The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, June 27, 1917, Image 7

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THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA.

Twenty-Five Years’
Experience With This
Kidney Medicine
It is a quarter ota a century since I im-
troduced Dr. Kilmer'’s Swamp-Root to |
my trade and they all speak very favor
ably regarding it, and some friends said |
it is the best medicine they have ever
used. The sale we have enjoyed on the
preparation and the splendid reputation |
that it feels is a positive proof that it is
one of the most meritorious remedies on
the market. Very truly yours,
F. E. BRITTON, Druggist.
Nov. 28th, 1916. Jonesboro, Tenn.
Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For You
Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co.,
Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample size bot-
tle. It will convince anyone. You will
also receive a booklet of valuable infor-
mation, telling about the kidneys and blad-
der. When writing, be sure and mention
this paper. Regular ffty-cent and one-
dollar size bottles for sale at all drug
etores.— Adv,
Didn't Do It.
“He's always knocking the
men.”
“Xs, I know it.”
“Only a few years ago he told me he
was just crazy to get married.”
“That's right, but it seems he wasn’t
quite crazy enough.”
married

DON'T WORRY ABOUT PIMPLES |
Because Cuticura ra Quickly Removes |
Them—Trial Free.
On rising and retiring gently smear |
the face with Cuticura Ointment, Wash
off the Ointment in five minutes with
Cuticura Soap and kot water, using
plenty of Soap. Keep your skin clear
by making Cuticura your every-day
toilet preparations.
Free sample each by mail with Book.
Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L,
Boston, Sold everywhere.—Ady.
Long Enough and Cold Enough.
The winter that has just closed was
the longest and coldest winter in 840
vears, so it is announced by the “old-
est inhabitant in England.” Well, we
can easily believe him, but isn't he
an old fellow and hasn't he a wonder-
ful memory ?—Providendce Bulletin.
Acid Stomach, Heartbhivs and Nausea
quickly disappear with the use of Wright's
Indian Vegetable Pills. Send for trial box
to 372 Pearl Kt, New York. . Adv.
KEEPING THE CITY ANCIENT
Rothenburg, Germany. Requires That
New Buildings Shall Be Built
in Old Style.
There is less sameness, more per-
sonality, to be found among the differ-
ent cities of the German empire than
in any other great modern state.
Often you can travel a few miles from
one city to another and it is as if you
had crossed an international boundary
and stepped into a new land. This
fact is due in large part to the fact
that German unity came so late. Many
of these same little cities were inde-
pendent and autonomous for as many
centuries as they have been parts of
the German empire for decades. They
have built up a tiny nationalism pe-
cutinr to themselves, flavoring their
Germanism with a spice that is all
thelr own.
Such a city above all others is Roth-
enburg, little red Rothenburg, with its
trim walls and towers, its air of an-
cient sleepiness carefully preserved, its
i0,000 good burghers, who are Rothen-
enburgers before all else, says the Na-
Geographic Magazine. Almost
German cherishes a friendly af-
for Rothenburg; it is such a
comfortable place, with a
nd a miniature tessellated
t it is dear to ‘the German
tional
every
fection
homely,
neatness a
beauty thi
heart.
Rothenburg is a city almost every
house of which is quaint and interest-
ing. Most of the houses are centuries
old, and when one has to be replaced
municipal regulations ordain that it
shall be replaced with one that is built
style, and blends harmoni-
ously with the whole. The fine disc
pline the burghers of
lay upon themselves out of their own
artistic sense
rather than as a bait for
for as a matter of fact,
visit Rothenburg.
in ancient
the tourists,
few tourists

A woman's idea of meanness is
something a
a mistake if she did it.
An other name
would be
mark by any
just as foolish.
Ty ly
easy


PARENTS
who love to gratify
children’s desire for
the e articles of
food and drink that
grown-ups use, find




 
 


INSTANT
PosSTUM
just the thing.



“There’s aReason”



Rothenburg |
of the fitness of things, |
man does that would be |
FARM
ANIMALS
DISEASED HOOFS OF CATTLE
| One Trouble Caused vy Excessive Wet
{ Weather Is Hard to Manage—Is
| Not Contagious.
|

| Not all hoof disease in cattle is the
| “hoof-and-mouth disease,” There is
| one form of hoof disease which is es-
| pecially hard to manage, which is
| caused by excessively wet weather and
| cattle having to be almost continually
in the mud. We had a case of this
i kind this spring, says a writer in an
exchange, The inner parts of the hoofs
become very sore and tender and will
| finally become rotten, if not cared for
in time,
We had a veterinarian prescribe
| treatment. This was kept up for a
| time without apparent results for the
| better. Then being very busy at corn
planting time, the treatment was neg-
lected and the animal got so it would
walk on the toes, the back part of the
hoof was so tender, We again tried
the treatment, but the animal got
worse and worse until it was a walk-
ing skeleton and could no longer stand
up, wisn we put it out of its misery
and dug a hole for the remains. We
know this was not contagious as the
other cattle were not affected in the
least.
IMPORTANCE OF STRONG RAM
| If Both Male and Ewe Are Weak in
Some Points Weaknesses Are In-
tensified in Lambs.
| A ram is half the flock. A good
ram will impress his desirable qual-
ities on his offspring. The ram must
be strong in the points in which the
| ewes are deficient. It is a well-known
| fact that like begets like, and if
both the ram and the ewe are weak
in the same points these weaknesses
will be intensified in the offspring.
If the flock i% small, a ram lamb
will be all right. If there are more
than thirty ewes the ram should be
two years old.: The ram selected will
| depend upon the type of ewes in the
flock. If the ewes are small and
light-boned, a heavyweight and
heavy-boned
ram with more refinement should be
used if the ewes are coarse-boned
| and rangy.
HANDLING STOCK MADE EASY
Big Crate Built on Flat Rack Enables
Farmer to Haul Animals With-
out Fear of Injury.


The accompanying illustration
i shows a hog rack devised by an in-
genious Illinois farmer and in success-
ful use on his big farm. After sev-
eral years’ experience with it he main-
tains it is the best thing of its kind
he ever saw.
It simply is a hig hog crate built
on a flat rack. The framework is laid
out exactly like a hay rack and the

 
=H



| Hog Crate on Rack.
floor laid level on top of the bolsters,
The picture shows how the crate or
rack was built on this floor.
There are two partitions with hinged
! gates. This admits hauling several dif-
| ferent classes of hogs and also pre-
{ vents the animals {rom piling up on |
each other in transit, a
frequently encountered and sometimes
a source of loss.
| many hogs as you can haul. There is
no danger nor particular difficulty.
The ordinary
Farm and Home.
WATER SUPPLY IN PASTURES
Nothing But Absolute Starvation
Pulls Animals Down in Condition
Faster Than Thirst.

water supply in the
that no animal suf-
Nothing but ab-
| Look to the
| pasture and see
| fers for want of it.
ram will be needed. A |
difficulty so |
You can put on as |



loading chute is used.— |
| a steady pull for
t solute starvation pulls them down in
| conditipn faster than thirst. In the |
| very hottest and dryest weather
| horses get little good in the field un-
less they have thickets and woods
| to stand in, to get away from flies.
TRIM HORSE'S HOOF EVENLY
Rasp—Keep Hoof Oiled if it Has
Tendency to Crack.

A horse is just as good as his feet,
and these should be given special at-
tention; the hoof bears the same re-
lation to the horse that the fingernail
does to man, in the matter of care,
and should be
The best instrument for this purpose
is the rasp. If the hoof has a ten-
{dency to crack it should be kept
| ciled.

Way to Keep Hog Well,
There is a theory that the way to
keep a hog well is to keep him and his
food and surroundings clean. Worth
irying.
Not Saiting Often Enough.
The fellow who salts his stock only
when he thi of it,
of it as often as his stock


seldom
does.

Provide Lamb Creep.
Provide a lamb creep so the lambs
{ can be fed an extra ration of grain
by themselves,
Best Instrument for This Purpose Is |
| through the rise.

LOCATION AND DESIGN OF VARIOUS ROADS


Tio. 3
lope §" to 1” per foot, depending on the rate of curvature and grade

CROSS SECTION SOMETIMES USED ON SIDE HILL CURVES Jo PREVENT
SKIDDING OF VEHICLES AND EROSION OF THE SLO


Cis generally 18° to 24" and ‘6 about 12


CROSS SECTION SHOWING BERM DITCH BUILT ABOVE SLOPE
Dimensions of the ditch are determined by the amount cf waler to be carried.



(Prepared by the United States Depart- | ditches a fall of about one
ment of Agriculture.)
The minimum width to accommodate |
safely two lines of average horse- |
drawn traffic is 14 feet, and for auto-
mobile traffic the width
should be not less than 18 feet, though
a width of 16 feet is used frequently.
In order to maintain the traveled way
to the required width and to afford
proper safeguards against accidents, it |
preferably |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
is necessary to provide a shoulder not |
less than three or four feet wide along
each side of the roadway proper.
shoulders may have a somewhat steep-
er crown than the rest of the road
surface, but they should be sufficiently
The |
| mate.
flat not to endanger traffic using them |
and really should constitute an addi- |
tional width of roadway.
that the total width of roadway be-
tween side ditches never should be less
than 20 feet where horse-drawn traffic
predominates, and 24 feet where any
considerable volume of automobile
traffic is to be accommodated.
Where sharp curves occur in the
alignment it is desirable, though not
customary, to increase the width of
the traveled way. A vehicle being
drawn along a curved road tends to oc-
cupy an appreciably greater width
This means |

|
|
than where the road is straight, and |
unless the width of the traveled way is |
ten-
the
Increased correspondingly, this
dency contributes materially to
hazards that invariably
sharp curves. The minimum
given above should also be increased
on embankments of any considerable
depth, so as to make maintenance
easier and at the same time diminish
the danger of accidents.
The width of right of way required |
to provide all necessary area for the
roadway, slopes and ditches, varies
considerably with the nature of the
topography.
: Grades.
In designing a public road one of the
most difficult problems to solve proper-
ly is the question of maximum allow-
able grades. In deciding this question,
the advantages to be gained by reduc- i A
ing all of the steeper grades on a par- | quires a slope of about two to
maximum |
ticular road to a given
accompany |
widths |
| abrupt angle,
foot per 100
feet of length, though a somewhat less
fall has proved satisfactory some-
times, |
Wherever changes in grade occur |
the change should be made by means
of a vertical curve, and uot by an
Slopes.
The slope at which earth will stand
when faced up in a cut or pluced in an
embankment depends (1) on the char-
acter of the earth and (2) on the cli-
In cuts, a good quality of non-
slaking clay usually will stand on a
slope of about 45 degrees, or, as slope
is expressed usually, one horizontal to |
one vertical, even where fairly deep
freezing occurs, and in some of the
Southern states such material has been
known to stand for many years on a
slope of less than one-half to one. On |
the other hand, clay that slakes very |
easily, may require a slope of three to |
|
|
|
|
{

one, or even four to one, under the most
favorable condition of climate, but
this latter extreme is very unusual.
The usual slope for clay in cuts is one |
to one in warm climates and one and
one-half to one in cold climates.
While in the case of embankments |
clay usually can be deposited on an
initial slope of about one to one, this
steep slope seldom can be maintained
unless the material is of an exceptional
quality and the climate very favorable.
Ordinarily clay embankments should
| have a slope of about two to one in
| these values should be increased.
1
should be weighed against the addi- |
tional cost which the reduction
volves.
The following data and suggestions
are intended to aid individual judg-
ment, which necessarily must be the
prime factor in solving this important
prcblem :
tn- |
1. The cost of average pleasure traf- |
fie, horse-drawn and motor,
cally unaffected by grades of not more
than 6 or 7 per cent (six or seven feet
rise per 100 feet, measured horizontal-
ly),
that it
brakes to
is unnecessary to apply the
vehicles when descending
the grades. But for traffic where loads
are as important as speed, even very
light grades may be of considerable
disadvantage.
2. Increasing the steepness
grade decreases in three distinct ways
the load a horse can haul: (a) for the
same character of surface, the required
tractive effort or pull per ton of load
is increased by about 20 pounds for
each per cent increase in grade, (b)
the possible pull the horse can exert is
decreased by an amount equal to the
effort required to lift his own weight
This amount is ap-
proximately equal to one one-hun-
dredth of the horse's weight for
per cent increase in grade, (¢) the ef-
fective pull of the horse is reduced by
the change in the angle at which the
pull is applied.
3. The pull a horse can exert on a
level road varies greatly with the in- |
is practi- |
provided the conditions are such |
of a’
each |
dividual animal, and is affected by the |
manner of hitching and the skill of the
driver. The character of the road
surface also may have an important
influence by affecting the
the horse's foothold.
Tests made by the office of punlic
roads and rural engineering indicate
that, on a level road, average
horses untrained to the road can exert
security of |
farm |
several consecutive l
hours equivalent to from 0.08 to 0.10 |
of their own weight without undue |
{ fatigue, and that by resting at inter-
| vals of from 500 to 600 feet they can |
| Firm earth or
| First-class gravel or ma
kept trimmed evenly. |
thinks
exert a pull equivalent to about 0.25
cold climates and at least one and one-
half to one in warm climates; and if
the clay be of questionable quality
Em-
care in |
slopes,
bankment slopes require more
construction than excavation
because any flattening of an embank-
ment slope by the action of weather |
after the road is completed is very |
likely to damage the road surface;
while the sliding in of excavation |
slopes usually does no further damage
than to obstruct the side ditches,
which can be reopened readily.
Sand of average quality usually re- |
one in |
cuts and three to one in embankments,
regardless of climate. Moderately |
coarse sand mixed with gravel will |
stand on a steeper slope than fine
sand, because the former is not meved
so readily by the action of storm wa- |
ter. !
Solid rock excavation usually can be |
done on an average slope of about one-
fourth to one, except where the rock
occurs in sloping strata separated by
slippery clay seams. In the latter case
the average slope may be as much as
one-half to one or three-fourths to one. |
The faces of rock cuts usually are not
dressed down to even an approximate- |
ly smooth slope, as is done in earth |
cuts. In excavating solid rock only
such material is moved as is actually
necessary to obtain the desired width
at the bottom of the cut or as has been
loosened in blasting. The faces should,
of course, be cleared of all material
which is loose, or which might be
loosened subsequently by frost and
slide down upon the road. Stone em- |
bankments usually will on a
slope of about one to one.
In order to prevent damage by wash-
ing all carth slopes in either excava-
tion or embankment should be protect- l
ed by a growth of grass as soon as
practicable after they are formed.
In many localities where the
fertile and a good quality of grass is
native no seeding of the slopes is nec-
stand
soil is
essary. In other cases the soil may not
possess sufficient fertility to grow
grass, even when the slopes are seed-
ed. and in which event it may be very
desirable to cover the slopes with cut
sod. This latter process usually is
very expensive, and should be em-
ployed only where it is known that
thorough seeding and fertilizing would
fail to f sod.


secure a covering of
Another precaution frequently neces-





| sary in order to prevent the washing
away of excavation slopes is to inter-
cept water from the nat ground
surface which otherwise would flow
down over the excavation slope. This !
is done by means of a “berm” ditch
constructed well back from the top of
i the slope. Figure i tes a con-
dition which makes ditch
desirable and also she such a
of their weight, provided the foothold
is gond.
4. The tests referred to above also
indicate that with a well-constructed
wagen the pull required to move a
gross load of one ton over a level road
varies about as follows:
Loose sand road
Average dry
greatly) :
garth road

and-c la ay yoad
ro
 
 
ac
Average grav

adam r¢

judgment should be
in fixing the maxi-
the
In general, the
largely influenced,
mum grade, by the topography of
region which the road traverses. Ac-
cording to the best current practice,
where the road is or is expected to be-
come of sufficient importance
rant a highly improved surface, the
maximum grade usually is fixed with
reference to this feature about as fol-
lows:

P
Coastal plain and prairie regions
Average roll country .
Hilly or mo ainous regic
The question of minimum grade is
of importance only as regards the side
ditches. These should have adequate
fall to empty the water that collects
in them at a sufficiently rapid rate to
prevent damage to the road. Ordinar-
 
t net only
to war- |
§toS]

ditch is constructed.
IMPORTANT WORK oF HUMUS
Comprises Eiements of Plant Food
and Has Power of Holding Neces-
sary Nitrates of Soil.

Humus is the substan







 
» soil by decaying veget
 
as leaves,
lowed u
compl
1
itself, but
crop p
food
helding the
tile to prevent
through
also has t

necess
soil
ans. Ho
» in ab-
in posi-
he use of
s in keeping the
indispensable
crops are in|

sorbing ar
tion and form avail
growing plants an
soil porous. Humus is
1 growth. Poor
to plant
many cases due to its lack.

Thrifty, Vigorous Currants.
k curr: thrifty
vigorous of

nts and
{are
 

grow
y |
Loam Sci! for Apples.
Apples do best on a loam soil un-
Uy it is desirable to give the side |derlaid with clay.
| air some every day
| be within the



HATCH GEESE IN INCUBATOR
Doubtful Whether They Would De
Well in Brooders, Therefore It Is
Not Often Tried,
Goose eggs can be successfully
hatched in incubators, but it Is not a
common practice, because it 1s doubt-
ful whether they would do well raised
in brooders.
Either geese or hens are commonly
used for hatching and rearing pum
poses. If the eggs are hatched by
hens or Incubators, it would be ad-
visable to add molsture to the eggs
during the first week by sprinkling
the eggs or nests with warm water.
From four to six eggs

| shell-primers ;
WAR USES FOR FACTORIFS
Manufacturers Surprised to Find What
Can Be Made in Their Plants in
Case of Emergency.
|
| grape, which is called “dibs” by the
Here is a paragraph, snipped out of |
| (Genesis 43:11), and which the Tyri-
an article by George Creel in Every-
body's Magazine, which shows the war
uses to which various peaceful manu-
factories can be subjected:
“A manufacturing jeweler was sur-
prised to learn that his plant, with
a few changes, could turn out peri-
scope; a sash-chain maker found
that his machines were adapted
to the production of cartridge clips
for rifles and machine guns; a phono-
graph concern was discovered to be
| well fitted for the manufacture of cer-
makers of
ban-
taln delicate shell parts;
underwear may be relied on for
dages; a
|
|
“Dibs” Drink of Arabians.
A decoction of the juice of the
Arabs, was called by the same name
as honey by the Hebrews, It forms an
article of commerce in the East, It
was “dibs,” and not ordinary bee
honey, which Jacob sent to Joseph
Palestine (Exo.
ans purchased from
dus 27:17).

In Case of Fire,
The grammar school principal went
| from room to room explaining what to
| do in case of fire,
The pupils listened
with respectful attention until he came
to his final instructions, then smiles
and giggles disturbed the principal's
serenity. “Above all things,” he sald,
“if your clothing catches fire, remain
| cool,”
manufacturer of music-rolls |
for gages; a cream-separator plant for |
| pany for gaines; a recording and com-
| puting machine plant for
are usually |
placed under a hen, and from ten to |
thirteen eggs under a goose.
If hatched by hens, the hen should
be kept confined, and goslings not al-
lowed to go into the water, especially
if the water is cold. To be assured
of success In raising goslings, they
should not be hatched until the grass
pasture is fairly good,
their chief diet.
In addition to that they should be |
fed any of the mashes recommended |
for chickens or goslings.
fuses: an
a sewing machine com- [
| which, if
infants’ food concern for shell plugs; |
| drug manufacturers and dye works for
| high explosives;
expected from
millers, tobacco
flour-
and
candle-makers,
manufacturers,
| siphon-makers; silversmiths can make
|
i caps;
as grass is |
Special care
should be taken in seeing that all of |
the feed is cleaned up at each meal,
as leftover food is very often a source
| of disease.
BREAKING UP BROODY FOWLS
Hens Have No Right to Sit and De
Nothing Else While Country
Faces Food Shortage.

Eliminate the
hens.
sit and do nothing at a time when the
country is facing so great a food short-
age, according to Ross M. Sherwood,
acting head of the poultry department
in the Kansas Agricultural college.
“The average hen lays four to five
eggs a week, worth 12 to 15 cents at
the present price of eggs,”
Sherwood. “Hens should be ‘broken
up’ as soon as they become broody. If
expense
cartridge-cases, bullet jackets, and
while shrapnel can be made in
car factories, elec-
locomotive works,
gas engine works,
tric elevator works,
stove foundries and machine shops.
‘Whenever You Need a Genera) Tonic
Take Grove'’s
The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless
| chill Tonic is equally valuable as a Gen-
| eral Tonic because it ccntains the well
known tonic properties of QUININE and
IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives out
| Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Builds
of broody |
Jven the fowls have no right to |
said Mr. |
possible do not let them set over night, |
for a day saved in shutting them up |
may save two days of their laying
period.
“Broody hens should be placed in
airy coops with slat bottoms and kept
up off the ground. Too frequently an
ordinary box or tub is turned















Coop for Broody Hens,
them, and as a result they are almost
as content to sit on the ground as they
were on the nest.
“It is a mistake to starve
hen. She should be well fed at this
time, so that she will be ready to lay
when turned out. Avoid fattening the
hen while breaking her up. Give
limited amount of grains and a liberal
supply of milk and table scraps. Care
should be taken to turn the hens out
as soon as they are broken up.”
WAYS FOR AIRING INCUBATOR
Best Hatches Are Often the Result of
Cooling, Especially During Warm
Summer Weather.

air the eggs in an incuba-
One method is to
at the night turn-
morning, should the
temperature be found a trifle high,
and the other way is to turn the eggs
slowly to inhale fresh air and to con-
fine the real cooling te one or
periods when eggs have been
One may
tor in two ways.
ing, or in the
incu-
| bated 15 and 17 days and to cool them
| down until the shells are actually cold.

The best hatches are often the resuit
i of such cooling, especially in warm
weather.
Superior Mash for Layers.
The Maine station fed the following
mash to laying bens with good re-
sults:
Wheat bran two parts by weight,
cornmeal one, middlings one, gluten
meal or dried brewer's grain one, lin-
seed meal one, beef scrap one. The
ration might be reduced to wheat bran,
shorts, cottonseed meal and beef

Or a fairly good mash can be n
two parts wheat bran, one part
meal, one part beef scrap.


Make Study of Fowls.
the
Select your variety and learn
type that belongs to it, including the
correct size and markings, The
the same difference in ind lual
 


hens that there
things.
sition of
animate
Unprofitable Investment.
A poorly fed hen x
investment.
  
TO 1¢

There




using anyt ection
with poultry keer p food, in
. 1 is usu most expen-
sive because it does not produce re-
sults.
Water and Grit.
Clear water and grit ought ays to

reach of po
Eggs for Halching,
Select uniform eggs for hatching.
two |
over |
up the Whole System. 50 cents.
Back to Earth.
finished shells may be |
{ Detroit, for the city
{ We had a friend who had been pret- |
| ty prosperous, but who came upon evil
| days. We met him one day and he
said that he was pretty close to be-
ing busted,
Then he honked his horn,
mournfully,
but he was still hoping. |

Value of Experience,
There is no experience in any life
rightly regarded, rightly
turned, and thereby wisely used, can-
not be made of value; many times
things thus turned and used can be
made sources of inestimable gain; oft-
times they become veritable blessings
in disguise.—~Waldo Trine.

Detroit Under Three Flags.
During the last 200 years the
French, British and American flags
have floated officially over the city of
was founded by
the French, captured by the British,
which later evacuated and American
troops marched in, bearing the Ameri-
can flag. my
" -
Kill All Flies! ™%s&E"
Placed anywhere, Daisy Fly Killer attracts and kills all
flies. Neat, clean, ornamental, convenient, and


teed efenoat Arbor
Daisy Fly Kiliep
Sold dealors,
by Ja by 9 rer, $10 1.00.
HAROLD SOMERS, 150 DE KALB AVE., BROOKLYN, Ny Yo
LABORERS — White and Colored
Steady Work — Good Wages
| Excellent opportunity for handy enen to
|
|
|
| and drove away, and we didn't see
| him again till the other day when we
bumped into him on the street, says
the Cleveland Plaindealer.
“Hello, old scout!” we said. “How |
are things breaking now?”
“Fine!” he answered. “I'm on my |
feet again.”
Jully I” we exclaimed. “How did
vou do it?”
“Sold my car.”
The joke was so obvious that
didn’t see it till after he had gone.
we |
FRECKLES
Now Is the Time to Get Rid of These
Ugly Spots.
There's no longer the slightest
feeling ashamed of your freckles, as the
| prescription othine — double strength — is
| guaranteed to remove these homely spots.
| strength—from your druggist,
| little of it
| suffering
{ the old country,
Simply get an ounce of othine—double
and apply a
night
should soon see that even the worst freckles
have begun to disappear, while the lighter
ones have vanished entirely. It is seldom
that more than one ounce is needed to com-
pletely clear the skin and gain a beautiful
clear complexion.
Be sure to ask for the double strength
othine, as this is sold under guarantee of
money back if {t falls to remove freckles. —
Adv.
Sugar for the Babies.
As a sidelight upon the
‘aused by the sugar order in
many babies, say the
medical officer of health at Luton, Bed-
| fordshire, were suffering from the lack
| of that
a broody |
fattening ingredient. The in-
ability of the mothers in poor circum-
stances to make purchases of a char-
acter to procure a ten-pound parcel of
sugar has suggested to the officer re-
ferred to that the council should pur-
chgse large quantities of sugar and
sell them to such mothers through
baby clinics. The suggestion has been
put into effect and proved the solution
of a problem that was assuming seri
ous proportions.
The Desired Effect.
“Massah! I sho’ is in a phudicky
munt, sah,” whined Brother Slewfoot.
| “Muh child’en has done got de
mumps, and got 'em so pow'ful pom-
pous dat yo’ kin hear 'em cl'ar acrost
de street. And I wisht you'd please
gimme ‘bout haffer dollah, say, to buy
some medicine for em. When all dem
eight child’'en gits mumpin’ at once,
de sound—"
“Pshaw! You can’t hear the mumps.
Slewfoot, you are an abnominable
Har!”
“Yassah! And won't yo’ please
gimme dat haffer dollah for bein’ de
most 'bhom’able liar yo’ has met dis
bright mawnin’, sah? Uh-yaw! Haw!
haw! ==Judge.
NnpoTtant to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, that famous old remedy
for infants and children, and see that {t
Bears the
AZ
Signature of
- ,
In Use for Over 30 Years.

Children Cr y for Fletcher’ s Castoria
Woman's Way.
“1 see artment stores are go-





in bonds.
if you buy one
> next day and
and morning and you |
economic |
| gets a piece of it
need of |
advance in all trades. Can also use all
classes of Mechanics at Good Wages.
Apply in person to
Bethiehem Steel Co., Sparrow's Point, Md,
—
Men learn more as they grow older,
Women never grow older.


ity because he never
of his ability to rise
A man isn’t mig!
falls, but because
when he tumbles.
Granulated Eyelids, Stiles, Inflamed Eyes
relieved over night by Roman Eye Balsam.
One trial proves its merit. Adv,
A married man says there is evi-
dently no end to a wife's mind, as he
every day.
The Better Way.
“What I went through in
ried life was a caution.”
“What I went through in my mar-
ried life were my husband's pockets.”
my mare

Temple of Solomon.
The Temple of Solomon was begun
in the fourth year of his reign (B. Q,
1012), and completed seven years
later. The whole area was inclosed
by the outer walls and formed a
square of about 600 feet. The front
of the porch was supported by twe
great brazen pillars. One of these
was called Jachin and the other Boaz.


“Doans Saved My Life”
“I Had Given Up Hope’ Says Mr.
Dent, ‘‘But Doan’s Kidney Pills
Cured Me Permanently.”
idney trouble began with back-
> ache, which ran on
about a year,” says
H. Der ent, 2213
Reynolds Street,
Brunswick, Ga. “My
back got so I was at
times unable to sleep,
even in a chair. Of-
ten the pain bent me
double. I would be
prostrated and some-

one would have to
move me. Uric acid
got into my blood

and I began to break
out. This got so bad
Mr. Dent
I went to a hospital for treatment. I
stayed there three months, but got but
little better. Dropsy set in and I bloat-
ed until nearly half again my size. My
knees were so swollen the flesh burst in
strips, I lay there panting, and just
about able to catch my breath. 1 =
five doctors; each one said it was im-
possible for me to live.
“I hadn't taken Doan’s Kidney Pills
long before I began to feel better. I
kept on and was soon able to get up.
The swelling gradually went away and
when I Fol used eleven boxes I was
completely cured. I have never had a
bit of trouble since. I owe ry life and
my health to Doan’s Kidney Pills.”
Get Doan’s at Any Store, 50c a Box
DOAN’ HIDNEY
PILLS
FOSTER-MILBURN CO., BUFFALO, N.Y.
PATENT
Mexican Corn Paint — Something aiferent,
by mail for 15 cents. Agents Wi ed.
CHEMICAL WORKS, Box 1298, » NEW ORLEANS, Ls



Watson E.Coleman,Wash-
ington, D.C. Books free. High
est references. Best resu N


| W. N. U.,, BALTIMORE, NO. 5.1017,

‘Canadian Farmers
Profit From Wheat

The war’s devastation of
European crops has caused
an unusual demand for grain
from the American Conti-
nent. The people of the world must
be fed and wheat near $2 a bushel
offers great profits to the farmer.
Canada’s invitation is therefore
especially attractive.
settlers to make money and happy,
prosperous homes for themselves by
; helping her raise immense wheat crops.
You can get a Homestead of 160 acres FREE
and other lands at remarkably low prices. During many
years Canadian wheat fields have averaged 20 bu
the acre many yields as high as 45 bushels to the acre.
Wonderful crops also of Oats, Barley Flax,
Mixed farming as profitable an industry as grain rais-
ing The excellent grasses full of nutrition are the only
food required for beef or dairy purposes. schools,
churches, markets convenient, climate excellent.
There is an extra demand for farm labor to replace the
many young men who have volunteered for the war.
Government is urging farmers $0 put extra acreage into
grain. Write for literature and particulars as to reduced
railway rates 0 Supt. of Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, OF
J. P. JAFFRAY,
Cor. Walnut & Bread Sts., Philadelphia, Pa.
Canadian Government Agent

 
 
 
 
 
 

She wants

 




 

els to


 
 
 
 
 

The