WEAK, RUN-DOWN NERVOUS, DIZZY Mrs. Lee Suffered From All These Troubles, but Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound Made Her Well Terre Haute, Indiana. —*‘I was weak and run-down and in such a nervous con- dition that I could hardly do my work. 1 was tired all the time and dizzy, had no appetite and could not sleep. I tried different medicines for a year but they did not help me, Then my husband '| saw the ad. for Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound in - - the newspapers and had me takeit. I regained my strength and never felt better in my life. * It com- pletely restored me to health. I had ractically no suffering when. my baby y was born and he is very strong and healthy. 1 know that the Vegetable Compound is the best medicine a woman can take before and after childbirth for health and strength. 1would be willing to answer letters from women asking about the Vegetable Compound.” — Mrs. Wu. J. LEE, Route E, Box 648, Terre Haute, Indiana. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- und is a dependable medicine for all ese troubles. For sale by druggists everywhere. Clear Your Skin With Cuticura / Soap to Cleanse Ointment to Heal Absolutely Nothing Better The golden rule measures 12 Inches to the foot. Say ‘‘Bayer Aspirin” INSIST! Unless you see the “Bayer Cross’ on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by phy- sicians for 24 years. Si Accept only a which contains proven directions Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists Aspiria is the trade mark of Bayer Manu- facture of Mosoaceticacidester of Balleyl Take Healing i estSulphur baths be Ait home wgdngusid A Bayer package For rheumatissm, gout, eczema or hives, nothing is more beneficizl than frequent sulphur baths. You can enjoy the benefits of heal- ing sulphur baths right in your own home, and at small cost by using Hancock Sulphur Compound nature's own blood purifying and skin healing remedy — Sulphur —sci- entifically prepared to make its use most efficacious. Use it in the bath. Also use it internally and as a lotion on affected parts. 60c and $1.20 the bottle at your druggist’s. If he cannot supply you, send his name and the price in stamps and we will send you a bottle direct. Haxcocx Liquip Sunraur COMPANY Baltimore, Maryland Haneook Sulphur Compound Ointment — 80 and 00 ~ for wee with the Liquid Compound. INFLAMED EYES Use Dr. Thompeon's By swaser. un River, Troy. NF. Boo MY HYDRAULIC RAM will give constant flow walter from spring or stream to your house. No expense after Installed BO rm A, Price $5.76. 8. W. SHOUPE, FINDLAY, OHIO Green's August Flower for Constipation, indigestion and Torpid Liver Hocoesaful for 60 years 80e and 9c bottles ALL DRUGGISTS Hl TOL: STHMA ALONG LIFE’S TRAIL AUS E RATER RARRARRRTR RRR RRR. By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK Dean of Men, University of Illinois. (BE). 1925, Western Newspape' Union.) SEEING ONLY THE OBVIOUS SUPPOSE one of the main objects the person who Invented the weath- er had in mind was to furnish an easy tople of conversation, and in this he has been eminently successful. In conversation, however, the most inter esting things are those least expected, most original, and least obvious Nothing palls upon one more than to be told something he already knows, or to have his attention called to some thing upon which he has already re marked, I meet Sweeney as I am going to the office on a bright sunshiny morning, and he remarks, “It's a fine dav.” Of course it Is, and it would be only an imbecile who would not recognize the fact. During ne do not conversations, all the I was quainted with Mrs, Parrish | now recall that In our and she has the habit of fluent speech she ever gave expression to anything not perfectly obvious. If we were riding along a publie road In the spring she would call attention to the fact that a rabbit was running across the road. that the grass was turning green, that a farmer the field. or announce to me how fast 1 was driving, though the speedometer was nearer to me than to Li I recall once letting her read a let ter which had come to me from a common friend who was the winter in South America, “Did you know that Jane very siek In Buenos Alres? sl me a few days later. “And they thinking of coming home in April” Naturally I was aware of these facts, for ghey were gone into | in the letter wlich fore given her to vend The alert mind In conversation picks out the curious, the intere g. or the | previously unknown and spr it on | one first. The greatest ple re in | conversation Is not | the unsuspected, choose the thing us, and so years voenl er. are 1 some detail 1 the day be obvious the and we ton often that we is patently be fore are stupid and | dull. Nancy ous. i find ua finds no delight obvi I came home her on her knees books. “Are quired. | * “No climbing in the the other dusting house?’ 1 In you cleaning she replied, “not at all; the Matterhorn.” BEING A FOOL ton's “Saint Francis of Assisl” Whether or not the estimate which he | places upon the life and charucter of but It is at me to least, esting. say, | own humble community, who found joy in dress and In | money and In the social | which young fellows of pleasure. He liked make and, 1 presume, was as boastful of his exploits as young men are today Later, when youth and enthusiasm and | physical courage were his, he became { oa fighter and set out bravely to war | Sickness came upon him, defeat stared him in the face, and he came | back home to be made sport of, to he | called a quitter and a coward, and In | his association with the oor and the | diseased and the outcast to be called the spending activities In find a show ioduy to a fool that he became a saint, Youth is not very different turies, Youth still the street to prove to ourselves Youth is as brave and ndventurous as ger. Give him half 2 chance, and the young fellow today will rush into war without questioning himself very closely as to the justice or the impor tance of the cange le is championing With reluctance, however, will he be a fool for any cause. What youth has always found it most difficult to face is ridicule. He ean endure any. thing but laughter, and so he finds it hard to be a saint, for a saint has to be willing to be laughed at. If need be, in the defense of his principles Youth can face danger or death with. out flinching: It can endure privations and never murmur; it shrinke from peing thought a fool. Gordon had been drunk the night before and had so attracted attention that he had been arrested and had spent the night In jail. He was a good boy at heart and a couragecus one. “Why did you do It?" I asked, for 1 knew it wns not his habit “I did not want to. drink,” he ex. plained, “but the fellows would have faughed at me if IT had refused. They would have thought me yellow.” We like to be thought brave or cou mgeous, we even enjoy the comment which comes from being thought rad leal or extreme, either in conduct or dress, A good deal of satisfaction can pe derived from being a martyr, but to be laughed at, to be thought a fool, even for the sake of principle, Is too much, Only the saint can fuce that situntion, Use Soy Bean Ol Meal for Poultry New Feed Could Well Be Fed to Greater Extent Than at Present. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) With the rapid expansion of soy- farmers of that region have at thelr disposal a new poultry feed which could well be used to much greater ex- tent than is being done at present, says the United States Department of Agriculture, Poultrymen in the Pa- cific Coast states have used soy-bean oll meal for several years and consider it a most excellent feed for growth and egg production, Feed Value of Meal. A number of feeding tests at various experiment stations have shown the equal and milk when fed In wheat shorts with sweet was found quantities cracked that with corn mixed valuable feed and dne to be mended as a good vation for feeding to little chicks. One lot of chicks on recon when eight weeks old. From these tests It concluded that the bean oll meal could replace rolled oats in chick feeding. Another series of experiments showed that soy-bean oll meal with a mineral mixture Is a supplement to than was BOY. corn meal densed buttermiik for short-time gimple mineral mixture ash, limestone and To he most effective, the amount of mineral mixture to be added should be about 2 per cent Add Mineral Mixtures, The addition of to the mineral mixture prevent too great a Hens responded in these tests to the use of mineral mix- ture in a similar that of young, growing birds. The m mixture, it has been shown, | the manner to 1 1 » * 1 supplement for growth and more than 40 per cent of te, 20 parts salt, A good mineral mixt on parts bone ure is made rs « Hog Cholera Outbreak Warnings against a possible serious from three states hog market definitely pointed to save a few dol F. A. Zimmer, state veterinarian of Ohlo, points to the fact that hog chol- era runs in cycles About raiser concluded the disease reappeared the time the hog other years that disappearing, it has acute form to take a iD was in Dr. R. A. Craig of the veterinary de- the about a heavy hogs and cholera infection will become wirely Furthermore, cause fow immunized movement scattered, he of low prices, hogs juring the past two years were hreshing gangs and visitors during the fall are practice what they know infectious dis Vaccination is now generally fecog- nized as the reliable method of pre- venting cholera when properly admin. While hundreds of farmers employing a skilled, established vet- do his work for a rea. At any rate, avold the ly, but seldom Is ever heard from again. Silage and Fodder Made by Stacking Green Corn Another form of silage may be made by stacking the bundles of green corn which have been cut about 20 feet in diameter and 20 feet high. The bundles should be distributed evenly aver the surface with the butts laid to the outside? This will keep the outside higher than the center so that it will be necessary to fill in the center before the stack is completed, Thorough tramping will be beneficial, About eight inches around the outside of the stuck will spoil but as only the butts of the stalks are affected by this, the loss is not serious. The top of the stack should be kept covered with a foot or twa of straw or hay during the winter to reduce spoliage. According to the Minnesota experi mental station, stack silage cures somewhat differently from ordinary silage and has a sweet molasses odor and flavor which makes it palatable to all kinds of live stock. The results obtained with stack silage, however, have not always been satisfactory. The method 1s only suggested here as a possibility. Under many, If not mos® conditions it would seem that handling the Immatare corn as fodder would be safer, : Aid to Sanitation System for Washing Before Entering Killing Pen. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) A shower-bath system for washing hogs before they enter the killing pen was recently installed in a large pack- ing plant at Salt Lake City as a means of improving sanitary conditions about the place in general and particularly to ald In maintaining the scalding vat in a clean condition. Hogs normally are dirty and dusty, and If not thor- oughly washed before killing will carry many Impurities into the scalding vat. Maintaining the sanitary condition of the scalding vat has been one of the most troublesome problems of meat. packing plants, The shower Installed In this plant at a suggestion from Dr. E. P. Duar at Salt Lake City, consists of a battery of five water nozzles of the As the floor of the pen Is of concrete, even the fleet The practice has not only reduced sealding vat, but has also served to do awny with the dust which ordinarily arises from dirty hogs, thus protecting of the killing section establishment from infection and irritation of the nose and throat, the employees of the welgh the and slight operation, expense of Officials of ture state that the practice of advisable In federal supervision or not, Flour Middlings Useful Flour middiings and those products, standard middling feed series of flour, are we, according to a new bulletin by A. McCarty and red-dog good ae t reported in a Ferrin and M, While these by-products of mill have long been been no fed to pigs, have very definite guides ¥, rT ntelligent mele or { use any tion among wr determining whether {it one of them. It Is that the bull reason eotin. whit distribution, has been is n the tions pasture; the o same Ingred either standar or meet the addition thie wheat by-product. As 6 result of the tests the bulle says that It is profitable to subst corn and tankage fed to growing p provided the per mill feed does than corn. not Cost more Growing hay tility of the soil If proper methods {« 1 are lowed, the field sny workers of fn in If conditions have eis fertilization more than a year. top-dressed with manure each fall or winter, Kix to eight loads to the acre have usually been found adequate, pro- viding 25 pounds of acid phosphate are mixed with each load of manure. An alternative procedure is to top-dress in the early spring at the rate of 200 pounds or more to each acre with a mixture of equal parts of nitrate of soda and acid phosphate, This method of utilizing fertilizers in rotation has been found to result In a much larger than average yield of timothy, while at the same time there is no lessened yield of the other crops grown in rotation. AR Corn silage Is a better feed than corn fodder, * . » Scrub cows are manufacturers; they turn profits into losses - - . More acres of soy beans than alfalfa were planted In Ohlo last year. - . * Blueberries seven-eighthe of an inch in dlameter have been produced on an experimental farm In New Jersey which eventually should make blue berry ples less infrequent, * . » In soll fertility tests at the South Dakota experiment s{ation the addi tion of phosphorus alone has Increased the yield of all crops about 30 per cent. These tests have been earried on for 16 years, - . ., A better ration is always an eco nomical one. Kix profitable changes in feeding methods were reported in one month to the state college at Ithaca by those who had finished it8 eorrerpondenna ~aurses, Sedan $775, J. 0. b. Lansing, Mich, MORE POWER! MORE PuLL! MORE PEP! Low-cost Transportation Star@ Cars Prices: fo. b. Lansing, Mich, COMMERCIAL CHASSIS . . ROADSTER TOURING . COUPSTER $423 $525 $525 £595 $675 sfeo ge sp 4 sgsPr e¥e)e, COUPE “he 4 +4 COACH 'JieW. +Befis +oe SEDAN . °, : $695 77% DURANT MOTORS, Inc. 250 West 57th Street, New York General Sales Dept.—1819 Broadway, New York Cele a. Dealers and Service Stations throughout the United States Canada and Mexico Puawrs: Elisabeth, N. J. Laming, Mich. Oakland, Cal. Toronto, Ont. = Permanent roads are a good investment not an expense How Much Are Poor Roads Costing You? 5,000,000 of America's 18,000,000 motor vehi- cles are recognized as an economic necessity on the farm. Is your car giving the full efficiency of which it is capable—and at the lowest cost per mile possible? Not if you are jolting over bumps and Not if you get stuck in the mud. In addition to the time you thus lose along the way, you also pay from one to four cents a mile more in gasoline, tire and repair bills than you would pay on permanently paved highways. Think. too, how many so-called improved roads have gone to pieces within the past few years, thereby piling up huge maintenance and rebuilding costs. Contrast all this with the record of Concrete Roads—the roads that have repair built out and maintenance built ia. Firm, rigid and unyielding, free of bumps, ruts, holes, mud and dust, they are, in every way, the most economical roads. Tell your highway officials you want more Concrete Roads. Such an investment will pay you big dividends year after year. ¥ . ® Let us give you all the facts about Contvete Roads, inchiling the experience of other communities. Ask for our free booklet, R-3. ruts. PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION 111 West Washi Street CHICA A National ization to Improve and Extend the Uses of Concrete Offices in 30 Cities Difficulties melt under white-beat es It is a great temptation to a dog thusiasm, when he sees you're afrald of him. CHiLDREN Cry ron CASTOR NAL ROR MOTHER :~ Fletcher's Castoria is especially pre- pared to relieve Infants in arms and Children all ages of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhea; allaying Feverishness arising there from, and, by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. To avold imitations, always Took for the signature of Zot Biden, Absolutely Harmless - No Opiates, Physicians everywhere recommend i