have an eve out tection against Inferior sealed package Is pro- A Brief Recital, “How did you get hurt, asked the inquisitive pe “It know.” “No, We'd been pushing on for four or five hours one morning and I hadn't been scratched, so 1 says to myself, ‘Gee, I'm in luck! * my lad? rson. wee te Thats oN was a shell, sir hat's all 1 Sir. to myself, ‘Gee, I'm —Birmingham-Age-Herald, Favoritism, the food restrictions our home ?™ “Have lifted In 3 “Not as far I'm concerned,” plied Mr. Meekton. “But Fido gets two dog biscuits lnstead of one.’ been ns re- now Constipation can be cured withont drugs. Nature's own remedy—select ed herbs—Is Garfield Tea —Ady. No man can make a fool of himself all the time. He has to sleep oceasion- ally. Plerce’s Pleasant Pellets, liver, bowels and stomach. Adv, Worry gives the undertaker more business than hard work ever did. Don’t wait until * your cold _develops Spanish Influenza or pneumonia. Kill it quick. >) LL CASCARA KE? QUININE Poms’ i6 A Hint, Intrepid Widow—Speaking of conun. drums, Mr. Slocum, there's a good one “Why is the letter lke ring?" Proerastinating no good at conundrums. Intrepid Widow—Yon Why, because can't without it. i ————— od’ a wedding Bachelor--Oh, I'm it up? “wed” give be “ on we WHY WOMEN DREAD OLD AGE | Don't worry about old age. Don’t worry {about being in other people's way when {| Jou are getting on in years. Keep your 3 ! ae in good condition and you can be as days as you { were when a kid, and every one will be t glad to see you. i The kidneys and bladder are the causes of senile afflictions. Keep them clean and in proper working condition. Drive the poisonous wastes from the em and avoid uric acid accumulations. Take GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules periodical ly and hy will find that the system will always be in perfect working order. Your i spirits will be enlivened | made | gmore the look of youth and health. i" New life, fresh strength and health will { come as you continue this treatment, When | your first vigor has been restored continue | for awhile i day. They will k prevent a return of | There is only one guaranteed brand of {| Haarlem Oil Capsules, GOLD MEDAL. i There are many fakes on the market. Be | sure you o the Original GOLD MEDAL | Imported Taarlem Oil Capsules. They are | the only reliable. For sale by all first-class ! gists ~ Adv, your muscies you in condition and your troubles, A Doggone Shame, “I say, Fido, you don't seeln to be very well satisfied with your dinner, today.” “How could I be when this family has gone bone dry?” Roman Pye Balsam is an antipeptio oint. ment, applied externally and not a “wash.” | It heals the Inflamed surfaces, providing | prompt relief. Adv. Make the best of the present—if you are unable to exchange it for anything better. Grow for the Land AND HELP TO MAKE PROGRESSIVE FARMERS (Prepared by the United States Depart- ment of Agriculture.) Agricultural production is not the sum total of achievement by members of boys’ clubs in the South, Those youngsters below the Mason-Dixon line raise good crops; also, they raise fine baby bgeves and standard pigs. Their sheep are of accredited breeds: their poultry is of the better types; and the gardens they cultivate are model gar- dens, many of them yielding very worth-while produce. In dollars and cents, the result of those boys’ efforts annually mounts up to many thou- sands; in food supply it is of inecal- culable value to the 15 Southern states, But this Is only part of the story—a bare enumeration of some of the ac- tivities of those Southern lads. The other part Is, or should be, more in- teresting, for it deals with intangible commodities—character, high ideals, educational aspirations, civic pride— evolved from and developed through the training received in boys’ clubs. In its effort to strengthen the agricul- tural extension organization the Unit ed States department of agriculture cites some Instances to show the bene- fits the boys' club work in the of Bonds and Bank Accounts. In Texas there are 1,000 boys recely- higher education—the direct re- sult of club membership. There are boys in that state who Liberty bonds, War The same number to the and 2.000 have bank accounts, Red Cross, securities amounting to helr bank deposits total Also West Virginia has 1.- own war $112.818, 07.031.50, counts. Many own lands and several hundred are in colleges, Arkansas has a record of hundreds of former boys’ club members who are in college, and what is more to their credit, paving their tuition with money earned from the sale of of their agricultural prod- ucts and prizes wom In agricultural contests, A number of the Southern clubs have developed college professors, in- structors in agricultural schools——men who learned the scientific method of farming and gained their experience in boys’ clubs, Many club members are in the military service. “We have hundreds of club members that are officers in the United States army,” writes a Mississippi state agent. Nor have modern business methods been overlooked by those young husband. men. In some of the states co-opern- tive buying, selling and marketing is the regular practice of boys’ club mem- bers, and the use of banking facili DESTRUCTIVE ENEMY Pest Ranks Next to Hessian Fly in Eastern States. Small Grub Lives in Stems of Wheat, Sucking Juices of Plant—May Be Controlled by Plowing Stubble Deeply. (Prepared by the United States Depart. ment of Agriculture.) The most destructive enemy of wheat, next to the Hessian fly, in the wheat states east of the Mississippi grub which lives in the stems of wheat, sucking the juices of the plant and causing a swelling in the stem. Although this insect Is sometimes more serious than the Hessian fly, occasionally causing complete destruc tion, very little is done at present to control its depredations, The insect has a number of natural enemies, but these should not be relied upon, For- tunately the Jointworm attacks only wheat, which fact suggests one of the most reliable control measures, that of substituting crops. In the south ern part of the Eastern wheat belt the insect may be controlled by plowing wheat stubble deeply after harvest when this does not interfere with the growing of red clover and grass, The egg from which the jointworm hatches is laid in the stem by an in- sect resembling a small black ant with wings. When a wheat plant first be comes infected no outward sign may appear. The presence of fhe worm ean be detected when the plant is nearly mature by mining the Inside of the stem, Just above the second or third Joint from the ground. Sometimes the point of infestation is noticeable, there being wart g | MEE Sissy i : 5 ANNES A» 50 END INDIGESTION. EAT ONE TABLET PAPE’S DIAPEPSIN INSTANTLY RELIEVES ANY DISTRESSED, UPSET STOMACH. Lumps of undigested food causing When your stomach Is acid, gas- Just as soon as you eat a tablet or These pleasant, harmless | ties, a common custom—the kind of . banking, by the way, where the char- i acter and Industry of the borrowers | In this connection the testimony of the president of a bank in Mississippl is corroborative, Says he: “So far as my stances are taken at random, thelr neighborhoods is very marked, state and county agents say. It is the kind of influence that, through prac- tical demonstration, turns skeptics in- to converts; that makes progressive farmers out of *“the-old-way-1s-good- enough-for-me” types. Influence of the Clubs, But extension agents are not the only ones who note these transforma- tions, Men of affairs have observed of civic improvem nts, better schools, nore active churches, marked increase in the demand for better merchandise, new business enterprises, pride in the appearance of their buildings, home grounds, the family acres, and a high- er type of community morale—all brought about by boys’ clubs and com- munity co-operation. Increased production, stimulation in every line of agricultural endeavor for the immediate and continued prosper. ity of their section Is one of the im- portant functions of boys' club work in the South. This is being plished by instruction and demonstra- tion in correct agricultural methods by extension of the United States department agriculture and the agricultural col And it is being done in the only w Ay pos- sible—through the organized efforts of the very boys who are to develop into progressive farmers the substantial producers of the future. However, quite as important a func. tion of this work is the all-round de- velopment of the boys themselves, Great stress is lald upon this, Through the agency of these boys’ clubs, the members are taught habits of thrift and industry. They are shown the real value of high character, the ad- vantages of education, the possibilities of leadership, the dignity of labor, the importance of co-operation in civie af. fairs and respect for others’ rights. The creditable desire for independ. ence, for land ownership and beauty and orderliness In land possessed is inculeated in them, that they may have KCCOM- the ROTrvice of state ges, and become try’s development, very good indication is the presence lodged plants, thei: change to the pupa stage. numerous parasitic enemies of the Jointworm, wheat growing In the Eastern states of necessity would have been abandoned or the growers forced measures, say department specialists, When fall plowing Is practiced the stubble containing the pest is buried deeply, thus preventing the Insect from emerging the following spring. Whenever this method is adopted the badly infested wheat should be cut high, so that the gredter majority of the jointworms will be left on the field in the old stubble and may be turned under and destroyed. In southern Kentucky, Virginia, Tennessee and other Southern and Southeastern states where double-cropping systems are in general use, it is possible to plow under the stubble without inter. fering with the cropping #ystem, Where this Is not practicable, as is sometimes the case in the more North. ern states, substitute crops, such as rye, barley or buckwheat should be grown on heavily Infested areas, BETTER ROADS IN LOUISIANA State to Spend $4,674,000 in Making Improvements and Maintenance During Year, According to figures compiled in the office of the state highway evgimoer, $4,674.000 will be spent on road ime | provement in Louisiana in 1010 in the constructing of 758 miles of highway and maintenance of 470 miles already be drug stores, Adv, i The Way of it. “The poor woman had to pinch her- self to get along.” “I'll bet her lazy, drinking husband | didn’t pinch himself.” “No; the cops did it for him.” i i BOSCHEE’S SYRUP Why use ordinary cough remedies | when Boschee's Syrup bas been used | 80 successfully for fifty-one years in| all parts of the United States for coughs, bronchitis, colds settled in the throat, especially lung troubles? It gives the patient a good night's rest, free from coughing, with easy expec- throw off the disease, helping the pa- tient to regain his health. Made In America and sold for more than half a century.—Ady. to be a in the you are in the canine Loser Gog It doesn't Pay manger—unless ER ves 42 & ye FRR RBvsive i ¥ : 3 PER GE. : AVefetabic Preparatioalar’s 4 similating the Food by Regula- { ting the Stomachs and Bowels of CHILDREN Thereby Promoting Digestion Gheerfulness and Rest Contains neither Opium, Morphine no by co NARCOTIC FO ay i) Ahelpful Remedy fox Constipation and everishness and IR ss OF SLEEP A Coated Tongue? What it Means A bad breath, costed tongue, bad taste in the mouth, languor and debility, are usnally signe that the liver is out of order. Prov. Hex METER says: “The liver is J an organ eecondary in importane only to the heart.” We can fg mannfL.e- ture poisons within our own bodies which are as deadly as & snake's venom. The liver acts as a guard over our well-being, sifting out the cinders and ashes from the gencral circulation, A blockade in the intestines piles a heavy burden upon the liver. If the intestines are choked or flogged up, the circulation of the blood becomes isoned and the system becomes osded with toxic waste, and we suffer from headache, yellow-coated tongue, taste in mouth, nausea, or as, £kin or eyes. At such times one should take a pleasant laxative. Such a one is made of May-apple, leaves of aloe, jalap, put into ready-to-use form by Joctor Pierce, nearly fifty years ago, and sold for 25 cents by all druggists nl us Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. Frepenickssune, VA.~"1 have been subject all my life to billousness and sich hadnt hes, ess spells always brought on & fever, and until I took Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets | was siways in more or less distress. | have found the "Pionsant Pellets’ to give prompt relief and I consider them unequalled ss a liver medicine They are easy to take and never cause gripd or other distress. It is 8 pleasure to recommen these Peliets and I" do so 82 every opportunity, Mus. Teos, Moz, 808 Hanover Street, OLD FALSE TEETH In any Shape — No Matter if Broken OLD GOLD, SILVER OR PLATINUM OLD OR NEW JEWELRY Tinfoll, pewier or collapsible tubes. Noibing 00 ange: poling too small. CASH by return mali Goods Beil Len days sublect Wo A PProve. C. H. HOWELL, Metals Broker C07 Bartioos sve, Kant COLOR BUS, 0830 GASTORIA For Infants and Children, Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Bears the Signature Use For Over Thirty Years THE SENTRUR SOMPANTY, NEW YORK ITY, impertinent, but True, : A coat was being bought In one of | the department stores for a little girl. | The price seemed high to the mother | and she remarked: “Just (hink of that | much money for a coat for a little | girl” i “Little folks are expensive, that's | true,” said the saleslady, “but we | would not do without them.” “No,” sald the youngster, who was | the proverbial little pitcher with | the overdeveloyed ears, “because if | there were no little people In the world, there wouldn't be anyone to grow up into big people.” Hig First Retreat. “Hae your boy Josh gone back to work ™ “Yep,” replied Farmer Corntossel. “He got so tired o' havin®' everybody persuadin’ him to sit around an’ tell all about the war that he gets away off yonder where nobody kin find him an’ chops wood sll day.” Then have decided to of perme on Tapevorm, See “Desa Thal Dr x . erm | * Reere Tx A politieal candidate should wear canvas shoes, Some people make a specialty of | killing time for others, Before retir- ing, use with warm water and insure a resid) night. t Refreshes ta ) Contains 30% Pure Sulphur, Ws Male 8 Whisker Dye, Bineh or Brown, $0 Have you R H EUM ATI SM TC MACTDI to remove the cans re oT mr iE EEL
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers