ON LIVER; BOWELS No sick headache, biliousness, bad taste or constipation by morning. Get a 10-cent box. Are you keeping your bowels, liver, and stomach clean, pure and fresh with Cascarets, or merely forcing a passageway every few days with Salts, Cathartic Pills, Castor Ofl Purgative Waters? Stop having a bowel wash-day. ulate the stomach, remove the sour and fermeul!ng food and foul gases, take the excess bile from the liver in the bowels. A Cascaret feel great by morning. Millions of men and women Cascaret now and then and have Headache, Biliousness, Coated Constipation. Adv, Here's a Tangle. How easy it is to mix up the aver age business man was the other day when the son of a local merchant leaned against his father's knee and innocently asked: “Daddy, is todey tomorrow?” “No, my son, of course today tomorrow,” answered the father isn't £0n. Vhen did [ ever say today was to- morrow?” “Yesterday,” answered the son. “Well, it was; today was tomorrow vesterday, but today is today, just vesterday was today yesterday but is vesterday today, and tomorrow will be today tomorrow, which makes today vesterday and tomorrow all at once Now run along and play,” and the fath- er collapsed into his chair with a sigh of relief.—Louisville Times as Out of the Frying Pan. David Starr Jordan, at a peace meet ing at the Hotel Astor in “New York, said to a reporter: “Half the world at war, and the counsel we are getting is that we must arm more heavily, That counsel reminds me of the African kings. “An African king feasted a white ex plorer royally Then, at the end of the feast, 300 giris were led forward “Choose from among these 300, said the king, ‘a wife.’ mered: ‘Oh, but if I took one, maining 299 would be jealous.’ “ “That is easily remedied,’ the king answered, ‘Take all.” it Puzzled Him. Silas—1 hear your son left small town and went to the city have a larger field for his efforts, Hiram-—-Yes; and that's me When Hank was home a two acre potato patch was too big a field for him.—Judge it isn't Being Done Now Jone is so very romantic. She s right down her father to let she's going to beg her Bobby.” “What's sh For on waiting for?” to change.” viea the tyles , like the Rhone 0 BOUrcs ne pure, the ire ~Har have other im- Many action OUR NATIONAL DISEASE Caused by Coffee. Physicians know that drugs will not rrect the evils caused by coffee and that the only remedy 18 to ug it An Arkansas doctor savs: I was a coffee drinker for many ears and thought that I could not do without it, but after years of ifering with our national malady. dyspepsia, I attributed it to the drink ing of coffee, and after some thought determined to u Postura for my morning drink. “I had the Postum according to directicus on the pkg. and found It just sulted my taste, “At first I used it hut I found myself often go wetting se much am pleased to say that 1 have been re lieved of indigestion. 1 gained 19 pounds in 4 months and my general alth is greatly improved fliinols. 8he had been in ill health for but Httle palo that Postum did me and advised her to try it. me that she had gained 40 pounds in weight and felt like herself again” Name given by Postum Co, Battle Creek, Mich, Read “The Road to Wall villa,” In pkgs Postum comes in two forms: Regular Postum-—munst be well boiled 15 and 25¢c packages. Instant Postum-—is 4 soluble powder A teaspoonful dissolves quickly In » enn of hot water and, with eream and cugar, makes a delicions beverage in stantly. 20c and B0e tins The cost per cup of both kinda shout the same “There's a Reason” for Postum. ~gold by Grocor: POULTRY HOUSE SITE Convenience Is Main Thing to Be Considered. Locate the Structure So That the Strong Winds Will Be at its Back, With Windows in Front Drainage of Importance. The builder of a farm poultry house should earefully consider the available sites, and put it where the fowls will do best, and where it will be easiest to look after them. Convenience is the malin thing to be regarded on a farm where there is ing care of the chickens. Put the house or houses close enough to the resi- the inmates. At the game all natural ad- location should be con- If there is a sheltering hill near enough be used as a wind- break, place the house so the strong winds from the west, northwest and north will be fended off by the higher ground. Set the house so the will be at its back, and this means, time, of to in the south, the southeast of them wise, These Int of difference weather, will stormy, make a blustery many cold days very well stay protected from windbreaks in There are the birds could outside if they were Another thing to be watched is the of drainage Damp, low ground, no matter how well the hen shelter. There should slope downward from the build- ing to make certain that it will not be Thorough drainage should be as sured even if it is necessary to lay a naturally well drained site can be chosen, the drainage will take care of will be just about impossible to keep the chickens healthy in Buch a struc. ture. The building itself can ed to the pocketbook of the builder. Where the climate is not unreasonably cold in winter, unreasonable from the poultry management, the house may be built very cheaply It must turn the rain, shut out drafis and be dry under foot, but it need not In fixing on the site for the house building or any part of it where it will or by a dense clump of trees. The sunlight should strike the building all Well-Protected Poultry House. day long. In summer it should shine at the east windows at sunrise. It should reach to the back of the build ing in winter when the sun is low at noon. The windows should be ar ranged to take every advantage of the sunlight all day long There is no germ killer like sunlight and it is far cheaper than anything that will ever be placed on the mar- ket. iMPROVE OLD APPLE TREES Carefully Remove All Dead and Cross Branches—Scrubbing the Bark Destroys Many Insects, in All dead and cross branches should Make a clean cut close grafting wax or shellac varnish Scrape the dead bark and moss off the larger limbs and then serub them This scrubbing will and their larvae Select a mild day for this work. Such methods require censiderable judgment in their appli eation, but with proper care they are successful, Old apple trees given the above treatment will gradually in. crease the yield and quality of their fruit. It will take several vears of careful culture to bring the trees into full bearing, but it will pay hang sumely. See to Ventilation. Is the barn well ventilated? Lack af fresh air means possible tuberculo- elr in sour dairy herd, Feed Liberally of Best Hay Obtainable «little Can Be Expected of an Uncomfortable Cow. Got to have a good warm barn, in the first place. Can't expect to get the most out of a shivering, uncom fortaife cow. Start right by building a warm barn. Then have the cows come in fresh in late fall of the year. Cows that have been milked all summer long are not worth fussing with through the cold winter months. They have done their work. Their milk is now scanty in quantity and thelr cream hard to churn, because they have been giving milk so long. Begin with fresh cows. Make up your mind to feed well The cows cannot get grass now. You must make up to them as nearly as you can for this lack. Feed liberal allowances of the best hay you can get. Never say or even think that any kind of hay will make good milk. It will not. Give allopathic doses of ground feed. Got to do It, to make a balanced ru Lady Elgin V and Her Nine-Month-Old Caif. tion. And by the way, this subject of a balanced ration is that every man must study for himself. He knows his cows better than anybody else does. He can prescribe for them more intelligently than a man can at a dis tance. Study is the farmer's salve tion. Finally, keep just cs accurate an ac count with your cows as if they were your summer boarders from the city and you wanted to know whether it paid or not. Weigh the milk, weigh the butter, weigh the feed, estimate the cost, set down the amount your products bring in, figure up the cost of making and subtract. Be a business one Becoming More Popular for Feeding Cattie and in Some Sections it is Almost a Necessity. Silage for feeding cattle is becom ing more popular every year and throughout many sections has become almost a necessity There i i { i i of bay; but even then something suc culent, in the form of silage or roots, is almost essential for the best results, I know of no better combination than clover hay and good corn silage. The one seems to be the exact complement of the other joth are very palatable to cattle and should be fed separately for the sake of variety. A bunch of catile getting a good feed night and morning of cut straw and silage, mixed 12 hours before feed ing, and all the dng clover hay they will eat at noon, Is about as well off for roughage as is possible. 1 do not know of any ration which cattle can be kept so full all the time without putting them off their feed In the early part of the season very little grain should be fed and the al lowance gradually from week to week, Many farmers waste a good deal grain by overfeeding in the early part of the winter. It is an easy matter to ruin the of a steer by feeding too much corn for any considerable length of time. A mixture of grains will always give other on increased Of digestion fed alone. lasses are to be fed it is a good prac tion BUG WORRIES PEAR GROWERS Much Damage to Fruit—Pre- ventive Treatment is Found, many western New York orchards are due to the work of false tarnished plant bugs become weakened and dwarfed and to maturity are scarred and deformed so as to be unmarketable. The dam age in a few cases has extended to three-fourths of the crop; but such in glances are comparatively few, as the pest has not yet become widely spread in noticeably destructive numbers. Pear growers should be on the wateh for it, however, and adopt repressive measures at first sign of its appear ance, for the period during which in. Jury can be prevented is short Full details of the Investigations which identified the pest, and of the preventive treatment found successful, are given in Bulletin No. 968 of the New York Agricultural Experiment gtation at Geneva, Orchardista and others interesteq can secure the bulletin by a postcard request, Less Work and More Money. Are we learning that there is a good deal more profit with less work to be made rafsing 76 bushels of corn acres? BROTHERS IN MISERY COMRADESHIP OF WOUNDED ON THE BATTLEFIELD, Letter Written to His Fiancee by Dying French Officer Revea.s Triumph of the Finer Feel- ings of Humanity, A letter, which Is among the mnost moving documents written since beginning of the war, has been Paris. a French cavalry officer, as he she received the news of his death. 8d in the chest during a cavalry charge and temporarily lost consclous- ness, the writer goes on: “There are two other uear me and I do not think there much hope for them, either. One is an officer of a Scottish regiment and the other a private in the uhlans. “They were struck down after and when I came to myself | found them bending over me, rendering first ald. The Britisher was pouring water down my throat from his flask, while the Cerman was endeavoring stanch my wound with an antiseptic preparation served out by their med- ical corps. “The Highlander had one of his legs shattered and the German had several pieces of shrapnel buried in his side. in spite of their own sufferings the were trying to help me, and was fully conscious again the gave me a morphia injection and took spe himself. His medical corps had also provided him with the injection and the needle, together with printed instructions for its use, “After the Injection, feeling wonder- fully at ease, we spoke of the lives we had lived before the war. We all spoke English, and we talked the women we had left at home. German and the PEritisher had only been married a year “1 wondered, and | suppose the olh ers did, ‘hy we at all I looked at who was failing to and in of his mud-etained uniform, he looked the embodiment of freedom Then 1 thought of the tricolor of France and had done for liberty “Then 1 watched had ceased to speak book was Uyireg to men lying 0 y when | German of the sleep drawn face and Highlander, exhausted spite the Cerman, who He had taken a knapsack and read a service for sol in battle ™ The letter ends with a reference ¥ PP Fi irom us it was found at the dead officer's sid his fiancee Germany's Dead Letter Mail. The German the feelings, so far as possible, of the families of soldiers who have in battle, when mall matter, grable for that reason, Is returned to the sender. Hitherto it was tom to stamp on the letter or package merely the word “fallen,” or “dead, it back home to ashe tho relatives with this harsh brevity the military authorities have been di rocted to use the words “fallen for the fatherland,” or “fallen on the komar” n still is post office the cus send xk NOW field of another way the authorities Are ing to Soften tho blow of notices from the front Hitherto was attempted only in country tricts, the returned mail of 1 fallen soldiers was handed over to the local authorities or the who then undertook to break the fatal news gently to the family. like this is now to be done als The loca asked to s« bearing where clergyman will now be Monkey War Veteran. Jacko, the pet monkey of H M. 8 . a flying visit to Harwich, sake of variety fof a railway cently paid made part journey or the rn in South i during the Born seaman fath He went with the in the Boxer rebellion ered him and took him afloat . to sea he and he was in the Loyal during its re- engagement with German stroyers Being an old soldier, he then took refuge In the sh kettle, ing was over.—Loundon Daily Mail Tramps Rald Peacock Pen. A feast ft for kings, perhaps, has the grounds of Milllonalre Gardner Hammond of Montecito, Cal, and made off with the peacocks. beautiful fowls have attracted no end of comment, being imported birds. The loss was discovered in the morning and all day Sheriff Nat Stew. art searched the hobo camps, but in vain, Raids on Montecito hen coops have been of nightly occurrence. “Big reward paid and no questions asked,” is the way the Hammonds are advertising for the rétumm of their pea cocks 8he Doesn't Save Them. “Young Mr. Twobble is very digal flod Do his letters to you purn, I's “Yoa—oventucily.” % A a. a HUNAN VOICE SENT 4,400 MILES Talking Over the Telephone From Sea to Sea. VIIRE PRESIDENT WILSON ON Thomas A. Watson In Californiz and Alex. ander Graham Bell, Inventor Of the Telephone, In New York. D. C.- inaugurated (he Pregident Wii Washington, Monday first transcontinental telephone system by to President Moore Panama-Pacific Expositic rancisco With Mz: Bell, the invent President Alexander Graham of the telephone, and American Telephone and graph Company, on the wire poinis ngratulation appeals has greal event work made it { the it promises to be, and convey my pe: and to all whose ble and make uiations to Bell York, the you With Dr listening ne at New Thomas A iin Presices spoke to Watson, ir "rancisco Mr an at the telephone Watson was Dr the time of and was to hear & word spoken over 10 express ventive genni owiedge that and n should BA America as of our unity and Will congratulat I want congratulations Mr. Vall Jekyi is fo Dr not congratulate you notables consum labors and sald the Presi possible y pride 12 3 ital ord ched HAYe FOSS our you Cony Dr. Bell &¥ LY Glial 10 to ¢ With listening 1s A + a" ire land, the Pi Beli line at hen spoke May i warinly on this tion of your loge abie act ments dent are justified in great pride In what has been This is 8 memorable day and | conve) to you Warm ons.’ The President Mr. Moore in S relpary done congratulat iezsander Grah tedephone represeniative a organizations tal service or public use 1 It will cost a perso to talk for thre Francisco and $6.57 minute, 30, Cal After the hange of messages } and Mr. Watsoo over rk n Francisco telephon: Monday original ized in the first conversation betwee: 40 cut in or uit still wers Hine the instrument ARO Was and the voices the two Years ene As a further test an extension was get up from New York to Jekyl island Ga., where Theodore N. Vail, president of the American Telephone and Tels graph Company, was waiting, and Mr Watson and Mr. Vail talked over » circuit 4,600 miles long iM HA MAAS SNS 8 VON BEUELOW PROMOTED. Head Of German Second Army Made Field Marshal, Amsterdam (via London).--A tele gram received hera fromm Berlin an nouncer that General von Buslow, commanderinchiel of the Usrman Second Army, has been appointed a field marsial General vou Einem, commanderinchief of the Third Army “he dispatedh adds, has been promoted | IF HAIR IS TURNING GRAY, USE SAGE TEA Try Grandmother's Recipe to Darken and Beautify Gray, Faded, Lifeless Hair, Grandmother kept her hair beaut | fully darkened, glossy and abundant with a brew of Sage Tea and SBulphur Whenever her bair fel! out or took on that dull, faded or streaked appear ance, this simple mixture was applied with wonderful effect. Py asking at any drug store for “Wyeth's and Sulphur Halr Remedy, get a large bottle of this recipe, ready to use, for about 60 cents. This simple mix sage you will old-time ture can be depended to restore natural and beauty to the halr and is eplendid for dan druff, dry, itchy scalp aud falling halr A well-known druggist body eases Wyeth's § and Sul) because it darkens so evenly that nobody can tell it has ! applied—it's 80 easy to use, L000 simply dampen a comb or soft brush and draw it through your bair, t2 one strand at a By the gray hair disappears other application stored to its natural giossy, soft and abun Upon color EAYE every naturally or re. looks two color and Adv. dant sant Hard Work. ur trenches st snake from Switzeriand And what cliers Vie w ri HANG WOrxK $24 4 int have, et r day and 1 », what did you e r?" the rgeant o cool it, sir,” sald the young sc HAIR OR NO HAIR? it is Certainly Up to You and Cuth cura. Tria! Free. Hot shampoos with Cuticura Soap, light ; of Cuti cura Ointment rubbed into the scalp tend to clear the scalp of dan druff, soothe itching and irritation and promote healthy hairgrowing condi tions. Nothing better, cleaner, purer. Sample each free by Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept Boston. Sold everywhere —Ady. emi 1h dressings XY information From Headquarters “Jinx finer plays than Shakespeare ever did.” “You surprise produced ™ never were B wrilter has Where were ut he told me them, and be cught to know” important to Mothers Examine careiully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for fants and children, and see that it Dears the ZT Signature of Much So. on & hair * YUL 8 Very ¢ hangs pros boo 18 wait What a tg we would be if jovels we could gee us! There is ne nood to suffer the annoving, excruciating pam of neuralgia; Sloan's Linupent laid on gently will soothe the aching head like magic. Don’t delay. Try it at once, Hear What Others Say “1 Luve been a mufferer with Neunlels for several years and have tried different Linimenta, but Floan's Liniment fs the best Lizitment for Neursigin on earth I hore tried it suooessfully; it has never failed "~F, H. Williams, Aupusts, Ark Mra. Ruth ©, Clagpool, Independence, Mo, writen; “A frond of curs told ww nbout your Linitent. We have been udng it for 13 aod think there is nothing like it. We use it on everything, sores, sore throat, wise. We can't gd ® think it is the Dost