. The symptoms of anthrax vary greatly, according to the acuteness of the( attack. Tlje early ^tages usually are characterized by high fever, rapid pulse, and labored breathing. In the most common form of the disease there are also local external swellings or tumors. t)eath ensues In from a few hours to several days. Medicinal treatment is usually of no avail in acute cases. The mostj, effective method of dealing with anthrax :{S by prevention. ' Tiie preventive measures recommended are 'U orotecting Individual animals by. vaccination and (2) burning or deeply burying the carcasses of animals that have died of the disease, so as to avoid infecting the ground. It's weather, not wear, that destroys most farm muchlnery. • • • la the tractor In shape to 0o the fall plowing and fitting? • • • Ad4ed tools often stand for multiplied efficiency on the farm. e • • • " ' , Adopting a farm name Is not enough. The next thing to do Is to use it. " e • • -- Lightning rods, poorly Installed, art worse than uone at all. Be sure that the ground connectlr>ns are at least eight feet deep, or down to permanent moisture. * Dawson' golden cbafT. a beardlees wheat especially adapted to southern Jersey, yielded 51 bushels per acre in trials at the New Jersey agricultural experiment station in 11)23, Tk« lalaib' aa4 CUUna'a laphkr Pleaaant to glT*--pleasant to t*ke. Guaranteed purely vef tableand absolutely harmleei It qutcWly overcome# colie, diarrhoea, flatulency and Other like dlx^rderm. The open pubhihed formula appears oo •very label. AtAUDntt^ Gear Your SI Of Disfiguring Blemishes Use Cuticura , im fr*» Addrwm o night Tomorrow Alright Heuwt - - •*. ^ .'*4.-5 Rape eeeded at the time of the hut cultivation of corn will provide an abundance of late feed f# hogs. It is particularly valuable In com that are to be bogged down. - GOITRE free :ihu.ivcak>!*vi Kts • t„*«v?•v M;rMv a,:t.o hf,ocnbwo*. -w.n <. : cruMt- ("•la g or<>iT!*!r«' .r* I t> a•n >«» fc-'-'v* of