CET READY FOR “FLU” Your Liver Active, Your a He Ce” vy otabs, the Nausealess Calomel Tablets, that are De- lightful, Safe and Sure. purified and their organs in perfect working order as a protection against the return of influenza. They know somplieations, water-—that’s all. no griping, no sickenin Kext morning your cold has vanished, liver is active, your system is puri- or a refreshed and you are fecling fine with a hearty appetite for break- No salts, no nausea, Calotabs are sold only in sealed packages, price thirty-five cents. Bvery druggist is authorized to refund Pa money if you are not perfectly lighted with Calotabs.—(Adv.) original Landscape Spoilers. _ “Some people,” said Mr. Growcher, gre Mike the mach for fixing up ¥ streets, solutely nec ry, nery They are al it’ but 8 fi great Jief when get through and go » “Cold ¥ an acute atta ons who are s 4 the head FALL'S : ullé mp t md render } tepeated atts dad to Chronle HALLS CATARRH am Internally and act an the Mucous Surf All Druggists Ti f for in the Head” k of Nasal Catarrh Tol gure, ¥, J. Cheney & Co., Most of us do thing esther people do them. Brighten up the home. I WOMAN WORKS 15 HOURS A DAY Marvelous Story of Woman's Change from Weakness to Strength by Taking Druggist’s Advice Peru, Ind. —*“1 suffered from a dis t with backache and dragging down pains so badly that at times I could not be on my feet and it did not seem as though I could stand it. I tried different ye medicines without any benefit and several doctors told me nothing but an operation would do me any good. My drug- gist told me of Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound. I took it with the result that I am now well and strong. I get =p in the morning at four o'clock, do my dousework, then go to a factory and work all day, come home and get supper and feel good. I don’t know how many of my friends 1 have told what Lydia E Finkham’s Vegetable Compound has done for me.” Mes. ANNA METERIANO 36 West 10th St, Peru, Ind. Women who suffer from any such ail- ments should not fail to try this famous soot and herb remedy, Lydia E. Pink. ham's Vegetable Compourns. TRAPPERS 1876 thousands of trappers bave shipped us annually their ene tire eateh of RAW FURS They knew they would receive spot ensh and absolutely falr and square treatment. Send us your mext consignment of Skunk, Fox, Bear, Muskrat, Opossum, Beaver, Raccoon, Lynx, ete. Highest Market Prices. No commis alon charged. Send for price lst today. OTTO WAGNER 134, 136, 138, 140 West 26th Street NEW YORK CITY, N.Y. KING PIN PLUG TOBACCO Known as "that good kind” Cry it—and you will know why Pr-COLDS tak Inhale Olive Tar Boothes, Heals, CGratifies. Quick Rallef. HALL&RUCKEL se. 215 Washington Stren N.Y. ’ $8 AUTO HAS MOTOR UNDER SEAT surrounding the motor, alr-cools it. the absent radiator, his object, A fan, in a ventilation chamber REGULAR OILING OF CAR SPRINGS Cleveland Auto School Head Thinks Neglect Is Often the Cause of Breakdowns. EASY WAY OF LUBRICATION Put Lifting Jack Under Body of Car | and Spring Leaves Are Separated by Means of Small Took Prolongs Life of Car. n you feel completely tired | r a day's ride in one car—or | other hand, thoroughly re | after a similar trip over prac- ¢ same road In another car, is du o un difference in the action of the springs of the two cars, says Clyde H. Pratt, Cleveland | Automobile School company. The most important part of the car's president of the i riding qualities are concerned is the | springs. If the reader will take the | trouble to look at the springs of vari-| ous he (or she) will note that | there are a number of general types of | These may be classed under | ames, among them full-ellip-| tic, semi-elliptie, three-quarter elliptic, | Cars ' How Springs Are Made. All springs, regardless of their type, ie up of a number of separate pieces of spring steel | above the other, short in the middie and the | longer ones extending through to the The spring Is con- nected to the frame by means of a spring shackle which Is fastened to the end of the spring by a spring bolt ! placed pieces being ons By watching the springs carefully when someone else is teetering the car up and down you will notice that these separate leaves slide on each other in. In order to keep the vibration of the axle from being trans ple suppose, essary to see that the spring leaves i for them to do this there must be a | Without this ofl film these springs | | hard and the springs are more liable to break. In fact, most of the broken | springs can be traced to a lack of | proper lubrication of the spring leaves, | Easy Way to Oil. ! An easy way to oll these is to put a | lifting jack under the body of the car, so that the weight will be taken off the The spring leaves are then easily separated by means of a screw driver or a small chisel and a little graphite in oll is easily Inserted. Graphite is usaally used with the oll in the spring leaves, because the graph- ite does not work out as quickly as the oil alone would, Many Spring Oilers. There are many different kinds of spring ollers on the market. Some of these are good and others are good only because the spring needs oiling and these help to call your attention to it. The spring bolts must also be oiled practically every day or they soon wear so the springs work hard ang then at an unexpected moment break, allowing the car to drop down. The market also offers many auxil- lary springs and various shock absorb ers which will very often make quite a difference in the riding of the car. But with the instructions that come with all of these various attachments you will find that one of the very impor tant items which they bring out is to have your springs thoroughly olled or greased before applying the spring sustaining device. As you travel around In warious makes of carg you will find that it is not so much the make of spring or the wpe of spring which makes the car “ide easy as it is the proper care and ubrieation of the springs, This more ‘han anything else will keep your springs from breaking, making your car ride easy, cut down your gasoline consumption and prolong the life of the ear and tires, PREPARE TIRES FOR LONG, HARD WINTER Car Owners Should Take Few Necessary Precautions. Carefully Wash on Outside to Remove All Harmful Substances, Wrap in Paper or Carpet and Store in Dry Place. The skin is thick on the belly of the codfish and the fur is heavy on the long, hard w= , Many motorists will soon put their . winter and § motor riding until ibout the ides of March. Many automobile in the for the no more of tires will go into storage with thousands of miles of Car owners few precautions nec them from damage ot in use, roe and them, to they ( keep wi} 1 valle Here are n are some smmendations large tire company to the motorist who wants to put his tires away and find 1. Wash tires carefully on outside stances, 2. Remove tires from heels and wrap in paper or old ourpet. 3, Store in a cool, dry place, away from light. Heat, light and moisture rubber, 4. Cold has no bad effect on tires, but they should be properly housed. 5. If tires are left on car, jack up car, deflate the tires aod wrap them in covers, 8. Don't let car stand on tires all winter, To do means weakening them in the parts that rest on the floor. Care will make the tires last out the full length of their guarantee, despite climatic conditions, CIRCULAR HOLE IN CURTAIN 80 Handy in Operating Searchlight Dun ing Storm When Windshield Is Filmed Over. Driving through rain, snow or fog is dangerous business at night storm curtains enclose the car, searchlight at the left of the driver A Means of Operating the Searchlight Is Necessary When the Windshield Is Filmed. cannot be used unless the curtain is unbuttoned. A circular hole, large enough for the arm to be thrust through, can easily be cut in the curtain and patched in the manner shown ia the illustration This will prevent the rain from enter at the searchlight—C. C. Popular Science Monthly. Spreen in NEWS _ di £y> Finesse in driving is essential If maximum pleasure, safety and comfort are to be obtained from a car. . + » In order to get the bost service from your tires it will be necessary to keep careful track of the number of miles run. on Clutch trouble is one of the com monest complaints among car owners. The clutch throwout collar needs dally lubrication, eo 0 If the owner should have occasion t dismantle the springs ho should take the opportunity to spread a lubricant over the leaves, LE Be An attachment invented In Europe onables a person In any seat in an an tomoblle to regulate its speed without the knowledge of the driver, - oo. — bea en St 0 4 mc. ton $00 LARGE CAPACITY FOR DAIRY COWS To Develop This Characteristic Calf Must Be Kept Growing From Beginning. SUPPLY ABUNDANCE OF HAY or to Freshen Before Twenty-Four Months Old—Work Up to Full Capacity Gradually. It is a well-known fact that capacity is one of the essentials of a good dairy cow and in order to develop this growling from the very beginning. A never recover from The calf should be in- duced to begin eating grain and hay at as early a date as possible and there should always be an sbundance of the hay accessible, toughage de- velops capacity In the digestive or- rans—-an item of lmportance—as the amount of feed that a cow will sume depends largely upon the devel- con Age to Breed Heifer. Heifers should be bred too young, the depending upon the breed to which they belong as well as the of the Hols fresi: on before they as fn rule, us A Bt h | better If gis or 25 mouths, He d be in good condition at time i fre not ange individual. to old. development ein heifers should not be bred are 24 months great many would do 25 shot of i an Splendid Type for Dairy. etceasive carbohydrate ration. After freshening, they should be worked up to full feed very gradually, receiving gil the roughage they care to consume without alfalfa or clover hay fed in connection with silage or roots being a very good combination, Amount of Grain to Feed. grain should be light to begin with and changed to 8 mixture grains that will supplement the 300 pounds ground oats, 300 pounds ground waste: The ncter in char LT HGURI of roughage ; pounds gluten feed being a good com bination to go with the roughage tioned above, The graln can lotig as there is an increase in down until there is a falling off in the milk flow and then the increase may be begun again. When on full feed they will consuming about pound of grain to every 3% pounds of milk produced, be one iried beet pulp may be used, but If none of these are available or are teo the grain mixture to advantage. the absence of silage and roots, the rows will consume a large quantity of alfalfa. Sometimes it is advisable to chaff and mosten a portion of it when fed under these conditions, FERTILITY IN DEAD LEAVES IN CHICKEN HOUSES See That Roosts Meet Require- ments of Various Fowis. Birds of Heavy, Large Breeds Should Not Be Compelled to Jump Too Far—Dangerous to Permit Hens to Crowd at Night, poultry houses It is always meet the requirements of the birds, If fowls are of the heavy, large breeds the perehes should not be us high, for many {ll effects are the result of jump ing from high perches, The lighter welght fowls are usually better flyers and can assist themselves in up and down much better than can the heavy ones. The two kinds should never be kept In the same house at night if for no other reason than the above, says a writer in an exchange. The height of the perches also brings trouble if every one 8 not on the same level, In endeavoring to the safest place in the house all fowls will try to reach the highest perch and the lower ones are practically useless ex- cept to the ones thet could not fight their way higher, Always alm to have the perches at the same height and have room enough on them to avoid crowding. dangers in crowding the hens at night . ' y noth secure There are to us ing of this discomfort. N¢ tier ie likes to hen wirent a i ns of alr lowed to flow ii do less damage If roosts are not to low. Whil i roved of ¢ very high roosts are disap it is advan nevertheless, H them oh tageous to nye that the same time for the one house, ih vod a the bird Lee may whole flock that GOOD SHED FOR IMPLEMENTS Drainage Should Be Sufficient to Keep Different Machines From Stand. ing in Wet Place. i mm sun, nd and be pensive, It n should 1 moisture It tuated a convenient spot and so arranged « to be easily used. The material from which is made will depend upon the the Very ys © the shed cost and good sheds are locality. g i Are Useful as Mulch or Fertil. izer gor Garden. sn Because leaves the Ohio Experiment Station point out the economy of using leaves as a mulch or fertilizer for the garden, rather than burning them in the streets or gutters. They show that 100 pounds of leaves are worth about 58 cents for their fertilizing value. When leaves are burnt the ash still contains a considerable amount of fer- but as the ashes or washed away by the water, thelr value is lost, To secure the best re sults from leaves as fertilizer, it Is them furnish a mulch for the ground during the winter; then they may be spaded In the spring and ine corporated with the soll, COW CONSUMES BULKY FEEDS Most Economical Method for Market. ing Different Crops—Much Fer tility Is Saved. When it comes to marketing grain, hay, silage, green crops, ete, the dairy cow is a'most indispensable for economy. She consumes these buiky feeds, converts them Into finished products easily and economically marketed and at the same time saves much of the fertility in the manure. Where hay, corn, fodder, ete, must be hauled to market there is considera. ble axpense. If most of this expense enn be saved there Is a wider arg n Yor profit on fae farm, An Inexpensive Shed for Farm Implements. ered with sheet iron. Other good ones can be made of wood-frame con Shingles, corrugated iron sheds, EYES OF ANIMALS RELIEVED Ten Per Cent Boric Acid and Ninety Per Cent Pure Water is Most Excellent Remedy. Sore and watery eyes of animals may be relieved by a solution of 10 per cent boric acid and 90 per cent pure water. Apply it on absorbent cotton and ure a fresh plece every time the eyes are treated. USE OF QUICKLIME FAVORED Superior to Put in Graves of Animale Dying From Different Con. tagious Diseases. Quicklime is good to put In graves of animals that die from taglous diseases. In wsing it cass should be surrounded ered with twice its weight quicklime. - » ota Sleepless, Palpitation” Dillons Mills, Va, —“Bome years ago I suffered with nervous indigestion and I had a continuous burning sensation in the pit of my stom ach, with palpitation of the heart so bad at night that I could not oy I became very miserable and nothing 1 took gave me any relief, Some one sent me one of Dr. Pierce's pam phlets through the , mail and [| became {terested at once inthe ‘Golden Medical Nscovery.” The first few doses of it gave me the first relief 1 had had in monthe snd I took three bottles of it, which made me feel like a different man, In eighteen years I have not had to diet or deprive myself of anything to eat, and my appe- tite is always good, so I know that I have been lt of my stomach trouble.” ~J., ¥. Bowles, R. ¥. D., 1, Box 42. Thin Blood, Ran-Down, Rervons, Gall Stones Fairmont, W., Va-"My wife became ailing from a complication of diseases; she bad thin blood, was run-down, nervous end had other ills. 1 had to wait on her five weeks, day and night. My time lost from work and money spent cost me sbout sixty-five dollars. { urchased a bottle of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, which gave her strength and smbition; also a great number of gall stones came from her, which she did not know she had. The ‘Golden Medical Dis povery’ is more than it is claimed to be; it is worth five cents a drop to the run- down and debilitated system.” —Bolomon Efaw, R. F. D. 6. | v sod Stomech Linside, W. Va.—"]l had been a suf ferer from indigestion and stomach trouble for over five months, nothing 1 ate agreed with me and | could not sleep well at might I used four packages of wee's Golden Medical Discovery pived the of results using Dr. Pierce's Pleasant i find them to give good Hattie Boyd, BR. F. D. BREW THIS TEA FOR BILIOUSKESS and greatest from its i am Ow "Mrs Costs next to nothing, yet bowels in fine order and ends constipation. keeps The head of every far simply brew a « before bedtime, It's an is Dr Carter's K and B. Tea, and has been used for years by thousands of families, who get such good results from its use that they have no desire to take anything else. Give It to the children freely—they Ilfke it and it will do them mood B C. Wells Co. 1e Boy. XN. TY. in ¢ + UBL old remedy, OWNERS Keep a bottle of Yager's Liniment in your stable for spavin, curb, splint or any enlargement, tor shoulder sip or sweeny, wounds, falls, scratches, collar or woe bodls, sprams and any Jamenecsa. It sheorbs swell : ings an enlargemeats, and dispels pain and stiffness quickly, YAGER'S LINIMENT At all dealers, Price 35 cents, The large 35 cent bottle of Yager's Lisi. ment contains twice as much as the usual #0 cent bottle of liniment, GILBERT BROS. & CO. Baltimore, Md. Says Pile Remedy Worth $100.00 a Box “1 have had Hching piles ever since my sarilest recollection. am 58 years oid and have suffered terribly. 1 have many remedies and doctors, but no cure About § weeks ago I saw your ad for Pe- terson's Olntment. The first application stopped all Itching, and in three days all soreness. [ have only used one box and consider I am cured. You have my grate- ful, heartfeit thanks Your ointment is worth a hundred dollars a box. Sincerely yours, A. Newth Columbus Ohio.” Peterson's Ointment for les, Eczema and old sores is only 35 cents a box at al druggists. Mall orders filled by Peterson Ointment Co., Inc., Buffalo, N. Y. = USE FOR 35 YEARS ; BAIBEIEL The Quick and Sure Cure for BARIA, CHILLS, FEVER AND LA GRIPPE a Powerful Tonle and Appetizer cnre that tired feeling, pains in back, and head. Contains ne nine, Tag Ing elon: ote. Make mene in Nevada's newest gold fields at 20e per share. Request information. Cae Bill Lode Mining Company, Austin, Nevada. LE. MUNTELLS BOOK ON SPIRIT. with large size bottle of delicious Vanilla Extract nt by mail for $1. Mile Muntell, 2811 Bedford Ave, Pittsburgh Pa old Folks’ Ooughs RR at 21SO’S