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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 9 Oct 1924, p. 9

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rib THE McHENRY PLAINDEALER, Mc HENRY, ILL. IV"I MUUIM'H Borers in Fall Most t^rlous Pest of Tihees and Must Be Combated to Get Good Fruit (Prepared by the United State* Department ^of Agriculture.) Throtighout much of the peach-gro*- tng district east of the Kooky mountains from Canada to Florida, orchardtets are troubled with the damaging work of the peach borer, the most important and serious pests of these trees and one that must be combated relentlessly if the peach is to be frown. Its injuries each year, Includ- <lng the cost of control measures, imount probably to not less than $8,- 000,000,* suys the United States Department of Agriculture. "fy This pest bus been known for more than 150 years, is a native American Insect, and has demandedthe attention of horticultural men continuously. Many methods have been tried for Its eradication and control, but !iot until 1915, when the bureau of entomology began experiments in the Use of various toxic gasses as * pos- /Jiible means of control, was any very 'practical method found. Use Paradichlorobenzine. In these experiments it was found that the chemical paradichlorobenzine, for which the abbreviated name "paradichlor" is suguested when referred to as an insecticide, could be used successfully in control of the insect. This chemical is a white crystalline substance having an etherlike odor which, while harmless to persons and domestic animals under ordinary conditions, is poisonous to insects. Application of this chemical to peach trees for the control of the peaCh J>orer should be made in the fall after Inost of the moths have finished their •gg-laying activities, to avoid late infestation of the trees. The method consists simply of applying the chemical to the soil around the base of the tree in a circular band an Inch or two Wide, care being taken that the inner part of the band is about two inches from the tree trunk. As soon as the chemical has been applied, cover it carefully with several shovelfuls of dirt, making a cone-shaped mound around the tree trunk by packing the earth with the back of the shovel. ......... Remove Dirt Mounds. Under average fall weather conditions most of the chemical under the •oil covering *W bur* evaporated in four to six weeks, killing from 00 to 100 per cent of the borers. It is a good practice to remove the mounds of dirt some five or six weeks after application of the chemical. . The "iwradichlor." in the experience of the bureau of entomology, can be used without danger of injury on trees four years of age and over--the dose on four and five-year trees l»eing threefourths of an ounce per tree, on trees six years of age and older one ounce per tree, or, if the trees are unusually large one aud oue-quarter oumea may be used.' X Dairy Products Perfect and Economical Food It has always been known that milk and other dairy products were very healthful and economical foods, but these facts were not fully realized until scientists made tlieir startling discoveries, within recent years, concerning those mysterious substances known as vitamins, which are contained In mllkj butter, etc., and which are absolutely essential to the growth and health of the old as well as the young. Milk and other dairy products are the most perfect of all foods, and the dairy cow is the most economical producer of such food. Various agencies and organizations, such as the United States Department of Agriculture, national,, state and local health organizations, doctors, nurses, etc., the national dairy council and many commercial organizations, have given these facts enormous publicity and advertising, and have educated the public to a greater ap- ) preciatlon and knowledge of the value of dairy products. Make Stack Silage When No Silo Is Available Andrew Boss, vice director of the Minnesota experiment station, says that farmers without silos can preserve green and immature corn by the stack method of making silage. C. L. McNelly, a Minnesota county agent, has made stack silage for four seasons on his- farm at Mcintosh, Minn., and recommends it in preference to bundle fodder.corn. He makes the stack about 20 feet in diameter and 20 feet high, keeping the center lower than the outside until the. top is reached whed it should be filled full. The bundles must be distributed'evenly over the surface with the butts laid to the outside. * During the winter the top of the stack is kept covered with a foot or two of wild hay which can be thrown hack as the silage is taken off. In order to prevent extreme freezing this covering should be replaced after the day's feed has been thrown down. Corn preserved In this way will rot In for about eight inches on the outside of the stack, but as the butts of the stalks only are affected the loss is not serious. According '.o Messrs. Itoss and McNelly the silage cures somewhat differently from the amnion corn silage In that it seems to develop less acid. There 13 a sweet molasses odor and flavor which make It palatable for all kinds of live stock. Most Important to Keep Sheep Free From Worms It Is most Important to keep sheep free from tapeworms. These worms come from ripe segments "dropped by infested slieep on the pastures so that old, 6r permanent pastures soon become tainted for sheep. Lambs should, so far as possible, have new, clean grass to go on each spring and before turning the ewes and lambs out to grass the ewes should be treated to free them of w«rms, especially stomach worms (strongylus liaemonchus). When sheep are known to be infested with tapeworms starve them for 24 hours, then give each sheep one to two drams of freshly powdered kamala. washed down With water. After administering the medicine turn the sheep into a pen on the floor of which slaked lime has been spread to the depth o£ ope Inch or more. Keep the sheep there for 24 hours. Mating Fowls for Points Wlwn mating fowls of the fmailersized varieties, one male to twelve or fifteen females Is sufficient; for medium- sized varieties, one male to ten or twelve females; for large varieties, like Cochins and Brahmas, one male to eight or fen females. This refers to breeding for ordinary purposes because when breeding for improvement of standard qualities the size of the mating depends on how many f^wls can be found which the breeder thinks will breed well together and produce the points which he wishes to produce. .Dress Turkeys for Market Farmers near the city markets, and particularly those In the middle Atlantic and New England states, often dress the turkeys and either sell them direct to the consumer or to city dealers. In some sections shortly before Thanksgiving there is held what Is known as turkey day. On the day before this event every turkey g:ower In the neighborhood kills and dresses his turkeys and the following morning brings them into town. METHODS OF APPLE GROWING EAST OF THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER Principles Discussed in Bulletin. (prepared by the United States Dep*rt»W* of Agriculture.) The fundamental principles of apple growing are discussed in a new bulletin Just issued by the United States Department of Agriculture which treats in particular of apple growing east of the Mississippi river. The fruit grower, says the department, who best understands the principles Involved and applies them wisely is the one who usually succeeds because lie best meets the conditions of nature with which he contends. There is no "rule of thumb" method of procedure which can be laid down to fit ali localities and conditions. From their inception, says the department. many orchards are doomed to failure or to mediocrity of success only, because they are poorly located with respect to soil, local temperature conditions, or for some other reason which is inherent in the surroundings and which might easily have been avoided had the principles of good orcharding been observed in the beginning. With the high costs that enter Into the development and maintenance of apple orchards, any advantages of site and location and of favorable conditions with respect to regularity of crops, abundant yields nnd perfection of development of the fruit may make a wide difference In the financial aspects of an orchard enterprise, as compared with one where adverse conditions occur. The alin of Farmers' Bulletin 1360 Is to help the grower in meeting some of the problems of apple orchard planting and maintenance. A copy may be secured uj»on request, as long as the supply lasts, from the United States Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C. RBMRCTSfc Site for Dairy Barn The selection of a site for the location of the dairy barn is seldom given due consideration. The location should be the first consideration for the reason that is is very expensive to change locations, once the barn is located and built. The barn should be located where the surface drainage is ideal. A lHK>rly drained barnyard will be the source of a great deal of the dairyluans troubles so far as producing food milk Is concerned. Pull out and burn ail bean vines Infected with rust. • • e Give special feeding and attention to bogs' to be shown at fairs. * * * The successful dairyman must weed, feed and breed, and keep continually at IV * • • Whitewash looks good on the oatside of poultry house# and pig pens, but on the inside It does good. Testing cows is a good deal like matrimony from the man's viewpoint --you alwuys get the best resuits if you humor every whim. • e • '! XA bookkeeping system of the Carta Is like a speedometer on the tiivver; it tells you liow fust you're going and i Itfts you figure the costs. i ' ' • I A high producing dairy cow, or anj dairy cow for that matter, should' never be forced to drink water below a temperature of 55 degrees. Fother Planned to Smother His Baby Kansas City. Mo.--Loren Peerson, nineteen years old, admitted, according to the police, that he escaped from a constable after being caught digging a grave in which he planned to bury a month-old baby boy In a pasture east of this city. **! intended to smother my baby and bury It to save my family and my wife's family from disgrace," Peerson was quoted as saying. The baby apparently nn- X harmed, was brought to a hospi- v tal. X FATHER HANGS GIRL BY WRISTS Inhuman Punishment for the Theft of $2. New York.*-- Everybody at 88 Thortrpson street knew that Antoinette. I'aul Forki's eight-year-old daughter, had stolen $2 from her father. They had heard Antoinette crying all night and, knowing her father, felt certain site had expiated her offense. The shrieks of the child redoubled in violence at about the time Forkl. whose wife and son had gone out earlier, was leaving for his fruit stand on the East side about 8:30 a. m.. and many mothers at C»S Thompson street shook their heads commiseratingly. Forkl slammed the door of his apartment at last and clumped down the stairs to his work. Listening women withdrew their heads and closed their doors softly as he passed, for the very fundamental of good breeding on Thompson street Is the ability to mind one's own business. By 9 o'clock, however; the dwindling shrieks and weakening moans of the childish voice which resounded In the .?orkl home had wrung the hearts of several women of the house to the point where they cast neighborly courtesy nnd good breeding to the winds and sought a policeman. He forced the door and found little Antoinette hanging limply by her wrists from a rope which was made fast above the transom. Her eyes were Inflamed and swollen from crying, her wrists were cut by the rope which had been knotted about them and her hands were puffy with congested blood. She fainted when she was cut down. r- Forkl is held on a charge of felonious assault. Big Plaids TlilS station's advance* styles have one quality in common which illustrates the tenacity of a mode that lias once been established, and its adaptability for the illustration of a new feature. That the straight-line frock Is stronger in favor^than ever before is evident, observes a fashion correspondent in the New York Times, particularly In the models for early fall street wear, for sports and In the new coats. Godets. biases, drapery and Innumerable variants are left to another type of dress, one for which plain materials are most suitable. The tube frock and 1 lie severely straight coat are widely accepted and are making possible the introduction the plaid and the stripe. Large plaids that developed Into wild extravagances of pattern were introduced late last winter, and so were enormous stripes, but tlieir place was not defined and they had but a bilef season. But the relation , of the big, plaid and the wide stripe to the unbroken surface and uncurved line was obvious, inspiring, the fashion artists Use Red Light Glare to Shame Spooners Off Roads Morrlstown, Ohio.--Officers In the western end of Belmont county have adopted a quiet but effective method of disposing of petting parties on lonely highways near here. Upon being notified of such parties in their district, the officers hurry to the scene In automobiles. They are armed with an apparently harmless box. Stealthily they place the box in front of the petting party car. A fuse is lighted and then the fun begins. For the next five minutes the roadway for an area of nearly 100 feet is illuminated with a glaring red light. The couple or couples In the car promptly forget everything except the starter on the machine and ^<eed away. $1 Bill Copied in Rug Seized as Counterfeit New York.--The largest counterfeit dollar In the world was seized here. The dollar, a rug reproducing a silver certificate, with finely woven portraits of Lincoln and Grant, was brought in on the liner King Alexander by a Greek merchant living in Chicago. Seizure was made by secret service agents who refused the name of the rug's owner. The agents explained It was illegal to reproduce currency In any manner. The dollar Is six feet by four. „ It even carries out the color scheme of United States currency. It was the first fucli seizure ever made at the custom house... Agents said the rug. had been made in Greece. ' Novel Punishment Meted Out to Chinese Thieves Tslngtao, China.--The park police here demonstrated a new and effective mode of punishment for vandals recently when two men were caught stealing flowers. The officers took the culprits to the main boulevard and made them kneel. To the prodding of police rifles they were made to shout to all passers-by why they were being thus treated. For 15 minutes they were compelled to shout: "I took what did not belong to me and promise never to do it again." while they were made to bold the stolen flowers aloft. For Sports Wear Nothing Is Smarter Than the Plaid Dress. to express one with the other, hnd tthheeyy open the season with dash and COIOI All last season, especially In the early spring styles," the coming of plaids and stripes was evident. Separate skirts in these were very chic, and the big plaids in sports coats, the Scotch plaids In scarfs, ties, parasols, hat trimmings and a thousand and one other smart accessories brought tliero Into favor. Now they are the sensation of the season, and every smart woman will have a coat frock, a tunic or n gown of more elaborate type done In a plaid in which there is no compromise as to size. The extreme character of the new plaids and stripes demands the most skillful handling and may be a stiff test of the designer's art and taste. A pattern that converts the entire frock Into a giant checkerboard--half a dozen blocks to one length of the figure--• must challenge the modiste's Ingenuity and her workmanship. For of all figured dress materials the larga jilaid or block Is most difficult and unless cleverly built most trying to the woman who wears It. No figure, however slim and graceful, will be less than disfigured by a plaid that Is not perfectly matched and cut with an aecurote and appraising eye. That success with plaids Is possible Is shown in some of the models already established by some of the best designers, both French and American. Nothing is more swagger than a plaid frock when it is well done. It may be of the severest plain block pattern, of a large plaid composed of clustered lines, or the sort reproducing the attractive plaids of the Highland clans, of which there are so many. They all require a high degree of skill, nnd they are either delightfujl or atrocioua according to the ability of the COIF turiere. Cloth Is All the Rage. The name of Rodier Is logically linked with the new fall fashions. f6r cloth is going to l»e all the rage, supplanting, ih a degree, the satins Hftd crepes and all the lighter fabrics that were so popular last , season. Rodier Is an- advocate of the plaid, and has created some most Important patterns In woolens that have both dnsli In appearance and comfort In texture. In the kashas, cheviot twills nnd English materials some stunning frocks for street or semisports wear are presented in all the new color combinations. Black arid white Is as popular in this type*" of dress as In everything else, at the moment, and the new Mendings a re _ most attractive. Brown, which is the very latest fancy. Is used in many 'charming ways--brown and black, brown and yellow, and In countless other arHstlc variations. The greens are good atso--reseda, bottle green, shutter green, jade--effectively combined with dee|*er or . lighter shades; with black, beige, tan, copper, offering a great variety. In the Hodier materials stripes are almost us well received as the plaids, and are especially good In the tunic frocks and the two-piece tailored suits in which the striped material is used for a plaited skirt, and for cravat scarf, collar and cuffs or other repeated touch on the Jacket of plain goods. Since the plaid stripe mode was first presented many smart models have been received showing a wide diversity of design. There are the uncompromising all-plaid -frock on which no trimming Is required or possible; the two-piece, with skirt of plaid Rnd tunic blouse of plain stuff; a frock of Quakerlike simplicity, having collar. 0cufTs and scarf of Scotch plaid or a gay check, and several new models In which plain and plaid materials are effectively combined. One of these typifies the Idea--a frock for a Jeune^fllle, the blouse-bod- .Ice and deep panel at one side of brown kasha, with a plaited skirt of ttrown and scarlet plaid. The long tight sleeves which are now the best style are trimmed with narrow bands of the plaid Just above the hand, and a band of the plaid finishes the collar revers and marks the top of the side panel with a narrow pocket flap. A tunic model that is quite new Is done In brown wool rep, severely straight nnd beltless, three-quarter length, with long, tight sleeves, a rolling Byron collar and small cuffs of white faille. From the throat to the belt line the tunic is cut open, showing a waistcoat of the faille. From the waist to the hip four or five buttons of carved hrown wood close the tunic, and below that It opens, coatlike, over a straight skirt of the plaid. A bias band of the plaid edges the open front of the waist and is used for a separate scarf. Bordered Frocks Are Smart Crane Cut» Off Light Passaic. N. J.--This city was in darkness for half an hour when a migratory crane, alighting on the electric wire which brings -2fl.0U<> volts from the Marion power house. Jersey City, with one foot on each of two wires, short circuited the system. Bordered frocks are going to he very smart. Some of the most important Paris houses have established distinctive styles in frocks in which the use of plaids, checks nnd stripes Is varied by Introducing them as a part of the dress--a border, trimming or some unique detail. I'remet does this with conspicuous success in youthful models, one of which Is built of beige kasha clothe the skirt bordered above the hem with stripes of brown and laid In a cluster of narrow plaits at one side of the front. The blouse and plain skirt are joined with a seam, and a narrow l»clt of brown patent leather Is worn. A small scarf of the beige goods bordered with brown Is attached to one side of the shullow, square, collurless neck. A sports frock that Is smart nnd showy is made of a Rodier material named "les paveo |M>plavella." one of the new weaves, a thick diagonal In dark blue, with a knee-depth border of large plaid in blue and gray uhout the bottom of the rtlrt and forming the separate scarf. Paquin is another of the well-known designers who go In for pluiils. using litem in subtle and stylish combinations with plain colors. Cheruit and Doucet ure featuring stripes expressing their styles in some Very handsome gowns and wraps EPILEPTIC FIT MTERVENES TO STOP ROBBERY Capricious Fate Steps In to Thwart Well'Laid Plans of Bandits, • Houston, Texas.--Choosing an epileptic fit as her weapon, capricious fate intervened to prevent a robbery and perhaps save a life at the Citizens' State bank. In the silent after-mldnlght darkness three men, revolvers drawn and black masks ready to hand, squatted beneath a counter of the bank. They were listening. In a moment they Intended to crawl on top of the big vault, there to wait for daylight and the coming of the first employee. Their hearts beat fast and hard with excitement; and, " as they crouched, -one of the trio suddenly gave a loud gasp. The other two, surprised and infuriated, turned on him with snarl3 and muttered curses. But he paid no attention. He had dropped his gun and mask, and was writhing and jerking on the floor. The whites pTvB® eyes shone strangely in the glootu; . Become Alarmed. Ills two companions became alarmed. In vain they shook' attd ^uuimeled him; lie seemed unaware of their presence. And then cold terror made their stomachs quake. \\'hat had seized him in the deep blackness? Their sense of guilt made every sound from the stricken ifian seem thunderous and horrible; and in another moment they leaped up. and leaving lllm there, fled out through the window by which they had entered. This was the story told to city detectives and Sheriff Binford b£ William H. Cox, twenty-four, who was foynd unconscious beneath the counter by L. B. Thompson, cashier of the bank, at 7 a. m. Monday. On seeing the revolver and mask beside the prostrate man. Thompson Are Yon Weak? Nervoni? Rundown? , Rocky Comfort. Mo.--w| reO» •fWMnd Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription for women who are in a ijcrvous and rundown state. When I had become weak, rundown, and in a nervous state I took Dr. Pierce's Favorite P r e - s c r i p t i o n a n d found i t very helpful in giving . . me strength and quieting my nerves. The Favorite Prescription' is a splendid buildingup tonic.'--Mrs. Earnest Kimbrough. If yon want to be well, ask your dealer for this Prescription, in tablet or liquid form. Write Dr. Pierce, Buffalo. N. Y.. for free advice. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM taoTtiOtMnfl -PtnpsHair Pall las Restores Color and to Gray and Faded Hail «;>. *.nd fi.noat r>mrrists» Chem. V>' kn. ratcboc Y. HINDERCORNS culooses, et**., stops all pain, ensures eoaofort tc 1 Ssth. m£li'* '*•- »« ' »•- •* Drnc- Ifrfe Blew* Cb*mi«al Warkt* Fatefcoco*- K *. Airight ma mild, vettetabl# Taxat!v« to relieve Constiratlon Btid Bill ousneea and Veep the dicestlve aod elltninative functions normal. 6ft * _ . , .. asc »oi faraticr y ears Chips off the 0M Block, M JUNIORS-- Uttle Nta L Onfj-thlrd the fffndose. Made of m e ingredient*, then candy coated. Por children and adults. _ •SOLO BY YOUR DRUGGIST* Enumerating V/i« "What a tine lot of children." ejaculated n lady motorist in the Rumpus Nidge region. "How many have you, sir?" "Ought's ought and Agger's a figger." began (tap Johnson, the parent of the puck. "Carry one, and--" "My gracious! What are you doing?" "Just sorter totaling 'em up, man,"-- Kunsas City Star. A worthless man always seems to have more friends than a worthless woman. Found Unconscious Beneath Counter. A New Embroidery A new kind of embroidery has been Invented by one of the most exclusive makers of sports clothes. It Is done on knitted garments which have been worked with a course sllteh. The embroidery which usually outlines simple geometrical patterns or squares'-or diamonds is <Jone by simply drawing heavy wool threads through the coarse knitting stitches. The embroidery is of a rotor strongly contrasting with that of the frock, so thnt It produces a great effect, though It Is simple to do. telephoned to the police. They took Cox to headquarters, where he remained In a semi-conscious condition for several hours. When he recovered he returned to the bank with Sheriff Binford and detectives Arch Spradley. George Andrews and Tom Bass, and explained to them Just how he and his companions had planned to stage a hold-up. He was hitter because they had run away and left him. An Ironical Joke. Before entering the hank they cut the telephone wire, he said. Then I hey worked out their campaign. They dtylded 10 get on top of the vault, wnlch was about nine feet high, and where. If they lay flat, they would he Invisible to anyone entering the bank. They figured that the first act of the first employee to arrive would he to open the vault; and then" It would be easy to reach over the edge aud cover him with tlieir weapons. But as they were about to scramble up. fate and Cox's nerves played them an Ironical Joke. According to Sheriff Binford, Cox said lie estimated his share of the haul would be $20,000, and that he intended to bury it. He declared he was j.a carpenter by trude, and recently hud returned hers from Los Angeles. The sheriff and detectives called on Cox's mother, tyho lives near the Yale street road, and who, they suld, continued his statement that lie was subject to epileptic tits. A charge of burglary was filed against him In Justice Campbell Overstreet's court. Few things come to the a vera go mnn. He must eo after them': Hall's Catarrh Medicine Treatment, both local and internal, and has been nicccwful in the treatment of Catarrh for ant forty yean. Sold by all druggists. F. J. CHENEY & CO* Toledo, Ohio MUNYON'S PAW PAW PILLS Hats of Horsehair Hats of the finest horsehair In a flattering shade of pale brown or bisque are covered with lace the same tone which falls In a becoming frill, for several inches below the brim. Paris Tunic Forerunner of Today's Popular Mode Flight Ends Fatally Ynmtt. Ariz.--William Jones, confessed slayer. escaj>ed from a sheriff's |x»88e under a fusillade of pistol shots, only to lose his life in flight in the quicksands of the Colorado river. Cape Is Snake Den Ixiveland. Colo.--While excavating In the Big Thompson canyon the other day for soft dirt used to fill In the rock crevices in repairs for the road to Rstes park, damaged In the recent floods, workmen under the direction of Road Supervisor H. J. McDill encountered a cave in the mountain side, which, as the work progressed, caved In disclosing a rattlesnake's deq in •tfhich wer? coiled three of the reptiles. ooe of trhlcli was sfevga foot long, V - The first tunics that came from Paris five yfars ago were the forerunners of the present styles, says a fashion correspondent in the New York Times. They were not Intended to be blouses, as the latest models nre called, but were really one-piece Jersey frocks for Informal or sports wear. They were held in with ribbon or soft silk girdles that gave a slightly gathered effect about the waist and, liip. Their vog^e was not conspicuous, but the Idea proved un opening wedge for the latest model In Its niany variants, which has become ar. instant success. In a mode so simple In character the changing of but a single line Is required to vary It.,, Silk poplin Is much liked among the lighter fabrics. Some charming tunic blouses are made of this material over a narrow skirt of the same stuff. Satin, particularly black satin, is so universally worn and is so popular for ihe tunic dress as to be "almost like, s uniform." Kaska cloth is used by some couturiers. To be strictly a la mode, some modistes are using materials of Incongruous nature In building tunleblouse frocks. A heavy lace in ivory or ecru is cut on the tunic model and worn over a straight slip of black satin or crepe de chine. And fine pmlted or tucked thin stuffs, such as chiffon or georgette, are made in funlc-blotiss style, over the usual tailored.slip. Coming in Again Vslvet flowers with big petals are coming in again, disposing here at,d there the little Victorian bouquets of small posies with which frocks have been ornamented. The large flowers sometimes are sewn In scant handful* over the skirt of i»n evening gown* Tunic Blouse Longer The tunic blouse grows longer and longer, till it Is difficult to distinguish it from the frock proper..^ Also, It grows more elaborate in design, and remains becoming only to tbe slim. Hop* for Constipation Raliara haadachs, diaattisss and othar diaordars due to bowal congestion. A parfsct laxative, Worka mildly without (ripinf. Mitfivsn's Paw Piv Tsaie aikts v*« wall, kasm jraa yag. Ssrii/odtoii guaranteed *ar womji Good Kidneys 4 Mean Long Eagle Picks Up Boy; Is Caught in Struggle Chathnm, Ont.--An eagle measuring eight feet front tip to tip picked up fourteen-year-old Fred Cunningham, weighing 97 pounds, on a goif course near here, lifted him five feet In the air and then dropped him when his clothing gave way, according to the story lold by the lad today. Cunningham, clawed and scratched, managed to net the bird in a wire fence, where It was killed by a citizen. Rivet in Her Nose Higbee, Mo.--After phj siciatHs had treated* the four-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Lushy of this place for catarrh one year, it was discovered the child,,, had a larife copper rivet in her nnse. The rivei was removed, and 'he child's "catarrhal" condition Is rupldly disappearing. * Keep Them Clean and Free from Poisonous Waste with Dr. Carey's Marsh root Prescription No. 777. iB Ounce Jlottle, 75c No Draft -- Just Roots and HwW - And Money Back If It Don't Halp You Wonderfully. When back aches and pufflness shows under the eyes. It means that your kidneys need cleaning--need to he built up. It may mean much more if quick action isn't taken--your very life may depend on what you do today. I)r. Carey's Marshroot Prescription 777 Is for kidney and bladder troublesv and for that purpose has been used with what might be called phenomenal success for 40 years. It has helped thousands and has saved many lives. It is rigidly guaranteed--if it doesn't help you in one week's time, money back. In tablet and liquid form at all real druggists everywhere. Price 75c. If your local druggist hasn't it. he can get It from the Carey Medical Laboratories at Elwlra, N. Y. MEN! Hook 528-Poand Prize Los Angeles, Cal.--II. J. Mallen, l„os Angeles busine*? man, caught a 528- pound sword fish off Santa Catalina Island. It is said to be the largest of Us kind ever captured with a rod. Kill* Self in Protest Lemlterg. Poland.--As a climax to his speech of protest against the Polish government's neglect of war invalids. a young cripHe shut himself dead here at a meeting. WOMEN! for two T+ar» I bad otf Stomach ire.--.* >T9p?pala. indLgsstum arai suMuscii causing . fusness. ootuUpaltati texrifct* Hsadachsa »<?*«.*- iv.v;or» >ald I ha t to upon, but 1 i<9 Submit Whan s frtend uf uuue lolJ ma about N't - ?ONK, I trt*d U and in two I couUl «at i*»atrt*«*hs» adnodQ ljt i1M70v l bLst k« 1 ab oowtt tl»d« <«B*a tfioir t -uAU u.iLi* NU-TONE WILL DO WON OCRS FOR YOU Thousand* o-f row mj-'y-vt it» woodwfui to '* Itsvs Gaarv vVn»u?atlvOftbaumati< ut>. M'T '****. dITay FsO' R(rMiaIl NloGd ayS atid tar t* V** t: acvocxjtu* u» dtrvedona an<1 if »' ih* ecfe) ot H daj« »d «« Kpi o:rtuio$n 1an d ^ Out ' return uuu*#L>or i ImMXMhhtsM IOIf fCer MMIC^ M. M--. D«pt. 114, 340 K. 7Sth St.. Chic Mauted--County Afrnti to wli th« A»to« luatio Cross L.*x-k for door* «nd windtfwsfcvery h>>m« ne«Kia th<-m mIm »nJ jars* pi..tits, Kxolusiw t<rrriu>ry Writ*, loa. y MviniaciM Mf* >' . RaptJa, Mich.

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