McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 9 Sep 1915, p. 7

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EFFICIENT TRAP NEST IS A NECESSITY *k:*\ f'3£" (Prepared by the United St&tes Depart­ ment of Agriculture.) *>„ A trap nest is a laying nest BO ar- t ranged that after a hen enters it she is confined until released by the at- ^•tendant. The trap nest shown in the • accompanying illustrations is used ; with good results on the government '§} poultry (arm and Is quite similar to ".^7. the nest used at the Connecticut /Estate experiment station. It is very :^vAV;simple and may be built at a small > ftv.cost- The use of trap nests is essential ^i|in breeding poultry for both egg pro- ^J'duction said exhibition, where pedi­ gree records are used in selecting either the males or females, and has a place in mass selection fSr increas­ ing the egg production. Trap nests are of value in weeding out poor lay­ ers and increasing the average egg yield of a flock by selecting and breed­ ing, but are not extensively used on account of the large amount or labor * ' • required to operate them. Some poul­ try breeders trap nest their pullets during their first six months of lay­ ing and use this as a basis in select- 0 (ng their breeders for egg production. One trap nest (Pig. 1) should be .-^provided for four to five hens kept in Hfiocks of fifty or more, while more trap ^nests per hen are necessary in small- ;er flocks. The hens are banded with numbered bands, and a record is kept their egg production. The nests * /should be visited at least three times daily, sad preferably four or five l^-' vjtimes, frequent trips being especially necessary when the hens are laying freely and during hot weather, ff. v. This trap nest may be attached to the under side of the dropping board, - -with the front facing the pen and ar- >^ranged 80 that it can be easily re- '%f^moved, or it may be placed on the % ,Vwalls of the pen. If the nest is placed 4' , ̂ under the dropping board, the latter will serve as a top for the nest, and ^•4; Vithe rear of the nest may be of wire allow good ventilation in warm :i;jweather. If the nest is placed on the |»,|^fi:/wall, slats or wire should be inserted ' f , -from the front of the nest to the wall |tev;vs)jat a sharp angle to prevent the hens J!f* %from roosting on the nest. When the hen enters this nest her "back raises the door (c), which re­ leases the catch or trigger (a) and allows the door to shut. The catch should be set so that its edge just -/i i.v • -*l - y '•id**.- J holds the door, which position is regulated by the, screw or nail at the lower inside edge of the catch. A washer should be placed on the screw (d) between the catch and the side pi the nest to prevent this catch from sticking. The guard (b) ^rmnd the catch keeps the nestling material away from the catch. The »sngth of the catch which supports fie door and the triangular notch in the door may be varied slightly for very small or very large hens. Constructing I Three-Compartment Nest. Cut four seven-eighth-inch boards for ends and partitions, 12 inches wide by 19 inches long, enough one- half-inch boards 39% inches long, laid lengthwise, to cover the top, back and bottom, and one strip 39% Inches long and one and one-half Inches wide for the front of thq nests. Cut three pieces of one-half-inch boards 12 inches long and three inches high to insert in the nest to hold the nesting material away from the door. > Nail the top, back and bottom to the ends and partitions (see Fig. 2), in­ sert the three-inch strips in the nestB, and make the guard (b), nailing it to the left side of the nest. Bore a hole in the catch (a) large enough so that the catch will move freely when screwed into position on the side. Place a washer on the screw between the catch and the side of the nest. Place a screw at the lower edge of the catch to stop It when set, so that the catch will Just hold the door. Make the doors (c) of seven-eighths- inch material, 12 inches by six inches, and cut a triangular notch in the cen­ ter four Inches Wide. Put two Bcrew eyeB in the top of the doors and bore holes in the front of the nests two Inches below the top (lnsid6 measure­ ment), through which a three-six­ teenth-inch wire is run to support the doors. Attach a narrow strip to the front of the nests for the her.s to lump upon when entering the nests. Place a but­ ton or block of wood on the front of each partition to hold the door when the nest is closed. If the nests are to be placed direct­ ly below the dropping board, a wire top should be used on the next, except for a five-inch strip of wood on the front edge of the top to stiffen the nest. WOVEN WIRE FENCE IS BEST Problem Has Always Loomed Up High to the Beginner With 8heep--Put Barbed Wire on Top. The fencing problem has alwftys loomed up high to the beginner in raising sheep. I% is not, however, a very difficult one if it Is undertaken in an intelligent manner. It does not require heavy fence to hold sheep, * but barbed wire will not make satis­ factory sheep fence. , Most sheep raisers use a fence con- POV- etructed of woven wire from thirty to P I ^ jjforty-two Inches high with from five nine horizontal wires and sixteen to 'Jjfc twenty stays to the rod. Any fence " -i - coming inside* these limits if put up " Jv"with a post each fourteen to sixteen j^oet will prove satisfactory for sheep. f 1 if a thirty-inch woven wire is used, it should have at least one barbed wire on top of it It usually pays to put one or two barbed wires on top of the woven wire, however, as this will - ^ make a fence that will turn horses and • cattle as well as sheep. 1 x ?• -.,f* : """V ;! » Care for Overheated f-tbrse. If one of the horses stops sweating Sf^^ior Is overcome with the heat, get the .'janimal into the shade at once'and re- • ^2'.^ove the harness. • (This includes the ^IP-bridle.) Sponge the horse all over with cold water and throw water on ** jthe legs. Cool the head with cold wa­ iter or chopped ice if it can be had. Give two ounces of aromatic spirits of ^ ^jammonla of two ounces of sweet - iBpirita of nitre. Even a cup of hot ;*-• f ^l^offee wlllfejelp if nothing else is avail- 2&,w-'--<able. ; -- Lighten Horse's Burden. • Make it as easy as you can for 'horses that are to be kept tugging on •he cultivator an day. Lighten the harness, for one thing. About all that |jj: jin needed for a common one-horse cul- >'^*V*lvator is a collar and a set of traces. %v*'? feeaidea bridle and lines, of course. PLANT PEAR TREES IN ROWS Good Oistanoe Is Fifteen by Thirty Feet--Object Is to Obtain Larger Yields of Fruit. A good distance for planting stand­ ard pear trees is 15 by 30 feet; that Is, the rows are 30 feet apart and the trees IS feet apart in the rows. The object of this method is to ob­ tain larger crops of fruit from the same ground until the trees become large enough to interfere with each other; then each alternate tree in the row is cut out, leaving the trees in the entire orchard at a distance of SO feet each way. This system has tfsn advantage of more fully utilizing tis* land for fruit production until tl^e (Waning out be comes necessary. Another plan is to plant the trees 2C feet apart each way. This distance will afford free circulation of air and abundance of sunlight, both of which are essential to well-developed and highly colored fruit. DIFFICULT PEST TO CONTROL Squash-Vine Borer Can Only Be Erad ieated by Cutting Out the Af­ fected Parts of Vines. The squash-vine borer, which de­ stroys melons, cucumbers, squashes and pumpkins by boring through the stems of the plants, and through th* leaf stalks, is a hard pest to control. Spraying does no good. About the only way to get rid of it is to cut out the affected parts of the vines. If vour crop is lujured this year, plant vines in a different place next year Harrow the infected fields lightly in •he fall, and then plow at least six inches deep in the spring. Or yotf n-ay cover the vines with earth here and there, while growJng, so that new roots will put out, and if the boref cuts off the plant from the original root It win still live.--Farm Ltffc SAILOR "CAME BACK" ROMANCE OF THE SEA A8 RE- • '."4ATB0 BY THE WRITEltf;-^ Cupid Triumphed In the End, Despite Effort^of Father to Separate His .? daughter From the Man She' Loved. • $ Some 30 years ago I sailed with a brigantine hailing from a New Eng­ land town. The skipper had an eight­ een-year-old daughter, his only child, on board, his wife being dead. The girl became friendly with. one of our ordinary seamen about twenty years old, a clean-cut chap, who al­ ready had his master's papers. One night, when the young fellow was at the wheel, the skipper came on deck and found his daughter standing alongside of him, with her arm around his neck. The skipper became angry, hit the boy/and sent him forward, and would not allow him to come aft again, although the girl told him she w&a engaged to the boy. Now began a trying time for the boy. One day the young fellow, goad- #9"'to desperation, defended himself when the skipper struck him. This was committing an unpardonable act, as a skipper has almost unlimited power on his own vessel. The boy was put into irons and when we arrived at Rio Janeiro, our destination, the harbor police took him to shore. I must state, to the skipper's credit, that he did not prose­ cute the boy, but of course his berth was taken by another man when we left Rio. Five years passed. I was still with the same skipper and so was his daughter, but she was not any more the laughing, happy girl she was be­ fore. * We had loaded pitch pine in Bruns­ wick, Qa., and were again bonnd for Rio. Nearing our destination, we were caught In a storm. The vessel rolled awfully, the cargo chafed back and forth and we soon knew that we had fire in the hold. We took off the main hatch to try and put oat the fire, but as soon as we got it open the flames burst out, and we had to take to the boats. This happened at night. The ves­ sel burned for two hours, when there was no more left of her. We stood by her, thinking the flames would draw some other vessel to our assist­ ance. At daylight we saw a "fore and after" near by. In a short time we were alongside. The skipper's daugh­ ter was the first up the ladder and I was close after her to prevent her from falling backward into the boat. The skipper of this vessel, a young fellow, stood at the rail and helped us to the deck. The girl looked at him and he at her; then they fell into each other's arms and the girl cried from happiness. The young skipper waB the boy her father had treated so shabbily. Strange to say, the vessel was bound for Rio, too, and he arrived there once more securely bound, but not with chains this time. The wedding was celebrated In Rio and the bride went with her husband on his vessel. --Chicago Tribune. How Much Radium? Efforts to determine the amount of radium in the ocean have been few. Prof. S. J. Lloyd of the University of Alabama finds that about thirty samples of sea water have been test­ ed. taken from the Irish and English coasts, the North and South Atlantic, the Mediterranean, the Black sea, the Arabian sea, and in his own deter­ mination from the Gulf of Mexico 200 miles south of Mobile. Discarding ex­ treme results, with a maximum 50 times greater than the minimum. It is concluded that the total radium In the sea 'somewhat exceeds 1,400 tons. As rivers contain little, it (s assumed that this supply comes from uranium in the sea, which must reach a total of nearly 4,200,000,000 tons, making ura­ nium in sea-water comparable in quan­ tity to gold. HOW NOBEL MADE DISCOVERY Cut Finger Caused Him to Find a Way of Handling Nitroglycerin With Safety. When that very dangerous explosive, nitroglycerin, was first invented ex­ traordinary precautions had to be tak­ en to prevent accidents while the sub­ stance was being handled, but, not­ withstanding this, eo many disaster^ ^occurred that there seemed to be strong probabilities that its manufac­ ture and use would have to be pro­ hibited, says an English paper. After several governments had actu­ ally interdicted its use, however, means were discovered by which this powerful explosive could be used with a minimum of danger to those who handled it One of the methods employed was to convert the nitroglycerin into dyna­ mite by its absorption in the infusorial earth known as kieselguhr. This process, however, involved a reduction of the explosive power of the nitro­ glycerin and explosives chemists per­ sisted in their researches to find some substance which, when added to nitro­ glycerin, would render it safe for han­ dling without diminishing its explosive force. One of these chemistB was Nobel. It is on record that one day while No­ bel was at work in. his laboratory he cut his finger, and in order to stop the bleeding he painted some collodion (a liquid preparation akin to guncot- ton) over the cut to form a protective artificial skin. Having done this, he poured some of the collodion, by way of an experiment, into a vessel containing nitroglycerin, when he noticed that the two sub­ stances mixed and formed a jellylike mass. He at once set to work to Investi­ gate this substance, and the outcome of these experiments was blasting gel­ atin, a mixture containing 90 per cent of nitroglycerin and 10 per cent of soluble guncotton. Thus, as a result of a very trivial occurrence, that vio­ lent explosive, blasting gelatin, was discovered. New Names for Old Initials. British soldiers at the front are ap­ plying new significations to old initials. For instance, the R. F. A.--Royal field artillery--is being called the Ready for Anything. The men of King Edward's Horse say that K. E. H. means Kill Every Hun. The'unkindest interpretation is that pnt upon the letters R. A. M. C.--Roy­ al army medical corps. Somfe wounded soldierB have complained of missing belongings after their things have passed into the keeping of the R. A. M. C., so they declare the initials really now stand for Rob All My Com­ rades. Her Qualntness. "Cu'i's 'ooman, muh wife is," com­ plained Brother Bogus. "She'll b'lieve any kind of a story 'bout a forriner, but she won't b'lieve her own awful wedded husband on oath!, BUeves dat tale 'bout Jonah and de whale fum beginnln' to end, but when I comes rollin' home fum de lodce at two o'clock in de mawnin' and tells her what kept me so long was he'pin 'nishiate a stutterln* candidate, she snawts like a camel!"--Kansas City Star. Paderewski's "Pupil." Paderewski arrived in a small west­ ern town about noon one day and de­ cided to take a walk in the afternoon. While strolling along he heard a piano, and, following the sound, came to a house on which was a sign reading: "Miss Jones. Piano lessons 25 cents an hour." Pausing to listen he heard the young woman trying to play one of Chopin's nocturnes, and not succeeding very well. Paderewski walked up to the houBe and knocked. Miss Jones came to the door and recognized him at once. De­ lighted, she Invited him in and he sat down and played the nocturne as only Paderewski can, afterward spending an hour in correcting her mistakes. Miss Jones thanked him and he de­ parted. Some months afterward he returned to the town, and again took the same walk. He soon came to the home of Miss JoneB, and, looking at the sign, read: "Miss Jones. Piano lessons f 1 an hour. (Pupfl of Paderewski.)". Reward for Scholar. Dr. Maude Slye, the Unlersity of Chicago medical research worker, who recently established the theory that cancer is inherited and not contagious, as a result of ten years' experiments with mice, has been awarded the How­ ard Taylor HIcketts prize by the fac­ ulty of the university medical schooL To Wash White Corduroy. Wash in warm, soapy water until clean, using a good quality soap, then boil one-half hour in soapy water. Rinse in clear water, changing the water three times, and rinsing again in cold bluing water. Don't wring or squeeze, but hang to drip dry (in opea air it possible). Don't iron. ' ^ /Physician of Eminence. > Dr. Richard Pearson Strong, having quelled the epidemic of typhus fever in Serbia, thereby saving countless thousands of lives, now returns to this country to resume bis place as pro­ fessor of tropical medicine at the Harvard Medical school. He bad pre­ vious plague experience In the Phil­ ippines and China. Doctor Strong was born in Fortress Monroe, Virginia March 18. 1872. It is said that even as a child he was attracted to medicine as a profession, and that the medical officers at the fort were his chosen friends. He graduated from the medi­ cal school at Johns Hopkins, winning his M. D., in 1897. Then came a year as resident house physician at the Johns Hopkins hospital. He entered the army July 23, 1JR98, as assistant surgeon. After his splendid work In China he was induced to attach him­ self to Harvard university, where he has operated along research lines/' Malayan Rubber Industry. Since 1897 developments in the rub­ ber industry in Malay have been enor­ mous. In 1897 about 350 acres were planted to rubber. Year after year more jungle was cleared and the acre­ age increased rapidly. A tremendous development was felt in 1906. De­ mand for rubber the world over taxed the supply and speculators rushed to put land under cultivation. It is stated that in that year alone 150,000 acres were alienated for rubber cultivation. In 1912 there were 621,621 acres under rubber, and at the end of 1912 there were 1,055 rubber estates of over 100 acres in extent, the average yield per acre being 260 pounds. War Influences Paris Veil Styles. The war veil is the latest freak of fashion in Paris. Though quite gro­ tesque in appearance, it is popular in the sense that it expresses the patriot­ ism of the women. The two designs most frequently seen are those of a black cannon wo ven in the mesh just where it rests on the cheek, and a "beauty spot" woveo to the shape of the Red Cross, but done In white on a black background. Heavy Guard for Morgan's Place. J. P. Morgan's estate at Glen Cove is still under guard and Is likely to be until the end of the war. Three men are on duty by day and four by night. One is on poBt at the bridge connect­ ing East island with the mainland, and not only every traveler, but every package that passes can do ao only after having been subjected to his scrutiny. The others patrol the beaches. 1 Movement* of the Heart. The heart of an average man makes about one three-thousandth of a volt of electricity at every beat, and an instrument sensitive enough to meas­ ure it tma JuvmtAt,. ». '-w".1 •• ,-.y- Work for Crippled 8oldi«ra. One form which Germany's provi­ sion for the employment of crippled jpoldiers 1B taking is the purchase of two large landed estates in the neigh­ borhood of Magdeburg, where each man will have a plot of ground for ^growing vegetables and fruit, which can be easily disposed of In the Magdeburg market One estate cost $375,000, and the other about the same price. Children Cry For mom ALCOHOL- 3 PER CENT. AVegelaMc PlrepafatioaJbrAs* simila ting the Food pndRe^ula- ting the Stomachs and Bowels of INFANTS CH I L D R K N Promotes Di^estion,CheeffuK neRS and Rest.Oonfains neither OpitimMorpliinc; an* Mineral NOT NARCOTIC. ~ Aqpr of WO* SNIVEL PtTCMEft Smi* A pertcct Remedy forCihistipfi? tion. Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea,. Worms. Fevcrishiiesa knit LOSSOFSLBEIV RftSimile Signature of THE CEKTAUR COMRVNTJ NEW YORK A t ( > m o n t h s o l d j jDosi s ^( i % rs What is CASTORIA Ctestoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pave* goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups, It Is pleasant. Ift contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotl# Substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years tfc has bcea in constant use for the relief of Constipation. Flatulency* "Wind Colic, all Teething1 Troubles and Diaprhceft. _ It regulates the Stomach cad Boweli| , assimilates tike Food, giving1 healthy and natural linen The Children'* Panacea--Tho Mother's Friend* GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of #•'1 imm 3 Exact Cow ot Wrappar In Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought TMt OKNTAUN COM MNY, NSW VOMK CITY, Ji GOT OUT OF HIS DILEMMA Truly Iceman, as He Remarked to Himself, Had Profited by Night 8chool Education. Frits, the iceman, was In a perspira­ tion (for it was the hottest four o'clock In the morning in 11 years) and a dilemma (for he only had one small block of Ice left and there were still ten customers left unserved, each of whom took a ten-cent piece). "1 know!" Friti cried to himself. M1 know a way out. I didnt go to night Bchool for nothin'!" And he cut the block into ten tiny pieces and put one piece in front of each of the ten gates. Then climbing over one of the fences, and filling a bucket full of war ter, he poured water over each of the tiny ten. so that each was In the mid­ dle of a puddle. Clever Fritz! "What you don't? Well, let him ex­ plain it himself, then: "Haw, haw!" chuckled Frits. "Now when they And the pieces they'll think the ice went and melted on 'em!" Shortly afterwards ten good house­ wives opened their gates and got a slant at the tiny ten. You know the rest if you never had It happen to you.--Detroit Free Press. 8ome Refreshment. Rear Admiral Fletcher during the maneuvers of Newport told a story at a garden party. "The navy is as abstemious from ethical reasons," be began, "as old Stingee was from miserliness." "Old Stingee was entertaining a boy­ hood friend one evening at his shore cottage. After a couple of hours of dry talk, the old fellow said genially: M 'Would you like some refreshment --a cooling draft, say--George?' "'Why, yes; I don't care If 1 do, said George, and he passed his band across bis mouth and brightened up wonderfully. "Good!' said old Stingee. 'Ill Just open up this window. There's a tine sea breeze blowing.'"--Detroit Free Press. Why the Applause. The amateur theatrical performance was being discussed. "You know that part of the new play where the man seizes the woman, forceB her Into the cupboard, and turns the key on her?" "Yes." "Well, last night * follow ta the audience applauded it so much that they had to put him out." "I don't think there Is anything to applaud about It" "Yes, there was. It turned out that the fellow was the husband of the actress, and it was the first time he had ever seen anybody shut her up." was the cool reply. office Help Wanted. "Why didn't you hire that boy? He looked like a hustler." "He told me be didn't know the bat­ ting averages of all the major league players." "Pshaw! Neither do you." "That's just my point I've got to hate an authority in the office I can refer to occasionally." • • • i • Family "trials" "In camera." should only he heard No such thing at "rubber roofing" f manufacturer* call thafc roofing "Rubkar R*of iac," i "Rubbarioa," "RubUroiW-Rubbaetkia taj Rubbar-tkat. Tha lifa ia all out of rubbar if I axpoaed ta tha daylight for K* Mai I Tbera is no Mch thine aa "Rubbar Koafii I at any kind. Thare is no rubbar it ain-teed Roofing M 'Hi U • .V It ia made of the very best Roofing Pelt thor­ oughly saturated in our properly blended asphalts and coated by a harder grade of asphalt which keeps the soft saturation within--the Ufa of tha roofing--from drying out quickly. It is guaranteed 5, 10 or 15 years, according to whether the thickness is 1, 2 or 3 ply re­ spectively. Your local dealer will qaotsyou reason­ able prices on our goods. Genera! Roofing Murafacfnriaf Co. Jf'orl laro--t momt/lacturcr* <il Hompm§ and BuiUUme Papm Haw YarkCit* Ckkaaa nilliMTi SLU* Badsa CWtmmJ fiuJaiak Datraft SaaFnadm Ciadaasti liwunlii . KaaaaaCfty Sm Hiartia Vmim Haabait M NO MORE GRAY HAIRS Restore Youthful Color. No One WW Know You're Using Anything. PhjslclannadTlseaffalnBtharmfulhalrstalua and dyes. But why use them when jou can bring back the natural, youthful color with Hay's Ilalr Health? This is accomplished by the action of air, due to an element eon- talne<! in this famouN preparation. Absolutely harmless; HO positive in r<>nultH that druggists will refund money If it fails. Keeps new gray hairs from showing- Routs damiruff; tones scalp; m a lies the hair Ntron«t< vigorous and beau­ tiful. 85c, 50c and SI .00 at drug stores or direct on receipt of prlc?an<l dealer'Bname. Philo Hay Specialties Co., Newark, N. J. Adr. Painful Truth. Miss Singwell had been a member of the choral society ever since it had been In existence, and It was un­ doubtedly true that her first youth had waned, but the choirmaster was astounded recently by the news that she had resigned her membership. "Resigned?" he gaspeA. "But what­ ever for?" "Well. 1 don't know exactly," said the secretary, "but it strikes me that it may have something to do with the solo we picked for her at the next performance." "Why? What Is it?" "Don't you remember? It begins. 1 once waa young, but now am old.'" ' He 8tiil Had Hope. After a hurried rush through the night the doctor found his patient in a very bad way. "My dear sir," he said slowly, "I havo been attending you for nine weeks and have done my best, but I'm afraid that your end Is near. Have you any last wish to express?** The patient drew a long breath. "Tea," be replied, in a faint voteC "1 wish I had had another doctor." ' Last Corn Land Southeast Missouri Reclaimed Landsf the only remaining undeveloped corn land in the United States. Land that will double, triple and quadruple in price just as sure as day follows night. Good corn land will in the future as •: it has in the past and does at the present command the highest c price. 50,000 acres of good, rich, alluvial, cut-over, bottom land,. ,' both drained and undrained, level as the Illinois prairie, rich as the Valley of the Nile; no rocks, hills or gumbo, but mellow- '• sandy loam soil, always works well, short mild winters, long- growing seasons, abundant yields of all staple crops, corn, wheat, alfalfa, clover, timothy, cow peas, potatoes. Two crops a year off of the same land. Land owned by Himmelberger-Harrison Lumber Company, the largest hardwood manufacturers in Mis- souri, largest land owners in Southeast Missouri. Men who have || in the last 15 years sold over 100,000 acres of this same kind of ' land to over 1,000 different people, all of whom have made good. || They have never foreclosed on a purchaser or taken back an acre || of the property. Sales from February first to August 28th, i); 14,874 acres to 126 different people. Can you beat it? In tracts |fp of 40 acres up, 10% cash, 10 annual installments with 5* interest Warranty Depd backed by over $2,000,000 assetB on ||; the payment of only 10% in cash. Can you equal it? Cowu te§ p our corn land. - Write for full information and free map. Address Dept. A. tnmmaihitrger-Harrison Land Silling Company, Cipe Girardeau, Mlwl 10c Worth of Will Clear $1.00 Worth of Land Get rid of the stumps and grow big crops on cleared land. Now it the time to clean up your farm while products bring high prices. Blasting is quickest, cheapest and easiest with Low Freez­ ing Ou Pont Explosives. They work in cold weather. Writm for Free Handbook of Explo*we» lift and name of nearest dealer. DU PONT POWDER COMPANY WILMINGTON DELAWARS Ii -M •mm 'M*4 jpjVH.i True to His Word. The Interviewer--Why did you sasslnate all your wives as soon the honeymoon was over? Bluebeard--You see. I'd promised to love each one as long as she lived, and no matter what other sins I' committed. I never disappoint a lady. --Philadelphia Bulletin. Drink Denison's Coffafe, For your health's sake. Women With Tacfc Some women have a sense of hu­ mor, while others have tact and lau^h At thsir luubMid'i jokM. .vV- * - '•* a" v -K -k * ,r - - . *• / - s - • ...- • You Owe the Folks A Lamp ' Winter cveninci. th« tim* to read tU >l«dj • •ad alao for the young folks to enjoy thtsiMlfn Give them • good light--the cheerful, brilliant, BMA» IMV glow of A KAYO lamp--the kind at U(ht yMrscffneed to read by. .It drive* away winter gloom- prevents keep* all the family happy and contented. In addition to all this coMfort, the RAYO is a pMk thre economy because one Uchta up the entire nMk Aflk your deale.--he ha* tlto RAYO, a* have le*4la* merchants everywhere. Tt. mi '^i f ^ v;:ij ..'£j ULlh A . >'lie

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