T H E G A T E C I T Y JO U R N A L
THIS WOMAN’S D A IR Y
REMARKABLE
RECOVERY FA C TS
Entirely Due To Lydia E.
Pinkham’a Vegetable
Compound
Forest City, Iowa. — “ My first child
lived only a short time and I was sick
f o r a year after.
When I bent over
and raised myself
up again I could al
most scream with
pain in my back.
One day I was so bad
that I had to leave
my washing and get
ready to go to the
doctor. He gave me
medicine but it did
no more good than
if I drank )ustwater.
Once when we had been in town a little
book telling about Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound was left in our car.
I have taken five bottles of the Vegeta
ble Compound now and I do all my
housework and help with the milking
and taking care o f chickens and gar
den. Besides I have a fine baby girl
eight months old, ju st the picture of
health and I am feeling fine myself.
You may use this letter as a testimo
nial and I will answer any letters ask
ing about the Vegetable Compound.”
— Mrs. O scar F . B oroeun , Route No.
6, Forest City, Iowa.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound is for sale by all druggists.
How to build up you r
W e ig h t
under weight
T O low BE fighting-power
often proves
In t he body.
It often means you are minus nerve-
power, minus red-cells In your blood,
minus
health,
minus vitality. It
Is serious to be
minus, but the
moment you In
crease the num
ber of your red-
blood - cells, you
begin to become
plus. That’s why
S. S. S., since 1820,
has meant to thousands of underweight
men and women, a plus In their
s t r e n g t h . Your
F r e t B o o k le t
body fills to the
Sen d n a m e and
point of p o w e r ,
a d d r e a a to S . 8 . B.
your flesh becomes
C o.. I l l 8 8. 8.
f i r m e r , the age
B id s - .
A tla n ta .
Q
a., fo r s p e c ia l
lines that come
b o o k le t
on
th e
from thinness dis
B lo o d .
appear. You look
younger, tlrmer, happier, and you feel
it, too, ull over your body. More red-
blood-cells! S. S. S. will build them.
S. S . S . Is s o ld a t a l l g o o d
d r u g s t o r e s In t w o s iz e s . T h e
l a r g e r s i z e Is m Ore e q b n b m ic a l.
Ç O ^ l e W orld's B e s t
O . J t '/ flo o d M e d icin e
A s It Seem ed to Him
An old New York farmer attended
a big picnic at Birmingham and
stayed over to watch the dancing at
night, says Town Topics. He hadn’t
been out In the world much, and he
was deeply Impressed with the girls’
clothes at that dunce.
"Some of the ladies’ clothes I see
here,” he said, “plumb puts ms In
mind of a barbwire fence.”
Somebody uskeil him why.
“Well,” said he, “It’s this way—they
nppenr to protect the property without
obstructin’ the view.”
A new process by which any tex
tile fubrlc, whether wool, cotton, or
silk, can be made waterproof has been
discovered In England, It Is asserted.
Sure Relief
FOR INDIGESTION
72 33
INDICESTI^
7^1 6 B
e l l - a n s
H o t w a te r
S u r e R e lie f
Prompt cooling to 50 degrees Fah
renheit Is absolutely essential for pro
ducing milk of low bacteria count,
warns F. C. Button, professor of dairy
ing at the New Jersey College of Agri
culture In New Brunswick.
The quickest and therefore best way
of cooling milk is to run it over a
surface cooler. On such a cooler the
' milk passes over the outside surface
In a thin layer. Cold water is circu
lated through the Inside and thus
By this means the
j chills the milk.
' temperature of the milk can be
brought within two or three degrees
of the temperature of the water. Ice
water will be needed In hot weather
to bring milk to 50 degrees Fahrenheit.
Morning’s milk should be cooled to
at least 50 degrees Fahrenheit.
Night’s milk may, however, be cooled
within two or three degrees of the
temperature of spring or well water,
since It Is afterward placed In the
Tooling tank where further chilling can
take place. The water In this vat
should not be above 45 degrees.
After milk has been cooled by a sur
face cooler it can be held at 50 de
grees Fahrenheit by placing in the vat
two to two and a half pounds of ice
for every gallon of milk. Lf the milk
Is not pre-cooled before being placed
in the vat, four pounds or more of Ice
are needed to cool each gallon of milk.
This pre-cooling will cut In half th®
amount of Ice required in the tank.
The use of small-top milk palls and
clean, sterilized utensils, and the
milking of clean, healthy cows help
to keep bacteria out of milk. Some
always get In, however, and unless the
milk is cooled quickly they multiply
rapidly. In warm milk bacteria dou
ble their number every half-hour. At
50 degrees they reproduce very slowly.
Cows Swallow All Sorts
of Dangerous Objects
Cows swallow all sorts of strange
things, Including clothes off the fence,
rags, hones, leather, crockery, bits of
metal, pebbles, bark, wood and, unfor-
nately, sharp objects, such as nails,
wires, pins, needles, tacks, hairpins
and staples. A swallowed sharp ob
ject is extremely dangerous. It lodges
In the second stomach, is churned
about there, at length may work
through the stomach wall, pierce the
diaphragm and then the sac to the
heart. If that happens Incurable and
often fatal inflammation of the sac
results, causing a disease of the heart
called traumatic pericarditis.
Wires that fasten labels to feed
sacks are a real menace. Shingle
nails have caused many losses. The
practical farmer makes It a habit to
dispose of every sharp object he sees
where It can do no harm. Punctures
of the hoof often end In fatal lock
jaw. horses being the commonest suf
ferers. People may contract the dis
ease In the same way. A dairyman
cf my acquaintance used a wire brush
to scrub the cow mangers. Wires fell
out and got Into the feed. Seven fine
cows died.—Dr. A. S. Alexander, Wis
consin.
Various Roots Are Good
Feed for the Dairy Cow
Hoots of all kinds are good feed for
dairy cows. Beets are especially val
uable, for they not only supply nu
trients *n a good form, but they do not
In any way affect the quality of milk.
Rutabagas and turnips do affect the
quality of milk, and especially If fed
Just before milking. If they are fed
after milking, it Is difficult to discern
any flavor in the milk, but butter made
from It will, upon standing a few
weeks or months, develop an objec-
tlonuble flavor. This has led some
creameries producing high quality but
ter to request their patrons not to
feed turnips or rutubugas.
^j^teoncrùi
f o r the Perfortion o f Y o u r
T h ta pura «n ow -w h ile e r e s ili r e m o r a s s l l d is c o lo ra 'lo
s n d c re a m y c o m p ie» lo o. A t drug o r d e p i. s to re s or by m all
M t d . S e n d f t * fre e B e a u ty Booklet. Agent « w anted. I
C . H. B EBH V C O ., 2 * 7 B r
-|—
---------------
K
Reduces Bursal Enlarge-
I merits. Thickened. Swollen
I T l s s n e s . C u rb s , K illed
I Tendons Soren ess from
Bruises or Strains; stops
1 Spavin Lam eness, allays pain.
I Does not blister, remove the
hair or lay up the hors«. Only
a few drops required at each
application., $2.50 a bottle at
■ or delivered. B o o k 1 A fre e .
W r. TOC NO, l „ , SIO I r a n St.. SprtufWU. M ...
J
DAISY FLY KILLER j M S ^ an T kuaj
------ ------------------------------ --
Nrat.
c t a n ,o rr art «* n tal, e*n-
ysaistst. chsatv la s t*
. all srassn M . o of
I firatal. can ’t spill or
I tip over ; will r.'t soQ
l o r li'ju rs anythin*.
1 Gnarantaad sffrctivs.
______________ 1
■Aki.UA> tSjMIUw».
ALL F t I H .
m i f k sib A m . B rw A b *. N. X.
D airy N otes
.v*. .
. .j. .
L
Cows do not enjoy moldy silage, and
It makes horses sick.
. . .
Feeding minerals to dairy cows Is
relatively new, and we have not
learned about it yet.
* • •
Clean the hern lots snd dairy
premises and haul off litter In order
to destroy breeding places for flies.
• • *
The choice of a herd sire may
make or break a man In the dairy
business, say dairy specialists of the
Pennsylvania State college. The fu
ture herd Is dependent upon influence#
In operation now.
• • •
Remove the cows from pastures In
tested with wild ouions and blttei
weeds three hours before milking, to
prevent bad odors and flavors to milk
and cream.
• s •
Seed or sod the pastures with Ber
muda, lespedeza or other desirable
grasses Native pasture grasses can
not he depended on.
e s e
W
R
K
L
E
Y
S
’a fter every m eal"
PASTURE FOR PIGS
MEANS BEST GAINS !
SURFACE COOLER IS
BEST FOR COOLING
ELL-AN S
2 5 4 AND 754 PACKAGES EVERYWHERE
U LIV E
STOCKA
Parents - encourage the
children to can tor their teeth/
G iv e
th e m
W r l g l e y ’s .
A common practice among commer
I t rem ove« fo o d p a r t ic le »
cial hog men Is to have the sows far
from the t e e t h Stre n g th en s
row In the spring as early as possible.
th e g u m s. C o m b a ts a c id
Under such management, there is less
m o u th .
tendency for the feeder to neglect
R e fr e s h in g and b e n e f i c i a l !
the sow and her pigs as spring work
has not yet started.
During the
first few weeks the sow and her Ut
SEALED
ter usually receive excellent care and
T IG H T
attention but when the pressure of
KEPT
spring work comes there is a tenden
R IG H T
cy to slight the sow and litter. If a
pasture is provided, the sow and Ut
ter are then under Ideal conditions
for the saving of both time and labor.
The best results in raising hogs are
always obtained upon pasture. The
pigs will be induced to take plenty of
exercise and be out in the direct rays
of the sun, which Is a stimulant to
growth. This fact Is not thoroughly
appreciated by all hog men. Upon
pasture they will make greater gains
at a 15 per cent cheaper cost than un TRY E U R E K A b « fo r« you b u y . Y o u 'll I f
der any other conditions. The healthy ■m azed. $ 5 .0 0 d o w n. $ 5 .0 0 p e r m o n th .
pigs are the pasture grazed pigs, for EUREKA VACUUM CLEANER CO.
( C o p y r i g h t . 1 9 2 5 .)
the pasture affords ideal sanitary con
225 So. S tate S t.. S alt L a k « City, U tah
32—
A w c e t lc l w m *
33— C ondem n
ditions. If the weather is very hot,
Horizontal.
30—
C h in e se c i ty
1 —- P e r t a i n i n g t o a n o c e a n i c r a c e
shade
should
be
provided.
MEN— Order Your Tobacco
38— F o llo w e r o f ce re m o n y
0— H o lm in m cU n n iM in
Pasture for sows’ suckling Utters
I I — W o rd p la y
43— T ru m p e t c a ll
IO— A m o d e r n f o r m o f a i R F i n b l y
Direct From Factory
4
4
—
G
r
a
c
e
f
u
l
4
0
—
D
e
w
c
e
n
d
a
n
t
during the winter will be beneficial.
IS — P r e v e n t
•
4 7 — L o w e s t p o i n t in a w hip
Save money; select natural leaf
IT — C y i n b u l * m n I b y H i n d u ( l a n c e r *
There are many warm days when the
4 0 — M u *le a l c o m p o n itlo n
chewing and smoking; 3 0 BIQ
IS— M ou n tain lio n *
A tta c k
32 — A n im a l
3 4 — V e h i sow
c l e and litter could be turned upon a
10— T h o ro u g h f a r e *
21— O vum i 31—
DIME TWISTS, $2.10, postpaid.
winter pasture of rye or some other
33—
M o u n t a i n in G r e e c e
22— P u l b u ck
2 4 — < h lld
Satisfaction guaranteed; send
37— t n cle i S. A f r ic a )
38— E n ta n g le
23— B e v e ra g e
27— P an t
20— T o**
seed crop.
money
order to Southern Tobacco
0 1 — D a r k flu id
30— C h e m ica l ra d ic a l
3 1 — S h o e d ! OO— W i n e c a s k
A permanent pasture like blue grass
Co., 352 N. Front S t, Memphis, fenn.
00 — T rib e
7 1 — S la v e
84— l a k e
3 3 — I l l u m i n e d i 00— S p r i n g
sod comes in handy during muddy
7 1— P a d d l e *
75— K ille d
7 0 — M id d l e
3 «— A d d i t i o n «
37— P o et
30— X j
7 7 — l .o u t
7S— l o o k e d
in f x tu r e
spells when other pastures are short, A n yb o d y M ailing T h e ir N am e and A d
4 0 — S o u th A m e r ic a n a n im a l
8
0
—
S
h
o
w
*
8
1
—
C
Jo
If
t
e
r
m
42— W o rrie d
43— H o a rd e r
also before other pastures have start d ress to A d elaid e Culp R h ea, C om poser
8 2 — (le n d n u n
8 4 — M e r c h a n t? !* ®
4S— I n f a * l e u
SO— l i e III
ed growth In the spring. Some feed a n d P u b lis h e r , to L i t t l e t o n P . O .. C o lo r a d o ,
88— C h a te a u *
31 — P r e p o s it io n
S 3— F r o n t i n g : 80— M u s i c a l f o r m
s u b u r b o f D e n v e r, w ith N O M O N E Y , w ill
01—
S tra in e d
»1^— C i t i e s
0 3 — G i ers
a n t attempt to have their pigs finish
r e c e iv e p o s tp a id W e s t e r n W e lc o m e a n d W y
3 0 — l> l* p ra l* e
30— U ndo
0 2 — H oy
08— l i l t
1 0 1 — S k ill
i n g G ir l so n g s 2 5 c e a c h .
D e d ic a te d to
ed for an eariy fall market. It is nec C o m
S 3— C i t y In C h i l e
ow B o y s . A lso C a m p F i r « S o n g 3 6 c . D edi
1
0
2
—
B
o
d
i
l
y
o
r
g
n
n
1
0
1
—
P
r
o
u
o
u
u
0 4 — H e r o i n e In S p e n c e r
0 3 — S e iz e
essary then to start them upon pas c a t e d to C a m p F i r e G ir ls a n d B o y S c o u ts .
lOO— F e m a l e .s h e e p
107— A n g er
07— P ro ceed
ON— T i e *
70— P la c e
J
u
s
t
o
u
t
Bongs.
I
f
y
o
u
lik
e
t
h
e
m
it prlc«
ture as early as possible and while fo r o n e . o r a ll, o r r e t u r n t h e m a t , m rem
y expens«
72— H un (S c o tch )
73— l.n h i r
T h e s o l u t i o n w i l l a p p e a r In n e x t I s s u e «
they are still nursing. The finishing a f t e r o n e w e e k ’s t r y o u t. T h a t ’s fa ir, a in ’t i t t
IS — F r ig h t
77 — Deferti-.
7 0 — lte (| u e * te < l
8 2 ---- I l e v e r n i c e
of spring pigs upon the corn field is a
t h i s t r u e fr u it b e v e r a g e on
83 — T h e re fo re
8 5 — C i v i l o f t 'e n * e
practice of growing popularity. Ex
a l l o c c a s io n s — F A M -L Y -A P B ,
Solution of Last Week*« Puzzl®.
8 7 — V ig o r
NO— F n * t
O n e tu b e
m a k e s a g a llo n
perience
has
taught
us
that
the
pig
0 0 — P e d a l p rin t«
» 3 — O p e ra w in g e r
o f t h e m o s t r e f r e s h in g s o f t
which will economically hog off a field d r in k s . O r a n g e . L e m o n , L im e , O r a p e , R a s p
04— P ie c e
0 0 ——M e t a l l i c r o c k
0 7 — D ue
90— N e g a tiv e
Is the well grown pasture fed pig.— b e r r y , R o o t - B e e r . C h e r r y . O n e tu b e , 36o|
th ree
t u b e s , $1.00.
M a ile d p r e p a id fo r
lot)— A n g e r e d
103— P re n e n t
B. VV. Fairbanks, Extension service, c h e c k , c a s h o r m o n e y o r d e r ; o r C . O. D.*
1 0 3 — Su r v l v o r *
1 0 8 — C u r t a in
p
lu
s
p
o
s
t
a
g
e
.
S
e
n
d
f
o
r s o m e to d a y .
Colorado
Agricultural
college.
lo o — S ta r
110— S e le n i
EUREKA
DRINK
1 1 1 — O n e w h o n en w o n a
113— V o m itin g
F R U IT V A L L E Y CO RP.
D e p a rtm e n t 261
R o c h e s te r , N . Y .
11 2 — C o n c l u e
W ater and Salt Needed
for Health of Sheep
Vertical.
1—
P e r ta in in g to m a ll
2—
S h n k e N p e a re a n c h n r n r t e r
3— U tiliz e
4— l - 'g y p t i n n g o d
5— N e g a tiv e
7— O b liq u e
8— L i n g e r
0— S en life
lO— l i e g
1 1 — S ib e ria n c i t y
12— A c o n ta in e r
13— S e c lu d e
14— P e r t a i n i n g t o T h e b e *
10— C h a n t
18— P re fa c e
2 0 — ( n d e rn to o d
23 — C lo th e r
2 0 — I t a l i a n w o m a n ’* n a m e
28 — G ro tto
3 1 — M a th e m a tic a l te rm
L. D. S. Business College
S C H O O L O P C P P IC IC N C Y
Keep plenty of fresh water and salt
A ll com m ercial branches. Catalog free.
SA L T LAKE C IT Y . UTAH
before your sheep at all times, and | 6 0 N. M ala S t
provide shade In hot weather. It Is
not essential that your barn be so |
U n beatable
very warm, except at lambing time, but
Smith and Jones had a lawsuit.
It is very necessary that they be kept Smith sat In the courtroom before the
and pastured in a dry place.
case opened, with his witnesses around
Always avoid using a scrub ram. |
him. Then Jones bustled in. He
The saying that the ram Is half the
stopped abruptly and looked Smith’s
flock Is very true, so lf a scrub is
witnesses over carefully. Presently
used, no improvement can be expected
he turned to Smith and asked: “Are
In the lambs. If the industry is to
these your witnesses?”
improve, the scrub must be eliminated.
“They are,” Smith replied.
Flocks of Inferior breeding demand
“Then you win,” Jones exclaimed.
much more care and feed than a well-
“I’ve had them witnesses twice my
bred flock, and the shepherd flnds no
self.”—Puthfinder.
enjoyment in caring for this type of
stuff when he could, with the same
amount of feed and care, be raising a
much better grade of stock. So, In ev
ery case where possible, secure the
You naturally feel secure when you
services of a pure-bred ram, and even
the most biased observer will agree know that the medicine you are about to
that the results are surprisingly fa take is absolutely pure and contains no
harmful or habit producing drugs.
vorable.
Such a medicine is Dr. Kilmers Swamp-
Root, kidney, liver and bladder medicine.
The same standard of purity, strength
Sheep Industry Is Due
and excellence is maintained in every
bottle of Swamp-Root.
for Some Big Fat Years
It is scientifically compounded from
“Government statistics show that , vegetable herbs.
In 1900 we had five sheep to every | It is not a stimulant and is taken in
eight people, in 1916 we had four j teaspoonful doses.
It is not recommended for everything.
sheep to every eight people, and in
It is nature’s great helper in relieving
1923 we had only three sheep to every
and
overcoming kidney, liver and blad
eight people," was a statement made
der troubles.
by H. E. Heed, professor of animal
A sworn statement of purity is with
husbandry at the Kansas State Agrl- j every bottle of Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-
cultural college, In a discussion on j Root.
the history and development of the j If you need a medicine, you should
sheep industry. “Such a condition as I have the best. On sa’j at all drug stores
this. In addition to the Inability of 1 in bottles of two sizes, medium and large.
the range to Increase Its present pro- , However, if you wish first to try this
great preparation send ten cents to Dr.
duction and the Improbability of over Kilmer
& Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a
production among farm flocks, should sample bottle. When writing be sure
make the sheep man's life a pleasant and mention this paper.
one for several years to come.”
A FEELING OF SECURITY
S a fe ty or D isaster
M atter o f Speculation
An amusing story Is told Illustrating
the comforts of seu travel of a genera
tion or so ago. I? concerns a nervous
old lady who booked a passage aboard
u tramp steamer bound from an east
African port to Karachi.
After a few days at sea a terrific
Storm broke, and the ramshackle
tramp steamer began to reel and
plunge violently, ( ’lutching her way
along tin» deck, the passenger presently
reached the captain’s cabin, where
she found that
worthy mariner
poring over a dirty piece of parch
ment.
“Are we safe?” she gasped.
“Madame,”' replied the skipper, “you
see (Ids ’ it thing I ’ave In front of
me. Well, it Is a chart of the Indian
ocean. On It you will observe there is
a lot of little black dots Now, madam.
If those dots is dirt we’re all right.
But If they’re rocks, madam, we're
bound for Kingdom Come.”
C ave Pictures Seen a s
E arly Fashion P lates
That there is little new under the
sun, even with regard to women’s
fashions, was pointed out by Ethbert
Brand, curator of the Rotherham
(Eng.) museum in the course of a re
cent lecture. Referring to an illustra
tion of women dancers on the walls
c f a Spanish cave, he said these palae
olithic belles were very near to the
pre^ent-da.v women with their kigh
bats, chignons, tight waists and bell
shaped skirts. These cave pictures
were probably the earliest fashion
plates in the world, and were drawn
about 20,000 years ago, declared Mr.
Brand.
Another illustration from Spain
showed a costume very much akin to
thaf of the modern flapper.
F e a rfu l P ro tp ect
The late Lew Dockstader of minstrel
fame was opposed to censorships, and
in ^n after-dinner speech in New York
he once said :
British Hunter B a g s
"The scantiness and transparency of
T iger With B ad Record the new fashions has caused a de
The inan-enting Mger of Kudu. Itur- mand for a censor of girls’ clothes.
j mu, said to have killed 100 human be- But a censor’s task, gentlemen. Is to
j Ings has beetl slain, says Capper's • lit out, to eliminate, to subtract—
i Weekly. Tlve natives called him "Tiger neter to add.
J with Man’s Brain." because of his cun
“•'f then, gentlemen, the dress of our
ning and boldness.
girl* is a moral menace now. and w®
At first the tiger attacked natives put a censor on it with his shears—
| in the Jungle, then eanie Into the vll- oh .liy!”
j lages even in daylight. The terrorized
villagers built shelves In their homes
Will P lease Children
and high platforms, hut couldn't escape
Children’s rooms offer an excellent
that way. Believing the brute led a
charmed life, the people nearest hts field for stencils, especially !» the
home without a nursery. Frolicking
lair finally fled to other seflements.
animals.
windmills
and
A British hunter took up the trail. children,
Finding a half-eaten native, the hunt clowns, flowers and domestic fowls
er hid la a tree, as It was the ani are designs in keeping with the worhi
mal's habit to return to Ids victims. of play. Background colors for such
When the tiger came, one shot through rooms should be light and cheerful.
the beast killed him. The b»ast was Applied decorations usually look best
ten feet long. The natives look upon if done In primary or strong contrast
the Britisher as a supernatural being ing colors.
Sent by I heir gods.
T rad e W inds’ Effects
The trade winds do more than carry
the west-bound mariner on Ills way.
says Nature Magazine. They have
been called ’’the pulse of the atmos-
The good cow shows femininity la ; pheric circulation." because their fluc
conduct, la disposition and In expre». tuations are related to the Weather
events of distant regions, snd their
atom
I , arching -ireatti Is responsible tor most
< the world's big deserts.
F lou r From W heat
The amount of flour obtained from
wheat depends very much on the size
and weight of the kernels and varies
from 63 to HO per cent. A fair average
is 4.7 bushels of wheat to one barrel
of flour, weighing 190 pounds, nr on#
bushel of wheat to 41 pounds of flour.
The shorts or middlings average I I to
12 per cent of the wheat, snd th# brar
-1 per cen t
I | I 11 fl..|..|- |.1M -H -H -l-F I
I I
Live Stock Hints
■H | | | |,.|..i | | .|
I
Treat sheep for stomach worms.
•
«
•
Slam at A gricu ltu ralists
A scien tist predicts th at by the use
of a new rapid-growth serum with
which he Is experimenting, the farm er
will plant wheat one day and harvest
*he crop the next.
T h at will leave
363 glorious days in which to grum
ble.— Humorist (London).
Many a good-tempered colt Is spoiled
by a bad-tempered owner.
• • •
Water horses and mules both before
and after feeding, but never when they
are very hot.
• s s
Remember that the hind legs of a
A n d S p rin k ta
horse are his propellers, and that poor
in the F o o t-B a th
— “— ‘
shoe fitting causes much lameness.
• • •
ALLEN’S FOOT=EASE
The Antiseptic, Healing Powder for
In the management of all classes of
tired, swollen, smarting, sweating
live stock, there are times when care
feet. It takes th® friction from tbe
shoe, prevent® blisters and sore spots
ful, watchful attention is required.
snd
takes tbe sting oat of corns and
That time In sheep production Is the
bunion®. Always use Allen’« Foot-E*««
lambing season.
to break in new sboes. Sold every
• • •
where Trial package Fr—. Address
ALLEN'S FO O T-EA SE. L« Roy, N. Y.
Give sows suckling pigs a liberal
grain mixture.
• • •
Have Good Hair
Feed lambs grain In a creep so that
they will be fat and ready for the
And d ean Scalp
market when they weigh 60 to 80
pounds.
s • •
- Soap and Ointment
The weaning pics weighing from 30
Work Wonders
to 100 pounds may be fed from 80 to
Llnr.gur f*rr ’ Di-Vi St«?*,
83 parts corn, and 15 to 20 parts tank
Dr I
age. or Instead of this ration you ran TW
Tbonip,<n.
ob I
EYEW A TER
use 75 to 80 parts corn, ten parts HELPfUL E Y E W A SH
wheat middlings, snd ten to 15 parts ua«tT.r.nor a T boosm .
‘.ankage.
,
5 h a k e
m to y o u r
Shoes
C u tic u r a
w
N
U . S.1 t L i r e
C - y , No
22
' 9 LS.