For sleeping rooms— formal parlors and reception halls — dining room and living room — for the library — and for public buildings. Properly applied it won't rub off. Ask your dealer for Ala- bastine Colorchart, or write Miss Ruby Brandon, Alabas- tine Co., Grand Rapids, Mich. Alabastine—a powder in white and tints. Packed in 5-pound packages, ready for use by mixing with cold or warm water. Full directions on every package. Apply with an ordi- nary wall brush. Suitable for all interior surfaces—plaster, wall board, brick, cement, or canvas. Scripture Goes Post Free Under a new law and regulntion of the Post Office department Holy Rerip- ture manuscript for the blind may be sent free if it is be given to the blind, and if it is be sold to the blind the postage is only 1 cent a pound Instead of the regular rates 10 fo reale on going to morning Adv if your eyes smart or feel Eye Balsam, applied relieve them by New Gun-Tilting Plan Thomas A guns he elevated tilting the an somewhat like the lateral whie'. submarines the that by Edison on with nroposes battleships« vessels apparatus tin or rud in diving der nse or coming ‘» surface, Say ‘Bayer’ - Insist! For Colds Headache Pain Lumbago Neuralgia Rheumatism afe— which contains proven directions Handy “Bayer” hoxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists Aspirin Is the trade mark of Bayer Mann. facture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid Indispensabl As? safe, soothing and healing dressing for cuts, scalds, burn Accept only a Bayer package CHESEBROUGH MPG. COMPANY —— 17 Btate Street New York “1 take grest plessure in what 5 Core Dera, telling you “1 persons who suffer in this manner wi oe dll peru to try them," i Mies, Edna Dean, Providence, R. I. Take Beecham’ wick B. F. Allen Co., 417 Canal Street, New York Buy from your druggist in 28 and $0e boxes So Sooth d Heali for Sinand Scalp _ a Pa a. W. N. U, BALTIMORE, NO. 19.1926, $2 THE KITCHEN ACABINET Wausiers Aewaspsper UBion, There is so little rest! There Is such an unreasoning passion for activity, And so we skim the sur- face of all things; we never look down into their depths and see the power of help and culture which they might contain. — Philips Brooks, EVERYDAY FOODS (EL Aude, Nearly everybody will eat and en- joy a good meat ple, If It is well sea- soned and properly baked. In a small fam ily there are always left over meats that may be used in such a ple. For chicken add the gravy, a ttle thin cream or milk to the bits of meat, cover with baking powder bis cult and bake. Be sure that the chicken is boll ing hot when putting on the biscuit. as this will insure them from being soggy, or soaked. A bit of chopped onion, parsley or a bit of a clove of garlic may be added 10 a meat muking it more ap- petizing. Dutch Pot Pie.—Cut into dice one half pound of smoked hum, cook slow ly until well-heated. then add six sliced potatoes, three onions sliced; cook a few minutes with the ham, then add three pints of boliing water, Cover with biscuits made from butter milk and baking powder, as they ure especially light and flaky. California Eggs.—Have eight hard cooked lengthwise, ['arboll the tips of a bunch of asparagus. But- ter a baking dish, put the eggs into it cut-side up, cover with the asparagus, then add the remaining eggs, yolks down. Prepare a white sauce, using cream and the liquor from the as paragus, VPour this over the dish, sprinkie with seasoning nnd well-but- tered crumbs and bake fifteen minutes Breakfast tomatoes lowing: ple, egEs cut Tomato.—~Hollow and fil Drop a raw tomato, season with and cover with two Add a bit of worcestershire sauce to each, skewer the bacon with tooth- plcks and bake In a hot oven twenty out with the fol L244 each salt and pepper slices of bacon small nto minutes, If you have a little ginger bread left over, or any plain cake, steam it and Serve for dessert. flour, one-half cuap- ful of bolling water, a grating of nut two tablespoonfuls of vine before serving. Add a teaspoonful of sugar to pens or stewed meats; It adds tc Variety of Good Things. Every little while one for a recipe short It Is too rich for food, but will be Joyed occasionally; It nice served with a of tea. nskw bread some for Scotch en cap Take flour, ter, sugar two pounds of one pound of but one-half pound of and two beaten of grated lemon peel roll one-half inch thick. Prick a fork and bake in n hot oven Breakfast Toast.--Melt three table of butter in a frying pan into one-fourth-inch slices Lay these four eggs bread melted butter. Beat Cook until well- browned on the bottom, then turn Serve hot. Arabian Ambrosia-This sounds good enough for any occasion, but is a mos: simple und easy-to-prepare dessert. Measure two cnpfuls of choice dates, wipe them carefully and remove the pits. Cut the dates into quarters and combine with one cupful of walnut meats coarsely chopped; in sherhet spoonful of marshmallow with a or top cream, glasses ; whipped cream. Fruitines—Beat two eggs and add one and one-half cupfuls of sugar, one-half cupful of softened butter and n teaspoonful of salt. Soak one cup- ful of raisins In two tablespoonfuls of orange or any frult juice for an hour, then put through the ment grinder. Mix and sift three and one- half cupfuls of pastry flour: add the fruit juice, one teaspoonful of soda. two tablespoonfuls of milk, one tea- spoonful of cinnamon and one-half teaspoonful of cloves. Mix all to gether and beat well; add the raisins and drop by teaspoonfuls on a baking sheet, two Inches apart. Bake eight to ten minutes. This recipe makes ahout fifty cookies. Chop Suey.—Take one-half pound of ean veal, cut into pieces, two cupfuls of celery, one-half enpful of onions eut fine, one can of bean sprouts and three tabiespoonfuls of Chinese sauce, Heat the mazola, cook the ment In it until Jone but not brown, add the celery and onions and cook until well-heated through, but not soft. Add meat stock or water from the bean sprouts {0 cook the vegetables. To one cup- ful of broth add two tablespoonfuls of cornstarch to mako the gravy ; sen: son well, add the chop suey sauce and serve hot. Newtie Mapwere in Hatching Geese Machines Have Gradually Come Into Use Where Fowls Are Raised. For many years after Incubators came into general practice they were not used for the hatching of geese, but they have gradually come Into use where geese ure raised In large num- bers. The generul requirements for successful incubation of hen's eggs nre needed In hatebing geese eggs. in addition the majority of operators be- lleve that they require more drying out In the early part of the hatch and more cooling than hen's eggs. Required Temperature, The temperature required does not need to be so high but no chauge eEEs are given more cooling. During the lust part of the hatch it Is gen erally necessary to supply moisture. Some rdvocate dipping the eggs, others sprinkling and others supplying the moisture to the machine. One of the main reasons for the need of addi tional moisture at that time Is so that the shell and membranes will not stick to the gosiing when It is trying to get out of the shell Some adjustments will need to made In the thermometer ns the thick- higher In the incubator and therefor in a slightly higher temperature unless an allowance is made for it. ip height will usually make a ence of a degree In the temperature, Hatch Slow Under Hens. Guslings will hatch out une der hens or in an incubator than under geese, However, nitention paid to proper cooling of & proper supply of should he no trouble In gen cessful batch, The beginner will so times become uneasy over this dela getting oul of the shell to help the goslings be done except in where one or more goslings are than the then extreme slower where in and there the moisture ing a suc ne. in tempt This should not and a ocrasional much hatching should iater others In care be and stopping at the least indication of bleeding. Usually the bird that eannot the goslings are given plenty of time and are supplied with ture so that the material of the shell will not stick to the body, the big ma- Mois On the Eastern market buyers bidding from 30 to 35 cents per pound CH pons This up a market for breeders of heavy Capons are making strong com petition for turkeys on of the markets on account of the high qua! ment. consumers want a larger bird than the opens many Then, too, most farms than turkers grow rapidly and the caponizing op- is not difficult to learn. The struments. The cheaper sets will do A capon will asually grow two pounds heavier than if left in the nat. ural state. The selling price Is con. siderably stronger so that the total re turns are generally from three to four times that of ordinary cockerels sold "here does not seem to be much danger of an oversupply of capons, so that It forms a market outlet that a good many breeders should seriously consider. Fowls Need Protein to Keep on Producing Eggs Many farm flocks get little or no protein in the winter and as a result are overfat and make a poor produc. tion. Farm hens are often given a whole carcass to Yeed in one month and ng meat the next, As a result they are thrown out of condition and often are poisoned by spoiled meat, There are three ways in which ani- mal protein ean be secured. A steady supply Is essential. Rabbits or dead farm animals when available can be cooked and ground or chopped up, dried and put in a box where hens can eat when they want, Skim milk or buttermilk can be put to no more prof- itable use on the farm than in produc: Ing winter eggs. Where a box of meat or a supply of milk are available all of the time, it may not be necessary to put meat scrape In the mash. but If there is a shortage of these it will pay to buy meat scraps. Road Pushes on Campaign for Efficiency and Peace Roads rule the world-—-not kings nor congresses, not courts nor constables, not ships nor soldiers. The road Is the only royal line in a democracy, the only legislature that never changes, the only court that never sleeps, the only army that never quits, the first nid to the redemption of any nation, the exodus from stagnation in any so clety, the call from savagery In any tribe, the high priest of prosperity, after the order of Malchisedec, with. out beginning of days or end of life, The rond ls umpire In every war, and when the new map Is made, it simply pushes on ite great campaign of help, hope, bretherhood, efficiency and Pure Bred Animals Not Prone to T. B. One Breed Is as Susceptible as Another. (Prepared by the United Btates Department of Agriculture.) There Is no relation between the breeding of cattle and their suscep tibility to tuberculosis, One breed is as susceptible as another, gpd grades are ag likely to become infected as pure hreds, These ure conclusions of veterinary specialists of the bureau of animal in dustry, United States Department Agriculture, based on several experience In eradicating tuberculosis. In support of the con clusion the bureau veterinarians have complied a large number of statistics arranged the unimals years according and whether pure breds or grades From July 1. 1921, to April 1 tuberculin tests were applied to 1.424, 302 pure bred cattle, cent found During the same grade cuttle were test, of which 4.8 per 10 the Various hreeds nre he period subjected cent were to tuberculous to reacted the ta breeds been the specialists representing various have able no that more susceptible or resistunt than any apply 1 evidence any These conclusions large groups the representing entire country It that certain more infection than management of cattle, ing and selling without is localities but of buy others, extent paying animals that sistance of the the principal the degree of infection, parently has nothing to extent of tubercnlosis factors do with Set Strawberries Early As a rule It I= best to set out straw them good care They give give Season, and the crop of frult planting, though less fruit for first crop, likely to be small In the fall ito ciover hay their maximum the second season after they will give more or several after the the berries after the ground Is about ready freeze a mulching of bean ind give winter and or some other k fra sextiid BW annie straw should we applied, to some protection frult The mulch should not during the time bearing applied very clean at be heavy. however Strawberry plants may also be set August If plants ean and provided ground not foo dry to get them started August planting will not give ns much the next year after setting will the plants set out in the rpring in good secured the Many farmers forget their potato the ordinary cuitivators. By this time that they will be a trouble throughout the season and If there rains, the soil has hecome hard and crusted. To prevent this, and to start the young plants off right. our best growers are cultivating their potatoes with an ordinary weeder or a spike tooth harrow with the teeth Inclined backward s0 as to prevent dragging out of the seed pleces and later the young plants, This practice Is usually seen across the fleld. when the only deep close cultivation is given Price Quite Important in Cattle Feed Venture The cost of gains alone does not de termine profit In cattle feeding. Sell. ing price 1s equally important. Selling price is determined very largely by finigh, hence the problem of the feeder is to produce as much galn and as rapid gains as possible as cheaply as possible. Most gains cost more than is necessary, but on the other hand the cheapest gains are not necessarily the most profitable. This emphasizes the complexity of the cattie-feeding business and the absolute necessity of using definite Information relative to the comparative feeding value of dif. ferent feeds and how they may be combined to make the most profit in a cattle-feeding venture. drm Hope springs eternal; so do weeds. Plan to use one to kill the other. ds The radish is one of the old stand bys of the home gardener. r » » . The best time to plan the attack against insects is while they are In winter quarters. - * - Barley generally produces more pounds of grain per ucre than any other small grain erop, . * » A tractor that Is properly broken In will wear many years longer than one fmproperly used at the smrt, » -.- 8 If it Is good enough to take prizes at the fair, it will sell well and Is good enough for foundation for future RE S587 5 AFTER HER BABY CAME Mrs. Hollister Unable To Do Her Work for Six Months Tells How Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Restored Her Health got relief. After I was well again 1 went to the doctor and he asked me { how I was getting along. 1 told him {1 was taking Lydia FE. Pinkham's { Vegetable Compound, and he said it | did not hurt any one to take it. | am | always recommending the Vegetable { Compound to others und | always | have a bottle of it on hand.” — Mrs, | Hexry Hovvisten, R. F. D. No, 1, | Box 7, Wyandotte, Michigan, Another Woman's Case St. Paul, Minnesota. — “I have g | little girl three years old and ever | since her birth 1 have suffered with { my back as if it were breaking in two, and bearing-down pains the time. I also had dizzy spells, | {had read several letters of women | in the newspapers, and the druggi | recommended Lydia E. Pinkham’s | | Vegetable Compound to my busband MRS, HENRY HOLLISTER for me. As a result of taking it WYANUOTTE, MICHIGAN | my back has stopped aching and the Wyandotte, Michigan. — “After my | awful bearing-down feeling is gone, baby was born I did not do my own | I feel stronger and Go all of my house work for six months and could hardly | work and tend to my little girl 1 take care of my own baby. I always | have also taken 1 yéia E. Pin ham’s bad a pain in my right side and it was | Liver Pills for ecns tipation. | have to bad I was getting round shoulders. | recommended these medicines to I would feel well one day and then , some of my friends and you may use feel so bad for three or four da sthat | this letter as a testimonial if you 1 would be in bed. One onde ry | wish. I will be pleased to answer mother came to see how I was, and | letters of other women if 1 can help she said a friend told her to tell me to | them by telling them whet this medi- try Lydia’ E. Pinkham’s Vegetable | cine nas done for me. *’—Mrs. Price, Compound, Eo the next day gor a | 147 West Summit Avenue, St. Paul, bottle and before it wae hal en I! Minnesota, Danger in Emotio 2 with Isub Us ar, silin Hg, RLIC INnous Money; bark withoul guestion if BUNT'S SALVE falls in the treatment of I'TCH, BOZEMA. RINGWORM TETTER or othes itebing skin diseases Pries Toe at drugeists, or direes from bE Richarts Weticies Co. Shermans. Vea SAVE YOUR EYES! Use Dir. Thompron's Brewaiesy Buy al your draggist's or 167 River, Troy, NK. Bookiel is heaven” he throb to he Your ear! aflume,” fear you presence sels mj) pave start ut how Da be Haid halr imprudent I” cureful comb.” WHY DRUGGISTS RECOMMEND 22": ni ruszmsy SWAMP-ROOT | a ERVICH 213 Griswold Detreit Washington, DD. O ——— ouse, bath, cul buildings Arres, 12 Miles From elects %Y te ¥. roon B Ire ghts. + , heat 12 y have watch : ‘ Erne. C uwmme VA ¢ wi ’ 3, VIEXXA WE WILL GIVE AWAY shacigtely y of ihe Tollowiog articles: fe pe Bundred pie toes ifuily inlatd Din. cisn's prescription er Be fwenty-inck Solid Leather Travel is a strengthening med Ra a ain Writ the ki liver and Lady's or Gentle rk nature ars druggists the Dr kidney, liver ahd interest remariatie by ares t gres maintained Kilmer's the and helps inevs, Lac intended | man's § 1 « Bulb Radio Set. A And many other inst & few hours once for full Het i “ ery wd the test of | of druggists on its | 20 No friends s wok norma "1 : & i VILL] u 0 Minneapolis. Minn, vou ciher - OF NIG OPFFORTU - eating & ‘sarge fraet + Manstes Coun. reeing to held Ht for one big profit. the profits r te ihe amount pec greed For informa- SHARP. Bex i473, BST. FLORIDA THEOLD RELIAPLE UHL HATCHERY Z==ou SEARLE Wh. By Bf . Ane = on Sin. . le 7 34-0 © 1 1t shown licine han so Be sure to get Swamp Root at once if you HAT FLORIDA, THE LAND NITIES We gre Bynd f the ¥ et and start treatment test this I nr vy we for a on address Al sure | PETERSBURG first to ten However wish at preparation send cents to r & Binghamtc Bn N.Y. bottle When writing be Co.. Lawyer Presidents of twenty-nine have been lawyers Adamses, Jefferson Jackson, Van Bu Pierce Juchanan Order from this ad. Osta) {roe Huyes, Garfield, Cleveland, | Ub Estchery, Box I. New Wasbiogton, Oblo ured * tend " Harrison. McKinley, Taft, EXCEPTIONAL SHIRT VALUE und Coolidge $250 white genuine Imported REaglish Broadeloth shirt Neckband or latest lomng- point styles, collar sitached Beautifal lus ter and custom-made. 35.66 ench, 3 for $7.80 postpaid High-clase Broadway models. Each ahirt gnarantesd or money refunded prompt iy. Send money order or check. Every shirt hae writien guarantee by this long-estab- lished New York house regarding ft and = ork ma nship Ale oney refund clans, Twenty ithe of Presidents the lison Tyler, our They nee Mae Iwo Monroe, ren, Polk, colin, Benjamin Wilson Shave With Cuticura Soap And double your razor efficiency as | well as promote skin purity, skin com- | fort and skin health. No mug no | slimy soap, no germs, no waste, no Lrri-4 ick Huon a a AE tation even when shaved twice dally. Bresdway and Deh St, New York (pe soap for all uses—shaving, bath- Fumnily Besndior, Never offered bees one ing and shampooing. — Advertisement, costly doctor bills 75 prescriptions with full ———————— | Instructions successfully prescribed by an {| eminent Buropesn specinlisg Ton Purga - tives, Diarrhea Mixtures, Fever & Cold Cures, | Stimulants, Soothing & ‘ough Miztures, ! Mouth Washes Toolh Powders Garglen, Lini. menia Lotions, Uintments. §1. stamped coy to E A BARRY, Ex 283 Nerrivtows, Va. Tap Big Electrical Supply Florence lake tunnel, thirteen and an half miles long, in the Californias Sierras, will provide electricity enough for 200.000 homes, pump water to 320,- 000 acres and run 5,000 factories. | Porter's Pain King Salve is made { with a base of pure wool fat (lanoline) combined with antiseptic, healing, pain- Indigestion produces disagreeable ard | relieving drugs. There is nothing bet- { i i sometimes alarming symptoms Wright's Indian Vegetable Pills remove symptoms and resiore digestion. 372 Pear! St. N Y. Adv. Now and Then Aiming to do right is not enough; | Fou must score an occasional hit.— Boston Transcript. ter for collar and =addle galls, cuts, scratches or bruises on horses. It quickly heals sole teats on cows, caked ndder, At your dealer's Playing Safe Gertrude—Are you married? Theodore—1 am sorry to say | am not, thank goodness American Le gion Weekly. ete A coward ie a man who knows he le wrong and refuses to admit it. ———— FT MOTHER :~ Fletcher's Cas- toria is a pleasant, harmless Substitute for Castor Oil, Pare. goric, Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups, especially prepared for Infants in arms and Children all ages. : To avoid imitations, always Jook for the signatsre of rtf Tle Broven directions on cach package Physicians everywhere recommend