“Bayer” - Insist! Colds Headache Pain Lumbago Neuralgia Rheumatism Sr = Accept only a Bayer ackage whichcontains proven oven directions Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manu facture of Aonoaceticacidester of Sallcylicacid Britain’s Motor Vehicles Great Britain has 1,242,000 motor vehicles, according to the latest fig- ures announced by the ministry of transport. This number cludes 474.- 000 private cars, 441,000 motorcycles, 210,000 commercial motors and 54,000 taxicabs and omnibuses, The occasional use of Roman Eye Balsam at night will prevent and relieve tired eyes and eye strain. 372 Pearl 8t., N, Y. Adv. Trace Movements of Birds Two hundred volunteer observers are now assisting the United States biological survey in tracing the migra- tory movements of hirds throughout the country.— Science Service, Why That Bad Back? Is backache keeping you upset? Feel all tired out——s0 nervous an os ae you can hardly keep ing? Then look to vour kidneys! J kidpeys rid the body of poisonous waste. But if they la impurities accumulate and poison t ve whole system. Then one is apt to suffer backache, stabbing pains, headaches, dizziness, and other annoy- ing kidney irregularities. If your kid- neys are sluggish, help them with a diuretic. Use Doan's Pills. They are praised the world over. Ask your neighbor! . » - A Virginia Case Mrs. H A. Camp- bell Magnol lia Ave, Buena Vista, says -y felt erable from sharp pains darted across the small of my back. I had terrible head- aches and just had to stop work. My kidneys were dis- ordered and I knew something had to be done. I began taking Doan's Pllls and one box relieved me.” DOAN’S "&?® STIMULANT DIURETIC TO THE KIDNEYS Foster-Milbum Co.. Mig. Chem. Buffalo, N. Y. which ‘Severe Headache and Consti- pation Relieved Over Night “After a serious {lines 1 became stipated snd suffered from awful tos Bah. One day | bought a box of Beecham’s and found ¢ il x them on going to bed 1 would feel fine in the morning. Oe have a headache now, rs old and have taken Beech jor 2 ears.” . C, Staub, Bethlehem, Pa. For aE SAMPLE ~—write B. F. Allen Co., 417 Canal Street, New York Buy from your druggist in 28 and Soe boxes For comsripation, biliowsmess, elt hay headaches and other digestive ailments take Beecham's Pitts ples, blackheads, freckles, blotches or other skin eruptions, your blood and skin neod the purifying and healing effects of this tried old remedy. + Physicians agree that sulphur ia one of the best and most effective b urifiers known to science. Hancock Bn Compound is the most efficacious way to use and benefit from Sulphur, Asa lo tion, it soothes and heals; taken inter. nally, it gets at the root of the trouble. 60¢ and $1.20 at your druggist's, If he cannot supply you, send his name and the price in stamps and we will send you & bottle direct. Hancock Liquip Surrnun COMPANY Baltimore, Maryland Haseoek Swuiphur Compound (vintment - $00 and toe ~~ for wee with the Liquid Compound, using the remedy that has helped thousands of sufferers. 25 cents and $1.00 at druggists. If unable to direct ALONG LIFE’S TRAIL ARB ARAR RNR RAR RRRRR RRR RERES By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK Dean of Men, University of Illinois. FFF (©, 1928, Western Newspaper Union.) THE LOUD VOICE HEN Solomon gave utterance to the bon mot that “A soft an- swer turneth away wrath,” he was making no personal reference to Mrs, Tobias. She had what Is known as a “carrying She could readily have addressed the Democratic con- vention without the use'of an ampi- filer, and could have been heard as easily as William Jennings, himself. She really had no need to employ a telephone when engaging in a conver: sation with her remote neighbors, Whenever she did call that instrument into use, If her windows were open, all the people within four blocks could hear her quite as distinctly as the person at the other end of the line. It Is true that nature sometimes plays us false, and starts us out into the world with harsh or high-pitched voices, that irritate people and get on their nerves and give an indication of lack of training and refinement. The loud voice is temperamental in pretty large degree, however, just as the tem- per is. It can be trained, modified, brought under control, and made to act properly. The loud #oice suggests Ir- ritation, lack of poise, the absence of self-control. Whenever Tolliver became angry or distressed, or when he was surprised by something untoward or unlooked- voice” ous. If he ran out of gusoline when driving his car, or lost a collar-button when getting ready for dinner, one of his clerks come in late to office, he began. No one paid attention to him usnally. His tones were so common as to have emphasis, and so people after as strained and out of balance. was one of the He and his the no set hii a while and wenk unre Coleman most men I big voice and welllm When be spoke over the teleplione it was in a natural tone, if the other was in the room When unexpected ha and quiet and self-possessed. who knew him could easily tell was angry, for then his volce even lower nnd er restrained than in ordinary One feit the power #8 one the in a big car throttied impressive when tive ever knew, was ealt low ited man the as with him ppened, he was On: when he be came more versation strength strained power down. He was he was quietest became angry, low, and we all self and the situation in hand quiet con and there, feels most Coleman's voice was Solomon was right, a soft answer does turn away wrath, voice gets us nowhere, and a loud NICKNAMES ICKNAMES are as taxes. They are a protest against the bad judgment of parents who start their children the pame that indicates neit nor personality. You boy out weigh by the world her charac can start your into name of Reginald or Percy thing the first or college he characterized. Mrs. Mason day he goes to school comes home properly bated nicknames, and when her frst-and-only-born arrived she named him Wilbur, and deigned to call him anything else or to let anyone else do so. Wilbur was blue-eyed nosed and frecklefaced and haired and wide-mouthed. He sturdy body and a permanent and he could play baseball, if not as well as Babe Ruth, at least well enough to skin all the fellows of his age. “Hello Mike,” the leader of the gang called to him the moment he stuck his face inside the playground at school, and Mike he was from that time on through grade school and high school and college, and still Is today though he is president of one of the largest corporations in the Northwest, and the name fits him today as well as it did then, Nicknames often suggest a physical characteristic as Fatty, and String, and Curly, and Sawed-off, Sometimes they show temperamental qualities, as Pep- per, and Smiley, and Speedy. Often without any special reason a boy's name Is changed simply because [It does not seem to fit him properiy. My two roommates in college were christened William and George in in- fancy, but for some reason, which 1 do not now recall, we always called William, Jimmy; and George went as regularly by the name of Pete. It would have seemed ridiculous to have called them anything else, When Swett came to college he was at once called Perspiration, but this proved too cumbersome for the under graduate tongue, and was soon short ened to Perse. I supposed for years that his real name was Percy and was so accosted. Wyre we always called Barb, Sudbrink, Suds, which was after wards changed to Soapy. There is something human and per sonal and friendly in a nickname, There Is something wrong with a fel low whom no one has ever nicknamed. He Isn't quite a democrat; he lacks a little of being a good fellow. He seems aloof from the crowd. He hasn't quite sold himself to bis constituency and stub- had a Managing Trees Club Members Being Taught How to Handle Pine Wood Lots on Farm. (Prepared by the United Btates Departgent of Agriculture.) Club boys in New Hampshire have demonstrated through a junior exten- slon forestry project that trees may be looked upon and managed as a crop if given attention under the direction of a forestry expert. A report re- seived by the United States Depart- ment of Agriculture stutes that club boys are being taught the management of pine wood lots through handling a quarter of an acre up to an acre on the family farm, received with enthusiasm and served its purpose very effectively. It consists of two general types of ac tivity—planting and thinning. Some- times the latter work Is referred as improvement cutting, or weeding. Different Cuttings. It was found necessary to emphasize and call attention of club members Lo cuttings in- structions, and to prepare definite both written and oral, each type. Each lot presents differ- ent conditions, and the solution of problems which require a personal visit of the junior extension agent. a forestry specialist can be the extension staff, The boys who take part in the tree planting division are expected to plant least a fourth of an acre between and June 1 this year. The of the trees, pumber 1025 member is to report the of trees living on October 15, Improvement Cutting. Improvement cutting deals three groups of trees--young stands under ten years of and thirty over thirty in the first group group from with pine age, those years ol fife The ob) YEeRrs overtopping centrate gv trees, th of the crease the and the stand. Thirty-one boy rolled in the nnd set of these land, reservations, and out over 13.000 seedlings Some were planted by boys on town gome on thers on Reveral The planting ular support lot lot farm wood for the home led thinning more pop- than To thie Ro enrol work recel and public pr management proj a start ciety for the Protection of New Hamp Forests has offered generous prizes a state and county hoys % ed al Alke won phase ect money for and the Six counties have entered, a fresh impetus Is being given junior forestry work. The contest will until next October, of Six Million Annually The tuberculin testing is now going forward at pually, sceording to a recent statement of the bureau of animal Industry, United States Department of Agricul Figures for the last six months of 1924 show that under the co-operative 26 cattle. This rate of testing was a noticeable increase over that for the preceding six months, veterinarians, based on the grad volume of testing, in- from six and a half to try dicate that the fiscal year ending June 30, This is In comparison with about five and a third million during the fiscal year 1024. ing Always Give Plenty of Green Feed to Goslings Goslings at first might have stale bread and milk, sprinkled with sand. lots of water and green food such as grass or sprouted oats with the hulls cut off. The hulls should not be given to the young goslings., After the first three or four days, they will take a mixture of four parts corn: meal, three parts bran, one part red dog, and after the first week add & per cent of high-grade beef seraps or mix with milk, always mixing a lit tle fine sand with this ration. Feed them three or four times a day at first, and three times a day later. Al ways give plenty of green food and all the water they will drink. Mixture of Field Peas and Oats Good for Hay One of the most satisfactory annual hay crops In the northern states where the climate is comparatively cool and the moisture Is abudant, is a mix- ture of oats and Canadian field peas. The field pea being a legume adds to the protein compounds in the feed and the mixture comes more nearly taking the place of clover than most other emergency crops. The crop can be grown in all of the states north of the Ohio river, and In the highest altitudes of the western states. Both oats and pens grow best on a cool, moist clay loam soil but they will grow on al most any soll that Is moist and well supplied with plant food, Swine Production of Big Importance Necessary Feeds Should Be Considered First. (Prepared by the United Siantes Department of Agriculture.) In utilizing farm wastes aod In con verting the concentrates ralsed on the farm Into a marketable product, the hog Is by far the most valuable farm anlmal, points out the bureau of ani mal Industry, Unlted States Depart ment of Agriculture, In its new Furmers' Bulletin 1487, Swine Pro duction. All regions of the United Stutes may be considered suitable for raising hogs. The feeds used to grow and fatten hogs can be produced to # greater or less extent in practically every part of the country. Without hog, profits in the big cattie-fat- tening industry of the Central West would be jeopardized. The feeds necessary fatten hogs should be given first the question of tion of a farm for hog ralsing is being contemplated. Feeds can he more abundantly In some than in others. Other factors, such markets, climate and quality of soll also should be studied. It is best but a few sows, As in number a care and con to grow when loca produced § 3 1OCHiities determine duce most what crops It wiil successfully and how and hogs fit into the gen eral plan for that particular farm, It Is always advisable to use pure Much are lost by starting sows and bullding of the berd by the use boars, Coples of the bulletin may be had free, as long as the supply lasts, the United States Department of Agri Washington, D. ( Scab Is Cause of pro and money up of bred from Apple pple seab api is one of the most Pe € rl i “% 4 appie diseases In nnsyil recognized state, says a new bul arison of (disease tates Departs Ww a reduction due 1« § VANIA aR ne it further This means an average redu of state for the Apple axitic fongus which on $4 048% ction apples of over two n in hols illion Wr year this ur years scab Is caused by lives winter the dead leaves the trees. While It has long been known n sprays, if time 1 and that cerita Rp i in the proper manner, to protect the and fruit against Infection by this fungus, the efficient and practical materials and the best time to use them present a problem upon which the station for six years experiments have 20 mercial ag well as station orchards in and one orchard each and Chester different serve leaves time in During this heen conducted con the experiment Centre county, involving over and 111 material two hundred separte plots different combinations as to and time of application. The results of the various sprays and dusts are given in the bulletin go that growers interested in the con- trol of apple scab may easily get the iatest Information on this vital sub. FARM.NOT Forest fire protection costs and saves much, - - * little Weeds are weeds and should be treated as such. » - * Sweet corn needs the germination test fully as much as field corn, this spring. *® * » Plant sound seed in a well prepared seed bed to be assured of a good crop stand. » * - Pumping water by hand is all right when a man needs exercise and has plenty of time. - . » The potato Is a staple crop which can profitably be grown in either a large or small orchard. - » » Pity the little chicks and keep their hover warm. They'll repay you in eggs when they Tow up. . * The garden Is no longer a plaything, but a very valuable ald in producing the food supply of a farm, . = » Proper spraying of the early Irish potato crop has increased the yield 74 bushels per acre, according to tests made by Dr. R. W, Lelby of the North Carolina experiment station, ' - » . Rape should be drilled on plowed ground at the rate of six to eight pounds per acre. It grows well dur ing the cool periods of the spring and is In shape for feeding In June, It can also be seeded between the corn rows nt the last cultivation and makes i an excellent crop for fall forage, Cuticura Scothes Baby Rashes That iteh and burn, by hot baths of Cuticura Soap followed by gentle anointings of Cutlcura Ointment Nothing better, purer, sweeter, espe- cially if a little of the fragrant Cutl cura Talcum is dusted on at the fin ish, 20e each. —Advertisement, Forgiveness as an Art If you do It him to in New forgive a friend be sure you which permits Don Marquis Tribune, with a manner himself Hers forgive Yori ld SWAMP-ROOT FOR KIDNEY AILMENTS There ir only stands ont pre-eminent as for curable ailments of liver and bladder Dr highest one medicine that really a medicine the kidneys Kilmer's Swamg the for the the stands Teas } remedy t house to he just Bands upon By Root Catine 1 mig Wamp BOON realized Nn gentie, healin Mart trea g vege tment at Bold at all med; ones drug stores in um and large However, great preparatic Dr Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, ) for a sample bottle and mention bottles of two sizes this Airplane Operation Cost It costs 2400 to operate depending on type of plane d, Unit estimates show, — Science RESINOL Soothing and Healing ClearsAway Blotches $3000 a vear an airplane Tiss 1] Stutes § Rervice Whiskered Strawberries . } I GET FEELING WELL AGAIN From Mother Nature's storehouse we have gathered the roots, barks and herbs which are compounded, under the famous Tanlac formula, to make Tanlac. This great tonic and builder has brought health and strength to millions. If your body je weak and under- nourished, if you can’t sleep or eat, have stomach trouble or burning rheumatism, just you see how quickly Tanlac can help you back to health and strength. Most people notice a big change for the better after the very first bottle. They have better appetites and more pep. The sparkle comes back to their dull eyes and color to their faded cheeks. Don’t delay taking Tanlae an- other precious day. Stop at your druggist’s now and get a bottle of this, the greatest of all tonics. Take Faniae fae Vawsiohie Pills TANLAC EXPERIENCE OF | Weak, Blue, Discouraged — | Relieved by Taking Lydia | E.Pinkham’s Medicine Cincinnati, Ohio. — “1 was nervous and could not sleep, had erying spells and the blues, * and didn’t care if 1 1 lived or died. My right side was very bad and I had backache and a weakness, | read about your med. icines in the papers and wrote for fur- ther information, I took Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound, Blood Medicine and Liver | Pills, and used Lydia E. Pinkham’s Sanitive Wash. 1 have had good re- sults in every way and am able to dc my work again and can eat anything that comes along. My friends tell me how well I am looking.”’ — Mrs. F.K.CorieLs, 129 Peete Street, Cincinnati, Ohio, Willing to Answer Letters Philadelphia, Pa,—*'1 have used your medicines for nervousness and a rub- down system with a severe weakness, After taking Lydia E, Pinkhams V etable Com ipound and using Lydia Pinkham’s Sanitive Wash I feel like a different woman and have gained in every way. lam willin toanswerletters asking about the medicines.” — Dora Hout, 2649 8S. 11th St., Philade iphia, Pa. Sold by druggists everywhere, KEEP EYES WELL! Dr. Thompson's Bye Water will » on #ihen them, At Sroee ste roy i River Troy. KY. 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Bave cowily doctor Billa 75 prescriptions with full siructions successiuily prescribed by an minent European specialist Tonics, Purgs- { tives, DMarrhea Mistures, Fever & Cold Cures i Stimulants Sooithing & Cough Miztores, {| Mouth Washes, Tooth Powders, Garglon Lin. ents, Lotions, Olntments. $1. stamped env BE A BARRY. Box 283 Norristown Pa. ! Family Remedies, Ite all the Flies nuisance is unnecessary. Miss., sick, but no results. to the air. Every It should be used to on hand-—and blow or scatter it N were dead.” Bee Brand Insect Powder Will not spot or stain, In red, sifting top cans, &t your groter's or it's couse. hold sizes ine insects. Keep a can always wherever insects may be hidden.