~~ DIZLY, FAINT Found Relief in Taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com Always Recommends rt, Connecticut. — *‘1 was y run-down, had headaches, dizzy, faint feelings and other troubles women often have. As I hadtaken Lydia E. Pinkham’s Ve complete | LLL Pinkha egeta- ble Com d Tablets. I am feeling very good now and shall continue taking them for a while. I have been telling my cousin about the medicine and she wants to take it, too. I always recoms- mend it.”’— Mrs. HENRY SMITH, R.F.D. No. 8, Box 6, Bridgeport, Conn. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound is a splendid medicine for such conditions. Ithas in many cases relieved those symptoms by removing the cause of them. Mrs. Smith's experience is but one of many. In a recent country-wide canvass of purchasers of Lydia E. Pinkham’'s Veg- etable Compound, over 121,000 repliea were received, and 98 per cent. re- they were benefited by its use. r sale by druggists everywhere. "TRY THE LEONARD EAR OIL Embarrassing Offer My little nlece, who uccompanied me to the dentist several times this sum- mer when I was getting my set of teeth, won a large box of caramels at our church fair recently. Trying to stop her from eating so 1cany, 1 sald, when she offered me some, “No thauks, dear, they're bad for the teeth,” when in a loud, shrill voice, before a lot of people standing in front of my booth, she replied, “I'll hold your teeth for you, Aunty, while you eat ‘em."—Cor responden-e, Kansas Clty Times, Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION ¥ BELL-ANS 25¢ AND 754 PACKAGES EVERYWHERE Teach Children To Use Cuticura’ DR.HUMPHREYS’ &é ? For Grip, Influenza Are you subject to colds? Then take Dr. Humphreys’ 77” right along. Don’t wait until the cold or Grip comes. it now. “77” is mighty efficient to protect you—from sneezing, coughing, chills, colds or the grip. Keep ‘‘77” handy. Ask your druggist for it today, ws gr hreys’ Manual. (112 pages.) You should read it. Tells about the home treatment of disease. Ask your druggist, or, write us for a copy. Dr. Humphreys’ ‘77,’ price 80c. and $1.00, at g stores or sent on remittance (our risk) or C.0.D. parcel post, Yack without question HUNTS BALVIE fails in the treatment ROZEMA, RINGWORM, itebhing skin Korean Lespedeza Good Forage Crop Earliness of Legume Is Its Chief Value for Pasture in Many Sections. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) A new forage crop has been devel- opened by the United States Depart- ment of Agriculture which will serve a useful field in that part of the United States which may be roughly described as a zone lying between southern Pennsylvania and northern Ohio on the north and the southern border of Vie ginia and Kentucky on the south, ex- tending from the Atlantic coast to Jowa. It has also given promise In Kansas, on the eastern border of the Great Plains and to some extent far ther west. Differs In Earliness. _This new forage crop, Korean les- pedeza, 18 a Jegume and is a close rel ative of the common or Japanese les- pedeza already widely distributed in the southern states, but differs from it in size, coarseness, and earliness as well as in technical characters. It Is described in Department Circular 317, just issued by the department. Its earliness 18 believed to be a weakness so far as its use In the South Is concerned, and it seems prob- able that over the greater part of the area where it will reproduce with cer- tainty the common lespedeza will be the more valuable form. The new variety matures so early that, In the latitude of Washington, D. C, it is ripe and dead at least a month before a killing frost and so produces no grazing at a time when the common variety is still green and fit to graze. On the other hand, the new Korean variety starts earlier in the spring and grows more rapidly, thus furnish- ing grazing before the common or Jap- anese has attained sufficient size to be pastured, Its earliness Is Its chief value for that part of the United States outlined above. Considered With Favor. Included in the bulletin are several reports from various experiment sta- tions where the new crop has been tested and It is considered with much favor. It has done exceedingly well in Iowa. A copy of the circular may be had upon request, as long as the supply lasts, from the United States Department of Agriculture, Washing ton, D. C. Raising of Early Lambs Recommended by Experts | The raising of early lambs rather | than late ones Is recommended by sheep husbandry men at the Kansas State Agriculture college, who say that breeding for early lambs should start early in the fall. It is true that early lamb raising takes more equipment and that the lambs and ewes must be partly barn- fed. But those who raise early Inmbs | find that thelr returns are more than enough to cover the cost of extra feed and care at a time when other farm work is not urgent, the live stock ex- perts point out. ' Early lambs are those which are | dropped from the middie of February | to March 7. They usually can be sent | to market before midsummer without any trouble. Thus lambs avold poor | summer pasture and danger of worm | infestation, ! Early breeding ean be accomplished | by flushing ewes ten days In advance of breeding season. Oats are recom- mended for this purpose. Flushing at ! breeding time makes a marked influ- | ence on the number of lambs. i i i i Avoid Damage From Bugs by Cleaning Out Bins If farmers are to avold damage from the grain beetles, they should clean out their grain bins and remove any old grain that may be left in the cor. ners and nooks of the bin, according to Pr. C. J Drake, entomologist, Iowa State college, In case the new grain must be stored with the old, Inspect the old grain be- fore using the bin. If it is Infested vith the weevil, treat with carbon bi sulphide at the rate of one pound of chemical to 100 bushels of grain. If the grain is less than four feet deep, put the chemical in shallow pans on top of the grain; otherwise, pour It flown through the grain in pipes. About 24 hours’ fumigation in a tightly closed bin is sufficient to kill the unwelcome boarder. Ground Feeds for Hens A good mash, containing only 17 per cont of meatserap, for breeding and laying hens of general purpose breeds, has been developed by the United States Department, of Agriculture. The remainder of the protein In the mash ta contained In vegetable form nnd the 83 per cent of ground oats and bran gives the desired bulk. The mash seems to be particularly good In rals tng the hatchability and fertility of eggs. The more stimulating rations seem to cause an overfat condition, Handle Moist Corn Carefully Corn which contains much moisture must be handled very carefully. It should not be put in plles or stored In guch a manner that the ears touch each other, Hang the ears separately in a loft that ls well ventilated and where the temperature will not reach freezing. Even If not of tie best, using early selected seed of a strain known to be good will be safer than having ta buy seed ‘of unknown adaptation and productiveness Much Headway Made Against Animal T. B. Work of Eradication Going on Quite Satisfactorily. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) The work of eradicating tubercu- losis from the cattle herds of the country has been going forward so | satisfuctorily in recent years that it | is predicted by those in charge of the work of the United States Depart ment of Agriculture that within eight | Years it Is probable that as many ag 30 states many be free of the plague. | This wii permit of the consolidation | of the veterinary forces so that work | may be carried on more rapidly in the remaining states where the extent of Infection Is greater. The system: atic plan of eradication has been go ing on in earnest since 1917. According to figures compiled from reports received by the department from field forces in the various states, about 33 per cent of the cattle In the country are tuberculous. In many of the states, of course, the infection is much more extensive. The progress made In the work dur ing the fiscal year terminating June 30, 1024, was greater than in any pre vious year. The accredited herds In creased from 28.520 to 48,273. A bet ter Indication of progress, however, | was the extension of the plan whereby areas, such as counties, have been cleaned up In one whirlwind cam paign. In the past year the number of counties adopting this plan In creased from 198 to 317. During the fiseal year 1024 than 5,000,000 cattle were tested. The prospects are, from présent indica tions, that this record will be exceed ed by more than a million during the current fiscal year. more | .3 Improvement in Quality Assists Value of Lambs Most of the sheep In South Caroling show a decided lack of breeding and care, which means that in order to put a first-class product on the market some improvements must be made These Improvements require very little expense and labor, advises E. (. God bey, associate animal husbandman, ip making suggestions slong this line These of pure hred rams will make more improvement in the appearance of the flocks than any other one thing These rams can be put on the farm af from $30 to $50 per head. At the pres ent time, a great number of scrub year. These rams have very poor mut ton conformation and a light wool covering, and in many cases they are closely refated to some of the ewes This haphazard method of breeding has resulted In sheep that are long legged and narrow and shallow bodled | Their wool is also short, coarse and | open, which makes a poor quality | product for the market. One cross with a pure bred ram will make » marked change in the appearance and | weight of the lambs, Save the ewe | lambs and breed them after they are a | year old. Buy n new ram or trade | with a neighbor, : Plain System of Poultry Accounts Is Important A definite record of expenditures and receipts is one of the greatest needs of Without it, the pouitryman is hardly able to determine | ry ty In Farmers’ Bulletin 1 Just is | sued, the United States Department of | Agriculture gives a simple system of | poultry accounts by which the neces | gary records can be easily kept. This system may be used either by the | poultry keeper who has a small flock | or by the commercial poultryman, i A study of his records kept according { to this system will enable the poultry man to determine which parts of the operation of the farm are profitable | and where the costs are too much. The | actual equipment necessary and the amount of feed required for the opera tion of a commercial poultry farm are also given, Copies of Farmers’ Bulletin 1427 Poultry Accounts, may be had free of charge upon application to the Depart | ment of Agriculture, Washington, D. C Continue to eull your poultry flock, : . 0» Only good farm land can produce good income. . "0p Clean up and burn all dead and de caying plants. Keep all vegetables gathered to en courage fruiting, - . . Farming without legumes Is like writing checks without making de posits, . & » Pick out the live stock which Is to be shown at the falr and give It plenty of attention, ‘ . 8 » Farm surveys show that our farm life is still too largely one of drudgery for men and women, . * » Our future lack of timber will not he due to lack of timber land, but to the lack of timber sense, a * » In spite of the slur, “ns dirty as n pig,” hogs need and ke sanitary quar ters and pay good dividends on the cost of such quarters, Don't Forget Cuticura Talcum When adding to your tollet requisites, An exquisite face, skin, baby and dust- ing powder and perfume, rendering other perfumes superfluous, You may rely on it because one of the Cuticura Trio (8Boap, Ointment and Talcum), 25¢ each everywhere—~—Advertisement, Result of Explosion “So Jim Is teaching his wife to drive the ear. How are they getting along?” “Oh, pretty well; but [ understand it Reeps him busy the rest of the day apologizing for the things he sald to her during the lesson.” important to All Women Readers of This Paper Swamp-Root a Fine Medicine Thousands upon thousands of women have kidney or bladder trouble and never suspect it, Women's complaints often prove to be nothing else but kidney trouble, or the result of kidney or bladder disease, If the kidneys are not in a healthy con. to become diseased. You may suffer pain in the back, head- ache and loss of ambition. Poor health makes you nervous, irritable may be despondent; it makes any one so. But hundreds of women claim that Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, by restoring health to the kidneys, proved to be just the | remedy needed to overcome such condi- | tions, | Many send for a sample bottle to see what Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver | and bladder medicine will do for them. | ly enclosing ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & | Co., Binghamton, N. Y., you may receive | sample size bottle by parcel post. You | ean purchase medium and large size bottles | at all drug stores. Advertisement, i i King of Mountains | Mount Everest 18 neariy as high as | the combined heights of Mount Cook | (the highest mountain In New Zea- | land). Fuji-Yama (the highest in Ja- | pan), and Ben Nevis (the highest In | the British isles), Hall's Catarrh Medicine is a Combined | Treatment, both | local and internal, and has been success | ful in the treatment of Catarrh for over | forty years. Sold by all druggists, Frequent Companions Tourist—The stork would seem to | be the only animal that ever visits this | Native—Wrong, stranger, makes its calls, Sweet Relish Cutsup Chill Ssuce Preserves Mince Meat Mayonnaise Dressing 1000 Island Dressing Pork snd Beans Peanut Butter Prepared Mustard Grape Juice Fruit Salad Pineapple Cling Peaches Sliced Peaches Apricots Pears Loganberries Red Raspberries Strawberries Blackberries Cherries Beets Red Kidney Beans Lims Beans Asparagus Tips Com Temstoes Peas Hominy Pumpkin Stringless Beans Sweet Potatoes Saver Kraut Spinach Salmon Milk QUALITY J CHICAGO Detective Camera A pocket camera shaped like a small for who the use desire lesigned especially of detectives, others to obtain photographs without the knowl. edge of the subjects. A dummy lens at of a field glass or end resembles that Thus the user is one able » sible line of vision, contained in what eyepiece. The camera can to than a yard or to and uses plates or film, appears to be the he focused legs “infinity.” People like to be asked what they are crying about. They'll tell, If you tense ‘em. Established 1853 NEW YORK PITTSBURGH ttention! Homeseekers Low round trip fares, five or more on one ticket, from Washington, D C, TO THE Tickets sold on first a 1924, inclusive. Return lim Splendid opportunities for money-making srchards, dairy, trock and genera! farms af iow cost. Home and factory sites. Long cred seasons. Short, mild winters markets Write: J, C. WILLIAMS Manager Development Service Washingten, D. C. SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM g - nt m manufacturer at a big saving. gin long combed wool Write for free Many beautiful shades and heather mixigres B0c per 4-on skein: $200 p Postage paid on all orders. CONCORD BTED MILLE, Dept. 479, West Concor Good W. N. U, BALTIMORE, NO. 40.1924 into their s stand the gaff. for USKIDE Heel. 4