——————————————— MEN CAN NOW DO MORE ia E. Pinkham’s Com; ps Them Well Fifty years ago there wero few Qecupaticns for women. Some taught school, some did housework, some found work to do at Because L Ve took up nursing. Today there are very few occupations not open to women, There are a women architects, lawyers, dentists, executives, and legis. lators. But all too often a woman cost of her health. Mrs. Elizabeth Chamberlain who works in the Unionall factory making | overalls writes that she got “wonderful | results” from taking Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound. Mrs, Chamberlain lives at 500 Monmouth St., Trenton, N. J. in the factory and will gladly answer any letters she gets from women asking about it, If Lydia BE. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has helped other women, vay shouldn't it help you? Takes Out | all pain instantly CORNS Dr. Scholl’s Zino-pads stop all pain quicker than any .other known method. Takes but a minute to quiet the worst corn. Healing starts at once. When the corn is gone it never comes back. If new shoes make the spot “touchy” again, a Zino-pad stops it instantly. That's because Zino-pads remove the cause— pressing and rubbing of shoes. Dr. Scholl's Zino-pads are medi- cated, antiseptic, protective. At all druggist’s and shoe dealer’s—35¢c, Dz Scholls Zino-pads Put one on—the pain is gone! Latest Clock Novelty A London clock a clock which has no sign ism. The bedded in a slab of ery has devised of mechan- em- : 3 inches hands, which are made of platinmin and diamonds, re volve on a thin metal pinion. Al though the c¢ transparent, no one except the the clock appar- ent eonne« and the framework, price of such a £4.000, | . maser face of the novelty is in diameter, and the maker knows how goes, because there Is no tion 1 the hands clock is something like will Supply Homes of the Italian government one-third "of the profits of the postal administration will be used In chasing and building houses for its employees and agents during the next ten years, These houses will remain the property of the administration. 3 dec ree Do and got | what one can kindly without sentiment urt, Sure Relief efficiently and one won't - ELL-ANS FOR INDIGESTION 25¢ and 75¢ Pkdz. Sold Everywhere Green’s August Flower’ For indigestion, Dyspepsia, ete. Relieves Distress after Hurried Meals or Overeating. Being a gentle laxative, it keeps the di- gestive tract working normally. 30c & 90c. At all Druggists. G. G. GREEN, Inc. WOODBURY, N. J. RCORNS Removes Corns, Oa) pain, ensures comfort Ay t Ring cher. as or toad i gy — (The KITCHEN CABINET (@, 1927. Remember that money is of pro- fle, generating nature. Money can beget money, and its offspring can beget more and so on. Five shillings turned 1s six, turned again it is seven und three pénce, and 80 on till it becomes a hundred pounds.—Benjamin Franklin, CASSEROLE DISHES Veal hearts are most | well cooked and seasoned Western Newspaper Union.) and bacon until crisp, remove them the pan and add a small sliced onion; fry in the fat. Trimm and wash four veal and fry { the hot fat. Place the heated casserole, add to the fat in the pan a cupful of water or stock, a them in and a bit of bay leaf. Pour the mix. ture over the hearts and cook well covered two hours. Just before serv. ing add the pleces of bacon, Vegetables en Casserole—Cut tur nips, squash or cauliflower Into small pleces and cook In salted water until | tender. Drain and place in a casse- role with two minced green peppers | a tablespoonful of butter and one-half : 4h ful of cream or rich milk. Bake in a moderate oven for fifteen min utes, Pour over a cream sauce, add a layer of buttered crumbs and cook uncovered until the crumbs are brown, Lamb en Casserole. —~Have steaks cut from the leg. Put into a hissing hot frying pan to sear the surface and hold In the julces, le move from the pan, brush with butter sprinkle well with salt and pepper and lay Ino the casserole, Add cupfyl of potatoes, cut into cubes, one half cupful of string beans, three {| fourths of a cupful of carrots cut Into thin strips, three slices of onion, two cupfuls of stewed and strained toma toes thickened with butter and flour —two tablespoonfuls of each, well | mixed. Cook until the vegetables are soft and the meat Is tender, three one The advantage of casserole cooking is that the dish may be put into the oven with proper heat and left with out further attention until ready to | serve, The dish Itself is placed on the table, doing away with a platter and two to three vegetable dishes, Hints and Things. Sauerkraut has become a portant food. most Im at suten un- cooked It prevents aunteolntoxication that Is, that it pre vents the growth of harmful bac teria in the allmen tary Its acids act somewhat like a disinfectant in one's We learn tl canal, intestines and so Some writers tell promotes internal cleanliness us that sauerkraut relieves sufferers from diabetes, ity, lumbago, flatulency in fact it is almost a cure-all food as near as any food can Sauerkraut is a remarkable palat able medicine to be recommended for seasickness, dyspepsia, dizziness and even skin troubles, Given for lack of appetite and nausea, it seems to settle the stomach and spur the ap- petite. The tests of different ways of caring for saverkraut tell us that either canned or in bulk It has equal ! virtue. The juice of the kraut itself Is a wonderful preservative and when kept cold and above freezing can be kept for months, When prepared from { good solid heads it may be shredded very fine, this is the test for the best kraut, as well as flavor, tenderness, amount of water and color, Sauerkraut if sour should be washed before cooking. If In and it Is losing Its moisture, a salt solution should be added to it. Sauer. kraut is more wholesome and diges tible uncooked than cooked, as is | fresh cabbage. However, niany en Joy the kraut cooked in various ways | with meat. When sauerkraut is {ced it | 1s especially good, eaten uncooked, of course, In many homes and hospitals the kraut water is given as a tonle and appetizer and if one likes kraut. it will be no hardship, rather a pleasure to take. It Iz considered one of the best blood tonics. With all that has been sald about this wonderful food it should grow In popularity, Serve spinach well seasoned and sprinkled with buttered crumbs, Put the last few tablespoonfuls of horseradish Into the pickle jar. Rhubarb combines with many fruits and juices, extending the more expen | sive fruits, Raspberries, | canned with two-thirds the amount of | rhubarb will seem entirely like small fruit. This reduces the and makes a most palatable fruit Cranberry julce iz another good fruit | extender: added to strawberries which | lose their color In cooking, It makes fa beautiful and tasty preserve, Rave all canned fruit. Mixed with two or three, obes and gastritis; be. some well bulk sauce or a gelatin pudding. This juice is good added to lemonade, or poured over apples when baking, Apple-Growing Season Length Every Variety Requires Defi- nite Number of Days to Mature Fruit. (Prepared by the United States Depart. ment of Agriculture.) Everyone 18 more or less familiar spples are grown In some gections of What de- varietal distribution? Is it the soll, the average temperature, rainfall, length of growing season, or Time to Mature Fruit. From data gathered during the last four years, J. RB. Magness, physiologist of ap- concludes that every Some varieties re- others 150 to less blossoming season. guire 165 to 170 days, 166, and still others ripen In 140 days from blossoming time. Apparently this time interval for ‘ma- ‘urity holds good for the different va- these on although bearing and latter factors quality. climate, do have a Length of Season, A careful analysis of the commercial | adaptation of apple varieties in differ ent sections of the United States in dicates that this length of season re quired to bring any variety to Ima- turity is the most important factor in its distribution. Varieties requiring 160 days or more, such as Winesap, Arkansas, Staym Winesap, or Yel low Newton, strictly limited to the South, latitudes the Pacific sections where mal blossoming an are the coast nor time Is about May 1, or eapMer. and first frosts oceur about 160 days later. Varieties requiring 140 to 150 daye to ripen, such athan, Delicious, or Baldwin, may be grown in the apple districts of the North where they are used as winter or storage applies. When grown In South these short-season varieties are fall apples, and if held successfully must be placed at once In cold storage. Generally, winter storage varieties most suitable for any particular sec tion of the country mre those ties which do not attain maturity un til cool wenther prevalls, middle and as Jon varie Field Peas Valuable to Use in Rotation Scheme Washington station not long ago put out a bulletin on field peas, re porting tests with the crop in rota- tions, and for hogging off In Wash ington, Here are the high points: The yield of wheat following peas is less than wheat following summer fal but greater than it is preceded by corn or sunfl A larger total yield of been during time In rots peas ner The average lowing wheat in tions In which this occurs is good low, when IWers grain has periods of $1 which field secured the IRYVE ha » ; equal sitions in been used instead of sum fallow , yield of field peas fol rota- sion four different crop ® 2.4 while the av erage yield of spring wheat following wheat In four rotations In which this crop succession 8 bushels The varieties, Bangalia, Canada and Alaska, seed of which is usually read ily obtained, were among the high yielders. Pigs fed limited rations on clover or alfalfa pasture made more rapid daily gains later while hogging off peas. In two of the three years’ experiments, the pigs fed limited ra. tions were marketed with fed rations at the same weight, age and condition. The feed cost of the pigs fed limited rations on pasture was Jess than that of the full-fed pigs. The pigs made average dally gains of from 94 to 1.25 pounds each while hogging off peas. The pork produced per acre of peas varied from 141 pounds with a 16-bushel crop to 244 pounds with a 36-bushel op, neces bushels, occurs is 21 sweet those BO+ OOOOH +OnO+OOH Agricultural Items + OBO Ov Ove], Navy beans do not yield well on extremely rich land. - - * Alfalfa and lime make a dollar out of a dime. . » * A permanent pasture insures a per- manent income, * ® * Check the grain drill before using to see that it Is planting right. - - - There are only two reasons why a man should farm: because he likes farming and beeause he can make money at it. The good farmer com bines the two. . - - Washing horses’ collars with warm water keeps them clean and smooth. Collars seraped with a knife are like ly to become rough and be ibe cause of sore shoulders, - * - More than half of the total area state is pastured and therefore is on the down grade toward final estine- tion. . = 0» To be well built a sflo must have airtight walls, be round in shape, have smooth, perpendicular walls, have strong walls which will not bulge, and be deep In proportion to its diameter. ‘Control Corn Borer While in Larval Stage. the United States of Agriculture.) (Prepared by ment damaging work while in the larval stage. It passes the greater part of its larval and also pupal existence within the stalk or other parts of the host plant, usually corn, but in some parts of the country in a variety of other plants, and weeds. For this reason there is but little chance of contrelling this pest by Insecticides, and it is evident to entomologists of the United States Department of Ag riculture who have worked on the problem that the major control efforts should be directed toward cultural practices which will lead to the utili zation or the destruction of Infested plants, Measures recommended are Feeding to live stock, burning, or plowing under; selection of varieties of corn least susceptible to severe In Jury, and regulating the time of plant ing to escape serious infestation and yet produce satisfactory yields. Control measures used must take in- to consideration the fact that in the New England Infested area two gen erations annually and the in- sects attack many plants in addition to corn, while in the cluding New York and around the Great Lakes, borer is single brooded principally to corn. In therefore, it is nec destroy all which are borer, especially large grasses and many the sections tacked, plowing, occur western areas, in the the and confi New England to utilize or region corn odd CRENrY plants or crop residues isted as hosts of the roadside weed where corn Is chefly at iow cutting, shredding, deep and burning of st stalks are ubble and recommended measures, Sanitation Is Big Help to Reduce Fowl Cholera of the flocks, olera is poultry Lumb, extension Kansas State Agricultura a recent radio address It wks most inte summer, and and Is due largely to changes of housing conditions and methods of feeding and handling which tend to lower the resistance of the fowls, Fow! cholera resembles fowl typhoid. In fact the resembia is so close that to most persons diseases appear to be Identical. trained workers are often microscopic examinations be fore definitely Ordinary feathers, Fowl ch one greatest menaces to ] W. rian of the college In declared veterinn chickens, and dv fatal turkeys results, It is fall equally early spring closely nee the Even compeliod diagnosing the disease symptoms are ruffling of the appetite, of tall, a staggering galt loss of drooping HR arrhen organism ich microscopic shaped, and kn« avium, It The wh fowl rowl CH URes in size, is wn as pasteurells rapidiy in multiplies vers causing blood poison Sanitary number of MEeASUres eatly reduce cholera, ac Regular ra even tempera RT CARPE © b. bh ventilation water, good pure rens are ture, houses and conditions disease, large also the which Pasture for Hog Family best It should be early in the spring as the seedbed can be well prepared. If sown In rows, from two to four pounds of seed per acre is sufficient ; if drilled in solid, from four to six pounds The Dwarf Essex va- riety is to be preferred. If possible divide field into two parts and pasture alternately. In securing a seeding of alfalfa only hardy northern grown seed should be used. The Grimm, Cossack, and On tario Variegated strains are exceed ngly well adapted to Michigan con- ditions. The seedbed should be well firmed and the soil should not be acid The land should be well drained. Rape is one of the substitute the Ample Supply of Green Peas Is Always Delight An ample supply of green peas, sugary with their own natural sweet. ness and not requiring any additions from the family sugar bowl gre the pride and ambition of every garden. er's heart. Peas from a single plant ing ‘are In bearing for only a short time. The dwarf varieties most monly grown in the home garden yield for about ten days while the bush peag, those which require brush ot wire supporis and grow from three to four feet tall, remain in good bearing from two to three weeks [It is real economy to plant the tall peas quantity. A succession com long continued period OL TER Useful Manure Floor The use of the manure floor or stor age shed, with an ocensional use of the manure spreader Is a step that goes hand in hand with good dairy farm. ing. Planning the rotation =o that manure may be supplied to the fields at regular intervals as it 1s needed insures a uniform, steady crop pro ductbon that lz a necessary part of well-organized farm operation, Neg lecting the fields that are back from the barn Is a poor practice, rapidly disappearing, CASTORIA MOTHER:- Fletcher's Castoria is a pleasant, harm- less Substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups, espe- cially prepared for Infants in arms Children all ages. To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of Gar ltd each package. © Physicians everywhere recommend it Bird Has Long Life How can a bird official record for long feathered tribe has twelve-year-old pintail near Brawley, Callf,, ular Relence Mon . A attached to the twelve years ago ther of survey, and Proven directions on A RE - India’s Population present India Is these only 7.000, right of franchise. duck captured les of railways, of according to Pop. are the property of inated band Ta ate, and which 400 000 bird's leg more than ure on at Bear River, Ul: Neo less the U land are Proves {f canals and live? A new The life the | set hy i ! ¥ { 1114 : long population of 2A4T.000 Ky and of (XM) among Leen possess the are 40000 nn employ WOrks “an equ IOUK senile, acres of FENN ma by a men nited Sts than 20.0506 (60) served by 1tes hiological the authentic? record les © channels, An as treat SHREDDED Fresh strawberries and cream $rish siseds of whole wheat delicious dish of health 3 oz. in Each Standard Package Clever Student House Cannot Burn “One of sald Doctor In which is said Hutchins, president of Berea college, | to be 100 per cent fireproof. It has a ‘who had recently taken up the steel frame of a concrete of was asked composition and the is of a her to give the vers laid on steel lath repls prompt. and i ing frames ave mn. of abet of the our students” Detroit ie a house winds and floors Eng of ox chemistry, by her plaster i hard cha ier The metal so tl} lish teas ¥ fer "OXY RS window door } at there Is nothi ng s———— "Tit ing i y 10 sir 100 Changeable Minds You want engraved on the ring Goldsmitt name Rod deep. There 30 gratification in slam Certainly — but not t ming the human ra t iz the oniy human race there is quitoes. It also kills bed bugs, roaches, ants, and their eggs. Fatal to insects but harmless to mankind. Will not stain. Get Flit today. /7T 81 TH > 2 DESTROYS Flies Mosquitoes Moths Ants Bed Bugs Roaches sane grannees on be Tea) One Reason Teacher Tommy, why was De mocles afraid to eat his dinner when the sword was suspended over his head by a «ingle hair? Tommy-—-He was afraid would fall in his soup.- Gangs sary oy ten discovered | who adhere] { has boys one girl Jsins a similar or ganization of her own. ‘Among adults, | if bridge ciubg are Included, the pro-| portion would just about be reversed, | A Chix thet for nEgo every the Imir London ldeas, The French superphotographer, M. Nogues, has invented a camera which takes 300 photographs an second, On the stage a plain actress may make up to look pretty, but it can’t be done on the screen. Girls who have no diamonds say About some people the worst thing that ht In vulgar | to wear them. | yOu oan say 1s the truth. Calicars Prevention Unexcelled in ul pushy, they aie gute ky of skin and hair health. The purifying.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers