ETS ge ¥ isan aR WER IgE - A BEFORE mo AFTER CHILDBIRTH Williams Tells How Lydia E. Pinkham’sVegetable Compound Kept Her in Health Overpeck Vegetable Compoun helped me both my before and after m EE 8 baby was born. : suffered with back- i} ache, headache, was generally run down and weak. I saw Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com: pound advertised in 0.—** Lydia E. Pinkham’s gi decided to try it. Now I feel fine, take I recommend oo ¢ who is ailing. You may Jebjish my testi- monial if you think it will help others. ’’~ Mrs. CARRIE WILLIAMS, Overpeck, Ohio, For more than forty years Lydia E. and do my own wor been restoring women to health who suffered from irregularities, displace- ments, backaches, headaches, bearing- down pains, nervousness or ‘‘the blues. ”’ Today there is hardly a town or hamlet in the United States wherein some woman does not reside who has been made well by it. That is why Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound’ is now recognized as the standar such ailments, SQUEEZED TO DEATH When the body begins to stiffen and movement becomes painful it is usually an indication that the kidneys are out of order. Keep these organs healthy by taking GOLD MEDAL ATI The world’s standard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles Famous since 1696. Take regularly and keep in good health. In three sizes, als druggists. Guaranteed as represented Look for the name Gold Medal on every box and accept no imitation Money back without question if HUNT'S GUARANTEED SKIN DISEASE REMEDIES (Hunt's Salve and Soap), fail in the treatment of Itch, Eczema, Ringworm, Tetter or other itch. ing skin diseases. Try this treats ment at our risk Sold by all reliable druggists, A. B, Richards Medicine Co, Sherman, Texas The Point of View. His friends »ay: “What a breezy personality.” His enemies say: “What an awful blow."—Wayside Tales, A Surmise. “Why isn't there building “Looks to me like the capitalists are on a strike” Freshen a Heavy Skin With the antiseptic, fascinating Cutl- cura Talcum Powder, an exquisitely scented convenient, economical face, skin, baby and dusting powder and perfume. Renders other perfumes su- perfluous. One of the Cuticura Toilet more vertisement, A fat man finds that it tio of starvation of 1,000 to 1 to re duce—1,000 days to 1 inch. a thief of time. Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION tukes Intoxication is the 4 6 BELLANS Hot water Sure Relief ELL-ANS 25¢ and 75¢ Packages, Everywhere D=Helloggs Asthma emedy for the prompt rellef of Asthma and Hay Fever. Ask your druggist for it, 25 conts and one dollar. rite for FREE SAMPLE. Nerthrop & Lyman Co.,Inc., Buffalo, N.Y. Ea KING PIN PLUG TOBACCO MISUSING GRADE NOT PROFITABLE Misbranding Frequently Occurs Through Ignorance, Rather Than Intent to Cheat. CAUSES OF IMPROPER GRADING Shipper Who Ships Inferior Farm Produce Soon Learns Error of His Way. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) Sixty per cent of the commercial po- tato crop in the United States is now and sold upon the basis of | United States potato grades, according | to the bureau of markets and crop es- and every producer con- that quality of graded | stock is vitally concerned with the | tices, Growers and shippers whose | This Sack, Labeied “U. 8. Grace vo. the Foreground. dependable travels quickly in market ing circles But in its larger aspect | a8 concerning the whole body of pro- d shippers who conduct their on a of the dealer, the misuse of ducers ar business basis with of essence i to the mutual feeling confidence which {8 the very f business dealings, Flagrant Case of Misbranding. of the jeopardize Several Instances United States potato grades have come to the attention of the department. In New Jersey a growers’ organization was found placing In sacks “U. 8. Grade No, 1” potatoes that were actually field run of poor quality. per cent of the y= wr? Be of the remaining 75 ern city a northern state. showed that sacks contalned stock that was and up to the grade require in every respect. in the bottom layers of sacks of SUGAR BEET CULTURE HAS LARGE GROWTH Farmers Received $99,000,600 for Crop in 1920. Any Fertile Soil Capable of Producing Good Yields of Other Crops Will, If Properly Handled, Prove Satisfactory, {Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) The sugar-beet industry of the Uni ted States produced more than 1,000.- 000 tons of sugar and the 108 factories, 97 of which were In operation in 15 states, pald American farmers more than $00,000,000 for thelr beets in 1920. In a comprehensive new bulletin, No. 995, “The Sugar Beet Industry in the United States,” the United States ducing good yields of other crops will, gar beets. restricted by considerations of of requisite to the heets question of the lated enough sugar The bulletin reviews the history of miil, bullt in 1870 at Alvarado, Cal: and deals at length with equipment, best meth cultivation; the the sugar-beet the manage Crops ; requirements ; the necessary of planting important relation and of and rotating of parallel enemies of sugar beets: and the busi ufacturers, “The successful produc tion of sugar beets farm ds pends to a great extent upon the tem perament of the farmer at:itude toward the production the who handles on any and upon his of this that cows, especially uy croy crop,” says bulletin, adding the man dalry cows, Is more of t inclined to tal Ke the growing such an intensive as sugar heets and Is more apt to sue ceed In this line age crop man, A list of ment publications of the beet-sugar i in the bulletin, which may be had free to the ment of Washington, D. C. than the grain or for more than fifty depart. on different i industry is in Hn Ses luded on upon applica IYepart Agriculture, KEEP DRINKING WATER CLEAN Overhafging Strip Prevents Fowls From Roosting on Edge or Get. ting Into Trough. To keep drinking water clean, pro- shelf on the Inside of the an overhanging strip, as shown in the sketch. The strip is Just far enough above the top of the trough to allow the chickens to drink but prevents them from roost. ing there, or getting into the trough. Pans or basins can be used with the wood fastened wr Vin a —— Water, | The had to be resorted | the receiving point, and the | suffered a heavy monetary loss, Blemished Stock Picked Out, In a trip through the Minnesota Do. | tato district a representative of the de- | partment recently reported that in one i house where a grading machine of the i shaking screen type was used the | screen was padded with burlap, leav- | Ing only about one and one-half feet of | sereen at one end uncovered. The man- | ager stated that this was to prevent | bruising the stock, and he seemed to i he much surprised when it was pointed j out that the burlap | the proper sizing of the potatoes, It was also reported that In some in- potatoes hat No 1 | by running the potatoes through a siz- | ing machine. In these cases it was | necessary to call attention to the fact {| that blemished stock must be culled | out by hand; also that when there is | & heavy run of undersized stock, much | of it may be carried over the grade | if the potatoes are run through too rapidly. Specifications of the federal grades ean be had upon application to the by rean of markets and crop estimates, United States Department of Agricul ture, Washington, D. C. The bureau will also be glad to advise growers and shippers with regard to detailed grad. Ing methods, SOILS NEED STABLE MANURE | Fertilizer Loosens Up Clay and Assists Sand to Retain Moisture Needed by Plants, The chief virtue of sandy soll Is that the roott of plants can pass | throngh it readily; its chief fault is | that It dries out too quickly. Clay soll { holds water well, but It tends to pack and harden. Both types of soll need stable manure—it loosens up clay and kelps sand to hold moisture. same arrangement, although if a trough Is made for the purpose, it will fit in better and, during the months, the ice will be forced upward and there will be no danger of break- ing. This arrangement will be found excellent for feeding the flock hot mashes and other feeds, algo. —Dale R. Van Horn of Nebraska, in the Farm Journal. CLEAN UP ALL GARDEN TRASH Insects and Disease Spores Live Over Winter in Stalks, Vines and Other Rubbish, depends on cleaning up the United States Department of Agri culture. Insects and disease spores Hve over the winter In stalks, vines and stubble, Weeds and vegetable burned or carried off as soon as It is convenient to do go. Pleces of cab bage, carrots, potatoes, and other vegetables which have been left on the ground In the harvest should be raked up and destroyed to avold at tracting Insects and rabbits. The rab bits, tempted by these tithits, may re main to hark the fruit trees and damage bushes, Time given to this work at a perlod of year when other matters are not pressing will be well repaid In the spring and summer, SODIUM FLUORID GETS LICE Mixed With Road Dust It Has Been Found to Be an Excellent Rem. edy by Experts. A combination of sodium fluorid and road dust, mixed one part of fluorid to four parts of dust, is an excellent remedy for body lice on fowls, accord. ing to Investigations by poultry ex. perts at the University of California. Sodium fluorid costs 40 cents a pound nnd that quantity is sufficient to treat 100 hens. Haifa Has Figured Prominently in Biblical History, Recently Made a “Free Port” Place Is Inseparably Associated With Holy Memories, the “A man who could hover about Broadway and Forty-second street in New York for a year and escape at- tention would be comparable to Haifa, comparatively obscure along a littoral flecked by Tyre and Sidon and Gaza and Jaffa, with Damascus and Jerusa- lem in the hinterland.” says a bulletin of the National Geographic soclety of British and French manda. tories of Palestine and Syria, respect. “Haifa now bids fair to emerge up on history's page as one of the free cities ranging from Hamburg to Ma- cao and from Marseilles to Trieste, “The paradox of Haifa is that It ie Carmel and the great plain of Esdrae. Berlin, sades, "One may stand npon the Mount Carmel where it achieves being a promontory of Acre Caesarea, bu luffalo, N. Y., and the Cru slopes of almost ut Bay south and look Herod and hy iit named Paul was jailed. Or he toward Tyre, of Phoer In will ruins of Athlit, with the remains of a built hy the Yorktown war, may turn north proud port nearer foreground ela the be the custle the Knights Templar, and of a holy two-century “Carmel #gelf, Solomon's sin “Thi Carmel.’ he will ile when ne head And the upon fell, * bride, upon upon Ca mocked prophets an altar Lord and Racrifice, “At his feet ies Halfa Middle Tancred forward to the nges 10060) souls received an impetus I then or city In iperor of German tis of Ger man sch Tories or. dered tablets to be ber him by, and granted a subsidy there, “The tion ir German colony had its Incep the Gern plarg, a re Hg unity berg, ormed at Wartem- which founded itz first colons that the aided later |t fown hy a Originally acquired a section which citizen the Kinge was selectod of Buffalo, Templars vision of a of earth, which must fructify in Testament ‘Land of Promise.’ generate Europe Later had a f 1 om } God the Old i other admitted, and after *he kaiser's visit mote German Interests” Grewsome Historic Relic. there are heads .withomt owners, The mummified head of Oliver Crom well, for instance. which on Re storation was torn from the hall, Is now It belongs to Mr. of Westminster private ownership. roof Sevenoaks, grandfather, the daughter of a showman He inherited it from whe purchased it Cromwell, whose ancestors the roof of West. tempestuons it. down from hall one The iron spike wooden are still at of the post Carl Busch Born in Denmark, Carl Busch, Kansas City composer, was born in Bjlerre, Denmark, March 1862. He studied law at the Uni composition with Hartmann He played in an or- chestra in Paris and studied under Godard and Gounofl, He eame to the United States in 1880, settling at Kansas City. Here he established the Philharmonic orchestra. He has com. posed works for orchestra, symphonic rhapsody, symphony, violin musie, the dramatic cantatas “League of the Alps” and “King Olaf,” and many songs, In September, 1012. while Mr, Busch was traveling in Denmark, the title of Knight of Danneborg was conferred upon him by the king. Airplanes 500 B. C. A stirring plece of literature, writ ten about 500 B. C,, tells how Rawun, king of Ceylon, flew over an enemy army and dropped bombs, eansing many casualties. Eventually, he was slain, and his “flying carriage” fell in. to the hands of the Hindu chieftain Ramchander, who flew in it all the way from Ceylon to his capital at Ajudhia, in northern India. In the Mahabharatta, one of the old. est of Brahman classics, mention Is made of the gift of a flying machine by a king to a brother monarch, as a token of friendship. WARNING! physicians over 21 years and Colds Toothache Earache proved safe by millions for Rheumatism Neuritis Pain, Pain Country's Timber Situation, The ginal forests of the United | States have been estimated to contain which cultivation and burn- 157.0060) (0x) per | the timber Is gone I'he consumption than the tion Of ori HOTes has been re- cutting to HOTES Nixty original £ five th Axur tr friend po bing umber iu nes g production potent factor in elevating ard of living and it is not rather urgs do curtail our consumption, increase our productic Taking Him Down, W. L. Georg <} declared at doring novell “Men” outlook, things about | sis was present, The best way a spoon” Use the Fireplace. A fireplace that is really us comfort and good on cool em falling source to draw-—a to otherwise cha and made having an which never that house have a fire is as absurd a What Money Cannot Buy. T™ 1 . The death 1 of Sir Earnest Cassel financier, some the famous English an he gave 3 shortly after the denth of his daughter | sald : “There Is recaiis Sears ago, the the nothing In success to equal and greatest | wife the Way of the transgressor is hard think the recompense, transgressors is a ex. | Most hate desks nen much as cleaning up thelr as women hate 3 dish Music has charm In the country the a mile apart where houses are Civilization will be at hand every bedroom has a bathroom when May Repair Liberty Bell, Announcement was made in Tivoll, Dutchess that Waelde just repaired a hes not 140 years, and that, ine planning to repair 41 HDe nde pen- George that county, bell spired by this success, to go to Philadel paired The Leather Medal Winner, “Wus shore ia thers ment Esther exelte 7 asked replied Dolls g on the pler off. I ran | of rope for ALN threw it to didn’t have any Legion Weekly, Unsophisticated. The proud escort of a pretty said her the the gates That's Donoghue, the famous jockey, | the girl at the race meeting to tered as horse cat past to second horse ™ “Oh, yes” said the girl, “he's quite of the chief jockeys, isn't het Ha to turn out in a differently cole ored suit In every race.”—Tit-Bits. one and certainly one of the dressiest ] ir i seTOS The Garrulous Sex. “Women always have to conversation. still and listen for one full She—"0h, Indeed! Supe pose the other party to the conversae were making a proposal of mare ringe? He—"Not even She'd say ‘yes' before he'd min- ” He- mow the A woman i wit tion then, spoken a te Don’t walt for your happiness until others hand it to you on a silver plat. ter, Mt. Etna, Europe's greatest volcano, rises Immediately in front of the sea, —— disturbed sleep, ten hours restless, at rest, is sometimes very while, and drink Postum instead. Thousands of : tea or coffee delicious, invigorating