- ‘R - | The New Package sthe same dependable fémedy that over a period of more than fifty years has been found so reliable in the treatment of catarrh and diseases of catarrhal nature, The outside of the package only has been altered. o facil- itate packing and reduce break- age in shipping, the paper wrap- er which has identified the e-ru-na bottle for many years has been displaced by a substan. tial pasteboard carton. Pe-ru-na cannot be made any better. Three generations of users testify that Pe-ru-na is the best remedy in the world for catarrh and discases of catarrhal origin. The remedy our fathers and grandfathers used with so much satisfaction is still the standby for the ills of everyday in thousands of American homes. PE-RU-NA Sold Everywhere Tablets or Liquid Economy isn't it country house every summer? “No; I save money. help to stay out there and has to do all her 1 own work.” “But my wife Radio for South Seas Recelving sets are to be distributed a British missionary te natives in Coconut palms, Pe MOTHER. Fletcher's Cas- tora is a pleasant, Substitute for Castor O harmless il, Pare. ly prepared Tl abs ages. Proven directions on each package. The Modern Salvager Electricity is an efficient salvager. Electric cranes equipped with electro- maznets hands great yards. The larger sections of scrap are chewed up In enormous electric shears or smashed with a tremendous electric “skull-cracker.” Nearly half the manufactured steel of the country comes from reclaimed iron and Mee! Junk, Did you ever have a pair of soles outlast the uppers? If not, you have never worn USKIDE Soles. People write that they can't wear USKIDE out. It is the onder Sole for Wear! Made by the world's largest rubber manufacturer, the United States Rub- ber Company. Comfortable, healthful, waterproof, good-looking. Tell your repairman to ut USKIDE Boles on our shoes uy new shoes wilh JBKIDE Soles. USKIDE will cut your shoe bills down. Get genuine USKIDE The name is on the sole~Ady. —————————— has only hid it. The Cause entire Brown f was nt. tacked by ptomaine poisoning. The family doctor was called. a8 emergency treatment had been ministered! he tried to find the source of the trouble “IN4 you all eat something that had been deft standing in tin?" he asked Mr. Brown thought ment. “By gosh, doc,” just what we did ass— The snily he cried, car all mumsing "- Judge, Shave With Cuticura Soap fort andl skin heuith. No mug, no slimy soap, mo germs, no waste, no irrks tation evem when shaved twice daily. | One soap for sll uses—shaving, bathe ‘ing and shaxpoging—A dvertisement, The man whe has a struggle for a living acquires a superior education, a —————— HL rb A Rheumatism Colds Headache Pain / Neuritis Neuralgia Toothache Lumbago y er” proven of 12. tablets T | Dry Cellar for Wintering Bees Where Temperature Falls Below 25 Degrees Good Quarters Needed. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) In localities where the average win- ter temperature falls below 205 de- grees Fahrenheit It is usually best to winter bees In a cellar, especially if the aplary Is unprotected from the winter winds and when the winter stores are of satisfactory quality. The placing of bees In a cellar Is only an- other way of Insulating the entire number of hives In one lot Instead of insulating them In groups or singly, as is done In outdoor wintering. A good dry cellar under a residence heated by a furnace ordinarily makes a desirable place to winter bees, Par tition off a portion of the cellar through which some of the furnace pipes run In order to provide suffi | clént heat for the bees. If the room i becomes too warm, Insulate the pipes | somewhat. A temperature of 50 de. grees Fahrenheit is suitable for a cel lar In which bees are being wintered, | If the dwelling has no celinr of the {| kind required it may be possible to construct one In a sandy hiliside, | using the soll as a floor and building | wooden walls to prevent the cellar i from caving In. A cellar excavated in moist soll will require walls and floor of waterproof concrete, Locate the celijug below the frost level, which, in regions where bees are hest wintered | In cellars, Is at least 2% feet below the level of the ground. Leave a dis tance of 0% feet between and ceiling. If the celling Is higher than this it will usually resalt In too low a temperature at the. floor. Insulate Ceiling. Cover the celling completely on top with some insulating material, as sawdust, to a depth of 14 feet. the cellar Is bulit In a sandy soll it for the celling, over the inner roof of the cellar being sufficient. The insulating mate rinl of whatever kind used should then be protected by a roof prejecting least 2 feet, preferably hevond i the outside of the cellar wall provision for carrying off Mom roof Locate the possible, close to the api than the drainage is good snow tional insulation for the cellar entire more, the cellar. Ary, yards at and wh the not Host, farther 0 where the add! ! the ing construct are | Way A running cel ed as to admit { cient for any ; tering of bees AWRY ere drifts deeply, thos providing lar und the drift of snow m to tracks ventilating shaft six fnches square through the the lar to the outside and so construct Hight be suff cellar adapted to Win. The top of the venti ! Inting shaft. which should extend at | least six feet above the may be painted black in order to In duce greater movement of air when { the sun shines. At times during the | coldest weather the ventilator may be nearly or entirely closed. In a warm | cellar built In a sandy hillside no ven. cel is on level pre may be of open prevent drift increased by fences such as sed ing over ral) oiling ceiling no will outer roof, | tilating shaft need be constructed. Best Type of Vestibule, In constructing an entrance to the cellar proper insulation must not be overlooked. The best type of vestl bule is a long narrow passage leading into the cellar, with heavy doors st each end of the véstibule. The heavier and thicker the doors the better for the bees. It Is Important that the vestibule be bulit and protected so that the temperature within it will never fall below freezing. It iz de sirable also that the vestibule be con structed so that bees may readily be carried In and out of the cellar. The cellar must be well drained. | either by natural or artificial means Before carrying the bees Into the | cellar give It a good cleaning and i leave it open to alr several days | Storing Seed Beans to Keep Little Weevil Out A problem that often confronts the | farmer and housewife who wishes to | keep some of the seed from the garden |i, how may this seed be stored to keep the bean weevil out? If the beans are kept only for eating pur poses, one may heat them before put- ting them In a box, sack or fruit jar: or boiling water may be poured over them. However, for seeding purposes, neither of these will work. In this case the beans should be thoroughly dry and put into a fruit jar with camphor gum. A small amount bf the gum is all that is necessary as it Is strong and lasting. Usually the eggs are lald In the beans before they were hulled and the gum must be used to help in con- trolling the young weevils when they hateh. If the seed is put Into an open container the beans may become con- taminated or infested. So they should be kept In a jar or something that is tight enough to keep the adult beetle or bug out. 7 Business and Success You can nearly always tell a farm er's success and business ability by the appearance of his house and barn. No good business man will permit his buildings to remain unpaited and In a dilapidated condition for he knows that he Is losing money by doing so and the man who Is unconcerned about the appearance of his premises ia apt to be careless In his farm prac Plow Under Residues to Help Fertility V ery Bs ssential. Don't rake off or ur the trash left on the fields after the crop Is har vested. Plow ft under. It contains plant food of a value from 35 to $15 per acre and will increase crop ylelds the following year, “Even where we use summer and winter legumes for soll lmprovement, the main crops have a larger acreage and therefore the cover crops planted are not sufficient to maintain the sup- piy of organic matter,” says W. F. Pate, fertility agronomist at the North Carolina State college, “This being the case, it is necessary to plow under the crop residues such as corn stalks, cotton stalks, tobacco stalks, peanut vines, grasses and other vegetative matter, This will help to keep up the supply of organic matter.” Professor Pate states that the YS tem of farming generally practiced in North Carolina tends to deplete the amount of organic matter in the soil. This causes the solls to wash and the crops to suffer under abnormal grow- ing seasons as a late cold spring, too little rain or too mueh rain. In most cases, where a soll has yleldel smaller crops from year to year, the reason can be found (n that the supply of or- ganic matter has not been maintained. Then, in nearly all cases where #3 is Increasing In crop producing power, the supply of organic matter inereasing. “Years ago when plements were crude or crop residues but not now.” fessor Pate. “With heavy plows, disk harrows and tractors available, fi crime not to turn under these val unble crop residues. By pract and winter plowing, the crop residues, sometimes called trash, will be com. preparing a good seed bed” {in many human eritically ner of nasal family, should as they may be the forerun- serious trouble, such as ocular roup, diphtheria or be more or } rdp WY Poor housing conditions ease many i flocks to acquire fall, Chicks shou! colds, especially the d be trained to { roost as soon as possible, as this al. bodies. Dampness in houses should particularly pot have sufficient feed or | profiler kind of food acquire easily. A halanced ration consisting of approximately equal parts of mash | and grains, supplemented with plenty | of succulent green feeds, is one of the best preventatives In preventing colds from | Ing Into more serious treuble, where jh wile flocks sre affected due to ex- posure, it is often advisable to admin- he avolded Chickens that do colds 1% pounds to 100 adult birds, say poultry men at the Kansas State Ag- ricultural college, Unsanitary pens as compared with clean ones result In a death loss of 85 per cent, experiments conducted by the Kansas State Agricultural col lege show. Proper sanitation includes all measures that are conducive te good health, but is probably more con- sidered In connection with the clean- liness of houses, yards, runs and gen- eral quarters as well as the feeding and drinking utensils. It also includes the control of both Internal and exter nal parasites Fall Is Best Time for Spreading Ground Lime The fall of the year Is usually the best time for the hauling and spread- ing of ground limestone. The stubble fieids are usually hard and the roads mostly geod and the fleld work not so pressing as in the spring. Some farm. ers have used hydrated lime at the rate of about 200 pounds to the acre and received good results with It Where the haul is long from the rail road siding, this type of lime treat ment for soll Is worth trying, because of the reduction of labor. Some men have hauled the crushed limestone In contractor dumping trucks and then dumped the ground limestone at the end of the fill and then spread with a lime spreader, Frequent cutting tends to kill out alfalfa. *. =» . Where you find scrud sires you usually find a scrub farmer. *® *» In one year eggs and chickens worth $1.047.8323,170 yere produced in the United States, . 5 0 Gophers “played possum” during the dry weather but are making the dirt fly since the fan rains started, . » Seed corn should be selected In the field from healthy, erect and well-ma- tured plants, Place the ears n'a well ventilated pace top drying. : . » Field selection of good seed corn should be attended to. If the work is well done, no other farm operation will pay o bigger dividend. Mule “Swap” Brought Fortune to Lucky Man | Eleven years ago LB aldwell, N. J., deere hin balky mule, Maud, down the streets of the villuze, and met John Gosman. They stopped to talk. Then Gosman noticed the fidyg eting Maud, “How'll you swap, Joe?" asl man. “Can't “What “Got way; leach, answered, “Worth asked, “Guess so, plied. And they signed the each Is departing Joseph Beach of ed Gow say, John” you got?” a piece of land down Palm Beach or West some such pis~e” replied Beach, Florida Pulm Gosman | i Beach | a $75, you reckon? let's swap,” Gosman re ’ papers, for West Palm teach soon to look for which he fortune, Maud Tribune, DEMAND “BAYER” ASPIRIN Aspirin Marked “With “Bayer Cross” | Has Been Proved Safe by Millions. at the property, | has been offered a small | dead.—New York Herald is Warning! Unless you gee “Bayer” on package or on tablets vou &re not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for 25 years, Say “Bayer” when you buy Aspirin (mitations may F prove dange rous. Adv, Famed War Spy Went the name the Bes Civil both During many them there cause, there gOome Memphis, war sides, were on women ¥ came 10 serve the Virginia B. Moon, full of pep that everybody it She rom Confederate a girl so called her had no morphine Union ngér.” is sald she fear of death, and ang carried the won reieg dispatches Twice captors by them She ntl by of through lines, she Po her exercising her was fir arrested In an officer who wa chief was commended bs General Grant's She avis for her girl was i4 bona fide when a sot In het +4 ow TF necting fo work Ww the New recentiy at Path f inde: I 550 + SOoWwWn in A so Movie Intelligentsia Frederic M Assan the Spanish rinter, sald in Los Angeles: “1 itiful and we Pp off but 1 : “1 suppose tainted with “She She interrupt her well 1 said, bread you're Sh pretty ac akespeare? laughed and flicked pellet at me, "No, you don’t!” she id Shakespeare's Success Rules There are scores of starters to eve ry finisher. Every person who gets ahead recognizes, consciously or unconscious. ily, four rules for success: Pirst wa ang keen at his work ¢ and thinks: fourth, he starts —Orit, third, he studies he finishes what | A Farmer 40 Years Ag Roa noke, Va. — ‘hen 1 was a young man farming, over Ve years ago, my appetite failed, 1 lost my grip on work-—had no am - bi tion whatever, nd could not sleep well 2 at night. Then malaria got mto my system I wrote Dr. Pierce and told him of my condi- tion, and, upon his advice, 1 took Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and it gave me a of health and ength in place of that mean, tired, feeling 1 had."—B. W. Nach, S. E feeling wornout B03 ( ampbel il ATE, All dealers ud or tablets, Send 10c to Dr oly Buffalo, N. Y., for trial pkg. tablets and write for free medical Sg Loveliness lear thy Skin by : 0 Ww HINDERCORNS Removes Corus, ou louses, ete. stops all pain, stsures comfort to fool, makes walking easy he by al on st Drog Ese. Hiscox Chemicon! Works, Patchogue KR. X mati -ordes home Bpare # enth Ne can Write ADLIN SUP- ne Bidg., Scranton Pa FITHER company 7 i your interest “E COMPANY, OKL AHOMA. LADIES WANTED—To assist house 1 wages made oy time Ps check twice « jressing PLY HOUBE, Ad-L EVER PURCHASED ning sioc in any us It ay be to UNITED SER A CITY HAVE YOu or elnily LARBOM New, Absolutely only Bend stam envel Jackson Av. Jersey City Autome bien Brand $15 10 makes anywhere i. Marm 180 BATHE YOUR EYES Use Dv. Thompson's Byewnieor Buy AS poz Grn #i's oF LE River, Troy. KN Booklet WHY SHOULD ANYONE SUFFER WITH INDIGESTION OR ANY STOMACH MISERY? If you want to fix up your dyspeptic, out of order stomach so that you can relish what you eat with not the least bit of after distress, do what tens of thousands of pie have already done. of gas, bloating, belching, ‘ that feeling of near suffo- cation isn't uch & hard matter as you may think--You've been getting hold of the wrong ine—that's all But inte than never-—ask your for a bottle of Dare’'s Menths rlomach medicine and a one * For acute indigestion is enough, but when nic. two or three bot- Put your disordered healthy condition and ving reteln “wT pe “ Coat 4 ieee 2.4 relling rd heaw ness medic better druggist Pepsin——a very pleasani one or the tr ties may be needed t« stomach in g make life worth Uf Making a start is the main thing, so why not gel one bottle today with the distinet understanding that if it doesn't help you the purchase price will be re- turned real doses uble Bg ORre yes His Attempt Bearcat, got sorter at his brother, Runt, ¥iste'd’y and hit him on the head with ax,” related Gap Johnson ef tum pus Ridge. Great guns!” ejaculated an ae quaintance. “What was he doing with we ax, anyhow?" “Trying to ~—yaw-w-wn-—make Runt eat it, or something that-a-way, ae- what the rest of the kide “My lea riled st Dos AR It were, the The people who never make mis > takes are high ly uninteresting. Star cars ROADSTER . -
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers