The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, February 21, 1917, Image 7

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BILIOUS, HEADAGHY,
SIO “CASCABETS”
Gergeg cleanse your liver and
sluggish bowels while
you sleep.
Get a 10-cent box.
Bick headache, biliousness, dizzi-
ness, coated tongue, foul taste and foul
breath—always trace them to torpid
liver; delayed, fermenting food in the
bowels or sour, gassy stomach.
Poisonous matter clogged in the in-
testines, instead of being cast out
of the system is re-absorbed into the
blood. When this poison reaches the
delicate brain tissue it causes conm-
gestion and that dull, throbbing, sick-
ening headache,
Cascarets immediately cleanse the

stomach, remove the sour, undigested |
food and foul gases, take the excess |
bile from the liver and carry out all

the constipated waste matter and |
& poisons in the bowels.
A Cascaret to-night will surely
straighten you out by morning. They
work while you sleep—a 10-cent box
from your druggist means your head
clear, stomach sweet and your liver
and bowels regular for months, Adv.


Rare.
Customer—I'd like to see a good sec- |
ond-hand automobile.
Dealer—So would L
Whenever You Need a General Tonic
Take Grove's
The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless
chill Tonic is equally valuable as a Gen-
eral Tonic because it contains the well
known tonic properties of QUININE and
IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives out
Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Builds
up the Whole System. 50 cents.
Contrary Assurance.
“Can you get me somebody on this |
Job who is a live wire?
“That’s dead easy.”
important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, that famous old remedy
for infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of Tie AT or |
In Use for Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for F letcher’ 8 Castoria |

Grammatically Sure.
“Can this actor make a
tense ?”’
“Certainly, if he’s in the mood.”
situation
As we grow more sensible, we refuse |
drug cathartics and take instead Nature's
herb cure, Garfield Tea. Adv.
SAINT OF CANDY MAKERS
Macarius, Egyptian Man of Fame,
Properly Entitled to Such Honor
as That Name Entails.

Probably few of the confectioners
and candy makers who cater to the
publie’s “sweet tooth” are aware that
they have awition saint all thelr own,
but such is the case. He is St.
Macarius. Macarius was adopted by |
the confectioners as their protector
because he himself followed the oc-
cupation of making sweets in Alex- |
andria before he forsook the world |
and its ways and retired to Thebals |
in upper Egypt to live the solitary and
gelf-sacrificing life of an anchorite.
Macarius lived In the fourth cen-
tury, and, if we may believe the tra-
ditlons concerning him, he was a
champion faster, For seven years, it
{s related, he lived on a diet com-
posed of raw herbs and pulse. Dur- |
ing Lent he ate on Sundays, and then |
but a few cabbage leaves. One of the
remarkable tales told about the
“candy saint” is that once, having
killed a gnat that bit him, he explated |
the “crime” by spending six months |
in a marsh, where great venomous |
flies abounded, subjecting himself to |
such torments that he became a mass |
of sores.








Conclusion. {
call this gentleman |
sald the judge
A Logical
“Did you really
an old fool last night?”
severely.
The prisoner tried hard to collect his |
thoughts.
“The more I look at him the more |
likely it seems that I did,” he replied.





Disciple of Jefferson.
She— Why have you never married? |
He—I am opposed to entangling al-
llances.—Boston Evening Transcript.



Canned fruits are needed in Cuba.




 


YouCan Snap
Your Fingers
at the ill effects




of caffeine when

you change from


coffee to
)STUM
Reason”
i




| abroad show
| sale plants
| perhaps not complete cont
trouble.
| upon weather conditions.
| sons one may plant
| the stems from the seed tubers if the
{| weather conditions are favorable to
| the development of the fungus.
| therefore, advisable to avoid infected
| seed when possible, in addition employ-
ISEASE OF POTATO
Tendency to Spread in Various
Parts of United States.


CAUSE OF ‘STREAK’ UNKNOWN

Mosale Assuming Much Importance as
Ailment in Certain Sections—Seed
Plot Is Best Method of Con.
trolling Disorders.
(From the United States Department of
Agriculture.)
Potato diseases, which are showing
1 tendency to become established or to
spread In various parts of the country,
can best be controlled in most cases
through the adoption by farmers of
the seedbed method of control, accord-
ing to Dr. H. A. Edson, truck-crop dis-
ease specialist of the United States de-
partment of agriculture. In discussing
the potato-disease situation and pos-
sible control measures in a recent ad-
dress, Doctor Edson said:
“A disease of the potato which is
making its appearance in several sec-
tions of the country is the one desig-
aated by Orton as streak. The cause
of this disease is unknown, It is
characterized by the appearance of an-
gular spots on the leaves, which have
a tendency to run down the veins
through the stems of the leaflets to the
main petiole, or leafstalk, producing
a streaked appearance. The affected
portions of the plant wither and die,
the leafstalks break over at the axil
of the leaves—that is, their junction
points with the branches—with the re-
sult that leaves hang directly down,
swinging in the wind and attached
only by a portion of the epidermis. In
severe cases the plants are eventually
entirely killed. The trouble is appar-
ently transmitted from generation to
generation by means of the seed tu-
bers, and there is some indication that
it Is transmitted from plant to plant

“Recent studies upon the powdery
seab have demonstrated the fact that
this disease is less serious in its char
acter in the United States than was at
first feared. It is apparently unable
to survive except in the more north-
ern sections of the country, and the
damage done there is, in many years,
not serious. The disease is correlated
with heavy, rather wet soils, or more
particularly with subsoils of this char-
acter, The damage done is to a large
extent dependent upon weather condi.
tions even in these unfavorable types
of soll,
Decay in Storage.
Several species of Fusarium are now
known to produce potato diseases.
These may be classified in two groups.
The first is the wilt-producing group
which attacks the vascular tissues and
the root system of the plant, cutting
off the water supply and causing in-
Jury in proportion to the extent of the
invasion. In extreme cases a yellow-
ing, or at least an unhealthy green
color and a characteristic rolling of
the folinge develop, to be followed by
sudden wilting and death. The tubers
produced upon infected plants fre-
quently carry the fungus in their vas-
cular tissue, as may often be demon-
strated by the appearance of a dark-
ened ring near their stem end. In-
fested tubers, stored under unfavor-
able conditions, may develop a serious
decay, which is either of the wet or
the dry type according to the tempera-
ture and moisture. The second group
includes other species of Fusarium,
which are to be classified as wound
parasites, They infect the tubers
through wounds resulting from han-
dling while digging or storing. The in-
fections may occur in the field or in
the storage houses. These forms of
decay may be controlled to a large ex-
tent by regulating the storage condi-
tions. The stock should be stored at
a low temperature (34 to 40 degrees
I*.) in well-ventilated houses. Our
knowledge of Fusarium wilt disease
tions for the satisfactory
the vascular parasites can be given.
It is possible, however, to improve the
condition by crop rotation and by care-


|
|
|




BURBANK 1S WELL A
in the fleld. In the absence of more
definite knowledge of the disease, it is
recommended that roguing be prac-
| ticed as a precautionary measure
wherever it appears.
Heavy Loss From Mosaic.
“Mosaic is assuming great impor-
tance as a potato disease in certain
sections of the country. It is charac-
terized by a mottling in the green of
the leaves, sometimes accompanied |
also by a erinkling but not a rolling
of the foliage. The disease should not
| bo confused with the uneven yellowing
which results from the application of
excessive water in irrigated reglons
nor with the somewhat different yel-
lowing and rolling associated with ex-
cessive alkali content in soils, nor
should it be confused with the con-
dition of partial absence of coloring
matter, possibly chimera, seen occa-
sionally in fields, more particularly in
certain sections of the West, The
cause of mosaic has never been deter-
mined, but it is known that the dis-
ease is reproduced when tubers from
affected plants are used for seed. The
experimental data which have been
secured both in the United States and

|



Uniform and of Good Size.
that the yield from mo-
is less than that from
healthy plants of the same variety
grown under the same conditions or
in the same field. The average reduc-
tion in yield in trials made by the de-
partment with various varieties and in
several different sections of the coun-
try Is approximately 80 per cent.
Roguing out affected plants in the
seed plot affords a practical though
rol of the
Rot in Winter.
“The late blight of the potato caused
by Phytophthora infestans and the rot
of tubers which follows in the winter
are too well known to call for descrip-
| are wasted.
DAPTED TO NEW SOILS.
ful selection of the seed stock. Tu-
bers produced on infected plants are
likely to carry the disease, hence such
progeny should never be used for seed.
| Disease-free sced, however, cannot be
depended upon to produce a healthy
crop on infected soil.
Control In Seed Plot.
“Aside from
control which have been mentioned,
| the most practical method of combat-
ing the disease discussed is probably
| that of the seed plot. For this pur-
| pose the
year the best stock available, planting
it upon his best soil type, and caring
From time to time during the growing
season the weak, diseased or other-
this field by hand, selecting those hills
whose ylelds approximate most closely
to the grower’s ideal.
for the next year’s seed plot.
method is followed consistently,
of the diseases which are now so vex-
atious will be largely held under con-
trol, and in addition the gene

| stock will be held at a high level.” |
ALFALFA WILL IMPROVE SOIL
Furnishes Organic Matter and Nitro.
gen, Two Big Essentials in Grow-
ing Good Crops.

| Alfalfa leaves the land richer in or-
| ganic matter and nitrogen than before
| it was grown. Organic matter and
| nitrogen are two things very neces:
| sary to have in the soil in order to |
| grow good crops. In continuous grain |
| growing organic matter and nitroge
| It has been found that
in continuous grain growing five times |
as much nitrogen as the crop uses is
lost from the soil. There is also a |
rapid loss of the organic matter.
When a grass crop or a legume crop
is grown organic matter is added to the
soll. The grasses do not add nitrogen |
but the legumes do, which makes them
more valuable than the grasses.
A legume as alfalfa produces more
hay too than any of the grass crops, |
and the alfalfa hay has a higher feed-
ing value. Alfalfa will improve the |
land and at the same time produce
more food for live stock than any oth- |
er crop grown.
MORE HUMUS NEEDED IN SOIL
Vegetable Matter Required to Make
Land Light, Porous and Mellow—
Admit Air and Water.



tion. It has recently been shown,
| however, that the planting of tubers |
affected with Phytophthora decay af-
fords a means for infection of the
growing crop. The development of the |
disease, however, is entirely dependent
In dry sea-
affected tubers
without insuring the development of
the late blight, but it has been shown
that the original Infections follow up
It is,
ing the usual control by bordeaux
mixture, which Is a well-established
practice,



Soil requires vegetable matter to
make {it light, porous and mellow.
| Close, compact soil does not readily
admit moisture and air, hence soil or-
ganisms that are so essential in break-
| ing down compounds and converting
unavailable plant food into available
foods for plants cannot thrive. But |
when the soil has sufficient vegetable |
matter decayed to a state that we |
call it humus it admits air and water
and lets these plant food helpers thrive |
to make the soil richer. i
Close, clammy soils will never yield
as they should till the per cent of |
humus is increased. Barnyard manure |
and turning under green crops are |
a ways of increasing the hu- |!
mls. By breaking early enough for |
[stalks and weeds to decay more hu-
mus may be added.
has not reached a stage where direc- |
control of |
the specific means of |
farmer employs in the first |
for it in the most approved manner. |
wise undesirable plants are rogued |
out, At digging time it is highly de- |
sirable to harvest at least a portion of |
Tubers ob- |
tained in this way form the nucleus |
If this |
many |
ral vigor |
and consequent productiveness of the |
| too
| houses.”
THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA.
SYRUP OF FIS FOR
A CHILD'S BOWELS
It is cruel to force nauseating,
harsh physic into a
sick child,
Look back at your childhood days.
Remember the “dose” mother insisted
on—castor oil, calomel, cathartics.
Hew you hated them, how you fought
against taking them,
With our children it's different.
Mothers who cling to the old form of
physic simply don’t realize what they
do. The children’s revolt is well-found-
ed. Their tender little “insides” are
injured by them.
If your child’s stomach, liver and
bowels need cleansing, give only deli-
cious “California Syrup of Figs.” Its
action is positive, but gentle. Millions
of mothers keep this harmless “fruit
laxative” handy; they know children
love to take it; that it never falls to
clean the liver and bowels and sweet-
en the stomach, and that a teaspoonful
given today saves a sick child tomor-
row.
Ask at the store for a 50-cent bottle
of “California Syrup of Figs,” which
has full directions for babies, children
of all ages and for grown-ups plainly
on each bottle. Adv.

A Hint.
“Oh, I just love animals; don’t you?”
gurgled the sweet young thing.
“Sure. Let's have a Welsh rabbit,”
sald the accommodating youth.—Town
Topics.

SWAMP-ROOT STOPS
SERIOUS BACKACHE
When your back aches, and your blad-
| der and kidneys seem to be disordered, re-
member it is needless to suffer—go to your
nearest drug store and get a bottle of Dr.
Kilmer's Swamp-Root. It is a physician's
prescription for diseases of the kidneys
and bladder.
| Tt has stood the test of years and has
| & reputation for quickly and effectively
| giving results in thousands of cases.
| This prescription was used by Dr. Kil
| mer in his private practice and was so
| very effective that it has been placed on
| sale everywhere. Get a bottle, 50c and
| $1.00, at your nearest druggist.
However, if you wish first to test this
| great preparation send ten cents to Dr.
Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a
| sample bottle. When writing be sure and
| mention this paper.—Adv.

[ Poor Fellow Had to Walk.
“Tell me of your early educational
hardships.”
“Well, I lived seven blocks from a
Carnegie library, and we had no auto-
mobile.”—Louisville Courier-Journal.
CUTICURA KILLS DANDRUFF
The Cause of Dry, Thin and Falling
Hair and Does It Quickly—Trial Free.

Anoint spots of dandruff, itching and
Irritation with Cuticura Ointment. Fol-
low at once by a hot shampoo with
Cuticura Soap, if a man, and next
| morning if a woman. When Dandruff |
goes the hair comes. Use Cutlcura |
Soap daily for the toilet,
i Free sample each by mail with Book.
Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L,
Boston, Sold everywhere.—Adv.

|
|
Extreme Caution.
| *“Jenks’' fad is insisting that every-
| thing in his life must have flavor.”
“Yes, he will not even sit down to
a table unless sure the wood Is sea-
soned.”
MOTHER’S JOY SALVE
for Colds, Croup, Pneumonia and
Asthma ; GOOSE GREASE LINIMENT
for Neuralgia, Rheumatism and
Sprains. For sale by all Druggists.
| GOOSE GREASE COMPANY, MFR'S,
Greensboro, N. C.—Adyv,



Sense of Justice.
“That parrot I bought uses violent |
language.”
“Lady,”
replied the dealer, “I won't |

«
fluenced by
birds,
erels will be
| ing unless you have trap-nested and
kept records on the hens.

FARM +
POULTRY «
BEGIN FIGHT ON PARASITES
Poor Policy to Wait Until Spring When
Insects Become Numerous—Dust
Birds Thoroughly.



A common practice among poultry
men is to wait in the spring until lice
and other parasites have become so
numerous that they will be noticeable,
By far the better plan is to begin the
fight early and keep them from getting
a start,
One of the best means of doing this |
is to dust the birds thoroughly with a |
good insect powder, at regular inter- |
There |
is no harm in giving the hens an appli- |
vals, beginning in late winter,
cation occasionally even in midwinter
since they are never entirely free from |
lice, and everyone of these pests killed
before the breeding season may mean
a million or two less to fight next sum-
mer.
CHICKENS KEPT IN BROODERS
Much Loss Can Be Avoided by Keep-
ing Everything Clean—Use Cut
Straw for Litter.
Much of the loss in raising chicks |
in brooders can be obviated by keep- |
ing the floor of brooders and brooder |
houses covered with an inch of clean
sand.
Cut corn stover or cut straw may
be used on the sand for scratch litter. |
Such material as clover or timothy
chaff or buckwheat hulls are objection-
able in the brooder house.
pick up the particles of the fuzzy stuff
and are not able to pass them through |
the crop.
The young chicks need a daily feed-
ing of fine-cut green grass if they are |
to do well.

ROOSTER TO IMPROVE FLOCK |
In Selecting Young Fowls Use Best |
Judgment—~Certain Characteris-
tics May Be Noted.
The kind of cockerels used is far
more important than
poultry raisers believe. The fact that
one bird looks well and is healthy and
active is a good indication of a good


The chicks |
most farmer- |
bird. But this is not enough. The
male bird should be of such good |
breeding that he will improve the
flock. If he is not capable of doing
this he is not worthy of his place as
head of the flock.
When you are selecting the male
birds from the young cockerels of your
own flock you should use your best |
judgement and find the best indivi-
duals. In this case you must be




| Silver Penciled Plymouth Rock Cock.
the appearance of
as for the most part the cock-
about the same in breed-
| deny that he does swear some. But| It is rather hard to select young
you must give him credit for the fact | cockerels, as they miy often deceive
that he doesn’t drink nor gamble.” one when they are quite young. Like
i a 2 | a calf, a colt, or a pig, there is much
If you suspect that vour child has Worms, | Speculation in selecting for breeding
a single dose of Dr. Peery's “Dead Shot” | nyrposes, Nevertheless, there are
will settle the question. Its action upon | r
the Stomach and Bowels is beneficial in | certain characteristics that may be
either case. Mo second dose or after pur- | noted. From these a careful breeder
Adv.
gative necessary.

Excessively Polite.
“Mary, how tall is a giant?”
Henry.
“Oh, I don’t know,’
“about as tall as a house. |
“And how tall is a house? |
+ “How should I know? Don’t ask |
|
asked |
’ sald the nurse;
”
”
so many questions. I have no idea |
how tall a house is.”
“Excuse me, Mary,” sald Henry |
with dignity, “I forgot that you were
poor to know anything about .
Dr. Pierce’s Pellets are best for liver,
bowels and stomach. One little Pellet for
a laxative—three for a cathartic.—Adv.


Man Who Knows.
“The doctor says I am working too
hard.”
“Id put more faith in that diag-
nosis if it came from your boss.”
ACTRESS TELLS SECRET.




the winter months,
are pullets, is that the summer supply
bugs and insects is cut off, |
and
take their place.
requiring both meat
START IN POULTRY BUSINESS |
Spring Is Good Time to Begin—Either
will determine the male birds for his
flock.
Given Something to Take Place
of Bugs and Insects.

One reason why eggs
yf worms,
no meat substitute is given to
The hen is an omnivorous feeder,
and vegetables.
Obtain Breeding Pen or File
Order for Eggs.



Spring is a good time to start in
A well known actress gives the follow- the boultry JUSIRRAS. Rither
or gray hair: To half pint of | @ good breeding pen from n
e 1 oz. Bay Rum, a small box of | who is reliable and who raises the
2 +H. DO C 1 0! a .
Bag Le sad, put SL Bye | breed you fancy, or else send for
mix it at home at very little cost. Full | eggs. You do not have much m
directions for making and use come in| to g¢htain breeding pens, for
each box of Barbo Compound. It will | breeders of purebred stock hav
gradually darken streaked, faded gray yr2eders of purebred stock have
hair, and r soft and glossy. It will | pens mated by this time and witl



alp, is not sticky or |
ot rub off. Adv.
color
and C
not
greasy,
Sur
I say
re Enough,
s I'm eating too mueh
sugar makes you |
1£4
“The doct«
sweet s
lazy. Think it
“Loaf sugar m

do«
i
ight.
1
Only One “BROMO QUININE”
the genuipe, call for full pame LAXATIVE
MO QUININE. Look for siznature of B. W.
OVE. Cures a Cold in One Day. 200.

ER
| BREN
GR

It is reported hat an Ohio temper- |
advocate refused to have his por- |
H ainted umfless it; was done in|
ples.





doubt will have disposed of their st
plus choice breeding males by adver-
tising them last fall and selling them |
to parties wanting good breeders.
these breeders and obtain their
to have the eggs for a month or
| send now
| and get your order booked,
| are doing the
| breeders send out eggs in thq
booked.
due to inability of the shipper


n, then, is to send to
price
Even if you do not care
The other pla
ists at once.
SO,
and obtain the price’l
for others
and



same thing,





Delays oftentimes cost
orders as promptly
| ness and itching of the scalp,
the |
GIVE CHICKENS GREEN FOOD |
During Winter Months Hen Must Be |
are not laid in |
even where there |
in- |
| cooked ;
yey Invested Some of The
Spare Money in Canadian
Lands,

8. Joseph & Sons, of Des Moines, |
Towa, are looked upon as being shrewd, |
careful business men, Having some |
spare money on hand, and looking for
a suitable investment, they decided to
purchase Canadian lands, and farm it.
With the assistance of the Canadian
Government Agent, at Des Moines,
| Towa, they made selection near Cham-
{ pion, Alberta, They put 240 acres of
and in wheat, and in writing to Mr.
Hewitt the Canadian Government
Agent at Des Moines, one of the mems-
| bers of the firm says:
have much pleasure in advising

you that on our farm five miles east
of Charpion, in the Province of Al-
berta, ada, this year (1916 we har-
vested i threshed 10,600 bushels of
wheat from 240 acrcs, this being an
| average of 44 bushels and 10 pounds
| to the ace + considerable portion
of the ‘wheat was No. 1 Northern,
worth at Champion approximately
making a total return
| =
| $1.85 per bushel,
| of $81.70 per
of $19,610, or an average
| acre gross yields. Needless to say, we
are extremely well pleased with our
lands.”
It might not be uninteresting to read
| the report of C.. A. Wright of Milo,
| Towa, who bought 160 acres at Cham-
| pion, Alberta, for $3,300 in December,
1915. He stubbled in the whole lot of
it, and threshed 4,487 bushels Grade
| No. 2 Northern.
| Mr. Wright, being a thorough busi-
| ness man, gives the cost of work, and
the amount realized. These figures
show that after paying for his land
and cost of operation he had $2,472.67
left. |
4487 bushels, worth $1.55 at
Champion $6,054.85
Threshing bill,

i “per bushel .......3 403.57 |
| Seed at 95¢ ........ 144.00 |
PYDPNING seeeesscnes 16000
Cutting ...csueaes 160.00
I TWIne sicesssevens 50.00 |
Shocking ..vcseceeee 40.00 |
| Haling to town, 3c. 134.01

.$1,182.18
3,300.00
Total cost
Cost of 1and .....
$4,482.18 $4,482.18
Net profit after paying for
farm and all cost of opera-
tion
—Advertise ont.
Not Served There. |
The applicant for cook, in a story |
told by the Ladies’ Home Journal, |
was untidy and insolent in appear- |
ance.
“Don’t hire her,” whispered
to his wife; “I don’t like her looks.”
“But,” remonstrated his wife, *‘just
consider the reputation for cooking she
”
Jones
bears.
“That
testily ;
doesn't matter,” said Jones
“we don’t want any she-bears
we don’t like them.”
FALLING HAIR MEANS
Save Your Hair!
DANDRUFF IS ACTIVE
Get a 25 Cent Bottle
of Danderine Right Now—Also
Stops Itching Scalp.


Thin, brittle, colorless and scraggy |
hair is mute evidence of a neglected
scalp; of dandruff—that awful scurf.
There is nothing so destructive to
the hair as dandruff. It robs the hair
of its luster, its strength and its very |
life; eventually producing a feverish- |
which
if not remedied causes the hair roots
to shrink, loosen and die—then the
hair falls out fast. A little Danderine |
tonight—now—any time—will surely
save your hair. |
Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton’s
Danderine from any store, and after
the first application your hair will
take on that life, luster and luxuriance
which is so beautiful. It will become
and fluffy and have the appear-
ance of abundance; an incomparable
gloss and but what will |
please you most will be after just a
few weeks’ when you will actual-
ly see a lot of fine, downy hair
hair—growing all over the scalp.
wavy
softness,
use,

new |
Adv,

Picked the Right Spot.
“I see where a rich n
» and flower
nent house.”
would be
n has built a |
n


arden on top of an

just the place {
3 -
ay hy?’
“I don’t
chickens could ever
neighbor’s
0 there.”
see how the
get
Whenever
pation, !
a cup


who
ver Helen, ag


  
“How old are you, darling st
asked.
“I isnt’ old,” said Hel ‘I'm nearly
new.”
Backache |
In spite of the best care one takes
of oneself, any part of the k
able to become out of
impo rtant organs are the 8
heart and kidneys.
The kidneys are the scave
day and night in s
s from the blood.
s are easily x
such th as bs
drowsiness, irrital
dizziness, rheumatic







clude
pressions,
aches,

twinges, |
, gout. i
“The very best way to restore the ||


kidneys to their normal state of hea lth
says Dr. Pierce, of Buf alo, oN Yo
i |
to |
  
drink plenty of pur nd e* in |
from your favorite 2 y a small
amount of Anuric, which is dispensed by
every dr uggist > Anuric is inex-

e and should be taken before meals. |
ill find Anuric more potent than
dissolves uric acid as water does





| which he
erament of the iN
vidual, "DWT perhaps more largely st
upon his habits, The common belie
of many authors, however, has been
that their best work is done at night,

Hanseatic League.
The Hanseatic league is said to have
been the first trade union. It was es.
tablished in the thirteenth century by
certain cities of northern Germany for
their mutual prosperity and protection,
The diet which used to be held every
three years, was called the Hansa,
This league was virtuaily broken up
in 1630.

Clinched His Assertion.
“Anything new in the show?’ asked
the local manager. “Yes,” answered
the visiting agent. “The biggest sup-
ply of new songs, new faces, new
jokes ever shown in captivity, Just to
show you the trouble we've. taken with
that show, we've been collecting all
that material for the last ten years,”

Take Warning Frem Corns.
Corns really are warning signs that
we are ill treating our feet, either by
wearing tight shoes which in time de«
form the bones of the foot or by wears
ing shoes which permit the foot to
thus submitting the surface of
the foot to intermittent pressure.
chafe,

—
Lived in One Room 82 Years.
Croydon, England, has lost by death
a trader who, in an interesting way,
carried on the trading traditions of
the past. He was Robert Brain, who
died at eighty-five years old in a room
the little old-fashioned shop in
had lived for Mr,
Brain was reputed to be the largest
ratepayer in the borough,
corporation about £800 a
Chronicle.
over
82 years.
| individual
| paying the
vear.—London




Farmer—" Them city folks want to know if there's
a bath in the house. What'll I tell "em? ™
His Wife—"Tell ‘em if they need 4 bath, they'd
better take it before they come.”
Take a bath of course, and evry three
hours while awake take a dose of
Boschee’s
German Syrup
It will quiet your cough, soothe the
inflammation of a sore throat and
lungs, stop the irritation in the bron-
chial tubes, insuring a good night's
rest, free and easy expectoration in
the morning. That old time-tested
remedy which for more -ghan half
a century has brought relief and
comfort to countless thousands all
over the civilized voorid. 25¢ and 75¢
at druggists and deaics everywhere,




Have vou
RHEUMATISM
Lumbago or Gout?
Take RHEUMACIDE to remove the cause
and drive the poison from the system.
“RHEUMACIDE ON THE INSIDE
PUTS RHEUMATISH ON TIE OUTSIDE”
At All Druggists
Jas. Baily & Son, Wholesale Distributors
Baltimore, Md.

 








Why suffer from
excruciating neu-
ralgia pains when
ication of Yager's Liniment
will give quick relief?
isliniment is



  
Liniment as EE
as the
SEES
LINIMENT
GILBFRT BROS. & CO.
Baltimore, Md.
Tus Pi Pills
The dyspeptic, the debilitated, whether from
1b


 


 


excess of work of 91 mig or body, drink or ex=
REGIGONS,
posure in
MAL
will find Tutt
tive ever offes
TCH
PAR




She el Music « 3 3
AUTO Orne, Eres
carb: Bn. sive Kasi Cob Box i34 XN
METAL SOLDIERS ie Deets, Moe.” Stangach
ng Co., 68 Weld Roche stor, N. Xa


tnpies, blotches, sores,
humors, and eruptions,


i Dr. Picrce’s Golden
Medical Discovers. ._ For
a poor complexion, “ands,
for the poor blood that
causes it, this is the bess
nown remedies,
3 isease or dis-
= @ skin or scalp,
! fn “every trouble that
| | come 3 from impure blood,


 

AL
10
ler of


the “Discovery” is the
only medicine sold that
R .jdoes what it promises.
A BE Scrofula in all its varie
-1 ous forms, Eczema, Tet-
ter, Salt-rhenm, Erysipelas, Boils, Car-
buncles, Enlarged Glands, and Swell
ings, and every kindred ailment, are
benefited and cured by it.
——

Cut this out and mail to us with the
name of the paper—we will mail yom
free a medical treatise on above dis-
eases.
Address D5 Pierce’s Invalids’®
Hotel, Buffalo, N
regulate


Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellet:
and invigorate stomach, liver andl
Sugar-coated, tiny granules,
a8 candy.