Image provided by: St. Helens Public Library; St. Helens, OR
About St. Helens mist. (St. Helens, Or.) 1913-1933 | View Entire Issue (March 28, 1913)
liiiitiiiirsi c 1 EXCELLENT TIME FOR LAYING BIRD IS FRIEND OF FARMER j Not Advisable to Have Pullets Pre- ' Goldfinch BnM Agriculture by Con suming Beads of Noxious Wsede, Especially Thistle. (By II. W. WKIS'lUUHF.It. In th Farm I ml Hresld) Why do I clans the goldflmh , winter resident? Simply because 1 think that many a farm boy sees thera and hears the familiar " anary j notes" and does not know them to : be our common black and yellow "wild canaries" of the summer time. This Is what they are, but they have; Jonned tha greenlah yellow garb of the female. Often, if they have found ; food feeding place with plenty of goldenrod or a ragweedy corn field. ff the jSftJ Dough 2rJ Better! fM& 25c N&ft Pou.d Cma if A. All Crew V V J Spread Dread Plague, in h. A.ivm of Kine Charles II news traveled slowly In Kngland and be ffir tlm neoole of Cornwall knew . Ji ... they will remain until th seods have KlMlut the terrible plague In London ADfXP rGORGE p UOHAULY the longest highway lu the world Is kuown to auto nioblllataa the Peclnc Highway. It estends from Vancouver to . . . Mlllt ti lu.iia. anoruins . wile Jaunt, and offering all sorts of .ceuery and nperlence, Mountain passes come with regu larity on this Ions road, which, to the .k ,.f K,.n Kramlaro, Is marked with the Parinc Highway signs. To the uuth of the (iolden Oate the em blematic road signs of the Automobile Club of Southern California give both the directions aud the topography In picture signs that can be Interpreted at a mile minute. In southern Cali fornia the roads have been Improved so rapidly that It Is the paradise of the motorists and the new roads have Bieaiit making the mountain passes ruler In grade as well ea smooth of pavoinctit. Crosses Ynei Range. San Marcos 1'aas. lying between the channel city of Kaula llurbara. famed for in well preserved mission and Ha mountain drives, and the old mission u.ni Yrw i the first seat of learn ing on the Pacific, crosses the tianta Tnei range with 30 miles of beautiful seeurry As one lifts aloft from Hair U I'.arbsre side, the whole channel with Its Islands and countryside grad ully unfolds. Maybe the 60 mile wide channel Is hidden by banks of fog that hide sll but the peaks of the Islands sod yet tnd sharply at the shore of Banta llurbara Hay. Intensifying the Piedmont region and adding to the beauty of the billowing clouds that Oil ths channel whllti away beyond Is the open sea, unending. On the north side of Ran Marco Ptas the srenery la more wild and the climb more precipitous. As the grade doubles around the old bills far away Tlsts are unfolded and the ridges of ths ratine give duty Idea to th mind, Finally there la a glimpse of the sno.fed mountain stream, the Bants Ynei river, where dwell the sperkM beauties sought by the nlm- ruda and found In abundance. The road follows along the river mile after mile as the altltudn drops away and dually the old ford, now well bridged. Is rearhed and the level of the stream Is found Grand old oaks dwell In all the pass es of the sunny southland Thousands of rears have they lived III their ma Jesty, brond. massive, silent and grand beyond drarrlptlon. Home of the pass ea like the Tejon start from the floor of the desert on both sides and grad sally unfold mountain torrent and majestic onk, whitened sycamore and beds of ferns gigantic In site. It Is tranie to leave the Mojave or the San Joa'iuln plnlns and enter the Te Jon and. rlnlng thousands of feet and In the hottest day. feel the atmos phere cool, vegetation grow rich and trees of wonderful site unfold. Mere only 40 miles away from the oil city of Hnkersrield, possibly the most un comfortable city In America In sum mer. is an Ideal resort offering every Inducement and yet containing not one ulnjcln summer home. Hut all throiinh It you find, the summer through, camping parties with wagon park horse or automobile:, arriving, so journing or departing In some of the rocky defiles like the Cajon or the Myllwild there la little vegetation un til the heights are rearhed. Tha Ca jon la a gateway to the great Ameri can desert, BOO miles wide, so offers Bo beauty of big trees. The Idyll- wild, on the country, winds over the coast side of the great Ban Jacinto mountain, where snow Is almost al ways found. Hera the road passes through glgantlo pines and through cool delta where mountain streams ri with distant saw mills In making mil slo for the traveler, and tha road rises to a height of over mile. Worth tha C Imb. There are 17 miles of climb on the Panning tldo of the lilyllwrid pass, but the views are worth It You. who have studied the plain from Pike Peark. the view from Mount Waahlng IRRITABILITY TO BE FOUGHT Psrnlcloua Foe of Happiness May Be Put to Flight by a Little Whole some Reflection. Don't lot the pernicious little fog of Irritability apoll the fruitful vlnea of your comfort and usefulness. It U nearly always a small thing that Irri tates, nearly alwaye a mental thing, too. Counteract It by Ita opposite. big. wholesome thought Chaao out the fog. A largo view of things I comforting and healing. Oeneroslty. magnanimity, forgive ness, keep the potty aggravation from "getting It on" ua. Suppose some one does give you a little unjust criticism, or take up your time, or bother you with trlfiee. Trrat the mattera Ilka trifles, and let your thought dwell on tha Important things. 4. woman once conquered pers'1"1 "Mllty In herself one hot summer -,y by turning her thought to -t by far tha reter part was big, nd w001" tha great out of dejora ove It wara calm and duclng Eggs Befors October Cold Weather Hinders. Many poultry miners believe that the sooner pullets start laying the greater the fliiaiiclul returns will be. but this Is not always the rase. It Is not advloahle to have pullets laying before October at the earliest, except in the few cases where Inter egg are not wanted. If the birds start lay ing earllur than October the cold weather comes around, and probably will bot start again until the winter Is nearly over. If they start laying by July or August, as very early hatched pullets sometimes do, they uuuiijr uiouu in wm mil aim uu uv ... . ; , . . , . , lay again until February. Hut It Is "sen consume, wu.cn .i " mere cam. . 1 .Vlen with slllt ....... ...I iirki of time , ers with pack mules laden mtn sua equally bad If they do not start laying fJ''Tot h(iwe, b, Con- and satin growna. rich robes, plumed by tho middle of November, as they Tby f""1 not, however, do con ;"" n.lve lac,.B whcu were probably will not start In until the end founded with another, similar no th-; hau an d .: pen I v. ttpr,ce of January at the earliest and perhaps srn winter bird, the pine siskin, whose i rountrTl,ld ryghed to purchase. not until the end of tVbruary or the not "nwhat Identical, dui , n(J tfae mer,.nanta havng disposed of beginning of March. I The time the pullets are hatched baa more to do with the time tbey start laying ' than anything else, but the systom of feeding haa consid erable to do with It also. If pullets , are maturing too quickly they ahoulJ receive free range aud be fed only once a day, about 3 or 4 o'clock la the afternoon hell the best time. The ton and similar sights will bait tht car with wonder as the Han Jacinto to(li ,hould be only dry grain, and plain, all the way to the foothills that oaU mr, aDOUt as goes as anything shut lu lllversldo. Is unfolded Thers fop ,h DUrial. As soon as tha early u down towns are seen, great ranches, pun,lB freeiy receive nutritious foods garden spots, ridges of bills on a great lney Urt Uylng. tu cker board like the vlow of the Oau : -I. .1 ... L'IIU.... . , .... I UIIUIII'I IIUIII tiuuilfc n IIIUII, wui ui bu- other physiognomy. There are over 100 mouutaln pass-1 ea in souiueru i.amoruia ana me east- central part of the state where are: the highest points lu the United i States. Mount Whitney Is here sur-! rounded by mure than a score of peak i'lke'i of A coven trates these w lids easily and swiftly, the field to On Kl Camlno Ileal, the old mission around, writes ad blndlna toaether the string of 22 Meade, Kan., missions slotis- the Pacific coast from and Ilreeie. I . . . . .!. m aw.im - mnnm i iinn.r ramt-m lUUB avoia turning suo.v - . , . h a..e vl - ..... O. S. Newberry of u" "' .bare and negieciea wunoui vu- 1V,. V.rmera' Mail 1 " ' I VaSO OI Iiowors or ..nl tied a chain ,0Ter- Goldfinches are among the ferni. I simply tied a cnain ..... .... . K. il : law uirui tuai ui t u-s uuo -s ww rtun Die,, north in Koiioma. some 70(1 behind the harrow as tar as me s--u- ... . .., ,,h.p Mnt' "r Formal Closing mile. f o,,.,,.t..rf,,i r,,m after Cahu- sr went, then followed tnis mars ne one evenlne little Helen stammered - - ...... - .... . uiv cuuiuuk yci iim. . . . nga. ten miles out of Is Angeles; time so as to cover all tne grouna , .ummer and fall ther the end of ner prayer, eviaenur 10 r- . . . . v. . ... 4 riam nf nt HA ll . I.t1na hnw in rlnnP. Then 8D8 B&IU. 1 -IllH-l tliatAtillisT - aTIIII Til OI lim WllU lijsj gvj e; 1 1 - . w Bi-w ww .1.1. l.ik In ha nrmnfrw ariwus, - . ,,. ,h.r. h..lrlthalavaraoDthhrf-wMd:'IV'"-"- yes. very truly your., Helen . - .ana in 10 be mission pndres; Conejo. meaning t labblt or hare, alo named when the padrea first tramped this trail; Cas Itas. meaning little bouses; Cuesta. that lofty pass beyond the mission town of Han Luis Obispo, and then the 40 mile Paso del Itobels. pass of th oaks: Han Juan, near Mission San uan HautNte; Halnt John, the Hap tlst. and many smaller passes like John. Ixs Catos (the rata, presumably lid rats) such are some of the names Home of the new roads are going J around the passes and losing the beauty by abandonment; but most of he roads of the California passes will remain l.ke the everlasting hills they are the route of the least resistance. ' USE WHEELBARROW SEEDER mplement Is Hltchsd to Harrow by Means of Rope Attechsd to Pipe 8avss One Operation. Thle makes a handy way to use a The Goldfinch. all their stock, departed. Then within a day or two the purchasers were at ' tacked by a strange sickness, and died by acores. The gaudy clothes had been stripped from the bodies of those who had died of plague In Lon ! don. I Mothers win And Mrs. WlnaloWs BVotntBS. ' Syrup U tost rm-JT lo nu ro 1 ?ullBg tMtbkuc peliod. s. any of which Is higher than wneeioarrow seeur - ima nockii 0ften In a Peark. Here Is the Hwltxerland I used a four sectlon harrow wltn it Darrow, mn(1 Junc merlca that few have as yet die- and lapped what tne oea"r lpring comes they pair. A Th. mi,w,i.i lu nnw nene- cover eacn nine. um - . . . . whose streaked breast can be dlstln-l rulshed from the solid color of the' goldfinch. During the winter they travel in company with Juncoa. uul wnen and then be- Klngly Life. ! And so the kingly life la a life In I quest of big things. Everyone la paln I fully familiar with the temptation to S fritter awav life in Interests that are i small and mean. There are those .hn .r.enrl their strength In seeking ! money. The concentrated purpose of i their days Is a quest for gold. They I are sealous for artificial gems and I they miss the goodly pearls. J. H. Lowett, JJ.D. CARE KHO USE OF CASSEROLE.' Excellent Servant of the Cook Must Have Proper Treatment, and Thla Advice Is Good. Before using a casserole for the first time, It la well to temper It; this Is best done by covering It with cold water. Then letting the water come to the boiling point, remove from the fire, and let the casserole remain In the water until It Is cold. Under no circumstances let the cas serole be put on the stove without water or fat In It; If this la dona the dish will crack. Avoid sudden changes of tempera-1 ture with the casserole; that la. do not take It from the hot stove or oven and place It in cold water or In a wet sink; this will prove disastrous to the ulxh. Casserole cooking reoulres only moderate beat; if something is being cooked in tha casserole at the same time that Intense beat Is required for something else, take the precau tion of setting the casserole In a pan of water. In cooking anything In a casserole It Is well to allow twice the time for that would be required were the stew or vegetables or fruit cook-1 ed in the ordinary way. Distemper In all Its forms, among all ars of horses snd dofja, cured and others In the same ata- bis prevented from having tlie disease with bpohn's IUtemr,er Cure. Every bottle ruaranteed. Over WO.OUO bottles sold last year. I.&O and f 1.00. Good drnftgists, or H-nd to manufacturers. Apent wanted. Write for free book. Hpohn Med.Co.,6peo. Contagious Diaaes, Oonhen, Ind. WOMEN Wm Kmit Im U MukiH Wnrk. bat liwra im m -ncbiM aud to 4 Wrk, ma it So i u qairfc ' a 1 kMtw thaa it't rrw bm 4om bvfera, THE MEADOWS POWER WASHER TAKES THE WOKK OUT OF WASH DAY. Fn a niutrat I catalog ml , n mlal f tk Maoa Mow m sUI SMBUaalas taia paper. Kp PORrJLND, OR. Send me your free Meadows Washing Ma chine catalog. Flowers In the Houae. Flowers add so much to the cheer fulness of the borne, even though we may not be extravagant In buying them. A few flowers tastefully ar- 7-lkr" ranged brighten the entire appear courtship, for " r,i-.r tables look Ian, to gatner wnai lenuce Cm,:h and sunflower seed they find awaiting 1 them. I t Lemonade Ginger Punch. Five lemons, one cupful of sugar, one cupful of boiling water, ginger ale. fresh mint, cold water, one-nan neap ing teaspoonful of gelatin. Wash the lamnna and slice mem: men spnu-i- over the sugar. Let stand for 30 min utes, and then add one quart of cold ,t.r Dissolve tne geiaune m iu- bolllng water and add It to the lemon mixture. Pour the wnoie inio a puucu Kni and arid the ginger ale. allow ing one quart of ginger ale for each nuart of the other liquid. Half an hour before serving add a few stems of fresh mint. For the Shopping Bag. Sew a very large safety pin In your shoDDlng bag. Then hang by means nt mnr safety oins your door key, samples of cloth, memoranda and auch ihinoi Tlifv will be handy when you open the bag ard aave poking down and around and about the bottom of the bag for these things. Pure Blood la the result el Perfect Natrltlaa which preceees fro as GOOD DIGESTION Assure These Benefits ALL EYES To Polish Piano. RinTCB5 SORE They benefit agriculture by eating if the poliBh of your piano Is dull. , the seeds of noxious weeds, especially wet It over sparingly with paraffin oil . , Banana Pie. the common thistle, and In feeding and let It remain for two hours. Then Unfj a deep plate wlttt rich crust and their young upon harmful Insects. Be-1 PoUth with linen and chamois akin. . bake a dellcate brown. Filling: Take log with us. to some extent, through- j Mower . magazine. out the winter only tends to add to, Rlchet , Poverty. their usefulness. .. ... . t what : ii,. ' tarn ctrcra anrl tWO tAbleBOOOn a scant cup of sugar In your sauce pan h ,.tn into a eenerous teaspoon of butter (not melted), beat In the i i i LOWLY HOG Ssader Runs Behind. the seeder handles loosely rest on this pipe, but a stick is placed over , thera and wired to the pipe so as not j lo alio too much free play. The -seeder Is hitched to the harrow by means of a rope attached to the pipe rtohoa nnv treasurea untold, a man IS ECONOMICAL! may possess In the midst of It. If he I ; does but seek them aright. Coleridge. Consumes, l- KNEW VALUE OF GOOD ROADS from th, center of the seeder to allow It to follow the harrow In turning. Rulers of Great Empires of Centuries Ago Also Proved Themselves Cap- n.,nY rnWC f)N SMALL FARM eata Is wasted. Fifty-two per cent of rniiww.w - - the food eaten by a nog goes to una : Puts to Good Use All It Eighty Per Cent, of Carcass Being Available. i The American hog is the most eco nomical of animals. Of what a horse eats 62 per cent, goes to waste. Fort- four per cent, of the food consumed bj cattle la similarly lost, and 32 'of all that aheep take Into their achs. Only 12 per cent, of what a pig III III able of Building Them. rH!"AH In, Down and Out" Savage man built nothing that can be called a road. When be was hun gry be sought food In the forests, or In the streams aud lakes, and finally made for himself definite trails. These Where No Consldersble Amount of growth. A sheep utlllxea only 25 per; if, - the Spring you always feel Live Stock Is Kept Anlmsla Are cent, of Its sustenance for growing, , way The gy.tem ia overloaded of Much importance Dairying should be a factor In the operations which means, of course, the PO"; ! with winter impurities, the blood ia Ju.tln.ble ' a.n.d0,from recent Vxper.mVnU m.Te ' -lal - . of every by government experts, who find, as a trails became at last the nrai roans. . h . . that the p, hai lloads. l'aths and "u""r .i." 'V. .h.. ,n .n economic aunerl. Mr. U W. rage, in uoaos. . a.u. ...u --- .,nnMnll .va farm work. what they caU an llrldges." tells of the stonsunaceu , n rnn.,der- oritv" even over poultry. That la to roads found In Egypt, built thousands """ . ... .'..- ,t nroduces more meat In propor tion to Its weight, and the animal weighs more In proportion to tne that the stones linn of the hauled. ... ... .,, ,nhnr ,,- p,.h 75 r,r cent Is edible, and of the aheep Egypt la not tho only land possess-,"" . . , ... ,,,., ' Ki . eent. Thus It appears ,g relic, of early roa d-bul.d. t g I Lby- ... - . - f f th, pI Ion. th. city of hanging garden, and P farm available for food than of any other ,re.t walls, at a very early date de- T'' ... .ta,ement applies domesticated creature. veloped a high stale of civilization. " ' . fmg ,.. thIa ... ! and Semlramls, Its great queen, was, n mthuslnstlo road builder. It Is at roads found In Egypt, built thousands . smau ....... - 7t yea ago of ...... v. .to... block.. le amount of live .tort can he yer .au. u. growth or for .ale fat. the In some pieces ten feet thick It was P . .n.nsed with over such a substantial road as this - '.mount of food It consumes. Eighty e. used In the con.tmc- -- fQur cent of th- , of a ho great Pyramid, were t h. doe. HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS is an ideal medicine for all spring ailments and a trial now will con vince you. Be ure it's Hostetter'e- flour, and a cup of boiling water and rir .tirrlne constantly until thick. Add a little vanilla after this cream is cool. Slice Into ttie crust a layer of Kon.no. alternated with a layer ol cream. There should be two layers of each Frost with the whites of two eggs, beaten stiff, with two teaspoons of sugar. Bfown in oven. cold. - Queen Victoria Detested Tobacco Th. number of smoking rooms no distributed over Windsor castle zi,M mn rierab T aSlOniSQ uueeu Victoria could she but aee them. Her late majesty could never onng neraen to do more than tolerate the weed in m form, and the smoking room was alway. relegated to a very distant part of her various residences. Nor were the guests permitted to aolace t nnman Tog w'th a auiet smoke in h.iF nwn ansrtments. as on their ar rival they were speclally warned not to do ao. " Modern Astronomy. The popular idea of the astronomer, says a writer in the World's Work, as one who spends his time In sleeping by day and peering through the small end of a telescope by night, must b dismissed. "The greater part of ths modern astronomer's time, says tha article, "is spent In studying photo graphs," often with a microscope. Paradoxical as It may seem, an as tronomer today gazes mora ones through a telescope." r nti Rin. atl hln. heat bhikie vahal la -note world, makaa tlx laumtiaaa amila, Breaking It Gently. "I her come to tell yes, Mrs. Ma lone, that yer husband met with an lccldent." "An" what is it, nowT" walled Mrs. Malone. "He was over ome by the heat, mum." "Overcome hy the heat, was he! An' how did it lappen?" -'He fell into the furnace jver at the foundry, mum." Tit-Blta. How Paris Helps Poor. The fact that the receipts of Paris heaters have more than doubled ia he last twenty years is a good thing for the Paris poor, since every buyer of a theater ticket in Paris haa to pay a ten per cent tax for the poor, ths total amount of which for the last year was $1,300.1)00. Acid Phosphate In Henhouses. - . s. L. n K.t nruotlx. t. to 11 A add ,hi. period that we nd w. 1 prob-: Znl U someUme. mad. ! phosphate or Host, freely In th. hen ably the first use of . tone In brldg to house. Tou can put th. manure Into building The two 'Prtlon. of 'Jg."" who hH , , fof drllUng by thorougU . were Joined by a brl dg. crow th. Lu v farmcr who hM to drrtng alr and then pound nhralea. This wonderful brldg. waa " .... , Y .hmuh a coarse lllllllll HOW I MADE MY HAIR GROW plates of lead. At that period, more than 2,000 It is true that pure-; in Up and running through a coarse bred stock are not adapted to the aleve. It la deficient In phosphorio poor farmer, it follows that there Is aciit which the soli usually needs, stock suitable for mm, lor cer-1 and at least on pounas 01 . u The scrub ' grade of acid phosphate should be ho wanted aa(ied to each 100 pounds of the dry . .1 or v in Ima thilp money. KYiir nr fly hundred pounds . . ... .., .. l " - J - I m.UUl . v-. --- noun.oeu. .-. - Thle men could certainly ed to all the princ.pa c tie. of the ff (c, year, before Christ, asphalt was used u ,; ',,', instead of mortar In constructing the U nly the scrub JjoL J vast walls round tho city. Commerce f'" v ; have no scrubs. The a niK"' .... i. n.,,. hroila are th. anl- way 400 miles long, paved with brick; farmer because they set in a mortar of aspbaltum, con nected Nineveh and Pabylon. It waa left to the Carthaginians to become Instructors to the world In the art of road building. Carthage la given the credit of having demonstrated to the world the atrateglo and economic value of Improved roads. Hut for a splendid system of highway., which permitted an easy means of communi cation with all parts of her' domains, she never could have reached the heights she attained, either In com merce or war. Youth'. Companion. quiet, and that nothing, without her consent, could unsettle and disquiet her thought. Irritability has a thought of anxiety. of worry, basically a fear, beneath )t "Perfect love casteth out fear." "When he glveth quietness, who then can make trouble?" The Housekeeper. will help make him independent. If the proper care is given them. The scrub has no place. per acre may be the most profitable amount for your rye. Woman With Marvelously Beautiful Hair Gives Simple Home Prescrip tion Which She I'sed With Most Remarkable Results. Oesldsble Seed Ears. The best ears of corn have the butts well rounded out with well-shaped ker nels. Ears having straight rows of Care of Poultry. Beglnnera in the poultry bualne. ar. likely to neglect their atock dur ing the time they are not yielding re turn, and often ran to ngurw iu. I waa greatly troubled with dandruff and falling hair. I tried many advrtla-t hair preparatlona and vmrioua preacripUona, but they all ailly failed: many of them mad my hair army ao it waa impoaaibta to comb it or do It up properly, i ,ki.k th.t aim of tha thins I triad wot poai- mi ininrloua and from my own experience I tura consequences. Such beglnnera , u atronsiy caution you aainat wain. Step to Your Own Drum. WTiy should we be In auch desper ate haste to succeed, and in aucL desperate enterprise.? If a man doe not keep pace with his companions, perhapa It is Lscause he hear, a dif ferent drummer. Let him atep to the music whlcu he hears, however measured or far away. It la not lm rwirtnnt that he should mature aa aoon as an apple tre or an ua.- du-.. . lj. ..in inin summer? turn u.o iiufi Thoreau. . Still, Aa Servanta Go, Old. Mrs. Heath anlffed audibly when v.. .i.t.p hannened to mention, with mn.iriornhia awe. a certain neighbor nuv' the married woman exclaim ed. "Why Daisy should speak of her h!n aa 'old family servants' I can't imagine!" '-But why shouldn't she, If !i wants to?" Inquired the sister -Because the one she's had longest Is her cook, and so far, she s stayeo. si months!" Youth a Companion Alas, Yest "Oh. Mr. Tltewadd. do you know I nassed by a candy store yeeterday and actually didn't go In." "How un like you I thought you said once you Invariably turned mi" "ny, uou you remember? You were with me. PILES CURED IN TO II DATS Toor dranhat will nfund morwy If PAZO OINT MENT fails to cur. any raa 01 limine-, .una. BlMdin. or Protrudina- Piles ia to U diura, sua Knew What He Waa Doing. . "1 do not see that you are practic ing economy by buying a fifteen-dollai ,Jt,h.. for vour wife." "Its Interior s so complex tnai oy tne umi inds money for street car ia a ompanlon will have paid for her. iuffalo Express. cannot be auccessful in the poultry huslness. Constant care, good feeding and fresh water are absolutely necea- kernels and a medium sUe shank are ; ,.rT . .n times. Thla holda good desirable. The cob ahould be of me- from tlm. th. chicke are hatched dlum alie and of a deep color, ine unU1 ty go into tne laying nouae. kernel, should be aeep ana nrm ou the cob, medium wedge shaped, have a deep color, and contain large, bright germs. I preparatlona containing wood alcohol and etber poisonous substances. I belter they Injur th ivnta of ths hair. After my Ions list of failures. I finally found a simple pr-scription which I can unhesitatingly stat. ia hsyond doubt tn most i ..i kin- f.tv th. h.ir 1 nsY rcr seen. Many of my friemis havo also used it. and ob tained wonderful etferta therefroni. It not only Is a powerful stimulant to the arowth of th hair and for i-storin ry hair to ita natural color, i. i. ,.ti. for removina- eandrufr. aiv- l. ih. hsir life and brilliancy, etc.. and for th purpose of keepins th aialp in Hrst-class con dition. It alsomakea tna nair easier Btao Over Body of Mother. A remarkable story of cruelty waa ' dairy farmer. recently told In a London (Eng.) court. When charged with sleeping out, Mrs. Ellrabfth Kloyd aged fifty four, said that ,wo months ago her husband turned her out, and ever since ahe haa slept on the dooratep of his house. Her husband and aont stepped over her body aa they left the bouse every morning. Good Dslry Farmer. A good dairy farmer has been de scribed as "a good general farmer plua the love of cowa." Thla la a good definition, because the man who doee not have a fondness for cattle, and who doea not find some satisfaction In caring for them seldom turns out to be a very capable and prosperoua Attention to Colta' Feet. Tvm't for.et to give the colt'a feet attention. Now Is when tha set of i ."i. i - form. 1 have a friend who used Umba la determined. Thera la always . u..n tnr a noor set of limbs. It . l.,u,VH w ' . Too Much Realism. Taterfamlllaa wrltea to complain of "tha amount of realism" that la nowa daya Imparted Into mechanical toye, -Th. other evening." he 'V?- "f0.h"T ny's automobile ran lf ?2 knocked the sawdu.t out of two tM --ening St.dar a4 Oaa.tta , Condition of Market Eggs. Send all eggs to market In a clean condition. Wash all aolled spota and keep out all cracked eggs. Sort eggs of the same aire and color Into th. sam. case. And most of all. get tha egga to the csutomer as soon aa pos sible after they are laid, for they do not improve by keeping. mav be hereditary, but It la generally carelessness on the part of th. owner who did not keep his feet trimmed down level with the frog. A colt'a feet ar. continually breaking off and splitting If they are not attended to promptly. Horae Journal. aj.nl. t.rf Machines. More farm implement, are worn o.t u.ttie ofjn. - MeT- by aun and rain man oy ua.. them under cover and use plenty of .raua and paint Doing thla means th. difference between buying new im plements every ten yeara and .very thre. years. it two months and dunne tnai time only etopped the fallina of hie hair and wonder fully Increased n livwin. . " ' - . atored all of hie hair to its natural color. You can ol.lsin the ingredients for making thia wonderful preparation from almoet any drugsut Th pr-ai-rlption la as follows: Bay Hum. a o.; Menthol Crystala. H drachm: TonadeOn-ee'. i oa. If you Ilk It per fumed a.ld a few drops of To-Kalon Perfume, which mixes perfretly with th other ingredient. This, however, ia not necessary. Apply night and morning, rub thoroughly into tVto'jour druggist ami ask for an eight ounr L..V,. ,.ii, ounces of Bay Rum; aleoono- half dra. hm of Menthol Crystals, and a two-ounce The Apple Orchard, tlo-v the neighbors laughed when an old farmer of slaty year, betraa to set out a large appie vraaara, so evwr elrttjy. - - he sM sxM ' ' -ate ox e Opening Up Drain Outleta. A few hours spent now to see thai all the drain outleta ar. well opened .. .... nn.iatdarable delay on ae Mtamt of wet flelda la the ertn. thol Crystals to the By num . " i .i. f-...n.M .nd sid tbo To-Kalon Perfume. Let it stand one-half hour and it la ready for use. T3U.lkH.l41H I uM C I Syrss. Tss U-- la ti.s. H.-14 Dtsiii,. nsa ; Try th. Left "I often wish." mourned Senator Spouter, "that I were ambidextrous then I could ro ei writing my speech ea without being interrupted by these pestiferous handshakers. No Loss. Blobbs "Do you think the death of old Closefist will be a lose to tne com munltv?" Slobbs "Well. I under stand the lose ia fully covered by in su ranee." Getting His Bearings. WnodrhoDoer '1 seen a lot o bea tracks 'bout a mile north o here big ones, too!" Hunter "Good! Which way la south?" Chicago Dally Newa. Not In Sight, Hokus "Do you think w. shall ever have universal peace?" Pokus isot so long a. women continue to play bridge for stakes. But They Never Do. Little fault would be found witn people who tell all they know if they would quit wnen mey nay. uou- m.i. Disturbers. There's hardly any way to be auch a nuisance as to have strong convic tion a. New York Presa. Method of Softening Gold. u.. .rM mar be softened by keep- m it t the boiling temperature oi water for four days. JKTi s SlMSHAM FREE ADVICE TO SiCK VOMEII Thousands Have BeenHelped By Common Sense Suggestions. Wnn suffering from any form of female ill. are invited to communicate promptly vim w woman'a privet, correspondence de partment of the Ly diaE. Pink ham Med icine Co., Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by woman and held In strict confidence. A woman can freely talk of her private illness to a woman , thus bu been established a confidential correspondence which has extended oreif many year, and which haa never been brokea Never have they VA teTumonial or need a letter without the written eonsentof the writer.and never h the Company allowed these confl totial letterTto get out of their poa Sn. the hundred, of thouauKU of them in their file, will attest. Out of the vast volume oT experience which they have to draw from, it la more than possible that they posses- the very knowledge needed in your case. Noth ing it asked in return except your good will and their advice has helped thou stfhds. Surely any woman, rich or poor, should be glad to take advantage of this s-eneroua offer of assistance. Addres. Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., (con fidential) Lynn, Mass. Fvery worn nit ouprht to hT T.ydl E. Pinktaam'i 80-P-ej Text Book. ' not b5.k !of general distribution, as it is too expenslre. It i fre nd nlJ' obtXabto by mall. Writ fo H totlay. P. N. U. No. U-1S. VXBRN wrMm i V Ma tks, P.S I t -.,J,1r--,,- " i r'-