ANNOUNCEMENT OF ADVANCE IN PRICE VAUGHAN'S PORTABLE DRAG SAW 4 H. P. Now $145; Sept. 15 will be $155 The Lightest and Strongest Drag Saw made Can bo Operated by One Man and Carried by Two Men. Vaughan Motor Works, Vilm PORTLAND, OREGON T 3 INCREASE your PROFITS Cigar Stores, Pool Halls and Candy - Dealers, ask for Proposition C. Specialty Sales Co., 421 MOMHIOH ST. rOIUUTO, OREGON Dealers in Sales Stimulators 200 Rooms Near Both Absolutely 100 Baths Depoti Fireproof Hotel Hoyt Corner Siathjand Hoy I Sis.. Portland. Oro. Thoroughly Renovated & Decorated LOUlHIMES. Manager. RATES:-75c to'UZ. SPECIAL-Week or Month HOLMES j BUSINESS COLLEGE " FLIEDNEJt BUILDING Tbntb and Wahhiniiton, I'oim.ANi), Ohkooh John II. Long A. P. ArtMsTHONf. Jane Connoh Arjsociatoaitd Department Priiiciptilrj A qualityfxhool. Open day and ovoning all the year. Students admitted at any time. Book keeping taught from written work, oxartly an prac ticed in buninrns. ftlmrtlifunl and typewriting by experta. jmwial instruclinti for civil service exami nation. Moderate tuition, books at miml! coat. Position as noon an competent. Invostiisiteit will pay. Cull, telephone Broadway 1821, or writo. ACADEMY OF THE .HOLY CHILD Rose City Park, Portland, Oregon. Phono Tabor 1081. A SELECT BOARDING AND DAY SCHOOL FOR GIRLS Boys Under 10 Admitted. I UTOffers exceptional advantages. Limited num. her of pupils. Individual care. Thorough moral, mental, physical training:. Modern languages. Music. Art. Biff I rft St SO WF. WILL CUT AND MBPSjeS MOUNT YOUR SCATS, IN A SOLID BPAKB OT riNGCM ANO AG ATS TRAVEL AND PROriT. Young men and women with business trainlug find positions everywhere. Go to Northwest's largest Business College, BEHNKE-WALKER, Portland, Ore, All courses. Positions guaranteed. Write for free Illustrated catalog. O - LENE The henless egg: chemist's sub- Hiipiic; tug sale: sample nan dozen, with details, 10c, Ego Co., Romcrvlllo, N, J. Larks in the Office. Boss I want to speak to you, Mr. Lovum, about your attentions to Miss Sweet during office hours. I engaged you as billing clerk only; no cooing mentioned. That will be all for the present. Tid-BitB. Veterinary Needs. "We must do something about blind tigers." "I say so, too," declared innocent Mrs. Squab. "Those unfortunate ani mals should have the services of a good Teterinarian at once. A Cook With Foresight. There is a certain Brooklyn man who takes a great interest in his household. So the other day, just before he left his office, he telephoned to his wife to ask whether she wanted him to bring anything home. "Yes," said his wife. "I wish you would Btop and get some tea. And you might as well, while you're about it, get a Bet of China, too." "China?" gasped the husband. "Yes. Of course we've got some, but the cook says there's not enough to aBt the week out. " WATCH YOUR SKIN IMPROVE When You Uie Cutlcura The Soap to Purify and Ointment to Heal. On rising mid rotlring gently smear the face with Cutlcura Ointment. Wash off Ointment in five minutes with Cutlcura Soap nnd hot water. Continue this treatment for ten days and note the change In your skin. No better toilet preparations exist. Free samplo each by mail with Book. AiUlresB postcard, Cutlcura, Dept. Li BoBton. Sold everywhere. Adv. Hopeless Case. The leap-year maid had Just pro posed, hut hud been hnnded the frosty digit. "I never thought," she sighed, "thut you would have the heart to turn me down." "I haven't," he replied. "My heart belongs to another at the present writing." SHIP Veal. Pork, Beef, Poultry, Butter, Eggt and Farm Produce to the Old Reliable Kverdlng house with record of 46 years of Souar? Dealings, and be assured of TOP MARKET PRICES. F. M. CRONKH1TE 45-47 Front Street Portland, Ore ton I .;- i HIDES, PELTS. CASCARA BARK, WOOL AND MOHAIR. t nit ill iw tin. Write tir prices ud shipping tut The H. F. Norton Co. hrtM oti; suhk, . tOo Your Own Plumbing By baying direct from us at wholesale prices and save the plumber's profits. Writs us to day your needs. We will gtva you our rock bottom "dlreet-to-you" pries, f o. b. rail or boat. We actually save you from lu to 36 per eent All goods guaranteed. Northwest headm. artew foi Leader Water Systemn and Fuller & Juhnsrtn Knginea. STARK-DAVIS CO. IS Third StteeL Portland, Oregon PARK TO BE UNIQUE LATEST ATTRACTION PLANNED FOR CITY OF L08 ANGELE8. Site of One of the Oldest Graveyards Known, Dating From the Pleisto cene Period Deathtrap for Animals. No other city in the United States can equal Log Angeles, Cal., In Its unique type of public park, made pos sible by the deeding recently by Q. Al lan Hancock of a tract of 32 acres of land at the city's western edge In the famous La Brea asphalt beds. The thing which makes this tract, hereafter to be known ns Hancock park, unique, Is the fact that It Is probably one of (he oldest graveyards of which any thing is known, for It dates back to the Pleistocene period. The tract, lo cated close to some of the best oil wells In the Southwest, has been the sources of both oil and tisphultum, ond it was In pits from which the latter was taken that bones of prehistoric mon sters were found. At first these bones were not. deemed of any great value, those finding them having an Idea that they were of ani mals of recent years. It was not until someone of a scientific turn of mind noticed thut they were too large to be long to any modern animal, that the starch for more bones gradually crowded the production of asphalt to the side, until, today, there have been made o hundred excnvutlons within the tract, many of which hnve yielded rich finds of well-preserved bones. From the bones and teeth which have boon found, scientists have re stored the skeletons of niuny varieties of animals, great and small, which lived many thousands of years ago. It is believed thut this Is the only pluco nnd only Instance where the fauna of one period and one region have been preserved and handed down Intact If nil the Pleistocene remains In nil, the museums of the world were to be brought together, the quantity would have to be multiplied by 50 In order to approximate the amount nlreudy taken from the Lu Brea beds, and the eud Is seemingly far off. Scientists who have studied the pits and the composition of their surroundings advance the theory that the tar beds were In reality death traps for the birds and animals which wandered through the section. Even today the visitor will see small pools of liquid asphalt which have oozed from the enrth, nnd often will see ground squirrels, rabbits, hens and birds of various kinds which have been Caught by foot or wing In the sticky tar, dying where caught, and gradually sinking deeper Into the usphiiltuin euch day as the sun warms the pools. In the wonderful museum In Exposi tion purk In Loi Angeles huve been as sembled types of the unlmnls which once roamed the region, whoso bones huve been taken from the La Breu pits, and theso Include mastodons, Imperial elephants, saber-toothed tigers, envo bears, giant sloths, horses, lions and mammoth birds that lived and died 1B0.OD0 to 200,000 years ago. Besides Ihe mounted specimens, the store rooms of the museum contain some 8,000 boxes of unassorted bones, which will Inter find their places In tot restored skeletons. It Is planned by the county nuthorl tleH, to whom the tract has been deed ed, to have set up about the pnrk gigantic groups of statuary depleting the animals of the Pleistocene era. The nsphaltuiu tins served to preserve the bones In a wonderfully perfect state, making their study n matter of greater ease. It Is probable that It will take a year or more to develop the park ns planned, but the supervisors have voted 1)125,000 as an Initial appro priation for the work. Hancock pnrli will, when fully developed, become one of the most Interesting placet In the nlreudy Interesting Southwest. Riches In Tennessee Caves. The development of two historic envea, known us Arch cave and Bone cuve In Van Karen county, Tennessee, Is now under way. The caves are esti mated to contain from 00,000 to 75, 000 tons of but guunn, which Is rich In potash nnd ammonia, besides other elements of plant food. The under ground area Is about six miles. Mil lions of bats Inhabited these caves for centuries prior to the Civil war, when they were driven out by the manufac turers of powder. It Is told that when Oen. John H. Morgan's detachment which raided Nashville during the Civil war became separated and wns hard pressed by superior federal forces they concealed themselves lu the Arch cave for several days. f. tt. V A La Laundry. A colored Baptist was exhorting, "Now, breddern and sistern, come up to tie altar and have you' sins washed away." All came but one man. "Why, 1 '.rudder Jones, don't yo' want yo' sine washed away?" "I done had my sine washed away." "Yo' has? Where yo' had yo' sins washed away?" "Ober at de Methodist church." "Ah, llrudder Jones, yo' aint' been washed; yo' jes been dry cleaned." Baltimore Trolley News. Willing Service. Lance corporal Is this B platoon? The Old Hand That depends. 'Ave yer come for fatigue men or 'ave yer brought the rum issue? Cassell's Sat urday Journal. The Point of View. A Sunday school teacher had been telling the class the story of the Good Samaritan. When she asked them what Ihe story meant, a little boy said: that when 1 am in trouble t." -e. "-Chris- Elva's j "Profession I By John Elkim (Copyright, 1917, by W. G. Chapman.) Cedric Shaw was Intently watching the girl across the room. Sometimes the swaying dancers In the hotel ball room came between him and her; but always his gaze went back persistently to the bright animated face of a young woman who stood talking with an elder ly lady. The first thing that had at tracted hlin was the absence of the painted lips nnd cheeks, which he saw on almost all of the young girls pres ent. Next to take his attention was the protty dancing gown, which unlike the others covered her back, and came above the shoulders all around In a be coming line. The young man could not have been called old-fashioned or "straight laced," but a certain fine respect for woman hood which had been carefully Instilled In hlra by his mother, felt a kind of re pulsion at the artificially covered faces, and the too scantily covered forms of the girls he met In society everywhere. He felt that this girl must be differ ent, and as he watched her face his conviction grew. He determined to know her, and started out to see If he could find someone to Introduce him. Finally he accomplished his object, and soon found himself guiding Miss Burt through the mazes of the dancers. Yes, decidedly Miss Burt was "differ ent." It was not long before Shaw's heart begun to give curious but un mlstukable evidences of being consid erably off Its normal condition. He managed to get an Invitation to call, which was not exactly difficult lnce Miss Burt was quite as anxious that he should ask as he was to get the permission. If the truth must be told she was nt the same time experiencing Bcttnething like the same alarming symptoms the young man was suffer ing. She had not analyzed her reasons "He Lights a Bit of Paper So' He Can Look Better." for being attracted; she simply knew that she was. As these things are hap pening every second among mortals on this globe It seems a waste of time to Inquire why. Elva Burt lived alone In a "furnished room" In the big city. The bed mas queraded us a couch during the day, and n screen covered the stationary wnshstnnd. Sho mado It look like a sitting room, and the house was clean and respectable, If not fashionable. Still she felt a slight qualm at receiv ing the stranger In her humble quar ters ti. He seemed to her like a man used to good society, one used to mingling with cultured people In re fined surroundings. In this supposition she was right. The mother of Cedric Shnw had belonged to a family of high social stunillng, und his father had been president of a college. When a lad of twelve, his father had died, leaving a moderate fortune to the wife nnd son, aud nt elghteeu, Cedric had started In to earn his own living. He had done so well that at twenty-five he wus now a Junior purtuer In the con cern. Blvn, on the evening Show was to call, put on her most becoming frock nnd sat down to wait for him. "Oh, dear!" she said to herself, "It Isn't very scrumptuous," surveying the room. "But If he's what I think he Is, ho won't mind. If he does well " The sentence ended In a sigh. It did not appear, from the animated conversation and the length of Shaw's call that he did "mind." The next day ho wrote a note of apology for having stayed so late, and asked when he might come again. Even after Stiaw hud become n fre quent visitor and hud several times taken Elvn to dine and to places of ninusement he knew little or nothing of her circumstances. She hnd told him her pnreuts lived In a small village In the stales, und with the exception of a few friends, she was alone in the city, and was earning her own living. As to how she was earning It she had not In formed htm, and hud evasively put htm on when he had nsked. He concluded that perhaps she might hnve a little foolish pride about revealing her occu pation, and said no more. The suite of offices occupied by his firm were in a building which hnd been remodeled from a dwelling house. Next to It stood n residence which the inarch of business up the avenue hnd so far left undisturbed, and It was now rented out for bachelor apart ments. One morning the papers hnd an Item on the front pngo tolling how Spray, Oalland A Co., diamond importers, had been robbed of valuable gems by the blowing open of n safe. This was Shaw's firm, and that evening he told 31 Jwlu Elvn they were entirely mystified as to how the burglars had entered. was a watchman on the outside couia not nave laiieu to see tnem the front, and the roof and back of the building showed not" the slightest trace of any forcible entrance. About two days after this, Shaw, In passing the house next his office, saw a young man hastily coming down the front steps. Something about him caused Shaw to stare curiously at the man. Instantly the man turned away to avoid his scrutiny, and almost stumbled down the remaining steps Shaw purposely stood in his way, and as the young man dodged him, caught at Ids arm. "Elva Burt!" he exclaimed. "What does this mean?" "Let me go!" she begged. "Let me go quickly 1" "But" he began. "Don't keep, me herel' she urged. And, freeing herself from his grasp, she harried on, hailed a taxi, and hnd vanished before Cedric Shaw could quite collect his scattered senses. He went to his desk In a dazed state of ralnd. No woman except a laundress or scrubwoman was ever seen coming out of this house. For the girl whose delicate womanliness had first of all appealed to him to be seen In such guise, and coming out of bachelor apartments, was a shock from which It was not easy to recover. He had given her the deepest devotion, the love of his life, and he had meant to tell her this. The blow staggered him. He meant to see her again, and at least try to wring from her an explanation, but he felt he could not go that day. Late In the afternoon the telephone rang, the senior partner took the mes sage, and when he had hung up the receiver he culled the heads of the firm together and told them. It was from police headquarters; they had made nn Important arrest two men from the house next door. Shaw felt his heart stop beating, and things running before his eyes. What If one of these men was Blva Burt? What If he had to face her In the prisoner's dock? A detective was now on the way up, and they wished someone to remain, and go with him to the cellar. Investiga tion revealed a tunnel from the house next door, through which the thieves had crawled, and which they must have worked, digging for some time. The police hnd not yet discovered the gems, but they believed they had got the right men, the Janitor and a young follow. A "young fellow." Shaw shud dered at confronting him. They went down to headquarters. The "young fel low" was short, stumpy, nnd red-haired, and both men protested their Innocence. 'Well," announced the chief, "this wns about the neatest bit of detective work you'd pull oft In a month of Sun days. The finding of that hole In the cellar was a Jim dandy. You see, the detective pretends to go In there to Inquire about rooms, and all of a sud den he sniffs something, and he yells out to the janitor he smells fire, and It's coming from the cellar. The min ute the man unlocks that cellar door, he's down there ahead of him, and nos ing around to beat the band. He lights a bit of paper so's he can look better, puts It out, and sniffs a burnt smell somewhere. But he's got what he came for, the Bight of a hole, and bricks and dirt behind a box, and he hasn't let on to the janitor he's seen n thing out of the common, nnd he's awful sorry he gave him such a scare. He finds out there's only a terribly high-priced apartment to rent, nnd Is awful Borry again, It being too much for his purse, and he gets out, and down here quicker'n lightning. And the two fel lows are Jailed In just about one hour from that time." Here one of the partners asked If he might see the detective. The chief said he supposed he might that Is, If he happened to be In. He went to a door, opened It, looked in, and beckoned to someone. A neat ly dressed young woman appeared in the doorway. Shaw gasped. "Miss Burt," nsked the chief, "do you know where Sanderson 1b?" She gave him an Inquiring look, then she suddenly saw Shaw's eyes upon her. Official caution vanished before the questioning of his gaze. Tho older men, rushing up to her, grasped her hand, expressing their thanks and the desire to make It some thing more substantial than thanks, Then Shaw said, ns he took her hand : "Miss Burt Is a very dear friend ol mine but I never knew 'Sanderson.' " Then he drew her nslde ns the othei men talked, und added: "I wanted to say something more than 'friend' may I?" Hor look prompted him to add r "And you'll never be 'Snnderson' again." Not Muoh Required. The newspaper which succeeded In getting the following paragon would bo lucky. Yet It Is probable there were applicants who believed they could come up to sample; "Subedi tor Smart, up-to-date man wanted fot a leading weekly journal. Must be a mini of Inltlntlve with a nose for good 'copy,' with practical knowledge ol printing ntul publishing routine nnd capable of making up, passing for and seeing through the press. Office houri daybreak till midnight. Salary whatever he is worth. No conventional 'Fleet streeters' or any unappreciated Journalistic geniuses need apply. Must bo n man of the world, with u wide hu man sympathy, with no 'kinks' elthor moral, political or artistic with a firm faith In the Inherent goodness of man kind and the policy of making the best possible use of this life as a sound preparation for the next. Must always weur a smile but never a snig ger. Dress optional. Must treat his work as one continuous holiday. It will pay any man, answering to these conditions, to relinquish any other in terest nnd secure tho post." London Tlt-Blts. . , Joy In One's Work. The Idea of Joy In one's work hai been often ridiculed, but nevertheless It Is fast taking root lu the minds ol man)' aud proving Its value and merit To perforin the day's work joyfully and Joyously may not be possible, lc cases, without effort, but the fact ii being realized more and more that it U very much worth while to develop ttu habit KEEP YOUR BREEDING STOCK Because of Increased Demand and High Prices for Feed Hens, Sows and Cows Are Sold. Don't sell off your breeding stock be cause of high prices of feed and the demand for live stock. Large num bers of hens, brood sows and milch cows are being sold. Already there Is a scarcity of poultry In the country, and In some dairy sections there has been a marked decrease In the number of milch cows. There are two sides to this business. Milk dealers and contractors In their effort to hold trade and placate their customers have refused to pay farmers a price for milk which would leave them a profit. As a consequence, many farmers have fonnd that their cows are worth more dead than alive. They have been forced to sell the cows because they could not continue In the business which was running them deeper In debt each month. Advancing prices for meat, milk, dairy and poultry products will bring a profit 'over the high cost of feed and labor, and the farmer who has kept a good stock of breeding animals Is pretty sure to receive handsome re turn. LABOR IS LIMITING FACTOR Horses Are Relatively Plentiful In Comparison and Use of More Is Strongly Used. Labor Is the limiting factor In crop production this year. Horses are rela tively plentiful In comparison. 0. B, Johnson of the department of farm management of the Missouri College of Agriculture, suggests that farmers lay aside one-man and two-horse tools and use those that require more horses so that more work per man can be done. One man with three horses to a 18-Inch breaking plow will turn over three acres or less In a day. The same man with a gang plow con sisting of two 12-Inch bottoms will average 4 acres a day and will use one more horse. This means that by Increasing the horse stock one-third, one man can Increase his efficiency in breaking ground nearly 75 per cent. Investigations have actually shown that a man on a riding Implement will do more work In a day than the same Splendid Farm Team. man and the same team with Imple ments that require him to walk. The use of bigger tools and thorough prep aration of seed beds will also cut down the time required for cultivation of the corn crop. Cultivation is the operation which limits the amount of corn one man can grow. If a good seed bed Is prepared, some time can be saved In cultivating the crop, and consequently more acres can be grown. KILL PLANT LICE OR APHIDS Application of Soap Solution Will Prove Efficient Must Hit Insect With Force. Plant lice or aphlds can be killed on golden glow, sweet peas, rose, buckthorn, plums or any plant by ap plications of soap solution. This is perfectly safe to use, and leaves no bad odor, and a few applications ap parently are sufficient to rid a plant of Its unpleasant parasite. Dissolve a 5-cent cake of white Boap In five or six gallons of hot water, and apply forcibly with a spray-pump when lukewarm. The insects must be hit with force. Occasionally bending over the twigs and Immersing the affected leaves, shaking them back and forth in the liquid, Is more ' effective than spraying. Directing a stream of wa ter from a garden hose against plant lice colonies Is of some help, if the water strikes them with force. WHEN TO CUT SWEET CLOVER Work Should Be Done When Plant Is About Three Feet High, to Avoid Woodiness In Stalks. Sweet clover should be cut when It la about two to three feet high, In order to avoid woodiness In the stalks. If the plants have begun to stool out, cutting should not be de layed a day longer than necessary. The crop should be cut from three to four Inches from the ground In order to prevent Injury to the plants. As sweet clover hay cures more slow ly than does alfalfa, care must be taken In handling so as not to shatter the leaves. The leaves are the most valuable part of the hay. PLAN AGAINST HOG CHOLERA Best Way to Prevent Spread of Dis ease Is to Keep Qerms Away From Healthy Animal. The best way to prevent hog cholera Is to keep the germs away from the hog. If hogs on a neighboring farm are sick, keep away from them and don't let anybody from the Infected farm go near an uninfected hog pen, or upon the ground frequented by healthy hogs. Feed for Brood Sow. Be careful how you feed sows that have little pigs. If too heavy a feed is given, it may lead to sickness In the Pigs- Place for Cows Only. It Is desirable that the place where the cows are kept be used for no other purpose. WOULD MAINTAIN SCHOOL STANDARD Government Bureau Urges That Efficiency Be Kept Up Dur ing the War. SECOND T8 DEFENSE NEEDS Salaries of Teachers Should Not Be Lowered, It is Urged, Although Costly Building May Be Postponed. Officials of Uncle Sam's bureau of education strongly contend that It is of the utmost Importance that there shall be no lowering In the efficiency of the nation's systems of education because of the war. They believe that schools and other agencies of education must be maintained at whatever necessary cost and against all hurtful Interfer ence with their regular work, except as may be necessary for the national defense, which la, of course, the Im mediate task and must be kept con stantly in mind, and have right of way everywhere and at all times. From the beginning of our participation In the war, they point out, we should avoid the mistakes which some other countries have made to their hurt and which they are now trying to correct. Bight In this connection It Is pointed out that if the war should be long and severe, there will be great need In Its later days for young men and women of scientific knowledge, training and skill; and tt may then be much more difficult than it Is now to support our schools, to spare our children and youth for other service and to permit them to attend school. Therefore, Contend Uncle Sam's educational ex perts, no school should close Its doors now or shorten Its term unnecessarily. All young men and women In college should remain and use their time to the very best advantage, except such as may find it necessary to leave for immediate profitable employment In some productive occupation or for the acceptance of some position In some branch of the military service, which position cannot be so well filled by any One else. All children in the elemen tary schools, and, as nearly as possi ble, all high school pupils should re main In school through the entire ses sion. Trained Men and .Women Needed. This question of the war and educa tion has been taken up seriously by ex perts of the bureau. They point out farther In this connection that when the war Is over, whether within a few months or after many years, there will be such demands upon this country for men and women of scientific knowl edge, technical skill nnd general cul ture as have never before come to any country. This country must play a far more Important part than It has In the past In agriculture, manufacturing and commerce, and also In the things of cultural life art, literature, music, sci entific discovery. A right conception of patriotism should Induce all students, say the bureau officials, who cannot render some Immediate service of great value to remain In college, concentrate their energy on their college work, and thus be all the more ready and fit when their services may be needed either for war or for the important work of re construction and development In our own and other countries when the war shall have ended. Should Not Cut Salaries. All schools dt whatever grade should remain open with their full quota of officers and teachers. The salaries of teachers should not be lowered, It is contended, In this time of unusual high cost of living. When possible, salaries should be increased in proportion to the services rendered. Since the peo ple of the country will be taxed heav ily by the federal government for the payment of the expenses of the war, It is urged by the officials that teachers should be willing to continue to do their work, and do It as well as they can ns a patriotic duty, even If their salaries cannot now be Increased. Schools should be continued In full efficiency, but In most cases costly building may be postponed. During school hours and out of school, on mornings, afternoons, Sat urdays and during vacation all older chlldrcu and youth should be encour aged and directed to do ns much use ful productive work, It is urged by these experts, as they can without in terfering with their more Important school duties. This productive work should be so directed as to give it the highest possible value, both economic ally and educdtionally. While the war for the safety of democracy Is in prog ress and when It Is over there will be greater need for effective machinery for the promotion of intelligent discus sion of the principles of democracy. HORSES MUST "DO THEIR BIT" Only Those Used Exclusively for Trade and Business Purposes to Get Grain In England. niustrntive of the radical steps now being taken to conserve grain In Eng land Is an official explanation of the order rationing horses, received at the office or Herbert Hoover, Uncle Sam's food administrator. The horses of King George are now being rationed under the terms of the order. The object of rationing Is officially explained as a means to Increase the quantity of oats available for human consumption by restricting their use as a feed for horses. By the terms of the order, the feed ing of grain to horses kept for private purposes Is prohibited, and Its use Is confined to horses used exclusively for trade and business purposes. Under existing circumstances no person 1 justified in keeping any horse that is beyond serviceable age. It Is pointed out that even In the case of trade horses, the feeding of any kind of grain Is not a necessity where the work done Is slow and not of an arduous character. Heavy penalties art) provided for violations of the act LISTEN TO THIS! SAYS CORNS LIFT RIGHT OUT NOW You corn-pestered men and women need suffer no longer. Wear the shoes that nearly killed you before, say this Cincinnati authority, because a few drops of freezone applied directly on a tender, aching corn or callus, stops soreness at once and soon the corn or hardened callus loosens so it can be lifted out, root and all, with out pain. A small bottle of freezone costs very little at any drug store, but will positively take off every hard or soft corn or callus. This should be tried, as it is Inexpensive and 1 said not to Irritate the surrounding skin. If your druggist hasn't any freezone tell him to get a small bottle tor you from his wholesale drug house. It Is fine stuff and acta like a charm every time. He May in 1950. "Why do you look at the baby in that peculiar manner?" "I was wondering if he will ever tell his children about the happy days of 1917 when prices were so reason able." Louisville Courier-Journal. His Trouble. Visitor My poor man, when you get out of this place, do not yield too hastily to temptation. Take time to think; take time. Convict That's wot I'm in fer. I took too many watches. A Domestic Indignation. "I just can't get along with my hus band, and that's all there is to it," re marked the square-jawed woman. " I understand you begged him with tears in your eyes not to go into the army if he could possibly avoid it." "I did talk rather sentimentally about the fear of losing him. And he made my affection an excuse to put up such an argument for exemption that they'll probably let him out. I've got to look forward to having a slacker sitting around the house all through the war." Washington Star. Don't Let Skin Trouble Spoil Your Good Time "I can't have any fun! I am such a sight with this eczema that people avoid me wherever I go. And the Itching torments me so that I don't get any peace, anyhow." Don't be discouraged! Even in se vere, well-established cases of eczema, or similar skin-troubles, Resinol Oint ment, aided by Resinol Soap, usually relieves the Itching at once and quick ly clears the eruption away. All drug gists sell Resinol Ointment and Resin ol Soap. Try. them. URINE Granulated Eyelids, i Sore Eyes, Eyes Inflamed by iSun, Dust and Wind quickly relieved by Murine. Try It In Smartinf , Just Eye Comfort MurlneEye Remedy 'JJlffi Eye Salvs, in Tubes 25c. For hook of the Hue-Pros. Ask Marine Ere Remedy Co., Chlcaco YOU CAN'T OCT OUT A Bog Spavin or Thoroughpio but you can clean them off promptly with . F. Wf'.'l''.':IJIf-lt7WrS and you work the horse same time. Does not blister or remove the hair. $2.00 per bottle, delivered. Will tell you more if you write. Book 4 M free. ABSORBING, JR., the antiseptic liniment for mankind, reduces Varicose Veins, Ruptured Muscle, or Ussraents, inlsTesd Glands, Wen.. Cysts. Allsrs Dsin Quickly. Pries 11 sal tt Is st dnif sjjsj or dellTered. Msgs in Ihe IT. s. A. by YOUNG, P.D.F., 403 Tempi St., Springfield, ton. An O.d Trait Uncle Eben "1 Just had a letter from my English cousin. He was In the trenches. He says one day his company was ordered to charge, and the first thing he knew he ran Into a lot of barbed wire, several mlnea and a hundred German batteries." Aunt Nancy "Just like George never looks where he's going." Life. Disconcerting Candor. Surgeon (to patient he Is about ta operate on) Well, obi chup, If I don't see you again, here's luck 1 Puck. ' Defined. Diplomacy Is the art of being disa greeable in a polite manner. Boston Transcript. PAINS SHARP AND STABBING Woman Thought She Would Die. Cured by Lydia E. Pinkham'i Vegetable Compound. Ogdensburg, Wis. "I suffered from female troubles which caused piercing pains lute a kmto through my back and side. I finally lost all my strength so I had ta go to bed. The doctor advised an oper ation but I would not listen to it. I thought of what I had read about Lydia Ei. rinkham s Vege table Compound and tried it The first bottle broutrht neat relief and six bottles have entirely cured me. All women who have female trouble of any kind should try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound." Mrs. Etta Dorion. Ogdensburg, Wis. Physicians undoubtedly did their best, battled with this case steadily and could do no more, but of ten the most scientific treatment is surpassed by the medicinal properties of the good old fashioned roots and herbs contained in Lydia E, Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. If any complication exists it pays to write the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. , Lynn, Mans. , for special free advice. llalil I jaaaaaaaaaK LaV mi i i y I J