RECOMMENDS IT TO OTHERS Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable (Compound Helps Her So Much Cleveland, Ohio.—"I sure reeom mend Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to any woman in the con dition I was in. I was so weak and run-down that I could hardly stand up. I could not eat and wa3 full of misery. A friend living on Arcade Avenue told me about this medi cine and after tak ing ten bottles my ♦weakness and nervousness are all gone. 'I feel like living again. I am still taking it until I feel strong like before. You may use this letter as a testimonial.”—Mas. Elizabeth Toso, 14913 Hale Ave., Cleveland, Ohio. Bell-ansI FOR INDIGESTION No More Distress I Gas, Sournccs, Heartburn Sick Headache, Dizziness after eating or drinking 25c and 75c Packages Sold Everywhere Quickly Relieves 1 Rheumatic Rains 12 Days’ Free Trial To got relief when pain tortured Joints and muscles keep you in con stant misery rub on Joint-Ease. It is quickly absorbed and you can rub it in often and expect results more speedily. Get it at any drug-i gist in America. Use Joint-Ease for sciatica, lum bago. sore, lame muscles, lame baek, chest colds, sore nostrils and burn ing, aching feet. Only GO cents. It' penetrates. ' rpppSend name and Address for 12 * *»rL.Ej(]ay trial tube to Pope I.abora- , tories, Desk 3, Hallowed, Maine. Joint-Ease She Chases Dirt Housewife—Why, Mary I What do you mean by looking through that keyhole? Maid—Well, I—er—er—was dusting, and I thought I’d look and see if there was any cobwebs in it, mum.— Answers. That Constant Backache Too Often This Warns of Sluggish Kidneys. LAME? Stiff? Achy? Every day bring constant, nagging backache? Sure your kidneys are working right? Sluggish kidneys allow waste im purities to remain in the blood and upset the whole system. A common warning is too frequent, scanty or burning secretions. > _ • Use Doan's Pills. Doan's, a stimu lant diuretic, increase the secretion of the kidneys and thus aid in the elimination of waste impurities. Are endorsed by users everywhere. A your neighborI »• DOAN'S p,tis A STIMULANT DIURETIC KIDNEYS • fo.i.r Mil*- i»n to Mfg the. Buffalo N Y * - J • >OUX CITY PTC CO. NO 12 i»2*. 1 11 OF INTEREST TO FARMERS 11 STARTING THE INCUBATOR Whether one is operating a smaTI individual lamp heated incubator, elec tric incubator or man.moth incubator, it is essential that the machine be given a thorough overhauling at the beginning o each hatching season. This means first of all the removal of trays, thermometers, muslin diaphragms and every thing that is moveable, sweeping the inside of the machine, spraying it with a good disinfecting solution such as Zenolium, Sterilac, B-K. etc.,, dry clean ing all moveable parts and immersing them in a disinfecting solution setting them up in the sun to dry. After they are dry they should be replaced. The outside of the machine, as well as all temperature and ventilating and regulating devices should be gone over carefully to see that all adjustments work freely, that no rust has accumulated and that no parts have been bent or broken The glass windows should be thoroughly cleaned so that one can see through them readily, and it Is an excellent plan to give the Incubator a coat of Spar varnish at least every other year. An incubator cellar is apt to be more or less moist and everything should be done to keep the doors from warping and to keep the moisture out. of the wood. A vacuum cleaner will be very helpful in cleaning the inside of the various sections, and in the case of the mammoth machine, in cleaning the space between decks where it is hard to get with a broom or brush. The heater parts should be gone over carefully whether it is a kerosene lamp or a ccal stove. All parts should be thoroughly cleaned. All dampers should bo removed and scraped to remove rust and dirt and thev should be re placed. All moving or friction parts should be thoroughly oiled. Grates in coal burning stoves should be examined to see that thev are not broken and work freely. Stove pipes, if they have not been previously removed, should be removed and all soot taken cut and if the pipes are weakened through rusting, they should be replaced with new. In the case of lamp heater machines, the wicks should be replaced in the lamps, ising glass windows carefully cleaned to remove any soot and anv brok en ising glass should be replaced with new. It is well to paint all exposed heat er pipes on mammoth incubators as well as the heaters themselves, with stove paint to not only add to the appearance, but also to durability of the equip ment and prevent continuous rusting. The seats of all draft dampers should b? scraped and filed and examined carefully to see that the dampers set evenly on the seat. In all hot water ma chines. whether of the mammoth type or kerosene type, the water should be removed from the pipes or tanks and they should be flushed out with water under pressure, this to remove any sediment that may accumulate on the bot tom of the pipe or tank and cause irregular radiation. This flushing of the pipes is very essential in the mammoth Incubator to maintain an even distribu tion of heat in all parts and in each section. Automatic alarms which register extreme variations In temoerature. either automatic should be overhauled and tested to see that they are functioning properly. All thermometers should be removed and tested carefully In warm w'ater alongside of a standardized thermometer of known accuracy. It is possible, if one has a section of the incubator that is known to read the same, the ther mometers can be placed in it side by side and corrections made accordingly by dry heat rather than warm water. Warm water, however, gives the most accurate test. So much for the preparation of the incubator for the season’s hatch. At least a week before it is time to put the eggs in the machine, the incubator should be started and run continually and carefully just as though the eggs were in the machine, and during this period of preliminary running, the ma chine should be adjusted carefully to operate at the desired tempprature. It will B^e the machine an opportunity to dry out, for all swollen doors to come back to normal and open readily, and in the case of a new machine which has never been rim before, it should be givr-n this week to 10 days preliminary running to heat it up and allow plenty of time for adjustment and regulation. The eggs should be traved up at least a day before they are placed in the incubator and allowed to lie in a room where the temperature is abound CO to 70 degrees for at least 24 hours before being placed in the machine. If these precautions are all taken before the incubation season starts a great deal of disappointment and delay in starting will be accomplished and much more satisfactory results given. PUKE BRED BEST The man who has early maturing pork animals has the Jump on the breeder wose animals mature in the early winter in the matter of market price as well as economy, for he is able to avoid the annual glut which always causes a price decline. Violently fluctuating markets need hold no terror to the breeder if he has a herd of early-maturing, pure bred Polands so that he can escape the bad winter market. He is able, by virtue of their early maturity fea ture, to get his hogs on the market weighing 250 to 275 pounds d de mand. A good plan is to keep the pigs eat ing corn and tankage 'rom the time they start to nibble at the gram put out for the sows. And, by continuing ojowviii uu uuu uuvu pasture, they fatten as they grow. By keeping them as fat as they are big, the breeder is enabled, at ail stages of the season, when breakers are ahead; to ship them any time after 175 pounds. liaising purebred hogs for market sounds strange in view of the fact that a few years ago registered hogs were looked upon as a luxury, too steep lor the market to handle. His limit was a purebred boar; but now l he is changing to blooded sows. The first cost may be a little higher, but everything considered, it is cheaper in the long run. -m *• • -- SHALLOW CULTIVATION, Do not wait for the corn to get much above the ground before be ginning cultivation. A harrow put on Just before the plant appears above the rurface or immediately afterward kills millions of weeds and prepares the soil for the tender plant when it i ernes through. Then the wreders a*s«l cultivators should «>e kept going from this time until tl c corn is to b;g to be culti ft \ i I \ . M.t i - - a it i Poultry | it,.,sites are of many kinds Scmeiitres they multiply until thrv kill tlse fo«b on which they prey, k t they do even great ar injury to the i Industry by reducing the vitality stunting tiie growth, and checking the css yield of fowls. • • Breed ciiimctci titles of taint were , tfrmviy fiabu-hed during l.»e nr cade Ircm 1130 to IMtf Ptom that tier led on, the stability «f the Urd ng breeds of tealsy it cui.siuvied tu haw been ds Quits vated with safety. If the season is dry more cultivation is nesessary, be cause it has been demonstrated that the average rainfall is not sufficient to grow a full crop of corn without keeping the moisture under the sur face, and the importance of thorough cultivation in dry seasons is there fore apparent. A fine dust mulch will keep the moisture from evaporating and ren der the plant food available for the corn roots. The first cultivation may be deep, but after cultivations should be shal low. The old-fashioned plow ripping along between rows four or five in ches deep, tearing and cutting off the roots, has destroyed millions of bushels of corn in times gone by. Most farmers know better now, but there may be yet some unenlightened man. and to him this warning applies. When the corn plant is three or four feet high the fibrous roots ex tend from one row to another and form a mat from three to five inches under the surface. When six to eight feet high these roots have formed a complete connection be tween the rows, and it can easily be understood that a cultivator set five or six inches deep will tear this mat npart and thus greatly injure the growing plant. CARE AFTER‘TREATMENT The losses after vaccination in many herds is due to overfeeding. It has been stated by many extensive breeders and feeders that proper feed ing of swine after vaccination is as important as proper vaccination. It has been demonstrated that im munity of recent vaccinated swine can be overcome by improper feed ing. Many socalled “breaks" after immunization are found upon in vestigation to be due to excessive or improper feeding. Gorging with corn, tankage or any other feed, is very likely to induce digestive derange ments, thus diminishing the pigs’ re sistance and making them subject to the virus that has been injected. Ample quantities of good pure water should be provided swine that have ___mi. . if x lit jauuii ouuuiu consist of very little feed for the first two days and then they may be given 1-3 to i-i of their usual ration until about 10 days after vaccination, when they can be gradually placed on full feed. Hog cholera Is a preventable dis ease and the vaccination of pigs after weaning is cheap insurance but the vaccination of pigs with anti-hog cholera serum and virus will not protect them against any other dis ease; and further if the vaccination is not properly done and the hogs properly cared for after the vaccina tion, the results will be problematic. PLANT MURK SUDAN One acre of sudan grass makes more feed for livestock than 10 acres cvf native grasses. No matter how dry the weather may become and how the native grass dries up. sudan keeps right on growing and making good I yields Sudan comes originally from a region of drought and heat, so dry, hot weather seems merely to speed up this forage crop. • • OIL WITH BRUSH When you have a large surface to oil frequently such as hors* powet gears or plows, an old large »|» paint briuh is the handiest thing tc uj-. The oil ran be applied rapidly this way. and vou will be abie .a keep your hands clean. • • Ml l> BA LAM Ml K ATfttM Neither growing nor fattening plfs | do well on corn alone, ft Is larking In mineral matter and protein, flood feeders wr.trh each animal and fred according to Its needs. If you smoke for pleasure » —you have the right idea. Enjoyment in smoking is the thing that counts and you get it full measure in Camels “fd walk u mile for a Camel99 (D 19211, R. J. Reynolds To!>aceo Company, Winston-Salem, N. C Four-Day Atlantic Liners Keels for ten passenger liners, the fastest ever built, will be laid in American shipyards next spring, if present plans are carried out, ns tiie first step to link America and Europe with four-day passenger service. Even that record may be speeded up in good weather by using airplanes to I reach the ships hundreds of miles at ! sea, and to leave them at equal dis ! tunees from the coast. Each vessel .is to be provided with a landing deck , for airplanes. Plans for the high speed ships have been drawn, and the | i hull model already tested in tlie tow ing basin at the Washington navy I yard. The ten ships will cost $1.r»0, 000,000.—Popular Mechanics Maga zine. The miser is known by the money he keeps. The BABY I _ Why do so many, many babies of to day escape all the little fretful spells and infantile ailments that used to worry mothers through the day, und keep them up half the night? If you don’t know the answer, you j haven’t discovered pure, harmless Cas | toria. it Is sweet to the taste, and I sweet in the little stomach. And Its gentle influence seems felt all through 'the tiny system. Not even u distaste ful dose of castor oil does so much good. Fletcher’s Casiorla Is purely vege table, so you may give It freely, ut first sign of colic; or constipation; or diarrhea. Or those many times when you Just don’t know what la the mai ler. For real sickness, call the doc tor, always. At other times, a few | drops of Fletcher’s ('nstoriu. The doctor often tells you to do Ju«t i hut; and always says Fletcher’s, other preparations may be Just b* pare, Just ns free from dangerous drugs, but why experiment? Beside*, she hook on carp and feeding of halites that comes with Fletcher's (’astorla Is worth Us weight In gold! Children Cry for 'l_I Couldn't Make It Go on That Much Money Mrs. Elizabeth Mortimer Miller, the eugenics expert, told a story to a Du luth reporter, “Our children,” she said, "live too much with their elders. They hear too many things that are unfit for children's ears. This makes them pre cocious. “In my native Sioux City a boy an swered a butcher’s want ad. “‘What can you do?’ the butcher asked him. “‘Anything,’ said the boy. ‘What will you pay me?’ “‘Two good .dollars a week, start ing right here and now,’ said the butcher. ‘But what cun you do?’ “ ‘Anything, I told you.’ said the boy. “ ‘Anything’s no answer,’ said the butcher. ‘Be specific. Can you dress a chicken?’ “‘Cosh,’ said the boy, ‘not on 52 a week.’” Dog Put on Pay Roll of League of Nations The League of Nations has a dog on its pay roll. Loulou, a fine tier man shepherd, has thus been honored because of his ability to guard the big home of the league. Loulou has been on the pay roll for some time, being allowed about 58 a month for subsist ence. But the dog really proved his worth during the recent Kacco-Van zetti riots, when the mob threw stones through the library windows and broke nearly all the windows tn the large glass room known ns the gold fish howl. When the mob leaders were breaking down the rear entrance of the main building with the intention of reducing It in lire Loulou appeared tlm C/ud'n tvltli f Ito tun wtif.'lmion The iimli did not mind the watchmen and was pushing in when Louluu got into action. The place was promptly cleared and the mob held back long enough tor tiie police to arrive. Coing to School in Clouds Candidates for army air oilicers commissions go to school in tin* clouds at a midwestern flying field. A plant that holds six students, an Instructor and pilot has been fitted with com fortable. padded chairs, n blackboard and other equipment, and. while the ship anils along, tlie teacher gives lectures with the aid of the hoard and tiie class makes notes and re ports. Each passenger wears a para chute and Imth doors of the plane are titled with levers which can he pulled to cause tin* dours to full Hear for a ready exit In ease of trouble.—Popu lar Mechanics Magazine. To Reveal Life on Moon A giant tele** ope which Is to tie erected on Naval Idll. near Oloemlon leln. Hotilli Africa, was referred to by Professor Itosslter of Michigan uni versify at u university luncheon In Bloemfontein ll will to* poasIMe through this giant U*le*eope to ills c**rti tin «hj * * mi Inch high nineteen tulle" away, he *uld. and ll will In* |H<««|hle to ***** In the moon object* the else of a cnihcdrat Of Course “Why doc* Justice have scale*I" "To Wei*?* ll*e hM»tur."* I nula | title Courier Journal. Veteran Farmer What Is believed to be the reea for consecutive farming in Texas i the achievement of C. C. Jr.ckaon ** Powell, Texas, Confederate veteran* eighty-six years of age, who has not missed making n crop since the close of the Civil war in 1805. Last year he did not grow cotton, hut had a corn crop which made a good yield.—In dianapolis News. Prefers to Remain Whole "The pedestrian only wants no even break.” remarks n writer. The average pedestrian would rntb er not get lilt nt all. Do You Cough? Omaha, Nebr.—‘‘Last winter I eon traded a severe cold which affected mo terribly and it seemed that I could not get rid of it. Finally I decided to take Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. I laid an idea it would relieve me if any thing would, and so it did. I took three bottles and was re lieved of all the af fects of my very bad cold. I think the 'Discovery' is a won derful tonic for anybody in a debilitated condition of health.”—Mra. M. & Stillam, 2417 Dodge St. All dealers. Tablets or liquid. Write Dr. Pierce, President Invalids’ Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y., for free coa> fidential medical advice. 11 Rats Without Poison A New Eittrmlaalsr that la Absolutely lata to uaa Anywbaawft Will not injure human beings, livestock. Cogs, cats, poultry, yet is deadly to rata and mice every time. Poison* arc ton dangaraua K-R-O does not contain ar-enic. phos phorus. barium carbonateor any deadly poison. Made of powdered wj u ill »a rec ommended by the U. 8. Dept, of Agri culture in their latest bulletin on “Rat Control.'* “Cn» of our food custom rilast Idd oaks* gitino d jOs dead ran on rue farm Iris tiiir.l a 2‘uuoc- lutkirc o( K B O Wa hear i.l m iry llnd ag 10 or SO rats af*rs Ulloa KRO nil. his hli'Mv luecrsBsl sad should i.lea ■ y »u * W ula,m«>« lUtua turn. Kiciiwood,O. 7Sc at your druggist; largo aire ftnar t.mes as snuchl |1.00. Sent poeii«t«i direct Irotn us if dealer cannot supa** you. SOI.D ON MONEY-BACH. Oil AH AN VEE. Th* K-HO Caas pany. Spr nglicU). Ohio, K ILLS-RATS-O N LY APPETITE IMPROVED QUUKLT V Carter s MUt tiswMto J m.>*» itn !•.»••• .'■»*re.<«s i»»m te.1 wild, .wa alas a r deers. Tlirr refuse tbe tium i <■ a my 11 it,,a psiwar thkh 4uff the A Via far taeA, Nrsitaler ikay ss* a farter e iws* rsyssem • ruf ran he teem by rhs »r (” '>•<** All l>minuet It. and 7I« Rad . t<« CARTERS IlBil \