There's scarcely an ache or pain that Bayer Aspirin won’t relieve promptly. It can't remove the cause, but it will relieve the pain ! Head* ’ aches. Backaches. Neuritis and neuralgia. Yes, and rheumatism, (Read proven directions for many important uses. Genuine Aspirin can't depress the heart. Look iot the Bayer cross: For Ivy Poisoning Try Hanford’s Balsam of Myrrh All dealer* are authorized to refund your money forthe first bottle it not suited. Hookworm Vanishing Hookworm, which a few years age caused many deaths in Georgia, is disappearing, according to the stute hoard of health. Only nine deaths from the disease were reported last year. EADACHE?, Instead of dangerous heart de- I pressants take cafe, mild, purely t vegetable NATURE’S REMEDY t and get rid of the bowel poisons & that caase the trouble. Noth ing like Nt for biliousness, sick headache and constipation. Acts pleasantly. Never gripes. Mild, safe, purely vegetable At druggists—only 25c. Make the test tonight. FEEL LIKE A UILLION, TAKE_ Fig Tree on Palm A fig tree about three feet high was found growing out of the side of a palm tree in the courthouse grounds, Vnsalia. t'nlif. its roots ap parently drew sustenance frotn the mold in tlie niches of the palm Hnd from the sap of (lie palm tree. This fig tree blossomed out with otbet trees at l lie iirst sign of spring. Ladybirds to Aid Planters Breeding of ladybirds to combat the ravages of the mealy Itug, th* worst insect known in coffee planta tions, has been started in Kenya colony, Africa. The work is the re sult of a suggestion by Sir Daniel Hall, eliief scientific adviser to tlif ministry of agriculture. The Value She—Your wife is looking wonder fsl tonight. Her gown Is a poem. Author—As a mater of fact, that gown is two poems and a short story.—Grit {Australia). Human behavior is usually the rw Suit of habit. ‘‘I took Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound when I was tired, nervous and run down. I saw the advertisement and decided to try it because I was hardly able to do my housework. It has helped me in every way. My nerves are better, I haye a good appetite, I sleep well and I do not tire so easily. I recommend the Vege table Compound to other women for it gives me so much strength and makes me feel like a new person.’'—Mrs. Lena Young, R. § i, Ellsworth, Maine. I Out Our Way 3y Williams - - -- T TTTI'I Tj^OStS GW lvoT \V j jpYOvJ CAUI'JK oe yY a pav OF UuAT fl| MORRV HuP ExPr.Pi; U Hn Tin' He«n formulated to enable dairy nen selling whole milk to raise eylacements with a minimum of abor and expense, and at the ame time reduce occurrence of iigestive disorders — particularly he scours—in young animals ’hat the new ration makes possi le attainment of these objec ives has been demonstrated hrough feeding tests at the ex eriment station farm, and in re nts now being obtained by more ian 800 New Jersey dairymen sing the ration. Ration Produces Champ Cows Records kept on more than 100 nimals reared on the milkless ,nd dry grain ration show that jrowth is not retarded, breeding lowers are not diminished, and >roductive ability is not impaired, several cows grown on the new ation hdvd made production rec ords. Records further reveal that ’alves may be grown to six months if age at an average cost of about 528 which is $25 to $50 less than he cost of rearing calves according o the whole milk method of feed .ng. The fermula for the new ration ~m developed by Pref. C. B. Bender, i Abcue arc several six-monihs old heifers raised on milkless-dry grain ration at New Jersey Experi ment Station. Professor C. B. Bender, who developed the ra tion, U shown on right. associate dairy husbandman. Is 150 pounds of ground oats, 100 pounds of yellow corn meal, 0 pounds each of wheat bran, linseed oil meal, and soluble blood flour, and four pounds each of finely pulverized steamed bone meal, finely pulverized lime stone. and salt. Replaces Milk After One Month The 50 pounds of soluble blood flour and 12 pounds of minerals “largely take the place of the milk,” according to the belief ex pressed by Professor Bender. He explains that at 30 days of age calves are fed only the milkless and dry grain mixture, liberal amounts of good quality alfalfa hay. and all the water they want to drink. This ration is continued for six months, after which a change is made to a simpler growing mix ture. Calves are led milk only during the first four weeks of their life. The milk is entirely removed from the ration at the cud of the first 30 days. “ltiere is an urgent need for a milkless, dry grain ration in states where dairymen sell their product in the form of whole milk,” Profes sor Bender asserts. "In New Jersey, for example, the 16 000 heifers reared annually are lees than half ol animals needed to replace 'worn out’ cows in our herds. II our dairy men are to increase productive abil | ity of their cows, more calves from high-producing stock must bn raised on farms." I HELP CLEAN HOUSE. :ouse cleaning time, and my wife said, •This place is just m fright! f yeu’ll pitch in and help me, Sam. I’ll do the job up right. I’ll do the bedroom closets first, So if you’ll take things out— 3e careful of those dresses! My! What IS the man about? I Those seeds? You spilled them on the floor? Of course I put them there! t must, with such a little house. Put things just anywhere. A place for things, and things in place Oh yeah! That's good, 111 say! fust fix a place for flower seeds— Come get out of my way! Your tackle box? Not there, you say? It’s right up on that shelf; i' know it’s there, because last Jail I put it there myself." t found the box and took it down. Concluding, thus, my task; rlousecleaning’s done? I guess it is, But I forgot to ask. —Sam Page. .- »+-* The New Ireland. Prom St. Louis Post-Dispatch. It is a new Ireland Michael Mac .Vhite, minister of the Irish Free ! State to the United States, tells about. The envoy, a guest of St. uouis, talks a Chamber-of-Com merce language. Figures flow from nis tongue. Postal savings, bank j deposits, exports, taxes, budgetary I disbursements—he reels them off j vith statistical exactitude. He points out that the revenue from alcohol has decreased by $10,000,00t in the last six years, which, in his Wheat Jockeying. From Lincoln Journal. Advices sent out by the Farm Equipment association to members ndicatc a possibility that Russia, instead of having wheat to sell, j will be compelled to use some of the soviet money in purchasing abroad. The peasants are not at all dis posed to work for the benefit of ! ;,he common good those lands that have been assigned to them, and t are not cultivating them with any fervor. Unfavorable weather also has aided In creating an apparent shortage of crop yields. As a result manufacturers are being urged to study carefully their commitments | opinion, is explained by better liv- , ing conditions and steadier em ployment. He asserts, with racial pride, that the nomadic tradition has been succeeded by a blood brother of the Scotchman in in dustriousness and thrift. Of peculiar interest is Mr. Mac White’s statement about the gov ernment’s hydro-electric plant on the river Shannon, representing an Investment of $30,000,000. Already 98 per cent of the power supply has been contracted for. The Snannon current is driving the street cars in Dublin and Cork so economically that the companies are prospering on a lower scale of fares than were ' formerly charged. Meantime small communities and remote rural dis tricts now have electricity, with higher standards of living. Govern ment operation is apparently a suc cess in Ireland, just as it is in Canada. The glamorous effect of Hie bat tling Ireland of song and story and tyranny and bloodshed is missing in Mr. MacWhite's ,’icture. The prosaic Ireland of prosperity is, i however, a much happier place for : men and women to live. Mr Mac White says it is and he knows. But surelv the troubadours have not wholly fled the emerald isle. As long as a shamrock grows there will be a poet to recite the miracle in swinging balladry. Can anyone imagine an Ireland so rich ia purse as to be poor In soul! -_ -;--— Airplane Progress. From Time. Sixteen years ago Charles Cool idge Parlin, commercial researclier for Curtis Publishing company, toured the United States, studied the automobile industry. ’‘Conserva tively,” accurately, he then forecast the mergers, used car crisis and from Russian customers. Figures recently released by the 1 department oi agriculture teem to justify the holding policy that has marked the situation in both the United States and Canada. The stubborn resistance of European buyers resulted in cutting down by 246.000. 000 bushels the world ex ports of wheat which last year were 097.000. 000 bushels and this year, up till a week ago, 451,000,000. The April 1 figures showed that the United States had 241,000,0*0 bush els available for export for the re mainder of the year, till the new crop start* coning on the market early in July. Anetfcer factor that would «r heavy casualties among builder which soon after came to pass. Last week appeared Mr. Parlin’i analysis of the aviation industry, based on a six-month, 20,387-mil' flying survey of the land. ''Censerv atively” predicted Researcher Par lin: In 10 years 230,000 privately owned planes will fly the Unite* States airways; in 15 years, 1,000, 600. Air transport between neighbor ing major cities will approacl "strettcar frequency.” A large proportion of Uniteo States businessmen will commute between ofices and country homei in their own planes, piloted by fly ing chauffeurs. Within 10 years, 10 companies, producing iewer than 20 makes oi planes, will hold more than 90 per cent of the total volume of business Aware of ths Pariin vista, aware also that more wealth reposes la Manhattan than anywhere else ii the Unites States, the aviation in dustry last week arrayed itself ai never before in the Aeronautical Chamber of Commerce’s first New York show. On show w»ere the most massivk ships now plying the transport lines within the United States and tc Central and South America. Assem bled for the first time anywhen were a Fokker F-32, a Consolidated Commodore boat, a Ford 5-AT, < Curtiss Condor, a Savonia-March etti S-55 boat, a Sikorsky S-38 am phibian. Surrounding these monsters, sus pended above them and ranged about Madison Square were 41 com mercial, sport, training and fightino plants, five gliders, 15 types of en gines. Total value of exhibit#: $2, 000.000. dinarily have operated to raise prices was the small carryover ol Argentina and the poor condition of the 1230 crop. These figures seem to justify the holding policy at the time that it was inaugurated but Europe refused to buy at the prices fixed in Liverpool, and so both Canada and the United States seem destined not onlv to Ics* money by holding out but also to have a larger carryover than last year. The duel, however, is not yet ended. European supplies am comparatively small, and it will be two months before tbe new crop casta its Shadow before. Texan %Vas Figuring on Journey Across Ocean Bnltery C, One Hundred Twenty- I ninth artillery, was ready to leave Camp Mills for the long trip across, j We were to bo taken from camp to the transport on a flat-bottom ferry boat and we were crowded on with full packs and Just enough room to stand.* After about an hour of the two-hour ride had passed 1 felt some one punching me in the back. Turn lng around. I saw a long, lank Texas recruit behind me. “What do you want?” I asked him “Say, how long did you say it would ^ take us to go across?” be asked me. “Oh, about ten days or two weeks," I told him. lie Just blinked Ids eyes a few times and shifted Ids full pack a lit tle before saying, “Ob, boy! This is sure going to be a b —I of a tiresome trip."—1„ H. Cunningham, in St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Have Glut of Bibles and of Epsom Salts N'o more Bibles or epsont salts are wanted at Tristan da Cunha, the “world’s loneliest isle," In the South Atlantic. The reason Is that kindly people have sent so many of these articles that every Inhabitant Is sup plied for years. According to Itev, It A. C. Pooley, the missionary in charge, there has been a flood of Bibles, some bouses having six copies, and many “Good Books" are awaiting new arrivals. He adds that there are still 200 pounds of epsoro salts to be taken when required, W3 j letter was written a year ago. but : has Just arrived In England, the bout ! touching the Island only about once n year. A new school was erected last spring for the 150 inhabitant*, who are descendants of the British garrison in the days when Napoleon was at St. Helena. Gems of Colored Glax Pitkin flasks are the products of Ibe Pitkin Glass works, which were j the first works of the kind built in Connecticut. The works were con strutted in 1783 and were in oper utlon until 1880. Many containers made by the Pitkin Glass works were never surpassed In beauty or color or pnttern. “The Pitkin type flask," says It. M. Knlttle, “Is known to every glass collector. Many large bottles are green with long banded necks. The sunburst pattern flask is particularly meritorious.’’ Division of Palestine A plan to divide Palestine accord /ng to tlie fnitii of the population — Jewish, Moslem and Christian—has been suggested. Mr. Ben Avi lias pro posed that 16 cantons be formed—0 Jewish, 7 Moslem and 3 Christian. The object is to place the Inhabitants in congenial surroundings, giving each group freedom to govern Itself In accordance with Its own traditions. All would come under a central gov ernment, the mandatory power for Palestine. Spices and Pilgrims About 28,000 Mohammedan pi I frims from tlie Netherland East In dies made the pilgrimage to Mecca during the last three months of Inst year. The number of visitors from the rubber districts, where prices were uncertain, was smaller than usual, while the number from the coffee «nd spice districts, where prices were good, was greater. The (otal from the two districts made up the normal pilgrimage from the is lands. Absent-Minded Billy was a very absent-minded little boy. One cold morning his mother sent him to school well bun dled up, even to ills galoshes. When he appeared at his desk his teacher W'us quite surprised at his appearance. She asked him: "How did you happen to come to school today without yonr shirt?’’ Billy looked himself over from his neck to his feet and exclaimed: “Gee, gosh! I thought I took off my galoshes.” Never “So Mabel has a job?” “Yeli." “Wrapped up in her work, 1 sup pose?" “Not on your life—she’s a swim ming teacher.” Early Alarm The pioneer of daylight saving was an early morning lly in a bedroom.— Louisville Times. OLD DOCTOR'S IDEA IS BIG HELP TO ELDERLY PEOPLE . ;_ Tn 188.", old Dr. Caldwell made a discovery for which elderly people the world over praise him today I Years of practice convinced him that many people were endanger ing tlielr health by a careless choice of laxatives. So be began a search for a harmless prescription which would he thoroughly effec tive. yet would neither gripe nor form nny habit. At last ho found It. Over and over lie wrote it, when he .found people bilious, headachy, out of sorts, weak or feverish; with coated tongue, had breath, no appe tite or energy. It relieved the most obstinate cuses, and yet was gentle with women, children and elderly people. Today the same famous, effective prescription, known as Dr. Cald well’s Syrup Pepsin, Is the world’s most popular laxative. It may be obtained from nny drugstore. Partnership Courting Frank—Is It true you are engaged ty three other men besides mo? Trance*— Why? “Well, I was- thinking the four of us might raise enough by clubbing together to buy you an engagement ring.”—Stray Stories. :-:----— She Lost 19 Pounds of Faf in 27 Days During October a woman in M»n lunu wrote—“My first bottle of Kruschen Halts lasted almont 4 weeks and during that time 1 lost 19 pounds of fat—Kruschcn ts all you claim for it—I ieel bettor than I liu* % for years." Here's the recipe that banishes fat and brings into blossom nil (lie nat ural attractiveness that every woman possesses. Every morning take one half tea spoonful of Kruselien Halts In a glass of hot water before breakfast. Bo sure and do thin'every morning for “lg» the little daily dose that taken off the fat,”—Don’t mins ■ morning. The Krum-hen habit mean# that every particle of poisonous waste matter and harmful adds and Rases are expelled from the system. At the same time the stoma, h, liver, kidneys and bowels are toned up and the pure, fresh blood containing Na ture's nix life-giving satis Is carried to every organ. Kin ml, nerve and fibre of Ine body and this Is followed by "that ICruschen feeling” of energetic health and activity that Is reflected In bright eyes, clear skin, cheerful vivacity and charming figure. If yen want to loA* fiit'wltlf speed get pn 85c bottle of Kruschen Salt* front any live druggist anywhere la America with the distinct under standing that yon must lie satisfied with results or money back. Lot* of Service “Hew do yon like my dress, Vomt Dad got It for aiy eighteenth bivttv day.” “Certainly worn well, hasn’t Hi"’' Til-Bits, Stomach OLIVER TROUBLES Ceated tongue, had breath, constipation, btti oujncrs, nausea. Indigestion, dimness, Insem ■ia result from acid stomach. Avoid serieus illness by taking August Ffcwer at once. Get at any good dragsist. Relieve# pnmpllv — sweetens stomach, livens liver, a Ids digestion, clears out poisons. Vou feci fine, eat anything, with AUGUST pLOWER Sioux City Ptg. Co., No. 23-1930. Coffins Discarded Every now and again some worthy Berli* citizen will buy a coffin and stow it away. At an auction there the other day, fourteen coffins were put up for gale. They, had been seized by the courtdj according to the auctioneer, from private citizens who could not or would not pay for them. » mm Flit is sold only Don t Sl T I black bant Here’6 the sure, quick, easy way to kill all mosquitoes indoors and keep ’em away outdoors! -3