FEELS LIKE A NEW WOMAN Am Lydia E Pinkham’s Vege. table Compound Dispelled Backache, Headaches and Dizziness. r*qaa Ofcia.—"1 would be nr, ~ r-»u*m if 1 f*~«i to nSLT* t*U>kW • Vejet* pound the I raise n deserve*. i« 1 faaw taken it II Ciffereet tisaea **»d it aiwaya re “"««* Ke when oth*-r Redicir.ee failed, and when I iwar a wafnan com P1*411 1 aiwaee rec \ / A I rv I ' win ter I wa* attacked *!“* aeveremar 6( organic weaar*eaa. 1 tad backache. pam, in mv hip* and ever rjr kidneys, headache. dizz-ne**. *** *> ««**. hmh* ached w*s I wa* always tired. I waa hardly a!4e to d* my housework I had taken L E. iV .har. • Vegetable Com pncnd on one other occasion. and it had h ped me eo 1 tuck it again and it has b~.*t me up. nstii now 1 fed like a new wonuBL You nave nsr hearty consent to aee my name aad testimonial is any way aad I hope it will benefit suffering * -men.**—Mr*. Oanta Team, 431 S. « ayne St. Piqu. Ohm. tt taw® who tie suffering from thoa* datn-ssasg ilia peculiar to their aex icwnid nut donht the ability of Lydia £. K:.» cam's Veprtal W Compound to re etof* thesr health. If yon want ape-rial advice write U> Lydia K. Pinkban Med b iae ( «. (raabdentul) Lynn. Ma**. 1 «»ur letter will tie opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict commence. The Wretchedness of Constipation Ci. - -ickiy be mrant by ClITFt'S LITTLE LIVES PILLS. Puriy a _ _ , —art c urMy and r- s*- y on ta* hr*lT~~ • che. 1 Dm rw and Indhpman. They do their duty «4 Ui nU. SMAiL DOSE. SMALL HUGE. (jrftniiDC exuac bur Signature Woe at A! Citraara-Rarji s» - -rat yean ago a tourist fell over the rock from a height of about threw : irad feet Bear Europe Point Gib "»-'ar He waa killed, of course The - tenant 3 charge of the guard rtK.-» however, .carried in hia guard - r* tor the gay that nothing un > _aJ had ee enrred * r tt * be waa "carpeted" before vt mayor, who asked for aa es ; -a&stiea. AelL Mr " replied tbe young o® c*r a Scotchman, "if the pair macule jc. ha twee h:St tt would hare beec a -«ry eitmordmary fact, but aa the ; -r logy wa* kflt- why. sir 1 thought : >u u ettrorfmary or ucusual." Tbe plan was accepted c ggeet Wiener True of AH. .at j believed to be the large* ".: her tree ta the world stacis la the -a.- ah terrttary of A era. or the trottier of Hol.vla !ta atom IS f. feet :* .» hcbee ta drrumference at tbe to-e Far 1» days every year this . gtvus fl pounds of rubber a _»* at _ ior rit pncea tlua brings ;a t a >«nr. or a fair intareat on a .* t> nf. to Ha owner* a family ' at*«a Sertngaeiro* Net*.eg pert of Calawitjr. .C-^g a giaaa of dear boaey la • ngbt band, father observed i» > aa .*y "It coal the little bees - • • u«nry tnp to dll this with •—hraa from the fleaers" Little 'i who had bare Uatratag cloee ~i aimed, with groat eamaatne**: 4* t p have been too bad “ r -iyem tad dropped The giaas*” S *y - How^lm^io+T HOlr? :*y- la * a fco? or a ***' body tea » M u> trll ttet yos tea* »• ngkt to %mr [timely hints about horses and mules | --. A Fine Type of Draft Horse. B> E S MII.I.ER ) A Uai is a great protection to a b >n»e * brain it hot weather They cat U bought at any store for 25 oecu S< re shoulders are caused by ill futlne collars and nothing else A man who will work a horse with * • re shoulder and make no attempt to < ure it or change the collar ought to t>. compelled to wear ill-fitting that would raise a new crop of blisters every week • f :h- horses are taken off dry feed, allowed to run to grass and work hard on hot days, look oat for colic ^ ark teams oughr to be allowed to run m the pasture at night. It is crue.tv to confine them In hot stalls The horse that sweats freely is in good condition I -ring heavy work in hot weather, horses ought to be watered between ■he regular resting periods It does not make much difference whether horse* are watered before or aver eat.ng It is largely a matter of hah.: and experiments show- that one •line ;s about as good as another. A horse that bolts bis food cannot have perfect digestion, any more than a man who eats in the same way. Five minutes vigorous work with a rough cloth on a horse's hide after a hard day's work, will do him a lot of good. A team that works in the fields all week should never be put on the road Sundays or holidays. A cool bran mash Saturday night is to a bcrse what mother’s pie is to a boy. « Mule colts are easy to raise and they are as good as money in the bank, because always salable at fair prices. Always use box stalls whenever practicable. A horse tied in a narrow stall is never quite comfortable and is in mere or less danger of being cast. A mule is no more prone to kick than a horse unless he is taught to do so by bad treatment. Horses very often lose their eye sight through dU6t and hayseed fall ing into their eyes from the loft above. If the horses must be kept in the barn during the hot weather, keep all the doors and windows w’ide open. GOOD SUGGESTIONS FOR THE SHEEPFOLD M stake of Turning Animals Out on Young Gpass and Stopping Grain Is Expensive. If you find a iamb apparently dead frets cold, souse him in a pail of water as hot as the hand can bear it. If he does not revive before the water becomes cool beat It again and be will likely come around. Wipe him dry. give him some hot milk and in an hour he will be as fit as ever. Lifting or dragging a sheep by its wool s ;ust as humane as dragging a child around by the hair of its head The wise shepherd will treat his ewes with the creosote solution for stomach worms before turning them out to pasture Sait Is medicine to a sheep, and it Is cheap medicine at that With spring lambs bringing from %- SO to Ji.iO :n the market*, who ran say there is no profit in the busi nee*? The mistake of turning sheep out on young grass and suddenly stopping tii* grain feed is nearly always very ex pen siva It is likely to set the sheep back several weeks. I: is a fact that sheep can be raised ,n the least expensive of foods and return a better profit for the little j rare is given them than any! other farm amine! Never keep an uDthrifty ewe on the place Fatten her as quickly as pos sible and get nd of her When breeding stock Is selling sway down low by discouraged flock master* that is the time tn buy a few good ewes If you have plenty of alfalfa and barley, with some sound turnips your young sheep will lay on fat amazingly *»#t Don’t need corn when you have these ratio na n0t (jiov the sheep to He abound In fence corner* or huddle In under brush The beat shade Is a shod on open ground where there Is no grass A Httle bit of shelter is fine for s^eep Free if »t be nothing more than * high board fence on the side trward the sunshine it will help a ’ot The sheep can snuggle up near to that and escape the direct rays of the run Be-ter than such a fence is a piece of *Todland *> hare a cluster of •••tie hemlock* in our pasture, up on ,id„ bin The sheep run up into that and «MI» not only the heat, but *3*0 the miserable flies that hurt them ao i. is a TJ*** ,aBC? w1,h *cme raer‘ ,„a. sheep can get enough drink by —CT*f. when the dew is on in the eariy morning Stop and think hos eery rery wat*r a sheeP “odd get that way Give them a good , ;iVcr a -toegi- to drink from pure-Bred Stock. if ran are determined to get th» JogX of your business you will « f«ej mongrel stock Nothing pays ^Twed or i. ~ wtLfactorj as th» Teach the P'B *» Eat rmcb the pig to eat at as eariy an possible, gradually Increase the ' ^La unrilnhout two months of age. i ITT.., as much butter or skim milk will take along with shat “ rK and weaning will not ^ThJtfd to either the pig or dam Make Rap'd Growth. _ _ln, .^joks should hare a ration i °r*L1u enable them to make rapid th* ** „ false economy to stint : S^h, either B«lity or BuanUty of t ***** ** mt*i 1 TOMATO CANNING IS QUITE PROFITABLE One Advantage Is That Industry Offers Employment to Young Folks During Vacation. 'Prepared by the Potted States Depart ment <.f Agriculture.) The canning of tomatoes has in re cent years grown to be an important commercial industry, according to the department of agriculture. In 1909 there were 12,800.000 cases of 12 cans each packed in the United States. This immense pack exceeded the combined aggregate of any three other vegetables. Only tomatoes used In commercial canning and not those used in home canning figures in this total U Is estimated that the area devoted to tomatoes in the home garden Is equal to or greater than that em ployed in their field culture. Of the quantity grown In the garden a con siderable surplus goes to waste and brings no return to the cultivator. To insure plenty of fruit for home use it is customary to set out about twice as many plants as are actually neces sary. In order that the canned product of the garden may find a ready market it must be put up in attractive form in containers suitable for commercial purposes, and should bear a trade mark which Is distinctive and which will tend to bold the trade for the product as it gains a reputation in the market. One advantage of the home canning of tomatoes in comparison with other employment open to young people in the country, is that it occurs during the vacation period. The large return In canned goods derived from a single acre makes the industry re munerative and. since the canning can be done during the vacation see son it can be carried on without inter- ! fering with school work. It is surpris ing how many tomatoes can be raised on an acre, and what lUtle expense is Involved in raising and preparing them for market. Weaning Pig*. Our experience is against weaning pigs other than to let nature take its j course; by this method we get better pigs, says a writer in an exchange. It is almost impossible to prevent them from receiving a check If weaned at seven or eight weeks old as some advise. You not only check the growth of the pig, but it seems great injury would result to the sow. j No one would take a calf from its mother, refrain from milking her. and then expect the cow to escape with out injury, and surely a sow must be something like a cow. Com as a Feeder. Corn is not cheap and the feeder 6houid make the most of it The way to do this is to feed a little tankage, oil meal or middlings with it Don’t feed cottonseed meal to hogs. The hog pars the highest price for corn i when he has seme protein feed along with it Double Cropping. Owners of small areas can greatly Increase returns by double cropping. It is especially desirable In town and suburban gardens. When properly planned and managed the crops do not Interfere with each other. Cull Surplus Cocks. Don’t let any surplus cocks eat up the profits. Keep enough for breed ing purposes and no more. If the others cannot be sold as breeding birds, get them into condition market them. ROAD * BUILDING EVOLUTION OF GOOD ROADS One of Greatest Factors in Campaigr Is Voluntary Work Being Oone, Especially in West. In the early days of our country emigration and settlement usually fol lowed the waterways, particularly the Merrimac. Connecticut, Hudson, Mo hawk. Delaware. Susquehanna. Poto mac and James—always at a great loss of time and doubling or even trebling of distance. As soon, however, as permanent roads began to be made distances were greatly shortened and the time required for a journey, and especially for a military operation, was wonderfully lessened. General Craddock's expedition against Fort Duquesne failed more from the ex “Devil's Sickle," on the Colorado Sprirgs-Canon City State Highway. haustiug necessity o? cutting its way through the primeval wilderness from Fort Cumberland to Turtle creek and tne difficulty of bringing up an ade quate support than from attacks upon it by the French forces and their In d.an allies. And when after Rraddock's tragic death, in the course of his disas trous retreat, the command devolved upon George Washington, that young Virginian officer was forced by the slow progress made over the rough, newly cut roads to pitch camp at Fort Necessity, in southwestern Pennsylva nia, the scene of his first and only sur render. It was undoubtedly this bitter ex perience that gave Washington an in sight into the need of the new country for improved roads, a subject which he discussed with vigor soon afterward in correspondence with General Forbes, who succeeded in taking Fort Du quesne only after cutting a shorter way from Carlisle through Bedford and across the Alleghany mountains. One of the greatest factors in the national campaign for better roads is the voluntary work being done, espe cially in the far west, Robert Bruce w rites in Leslie's. Of course the great est single example of this is the pros pective Lincoln highway front New York to San Francisco, which the au tomobile and allied industries have un dertaken to build and toward which over flTe million dollars have already been subscribed. In the territory west of the Mississippi riTer. which has no such sources of revenue to draw upon as the Eastern states, this voluntary effort shows itself in an increasing number of "good roads" days, when thousands of able-bodied men. fre quently headed by the governors of states, turn out and contribute the la bor that is just as neecssary as cash. Sometimes it accomplishes more be cause voluntary work is uniformly en thusiastic and contagious. A fine example of this voluntary ef fort is the building of a $50,000 sea level causeway along the Pacific coast between Ventura and Santa Barbara, Cal., shortening the Los Angeles-San Francisco route about eight miles and saving many steep, dangerous turns over the mountains through the Casl tas passes. The funds for this work were raised principally through the Automobile club of southern Califor nia and the causeway was constructed for use by motorists pending the com pletion of a permanent sea level route by the state. ROADS ARE MADE TOO WIDE? Western Roadways Are From Fifty to Sixty Feet in Width—Much of Space Grown to Weeds. It is argued that as a general thing and particularly in the West, the roads of the United States are too wide. The West and Germany are compared in this respect. It is point ed out that while in Germany, where the traffic is enormous, the highways are but 20 and 21 feet, in the West where the traffic is comparatively light and land worth $100 an acre, the roadways are from fifty to sixty feet In width, three-fourths of which grows up in weeds and grass. It can hardly be said, however, that the roads are too wide in the eastern states. Mountain travelers, especial ly, will smile at the idea of wide roads in reading of the subject having many a time and oft met face to face other travelers far from the "wide place." with the result that their re- ] hides had to be taken apart and car ride by piecemeal or stood up at a dizzy angle against the cliff while the other hugged the perilous edge of a fathomless ravine. Keep Boys on the Farm. To keep the boy on the farm it will be necessary to make the country forces as effective and inspiring as the dty forces. The longest step towards accomplishing this result is to have good highways In the country. Delay to Farm Journals. If you miss a few copies of your favorite farm journal because the mail carrier could not get to your house on account of the bad condition of your roads, you know the answer. Get busy this year. “I Spend^^^L My Hard earned ^ Nickels for 1 WRIGLEYSfr. f//V/AV^^ I get the most pleasure for the longest You can*t get a bigger buy for a nickel. It is as delicious as economical—as beneficial as delicious—as popular with your family as with you. ^B It s as clean as it’s fresh. It’s always clean and jB always fresh because the new’ air-tight, dust-proof ^B seal keeps it so. Every sealed ^B w package is personal to you. ^B Purify your breath, preserve your teeth, harden your gums and keep your digestion good with this mouth-cleansing pastime. Chew it after every meal Be SURE it’s WRIGLEY’S Knew What He Meant. The family doctor was paying a semi-social, semi-official call. Before taking his departure he lingered to , discuss with the mother of his small patient local health conditions. "We’re not so badly off after all,” j he concluded "For one thing, there are only two uncontrolled, unmitigated smoke nuisances in the whole town.” “I know,” piped up small Margaret from her sofa. “You mean papa and Uncle Jim!” Its State. “That article on electric menus is all mixed up.” ”Yes, it does look like current ’pi.’ ” Kill the Flies Nsw and Prevent fisease A DAISY FLY KILLER will do lt Kllls thousands. Last* all season. All dealer* or six sent express paid for $1. H. SOMERS. 150 De Kalb Are . Brooklyn. N. Y. Adv. Awful. Tommy—Why do ducks dive? Harp—Guess they must want to liquidate their bills. Be happy. Use Red Cross Ball Blue; much better than liquid blue Delights the laundress All grocers. Adv. Many a girl catches the man she wants by pretending to desire some man she doesn’t want Putnam Fadeless Dyes guarantee I satisfaction. Adv. Some people’s specialty is pouring ice water on enthusiasm. 1 FARMER’S WIVES] will receive Absolutely Free of Charge a very convenient and useful Kitchen Article while the supply lasts. We simply ask you to demonstrate the use of it to your husband. Mail ns a postal request for this to day as the supply is limited and will soon be ♦»!«»» Then watch this space for our offer next month. Address: 151 L. S. Ex., So. Omaha ■— REDWOOD fSS?S*° TANKS ! r-n L r-.— LAST A UFET1K— I cjutt BU*T ca bot—«o abvt a we manufacture the celebrated Cali fornia Redwood tanka. They neither shrink nor swell and cannot rot. Our tanka are held in perfect shape by a patented appliatew. not found in any other tank made. Redwood tanks i have been known to stand C8 years without decay. Cost no more than others. Send for price list and men tion size of tank wanted. » ATLAS TkHK HFG. CO. 20ft W. O.W.BMf., Oasts I I DR. P1KRCETS 1 Golden Medical Discovery 1 £££?“ I WORMS. "Wormy**, that*, what*, the matter of ’em. Stomach »»« in testinal worms. Nearly as bad as distemper. Cost yon too much to feed ’em. look bad—are bad. Don't physic ’em to Spohn's Cure Will remove the worms, improve tone'em np all roan" ‘ "-—' “ Pall directions with SPOHN MEDICAL CO, SPECIAL TO WOMEN The most economical, cleansing and germicidal of all antiseptics la A soluble Antiseptic Powder to be dissolved in water as needed. As a medicinal antiseptic for douches in treating catarrh, inflammation or ulceration of note, throat, and that caused by feminize ills it has no equal. For ten years the Lydia E. Plnkham Medicine Co. has recommended Pax tin a in their private correspondence with women, which proves its superiority. Women who have been cured say It is ‘‘worth its weight in gold." At druggists. 50c. large box, or by mail. The Paxton Toiler Co, Boston, Mass. -PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM A tot let preparation of merit Beil# to eradlcmto dandruff. Foe Raetorinr Color and leautrtoCrerarFeded Hair. B»c.ap