t even In in of the big. or tunity and is al. vhaled dest wife xd an ermi- gent, » had rents, (,""— the e act | the hich them , al Zes. ai- on, en- Nerves All On Edge? Just as nerve wear is a case of kidney go is kidney trouble a cau Anyone who has back- 1 weakness, of nerygusness. ache, vousness, ‘‘blues,” headaches; dizzy spells, urinary ills and a tired, worn feeling, would do well to try Doan’s Kidney Pills. This safe, relia- ble remedy is recommended by thou- sands who have had relief from just such troubles. A Virginia Case Mrs. G. W. Da- vis, 107 Prince St. Alexandria, V a ., says: “Doctors treated me for a long time and pro- “Every Picture WisaStory” nounced my condi- tion serious. Often I felt so listless and nervous that I almost gave up hope and I endured torture from kid- ney ailments. Fin- ally, 1 used Doan's 7 Kidney Pills and they brought me relief after every- thing else had failed. I still take them occasionally and am always benetited right away.” Get Doan's at Any Store, 80c a Box DOAN’S “inex PILLS FOSTER-MILBURN CO., BUFFALO, N.Y. Your Fruit Won't Spoil If You Use £000 LUCK RED RUBBERS They Fit All Standard Jars Specially recommended for cold pack canning. Send 2c stamp for new beok on preserving or 10cia stamps for one dozen rings if you cannot get them at your dealer's. dress Department 54 BOSTON WOVEN HOSE & RUBBER CO. Cambridge, Mass, For Home Guard Drills THE CITIZENS’ HAND BOOK OF THE UNITED STATES ARMY with rudiments of Military Instructions used | at Federal Training Camps, Signals and Codes, etc., 25 cents. $15.00 per hundred. BOYER BROTHERS, 1434 Brandywize St., Philadelphia, Pa. Didn't Need to Be Told." Katherine, age six, had been going | to school about two weeks when she | said to her mother one day: “Mother, | I am the nicest and the prettiest and the smartest girl in our class.” Her mother, very much elated, exclaimed: “Why! dear?” “Oh, no!” said Katherine. found it out myself.” WATCH YOUR SKIN IMPROVE When You Use Cuticura—The Soap to Purify and Ointment to Heal. On rising and retiring gently smear the face with Cuticura Ointment. Wash off Ointment in five minutes with Cuti- cura Soap and hot water. 1 just the change in your skin. No better toilet preparations exist. Free sample each by mail with Book. Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L, | Sold everywhere.—Adv. GET EXPLOSIVE FROM FLOWER British Scientists Discover That Blos- som of Mahua Tree in India Is Rich in Acetone. Boston, The munition output of India has ir two years been increased a thousand- fold, mainly through the discovery that | one of India's commonest blossoms, the flower of the mahua or mhowra tree, contains acetone in quantity. This tree is widely known to all travelers in Jritain’s Asiatic empire, but its use as a base for explosives is at least one thing new under the sun, says the Scientific American. When the war broke out, acetone, which forms the chief ingredient of cordite, was extracted mainly from wood, maize, and starch; and the Brit- fsh admiralty erected a great factory for the process of acetone recovery from starch. But fortunately two Eng- lish scientists in Hyaerabad discovered that the mahua flowers contained ace- tone in larger proportions than it is found in any other vegetable substance —that this inoffensive bloom was ten times richer in the material in ques- | tion than any known wood. In fact, the director general of ordnance for India that all odds best known, Manufacture on a large scale iS now reports the source for under way and it is whispered that the | which abundance of munitions with the British forces in Mesopotamia ap- pear to be blessed is to be attributed | | to the new discovery. “This year the potato is king.” Then God save the king. Puts PEP into the afternoon's’ work Did the teacher tell you that, | Continue | this treatment for ten days and note | the mahua is by | acetone | NAR'S CALL TO THE FARMER | Live Stock Breeder's Opportunity as Well as Duty Presented by Big Food Shortage.’ The present food shortage, which threatens to become much more seri- ous, is the live stock farmer's oppor- tunity as well as the call to the pa- triotic duty. In view of the grave situation, the division of animal forestry, University Farm, St. Paul, offers the following suggestions to the live stock farmers: Keep all live stock off pastures till the grass has a good start, and the sod will withstand tramping and retain the moisture in the soil. Much more feed will be yielded and hay saved in the long run by this method. “A week too early to grass in the spring means three weeks less pasture in the fall.” Do not turn out steers about ready for market ; they will shrink more than \ | | Excellent Beef Type. | they will gain, and other stock needs | | the pasture. Raise all calves for which there is ample feed. | hog pastures, and labor by self-feeders | | and crops to be hogged-off. Rebreed sows that have farrowed | early for fall litters wherever concen- | trates are available for feed. | Substitute and supplement oats -in | the rations of farm and city work- | horses by brewers’ grains, oilmeal, mo- | lasses and alfalfa hay, thus releasing | the oats for tlie horses in army serv- | ice. | Breed all suitable mares to the best | stallion available, Keep chickens on city lots. They | ugilize kitchen waste, require only | light labor such as children, old folks, and convalescents can supply, and make quick and economic returns in | meat and eggs. Observe all rules of stable hygiene | and sanitation to control animal dis- eases, : | ‘SUMMER PASTURE FOR SWINE | Green Food Is Required for Best De- | velopment of Pigs—Alfaifa Is | Relished by Animals. | | (North Dakota Agricultural College Bul- { letin.) | Pasture should by all means be pro- vided for the pigs. This is the cheap- est food that can be provided, and good development in the pigs re- | quires green food. Alfalfa is one of the best pastures. It is relished by the pigs, is nutritious and provides feed during the whole pasture season. Many report splendid success with | sweet clover where neither brome grass nor winter rye is available. | | Oats, barley and rape can be in the spring and will produce green feed till the hogs can be turned into | the corn. If no alfalfa is available {on the farm for pig pasture, | spring will be the time to sow it. | When the pigs are on pasture they { should be fed some grain, and the pigs will get along with less grain { when on alfalfa than on most any oth- | er pasture. ‘DOMESTIC HORSE IN DEMAND instead of Looking to Europe for Ani- mals We Are Now Sending Our | Surplus There. | For a good many years the imported | horse has been the standard, and it i has seemed that most breeders would not buy a high-priced animal unless bred in Europe. Now the day has come when we are not only satisfied ourselves with the home-bred horse, but the best breeders are looking to foreign fields as an outlet for the sur. plus, as soon as they are able to supply the home demand.—Twentieth Century Farmer. - KEEP SOWS BY THEMSELVES Not Safe to Allow Pregnant Animals Free Run of Horse and Cattle Lots—Permit Exercise. | | | | | | It is altogéther too common to al- { low pregnant sows a free run of the horse and cattle lots, and to force | them to occupy crowded quarters with | a large number: of hogs. Occasionally | heavy losses result from such a prac- | tice and must be avoided if best re- sults are to be expected. | Brood sows should be allowed the | run of a well-drained lot by themselves i where they have ample room for the | requisite amount of exercise. | Caring for Sheep. | A flock-master says: “Sheep should | have their noses tarred, rams should | | be separated from the ewes, and the strong, vigorous lambs weaned.” Feeding Period of Hog. The feeding period of the short, and the more quickly it is grown the greater the profit. hog 1s Pasture. Shade in Pig The pigs necd si There should Le trees ter. Save high-priced feed by providing | sown | this | eae a ———————————————_————————————————— (Prepared by the United States Depart- ment of Agriculture.) Farmers can make the cultivation of corn most effective and go a long way toward assuring themselves of harvesting a good crop by getting the start of weeds. When these robber plants are small, before their roots have taken firm hold and before they have used much soil moisture, they the soil. When weeds have become better established, however, deep cul- tivation only will kill them. Such deep cultivation not only means more labor, but it cannot be accomplished without breaking and destroying many corn roots. If corn land has been properly pre- pared deep cultivation is not advisable. plants after they are a foot high, as much harm would be done by breaking the roots. To get an early start of the weeds, | in many sections or in seasons when seed germinates slowly, it is advisable to harrow once or twice or otherwise | up. Limited moisture makes thin | stands necessary and it is poor man- | | rob the corn of this moisture. Aside from destroying weeds, time- ly cultivation is beneficial in prevent- ing the loss of moisture by evapora- | ing of the soil. The loss of soil mois- | ture by evaporation continues much | longer from a compact, damp surface | than from a loose, dry surface, and the evaporation tends to keep the soil cold. In Northern altitudes the localities and at high conservation | | servation of moisture. Luckily, both heat and moisture may be conserved by good, timely cultivation. [ 4 : : i | wasted in evaporating or wasting soil moisture, making the surface loose | moisture. Cultivate After Rains. the cultivating should be done as soon as the surface is dry enough to work AAA ERADICATION OF WIRE GRASS Pastures Should Be Completely Pul- verized to Depth of Four Inches by Cutaway Harrow. The so-called wire grasses are many. Such grasses as propagate by means of creeping root stalks constantly re- produce new plants at the rooting points, as couch or quack grass, John- son grass, Bermuda grass gnd mem- bers of the blue-grass family. This pasture, if adapted to tillage, should | be completely pulverized to the depth of four inches with a cutaway or disk | harrow in July and keep harrowed once | a week as long as the soil remains dry | during the remainder of the season, al- | lowing no green spear of grass to get { a foothold. | By fall the mass of will be | practically lifeless if the season has { been normally dry and hot.. The whole should then be turned under ten inches deep, using a jointer. In the spring harrow every week until time to plant a cultivated crop, then keep perfectly clean, and the battle will be won. roots EXCELLENT FEED FOR DAIRY » Peavine Silage Is Very Palatable, Con- taining More Protein Than That Fromr Corn. Peavine silage is an excellent feed | for dairy cows, being very palatable | and cogtaining more protein than corn | silage and approximately equaling it | in the total nutrients. Because of its strong odor, peavine_ silage should be fed after rather than before milking | to prevent tainting the milk. It may be fed in as large quantities will be consumed but is more sat i when supplied at the rate of a | pounds per cow per day. BAD FEED QUITE DANGEROUS | Old Corn or Hay, Not Sheltered Prop- erly, Is Often in Moldy and Poor Condition. Often the farmer in the spring of the year has some old corn or old hay, which, if it has not been sheltered properly, is moldy and in bad condi- tion. Such feed often is the cause of | serfous trouble with the stock. Farmers should be careful how they | | use old moldy feed of any kind, for it is dangerous, often meaning the loss | of several head of stock before the trouble is located. | ere | SERIOUS ENEMY OF ALFALFA Weeds, Including Perennial Grasses, Likely to Prove Disastrous to Thrifty Growth. When alfalfa is once started under favorable soil conditions, weeds, in- cluding perennial grasses, will likely prove its most dangerous enemy. This is one reason why sod land is not ree- ommended for this crop. Of: accovat of the danger from weeds it is usually best to precede the alfalfa for one or two years with a clean-cultivated Crop. can be destroyed by a light stirring of | agement to allow grass and weeds to | tion and also in hastening the warm- | of heat is | frequently as important as the con- | Heat is | and dry saves both soil heat and soil | Cultivating after heavy rains is a | good practice. To be most effective IMPLEMENT FOR MAINTAINING SOIL MULCH. well, If the soil is allowed to dry un- til it breaks up cloddy, much moisture will be lost, a good mulch cannot be obtained, and harm is more likely to be done to the corn roots. As long as rapid evaporation Is taking place, the surface will remain cold and the growth of the corn will be slow. In order to cover large arens quickly, cul tivators which work two or more rows are a great advantage. The number of cultivations neces- sary and the best time fer them de- pend upon weather and soil conditions. Weeds should not be allowed to grow, and a mellow surface should be main- tained, In seme seasons this may be effectually accomplished with one or two cultivations; in other from four to six cultivations ay be seasons It should never be given close to the | necessary, Nothing can be gained by continuing cultivation in cornfields free from weeds and in which the soil surface is mellow. When the surface is sufli- ciently loose and dry to reduce evap- oration, is open enough to prevent run- | tivation could do no good and if care- | lessly performed would do injury to the corn. Object of Cultivation, THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA. | | to cultivate the field before corn comes | off, and no weeds are starting, a cul-§ Fiesh Are Misnamed, Apparently every popular name for | fish is a misnomer. There Is a fish | plentiful on the coasts of Alaska | | known as the atka mackerel. The bu- | reau of fisheries patiently points out | that it 1s not a mackerel and nothing | like a mackerel, But it is an excel | lent food fish, and can be shipped salt- ed, Alaska been: en \ couraged to be known as the | should make its | | canneries have \ this fish, which will salt and | our atkatish, appearance in markets in the coming winter, | i. To Drive Out Malaria And Build Up The Syste | ————— { Take the Old Standard GROVE'S One Rooster to Fifteen Hens Is About TASTELESS ei) TOMS. You teow | i . | what you aru taking, a o is Right With Larger Breeds, Such | printed on every label, showing it is | as Plymouth Rock. | Quinine and Iron in a tasteless form. The | m— Quinine drives out malaria, the Iron | builds up the system. 50 ceats. Birds of the general-purpose class, such as the Plymouth Rocks, Wyan dottes, Rhode Island Reds, Orpingtons, etc., usually require one male to 15 females, depending upon the vigor of the male. Among birds of lighter Both Appropriate. Longmore—The former clients of | Smith, the divorce lawyer, who died { last week, are going to do a nice thing, | Short—What? | Longmore—Show their appreciation | by erecting a monument to his mem- | ory. Short—Have they chosen the design? Longmore—Not yet. A number of | them want something among the lines | of the Statue of Liberty, and the oth- | ers favor a colossal granite cleaver.— | The Lamb. | | | SHAKE INTO YOUR SHOES | | Allen's Foot=Ease, the antiseptic powder to be { | shaken into the shoes and sprinkled in the foot- bath. It relieves painful, swollen, smarting feet and takes the sting out of corns and bunions. | Used by the British and French troops at the front. Allen's Foot=Ease is a certain rellef for tired, aching feet. Sold everywhere—Adv. Mantell’s Ghost Story. Robert Mantell tells of a barnstorm- ing company in the West in the old | days that made a try at Shakespeare. | Considerable complaint was heard rela- tive to the efforts of the man who es- Barred Plymouth Rock Cockerel. breeds, such as Leghorns, Anconas, | sayed to do the ghost in “Hamlet.” Campines, Hamburgs, etc., one male | One day a dramatic man on a local is sufficient for a flock of 20 females. | paper said to the leading man: | About ten days should be allowed | “That fellow who plays the ghost | for the fertilization of the flock by | does not suggest the supernatural.” the male, However, in small flocks, | “1 should say not,” assented the { Corn should be cultivated only when one or more objects will be accom- plished by the cultivation and when to- | tal effects will injurious, The | cultivation are: (1) the corn of soil moisture and fertility. (2) Putting the surface in condi- tion to take in | ing run-off and erosion, which mean losses of water and soil fertility. (3) Warming the soil by drying its surface quickly. | (4) Saving moisture by [its capillary rise to the soil surface. | Some injurious effects of cultivation | are: | (1) Breaking the corn roots which | otherwise would use some of the | [ { beneficial effects of moisture of light showers evaporates; and [ (2) Forming large clods and air | spaces, thus permitting air to enter | and dry the soil. —~ | Nourishing Ration Previous to Foal- ing Is of Importance for Good Start for the Colt. Feeding the a good | nourishing ration foaling is of prime importance if rapid de- velopment of the colt is ex- pected. start in the battle and only bone and strong can the colt develop into a horse. A proper feed will do a strong colt at the basis of the They have high nutritive but still do not supply an ex pregnant mare previous to young A good life is by being large of of muscie when born growthy the toward balancing of much birth. mare's making Oats form ration. value, cess of fat as would cern. However, it is well to mix the two using about three times as much cats as corn by 1 Oilmeal or bran in si [amounts once daily will keep the gestive tract open and act conditioner, With the present high feed prices the former will probably tbe thé more profitable of the two. Any kind of fed weight, as general hay may be de- | undesirable half | mare's | : + resembles that of prairie chickens and pending on the availability and price, FUNGUS DISEASES OF TOMATO Blossorn-End Rot Attacks Fruit Be- fore It Is Mature, Causing It to Drop to Ground. tomatoes is a It attacks t while the to rot and ure. AS Soon ed, puli off all After this, spray thoroughly with hordesux n | ture. Bordeaux mixture is made with one pound of blue stone, one pound of quick lime and 12 ga or. Dis- solve the blue stone by hanging it in a cloth bag, in water, over night. Slake the lime separately, then mix the two thoroughly, and add the 12 gallons of water. Earthen, glass or wood recep- must be used to dissolve the blue stone in. It will corrode metal. Blossom-end rot of used by a disease the blossom-end of fruit is iru green ses it iy: fF hof drop oif befo as the » is ol affected fruit and destroy it. Hons of wi tacles If fruit is ripened, gather all ripe fruit before spraying. It is neces- sary to repeat the spray every wee as long as there is any sign of tbe dis- ease, Plan to Have Crops Ready for Swine to Harvest in Fall—They Will Save Big Cost of Labor. Farm labor is 7 ly becoming more and ineflicient. generally pay for this labor, so why not let them do the work themselves, thu i costly Pigs 1S the cost and worry of poor help? n to have crops re 7 for the pi to harvest in the fs Let them hog down them eat the rape, some of your corn crops; let rye and pumpkins that you plant with your corn. They will not only save the cost of harvest- ing labor, but they will derive more benefit from the feeds so consumed.~— , Swine World, i - be more beneficial than ! Preventing weeds from robbing rainfall, thus prevent- | checking | before it {| a short peried, but should not be too i long continued. FEEDS FOR PREGNANT MARES | -. are ‘GOOD MEDICINE FOR FOWLS | ameled or earthenware vessels, as the | leading man with alacrity, “but he does suggest the natural Every- body's Magazine. such as four or five females, only four or five days is needed. super.” Roman Eye Balsam is an antiseptic oint- : . | ment, applied externally and not a “wash.” On Account of High Price of Perman- | [ts healing properties penetrate the in- ganate of Potash Substitute Is flamed surfaces, providing prompt relief. Sought by Poultry Men. Adv. Then Silence. They were merrily, this young man and the young woman, and (Storrs Experiment Station.) Many poultry men have been using | permanganate of potash to prevent the | spread of colds and other catarrhal | were talking of nothing at all, when diseases. During the past two years | suddenly the girl asked: this product has risen in price from 50 | “Have you enlisted?” cents to $2.50 to $3 per pound; thus “No,” answered the youth. it is not surprising that a good substi- tute is being looked for. One authority suggests the use bluestone or copper sulphate, which | hh rs . an be used as follows: Dissolve four | “Haven't you done anything about ounces of the bluestone in a quart of | the war? water, this to be known as a stock so- | No." the youth replied. lution. Add one ounce of this solu- | Whereupon the girl stopped tion to each gallon of the drinking wa- | ing. : . : . ter. This can perhaps be well used for I wish you w ould take mea fo sont | I don’t think I want to dance with | you.”—Washington Star. dancing | serve corps?” of | “No, not yet. I haven't thought | much about that sort of thing.” dane- Furthermore, one ought to use en- Elections in Land of Nippon. The Japanese people are satisfied with the result of the election of April 20, but agitation regarding expense at- | tending a canvass for a seat in parlia- ment is renewed. The same argument is heard as those after the last gen- copper sulphate solution may produce chemical changes when used ‘in galvanized pans. GUINEA FOWL IS PROFITABLE es | eral election, according to East and West. The Chugai Shogyo estimates Large Farms Now Being Established | Where Guineas Are Being Raised for Meat Purposes. the cost of 600 candidates at not less | than $2,640,000! This is more representatives in the United expend, but senators have been known to pay half a million for seats in that body. The Chugai says the govern- ment spent $200,000 for supervising the election, which, to Americans, will than States Raising guinea fowls in Kansas is profitable, according to N. L. Harris, superintendent of the Kansas State Ag- ricultural college poultry farm. _ “Large farms are now being estab- appear moderate. This sum includes lished where guineas are raised for “stumping trips” through the country meat purposes,” said Mr. Harris. “The by cabinet ministers; members of the eggs are small and consequently are | (nnosition paid their own expenses. of little value commercially. The editor regrets that so many men “Guinea fowls are easy to raise. | entitled to vote il to exercise their They are noisy and good fighters and | high privilege. Repeated dissolution not subject to the attacks of | of the diet not only causes political hawks. disturbances, he argues, but imposes “There is a good market for guinea | heavy financial loss upon the nation fowls. The meat of the young guineas | and upon individuals. Dr. Peery's “Dead Shot" not only expels Worms or Tapeworm but cleans out the and tones up The and stylish substitute wild ducks. clubs cafes use the guineas as a mucus in which they breed for ducks, prairie chickens, quail, and | the digestion. Ome dose sufficient. Aav. ' other game which the laws make it im- | ” _ mT i possible for them to secure.” Marital Consideration. dc A considerate man who really wants | . to make his happy will look de- | IMPORTANT EGGS BE TURNED | jectea ana ble at the station | rt LS when si ng for the summer. Comparatively Small Hens Have Trou- | She «: r heart with her if | enough to | ing a hot | old time.—Houston Post. { ble in Turning Goose Eggs—Crip- brutal ke happ« pled Goslings Result. i anticipat look as if were Sometimes it is necessary to set a ERR { itively small Pittsburgh has measured telephone | goose eggs under compari hens, that have not the str service. turn the large e In set ros Se = . under a hen, mark them on side SNE LE so that you can tell whether or not +T h e E ffects the hen is turning them. i she docs not turn the HAT INFANTS are peculiarly susceptible to goslings will be preparations, all of which are narcotic, is well known, | and information received from authens* | rience here say that the conditions are | surprising if the same experience met “Haven't you joined the Officers’ Re- | | such are to be had from farmers who smallest doses, if continued, these opiates cause changes in the func GULTUATE] GULTWATEL Produce More Food, But at ihe §. Lowest Cost. : —m— #1 A trip through most of the grain ’ growing districts of Western Canada, i tic sources, reveals that the spring seeding of wheat, barley and oats 18 finished and the grain is having a most. rapid growth, Men of farming expe= similar to those years when there was an abundant harvest reaped. During the past year a number of new settlers «ume into the country, and they will undoubtedly have a good crop this This added to the normal acre= age, made considerably less by the lack of labor owing to the number who have gone to the front, will give a fair general yield. It is surprising the growth that this country is capable of producing. Wheat has this spring germinated and shown three or four inches growth in five or six days, and with anything like favorable weather, harvesting should commence about the 15th of August, or a little over one hundred days from first seeding. Hundreds of farmers throughout this vast country paid for their entire holdings out of one year's crop and it would not be year. a great many more this year. The best authorities on the wheat situation give it as their opinion that for many years to come, wheat prices will be high. They base their opinion on a scientific calculation and their reasoning seems to be sound. Anyway, it is quite evident that for some years to come, the producer of wheat will be amply rewarded for any effort he may make to develop this branch of agricultural industry. Money may be made on the high-priced lands of the wheat-growing districts of the United States, but it is a question if these high-priced lands would not be more profitably employed in other branches of farming than in growing the smaller grains, leaving it to lands just as pro= ductive for wheat, less expensive to op« erate, and with®* a much smaller initial price, to provide the world with this necessity of life. Here is where Western Canada, with its vast rich fertile plains, its low railway rates, its exceptionally good shipping privileges, its excellent climate, and its: perfect social conditions, has a com= bination of advantages not possessed | by any other portion of the continent. IFurthermore, these lands, of unex= | celled quality, are extraordinarily | cheap, while for the man who does not | care to undertake farming on so exten= sive a scale there is the free home- stead which offers him all the opportu= nity for which he is looking. | The prospective purchaser will have no difficulty at all in making a selec= tion of a fine piece of land, well lo= cated and convenient to transportation, | which may be had for from $15 to $25 an acre, and the railway companies or other holders of large tracts are al- ways glad to sell on easy terms. Or if he desires a farm that is already under cultivation and improved, many already have made comfortable fore tunes and are ready to retire. 1 It is not to the grain grower only that Western Canada offers great op- portumities. If one wishes to go in for cattle raising, there are great stretches of range land both free and for lease; and in many sections of the country there are the finest of grazing lands that may be purchased at very low prices. The appeal which has been sent out both by the United States and Canas dian governments, for an unstinted, un- limited production of food stuffs to pre- vent what might otherwise be a fame fine throughout this great continent— and then consequently, throughout the worid—should in itself arouse all the ambition and desire in the heart and soul of the man who is not fighting at the front, to produce all he can. In addition, there is the potent fact that no chances are being taken in answering the appeal. Take it from either stand- point you answer the country’s ‘call, ale though not fighting, and you are also insured against any loss by the high prices that are bound to exist for some time. Whether it be in the United States on its excellent grain lands or in Canada on its splendid grain lands, all should do their bit.—Advertisement, Foresight. “When one of those musty thrones topples over in Europe do you suppose there is much dust?” ; “Not as much as you might think, Most menarchs are crafty enough to put their dust away In a safe place bee fore a revolution starts.” A man is never such a bonehead that he can fool himself by lying to himself, = ee aE of Opiates. ium and its i Even in the crippled, eggs are turned by hand. Hatching Duck Eggs. In hatching duck eggs in an in tor give them more ventil moisture, less coolin perature the first eggs. The heat must 103 degrees. 1 1 nd a low week tha never get above Pick Out Hatching Eggs. Don’t hatch chicks from egg aid by every fowl in the but pick out and breed f 1 the strong, vigorous birds that ed to be good layers. Place fcr Little Chi Don’t be spa of t d manure on the If y¢ t large yields fr¢ a § 1 u must see to it that pl y ble plant food is provided. Run for Little C s. Give the little chicks ¢ ( ors on the ground every he weather is suitable. Benefits of Whitewash. Whitewash your poultry } It acts as a 'mproves appearances disinfectant. tions and growth of the cells which are likely to become permanent, causing imbecility, mental perversion, a craving for alcohol or narcotics in later life. Nervous diseases, such as intractable nervous dyspepsia and lack of sta: wers are a result of dosing with opiates or narcotics to keep children gi in their infancy. The rule among physicians is that children should never receive opiates in the smallest doses for more than a day at a time, and only they if unavoidable. # ood ® he administration of Anodynes, Drops, Cordials, Soothing § other narcotics to children by any but hs cannot oS ~~ ys aud decried, and the druggist should not be & party to it. Children who are need the attention of a physician, and it is nothing less than a crime to dose them willfully with narcotics. Castoria contains no narcotics if it bears the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher. Genuine Castoria always bears the signature of — As Age Advances the Liver Requires occasional slight stimulation. Ser IN CAR rice ut : TER'S Giese fn «" LITTLE LIVER PILLS Work ITTLE correct jveR CONSTIPATION Genuine bears rw SeadRop Colorless or Pale Faces July indicatethe absence of Ironia. . e’blood, » : a condition which will be greatly helped by Carter sIron Pills