Te aa ae ie, des Spohn’s act on the glands, century. “Hoarding and Wasting. Great as is the sin to hoard treas- ures, it is no greater than to squander them, Waste brings woe, It is of the essence of well-doing to “economize.” Unfaithfulness stands as its own wit- ness against a man, The Lord intrusts us with this world's that his cause may not suffer. — Reformed Church Mosenger, goods LIFT OFF CORNS! Doesn’t hurt a bit and costs only a few cents Magic! ’n that touchy corn, instantly it stops aching, the fingers! Truly! Try Freezone! a tiny bottle for a few cents, to rid your feet of every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the ind calluses, without one particle of pain, soreness or irritation. Freezone Is the discovery of a noted Cincinnat} genius.—Adv, Willing Clerk. He was strictly opposed to doctors and medicine, proclaiming the doe- trine that fresh air, pure water and plenty of exercise could cure all ills aven to smallpox. He wa into #2 downtown drug waved his hand f “There,” he sald In a snough for all the real and tive customers to hear him, enough poison to kill in Indianapolis.” The clerk who was nearest studied a minute, Then courteously: “Yes, and how would you prefer to have your share?” — Indianapolis News, No humbug! sufficient toes, and the shelves, loud prospec- “there is all the pee ple giore at one © tone he said INTO YOUR SHOES Ease, the antiseptic powder to be shaken into the shoes and sprinkied in the foot-bath The Plattsburg Camp Man- ua! advises men in training to use Foote Ease in their shoes each morning It pre- vefits blisters and sore spots and relieves painful, swollen, smarting feet and takes the sting out of corns and bunions Always use Allen's Foot=Eass to break In new shoes.~—Adv, ASKING A LITTLE T00 MUCH Under the Circumstances, Actor Was Justified in Refusing Parts Manager Allotted Him. SHAKE Allen's Foot limitations of his of a theatrical wr traveled ving to the the manager on the road sh ort company. him and remarked: Wellington, players to “Look here, to play *The Silent Foe'—Henderson, Bill, and the Spider.” “Can't do it!" briefly, but firmly. “Can't do it? Won't do (it, you mean!” snorted the manager won't you do 1t?” “Because it can't be done. No hu- man being could play these three parts at the one time, In the third act Hen- derson and the Spider have a fight and old Uncle Bill rushes in to sep- arate them.” Requires Brains, A certain Englishman, famous for his erudtion, played such a wretched game on the links that he remarked one day to his caddie: “How is fit that I, a man acquainted with all the arts and sclences, cannot play this confounded game of golf 7" “Weel,” sald the eaddie, “it's this—ye ken a’ aboot they sma’ af. fairs, an’ wi’ things connectit wi them, but we maun understan’ that It tak's a held to play gowf.”"-—Boston Transcript. — like At the first eign of a cough give a few doses of “BPOHN'E"Y It will digeare. “SPOHN'S" has been the STEMPER, INFLUENZA, PINK EYE, COUGHS and COLDS for a quarter of a Goshen, Ind. CHINESE HOLD HILL SACRED Huang Shan Created a Shrine More Than Three Hundred Years Ago, Is Tradition. More than 300 years ago in the Ming dynasty, a Buddhist priest named Pu Men visited the Huang Shan in the South Anhui hills. He was charmed with the place and became infatuated with the idea of making it a sacred mountain. A journey to Peking and an audience with the royal household resulted in an appropriation of large sums of money for developing fairyland of the A brass pagoda wus prepared for was decorated with rods, 1,000 little Bud halls it Purple The whose was Sand temple and is now called Merciful Light hall At that time, Herald, hundreds of temple christened the priests came to of Buddhist built to the peaks, prosperity. tops of all the important and at temple was least one ASPIRIN INTRODUCED Look for name “Bayer” on the tablets, then you need never worry. If you want the true, world-famous Aspirin, as prescribed by physicians for over eighteen years, you must ask for “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin.” The “Bayer Cross” Is stamped on each tablet and appears on each pack age for your protection against imi- tations, In each package of “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” are safe and proper direc- tions for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia, Toothache, Earache, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Neuritis, and for Pala in general, Handy tin boxes containing 12 tablets cost but a few cents. Druggists also sell larger “Bayer” packages. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufac- Sallcy- leacid.~—Adv Vhen Barker Barked. Sergeant Barker was In a bad tem. per, and the 1 recruits under instruction were having a hard time of it. The squad had to ‘bout turn = times In few seconds that it poor fellows got Smiff finished up dizzy, ff fin wrong way. by turni 8 ' a towering rage Smudger roared ; “Where you are? “Well, meekly, “I began to Smudger, think I was at a dressed up as a mutton, n IR round on a n sergeant.’ ergeant, fancy dress ball bloomin’' leg o round and The Milkman’s Error, Guy Oyster, th rilliant secretary said In a recent interview : “1 personally this time of un- against strikes but you can good thing, as the remarked when he found spoiled his milk by put Ik-preservative in it.” Strikes are a good thi Mng, mil mar milkman that he'd Measuring Time. Ernest was learning to tell time. He had just mastered the numbers on clock, but had not learned the meaning of the minute hand. “What time Is it? I asked him, when the minute hand pointed to five minutes of 12. He looked na sald: “Why, Exchange. long time, and then It is just an inch to 12.” His Job. Belle—Do you know what a make- up man does on a newspaper? Nell—I suppose he puts the pleces in that tell you how to get a good complexion. No Mustache for British Tar. A bluejacket in the British navy ls not permitted to cultivate a mustache. If he attempts it he is fined a month's Area SEE EFFICIENCY IN FARM TOOLS Day Than Man With Six Horses in 310) Plowing, increases Effi. ciency of Man-Labor 50 Per Cent Over That Done by Hand-—Good Work of Hay Loader, United States Depart ment of Agriculture.) With a 28inch horse-drawn plow, une man accomplishes from 70 to 80 with a single-bot tom plow. One man with a 28-inch plow drawn by a tractor covers from 30 to 85 per cent more ground In a The One-HMorse Cultivator |llustrat. ing Waste of Man-Labor Actually Entalled by Using Small Imple. ments, on a size, Two-Row Cultivator, These facts about 000 replies an were dressed by the Unite 1 St ture, of a two-row ticable, to cover 1 mriment of itions wher cele cul ates Under cond corn this n In the horses are the two-row tion of a fou CTeNses but groun d covered per day. Such of these farmers as use found the use o increases the $ man labor 00 per cent, r that binders have work ng stalk by han Value of Hay-Loader, With respex 2% to the value of a Jy ienrned that the use of “ae ment reduces by about 25 The Two.Row Cultivator—One Man and Three Horses Doing the Work of Two Men and Four Horses With Two-Horse Cultivator, or of Four Men and Four Horses With One. Horse Cultivator, per cent the time required to put on a load of hay, while the amount of labor required for unloading into the mow Is only a little more than half as great when a hayfork is used as when the work Is done by hand. BOOST FOR PUREBRED SIRES Efforts Being Made to Eliminate Scrub Sires Appreciated by Many Stock Breeders. Many breeders of purebred stock do not realize the value of the state and national purebred sire crusade. They fall to see t this crusade is increasing the use of purebred sires and consequently, Increasing the de mand for them and prices, This crusade is a business proposi- tion and Is of greatest value to the breeders of purebred stock and they should support It APPEARANCE OF FARM HOME Surroundings Must Be Made Attrac. tive to Uplift Family, Visitors i and Passersby. A home and its surroundings must be attractive in order to be most up lifting to the family, visitors, and pass. ers-by. Farmsteads especially need attention In order to secure satisfac. tory conditions, says the United States department of agriculture. The farm home and the farm business are so closely related that the success of the fatter is reflected In the appearance pf the former. TIMBER PROFITABLE FOR UNUSUAL SPOTS Many Corners and Slopes Can Be Utilized by Trees. Locust and Acacia Build Up Poor Soil Through Nitrogen-Gathering Bac. teria in Root Nodules—Small Gullies Checked, (Prepared by the 1 ed ment of Ag Timber Is e crop. Steep slopes, poor soll, land, unusual corners, wooded tracts—all these tunities for growing timber profitably States Depart ulture.) sentially a ASK FOR “DIAMOND DYES” Don't Buy a Poor Dye That Fades, Streaks or Ruins Material, Each package of “Diamond contains directions so simple that any woman can diamwond-dye a new, rich, fudeless color Into worn, shabby gar- ments, draperies, coverings, whether wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed goods, uy “Dismond Dyes™ then perfect even If you no other kind results are have never dyed before. will reveal a spots of this sor can be utilized to advantage, hey do not already have trees, planting them with the proper will materially In crease the valne of the Certain kinds of trees cust and the acacias, bul soil through the bacteria in the root ing to the forest service, United States department of agriculture. The sof hit iilding g power of varieties lke the lo id up pool accord nodules, trees on farmer should not Steep lands, hich have Seared ) imber at much ex overlook, for a few ecome gullied, and the after being cultivated often pense, Years covered witl 3 cheapest metho of stopped up bs Small gullies can be ¥ packed brush and treetops, sn Good Stand of Young Short-Lect Pine, The shou will conditions id be made so favorable start rapidly into growth so that Severely Practical. dear,” ai young Forkins, “that i get vou birough “Glad you “Erte “Hut what? “Fre scarce is expensive The next time thing sentimental on with flour.” important toc Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of ASTORIA, that famous old remedy for infants and children, and see that i Bears the A Br Signature of In Use for Over 80 Years. Children Cry for Fle Not interested wi 1 Yi the Cole look been years, so 1 up-to-date pict ¥y cal Important to all Women Readers of this Paper Thousands upon thousands of womes have kidney or bladder trouble snd never suspect it. Women's complaints often prove to be but kidney trouble, or the result of kidoey or bladder disease, If the kidneys are not in a healthy con they may cause the other organs to become diseased, You may suffer pain in the back, heal ache and loss of ambition. Poor health makes you nervous, irrite it makes sang jut hundreds of women claim that De Imer's Bwamp-Root, by restoring alth to the kidneys, proved to b: just needed to overcome such ons, M y send for a sample bottle to see Bwamp-Root, the great kideey, will do for cents fo, Pe Co., Bingh amton, N. Y., mple size bottle by Pareel You can medium and enclosing ten p urchase GAVE AMATEUR “SOFT” PART Pompous Individual Duly Awarded His “Place in the Sun,” as He Had Requested. assured befor mulch method of growing very good res iin condi tions it is not Intended for trees which have just been planted. When the sod- mulch method is adopted it is usnal after the trees are well establishe | when the ground grass and when sod Is formed the grass » winter, While the sod trees gives ilts under cer Hans as ihe BABOON PUT 10 USEFUL TASK the Animals Are Said to Develop Traits That Are Almost Human, of the day, the sheep, earance them Used to It. Vigitor—Have you ever been This kills out the sod about the tree, conserves moisture. The drawback to this system is that very often there is not sufficient material grown in the orchard to make enough mulch for each tree, and the sod is not conserved. ADD FERTILIZER TO MANURE Yield of Corn Increased by Eleven Bushels Per Acre in Experiment at Ohio Station. The fact that manure itself is not a balanced plant food, but may, with profit, be reinforced with phosphate, fe becoming more and more a matter of general knowledge, At the Ohlo experiment station fer. tilizer added to manure, increased the yield of corn by 11 bushels per acre, The residual effect of the fertilizer inereased the wheat erop which fol lowed the corn by five and a half bush- els per acre. The clover crop, follow. ing the wheat, showed a gain of 1,100 pounds of hay per acre. The fertilizer paid for itself three times, CURRANT WORM IS HARMFUL First Brood Appears Early in Spring and They May Be Destroyed by Arsenical Spray. The imported currant worm {8 about three-fourths of an Inch long, green with yellow tips. They appear first in early spring as soon as the leaves are out, and there is one other brood, and sometimes a third later in the season, They devour the foliage. These are readily destroyed by an arsenical spray or a dusting with an arsenical poison. By catching the first brood there will be little trouble later In the season, ' i Soldier—Have 1? Why, the lon went without getting bit- kicked! bein’ 1d he had art? he ght" re re to be t-market Cuticura Socotnes Baby Rashes vith hot baths “ by gentle n tment, r, espe nt Cuti at the fine onc each everywhere — Adv, Foorpro nt ear "eB r 8ii ippin vg Up. on Her. - of o think, own bed nen ever ween tee mighty oor buddy ch in the pillowsilp Ww t ow was he better Ho ane Sector. A Soio Part iac oll} ght. 1y—What did he talk about? wala Why, he Rn ust sat and listensd He never opened his mouth, Orators seldom convince: they cone convictions, - " " irm thelr hearers in their a —should be boiled fully
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers