Doan’s, However, Restored Mrs. Vogt to Health and Strength, Haso’t Suffered Since. “I had one of the worst cases of kide ney complaint imaginable,” says Mra. Wm. Vogt, 6316 Audrey Ave, Wellston, Mo, “and 1 was laid up im bed for days at a time, “My bladder inflamed and the secretions caused My back bad shape was kidney terrible pain, was in such that when I moved the pains were like a knife- thrust I got so dizzy I couldn't stoop and my head Just throbbed with pain, Beads of perspi- ration would stand on temples, then i become cold and ny would numb, “My heart action was MRS. VOGT, affected and I felt as {if 1 couldn't take another breath. I got so nervous and run down, I felt life wasn't worth living and often wished that I might dle so my suffering would be ended. Medicine falled to help me and I was discouraged. “Doan’s Kidney Plils were recommend ed to me and I could tell 1 was being helped after the first few doses. 1 kept getting better every day and continued use cured me. My health improved in every way and best of all, the cure has been permanent. I feel that Doan’s saved my life” Sworn to before me, HENRY B. SURKAMP. Notary Public Get Doan’s at Any Store, 60c a Box DOAN’S ®i3xer PILLS FOSTER-MILBURN CO., BUFFALO, N.Y. His Chief Worry. War Gardener—By the way, did you fellows get in the house? Burglar—We came through the back window! War Gardener (excitedly)—Great Scott! I hope you didn't step on my potato patch! how You never can know how superior to oth- er preparations in prompiness and efficien- ey is Dr. Peery’s “Dead Shot” until you have tried it once. A single dose cleans out Worms or Tapeworm. Adv. Resented. the philosopher, Presumption “Be good,” said “and you wil “Not replied the man of sensitis “If you under- take to be good some envious people are likely to think you are trying to put on 1 be happy.” necessa e conscience, ate airs, To Drive Out Malaria And Build Up The System Take the Old Standard GROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC. You know what you are taking, as the formula is printed on every label, showing it is Quinine and Iron in a tasteless form. The Quinine drives out malaria, the Iron builds up the system. 60 cents. HOW TO CONQUER THE CRAMP Worst Effect Is Panic, Which Causes the Swimmer to Let All the Air Out of His Lungs. mtraction of y¥ the penetration could not of drowning. Its effect, cording to Popular Science Monthly, is to cause a which thr the swimmer guard, causing him to let the air out of his ngs and thus allow the air passages to become filled with The safeguard against such a panic is absolute confidence in the floating power of the body and a demonstrable knowledge of the proper way to quickly fill the lungs to utmost capacity with air, The moment a cramp is felt, the swimmer should turn on his back and begin to gulp the alr, making no effort to keep himself from sinking. As he sinks he slowly exhales under water, through the mouth, with the lips puck- ered as for whistling. If it is a stom- ach cramp the knees will be drawn up against the abdomen, but the swim- imp Is merely a « the muscles caused | J il of the cold. itself cay Obviously, it 30 ne- panic pede off his water. 2is strength until they are fully ex tended. This will no doubt cause great pain for a few seconds, but as soon as the legs are straightened out the cramp will vanish, and the body, buoy- ed up by the alr In the lungs, will shoot up to the surface. There still inhaling In great gulps and exhaling through puckered lips, the swimmer may float until he regains his strength or is picked up. In ease of cramp In the leg or arm the same system of breathing Is fol lowed and the affected part is straight. ened out by sheer strength. Try This on Chiggers. Collodion is sald to give rellef from the Irritation caused by the bites of chiggers. Collodion is a solution of gun cotton In alcohol and ether. When it Is applied to the skin, the alcohol and ether evaporate, leaving a color less film which adheres to the skin, An application of collodion 1s excel lent treatment for hang nails. The bottle should be kept tightly corked. Used to Them. Mrs. Jones—The paper says that the charges of company A were terri fie. Mr, that ; Judge, Jones- Captain I'm "not surprised Zink 1s a at dentist, — Spotted, Naval Reerult Ship ahoy! Officer of the Deck—Where away? Naval Reeruit—Far away. One of First Requisites of Ripen- ing Fruit Is Moisture. en Stiff Clay Is to Be Avoided Because It Cannot Be Worked Early in Season Without Becoming Cloddy and Is Apt to Bake. (By J. A. BAUER) to strawberry culture will vary some- what in different sections. In a gen eral way we have said that any soil that would grow good crops of corn or potatoes would good berries, and while this seems to be a grow straw- tage it is necessary to have the soll especially adapted. One of the first requisites of the ripening fruit is moisture, and care should be that this Is provided. Hence a very safe location, although in moist sea- adapted early Neither is a stiff strawberry growth, as clay very in Perfect or Staminate. Imperfect ap Pistillate. Perfect or Staminate. be worked and later Is apt to bake, and the plants will suffer more than It would that a sandy loam or loam with slight mixture clay if properly handled, give the best results, Having chosen a retentive ture, it next becomes necessary to cannot season it becoming cloddy, seem on sandy soll, of should, soil repare repars for proper drainage in ease of e rainfall, natural of the land Is such that no water upon the i are the only ceessiy unless the ¢ stand surface. Tile practical ones to use, Open ditches swer th tory In many ways, In planning your strawberry fleld i FERREIRA RA RRR ¥ SILO QUALIFICATIONS. It should be alr-tight, to keep the alr out and the juices in. It should be gmooth, to permit the silage to settle without leav- ing alr spaces along the wall, It should be constructed of durable material which will not decay or blow down. The dlameter should be such that from two to three inches of silage will be fed off each day. There is an advantage in the tall silo, because the silage at the bottom is compressed by the weight of that above. It should be so it can withstand pressure of the silage, The weight of sllage differs from Year to year, according to the amount of moisture in the built that the bursting 01 Eil~ FREER E ERE EAEE REE RE EEE RRR EERE age, x» | RRR RE RRR RRR Rk Aa 'MOST NUTRITIOUS OF FOODS | Sweet Corn Is More Easily Dried Than Almost Any Other Vegetable ~Plant Good Supply. THATCHER, Minnesota Ex- periment Station.) Dried sweet corn i8 one of the most { Sweet corn 18 more | easily dried than almost any other gar. i For arge amounts » dried It (By R. W, | nutritious foods, these reasons of this summer for use be planted or » fields and is y cultivated gar- regetable, sweet corn can lots of quick- like the Early uld be planted ; but a winter use, the larger BOrts, as Cour Stowell's Ev elding and be used, Gentleman or. | green, should Let everyone who has a garden or field plenty of available sweet to and a winter Kive a summ be corn r gunnlv er supply 3 - gy { f - large excess to dried for use, | ENTRANCE IS CATTLE-PRGOF Posts Arranged in Such Manner as to Admit Person, but Always Closed to Animals. marshes or lakes, also valleys where there is no chance air, as these that show for circulation of ies are very liable when higher land or more 1 iintion little, if any. A hard often ruins the entire 1aen 10001 : y to clre would frost at lossoming time crop. The best land one can use is a clover field. After plowing fertilize with a mixture of three pounds of nitrogen seven pounds of phosphorie acid and nine pounds of using about eight hundred pounds to the acre, potash, land should be plowed up and after one or two clover crops reset, Just to find out what varieties of strawberries are bast adapted to one's particular soll or climate, it is well to Proper and Improper Method of Set. Properly Set; at Left, Too Deep; at Right, Too Shallow, ity, and determine by their experience: or, a limited number of plants can be tried. Setting poor plants will often bring fallure, never to purchase any hardy, vigorous plants, On an acre of rich, cultivated land, a crop of strawberries can be grown that will net $500; an acre of such iand should produce at the rate of 200 bushels to the acre. but strong, CLEAN AND STORE PLANTERS Implements Should Be Put Away Care. fully for Another Year—Keep in Good Condition, As soon as the farmer has finished using the planters for this year, they should be cleaned and put away care fully, so that they will be In good con- dition for another year. Often by carelessly allowing planters to lay around uncared for, one has to buy a flew one the following season, or at least hunt for lost parts. Every plate and other part of the planters should be stored carefully away, and the planter left ready for use another Prices of machinery are ad vancing as well as prices of foodstuffs, should not take unusually good care Often Thrives on Soil Not Adapted | to Other Crops. Cabbage is not very particular about the soll in which It will grow. It can often be grown on land not adapted to other crops. Any well-drained soil, holding plenty of plant food In an available condition, should grow an ex- cellent crops Land with a loose, grav- To make a gate that a person can enter but cattle cannot go through, | set in each direction about eight ind apart, or so you can go with ease, says a Minnesota In a fence rus place one post on one post shes through writer in The Fa ning east and west, rmer Cattie-Proof Gate. | the west, one on the north, one on the | east, and one on the south. Nail the ralls on the two posts east and west, and you will have an entrance that is ialways open for a person but closed to a cow. Put one of these gates In your cowyard fence where you enter often, FEEDING FARM WORK HORSES Farmers Are Urged to Utilize Home. Grown Feeds to Fullest Extent Grain ls Essential, In feeding horses utilize home- grown feeds to the fullest extent. In a section where corn can be well ma- tured, this grain ought to constitute the greater portion of the concentrated feed for work horses, Corn alone can be used as a grain feed for work horses If a good quality {of alfalfa or clover hay is fed for | roughage, When combined with mixed | hay or timothy hay, a grain combina- tion of three parts corn and one part onts by weight is a satisfactory mix- ture, If oats are scarce and high in price, cottonseed-meal or ollmeal may be substituted for the protein furnished by the oats. One-third to one-half pound of linseed meal will, with the amount secured through mixed hay, furnish sufficient protein for a 1.500- pound working horse, A horse at farm work requires from 134 to 1% pounds of grain per 100 pounds live weight dally, Feed grain | sufliclent to keep the horse In good working condition. Hay may be lim. ited to the standard of a pound of hay to 100 pounds live weight daily. Re- duce the grain one-half on days when the horse Is idie to avoid azoturia, IDEAL PLACE FOR CHICKENS Fowls and Chicks Should Be Allowed to Run in Corn When It Is High Enough for Shade. Let the fowls and chicks run in the cornfield after the corn is high enough to furnish shade, and they will have a O30 2020 02 20 20 20 0 20 2 0 0 2 0 2 00 3 0 2 2 3 0 0 2 0 0 days and will pick up many bugs and | worms which might otherwise injure the corn, SWISS CHARD FOR CHICKENS Leaves Make Best of Gréen Food for Fowls, and Many Raise it Espe- cially for That Purpose, — Swiss chard is fine if not allowed to rather closely, The leaves make the best of green food for the hens and chickens, and many poultry keeters She Knew What to Take. Five.year-old Mary, who is nlways Hyves In a small town where the parties, to make up his back Just before the last one she begged eagerly: “Can't I take something, too, muv- “Noi if your father and I take some- thing, that will be plenty.” But the child could not bear to give up the idea, so she ransacked the whole house for something suitable. she appeared before her of her own. “Please, muvver, can't 1 take this? See, it's not a speck of good for any- thing,” she urged.—Christian Herald. CARE FOR YOUR SKIN And Keep It Clear by Daily Use of Cuticura—Trial Free. A hot bath with Cuticura Soap fol- lowed by a gentle anointing with Cuti- cura Ointment clears the skin or scalp in most cases of eczemas, rashes and itching of children and adults. Make Cuticura your every-day toilet prepara- tions and prevent such troubles, Free sample each by mail with Book. Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston, Sold everywhere.—Adyv, Speaking of Vegetables, electro to a small domestie, and sald: “Mary, you will always find a on anything that is real sliver” “Yes, mum,” sald Mary, “I'll remem ber, and I've heard always carrots on gold, thot seen them.” ‘lion say us there igh 1 ain't Some girls who profess to be highly educated have been merely immersed in a weak solution of accomplishment i Em, Can STD » For Infants and Children, CTAB fI0 3) Therety Fomolng sid Cheerfulness dies aia neither um, Mineral. Not NARCOTIC al. Nor NARG eee of lc SAMUELFTOER Prmplin Sd Abn Seana Asch se Worm Send 1] AhelpfulRemedyfor § Constipation and Diarrbacty and Feverishness : ft Loss OF SLEEP {| resutting therefrom -inlnfancy Fac Simile Signature of Cevravn COMP or. NEW YORK. _ Tr ¥ 22 ELT La EARLE -3S CENTS id i Exact Copy of Wrapper, Genuiiia Castoria Always In Usa For Over Thirty Years THE CTHTAUR SOMPANY, HOW YORE ore. July 18, 70,200 miles of travel. And it proves iles per as nothing else would No other car in ferent kinds of roads. 70,200 miles. gasoline, $935, pick up something from the floor. “Who has lost a dime?” he asked. At once half a dozen passengers be- gan fumbling In thelr pockets, until one of them held out his hand and declared that he had dropped the coin. “Does it bear the date—18807" in quired the finder, “Yes, certainly.” “Is one side rather worn?” “Just so.” “Here you are, then,” sald the finder and handed him a trousers button.” AA A AUIS prod disagreeable and sometimes alarming symptoms Wright's Indian Vegetable In stimulate the diges- tive processes to function naturally, Adv, Indigestion in the Rear, Stolin—Was Jack wounded at the front, then? ~Mnud--No; he came home on leave The Bride and the Cynic. i “Yes,” sald the bride of a week. | “Jack tells me everything he knows, and I tell him everything I know.” “Indeed I” rejoined her ex-rival, who had been left at the post. “The silence i when you are together must be op- | pressive,” NOTHING 80 EFFECTIVE AS FLIXIR | BARER For Malaria, Chills & Fever. | Ohief of Police, J. W. Reynolds, Newport | News, Va, : “It in a pleasure to recommend Babek for chills and fever. Have used {t when | necessary for 30 feara and have found no remedy | as effective.” KIXIr Babek 50 cents, all drugs | gists, or by Parcel Pos : from Kiocaew SE A Good 80 pills . ® - . Poor Business. “The airplane is in flames |” “And two thousand fet up! What a foolish place to burn 1t1"” Registered a Kick. “What's the matter with your wrist watch?” “One of the cows kicked it in the “What for?” “Well, you see, 1 was milking her, Statesman. Was It because wash day comes next to Sunday that somebody told how —————————— 5 Love binds somé¢ men, and makes lots of others too nearsighted for mille tary service, After the field Is plowed come the ally sabhesil mmst be avoided, , harrowing de i : | ralse it especially for this purposa, and sat on a wasp's nest,