V be / py Manufactured by House of Quality COLUMBIA, PA. HOTEL McGINNIS East Main St. Mount Joy, Penna. Restaurant and Lunch Bar YSTERS IN ANY STYLE CLAMS IN ANY STYLE DEVIL CRABS TURTLE SOUPS V In fact everything in season. Private Dining Room for Ladies. J. W. McGINNIS PROPRIETOR ROBERT H. HOKE PROFESSIONAL UNDERTAKER / AND / / EMBALMER Bunday and Night Calls Responded to Immediately. Bell Prone MOUNT JOY, PA. T7-Pase., 40H. P, ¢ Price $1190 Ges i, Agency in Your Own Locality . - Our agents are making big money Any rellable farmer, or aggressive man can dothe same. Case products are known asthe best in every farming district—Case agents find it easy to sell cars because of this. One Case agent in a neighboring county of Pennsylvania made in a few months a @® Cash Profitof $1904.00 Don’t wait, Don tlosethisagency. Write forthe won- derful Case catalog and pz-ticulars atonce, Address J. 1. Case Representatives, P, 0. E454, Lancaster, Pa. YOUR NEXT Williams—The Barber Agent for Manhattan Laundry West Main St., Mt. Joy, Pa. / THE FAMOUS CHINCATEAGUE OYSTERS 356 CENTS PER QUART Groceries and Provisions BRANT BROS MT. JOY ST. MT. JOY, PA. FOR HAND-MADE HARNESS OTO R.D.RAFFENSBERGER SALUNGA, PA. Advertis- ing a Sale! CU don’t Itave | 2 rig in the middle of the road and go to a fence- post to read a sale bill do you? Then don’t expect the other fel- low to do it. Put an ad in this paper, then, regardless of the weather, the fellow you want to reach reads your announce- ments while seated at his fireside. if he is a prospective buyer you'll have him at yoursale. One extra Buyer often pays the entire expense of the ad, and it's a poor ad that won't pull that buyer. An ad in this paper reaches the people you are after. Bills may be 2 necessity, but the ad is the thing that does the business. Don’t think of having a special sale without using advertising space in this Paper. { OneExtraBuyer § § &t a ssle often pays the | entire expense of the ad. Get That Buyer § | . ‘Great New CASE 40" ‘NEW SPRING SUITS OF SATIN | | Designers Plan to Use This Material | There is a strong tendency to omit a | can be kept on. | public place. BARREL SKIRT HERE | DESIGNS OF NEW EFFECT ARE ALREADY BEING SHOWN. | Cannot Be Said to Have Been Abso- lutely Accepted, but Rather Has Been Put Forward for Ap- proval or Disapproval. Behold the barrel skirt! Not for several seasons has a change in silhouette excited so much { comment and caused so much perturba- | tion of spirit among costumers as the | present season introduction of the bar- [ rel skirt, or *“jupe tonneau,” as the | French designate it. | The figure silhouette had been quite serenely and happily settled when bul- | retins concerning the arrival of the | barrel skirt were heard, to be followed | shortly by the skirt itself, It has not been accepted; make no mistake about that; but it is threat- ened, and ever so many interpretations | | | WN i] Hl [I | BR | [RR [ Nob [RY | NY I NNT [ RRMR { N N EER N ANS \ | RRR NJ [ARNG HER N | RHEE | 3b N | RAY | DANN i D Lo IN \ NOK 3 N IRR | BRR: \ NN Not N NM | NR SY \ ! J OR } 4) Rh NR A Afb Aff Fr AA fofodokh LLL 27; Behold the Barrel Skirt! | of the garment are before the public, | Some are very | pleading for approval. simple affairs, really only glorified members of the old favorite, the peg- freakish, and there are some models | tive as well, and worth very serious consideration. One such is shown in the sketch pre- sented herewith. This model barrel skirt is the most Interesting half of a | the arrangement of the skirt, with its slightly bulging hip gores of fabric con- trasting in color with the major por- tion of. the garment, a suggestion is given that the skirt may be simply un- | buttoned at the bottom and a regular | skirt result. This is not true, how- ever. It is merely an illusion. The skirt of the frock shown meas- ures two yards at the bottom, and its silhouette is arrived at, as one may clearly see by a glance at the sketch, by two straight front and back panels of equal width, top and bottom, gath- ered in at the waistline, left open at | elther’ side to about the knees, and | from there fastened securely, the in- set of contrasting fabric bulging so as to accentuate a hip flare and re- 3ult in the barrel silhouette. The bodice of this little gown is | very smart; but in the excitement of considering the barrel skirt, whether | It is to be or not to be, the question | of bodice grows to be of comparative- ly minor importance. It must be con- | sidered, however, and it may be stated | that the bodice fastens simply in the | center back with small bullet buttons matching those employed on the skirt. | The gown might be attractively devel- oped with sand-colored serge and taf- feta in a contrasting shade, narrow black soutache brald giving a smart trimming touch. Four and a quarter | yards of material 36 inches wide will | be required for the gown proper, with onc nud a half yards of combination fabric.—Washington Star. ‘MANY MODELS IN BLOUSES | Not for Several Seasons Has Such a | Pleasing Variety Been Offered as Just Now. | — A noticeable feature about the num- ber of blouses for she coming season | is the fact that there is a little of everything to be found among them. | While peplums are not so strong as | they were, they are being used to give | distinction to a few models. It is ex- threatened | | blouses is Irish crochet lace. "| placed and covered up, so that the air top skirt, while others are decidedly | that qualify as new and are attrac- | gown employing two fabrics, and in | * welcome when white skirts are worn A white or light peplum looks out o! place with a dark skirt. Paisley col orings and Paisley designs are very popular, and hand embroidery, along with soutache braid, is being rushed as strong as possible. A particularly attractive blouse of dark blue chiffor was printed in a large floral design rose, blue, green and gold in color, The collar was of rose. Rose stripes around the blouse gave a bolero effect The peplum was bound in rose, A clever peplum idea was carried out on a dark blue satin blouse in the form of heavily brocaded metallic tis sue in various colors. The bands passed over the shoulders and extended be low the waistline to give a peplum ef: fect. Bright-colored prints are very much in evidence, Stripes and plaids in blue and gold and rose, with a touch of black somewhere about them, all-over Paisleys and white with Paisley and | Persian dots are seen. An important trimming on blouses | of georgette crepe and on cotton In many instances it is dyed to match the color of the blouse on which it is used. On | a biscuit-colored georgette crepe blouse the lace, dyed to match, forms the back | of the square collar. In the front the collar forms a surplice effect and Is edged with Irish crochet picot. The fullness of the sleeves is caught by an insert of the lace several inches above the wrist. Diamond-shaped inserts of the lace dyed are very effective on the fronts of | blouses. ‘DAINTY FOR DRESSING TABLE | Jewel Tray Almost as Much of an Ornament as Articles It Is Meant to Contain. It is nice to have upon the dressing |table some little receptacle in which (rings, brooches, etc, can be easily | will not tarnish them while they are inot in use. We give a sketch of a { dainty little tray to make for this pur- pose. It can be made from the lid of a | cardboard box of a suitable size. The | sides are covered with thin silk, the | en THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA, PRINCIPAL AIM IN WINTERING STOCKERS (By ¢. I. BRAY, Colorado Agricultural College, Fort Collins, Colo.) The principal object in wintering cattle is to bring them through the the winter in such condition that they will make the best returns the next season, In days of unlimited range and cheap beef, what would now be considered a high death loss was tak- as a matter of course. With high beef prices, limited range, and with feedstuffs more readily available in case of need, it is not considered economical to let stock cattle lose flesh in wintering. They will be in better shape to take advantage of the next season’s grass if they gain a lit- tle through the winter. It is not ad- visable, on the other hand, to let stock cattle fatten much, unless they are to be fed out for market before June, as they are likely to lose this fat on early spring grass, and will not make such profitable gains through the fol- lowing summer. Under farm conditions, the greatest possible use should be made of such roughages as corn fodder, straw, or silage, but these feeds must be supplemented with either a little cot. tonseed cake, linseed meal or alfalfa hay. An advantage of cottonseed cake is that it can be used readily to supplement poor winter grazing, be- ing easily transported, very concen- trated, easy to feed, and a natural supplement to native grasses. Alfalfa alone fed to steers at the North Platte station, Nebraska, made gains of three- fourths pound per day as compared to gains of one-fifth pound on prairie hay, but alfalfa and prairie hay tegether were practically equal to alfalfa alone. Fourteen pounds of straw and one pound of cottonseed meal have put 21 pounds gain on stockers during a winter's feeding. The addition of one pound cottonseed meal to a silage ra- tion has proved more profitable than silage alone, making total gains of 16 pounds per head. RUSTY STRAW GOOD FOR FARM ANIMALS On General Principles It Is Not Considered Advisable to Feed It to Females. {By M. H. REYNOLDS, Division of Vet- erinary Science, University Farm, St. Paul.) Is rusty straw safe or desirable stock food? The general teaching for a _) Nr Jewel Tray for Dressing Table. material being turned over at the edges and underneath and fastened on with a strong adhesive. The interior is loosely silk fastened In place with a few | stitches run through the card. The | flap which covers the tray is made of thicker silk or satin edged with silk cord, and lined with soft white silk. It is sewn on at the back of the tray | and the cord in front is arranged in two little loops which fasten to two barrel buttons sewn on where indicat- ed in the sketch. Upon the front of the flap a pretty little floral design is embroidered, con- sisting of a pale pink rose and leaves worked in varlous shades of green, and within this design the initials of the owner are worked in gold, inclosed in a horseshoe composed of tiny green leaves. DICTATES OF FASHIGN have lined with Dainty handkerchiefs net edges. The aigrette is once more in vogue. | New tricorn hats are soft and pli- able. The tam-o’-shanter crown is fash- ionable. Metal brocaded ribbons are having a great vogue. There are toques made entirely of ostrich feathers. Some charming frocks are ruffled from waist to hem. The skating girl must wear a tam- o’-shanter and scarf to match. The trains on some evening gowns are still no bigger than sashes. The entire silhouette promises to be a little narrower and a little closer. Unusual Sham. i A pillow sham that is unusual is | made of fine white linen, ornamented | with three fllet crochet insets. The sham measures about 59 inches long | and 22 inches wide and Is finished with | pected. that they will receive greater a deep hemstitched hem. { A A A A AAA AA AAA A Add IIA. | Largely as a Substitute for the Serge. The designers are bringing out a heavy weave of satin for the first spring suits, as a substitute for serge. blouse and arrange the coat so that it A few of these new coats are buttoned down the back from neck to hem, which removes any possibility of their being taken off in a It appears that the prevailing creed in fashion is that a woman must not think of going in her shirt sleeves any more than & man would think of do- ing it; she wears a wash blouse be- neath the jacket for purposes of clean- liness, but not publicity. So far-reach- Ing is this creed that the medieval tunic, which extends only to the hip line and is fastene® to the shoulder or slips over the head, is worn with a eloth skirt over a blouse even in the wouse, Probably tle best thing to remem- ber in buying clothes now is that the | figure must be straightened out in the { medieval manner, from bust to hips. You can choose your own way of do- ing it, whether by a deep girdle, by the straight lines of the fabric or by a | belt of suede or leather that conceals | any inward curve beneath the arms | toward the waist. There is no evidence that embroid- | ery in bullion and slik thread will go ! out of fashion this spring, but the or | nate French designs taken from stain- | ed-glass windows of the fifteenth cen- tury have given way to the more primi- tive designs that one sees on the pot- tery of Indians. The fashion for the cashmere and Paisley shawls that came out in Oecto- | ber will again find expression this spring in figures printed on flat sur | faces, and also the reproduction of the | Paisley pear, which is an old Indian design, in embroidery done in colored and bullion threads. Instead of stringing beads and cut. ting out funny pictures, children in a California schooi are being taught te darn daddy's socks. | and in view of some uncertainty, it | much on sows uniil he is one year old, | one day, | ing at the time he is being used. This | keeps him in good condition, and bet- { ter results may be obtained. | PREVENT INJURY BY RABBITS {| add three teaspoonfuls of paris green, | possible income from lambs and wool many years has been that blights, rusts, smuts, ete., are all harmful and likely to produce abortions and other troubles. Actual experience and some research work, howevjr, show that (his statement is far too general. There can be no question concern- ing the undesirability of moldy hay, straw, grain, or ensilage, on account of the well-known forage poisoning of horses and cattle, but quantities of corn smut have been fed in experi- mental work, without evident harm, though this does not prove that under other circumstances smut may not be Injurious. Stock seems sometimes ac- tually to prefer straw in the black rust stage and eat it readily, yet the same stock may appear to straw in the red-rust stage, possibly because more dusty. We think that the farmer would be quite justified in the cautious feeding of rusty straw. On general principles would be better not to use rusty straw for a female heavy with young, though even in such a case it might do no harm. There is little positive informa- tion available. The writer would greatly appreciate reports of actual experience. RIGHT MANAGEMENT OF BOAR Animal Should Not Be Used Very Much Until One Year Old—Keep in Best of Condition. should not be used very A boar nor for heavy service until two years old, If one wants to develop a boar to the highest possibility it is not well to use him at all under one year old. One service per day is enough, but in case two sows are to be served in breed one in the morning end the other in the evening, and let the boar rest a day or so before using him again. One service to a sow is all that is necessary. With such a treatment a mature boar should be able to handie 50 or 60 sows during a breeding season. The boar should be kept in good condition all the year, but not so fat as to be lazy and clumsy. His ratgn should be increased before the breed- ing seascn, in order to have him gain- Paris Green Added to Whitewash Ap- plied to Trees Will Stop Animals From Gnawing Bark. dislike | NOT ECONOMICAL TO ALLOW CATTLE TO LOSE FLESH. SCOURS IN CALVES CAN BE PREVENTED Animals Should Have Warm, Clean and Well-Ventilated Pens—Feed Grain. Thousands of calves are lost each year by what is known as scours, says H. H. Kildee, University farm, St. Paul. On every farm measures should be taken to guard against this dis- Beets, Silage and Alfalfa Produce Sat. isfactory Results—Cabbage Also Is Excellent. Succulent feed should be given te chickens in winter, because of its val ue as a tonic, asserts RR. M. Sherwood, acting head of the department of poul try husbandry in the Kansas state ag ricultural college. “Beets, silage, and alfalfa may be obtained on most farms,” said Mr Sherwood. “Alfalfa leaves soaked in sour milk are of great value. The milk softens the leaves, and also fur. nishes valuable food nutrients. It is well for the farmer to plant winter wheat or rye near his chicken house.” Cabbage is excellent as a green feed, in the opinion of Mr. Sherwood. Some persons feed turnips, potatoes, and even apples. used for succulence, but it is not de- sirable that the sprouting be done in the house because of the offensive odor given off. This necessitates the use of a special sprouter with heater, and adds materially to the cost of the feed. REPAIRS FOR THE INCUBATOR Time to Get Machine Order—Removable Parts Should Be Thoroughly Cleaned. (By C. E. BROWN, Poultryman, North- west Experiment Station) In a few days many incubators will be in operation. Whether the chicks are to be hatched early in March or not until the middle of April, it is time to look after repairs and to get the machine —in shape. Repairs for the incubator may not be readily found. If the incubator was neglected at the close of last season, it should be thor- oughly cleaned. Removable should be taken out and washed and the entire machine should be aired and sunned. A 10 per cent solution of zenoleum should be used as a disin- fectant in washing the interior of the machine. PREPARE GEESE FOR MARKET Use Slender-Bladed Sharp Knife, Mak- ing Cut Well Back in Order to Induce Free Bleeding. When the birds are thoroughly fat ease, which results from a deranged digestive system. Calves should have warm, clean, light and well-ventilated pens. Milk should be fed on regular amounts, at regular times, at a temperature of | about 80 degree F., from scrupulously | clean pails. The foam which accum- ulates on the milk while it is being separated should never be fed. The time to feed the grain ration is immediately after the milk is fed, so that the calves will not suck each oth- er’s ears and thus take air into the stomach, which causes bloat and pro- duces scours. It is well to have stanchions in one side of the pen so that the calves may be confined for a short time after be- ing fed milk. ROUGHAGES OF FARM TURNED INTO MONEY One of Chief Advantages in Keep- ing Live Stock Is Utilizaticn of Cheap Feeds. (By C. A. WILLSON, Kentucky Experi- ment Station.) The chief advantage that would re- sult from the keeping of live stock on the majority of farms is that to a large extent the returns would be ad- | ditional to those realized when live | stock was not kept. These returns would be additional because live stock would turn the roughages of the farm, | that are now going to waste, into | money. More than one-half the fod- der in this state goes to waste every year, For every head of cattle in the state there are produced three acres of corn, which will average one ton of stover per acre. One and one-half tons of stover is more than is needed to winter one head of cattle. There is going to waste, then, every year in this state, 5,700,000 tons of ®rn stover, which at a valuation of $5 per ton means a loss to the farmers of the state, through a lack of proper utili- zation of feeds by cattle, of over $28,« 000,000. LAYING HEN NEEDS PROTEIN Meat Scrap Has Produced Increased | Egg Production at the Ohio Ex- periment Station. “Hens require some protein of ani- | mal origin if best results in egg pro- | duction are to be secured,” said W J. | Buss, poultryman at the Ohio experi- ment station. “In eur work meat | According to the experts of the | North Dakota agricultural college, | damage to trees by rabbits gnawing the bark can be stopped in the follow- | {| lowing way : Make a thick whitewash; i | slacking the lime overnight improves it. To each pailful of the whitewash and paint the trees with it. Stir fre- quently when applying it. Income From Lambs. Ten dollars a head is not an im- from good ewes. Even as high a re- turn as $12 has been reported by sheep | growers. Something to Make Milk. The ewes will need something that will make milk. Are they getting it? Raising Calves on Milk. Raise calves on clean, warm, sweet skim milk, fed regularly, D> i scrap has produced increased egg yields and more than paid for itself, but soy beans generally are not a sat- isfactory high-protein feed. In re-| cent feeding tests at the station, hens | fed soy beans laid only a few more | eggs than those given no feed high in protein. Skim milk and tankage are also suitable for use in rations for laying hens. Marketing Dairy Cattle. Dairy cattle can be marketed profit- ably only in the following way—i. e., by vealing from thirty to forty days old, or fed and sold as baby beef at eighteen or twenty months old. A good dairy cow will earn $40 or $50 more every year than an average so-called dual-purpose cow. Good for Dairy Farmer. The silo, cream separator and the manure spreader are indispensables te ihe successful dairy farmer, | problem of supplying it and plump, geese may be killed in the following manner: slender-bladed, sharp knife into the roof of the mouth. The cut should be made well back in order to induce free bleeding. It is difficult to drypick a fat bird without tearing the skin. A better way is to loosen the feathers by scalding or steaming. A good way is to make a small plat- form of laths and place it in &=s bot tom of a barrel so that the platform will be about 4 inches above the water. Pour into the barrel boiling water un- til it comes within about an inch of the platform. form, cover the barrel tightly with a heavy piece of carpet or cloth and al- low it to steam for five or six minutes. Before placing the bird in the bar- rel, tie a stout string to its feet, leav- ing one end hanging outside by which Well-Bred Toulouse Geese. the bird may be drawn out and sus- pended at a convenient height for pick- ing. Have a large bag or barrel near into which the feathers may be placed | as they are picked. Care must be ta- ken that the feathers are not soiled by blood or dirt as they will lose their value. After the bird is thoroughly cleaned, | dip in cold water and allow it to re- main two or three minutes. Leave feathers on about half the neck next to the head and also on the wings above the first joint. Geese should be marketed with the heads on and un- drawn. Do not lay one bird upon an- other when picked but wrap each in a clean cloth or paper, place it on its back and allow it to cool in that form. Never hang a bird up by the feet or head to cool as this destroys their plump appearance. Storing Eggs for Hatching. Eggs that are to be used for .hatch- ing should be kept in a cool room in Sprouted oats are often | Into Working | parts | Hang by the feet, | back to the wall and insert a long | Lay the goose on the plat- | which the temperature is more or less | moist. A basement that is not too damp is the best kind of a storage { room. Fowls Need Green Feed. Fowls need a lot of green feed. The is easy in the summer, and by shade-drying ten- der grass and clover leaves in season | it can easily be solved in the winter as | well. Starting Poultry Plants. The best way to start a poultry | plant is to purchase a breeding pen and from that raise the next year's stock. For that purpose a pen of year- ling fowls would be best. Hens Miss Green Food. Hens stop laying in winter because they miss the @varmth, the green food, and the worms and bugs that they get in spring. Insure Fertile Eggs. Three weeks is none too long to have the flock mated up before eggs are to be saved to insure fertility. Unprofitable System. The poultry farm run on the hap- hazard system will never prove profitable. THE INESTHENT WINTER TONIC FOR POULTRY | A DIFFERENCE IN The Western Canada Farm Prof- its Are Away in Excess. Mr. George H. Barr, of Iowa, oe seven sections of land in Saskatche- wan, These he has fenced and rent. ed, either for pasture or cultivation, all paying good interest on the invest- ment, . Mr. Bare says that farm land at home in Iowa is held at $150 per acre. These lands are in a high state of cul- tivation, with splendid improvements in houses, barns, stables and silos, and yet, the revenue returns from them are only from two to three per cent per annum on investment. Last year, 1915, his half share ot crop on a quarter section in Saskatche- wan, wheat on new breuking, gave him 35 per cent on the capital invested— $25.00 an acre. The crop yield was 85 bushels per acre. This year the same quarter-section. sown ta Red Fife on stubble gave 3,286 bushels, His share, 1,643 bushels of 1 Northern at $1.56 per bushel, gave him $2,563.08, Seed, half the twine and half the threshing bill cost him $453.00. Allow- ing a share of the expense of his an- nual inspection trip, charged to this quarter-section even to $110.00, and he has left $2,000.00, that is 50 per cent of the original cost of the land. Any- one can figure up that another aver- age crop will pay, not 2 or 3 per cent on investment, as in Iowa, but the total price of the land. Mr. Barr says: [ “That's no joke now.” Mr. Barr was instrumental in bring- ing a number of farmers from Iowa to Saskatchewan in 1913. He referred to one of them, Geo. H. Kerton, a tenant farmer in Iowa. He bought a quarter- section of improved land at $32.00 an acre near Hanley. From proceeds of crop in 1914, 1915, 1916, he has paid for the land. Mr. Barr asked him a week ago: “Well, George, what shall 1 tell friends down home for you?” The reply was: “Tell them I shall never go back to be a tenant for any man.” Another man, Charles Haight, realized $18,000 in cash for his wheat crops in 1¢ [5 and 1916. Mr. Barr when at home devotes most of his time to raising and deal- ing in live stock. On his first visit of inspection to Saskatchewan, he real- ized the opportunity there was here for grazing cattle. So his quarter- sections, not occupied, were fenced and rented as pasture lands to farm- ers adjoining. His creed is: “Let na- ture supply the feed all summer while cattle are growing, and then in the fall, take them to farmsteads to be finished for market. There is money in it.”—Advertisement. Good Old Patrons. Willis—Do you think a knowledge of the Bible is nc¢cessary for a busi- nessman nowadays? Gillis—Yes, indeed; ignorance of it cost Bump, the mail order man, a hun- dred last week. Some fellow copied a lot of names out of Chronicles and sold it to Bump as a mailing list and Bump sent out circulars of his new safety razor to half a hundred patriarchs of the Old Testament before he got wise. —Judge. 5 CHILD CROSS, FEVERS, § Look, Mother! tongue coated, give “California Syrup of Figs.” Children love this “fruit laxative,” and nothing else cleanses the tender stomach, liver and bowels so nicely. A child simply will not stop playing to empty the bowels, and the result is they become tightly clogged with waste, liver gets sluggish, stomach sours, then your little one becomes cross, half-sick, feverisl, don't eat, sleep or act naturally, breath is bad, system full of cold, has sore throat, stomach-ache or diarrhea. Listen, Mother! See if tongue is coated, then give a teaspoonful of “California Syrup of Figs,” and in a few hours all the constipated waste, sour bile and undigested food passes out of the sys- tem, and you have a well child again. Millions of mothers give “California Syrup of Figs” because it is perfectly harmless; children love it, and it nev- er fails to act on the stomach, liver and bowels. Ask at the store for a 50-ceut bottle of “California Syrup of Figs,” which is | has full directions for babies, children of all ages and for grown-ups plainly printed on the bottle. Adv. Masculine Form. “What is a hunch?” “A hunch is the masculine equiva- tent of feminine intuition.” 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. Large Melon. Joe Arnold of Weatherford, Tex., raised a watermelon that weighed 108 pounds. Allen's Foot-Ease for the Troops. Many war zone hospitals have ordered Allen's Foot- Ease, the antiseptic powder, for use: among the troops. Shaken Into the shoes and sprinkled in the foot-bath, Allen’s Foot-Fasel gives rest and comfort, and makes walking 8 delight. Sold everywhere 25¢. Tryit today. Adv. Translated. “Maybelle used a lot of make-up on her face.” “Now I shall call it make-out.” Dr. Peery's “Dead Shot” is powerful and prompt but safe. One dose only is enough to expel Worms or Tapeworm. No caster ofl necessary. Adv. American gloves are in demand In “ihn. {