WASALLRUNDOWN Faulty Kidneys Caused fieite 84 Suf- fering, Completely R Since Using feta Mrs. Harry A. Lyon, 5 St. Willlam 8t., 8. Boston, Mass, says: “Doan's Kidney Pills have surely done me wonderful good. About two months prior to the birth of my baby, I had two convulsions and was taken to a hospltal. Doctors sald the convulsions were due to my kidneys not working properly. “I had swelling of the feet and ankles 80 that I had to wear large - sized slippers, . My back ached in- =< tensely, I was nperv- MRS LYON, ous and unable to sleep. I alsp suf- fered from awful headaches and felt weak, tired languld, and run down. “After I came home a friend sug- gested that I try Doan's Kidney Pills, and I got some, Isoon noticed Improvement; my back became stronger and I felt better in every way. I kept on taking Doan’s and was cured. They are surely reliable.” Mrs. Lyon gave the above state- ment in May, 1915, and. on March 12, 1917, she sald: “My cure has lasted, I take Doan's occasionally, however, as a strength- ener for my kidneys.” Get Doan’s at Any Store, 60c a Box DOAN’S Sane FOSTER-MILBURN CO., BUFFALO, N.Y. A —————————— A Hard Nut to Crack When a cold hits you in the head or throat, it's hard to get rid of it Don’t experiment. Break it up with Hale's Honey of Horehound and Tar. Prompt and effective. Alldruggists, 25cta. a bottle. Try Pike's Toothache Drops For 35¢c When you bu ¥acort Lins ment you get splendid value! The large 35 cent bottle contains twice as much as the usual 50 cent bottle of Liniment, Try it for rheumatism, neuralgia, sciatica, sprains, cuts bruises. At all dealers — price 35 cents. MTT RELIEVES PAIN Surprises in Housekeeping. Mrs. Simpleton, ness girl, fatricacies of housekeeping. food,” she confided to her friend. “I bought a real nice-looking refrigerator, but Ir doesn't work well at all” “Do you keep enough lce In It? *Ice I" gasped Mrs. Simpleton. f hope you don’t think, all that a refrigerator 80 to the additional expense of buying ice!” money on A torpid iy food sasimiiation Tone up your liver with Wright's India: Vegetable Fills They ach gently and surely Adv. Teaches Szamanship. the tors In the government navigation at Charleston, 8, C., was compeiled to feave, a woman, Mrs, Charlotte 8, Pat ten of Mal took the helin, and 1s gow teaching beginners In nentical sel ence. Mre. Patten is the widow of a sea captain, for fifteen years lived on board a ship. After the death of her husband she continued her life on the sea on board a ship captained by her son-in-law, A Woman When one Krad pas of instru ¥ 3 190 +:1 fg RED FACES AND RED HANDS Soothed and Healed by Cuticura—Sam. ple Each Free by Mail. Treatment for the face: On rising and retiring smear affected parts with Cuticura Ointment. Then wash off with Cuticura Soap and hot water. For the hands: BSonk them in a hot lather of Cuticura Soap. Dry, and rub in Cuticura Ointment. ; Free sample each by mail with Book. Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston, Sold everywhere—Ady, Labor Scarce in Coal Region. 80 scarce is labor In the conl region that when Jacob Schoen of Pottsville Pa., Buperintendent of highways, ad. vertised for men for work on the streets, the only reply he got was from & man 82 years of age. Onesided. He-1 suppose we are to consider the engagement broken? She—You are; not me, I'm still en. New York.—These are stirring times in clothes, The manufacturers nnd shops have prepared for a rush sea- son. It is thelr own expression that they are actually serambling for a sup- ply to meet the demand. The French gowns are here. New American gowns are not only exploit- ed, but tremendously admired and approved. The effects of those who have taken the French silhouette and built gowns in their own workrooms, made of American materials, should be commended in an entire chapter. Some of the best houses In this country have tried out experienced designers and colorists in producing several hundred gowns that are first cousins to the French in that they express the adopted Paris lines, Each of the designers gives full tribute to the fact that Paris has laid down the laws for the season; but every de- signer boasts with honest pride that the clothes are the product of Amerl- can study and workmanship. In every case, the houses ers to produce them, and the ongs that were successful were gowns that had been given into the hands of those who had studied the Paris methods with reverence earnestness, The result was that clientele of these houses saw_ ordinarily good drapery, tion of alln extra- g colors and an excel to telieve is purely American. The Colors That Prevail. The silhouette has been established, Every woman now knows that her the figure, thin one-piece gowns. take precedence over stiff ones; rious colors, fabrics and that she must necept or avoid, These are vastly to the average shopper. True, is a class of women who go to ex- pensive houses that handle only a few of the most fashiohable pieces of ap- parel and offer nothing that can lead one Into the wrong path: but class remains an exclusive one, and what they do or do not do is not al- ways a guid who must fight clothes In their ov victory is vital Take colors. Who does not feel perplexed and confused on entering a shop where hundreds of colors are dashed upon the vision and offered as the Iatest thing? One feels that a gigantic kaleidoscope has before the eves, out the battle vn way and to whom The material in this evening gown is heavy brecaded satin, the odd bodice in dark blue with a girdle of pale goid dotted with jet beads. 8kirt of pale gold with flowers in blue, gold and black. to work. The judgment is suspend- ed. One goes out of the shop with a feeling that it is futile to try to buy clothes and with a desire to let the genson slide, Is 1s this discouragement that as- galls three-quarters of the women who go out to get their new apparel, so let them be guided by the fact that not many colors are really in fashion, and not many are available for the woman who has not many social opportunities to display a varlety of clothes. : To begin at the beginning of the color scheme: Midnight blue holds its own, Black Is In demand by those who want to dress well in the afternoon nnd evening, but It does not hold a high place for street sults or frocks, is accepting. it. Know yourself well, green, wear it in are variously known as jade, Egyp- tian and lettuce, The women who ean wear Inde best maierials are woven In this ale ental shops are filled with bits of fine Jade made into earrings, and necklaces, There are fans also buckles of the slippers. Byzantine fashion, ted flickers through the color the flame from the artiliery This Helmet of Navarre is made of i tete de negre velvet, with visor faced | with white satin. It is trimmed with | two large siiver buckles. | front. It is against the accepted psy- i chology that the colors of war should | be exploited while war is on. It is better to be sane than foolish when one approaches the subject of red In clothes. The scarlet danger sign should be put over all the coun- ters where red fabrics are placed, and it should be worn by the mannequin who parades In a red gown. the color of conflict; f of peace, it well is thrice blessed, ally speaking, and she is apart from | her neighbors, because she is a rare | type. i and eyes, These well-known burgun- i dy shades are offered. | duvetyn, serge, satin, velvet i livia cloth, which the American weav- | ers are imitating In a successful way. An Epidemic of Gray. tury or two feeling that gray is the tone of sadness and that its Quakerish This season, however, all doubts elastic name of gray. imity to artillery gray, which and the gray of London smoke, gets from the glitter of cut steel, Egyptian green, with The sliver gray tissues are loaded with rhinestone, jet, pleases with gray today. She regards ft ns a neutral foundation for what ever color scheme, Florentine or Futuristic, that she cares to work out on its surface, Serge Is good, If it Is soft; other. wise, It should be barred. The funda- mental thiug Is to get the fabric that clings to the figure, All others must be put on the opposite side of the scale, Nothing must have any chance to flare. Even though the bustle is an accepted fashion—and by the way, it is an Americar production that has met with an unusual success—it must be arranged in a soft fabric that merely drapes Itself over the end of the spine and does not show any am- bition to project itself into space. (Copyright, 1917, by the McClure Newspa- per Byndicate.) Squirrel Popular. The winter furs will show much dyed squirrel, One exquisite full length coat Is In gray squirrel, In ex- cellent soft tones, while as coliar and cuffs are gray fox so well blended that there Is scarcely any variance In the (two fure.. Food Situation Demands That Animals Be Not Neglected. Supply Is Rapidly Being Depleted and Serious Condition Will Develop Unless Conservation Meas- ures Are Taken, (By RB, W. CLARK, Colorado Agricul- tural College, Fort Collins, Colo.) Save all the heifer calves and plan | to raise more pigs, lambs, colts, calves and chickens next year than you did | this year. Do you know the world is | being depleted of its live stock? Keep your pigs growing. They should weigh 200 pounds at six months of age and they are worth $16 a hun- | dred now. Ten good pigs are worth $300, Give your hogs all the alfalfa or | clover they will eat winter and sum- mer. Give them skim milk, whey, some grain, or anything else you have but be sure to give them all they can eat, Keep the calves growing. Give them {| some grain, separate from milk, and ! all the good hay they can eat. Veal | Is now worth 16 cents a pound. A | good veal is worth $35. | Feed the lambs well. worth $20 aplece and woo, from 50 cents to 70 cents a pound. { Feed the cows well, Keep i milking. eat so much, they can “bat all the time, of milk, butter and cheese out of sight, #1 a pound before long. Feed and handle the They are is going mares Good horses are worth more than they were a year ago. good horse is worth £300, A Dr. McCampell of Kansas State Col. lege Tells How Young Animal Should Be Treated. Colts are sometimes injured by in- them. They seem to think that be- cause the colt is large he can do as much as the mature horse, “Give the colt light work” advises Dr. C. W. McCampell, associate profes- sor of animal husbandry in the Kan- sas State Agricultural college. “The colt should be prepared for the sea- son's work If he Is to do his best. Lib- weeks before the work starts, year-old colt handled in this manner after a. few weeks’ preparatory work i will be able to do considerable work of rest occasionally. work the colt at first. There is dan- ! ger of sweeney, broken wind, or other serious trouble which probably would entire season.” cause of Too High or Too Low Temperature of Cellar, winter use. Let us not forget the | fruit and vegetables, | grow good crops of garden vegetables, and then lose them because the stor. age place is too hot or too cold. We | want to léarn all we ean about pits and dug-outs and cellars for holding garden and orchard food. Here is the | picture of a cabbage pit taken from a Method of Storing Cabbage. Colorado bulletin. The cabbages are stored by placing them head down three in a row and two on top, mak- ing a tier of five cabbages, the roots extending in the air. The pile may be ns long as neccessary. Several inches of straw or leaves should then be put over the cabbage and the same amount of earth thrown on them. Cab- bage may be kept frozen solid without injury to the head, provided It is thawed out very gradually—Rural New Yorker, TERM “COLIC” IS VAGUE ONE impossible to Give One Remedy to Apply to All Affections Commonly Termed “Colic” Br I AR Bitar 850 "The term “colic” Is a vague one and is generally meaningless, In the horse there are ten common affections of the intestines, four of the stomach, three of the generative system, four of the urinary organs, three of the rectum and seven miscellaneous conditions making a total of 81 common condi tions known as colle, There are also a number of conditions not frequently met which are also known as colle. It is therefore out of the uestion to sug gest a remedy to cover ese conditions, but each case should be siudied, and aftér a correct diagnosis the proper steps in treatment may be taken, itural Wo PHAR RRRARRBRRRBR ARBRE NN SILO FACTS Consider the silo: It means larger profits from the cornfield, It means less labor in feeding, It means better health for the herd. It means a larger milk flow from the dairy cow. It means more beef at reduced cost, It means less grain stock ration and more soldier's ration. the the in in FARRAR ARRRRRRRA RAR AAR RRR RRR RS Ass asssanssassae nance sansad ddedndsiudnd Sitaiiniiebdebi detain WORK HORSES AND SAVE MEN Expert of Missouri College of Agri culture Outlines Plan to Solve Labor Problem. Labor is the limiting factor In crop production this year. Horses are rela- | tively plentiful in comparison. 0. R. Johnson of the department of farm | management of the Missouri College of | Agriculture suggests that farmers lay | aside one-man and two-horse tools and | use those that require more horses so | that mofe work per man can be done, | One man with three horses to a 16- | inch breaking plow will turn over three | acres or less in a day. The same man ' with a gang plow consisting of two | and will use means that by one more horse, increasing the | stock one-third, one man can | his efficiency in breaking | ground nearly 75 per cent, Investigations have actually shown | This man and the same team with imple. | ments that require him to walk. The | use of bigger tools and thorough prep- | aration of seed beds will also cut down | the time required for cultivation of | the corn crop. Cultivation is the op- | eration which limits the amount of | corn one man can grow. If a good seedbed Is prepared, some time can be | saved In cultivating the crop, and con- sequently more acres can be grown, Contrivance Protects Driver From Severe Jolting and Eliminates Danger of Falling. For cultivators and certain other farm [mplements, a shock-ab 2 seat has been devised to protect a driver from severe jolting and to elin danger of his being thrown The seat post 1s plv- oted to the tongue and held in posi. tion by three coll springs. One of these is stretched between the tongue seat post, sorbing Safety Spring Seat. while the other two extend diagonally to either side, connecting the seat and the frame. This arrangement prevents undue movement in any direction and supports the seat without its having connection.—Popular Me chanics, FAINT FOR FARM BUILDINGS | Avoid Cheap Imitations and Use That Made of Linseed Oil and Ground Lead—Color Is Important, paint. The best paint is made of lin- that the paint is improved by a small addition of zine. An unpainted build- Indeed it would seem as though paint | would protect a building for a hun- | dred years or more if properly applied | at the right time, The color of paint | is important. colors, GARDENERS SAVE OWN SEEDS Early Specimens Wil Improve Varieties. Many gardeners save thelr own seeds, but they are not very careful about selection, using all the plants for the table that are wanted and sav. ing the seed from what happens to be left. As a consequence, in a short time the variety is “run out” the term used when seeds propagate weak, inferior plants. A llttle time and care in saving the best early specimens will improve the varieties, instead of in. Juring them. GRADE ALL MARKET PRODUCE Neatness and Cleanliness Are Recomm mended in Preparing All Farm Truck for Sale. @ L 0Y CA Do not fail | Producing and Refining OIL O11 prices booming. Blocks sorring. Thoy sands drawing dividends from small Invests ments In ground-floor shares of reliable off and refining computiien. Write af ofice for 816 FREE BOOK OF PHOTOS AND OIL FACTS shout big, substar Hat, ghare-and share -kiiKe oll and refining company (governed by bourd of 12 conse ryative bankers) owning 45.008 serves of valuables oll icases deposited in bank, all paid for and certified by law is Okishoma and Texas, the world's richest of) region. Big vehi now dfilling. Dozen wells to be drilled soon, Modern Of Refinery ts be erected Positively your fair snd sqgasre quick opportunity (frees from bhumbe 1 fakir's methods) to buy $1 par share SOW in honestiy-managed, fast-growing company + USAGE OIL & REFINING CO., Oklahoma City, Chis A LOCAL SALESMAN or responsible merchandise Lroker wanted Ww sell pur line of package sod bulk tess and coffees. Cos mission basis. Bxciusive selling agency. Or we pow socked bry, jobbers. Le maie proposition rom om Aone aul hitshed firm. Write for parliculsrns Ler you wi i} sell our dine § zed auvely, ot you hav é other accounts, Kiso territury desired She Studied Byron. Hawkins, who posed as a lit a great ad- had re Mrs. on for Byron's works, showing him to a caller. “What have you named him?’ asked “Perchance,” was the reply. “What a singular name for an ani commented the caller. him after Byron's dog” “Don’t you remember » Harold, the my mal” “1 named she explained. the line Childe poet says, ‘Perchance in where ot dog? To Drive Out Malaria And Build Up The Syston Take the Old Standard GROVE'S —ry what you are taking, as the formula is printed on every label, showiog it is "a tasteless form. The Quinine drives out malaria, the Irco builds up the System, 60 cents. Can't Live on $25,000 a Year. The somewhat irritating story of the woman who cannot support herself on a large income bobs up again. Mrs. Olga Kohler Florman of New York has been drawing $25,000 annually from the state of her father, but she asks un debt. arned rt of an infant i her a bonus MOTHER! Have you ever used MOTHER'S JOY SALVE for Colds, Coughs, Croup and Pneumonia, Asthma, and Head Ca- tarrh? If you haven't get it at once. It will cure you.—Adyv, GERMANS BRIBED THE UMPIRE Cart Emil Junck Tells How Teutons Are Tricky in Other Ways Than in War. contribute to the suppo son. The lowed Court a Carl Emi Chicago, 1 Junck, a dye importer of was talking about Germany. “The n sp tic ‘KY, shifty and false,” “The Ger- mans today k it's clever to cheat Their wi 8 of every war law and vvery international agree. ment, i¥ a cheating war. “Here is an {Uustration of the Ges man spirit. “When I lived in Eilberfeld 1 organ ized a football team g the Elber when the team was hboring team, I gave the boys 100 marks to buy leg guards or whatever would most help then to win. “Well, they won, but their shoes and leg guards were very oid and shabby, captain the Germ irit today is he said a its vi iattan amon Un oe, shi Le after “'Giad you licked 'em, though cer tainly some of the decisions were close. But what did you do with the money I gave you? “The captain answered with a know. ing smile: “You sald, Herr Junck, that we were to use the money In any way that would best help us to win ; so of course we made a present of it to the um pire.” Despite the Price. *Nevenge is sweet" “All I know about revenge is this There's less of it actually had than al. most any commodity you can name™ THERE'S NO DOUBT ABOUT POSTUM AS A HEALTH IMPROVEMENT OVER COFFEE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers