YOUNG WOMEN MAY KEEP WEL By Taking Lydia E. Pinkham’, y Vegetable Compound . Here is Proof St. Paul, Minn.—"“Here is a little advice I would like to ha 4 you put in A the pers,” Mrs cine Company. and strength for the .§ next thirty years of their lives, it is best tostart in right now : Pinkham's e Compound. I have tried the Compound myself and received fine re- sults from its use.” condition before taking the Compound, she writes, “I was afraid in my own house in broad daylight, I used to lock the doors and pull down the LIFE IN FORT MINK { After Mrs, Toofus had kissed her | husband effusively, she promptly | promptly refused, “Pig! I lavish those affections upon | you. | me those five dollars.” | and guide. “Now I can't afford any { more kisses just at present.” porch and she read it through. In so doing, she found a letter from a woman own. Vegetable Compound,” Mrs. Lorberter continued, “and have had fine results husband. Now I ask him, “How is hoysekeeping?” and he says, “It is just like being in Heaven!” the Sunlit Road to Better Health? {(UTSena SCRATCHES Stop the smarting and hasten the healing by prompt application of Resino Test Your Brain The “ask me another” fad is the first definite successor of the cross- word puzzle. Conversations over heard In public conveyances indicate that many of the “ask me's” are as intriguing as the puzzles over which enthusiasts worried far into the night. “It's always a challenge to try one more, and if you want to find out just how little you know, have some one start ‘asking’” a fan sald. \ Sudden Inspiration “And what did your wife have to say when you stood at the Pyramids? “Wanted to know If 1 had locked the kitchen door” Special Of fer Indigestion Your Dru t Says Pleasant to Take, Elixir Must Help Poor Distressed Stomachs or Money Gladly Refunded. and fullness from poor digestion or dyspepsia that you think your heart is golng to stop beating. Your stomach may be so distended that your breathing is short and gaspy. You are dizzy and pray for quick rellef—what's to be done. Just one tablespoonful of Dare's Mentha Pepsin and speedily the gas disappears, the pressing on the heart ceases and you can breathe deep and naturally. Oh! What blessed relief; but why not get rid of such attacks altogether? Why have them at all? THEN THE IRON FLEW Wifle—Here | clothes all day! | Ing? { ~ Hubby—Sort suppose? I've been pressing of ironing bored | Now Plays a Harp At sixty miles Drove Tommie Sharp; There came a train— He plays a harp. Undertook Mr. Jones | Jim and Andy were discussing the | death of u friend. { Jim sald—Andy, who gwine to bury { Mr. Jones? | Andy replied—] don't know who | wine bury him, but Mr. Smith under- | took him. | The Outlook. Another Broken Heart Motorist—I'm sarry 1 ran over your i hen. Would a dollar make It right? Farmer--Waal, better make It two. I have a rooster that was mighty fond of that hen, and the sbock might kill i him, too. Swimming in It Parson—Did poverty drive you to your criminal ways? Prisoner-Not at all. 1 was simply coining money. — Sydney Bulletin, Throw That One Out Bill—Every time 1 look at you 1 have thoughts of revenge, Mae—Oh, why? Bill—Revenge is sweet, you know, SCRAPS WITH HIS WIFE ———w— where guarantees Dare's Mentha Pep- tin, a pleasant elixir, to help you or money back. FOR OVER 200 YEARS haarlem oil has been a world- wide remedy for kidney; liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric acid conditions. G HAARLEM OIL 12 correct internal troubles, stimulate vital organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine Goro Mex LB Mitchell Soo thet brings comforting relief For SORE EYES FREE WEEPAH The new Gold Avom 41999ing strong drugs ayes sors from Alkali Camp where ore assay. ing $78,000.00 per ton in gold was un- covered and the greatest min. ing stampede since the days of ‘49. We believe it will prove another Gold field where fortunes were quickly made actual mining find 3] those w hased ocks dur - fod of mine development. pu BUY THE GOOD WEEPAHS NOW! Send for map and information on an mining stock you want to buy of sell, E. H.SCHIEK & CO. od Brokers since 1908 i i | 8She—Do you have many scraps with | your wife? | He—Almost every night at supper | whatever Is left over from dinner, | you know, Oh, My Cherries | Robin Redbreast sald to me i “May 1 build a nest in your apple tree ™ “Sure,” said 1, and 1 heaved a sigh “But stay away from the Cherry Tree.” Tempest Brewing Mr. Stinger—Jane, I am going to take that car out In the yard and fix it, or bust {t, Mrs. Stinger—Why, John, just think of the neighbors—and you baptized only last Sunday morning. Paging Mr. Lincoln boiled ' boss. “Fired? How you talk!” sneered the stenog. “I supposed they sold slaves."-—American Legion Monthly, Oh! Rod-—1 suppose you consider It quite a triumph to make a fool of me? Jane-—-Why no. something accomplished very difficult. Pointed and Headed “1 can't find a single pin! Where do they all go to, anyway?” “It's hard to tell, because they're pointed In one direction and they're headed in another.” A triumph means that was By WILLIAM A, RADFORD Mr. William A. Radford will answer questions and give advice FREE OF COET on all problems pertaining to the subject of for the readers of this paper. On ac- count of his wide experience as editor, author and manufacturer, he Is, with. out doubt, subject Ham A. Radford, No. 1827 nue, Chicago, Ill, and two-cent stamp for reply Prairie ave- only Inclose Owners of dalry herds of more than the average size plan thelr new barns as carefully as a home owner plans his new house. For it is important to profitable dairying to provide the to equip it that the work of feeding, milking and caring for the animals may be done at the least possible labor cost Shown In the [llustration | sign for a dairy barn to house a herd of 50 milk cows, the young stock and the herd bull. This building is 30 feet wide and 110 feet Jong. It Is set on a concrete foundation and has a concrete floor, into which are set the stall partitions, the mangers and the gutters, while other squipment con- | sists of Individual drinking cups at home, and £0 the stall heads, an overhead carrier for transporting the feed to and to remove the lit- ventilating system that in supply of fresh and without any system mangers ter, and a sures a continuous anlmals, The enumerated is days of high labor for It makes the numerous de. of properly for a dairy herd easier, and cuts the cost of the equipment 5 in these caring The exterior view of the building shows the continuous rows of windows that admit sunshine warmth to the stable floor. The stalls are ranged on two sides of a central feeding al- ley, with the cow facing the center of the building. The gutters are in the rear and are In range of the sunshine admitted by the windows, an arrange ment that helps keep the buliding sanitary, Above the stable is the mow floor. where there Is plenty of room to store the roughage this number of animals will need during the time they are housed. Adjoining are twin sllos for the fresh feed that is supplied the cows during the winter, and Cheap Plaster Costly construction, in that it enuses constant care and expense when deterioration begins Reason able construction can be obtalned only ally expensive by paying a reasonable price There is no single place where good bad work shows up as it does in plastering. or skimped, either through or design, the result is rough waves or ridges if papered, or even by dangerous falling of the plas ter. There are several causes due to lack of knowledge or carelessness of mortar man or the plasterer that ontribute to plaster failures, It is essential with any material that the | mortar be well mixed, and the backing of wood lath, block, brick or concrete i be dampened before It is covered With metal lath this is not necessary but it is well to bear In mind that the i lath must be tight. Plaster hazards are minimized by the use of lime. It produces a plaster | that sets slowly enough to adjust it- seif. It hardens by drying out and is not dependent upon crystallization, | and is free from the necessity of hav- ing just the proper amount of water {in the mortar. A further factor of Interest to the builder, and owner, too, is a saving of as much as 8 per cent of the cost of the plaster In that the | droppings of lime plaster may be re. | tempered and used again with perfect safety. Lime plaster gives a smooth, hard { surface and the hardening process be- ing gradual the plasterer has time to (trim up his work and avoid waves | and uneven places on the walls and | ceilings, | On construction jobs such as the | smaller type of house, an architect is | seldom employed. The design Is some- | times made by the owner who knows { little or nothing about building, and | given to a builder with the iron-clad instruction that the cost must be kept | to a minimum, or else the contractors { must bid for the work under condi: | tions that most always necessitate the | cutting of costs to the detriment of or ignorance cracks, or tae | the job. | It is often difficult to Impress those | outside the building trades with the necessity of using only the best plas- ter materials, and the highest grade of workmanship, probably because most plaster is covered with wall pa- per and its defects are not readily apparent at first. * For the same rea. gon, bullders desiring to keep the costs down are tempted to save on the plas tering, as It is natural to cut costs where it is least apparent. This, how. ever, does not pay, for a good plas. tering job Is constantly before the eye and well repays In satisfaction the few dollars it cost more than a cheap Job, which soon cracks and becomes an eyesore. Variety in Finishes is used to hecause lime found In any other It works smoothly and ens the plasterers trowel This by the common Jdme many finishes, plaster produce has cer ily on like helps work, Lime also hardens enough to allow the plasterer to pro This more butter.” to do warm them plasticity and better plaster glowls duce exactly the surface designed. This is particularly Important in the the texture finishes, In rendering which the plasterer uses a variety of instruments to work out the surface patterns characteristic of the period being reproduced Another trend in the growing popularity of “all-plas- tered” interiors. In these not only the walls and cellings are lime-plastered but also cornices, beams, pillars, mold ings and arches. These receive a va riety of decorative treatment. vying with the masterpieces of the old-time craftsman, whose work, was too long forgotten, i Concrete Has Many Uses in Construction Concrete Is made by mixing port land cement, sand, pebbles or broken stone and water in certain definite proportions, according to the kind of work for which the concrete ig to be used, and then permitting the mixture to harden unfler the proper conditions in forms or molds, Cement mills pack portland cement ! in standard cloth sacks or in paper bags holding 94 ponds net weight For convenience in determining the necessary quantity of the several ma. | terials entering Into a concrete mix. | ture, one sack of portland cement is | considered as one cuble foot. Practically all building material i dealers handle portland cement. Cloth sacks are charged to the cement pur. | chaser. When empty they should be | returned to the cement dealer. who will buy them back If they are fit for | further use as cement containers, Cement sacks which have been wet, i torn or otherwise rendered unfit for | use are not redeemable. Paper bags : are not returnable. Cement should | always be kept In a dry place. i Case home building is Cover Old Shingles Now you ean build a better root right over the old wood shingles, You not only save the expense and bother of tearing them off, but you got roof that's fire-safe, unusually weathe tight, long-lived and trouble-free and one that adds many dollars worth of beauty to your home as well. Sev eral manufacturers are now making shingles of great beauty which may be applied over your old roof. eteran Wins 15-Year Fight A chronic invalid for 15 years. A dogged fight to win lost health. Rugged, robust health at last. That is the truly wonderful record of Geo, E. Lohman, 3121 Dillon 8t., who served with the Maryland troops in the Bpanish-American War. “For 15 years,” he said, “I suf- fered acutely from chronie indiges- tion. Gas, stomach pains, dizzy spells and general lassitude and weak ness made life a dreary drudge. I lost weight gradually and the distressing symploms grew worse with time. Stiffness in arms and legs and a sword- like pain in the small of my back made me almost yell with pain at times, “Soon after starting on Tanlae I felt a different man. My appetite eame back and I actually enjoyed my food. It agreed with me, too, so that I could eat anything I cared for, with- out fear of distress afterwards. I gained 7 lbs. in a short time. Tanlac Gratitude is eapensive —Gibbon, somali Wanted : High-school and college stn dents to “nve lopes, fold and mall circulars. Profit. able, permanent employment to those who take on work, Information where and how to get it 20c. Campbell, Charleston, W. Va lox 1787. Adv, and teachers nddress this The fate —Balley, heart I= its owy Dr. Peery's “Dead Ehot” expels Worms or Tapeworry but cleans out the mucus In which they breed and tones up the digestion. One dose dees it Adv, not only He who Is everywhere 1s now here, proved a blessing to me.” Tanlase is nature's own remedy, made from roote, barks and herbs. Your druggist has it. Get a trial bots tle today. Over 52,000,000 bottles already gold. | { | Green's August Flower | a For Indigestion, Dyspepsia, etc. Relieves Distress after Hurried Meals or Overeating. Being » gentle laxative, it keeps the di- gestive tract working normally. 30c & 90c. At all Druggists. G. G. GREEN, inc. WOODBURY, N. J. Lucky one is If an excuse is also a good reason MOTHER :—~ Fletcher's Castoria is especially pre- pared to relieve Infants im arms and Children all ages of Absolutely Harn. less = No Opiates. Cuticura Cuticura Soap and bot water, dry quicker or safer than Cuticura Soup Ointment for all skin troubles. neh free. A Ba, Maas” BF Coticura Shaving Stick 28¢. and and for somethi HAIR on a sation. TOW ALD HEAD. Scottdale, Pa. Make-up With Airbrush In some theatrical performances and i in the movies, it is often necessary to | put a “make-up” on a larger portion of the performer's body. In ordinary manner of procedure, this requires | but the operation | has been recently hastened by the use | of an airbrush. The coloring matter | to be covered and much time is saved. | If there are no distant relations at | a man's funeral it's a safe bet that! he died poor, | “IL slhms— Canned Deer A railroad in Alaska, it is stated, is contemplating the erection of a deer deer meat. Food experts claim thag the ment tastes like veal and retains the original flavor because it is cooked in the can. : —————————_— . A toroid liver prevents proper food asso hn. tion. one up your liver with Wright's Indias Vegetable Pills, 372 Pearl 81, N, 5% Adv, Constant association with a charm. ing personality sometimes reveals thas it is anything but deep. Ee