NERVOUS PROSTRATION Mrs. J. Christman Proved That Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is a Remedy for this Trouble. Binghamton, N. Y.—*1 was in a very nervous condition for over a year, my | a ind was gloomy, be i could see no light on | l anything, could not fwork and could not {have anyone to see ; Doctor’s med- icine did not hel y ink- am’s Vegetable Compound was re- ommended. I took tand am now well. I recom- end it to all afflict~ rostration.”’—Mrs., J. CHRISTMAN, 198 Oak Street, Bingham- ton, New York. The success of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, is unparalleled. It may be used with perfect confidence by women who suffer from nervous prostration, displacemen inflammation, ulcera- tion, irregularities, periodic pains, back- ache, bearing-down feeling, flatulency, indigestion and dizziness, Lydia Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is the standard remedy for female ills. If there are any complications about which you need advice write in con- fidence to Lydia E. Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass, “I feel it my duty to write you a letter of thanks for your wonderful Peterson's | Ointment. I had a running sore on my | left leg for one year. I began to use | Peterson's Ointment three weeks ago and | now it is healed."-—A. C. Gilbrath, 708 | Reed St., Erie, Pa. For vears I have drudgists a large OINTMENT for 35 nts. The healing power in this ointment is marvelous, | Eczema goes in a few days. Old sores heal up like magic; piles that other reme. dies do not m to even relieve are | edily ¢ u l. Pimples and nasty blackheads d ar in a week and the | distress of ch ¥ goes in a few minutes. | Mail orders filled. Peterson Ointment Co., Ine., Buffalo, N. Y. with nervous been selling through | ox of PETERSON'S | After you eat—always use —one or two tablets—eat like candy. Instantly relieves Heartburn, Bloated Gassy Feeling. Stops indigestion, food souring, repeating, headache and the many miseries caused by Acid-Stomach EATONIC is the best remedy, it takes the harmful acids and gases right out of the body and, of course, you get well. Tens of thousands wonderfully | benefited. Guaranteed to satisfy or money refunded by your own drug- gist. Cost a trifle. Please try it! Liggattnllyors KING PIN CHEWING TOBACCO Has that good licorice taste ouve been ooking for: { 1 in the field and belt power at the barn, use the Frick Tractor You can depend on the FRICK TRACTOR for all farm uses. It's convenient — has roomy platform, ample power and is built for dur- ability. Frick Tractors are delivered for shipment on their own power. A Frick Tractor and Junior Thresher is your idealoutfit. Write for price and further information. Immediate Deliveries FRICK COMPANY, Inc. 373 W. Main St, Waynesboro, Pa. WATCH THE BIG 4 Stomach-Kidneys-Heart- Liver Keep the vital organs healthy by regularly taking the world’s stand- ord remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles— _ GOLD MEDAL [EE The National Remedy of Holland for centuries and endorsed by Queen Withele mina, t all druggists, three sizes. ad ateavs 3, Maal on every hon OXE FRE $108,000. Free for everybody by seiltag new article, a for only #1. W Alpe Baltimore Bldg. leageo DEVICE IS MADE Anyone in United States May Make and Use It Without Payment of Royalty. Sample of Grain ls Evenly Divided and One-Half Ig as Representative of Whole Original Sample as the Other, A device with which a sample of grain, to be used In grading a given lot, can be evenly divided so that one- half will be as representative as the whole original sample, has been de- signed and patented by the United States department of agriculture, and anyone in the United States is free ment of a royalty. A representative sample of a given lot or shipment of grain which Is se- cured by means of a probe, usually has to be divided into smaller portions for Sr — ———Teee Pouring a Sample of Grain into a “Modified Boerner Sampler.” known companying photographs, as fn ly been put out by the bureau of mar of agriculture. It is similar In prin- reau a year or two ago, hut Is so de signed that it ean easil ed of block tin or brass by any tin- at about one-third the cost he construct of Working of Device, cylindrieal and The sam The sampler Is i i i which Hs that nt the top, lever removes a cap flows downward it cone, Encireling of apnrt op In these the hase of this cone are small chutes whose dis exactly the Half of the grain chutes, 8nd half be them. The latter portion flows directly the uppermost of pans placed one above the other at the sampler, The half fall. ing into the chutes ia diverted Into a funnel, the lower end of which leads to a protected opening In the center of the upper pan, thereby permitting nl Reries tance is width of ings, ito base of the lower pan. In this fashion the origi representative of the original lot as is the other. Standard Equipment. One of the duties of the bureau of markets, United States department of agriculture, is to administer the United States grain standards act, and be. cause It desires to make standard equipment for grain grading easily ob- tainable by all dealers, country ns well as city, the burean has devised this comparatively Inexpensive apparatus to take the place of the more expen. sive Boerner sampling device. The sampler and a few other pleces of ap paratus are all that are required for grading grain, according to practice recommended by the United States de partment of agriculture, DEEP PULVERIZING OF SOIL Plants Will Not Thrive If Soil is Coarse and Lumpy Just Below the Surface, Few gardeners realize the impor wance of pulverizing the soll as deeply ay It is plowed. No matter how per. fectly the surface Is prepared, if the soll is coarse and lumpy below the plants will not thrive. Large alr spaces In the soil are a detriment, but a large number of very small afr spaces ln the soli are a benefit, i £ HALL. PA. § ORGANIZED FOR SELLING STC? One Example of Help Given by County Agent. Farm Bureau Marketing Association Formed in California to Dispose of Hogs-—System Applicable to Other Products. (Prepared by the United States Depart- ment of Agriculture.) Selling live stock by auction, a plan started in Kern county, California, in 1917, has now spread through a con. siderable area of the Interior of the state, especially where large numbers of hogs are grown. Last year seven counties—Kern, Xings, Merced, Ma- dera, Stanislaus, Tulare and Fresno— formed the California Farm Bureau | Marketing assoelation and Jolped in conducting auction sales, This asso- Jlation emploYed a manager and as- sistant manager who were responsible for the success of the sales. In addi tion, each county farm bureau has a‘| committee in charge of the sales loeal- | ly. Auction sales were held in | San Joaquin and Shasta counties, It | is expected that this system will ex- ! pand throughout the state during the | coming year and that it will prog, ap- i plicable to other products which are { capable of standardization, i The business last year included 183 also auction sales at which 543 carloads of live stock were soid for £1.700.830.70. | It Is estimated that the sales brought a direct increased return to the farm- | ers of $166,048.97 over the wise. the prices stock would have brought This is but one ex: other iple of the help ziven by the county agent in organiz- | ng farmers for selling live sto k. One hundred and three county agents in 19 ‘tates report this service impor. Year. | 14 assisted In or fs an feature of the wgrk last ‘thermore, 188 county agents in states report that they ranizing live-stock their shipping assocls tions in counties, TOMATO TRELLIS IS USEFUL Nothing Better Than Hinged Arrange. ment Shown in Hustration—— Is Easily Made, wing description nate vines ato pl i1 garden, the his shaped structure, eos ged tom Take fou ng. Place each } and feet $ form the , 80 to speak. ten-foot strips tent-like struc. a} palr of them , At one er hinge them strips ten long. These two long stri ridge-pole of Nall several across each side ture and the The hinged : the trellis other of the is completed. of the trellis, as shown he agram and marked | H, permits it to be spread the exact width of the row, or it may be spread on Tomato Trellis may be supported. When not in use, with the garden tools, ESSENTIALS TO GARDEN SITE | Certain Amount of Sunlight, Fairly Fertile Soil and Coo! Drainage Other Points. There are three essentials to the | site, experience has shown. Sunlight at least six hours a a soil sufficiently fertile for weeds to | grow upon it; sufficient drainage, either natural or artificial, to prevent flooding or excessive moisture, If a site Is notably deficient In any of these three essential characteristios, it Is not suited for garden purposes un. less the fault ean be corrected. If one Is fortunate enough to be able to choose among several possible loca tions, the New York state college at Ithaen suggests it may be well to con. sider the following points. Nearness to the house for con venience In working the garden and in gathering the products and, In the case of a town garden, for protection against trespass and theft, A water supply to insure against drought, A gentle south or southeast slope, A windbreak to the north, A good, rich loam, that Is, a mix. ture of sand and clay with plenty of humus or decomposed plant material, Fertility and abundant humus are gen- erally Indicated by a dark color of the sofl, ~ ' day; | * MILKWEED SHOOTS ARE GOOD Cut Just as They Come Through Ground They Are Crisp and Tender ~yMake Excellent Dish, ft may not be known to many farm. ers that the young milkweed shoors are edible, that when cut just as they come through the ground while still white, crisp and tender and cooked like asparagus, they make sy excel lent dish, READY TOR ORDEAL. “Have you prepared a good supply of cribs?" “Yeon” “Have you concealed the textbook In your hat?” “Yes “Are you sure you gave the instruct- or a good cigar?” “Certainly.” “Well, then. let's go in and hit that -{ ‘arnell Widow, Deliberation. admit,” sald Mr, Meekton, often proceeds with deliberation than a “1 must “that a more cautious man.” “For instance?” “A man frequently an ime portant matter by flipping a colin, where a woman will consult a oulja board woman decides " A Sensitive 30 t Soul. yourself up to inferior intel. you give the asked med Bill the Barg. me of those tl por ngs A mmkind 'e feel like "sociat SELL Providing for Family Friends, ed wish 1 knees vhat i $id 1 these tiny me at Squire Brown's st tonight, Mr. Possum. No, thank Too ne other “coon™ you. An mits Little Pitchers. “Mr en it, will “Sharpen you?” what, my boy? “Why, when you came, ipa told mo you had an ax to grind. Easy Question. are the best 1 “What sellers net now ™ “Do 1 have to tell you? Those with iald up In ‘em.” Plenty of Practice. “Your friend seems to for asserting himself” “He is lucky In baving chances, has an impediment In speech.” Fine Present. he up the minister's library? “1 thought I would give a pretty antiquarian with gold fish In it.” Appreciation, Friend of the Institution—What do the Inmates think of the new asylum? Keeper—They just rave over it, sir!™ ~London Mail, A Job Delegated. Howard=-Does Coward eser tell his wife just how horrid she Is? Jay--No, he hires cooks to do it for him.~Judge. Had Thought of It. “Have you never thought of retiring from politics?” “Yes,” replied Senaior Sorghum: “but always with a shudder.” Remiss Actions. “There are some queer about the actions of nature” “Name some, for Instance.” “That she does not put lids on the chest Ingtead of the eye, and that she doesn’t make shingles some on the roof of the mouth.” : Cynical Azaen®, She—Do you believe a woman conld make & success of an idea for a flying machine? Ho<=Why not? Most of women's {dens incline to the “ighty, things oo Lift off Corns! Doesn’t hurt a bit and Preszone costs only a Yew cents, With your fingers! You can lift off any hard corn, soft corn, or corn be- tween the toes, and the hard skin cal- {uses from bottom of feet, A tiny bottle of “Freezone” costs iittle at any drug store; apply a few In- then shortly corn or cal- all, without stantly it stops hurting, you lift that bothersome lous right off, root and No humbug !—Adv. Ready for Him. Mrs. A—Does your husband smoke in the house? Mrs. B—Yes; and I'm glad of it. It if he ever remarks that we mt Joston Transeript, 15 torpld Hyer prevents proper food as- fiation. Tone up your liver with ght's Vegetable Fllis They act gently. — av The people who are paid to he good FranticWith Pain Doen’s However Brought Complete Recovery and Trouble Has Never “My kidneys were weakened by ex- posure in Alaska,” wsdys Hermans Schrader, 32 Park Ave., Hobokem, N. J, "and my nusery at times be came 0 great Y one I would lose my mind. 1 had terrible pains in my back, and a con stant desire to urinate. My back felt as if it were in sections with each crushing ) against the other. Y Finally 1 was ta ken desperately il, It seemed as if something were crushing out my life. Before lo I passed a grave stone the size of a pea. If the pain had been ang more intense Mr. Schrader think I would have died. 1 was having practically mo flushing of the kidneys and my weight had reduced from 178 pounds to 125. The doctor told me I hac gravel and emall stones filling up the passages of the bladder. After all of this I began to use Doan's Kidney Pills and soon improved. In a short time I was well and my cure has lasted fifteen years. Today I am in perfect health.” Sworn to before me, W. P. WEISS, Notary Public. Cet Doan's at Any Store, 0c & Box DOAN’ KIDNEY PILLS FOSTER - MILBURN CO., BUFFALO, N. Y. R = N Cuticwra Soap Complexions Are Healthy Seap 25¢, Ointment 25 and 50c, Talcum 25¢. ORCHARDS, tiunber n Far is Shee mes, Luray, Va FOR FARMS, HOMES, nnd r business ha ® noes rite Dan 3H for Tired, Sw and 3 Ask for One Can't Help Thinking Mrs. Clayton Might Have Expressed Her Senti ments Better, The young couple on moon come from London on the first sts 1 journey. In Reg meet Mrs. ative town. lear Miss J , and then a8 the bride nge of name. “But fancy meeting like this!” fin. the blushing young wife, is strange,” agreed Mrs. ton. “We live at Streatham. ust come and have tea with us” “Thank you! It's very kind of you to nsk us” “Not at all—not at all,” gushed Mrs. Clayton. “You know how Jt is. When you're city, people you never thought much of at home seem ike dear friends, don't they?" don Tit-Bits, nes offered explained Clay- You in a strange — Lon. Important League. First SBuburbanite—We are up a league of nations in our suburb. Have you heard of it? Second Suburbanite— 1 straw vote? No, what is it, went between those who are planning a garden this year and those who are planning to keep chickens, Blisters, Callouses, akes walk. 1s of powder Our army 23 be “et, (1 A acs ng Allen's where, KEEP TROUBLES TO YOURSELF The World, 8 Gene Little as a General Th Hag Use for the Man dicted to Self-Pity. Ings Ad. in a little pity is the trouble. ment of hig it seems the very to greater danger, anyhow, \ 0 Nobody ever went anys I anything while meeting it In one form or am~ others pity if they don’t waste any ti pitring The that rour oor neighbor tickled ith if such troubles as you have about. — Ex iid worth Fx chances are would be to de were all he had to worrs change. Furniture Oil To te scratched furniture mix together in a bottle equal gquamté- { best salad oll and vinegar Shake vig usly, then it Is ready t» Take a small pad or soft rag, dip it into and rub well into the wood until all scratches have disappeared. Then polish with an rag. You will be delighted i with the resuit, POTIOVA renova tieg « the OT use, the solution other soft Far more healthful
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers