A — WRIGLEYS Evers Heal RE Soothes the throat. For Quality, Flavor and the Sealed Package, Pesky Devils Quietus P. D. Q. 2. D Devils pS Ants Fleas, as DQ ih She live ones and a MR ns, BS = ut a chemical unlike any- have ever used, es Sent age makes contains a pat 23 3 patent Cavuto kot a ed Your druggist has It or he can get it for you. Malied pre: paki upon receipt of price the Ow! Chemical Wha, Terre Haute, Ind LIES 3 13 pecia this advertisement preg Bh Be y Washington, D.C. Ea - Rheumatism and Neuritis “B- a ET emdoreed sa 3 7 ear EER Ei! for BLN. Weite HAHN & BARN, 234 W. Serstega St, Baltimore, Md. Clear Baby”: 8 Sion With Cuticura Soap and Talcum Soap 5c, Ointment 25 sad 50c, Talcns 25c. Mariners Dread fo Approach it Through Treacherous Bay of Bis cay, Owing to Swift Currents. — from ghore, the water Is #0 rough that The Bay of Biscay has always been high tides, flerce currents and danger ous reefs, Belle isle was Inhabited from early tures made by the Druids are numer ous. Later, the Romans occupied It as an outpost of their empire. Then It was held for a long pericd by a Catho- lic monastery. In 1761 the British cap tured the Island, after a long siege, but it went back to Fiance soon after, Napoleon started to fortify Belle isle, but never finished the job. Dumas, In “The Three Musketeers,” tells how the gigantic Porthos labored with the great rocks used for the earlier foun- dations. How He Came In, “I'm right proud of my son at col lege. He's one of the most popular young fellars thar,” said Farmer Hicks proudly. “Yer don’t say so? exclalmed a neighbor. “Yep; he recently gave a big dinner dance In my honor at one of the most fashionable hotels.” “Wuz you thar? “No, I wun't.” “Wal, where do you come In? *1 paid for IL.” Let the camel get his nose In the tent and presently he will all the whole tent. It Is the same way with a hobby. Champion Barrow Has Traveled Far “Oklahoma King” Has Been Exhibited in Different Parts of United States. Not content with being declared the grand champion barrow of the world at the 1922 International Live Stock exposition, Oklahoma King has added to his honors the title of the widest traveled and most inspected hog on earth. Instead of being sent to the block after attaining supreme honors at Chi- cago last December, he was purchased by two Duroc associations and sent on a tour of exhibitor which has carried him to all parts of the country. Among Oklahoma King. the places visited were Nashville, Tenn.; Denver, Colo.; Lincoln, Neb; Crookston, Minn. ; Madison and Janes ville, Wis.; Fort Worth, Tex.; Okla. homa City, Stillwater and Guymon, Okla. ; Peoria, Urbana and Aurora, Iil.; Columbus, O.: LaFayette, Ind. ; Lex- ington, Ky., and Des Moines, Ia. His journey will continue through- out the fall months when he will be the center of attraction at many of the large fairs, It Is planned to bring him back to Chicago the first week in De cember for the International, this be- ing the first time that the grand cham- plon barrow at this show has ever been returned the following year. Oklahoma King has stood up well and actually gained flesh during his travels. This is all the more remark. able in view of the fact that he has been shipped as any express. At his numerous stops, ceptions and honors have been heaped high upon his porcine head. In one city nothing was considered too good for one of his royal standing and he leading hotel. This noted animal began life In the classical environment of the Oklahoma Agricultural college. Under the con stant supervision of a former pig club winner he was grown and fitted for the great competition at Chicago and am- ply justified this faith by defeating nearly 500 of the finest market hogs In the world for supreme honors, Competent judges have conceded has ever been produced, and it is for clations have saved him from his history-making tour of the United States. Vaccinating Cattle to Prevent Shipping Fever Although still in the experimental such a degree of perfection that It Is Until the method has been more thoroughly tried out, the department will furnish vaccine produced In its Imboratory and also trained veterinar- fans who will give the treatment at actual cost. Losses from this disease have been steadily Increasing for several years During the past fall and winter the disease became more prevalent and virulent than ever before. It is most likely to show Itself among animals shipped long distances although It occasionally attacks those that have never left the home place. Great Value of Addin Protein to Hog Ration The value of adding protein to a ration, even when pigs being fattened for market have the run of a good alfalfa pasture, was shown In a test conducted by the Kansas experiment station last year. One lot was fed all the comm It would eat, In addition to alfalfa pasture. The other lot was fed all the corn it would eat plus one-fourth of a pound of tankage per head per day ip addition to alfalfa pasture. The pigs in the lot receiving no tankage made a gain of 74 pound per day at a cost of $56.56 per 100 pounds of gain. The pigs in the lot receiving tankage made a gain of 1.25 pounds per day at a cost of $4.00 per 100 pounds of gain. The addition of onefourth of a pound of tankage per head per day on alfalfa Short of Phenomenal The progress which the dairy in dustry as a whole has made during the past three years Is nothing short of phenomenal. During a period when other lines of farming end Industry were suffering from stagnation, the industry has been forging ahead new Rotation to Prevent Disorders of Beans Hand Pick Disease-Free Pods to Use for Seeding. Plant beans on the same land not oftener than once in three or four years, particularly if disease has been prevalent. Solls which once become thoroughly Infected as a result of con- tinuous cropping are seldom safe to use for the same or closely related crops for years to ecme. Wherever practical, destroy all dis eased vines and trash by burning. If the bean straw from diseased vines Is to be fed, do not use the manure on a field that is to be planted to beans, As far as possible avold cultivating the beans early in the moming when there is dew on them, or when they are wet with rain, select disease-free Use these to plant a seed possible, for seed. beans,” and distance from the main crop. diseased seed. Seed treatment of beans Is practical value, since that would penetrate the seed deeply enough to destroy the disease-produe- ing organism would Hkewise be apt to kill the seed. Spraying with 54-50 formula, oughly by cempetent persons, best unsatisfactory, unprofitable and only partially Sackett, Bacteriologist, periment Station. Find Silage Profitable bordeaux (Colorado Ex- feeding tests with baby the Minnesota experiment Recent itably used in fattening baby beeves. conducted by fed more regularly and required leas The silage-fed calves guined of 222 pounds per head per day its per hundred which had silage, calves a net while those 16.15 sllnge-fod showed In another test barley proved prac gaine on fattening calves because of the greater cost by hogs following, the corn-fed ealves showed a profit of the profit on those fed barley was but £601 per head. Pure bred beef calves, high-grade similar gains on similar amounts of feed. The difference in selling price 283.45 and the common calves only $58.18 per head. Sheep Raising Spurred vision, University of Minnesota, farmers entering this field should go slowly at first and study the require ments very thoroughly,” he adds, Mr. Anderson makes the foregoing statement in view of the greatly In. creased interest exhibited in sheep pro duction the last few months, which has been brought about by advancing prices for wool, a steady lamb market and good profits made in feeding lambs during 1921-1922. Stocks of wool, which accumulated during the war and Immediately after, have now heen converted into merchan- dise. Manufacturers short of mill sup plies and eager to keep the mills going have become anxious to buy, causing the price to go up. “Prices of lambs have been at £12 to $15 per 100 pounds for a long time, with a variation of $2 to $250 for shorn lambs,” says Professor Anderson, Such prices should be an inducement for many farmers to have flocks of 25 to 85 ewes or more which will consume green food perhaps otherwise wasted and convert it Into a marketable product. With wool and market stock high In price, because of a decrease In the number of sheep In the United States and the action of the new pro. tective tariff, our sheep breeders can surely compete with the breeders of other countries,” Overcrowding Chickens Is Quite Unprofitable In culling the flock it is better to Oh, Fudge! On sale was a cigar ealled the Vil nin, Customer thought this a queer name for a cigar. The manufacturer was always ready to explain “You see,” he would say, ways folled,"—Loulsville Journal, “it's nl Courler- All Bet, Jack—There's something I've been wanting to ask you for weeks, Jen—Well, hurry up. I've had the answer ready for months. —Boston Transcript. At one hotel In Bavaria a visitor Judge G. W. Thomason, Mayor of Tarrant Clty, Alabama, widely known | Sleep was often impossible, and I grade {ually weakened so I could hardly at- recently gave his unqualified endorse | ment to the Tanlac treatment, “Chronic Indigestion brought me to the verge of a general breakdown “The first bottle of Tanlae Iuproved me wonderfully, and each successive strength, 1 felt ten yeura ason, “and pothing seemed to afford much relief, I was enough to keep going on, and food he paper. | eansing pain ar ind extreme nervousness, Vegetable Compound ale female troubles may through lect reach a stage when an oper- 8 on is necessary. But mostof the common ailments are not the surgical ones; they are not caused by serious displacements, tumors or growths, al though symptoms may appear the same. When disturbing silments first ap; , take Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound to Jo- lieve the present distress and vent more serious troubles Paes letters have been received from wo- og whohbave been restored to health Lydis E Piakbany’ 8 Vegetable B Lod, afte rations have been advised by at! ng physicians. Mrs. Edwards Avoids Operation * Wilson, N. C.—* For about a ypar I was not able to do anything, not even my bousework, because of the phim in my sides and the bearing pains. 1 could only He around the house. The doctor said nothing but an operation would help me, but I tried different medicines which did L Peculia no until my sister insisted onm No I Yinkham's Vegetable y Lh aS She said there was nothing like it. 1 know that she was right, for 1 began to improve with the first bottle and it has done me more good than anything else. 1 am able now to do anything on the farm or in my home and 1 recommend it to m friends.” —LiLLiE Ew ARDS, B.F.D. 8, Box 44, Wilson, N. C. Another Operation Avoided Akron, Ohio. —‘“ I can never praise Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- und too highly for what it bas done or me. I bad such pains and weak- ness that the doctor told me nothing but an operation would help me. But my mother had taken the Vegetable Compound and she told me what it had done for her, and so took it and I am glad to tefl every one that it made me a strong woman, and I have had two children since then.” —Mrs, R. G. WesTOovVER, 825 Grant Street, Akron, Ohio. Cash Trade Onty, Pagser-by (to beggar)—I have no small change at present, but I'll hand you something coming back. Beggar (dolorousiyi—Ah, sir, doin’ business on credit that redooced me to this—~New Haven Register, it was is a Combined Medicine Treatment, both focal and internal, and has been success ful in the treatment of Catarrh for over forty years. « Sold by all druggists: Frank, Magistrate—Is this fense? Man—Well, been caught Tit-Bits, your first of. Simple. “A popular song must be simple” “Tea” commented Miss “even idiotic” Life is a flower of which love is the honey. ~Vietor Hugo. Might divorce Be Advisable, “One for every eight mar ringes “So they say, “That's bad” “True. Suppose we get ma fore the get Worse Courier-Journal. ainlia * girlie rried be odds "eel ouisvilic More the Merrier, “How many people in New York? “More than four millions.’ *1 don’t see how you all “Oh, we patronize each Louisville Courier-Journal, Can't Afford Both. Mrs. Loser—The dentist says 1 must | have some hridge work done. Hushand—Then you'll have to quit | bridge play. --Boston Transcript. Not Particular, The Landlady--Will you take tea or | coffee? The Boarder live" Whichever you call it She big Poughkeepsie 100 feet long. bridge time later, Tanlac gave with me” Tanlac is for sale by ell good drug- rtunity Calls Trem CANADA nh ly er, Pay a visit to Canadas on vourseil the opportunities gin prairie land, peasy rail wn and towns, ut £15 Lo 520 an scre~bong terms H desred, YWheat crops last year the big. gest in history; dairying and bogs pay well, mixed farming rapidly increasing. » Homeseekers’ Rates on Canadian Railroads If you wish to look over the ~ountry with & view to taking mp land get an order from the senrest Canadian Government Agent for special rates on Canadian railroads. Make this your summer outing~-Cansda welcomes touriste-—-no pass ports required — have a grest trip and soe with your own eyes the opportunities that gwen you. Se. For full information, with free gn booklets end maps, write F. A. HARRISON Desk W 308 K. Second Street Harvishurg, Pa. 5%, Authorised Conadinn Gov't Ast. rt Ri BASING Nit FOL SON 6, 111 8K Gay . Baltimore : PEANUTS { Extra fancy Virrinia Shelled | PROSE] Lami $I YOU CANT fare free and he he | ‘Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION up a bic forehead, 1 5K © ’ too, if i BELLANS 258 AND 75¢ PACKAGES EVERYWHERE - HAY FEVER Bafferers from this distressing eombiuint i oan secure guick relief! by usis GRER MOUNTAIN ASTHMA aN POURD. Used for 65 years and result of long experience in treatment of throat apd jong diseases by Dr. J J Guild, FREE TRIAL BOX and Trestise sent upon res guest. The and 31.00 st drag- gists Jd RH GUILD CO RC PERT, VERMONT. _ALFALFO _ Ean for im Seduime. SR for partheninm dE ay Hahn & Hohn, IM W. aie $1. Batimers, Md. TYPEWRITERS L © Semen Ohvetst athe lpr; “REBUILT MACHINES ey Sree ET attention to on arvicula HOWARD BOYER COMPANY 04 W. Payette SA. Batilmore, Md. GERMS are wilh toil ats 1 a WAR head
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers