McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 30 Aug 1917, p. 7

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;:V/ 1^.. : 4 f*LOW//?& line horse is rapidly ionizing American e:: Robert H. Moul- es for our readers he wonders per the mechanical our broad acres aom for hired r took to the automo- he does to a circus. Old Dobbins of the buggy has long si ace been smothered by the exhaust from the four-cylinder gas vehicles, and now he Is be­ ing ousted from his old and arduous vocation of plowing and harvesting. If it were not for the welcbming arms of the belligerent war buyers, there would be no one to love or cherish our black beauties, and, like poor relations, they ' would have to survive on the husks. Farming has ever been attractive to the city <?hap, and it has always been extremiely toilsome to the native. But now, with the aid of mechanical hired hands, farming in the future will be mere joy-riding. Instead of following a team of panting, perspiring horses and stumbling over rough clods in the' broiling sun while trying to keep tinder control a plow whose diabolical disposition is to twist and turn from the straight and even furrow, Mr. Farmer can put on his automobile goggles and gloves, seat himself comfortably in the spring seat of a tractor, and under a canvas canopy that shunts^ away the sun, guide his obedient steel steed " across the fields. In the springtime the plowing can be done to the music of the birds, who gath­ er around to watch for the luckless but luscious worms turned up by the blades. By one turn of the wheel, a battery of disk plows can be made to obey orders like soldiers. When the plowing is done, the mechanical hired man will as cheerfully pull a harrow or a seeding machine, jind no stops need be made in the shade to allow the "critter" to "blow.", A tractor loves to work and all it asks in return is. that its stomach be kept full of the spirits that enthuse but do not intoxicate. During the dinner hour, if the fbrmer follow^ his efficiency book faithfully, he will connect up his tractor engine with the pump and fill the water reservoir, or perhaps he will turn the churn for mother. After a long pull at the cider barrel and the distillate tank, both master and servant are ready to resume operations. As the seasons merge one into another, and the crops are all planted and growing under the genial smiles of Old Sol and the sympathetic min­ istrations of Jupiter Pluviu8, Mr. Farmer, with nothing to do but watch his grain grow, can . drive his tractor over to the neighboring wood lot, and with the help of this husky sons, or his neighbor's stalwart sons, can cut enough cord- wood to defy the advance and siege of- Jack Frost. The modern tractor lotes to be tied to a buzz saw, and It sings right merrily while doing Its work. When the wood is cut, the obliging tractor will haul it to the woodshed, and then, like the famous man of history, will look for new work to conquer. The overwhelming advantage of the tractor over horses is that of power and endurance. If the supply tank of one of these machines Is kept full of fuel, it will .work on indefinitely without rest, whereas beasts of burden demand time to eat and sleep and rest. Then, too, it is mudh easier on the farmer to sit on a seat and plow by burning a wheel than to follow the furrows on foot. /Consequently, the farmer with a tractor will do all his plowing in from a fourth to a half of the time required with horses. By equipping the machines with electric lights, generated by the motor, the surrounding ground can be made as light day, and plowing can go on independent of,the sun. Poor Dobbins would give Up the ghost If subjected to such treatment. The superiority of the tractor Is also demon- stinted by the ability to get over ground so soft and muddy that ordinary horses arid farm im­ plements would mire in. The modern ball-tread tractor Is built to -rnn oil its own track. Being wide and fltft, with the weight of the machine evenly distributed, this Caterpillar type of per­ ambulator can navigate through a sea of mud. and by its great traction power can pull anything except teeth. In the rice fields of California. * "where water stands upon the ground during all the growing season, the tractor is found to be the only feasible means of getting over the fields •for plowing, seeding, cutting and harvesting the crop. It even furnishes the motive power for thrashing the rice. If the road In front of the farm Is rough and rieed* the smoothing influence of the tractor* It will do the job and do It right. If the hens have been Industrious, or bossy's product has been converted into golden butter or cheese for the city folks, Mr. Farmer can haul them to market by hitching a trailer behind his tractor. Many of the machines are bought for their hauling abil­ ity alone. It will even take the folks to church on Sundary, if the Jitney happens to break down f on Saturday night. ^ in fact, the tractor is as versatile as a movie . ?* star and It doesn't mind showing oiT its diverse talents. One has even been known to rid a cellar m of rodents by "coughing" the gas from its exhanst through a rubber ti^>e run into the private dwell­ ing of Mr. Hat. .• •, The development of the tractor Is * matter Ok? LOADS Off QAD &OAD3 evolution, it has been with us for tunny years, but the older Members of the family, though big In stature, were extremely awkward, had many ills «nd didn't believe in efficiency. They were very ttnpresslve to look at, but when the farmer bought one he usually found that it made the most durable Impression upon the ground. It was a better staller than a politician. ' Through education, however, it was developed lnt'» a finer thing. It lost a lot of Its awkwardness wl»h its stee and gained in strength and flexibility. It? groans were converted into action. It began to wear new shoes, and when a mudhole or a gtlfly confronted it. Instead of puffing and snorting ai'd marking time, as the older ones did, It rolled on through the soft spots, or climbed out of the 'dttches. Its new revolving track shoes could go anywhere, and it did. The latest proof of this is si'en in the reports from the Europeau battle­ fields, where the armored "tanks" are walking over all obstacles. It is said on reliable authori­ ty that these tanks are built upon - a foundation of an American type of tractor. It is in orchard work that the tractor has wwn its way into the hearts of many owners. In a well-managed orchard it Is necessary to plow up the soil as close to the trees as possible. WitiTfe' team and the old-fashioned ployr, It Is Impossible •to cut corners and reach little out-of-the-way nooks, but not so with the tracfor. It can ttirn around like a/ whirling dervish and can come close enough to a tree or the fence to caress but not offend It. A favorite trick of one make of a California tractor is to turn completely around on an ordinary railroad flat car. When one coa» ciders the width of these ours the feat !s| a re­ markable one. If all else fails, the machine can get a job in a circus as a contortionist. One of the odd uses to which tractors are put is that of clearing land foj* cultivation. On the virgin fields of Canada the ranchers found the new land to be thickly covered with tough brush and young trees, forming a dense mat, to clear which by hand seemed a formidable task. A tractor owner rigged up a sort of "summer snow- plow" made of two shj;rp blades at the bottom and a number of steel rods placed horizontally over a V-shaped frame that ran to a height of four or five feet. By fastening this contrivance to the front of his tractor, and by bucking the forest growth as he wotid a snowdrift, the brush was cut off close to tlie ground and thrown to one side and burned. Later the same tractor went over the ground with a gangplow and cut out all the roots and turned up the soli for planting. The tractor on the ffcrm has come to stay, and the uprjo-date farmer will find it as hard to get along without one as n wife, and much easier to get along with. Trade Secrets Held at Enormous Prices The Oxford Press syndicate values its formula for making the very thin, tough paper used In the Bibles and encyclopedias at more than $1, 00*,- 000. To perfect the process required 25 years of hard work and the expenditure of $1,000,000 to? cash. A secret off even greater value is the formula for jnakiftg the paper employed for the Bank of England notes. This Is a fathily possession of.- the Portals of La-venstroke, to whom already la two generations it has brought an enormous for­ tune. Th© brilliant red cloth of the cardinals' rob&s worn at the Vatican has been manufactured.for many generations by the same firm of merchants at Burstcheid, near Alx-la-Chapelle. The secret process of distilling the dye Is given by father to son. with every precaution to prevent a,hy outsider from gaining possession of the reci­ pe, according to a writer in the - Los Angeles Times. In this connection It is rather curious to. qote that this family of cloth merchants Is of Huguenot descent and 1 s Protestant toiay. Recipe for Green Chartreuse.; When the monks of La Grande Chartreuse were expelled from France, the senior abbot carried the recipe for the famous liqueur in a casket of tempered steel, and this was never for a moment out of his possession. In the open market after­ ward the formulae for the twin liqueurs, the green chartreuse and the yellow, were sold for $1,600,000. At the time this liqneur was first made the recipe was written on a single fragment, of parchment, six Inches by nine. One by one additional ingredients were Introduced. , It has been stated that at the "present time the mixture contains 137 different substance®. And every addition to the drink required an ad-, ditlop to the recipe. The result was a volume of more than 100 pages. It Is no exaggeration to say that this Is the most valuable book In the world. This be­ comes rather amusing when we remember that the mendicant friar who first concocted the liqueur regarded his Invention with considerable disfavor. He was as shortsighted as Giovanni Farina, who wafi, the originator of eau de cologne. He offered the recipe for sale at $3,500. A conserva­ tive estimate of the total value of its sales' profits since that Is $25,000,000. \ Famous Maraschino Cordial. flie Namls of Zara, in Dalmatia, were wilier. They possessed as one of their heirlooms a family recipe for a drink distilled from the marasco, or wifd cherry. When they finally consented to part with their secret they received therefor a large sum in cash and land to the extent of several thousand acres. This is the cordial popular the world over as Maraschino. It has frequently happened that valuable trade secrets have been lost beyond recovery. For In-' stance, the best watch oil. It appears, cannot be obtained today because the secret process of mix­ ing perished with the Inventor. It Is said that the last quart of this famous liquid was sold for $200, and that was 35 years ago. Since then every effort has been made to analyze the product in an attempt to reproduce the oil, but without success. The man who made It who alone knew Its compo­ sition died, and, it further appears, not eveh his name or the place of his burial is known. He never revealed to anyone the details of his process and it was not until after his death that the redl value of the oil was appreciated. Business firms are not the only possessors of trade secrets. Governments are Just as zealous In guarding valuable processes ns are manufac­ turers. For example, the Chinese government is the owner of the secret of making vermilllon red, which is held by many experts to be the most beautiful shade of red In the world. No one has ever been able to produ ce a like vermilllon. The Turkish government. It appears, possesses a similar secret process of Inlaying precious met­ als In the hardest steel. The work is done per- . fectly and defies all atte mpts at reproduction. In 1913 it was announced that a distinguished Chemist of the imperial technical school of Mos­ cow had solved the problem of making artificial rubber, and that he could sell the new product at about 30 cents a pound. Yet the price of rubber remains pretty much the same, If not more. The reason may be found by examining the patent office records. In the last decade many hundreds of patents for artificial rubber have been taken out. Substitutes have been made from petroleum, from coal tar, turpentine, peat, from nitrated lin­ seed oil and by treating cereals with ph.valin. The latter invention created a considerable sen­ sation so long ago as 1906, yet, judging by the constantly increasing, demand for the natural product, it has had little effect upon the real rub­ ber market. The chemist, working in his laboratory, can take any substance and analyze it, that is, break it up Into its original constituents, and tell you what they are and how much of each element the substance in question Is composed of; but when It comes to building up the original sub­ stance out o£ Its prime constituents he is at sea, for the most part. By dint of long and patient experiments or perhaps by pure chance he may succeed in reproducing some few natural products, but that Is as far as he can go. Indigo blue took many years to synthetize. A German chemist accomplished it at last, but the curious discovery was made that if blended with the natural product made from the indigo plant the color obtained was both more durable and brighter than that made by either dye alone. So artificial indigo has not yet ruined the indigo planter. Gutta Percha Becomes Scarcer., Artificial camphor has also been produced* It Is now made from pine-tree turpentine. But the chemist has not yet succeeded In synthetlzing gutta percha. This commodity yearly becomes scarcer. Enormous quantities are required for va­ rious purposes, notably the covering of submarine cables and the making of golf balls. A fortune awaits the man who can make artificial gutta percha at a price that will permit It to corppete with the Juice of the Dlchopis gutta. Cork is another substance of everyday use, that seems to defy the inventor. The only substitute for cork is paper treated with paraffin wax. But such a cork could not be used for a bottle of wine. So far nothing has been artificially made to com­ pete with thse bark of the cork oak. At Delhi, in India, stands an andleht iron mon­ ument which, though exposed to all weathers, never rusts or decays. Yet it has no protective" covering. Here is a secret which would be simply Invaluable to the world, which has been discovered by some Indian artificer of old and most unfor­ tunately lost. At a meeting of steel and Iron men in London, the chairman said that they could face the future with complacency If they could rediscover the secret. To shipowners alone it would mean a yearly saving of millions. Rust Is the great enemy of the steel ship and she has constantly to go into dock to have her hull ctoated with an antlcorrosive solution. THINGS WORTH KNOWING Australian white ants have devel­ oped a taste for lead covering and in­ sulation of cables that Is proving cost­ ly to telephone companies. To make typewriters less noisy a \i)sl ^ Cleveland toventor has patented a pla- \ "en core that changes the loud CIICK of the type to a dull thud. 'tj'L To remove snow from city streets- a *• V*V motor-driven machine has been lnvent- •: >V ed that cleans an 8-fotft swifb Ht m rate 0t 000 feat a minute. Treating freshly made cheese wHh alternating electric currents for 24 hours, a Dutch electrician apparently gives it all the properties of age. A Philadelphian has invented a cal­ endar of 13 months of 28 days each, Christmas falling on the extra days and being given t*o Hays, In leap yearsu That stray wireless waves cause many unexplained fires at sea and ex­ plosions on warships Is the theory,of a French scientist of high standing." A watch that operates a snap shot caroerp has been invented by a Salt Lake City man to take pictures at de­ sired times or even to photograph Hs own user. Ungallant Memories. "General, what was the most trying one of youf engagements r" . "The one I made to get married." .j,.. t " Batter Keep It. owe him a grudge." "In cases of that kind it is better to suspend pay­ ment."--Louisville Courier-Journal. • *: SOME POSTSCRIPTS Portions of store windows can b« utilised as blackboards for sign writ­ ing by sand blasting the outside of thf glass and painting the Inside. Scientists In one European count J have offered a gold medal.for the bet method for preparing leadless inks for printing and lithographing. Attachments for a-popular type au tomobile have been invented to con vert it into a farm tractor without tb " removal of any of its original jart* NOT ONE SLACKER Part Played by One Yankee ^«Woiifian in Revolution Margaret Corbln Took Her Husband's Place at the Guns in Battle of ^Fwt! Washington and "' * Wounded. 1" • '• ! .1:1-SljS. K- J..' "Margaret Corbln, who was bora In Franklin county, Pennsylvania, No­ vember 16, 1751, was the only daugh­ ter of Robert Coeferan. who was killed by the Indians In 1756. Margaret's mother, for whom the daughter • was named. Was taken into captivity at the same time. Margaret was now five years old and escaped her parents' fate because she and1 her brother were visiting an uncle, who raised Margaret. In 1T72 Margaret married John Cor- - bin of Virginia. Corbln enlisted lit the First company. Pennsylvania ar­ tillery, and his wife, having no chil­ dren, followed her husband to war, serving as a nurse and aid in camp life. •> - : . When John Corbln was killed at the battle of Fort Washington, November 16, 1776, Margaret took his place at the gun, until struck down with three grnpeshot, which severed tin arm and tore away part of her breast. Mary Pitcher's husband. Hays, wfui a gunner in the same regiment, and it is safe to assume that Margaret Cor- bin's heroism at Fort Washington In­ spired Molly Pitcher's act' at Mon­ mouth. At the surrender Margaret was en­ rolled ns a member of the "Invalid Regiment." Her woujnds at Fort Washington were such jthat they were ultimately <l»e cause of her death In 1800. & On account of her Wounds the su­ preme council of Philadelphia on June 29, 1779, granted her $30 and recom­ mended her to the board of war for a regular pension. The resolution of congress, July 6, 1779, Is on record in which honorable mention is made of the services of Margaret Corbln. "Resolved, That Margaret Corbln, wonnded and disabled at the attack of Fort Washington, while she heroically filled the post of her husband who was killed by her side, serving a piece of artillery, do receive during her nat­ ural life or continuance of'said disabil­ ity, one-half the monthly pay drawn by a soldier in service of these States; and that site now receive out of the public stores one suit of clothert or the value thereof In money." Margaret Corbin was the first wom­ an pensioned by our' government for heroic deeds. Wanted to Cinch His Job. "I should Uke a day's shore leave to attend to some personal business, If you please, sir," said u junior lieuten­ ant, saluting, to Capt. James G. Bal- linger of the Naval Coast Defense re­ serve recently® "Your private worries are of minor Importance now, as yon are In the navy--however, fill out an applica­ tion." rolled the captain. "I worked 17 years to get the job I now hold," said the lieutenant. "It means a good deal to me, as I want to get things stralchtened out before go­ ing to sea. I would like to have the job again In case I come back after the war, as it Is a fair one. If you say so, sir, I will withdraw the request." He was turning avfay when Captain Balllnger asked: "What's your name and job?" "William K. Vanderbilt, Jr., vice president of the New York Central railroad." In due course of time his one day's shore leave was granted. lieutenant Vanderbilt having filled out the appli­ cation. Raise Turkeys On Ranches. Exclusive turkey ranches are fonnd In the unsettled foothill regions of Cal­ ifornia and In parts of Arizona and other Western states, where a thou­ sand or more turkeys are raised each season. The establishments are located where the range Is unlimited and the natural food of the turkey, such as grasshoppers and other insects, green vegetables and the seeds of various weeds and grasses, Is abundant. Ad­ vantage also is taken on these ranches of the turkey's relish for acorns, and where these are plentiful but little grain need be used for fattening In the fall. The large flocks of turkeys arc managed much like herds of sheep, be­ ing taken out to the range early in the morning and brought home tc roost at night, says an exchange. They are herded during the day by men ei­ ther on foot or on horseback, and by dogs especially trained for the work. Levity. Levity Is mental relaxation sanction­ ed by good judgment, but controlled by It, tdo. There is certainly a flaw some­ where In the mental makeup of a man whose humor is habitually prurient, or who burlesques anything which many good, simple-minded, but devout peo­ ple hold sacred. Habit Is the clothing of Judgment--the fixedness of cholct --and bad habits never associate with good judgment. A Christian gentleman may be a great fool, a dullard and an intellectual nonenlty. But his life his habits and his actions are far bet­ ter evidences of level-headed Judg­ ment than the brilliant and erratic courses of philosophers and epicureans whose wisdom has turned to the very folly of Iniquity.--Catholic Citizen. Ai to Proper Behavior,. "Streets and sidewalks are property. Citizens have the right to walk on them, whether they wear skirts, pantaloons or bathing suits, at long as their behavior is proper. There is no ordinance specifying the amount of clothing a person shall wear In the street," is the wisdom quoted frone the lips of Jndge Howard Hayes wher passing upon the arrest of a young woman who promennded in her bath Ing suit. We agree with the judge The question Is one of behavior. Bu1 It is fair to ask whether promenading the streets without any clothing \vool< be proper behavior*--Chicago I'oSt. Pardonable Crim ̂ He--If I should kiss ydu, would you bare me arretted? She--What would berthfi AV judge would acquit you. ' Small Game. ' "Your son $ a great fisherman, fce?" ' V- "Csftls himself such, ^e's jnst from vacation. Caught a bunch of measly trout when he might have caught an heiress." No Slacker. Witty One--Corporal Strutt enlist­ ed in April. He's the most patriotic recruit I've met. Pretty One--How's that? Witty One--He's highly insulted be­ cause his father sent him some money by draft.--Town Topics. vBb«HSTS PLEASED Vvtm ®10D,KIDNEY MEDKHI I have sold your remedy for the put fifteen years ana have sufficient confidence in it to give it my personal recommenda­ tion. I believe it is one of the best medi­ cines of its class on the market today I find pleasure in selling it at All timeaU | Very trulv vour°, i| KAMINER'S" DRUG STORE, P. V. Kaminer, Piw-i. , Nov. 4, 1®16. Spartanburg, S. ffc:" tetter to Dr. Kilmer O Co. Binghamton. N. Y. Nine out of ,ten men whose names are signed to a petition couldn't tell what It Is for. v Another great Invention ought to be a time-lock that will shut up the mechanical music at 10:30 p. m. Prove What Swsmp-Root Wffl Do For Tea Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample mae bottle. It will convince anyone. Yon will also receive a booklet of valuable in­ formation. telling about the kidneys and bladder. Whejp writing, be sure and men­ tion this paper. Large and medium sis* bottles for sale at all drag stores.--Adv. Its Kind. 1 "What sort of a dinner was that it the teamsters?" " ] "I guess it was an a la cart mm." I 1 A Message to Mothers YOU know tike real human doctors right around in your neighborhoodsi tne doctors made of flesh and blood just like-you: the doctors with souls and hearts; those men who are responding to your call in the dead of night as readily as in the broad day light; they are ready to tell you the jgood that Fletcher's Castoria has done, is doing.and will do, from their experience and their love for children. . • Fletcher's Castoria is nothing new. We are not asking you ttj an experiment. We jost want to impress upon yon the importancis of buying Fletcher'i • m Your physician will tell ber of imitations on the the welfare of your baby. as he knows there are a mas* ha is particularly interested tor Canada's Liberal Offer of Wheat Land to Settlers is open to you--to every farmer or farmer's son who is anxious to establish for himself a happy home and prpsperity. Canada's hearty Invitation this year is more attractive than ever. Wheat is much higher but her fertile farm land juat as cheap, and in the provinces of Manitoba, Saskat­ chewan and Alberta 16® ken lnwhiii An ActaaDr Fm to Mtthn olOthrLnl at fiw» ftSts 120 par Am Tha great demand for Canadian Wheat will kMt) up the pnee. Where a fanner can set near for wheat and raise 20 to 45 bushels tb the acre be is bound t* nuJ» Maw -- taet'e whst 7ss csa £spsci is ̂ ssteni Caaaoa. Won­ derful yields also of Oats» BuUr awl Flu. Mixed Firdat in Western Canada ia folly as ! an indi -as * '•tV;* iw\ profitable i dustry as grain raising. Tb* ereellent puns, fan of nutrition, ate tb* only food roqnlred eiUiar tor b*el or Akin panoses Good sehools, eharebes, markets oonr«nfenl, oHrnat* •xcolleot. There Is an snnsnal deaaand for farm labor tO FGplSC© uinuj /Ouju* uivu ruG u&TO •olwn<--Mil for the war. Write for litemtnre and particulars an to reduced railway fates to Hopi. o< laualgratlon, Ottawa, Can., or to C. J. Bmwhtoii, Room 412. IIS W.llwi Straat. Cfcfcaeo, 111.; M. V. Mafliiii--» 171 Jalfaraaa Atuum, Detroit. MMu Canadian Government Agents SHAKESPEARE AT THE FRONT Famous English Actress Declares Ev- ' ary Performance 8he Gave far 8oldlert Waa a Joy. *>» - Miss Lena Ashwell, the distinguished London actress, who has been giving a number of dramas and Shakespearean plays to soldiers at the front, waxes eloquent upon her strange and won­ derful auditory. "No Tommy is stodgy, as a West end audience is," she re­ marks. "Every performance was a Joy." The Tommies show their devotion In all sorts of ways. Some Tommies, hear­ ing she was coming, built her scenery out of odds and ends/of canvas and wood, painted red and yellow, exactly like the' framework of a Punch and Judy show. Another group of men, working with the forage supplies In Rouen, on the railway side, where there are scarcely any blooms of any rort, managed to get her a little tight hunch of flowers, arranged with a bit of paper like an old-fashioned bouquet. Still another devoted group gave her a little box of silver, beautifully chased. But what she treasures most is a lucky bean. The young soldier who gave It to her stood grasping her hands he had been eleven months in the trenches and that she could not Imag­ ine what it meant to him to see a lady, much less hear her speak; that this bean had been all over the world with him and hail brought him good luck-- he hadn't been wounded yet--and now he wanted her to have It. The boy was simply giving her everything. No won­ der she set his beon In the best of gold and wears it tiiwf yfktr . \ CUTIGURA IS SO SOOTHING ^ q University of Notre Dun NOTRl DAME, INDIANA Offers Complete Coarse In Africalhm Fall ooorses also la Letters, Journalism* Library Science, Chemistry, Pharmacy, Madl» olna, Architecture, Gommeroe aad Law. ! 1 m No Cause for Alarm. The other Monday afternoon a wom­ an rushed excitedly down an alley lii • the poor quarter and, stopping at a house, knocked loudly. Receiving no reply, she knocked a second time. Still no answer. 1 i v , A third time she knocked, and then a window flung open atad a woman whose appearance Hetrayed slgna of a sudden awakening leaned out. "Well, what is it?" she asked. The woman below looked up and SB* claimed with bate#*breath: "Mrs. Skinner, yer 'usband's got Asa days!" - <'• "Dear, dear me, Mrs. Jones," was the reply, "is that all? How yer did un­ nerve me!- I thought it scarecrow after the rent agin," " ^ . -- V i ? J Certainly Does. "Did you see where the first pris­ oner taken by an American in tha In the dark, saying blunderingljL.that..^tfenches weighed 220 pounds?" 'That certainly lent weight incident." The man who can extract olive oO from cotton seed should be able to gather figs from thistles. A GUARAMTEED remedy fob HAY RVER-ASTlttIA asRuMi* itrrnm erery ease or Asthma, Bronchial '.Asjbaoa aad U»e iHvnnr. No Your BOSSY WIU withoatany <yiMUonif this fwbmdyi To Itching, Burning Skins--It Not Only Soothes, but Heals--Trial Free. Treatment: Bathe the affected sur­ face with Cuticura Soap and hot wa­ ter, dry gently and apply Cuticura Ointment. Repeat morning and night. This method affords immediate relief, and points to speedy healmeat. They are ideal for, every-day toilet uses. Free sample each by mall with Book. Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. 1% Boston. Sold everywhere.--Adv. An Elegant Translation. A Boston girl who had been taking her llrst lesson in bicycle riding ex­ pressed her satisfaction at liome at the result of the experiment. "The man said," she repeated, "that I had made most satisfactory progress for a novice." "Why, did he really say that?" was the surprised query. "Well, no," answered the Boston youQg woman, after a moment's reflec­ tion. "What he did says Was, 'You'll do fust rate for a new beginner!'"-- Christian Register. Astbaiatie syaiptoaiaaeeoBiaaaylnf Bay iww matter bow violent th* attacks or obatiaat* the m MsRsSCMIFFMAirS ft ASTHMADOR AND A8TMMADOR CIGARETTES positively gives INSTANT RBLiar la everrcase aad baa permanently cared thousands «rbo had bcea juble, after having trlsd erwrrolbse sld I eoaaMered 1 of rell aearabl iltef In at thlt u vain. Asthmatics aboakf avail themselves of this guarantee offer through their druggist. Bar a i£cent package aad preeenl t to your droggUt. r sole Jadge as to w hether yon are b*n<*ilt!i»d aad tb* draggtsl will slve too back ji nr mon«» 1? roaasa not. We do not know of any fairer {m\»{kisMM| • tuch weeouid make. EH R. Schfffmanfl Co^ Proprietors, SI. Pud, Mm. YOU CAN SERVE YOUR COUNTRY In no brtirr way sJisinciHg- iwneowafrt ia making- up their fruit selections. Everybody la goliiK to plant t«?rry bushes,grapes,applaa,et«^ this Fall or next Spriug. We want the services well known through your action to take orders. The p*y ia libcraL Work » heu convenient. Any time iaagoodUase to sell Chav stock, but the best tlineis right now. OttSC M0TIEIS C8.. Tk* Secfcutir Rorssrits, ISMM.1IH IV \ J Uruguay has 22 meat-packing plants. '/fi/E Granulated EyeJidj, by Mia relieved by Murine. Trylt in your Eyesand in Baby's Eyes. iSassftiBf.Jast EjrtCisrfirt .At Tew DragaM'Se* kg I--n IWrpir bottle HwiM •V* aafcm, ia Tabae He. fCifce* th» £V« - free. . - - - -- - Cklcac* * j . FOR PERSONAL HYGIENE DmmImc fat miaf foe dostkM tfli peMe catarrh, ulceration assd faafla_ matiosi. Rssosnasadtd by Lr^ia E. PiakHaas Med. C* lor tea jean, j A K ee Hag woadsr for a***! catanlb ewretkroat aad sere egr«M. EwMeiaL W . H . I K CHICAGO, HQ. -AiSJ.,.... lk.1!

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