it stimulates appetite and aids digestion. it makes your food do you more. goad. Note how that stuitly feeling Make Your Own Peanut Candy, Salted Pea- nuts and Peanut Butter. Three pounds raw Shelled White Spanish Peanuts delivered, §1 Mrs. M. 1. Taylor, 84 E Wash'n, Newnan, Ga FARMS-SEND FOR MY DESCRIPTIVE price list; it will interest you H D FUNK, ROYERSFORD, PA Phone 366 Opportunity Offered Partner to join in pro- motion of company to market new machine with unlimited field and indications of very Inves Gilmore New York large profits. $600 to $5,000 required tigation by own attorneys invitad Co.. P. O. Box 178, Trinity Sta., Parents, Teach Yourselves, Your Boys and girls, age no barrier, to swim in a sure, safe, juick way. Send for instructions. Brandon Sales Co., 197 Harrison, St, Paterson, N. J MOST WONDERFUL SALVE FOR ALL SORES. Good for man or beast. 35c and $1.00, THE NELSON REMEDY CO. Not Ine 831 Lincoln Avenue, Highland Park, Iilinpis Looked Like a Lot A dear old lady, says the Tatler, was spending a holiday at Southamp- ton and with some friends was being shown over cae of the blg transat- lantic liners just before its departure, “What's that down there?’ she In. quired of the captain “That's the steerage, replied. “Dear me,” she exclaimed In aston- ishment, “and does it really take all those people to make the boat go straight?” SWAMP-ROOT FOR KIDNEY AILMENTS There.is only one medicine that really stands out pre-eminent as a medicine for curable ailments of the kidneys, liver and bladder. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root stands the highest for the reason that it has proven to be just the remedy needed in thousands upon thousands f distressing cases. madam,” he of Bwamp-Root. makes friends quickly because its mild and immediate effect is soon real ized in most cases. It is a gentle, healing vegetable compound. Start treatment at once. Sold at all drug stores in bottles of two sizes, medium and large. However, if you wish first to test this great preparation, send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When ¥%riting, be sure and mention this paper.—Advertisement. A Puzzler Managing Editor—Here Is one for you, Slick. Society Editor—For me? Managing Editor—Strictly; a young lady wants to know who should keep up the payments on the ring when the engagement is broken. The heaviest rains fall on the leaky house.~—~Proverbs of Japan . (2) It kills the germs for pyorrhea and diseases. (3) It kills the colds, haarlem oil has been a world- wide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, G HAARLEM OIL 2 correctinternal troubles, stimulate vital organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine Gop Mapas. ff 1 vem timate messi ; EE py J '"W. N. U, BALTIMORE, NO. 22-1024 HOME HINTS AND DIET ; By INEZ SEARLES WILLSON het MB A a a A A A AA AA a as HERR IT TY TTY TY yyy YYYYYYYYy (@, 1534, Western Newspaper Union.) AFTERNOON TEA Serving afternoon tea Is a pleasant custom. The hostess presiding at a well-appointed tea table seems to em. body the spirit of gracious hospitality. There is an atmosphere of intimacy and informality which Is created by no other soclal affair, In these days of kitchenettes and dinettes and small quarters generally, the problem of entertaining is more or less difficult. It Is not always pos- sible nor deskrable to do all entertaln- ing In public places and yet the family may require all the space at table, thus making it out of the question to have guests at luncheon or dinner. Having a few persons in for tea solves the difficulty in part at least. An advantage of this way of enter- taining is that everything may be pre pared before the guests arrive. The hostess Is In that satisfactory frame of mind created by the knowledge that she Is “all ready for the party.” There Is nothing to do except brew the tea Just before serving. The ever-handy tea cart helps won- derfully as it takes the place of table as well as tray. If the rooms are so small that a wheeled tray is one of the things which has to be eliminated, a large tray may be used. The tea- pot, dishes, etc., are placed on the tray, which Is carried into the living room where it is put on a table, cleared for the purpose, and the serv- ice Is done directly from the tray. Make your tea table as attractive as possible. Use your best china and see to it that the napkins are dainty and snowy-white. Perhaps the tray or table is too small to allow a cen- terplece of flowers, but a single blos- som In a bud vase will add a festive touch. You will need, for service, cups, saucers; or Instead of saucers salad- sized plates may be used. Spoons will be required and forks perhaps, de pending on the type of refreshments. Very thin slices of orange and lemon arranged In alternate rows on a small plate are a decoration In themselves. Cloves may be stuck Into the pleces of lemon. 1, personally, prefer putting three or four whole cloves In the tea- pot and brewing with the tea. Incl dentally, I do not reserve this method of making tea for company because I have found tea as a beverage so Im- proved by the addition of the cloves that 1 never make It without them. Two or three are enough to give the desired flavor. There are on the mar- ket, sugar-coated cloves In different colors which lend to the attractive ap- pearance of the table. The food served depends entirely upon the occasion and the wishes of the hostess. The refreshments may be as simple or as elaborate as one desires. A good cup of tea and dainty sandwiches are sufficient. HAPPY TREATMENT OF Lado dh a a a a a a WER Tee tile fireplace and perhaps your land- lord objects to having it changed or perhaps you do not want to expend the money to replace it? If this is one of your problems you will be In- terested to know how one clever wom- an solved it. She ved In a rented house of the Colonial cottage type of architecture, and her furniture, which was old. seemed to belong In its surroundings. However, In the midst of the mellow- ness of the old mahogany and pleas antly fading draperies and as the cen- ter of Interest, stood a fireplace of monstrously ugly, shiny green tile. The landlord would permit no change to be made, and there It was, creating discord In an otherwise har monious room. Very well, it could not be torn down, and as peace of mind could not exist In the house with it. the only thing to do was to cover it up. This Is just. what my Ingenious friend did. She had a carpenter make a fire place of wood In such a way that it fitted over the original mantel. The new exterior of the fireplace was painted white to match the woodwork, and was pure Colonial in design. The difference this simple treatment made in the room was astonishing. All parts were brought into the proper re lation one with another. e room was a unit in which there was no jar ring note. Were you to enter this home, you would be conscious of the charm which It exerts. You would love the faded blue drapes and the soft gleam of the polished mahogany In the gate- leg table. You would thrill over the old hooked rugs on the floors. You would notice the brass candlesticks on the mantel. You might even remark that the fireplace was lovely, but un- less your hostess took you into her confidence you would never know that It was a sham, hiding the skeleton of that perfect room, A Money-Saver Engineers at the office of the Delta Barrage In Egypt did not want to pay f man to stay at the reservoir miles away just to read the gauge, They decided to make the water report its own level by telephone. Now they Just take down the receiver and the number of the gauge reading Is autos matically spoken to them. A flont connected with the telephone does the trick. \ New Ventilating Plan for Granary Bystem Recently Devised Prevents Heat Damage to Grain in Storage. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) A system of ventilating farm bins that prevents heat damage to stored grain has been devised by the Untied States Department of Agriculture. The system involves the use of wood and wire ventilators that can be con- structed on the farm at a cost of about $10 to equip a bin of 1,000 bushels capacity. The monetary loss from damaged grain during the past few years is es- timated at around $2,000,000 a year, the department says. During a six- months period 43% per cent of the re- ceipts at Kansas City market graded one or more grades lower on account of heat damage, it is pointed out, Avoid Wheat Damage. Department investigators show that much of the damage to wheat could be avolded by better systems of farm storage, and that such farm storage Fig.1 Ventilated Wheat of Ventilators in Position. improvement is essential to the suc cess of the methods of harvesting and handling the crop now practiced by many farmers. harvesting and handling grain facili tate time and lessen expense, but much of the early threshed wheat whether harvested with a Combine harvester or threshed from dies is not In condition for safe stor age, the department says. The grain must be fully ripe and dry when threshed If it is to be stored safely. Its storage condition is not #pfe If threshed before it Is quite threshed from either bundles or’stacks while wet from recent rain, although dry before the rain came. Weather at harvesting and threshing time Is another important factor. Arrangement of Ventilation, A series of ventilators 18 used [a the department's new system. Each ventilater consists of two boards 4 Bin Three Feet Apart Near Floor Others Extend to Top of Bins to 6 inches wide and long enough to reach across the bin or to reach from the bottom to the top of the bin as shown In the illustrations. These boards are set on edge 4 inches apart and cleats 4 inches long are mortised In at the top, and other cleats nalled across the bottom. Strips of screen wire 8 Inches wide and as long as the boards are nalled across the top and bottom. The ventilators placed across the bin connect with openings in the sides of the bin, and those standing upright rest at the bottom on horizontal ventilators, and extend above the wheat at the top. In all cases the ventilators should be placed not more than three feet apart. Field tests of the ventilating sys tem were made last year with good results. In one Instance the wheat had a moisture content of 16 per cent when it went Into the ventilated bin and at the end of 74 days came out with a moisture content of only 14.3 per cent, Full detalls regarding the construction of the ventilators and the results of the department's field tests and laboratory experiments may be had upon application to the department at Washington, D, C. Ask for mimeographed circular entitled “Ventilated Farm Grain Bing” pub- lished by the bureau of agricultural economics, Equipment Devised for Scraping Hog Carcasses Patents on mechanical equipment for removing halr and scurf from hog carcasses have been assigned to the citizens of the United States by Dr, Robert B. Leeper, federal veterinary inspector at Denver, Colo, The device Invented by Doctor Leeper, who Is In the employ of the bureau of animal Industry of the Unit. pd States Department of Agriculture, may be made, used, or vended by any- pne without paying royalties. It 1s of "particular Interest and value to the ment-packing Industry, and reports of those using the Invention say that it Js quite satisfactory, Control Brown Rot of Prunes and Cherries Attacks Not Deemed Serious in Many Seasons. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture) Bgown-rot of prunes und sweet cher ries annually attacks orchards In many sections, In most years the at- tacks are not severe enough to at tract general attention, but ocecaslon- ally the constantly present disease breaks out Into a serious epidemic that causes the loss cof a large per- centage of the crop, The destructive phases of the disease have taken two forms, says the United States Depart- ment of Agriculture—one form is an infection of the blossoms and the oth- er a rotilng of the fruit as it ap proaches maturity, The nature of the disease and the life cycle of the fungus which causes it, together with spray methods for controlling the spread of the disease, are fully presented in Farmers’ Bui- letin 1410, just issued by the United States Department of Agriculture. Plowing and harrowing around the trees In the orchard are recommended a8 of value in the control of brown rot. Fruit that is deeply buried is not likely to produce the urn-lko growths known as apothecia which carry spores that are spread to the blossoms of the fruit trees and cause infection. Harrowing, in the early spring and blossoming season, is likely to disturb the partly formed apothecia and prevent thelr further development. Orchards that are not or cultivated until after the season usually have abundance of apothecia, while Orchards free from otherwise, have been found to blossom infection, and relatively from brown-rot. An application of spray weeks before picking value control usually free three time is of of rot in the the are blossoms open and shed are of Just after they value in the control A copy of this found of value to orchardists and may as long the Hs ment of Agficulture, Washington, D.C. Deferred or Rotation Grazing Aids Pastures Deferred or rotation grazing demon. of California counties In Shasta county a pas ously, according to reports to the i i With Improved Cattle In the three months’ period January 1 to March 31, 1024, the agricultural with pure breds had 808 new recruits, This number of live stock owners. ac. cording to records of the United States Department -of Agriculture, signed fgreements to use henceforth pure bred sires exclusively for all classes The number is an increase of more than 100 over that for the preceding quarterly period The total number of live stock owners co-operating with the various states and with the department In the “Bet. ter Sires—Better Stock” campaign now exceeds 13.500, Money tied up In idle machinery pays no Interest * +» » It costs less to live In the than to exist ia the city, » » . Want to save money? Buying acid phosphate In bulk is one way. . . . For the land's sake, and your own bank accouat, plant some legume crop this year. country Many pastures which are weedy and thin would be greatly benefited by planting sweet clover, La A little tiling, or even temporary ditchiag, may make a lot of difference with the yield of some fields, . % 9» Alsike clover is the best buy for many farmers this year. There are three reasons. Ask the county agent. *. » » “Looking over the tile drain outlets and cleantag out those that need it is @ good spring job that may save money Igter, ® * The dairyman who feeds legume hay has ihe langh on the fellow who feeds tirgothy, when he figures up his feed costs, eo 0 Sweet clover, seeded with rye, makes it pogsible for the ground to be turned directly Into a sweet clover pasture after the rye Is pastured off, Honorable A. P. Tarbox, distin- guished lawyer and judge, residing at 217 West 23rd St, University Place, Neb., lends his nape to further the cause of Tanlae, the famous treatment that has proved of such great benefit to him. “1f anybody knows what Tanlae will do,” recently enid Judge Tarbox, “it is me, for the medicine has kept me on my feet and able to work for the past two years." Judge Tarbox has been a member of the bar since early manhood and has practiced law in Illinois, Nebraska and Oklahoma for more than a half cen- tury. He Is a charter member of Far- ragut Post, Lincoln, G, A. R., and also prominent in fraternal order Speaking further of with Tanlac, Judge Tarbox said; “Stomach trouble had been the ba his War. Indigestion such ag 1 had ahout the worst end time, if it} It made my wes the past two years ad not been for Taniag. ¢ 1 gigns of indigestion an up in a way I had thought “In fact, Tanlac has me Be slow enough to be sur Childre unqualified ene ' reason to give it my Tenlac is for sale by all good drug- Accept no substitute, Over 40 million bottles sold, Take Tanlae Vegetable Pills for cone stipation. Made and recommended by ianufacturers of TANLAC the nn ne stroke an oak. “Castoria” 1 fells not Mother! been in Fletcher's C(Castoria for over 50 harmless substitute use Years as Soothing Syrups. Contains no parcotics. Proven directions are on it. he kind wou have always bought bears signature of » GROCERS tables and all products of own mores. We never sell to chain stoves. Mansfocturers ond Importers Briablished 142 NEW YORK BOSTON CHICAGO PITTSBURGH FOR MEN and WOMEN 2° SHOES shoes. have you had th: 3 ( Edi” 5 live, demand W. L. J wi $700 and A AL lities, I | ¥- Sependatile ACTA | Nt your vicinity, § DUTCH VASES for flowers and our art re i — lass vases to beautify Tour ratie No Green, Amethyst, i2 inches high, Innovation style, 1 covered toald 35. B Tr our y refund ED.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers