Is Yo u r
Hair Sick?
That's too bad ! We had no
ticed it was looking pretty
thin and faded of late, but
naturally did not like to speak
of it. By the way, Ayer's
Hair Vigor is a regular hair
grower, a perfect hair re
storer. It keeps the scalp
clean and healthy.
" I am well acquainted with Ayer'n nlr
Vigor and 1 like It very much. I would esi.
cIhIIt recommend It at an excellent dreaalnz
for the hair, keeping It toft and smooth, and
preventing tlie hair from a n lit II n at the
eniU." MIMNIS MtiTz, Veeduin, Mich.
A
ttUdo by J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mm.
SAPSAPARILLA.
PILLS.
CHEKKY PECTORAL.
yers
Two large paintings and seven water
colors by Ibsen, painted while he was
roung. have been discovered at Nlt-Da-len,
Sweden, In the possession of the
widow of one of Ibsen's friends. It Is
well known that the dramatist during
lis youth was interested In drawing and
painting. So far only two paintings
and two water colors were known, be
longing to n private collection. They all
were painted during bis youth.
Uncle Allen.
"They say," remarked Uncle Allen
Sparks, "that the corporations are not
going to contribute anything to the cam
paign funds this year. Then we won't
have as much campaign oratory as usual.
There Is no loss without some gain."
Chicago Tribune.
Connecting of Drain Tiles.
It Is difficult to cut large tile with
a view to fitting small tile to connect
laterals with main drains. There Is a
great deal of danger of the tile break
ing, and one Is likely to lose two or
three large tile In attempting to form
n junction, and, at the best, tlie Junc
tion Is likely to be a poorly formed
one, unless considerable care is taken
In covering the openings and cementing
the joint. I have, therefore, found it
advisable to recommend tlie use of a
Disappointed.
"Mrs. YVraxall, how do you like your
new flat?"
"Don't say anything about it( Mrs.
Hugo, but I'm all out of patience with
it."
"What is the trouble?"
"There isn't a single thing I can find
fault with."
MA
JUNCTION OF TII.ES.
uona jnagment.
"Your partner,"' remarked the privi
leged friend, "seems to be a man of
unusually good Judgment."
"You bet he Is," replied the self-acknowledged
brains of the firm. "Why,
he never makes a move without asking
my advice!" Chicago News.
II on I KnllKhtenment.
"Pop, what Is a chiropodist?"
"One of these ieople who tell your
character from your handwriting.
That's right, Tommy; always ask pa
anything you want to know." Balti
more American.
HOWAltD E. nt'RTO. Aasayer 'l OjmIit.
Ihi1viU, Colorado. Kpei imen prices: t,ull,
HllTr, 1. ad, (I ; Hold, Silver, 76o ; Uold, Soc; Zinc or
liiipcr, tl. Cyanide terns. Mailing envelopes and
full price list scntou application. Control and Um
pire work solicited, luiurencei Carbonate Is
tlonal iiauk.
otel mqore
OPKX ALL Till YKA1S
Clatsop Beach
u r mrcriif on me oetcn overlooking pv
I III U 1 lllfli Mu IMF! mill E.
Rl IFF HfllKF surf bathing. Kr-rrra-
nr Snn nnrlors. Klcrtrlc llirhls. Hn-If.
ur nlai-e and steam heat. Une nnlkn 5-V
nBrriflW" nl drlTOB. Nea foods a spec- fy
unluun lultr. Kates. S-.60 and :!.!! FV
per flajr. Special rates bjr the neck,
I DAM. J. MlMJUK. Proprietor
connecting box or basin, built In the
main drain at points where laterals
connect. These basins may be made
of plank or brick or cement, accord
ing to convenience or fancy. Of what
ever materials, the box should be
from twelve to eighteen Inches square,
according to the size of the main tile.
Tlie best time to build the box is when
the main Is laid. Two sides of the
box, namely opposite sides, will be
used for the main line, tho other two
sides when the box is built should be
fitted with the first tile of the laterals,
which may be immediately or at some
subsequent time completed. Tills basin
or box should extend six to twelve
inches below the line of tlie drain, and
besides serving for connecting the
basin will serve for a sile basin, that
is. will collect anv sediment which
I may happen to get Into tlie various
, lines of tile discharging Into it. Also,
the box may be continued to the
i ground surface and be provided there
j with a tight cover, or if It is not de
sired to have a box exposed thus and
in the way, It may lie covered with
plank about fifteen inches below the
ground surface and then covered over
with soil the iiositlon of the box be-
j lug carefully marked on the drain map
or Its distance measured from two
points near at hand. .Such a basin Is
an excellent device to use where two
or three lines of drain unite.
i Of ivhntm'or m'ltnrinl tha l-w lu
SEASIDE, OREGON 'built, the tile on the four sides should
Fruit and Truck Farms.
The man who has not capital to pur
chase a large farm must be satisfied
with small holdings, Ten acres In fruit
and truck garden will furnish occupa
tion for one man all the time, and dur
ing fruit harvest extra help will need
to be employed.
If the husbandman can realize as
DRY FARMING IN IDAHO.
Resume of Idaho Experiment Station
Bulletin No. 62.
By Eliaa Nelson, IrriKationist.
In tlie western part of Nez Tercei
county and throughout southern Idaho
the precipitation is small and ari
conditions there, prevail. Farming
without irrigation in those portions of
the state may therefore be termed dry
farming
In Idaho dry farming has boon quite
successful with 12 inches of annual pre
cipitation. It is practiced in eastern
Oregon even with but 9 to 10 inches
Hie average annual precipitation for
southern Idaho in ll'.'jjj inches. Drv
farming should be successful in Idaho
on all soils that are 4 to 5 feet deep
larire returns for bis Individual labor
devoted to the cultivation of ten acres an(1 suitable in other respects provided
of land os he could from operating a . ! oper methods of cultivation are pur
quarter of a section It would be great
economy to work the smaller farm and
place the residue of his capital at In
terest. Truck gardening and fruit growing
have become established branches of
agriculture. The farmer raises his
own . supplies of fruit and vegetables,
but the multitude of residents of cit
ies depend on the professional fruit
grower and market gardener for their
supplies of fruit and vegetables. Small
farms are multiplying annually and
lieeome profitable investments when
operated to truck gardening and fruit
growing. An acre of onions In aver
age seasons will return a gross income
of $300 to $700 and fruit will average
$250 to $(500 per acre. An acre of ap
ple trees hare sold as high as $1,200
on the trees, the purchaser furnishing
the packages and harvesting the crop.
.The laud can be so operated as to
produce a crop of early peas and fol
lowed by turnips or late cabbages.
Small farms are particularly adapted
sued.
Dry farming has been practiced Run
eessfully on various soils ranging from
heavy clay to sandy. The depth of the
soil is of more importance than tlie
kind. The average soil in southern
Idaho is capable of absorbing 3 inches
of water for each foot of depth. Of
this amount 2 inches is available water
r. , 1 .. t 1
mm nil lie UKi'U uy crOJlS. J lie TP
mainder is not given up by the soil. To
absorb 12 inches of rain and hold it as
available moisture requires 6 feet of
soil. While a deep soil is a great a
vantage, dry fanning has been success
ful on soils of lesser depth than that.
The equivalent of an inch of rain stored
in the soil is capable of producing 2"
bushels of wheat per acre if it be
utilized.
With good methods it should be pos
sible to conserve at least one half of
the precipitation to do duty in crop
production. In actual practice not
to men in moderate circumstances and much more than one fourth is eeiierallv
"uu -l'fiiu on uteir liiuor to supiiun utjljzed. tha three-. onrth. -,;
ineir rammes. me small rarm not
only yields a large cash Income when
properly managed, but it furnishes a
home for the family aul guarantees
steady employment to the owner twelve
mouths in the year. (Joodall's Farmer.
A Farm Dairy.
The accompanying plan for a farm
dairy will give a general idea of the storage of water in the soil. Maintain-
requiremenrs ror sucn a nuiiaiug. Ac- 'jne a ftust mu
ng lost by
surface evaporation or by run-off.
The amount of moisture that is ab
sorbed by the soil and retained very
largely determines the yield. Deep
percolation is therefore to be desired
and surface cultivation to prevent un
necessary losses by -evaporation should
be practiced. Deep plowing favors the
cormnodation is made for handling the to con5erve that wllk,h th Koil has
milk or thirty cows and making butter, i . , , T. . .
A cement floor is iu every way superl-, .... , . . . . ' - . , , .
a uust uidiinri uci 11U1U3 UV LliXl'
Sbd yr7.
i i i'
as v.. .' -fl J-' .000- J
ris-le ftollrllnde.
Tiut Just as the citizen was about to
have the man who had sandbagged him
arrested, he was opportunely waited on
by a committee of the ( 'ommercial Club.
"We have tlie welfare of our beauti
ful city much nt heart," they observed.
"I'm glad to bear that I" replied the
citizen, cordially. "So have .1."
The committee cleared their throats.
"Of course the price of real estate is
about the main element In the welfare
of a city," they went on.
"Of course," the citizen assented, be
ing something of a booster himself.
Here the committee, looking at him
very hard, came to the point.
"We have the honor to inform you,"
quoth they, "that real estate made up
into sandbags yields more profit and
by that commands a higher price than
real estate lu any other form."
This naturally ended the matter. The
citizen saw the point at once and was
profuse In his thanks at being set right,
while tlie committee went on their way
rejoicing In the consciousness of a good
thing done. Puck.
Deafness Cannot Be Cured
YOU'RE TOO THIN.
Even Slight Catarrhal Derangements
of the Stomach Produce Acid Fer
mentation of the Food.
It's Stomach Catarrh
Some people are thin and always re
main thin, from temperamental rea
sons. Probably in such cases nothing
can bo done to change this personal
peculiarity.
Hut there are a large number of peo
ple who get tnin, or remain thin, who
naturally would be plump and fleshy
but for some digestive derangement.
Thin people lack In adipose tissue.
Adipose tissue is chiefly composed of
fat.
Tat is derived from the oily constit
uents of food.
The fat-making fooas are called by
the physiologist, hydrocarbon's. This
class of food are not digested in the
stomach at all. They are digested in
the duodenum, the division of the ali
mentary canal just below the stomach.
The digestion of fat is mainly, if not
wholly, the work of the pancreatic
juico. This juice is cf alkaline reac-
ng, and when It is entirely clowri. Deafnfts is , rM-.a
thrpun!t Ami iinlnt. Ihu
tauen out and tins tube restored to it nnrlr.nl
conuition, hearing will be dest roved forever;
nine cases out of ten are caused W Catarrh,
wnien Is nothinu but an inflamed ennriirinn of
the mucous surfaces.
Me will eire One Hundred Dollar for anv
case of Ueafness (caused by catarrh) that can
not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Ture. Send foi
circulars, free.
r. J. t'HErsEY & CO., Toledo, O.
Pold bv Prueeists. 7"c.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.
hy local armiicatinns. , thev rni,f.i rone-. tir uon, and is rendered inert bv tho addi-
diseaved portion of the ear. 'Ihcr : is im.y one tion of acid. A hyperacid ty of tho
way to cure deafness, and that is bv coustltn- ! .. ,. . , ,Jl , ' .
tionai remedies. UMtnm u -an..i i.vn in. digestive fluids of the stomach passing
?a, OI,d'tlon of ?he mu ous linn sr of th : down into tho duodenum, destroys
jMistaclnan lube. hen this tubu is inflamed i .. . , . .. . -
you have a rumbling sound or imperf-et hear- tho panerpatic fluid for digestive pur-
Therefore, the fats are not di
gested or emulsified, and the system Is
deprived of its due proportion of oily
constituents. Hence, the patient grows
thin.
Tho beginning of the trouble is a ca
tarrhal condition of the stomach which
causes hyperacidity of the" gastric
Juices. This hyperacidity is caused by
fermentation of food in the stomach.
When the food is taken into the stom
ach, if the process of digestion does
not begin immediately, acid fermenta
tion will take place. This creates a
hyperacidity of the stomach Juices
which in their turn prevent the pan
creatic digestion of the oils, and tha
emaciation results.
A dose of Peruna before each men!
hastens the stomach digestion. By
hurrying digestion, Peruna prevents
fermentation of the contents of the
stomach, and the pancreatic juice is thus
preserved in its normal state. It then
only remains for the patient to eat a
With Father'a Simile
Bragdon, the composer, was working
on his symphonic poem when the baby's
lusty cry was heard from the nursery.
Bragdon bore it manfully for five min
utes, expecting baby's mother to come
to the rescue. Then he opened the door
and shouted upstairs:
"What is the matter? Harry, are
you teasing the baby?"
So, papa."
You must be doing something to
make him crv."
Xo, papa truly! All Ethel and I
did was to try to sing him to sleep j sufficient amount of fat-forming fowls,
with your lullaby.'
CASTOR I A
For Infants and Children.
he Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
PLAN FOB FARM DAIRY.
;J &VV-.5r . a' .'-ill
or to a wooden floor for a creamery.
When properly put in, a cement lloor
will last indefinitely and can be kept
clean and sanitary, whereas a wooden
rowing anil especially on the summer
-11 1. . 13 il , l mi . !
j ianow Miouiu tins oe aone. i nat win
' prevent tlie soil below the mulch from
drying out. Leaving the summer fal
low lie rough 1 n r i n tr summer allows the
soil to dry out. "With such practices
there is a large loss of moisture and no
faiutuuii aiu in ici 11111 i tui iiiv; ii.iu
oration of plant food does not take
place in a dry soil.
Summer fallowing alternate years is
recommended for all localities with less
than 15 inches of annual precipitation. ; pan, grimly, thrusting a newspaper
Where there is more than that it is gen- j clipping under the editors nose, "whv
erally possible to grow a crop every , your revl ewer ref erst o mv recent book
Am ended.
The editor was dreaming In his "den"
when the door opened and a ratlier
stem-visaged woman entered, without
apology, says u writer iu the Baltimore
Sun.
"Will you kindly explain," she be-
as a "History of Female Suffrage by a
year. Growing a cultivated crop every
other Tnr ia ninrn nrnftf-nlilo thnn n !
single crop svstem. For cverv vcar i Ufv Historical Writer?"
cropping the plowing should be in the "Quite unpardonable." said the ed-
and the thinness disappears and plump-
uess takes its place.
Two l.lltle Sllpi.
Admission slips to the hospitals are
pretty likely to be matter-of-fact rec
ords and more or less tragic, but occa
sionally, tlie New York Sun reports,
a bit of uiK-oi.scious humor is found in
them.
A slip at C.-uiverneur recently report
ed that a driver of a bunsnm had re
ceived his injuries by "falling off a
perch," and the man's name was Bird.
Another (ioiiverneur slip announced
that the patient was hurt by "falling
off water wagon" a fall, it might be
added, which is always dangerous.
fall. For the bare summer fallow the
and is always a source of contamina
tion.
BUT BASI.V.
St. Helen's Hall, Portland, Or.
Resident and Day School for Girl.
Catalogue on Request.
furnish Your
Home
Without Cost
With PREMIUMS Given
FREE for CARTON TOPS
and SOAP WRAPPERS from
"20 MULE TEAM"
BORAX PRODUCTS
Leather Goods. Pocket Books, Purses,
Hand Bags, Chatelaines, Suit Cases'
Tl-llnLa rVillar anrl PnflF Poa.io Rn.n.
Strops, Traveling Bags, Toilet and row " pIn,,t ,u 1ure nitrnte of Hla.
Sewing Cases, Rain Coats, Umbrellas acU1 I"si'hate and other actual food
and Rubber Ooods. suDstttutes ; not even If they are mixed
Jewelry. Clocks, Watches, Chains, 'with the most consummate skill. Look
Kings, roos, roocnes mreues, ide at a clay soil; It Is generally regarded
Combs, Bracelets, Neck Chains, Etc. a ,,rtv. uru.r , n t - .
Silverware. Tea Sets, Coffee Sets, Mugs, I "7 r tty oW for growing plants.
Desk Sets, Inkstands, Cake Dishes, I but U h:i u,wre aotl,aI ux,ils ' food
Candlesticks, Ice Pitchers, Salt and : 5 11 tnan "n-v otm r rt of soli you
Peppers, Napkin Rings, Jewel Boxes, j can take, and it is Improved by throw
Knives, Forks and Spoons, Cigrar and ine In the solid exit of unn.i t,
O'cmrottA Pjisoa PniT Rnm fink '
- - - Wl 1 . V
I be carefully fitted iu so as to allow
' nothing to enter the box except what
' goes there through the tile.
. If the main drain Is to be built of
plank, it certainly would be better to
spike the plank, for two reasons: First,
to prevent displacement, and secondly,
to prevent entrance of solid matter. It
has been found that the joints of the
box will afford sulliclent means of In
gress for the water even If the planks
are spiked, and if they are not spiked
there Is danger of too great openings
and finally tilling the box with sedl
tnent. Exchange.
Chrinloal FrrtllUrra.
Mrong chemical fertilizers should
flot be given too lavishly to growing
plants. Mtrate of soda Is good as a
source of nitrogen, but you can not
and Brush Sets, Manicure Sets.
Glassware. Nappies, Vases, Spoon Hol
ders, Celery and Salad Bowls, Bon Bon
Dishes, Punch Sets. Tumblers, Goblets.
Games. Guns, Pistols, Air Rifles, Fish
ing Tackle, Boxing Gloves, Tool Chests,
Baseball and Football Goods, Cameras,
Phonographs, Banjos, Guitars, Books.
furniture. Rugs, Lace Curtains, Cut
lery, Lamps, Baby Carriages, Beds, j
' Send te (tamp for 40-pta FREE catatonia
Jatina- ovar 1000 praacnU firm fro. Aidraoa
VaaiAa Caaat Bans C, Oakknd. Cal
rubbish of ashes from the furnace.
Kecplnar Avrmy Cut norma.
It is, claimed that plaster and salt,
two parts of the former to one part of
the latter, dropjiod on the hills of corn
or potash In the form of kalnlt will
have a go.nl effect In keeping awny cut
worms, and besides will fertilize the
corn. A very small amount is all that
lii required.
tloor is short lived, quicly rots out plowing may be either in the spring or
in the fall. The former has been most
successful in the Columbia basin up
lands, the latter has proven the better
Calve with Sconra. ystem in i tan.
A dairvmnn irivps this rwiwilr fnr ' un rail plowing tlie sou settles ilur-
wbite scours: Carbolic acid diluted 1 'int" aru ",od-raPi,,Iar.v conn0
- . ... .11 , , , tion with subsml is thus ensured,
to o; 'kept a vial in my pocket and with ,owi the lowf,r f of
Just as soon as tlie calf was dropped I the furrow slice does not become firm
loured some on the navel next to body enough. Packing to close up the air
and some on the nose, and every calf spaces is therefore an advantage.
that I got before dry I raised, but when Either the sub surface packer or the
dropped in the night and the caw licked ,,"1'uKatod rollor I,i:.v l,e used for that
purpose, i aoiiing in conncciion wiin
spring plowing is recommended for the
I tor, gravely. "Of course the
should be spelled with a 'y.'"
word
riTO St. Vitus' Pance and all Nervons D!a"aen
I I I 0 permanently cured hy rr. Kline's l-rmt
.Verve Restorer. Send for 1'IiKE 2trlal bottle a:il
treatise. Dr.lt. IL Kline, lxl..6Jl Arch bU,l Liia.,l'ii
I
"'Vlih Sh'nina 'loi-iiiiis Face."
"This luminous p:int,"' said a young
father, according to the Philadelphia
Keconl. "ought to be an excellent thing
among families."
"How so?" asked a friend.
"Why." said the young father, "you
Just touch up the baby's face with it
before retiring, and then you can see
to give him his bottle without mak
ing a light."
The
General Demand
dry before I got them, they died."
KeaturliiK M endow.
Meadows can often be revived ano
lighter soils in Idaho.
Rotation of crops in dry fnrming
should be practiced at lenst in the more
made profitable by the application of favorable localities as the fertility of
commercial fertilizer. This can be
made up of l."iO pounds of nitrate of
soda, l.r0 pounds of acid phosphate nnd
70 pounds of muriate of potash. These
materials should be well mixed and
sown broadcast about this time, care
the land is then maintained. While
continuous wheat crowing for several
decades in some districts has not ex
hausted the soil, there cannot be much
dependence upon the permanency of
such a svstem. '
Winter wheat generally vieMs 4 to 5
being taken to distribute it evenly over bushels more per acre titan spring va
the field.
rieties. The most promising winter
wheat for southern lilnho arc Turkey j
Red, Forty-fold, Gold Coin, Loft house
and Odessa. The best spring varieties ,
are Kubanka Durum. Blue Stem, Little
Club, Red Chaff and Sonora. i
Other cereals have been successful '
on dry land, such as Sixty Days. Kher
son and I'ic Four oats and Smooth
of thirteen eggs fifteen healthy chick-; Hullers barley and rvc. Potatoes hnvo
ens. Mrs. Bush can not account for, been quite successful without irrisra- I
the extra number except that there tion. Laiiy varieties, such as Earlv
llatcbea 16 Clilcka from 13 Erk.
"Phoebe," a large hen owned by
Mrs. T. Z. Bush, of Birdsboro. Pa., for
a long time has bad a reputation of ,
laying an egg every day nnd sometimes !
two per day. Now she has hatched out'
must have been two pairs of twins.
A Few Farm Tlpa.
Keep the water sprout growths rub
bed off the fruit trees.
Angora goats have been found ex
ceedingly profitable on many farms.
Cow peas are to the South what
clover and alfalfa are to the North.
Bordeaux mixture Is the best nil-
Ohio and Six Weeks, are the best. Al- I
falfa is very drouth resisting and may
be sown on the arid farm. In favor- j
able localities it may give two cuttings
while the less favorable but one.
In soma localities in southern Idaho
the profitableness of dry farming is no
matter of doubt, for from 25 to 35
bushels of wheat per acre are produced.
Where yields are small the cost of pro
duction must be greatly reduced to give
a margin of profit and operations must
Furnishing an I n pl rn ( Ion.
"What is it you ore writing in such a
hurry. Will?" asked Mrs. Bonis.
"I saw von discharge the cook a fiw
minutes ago." answered K. Will Bonis.
the strusaling author, without looking j of the Weil-Informed of the World has
up from his work j ftl bccn for a s, , pleasapt
What of that? ,
"It was intensely dramatic." ! ai:d efa&ent ""l""! laxative remedy of
"Gracious: You are not trying to l j known value; a laxarive which physi-
dramatize it?" j cians could sanction for family use
"Not at all, my dear. You can't get I because its component parts are
quick enough action on a drama. I m i, ,
novelizing it." known to them to be wholesome and
truly beneficial is effect, acceptable
tc the system and gentle, yet prompt,
in action.
In supplying that demand with its
excellent combination of Syrup of
Fiss and Elixir of Senna, the Cali
fornia Fig Syrup Co. proceeds along
ethical lines and relies on the merits
of the laxative for its remarkable
success.
That is one of many reasons why
Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is
given the preference by the Well
informed. To get its beneficial effects
always buy the genuine manufac
tured by the California Fig Syrup Co.,
only, and for sale by all leading
druggists. Price fifty cents per bottla.
His Money's Worth.
A gentleman interviewed the laun- i
dryman in regard to lost garments,
says a writer iu Harper's Weekly, with
the following result :
La u n dry in a n I regret to tell you.
sir, that one of your shirts is lost.
Customer Rut here I have paid you
twelve cents for doing It up.
Lauudryman Quite right, sir. We
laundered It before we lost It.
Mothers will find Mrs. TVlnslow's Soothing
Byrup the best remedy to uso lor their tli'ldiu
luring the teething period.
Side I-iehta on Pony,
The ancient mariner had shot the al
batross. "I was absolutely out of meat." he
pleaded, "and I-couldn't shoot a canvas
back duck without getting into trouble
with the game warden."
Let us not blame Samuel Taylor Cole
ridge, however, for taking liberties with
this bald narrative when he worked it
up into a Poem You Ought to Know.
P N U
No. 27-03
WHEN writing to advertiser please
IT mention thla paper.
around
ence.
per
would be from $5 to $7
spraying material In exist- 1 on con!,i'1rlu scale. Each man
I should handle from 200 to 300 acres.
I "Rv mean of ro-nnpritinn nmnnir f.irm-
In renting land be sure to make a ers traction eneines may be employed
contract with the tenant and thou both and these generally reduce expenses
live up to IL one hslf. Where the farmer uses his
No tine is quite so much out of place i own tol8 and teams ,ho actual cost of
s the farmer who retires to a whit- ' rdu(,in? wheat will range from $3 to
...... a ma, i.rA At nnnlriil nft.ai t
.1: ..I I- r . ...... .vi, ...va
UUIK piitl V 111 IIIW II.
All the corn growing land Is taken.
Cheap corn land is no more. The price
of corn must stay up.
The atmosphere contains In unlimit
ed quantities one of the most essentia!
plant foods, nitrogen, but the farmer
must grow the legumes before he can
get any lionefit from this vast store.
The estimated cost of the Itoosevelt
dam. which Is part 'of the Salt ltiwr
Irrigation scheme, has boon cut down
by $1.IKX.(KI0 by the establishment ,.f a
government cement mill ou the spot.
No Escape.
The young man bad proposed and been
accepted.
"But what's this you're dolnf, dearT"
asked a moment later.
"I'm taking your Bertlllon measure
ments, Clarence," Mid the determined
fouag woman. "The last one got away."
Chicago Tribuna.
Much of the tobacco grown In east-
rn Bencal Is marketed In Calcutta, i
whence It Is shipped to Burma, where
it to manufactured Into cheroots.
STJACOBS OIL
25.ALL CRUGdSTS-BOo.
FOR STIFFNESS, SORENESS, SPHAIN On BRUISE,
NOTHING IS BETTER THAT YOU CAN USE;
LUMBAGO'S PAIN, RHEUMATIC TWINGE,
YOUR BACK FEELS LIKE A RUSTY HINGE
SCIATIC ACHES ALL PLEASURES SPOIL,
FOR HAPPINESS USE ST. JACOBS OIL.
i