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ADANDERINE" sps Hair Coming Out: Doubles its Beauty. II E A few cents buys "Danderine." dfer an application of "Danderine" t ym can not find a fallen hair or any i dldruiff, besides every hair shows new f is, vigor, brightness, more color and 1 sickness.-Adv. A guest may be as glad to go as the e bmrt is to have him. ortant to all Women Readers of this Paper l Thousands upon thousands of women lave kidney or bladder trouble and never smpect it. Women's complaints often prove to be asthiag else but kidney trouble, or the I rmsi of kidney or bladder disease. If the kidneys are not in a healthy eon lm, they may ecuse the other orgmas to beame diseased. FYe may suffer pain in the back, head. ali and loss of ambition. ?ar health makes you nervon. irrita IM ad may be despondent; it makes any Bl huMndreds of women claim that Dr. Who'sa ýp-Root, by restoring bel to the idneys, proved to be just re ady needed to overcome such Ma nd for a sample bottle to see wsat SmwauRoot, the great kidney, wba and bladder medicine, will do for tha.s Dy enalosing tea cents to Dr. KMA C.., Binghamton, N. Y., you me s.ceivemple sie bottle by Parcel ]P l Tea Y an erohse medium and lwmsi'eboattles at all drug stores.-Adv. WbM.tWo wenes e ll in love with e sia e ian nEu y cut each other by "Iname ron rs. ...... ASPIRIN INTRODUCED BY "BAYER" IN 1900 lslt w per ae Nayers on the tabdtp, , temn ye need snev worry. Mi yen want the true, world-famous Anqkik, as prescribed by physicians SW .ier eighteen years, you must ask fr Byer Tablets of Aspirin." he LBayer Cross" Is stamped on cau tablet and appears on each pack La i.r your protection against mi L each pclkage of "Bayer Tablets of A.ihri" are safe and proper diree tem gr Colds, Headache, Neuralgia. Z'lbeate, Efarache, Rheumattss, s s, Neuritis, and for Pain in leldeta boxes containing 12 tablets O r-t a few cents. Druggists also ea b amer 'Bayer" packages. Aspirin s i. trace mark of Bayer Manufac te of l eaeetlesldester of Salic lmeld -Ad; Ms Prominent Cbarac+istl Te am st have seen some trait In -e to a~ e," said Mr. MLeekton, "or p ws wedgn't have married me." "I (1 " replied his wife; "your sb ine nerve In wanting to be my hus ,"--Pearen'u Weekly. ag e tea ~~- - I lesi* * ,l 4ihiPlr Wch-SL r i.;-~i; ~ rirbi ~ 8·'3·c ·/ s~ic~ - -·6ms K :rs~eti RABBIT RAISING IS GOOD SCHEME f American People Beginning to Realize That Meat Is Su perior for Home Table. LITTLE CAPITAL IS NEEDED Back-Yard Enterprise Turns Waste Materials and Spare Time Into Food-Selection of Breed Is Matter of Taste. :Prepared by the United States Depart ment of Agriculture.) R iabbits have always been an impor tant source of ment in Eutroe, but in the United States until recently r few of them were eaten except during I the winter hunting saason. Condi tions resulting from the great war have awakened many Americans to the economic value of rabbits and more and more people each year are raising sufficient in their back yards to supply the family table. The flesh of the young domesticated rabbits is vastly I superior in fiber and flavor to that of ,the wild rabbits. It closely resembles I the white meat of chicken. A prolific 10-pound doe can easily raise in a year 20 young, which at 5 months will produce not less than 50 pounds of delicious meat. By means of compound hutches all this can be Rpbbits Are Easy to Handle. done on an area 4 by 6 feet. Half an hour of time a day, and some hay, roadside weeds, and refuse from orch ards, garden, and kitchen, supplement ed by a small quantity of grain, cover ) the cost of production. Raising rab bit meat for home consumption is a 6 proposition for turning to account time. space. and materials which are ordinarily wasted. Cost of Rabbit Raising. The cost of starting a rabbitry de s pends on its size and on the price of k material. One can buy two good does and a buck, of breeding age--enoug R to supply an average family with all the rabbit meat it would care to use -for anywhere from $1.50 to $10 each, or for a total of from $4.50 to $30. B Hutches may vary in cost from a few cents each, the price of an empty 4 dry-goods box. to several dollars, if 6 expended for dressed lumber to be put Q together by a carpenter. On a farm where odds and ends of lumber and poultry netting usually are available, and where hay, grain, and milk are 1 produced in abundanc , .the money cost of starting and tearrying on a i small, rabbitry is negligible. In any case the initial cost need not be great. The daily cost when all feed is pur chased is not usually above 1 cent for . a 10 or 12 pound rabbit, a recent bul r letin on rabbit raising, published by the bureau of biological survey of the. !United States department of agricul ' tare, states. Selecting a breed is a matter of taste, although it may be influenced more or less by the market that is to be sljplled. For example, the family table would demand smaller animals than would the trade of a restaurant or hotel. It is best to begin with only Sone breed and to concmntrate on derel JppngA tht into tock that may be a sgarce of pride and profit. u oq buck and two or three does are e-uagh to start ith. Young animals ar braelag age ace better than older omse. which will soon be eats their 0.* i6 * ~ - . a6: i %;.1: portion of some kind of greens daily is the steady diet used in most rab bitries. Crushed barley may be sub stituted for oats; clover or alfalfa may be used with green oats or timothy hay; and the greens may con sist of carrots, rutabagas, prunings from apple and cherry tress, and plan tain, docle burdock, dandelion, caull flower, lettuce, or lawn clippings. Lawn clippings or other green grass should be clean and not fed when moldy or fermented. Dandelion tops and roots not only have a food value, but are useful on occasion because of their medjcinal properties. A variety of feed is essential. ADVISABLE TO PRUNE AND STAKE TOMATOES Question Is Asked Every Year By Many Gardeners. Advantages Are That Larger Number of Plants Can Be Set on Given Area-Quality of Fruit Is Usually Much Better. Does it pay to prune tomato vines to a single "stem and tie them to stakes or to a trellis? This question is asked every year by thousands of home gardeners. It does pay, accord ing to United States department of agriculture specialists, especially if the space for garden purposes is limited, and it is desired to make the best use of it. Tomato plants, if left to themselves, have a habit of spread ing all over the garden and of produc ing their fruit right on the ground, where it becomes covered with dirt every time there is a rain. Advantages of pruning and staking tomatoes are that a larger number of plants can be set on a given area than by the ordinary method; the fruit will ripen a little earlier on the plants that are pruned and staked; and the fruit is held off the ground, is clean, and easy to gather. While the indivldeln plants do not produce so large a quantity of fruit as when they are allowed to spread upon the ground, at least three times as many plants can be set on a given area, thereby actually increasing the quantity of tomatoes produced. The f quality of the fruit is usually better on the plants that are pruned sad tied to stakes. Small round poles about four feet r in length, sharpened at one end, make the most desirable tomato stakes for a the home garden. The'best proof that t staking tomatoes pays is found In the e fact that the best home gardeners fol low the practice. LIME REQUIREMENTS OF SOIL s As General Rule Application of Small t Quantity Will Be Beneficial II Ashes Help Some. There is no certain means by which the average gardener can determine the lime requirements of his soil. As y a general rule, however, the applica Stion of 1 small quantity of lime will be It beneficiaL This. should be at the rate 0 of from one-half bushel to one bushel d of air-slaked lime to a square rod of ground. The lime should be applied e after the land has beeen plowed or y spaded and while it is being raked a and fitted for planting. y It should always be borne in mind I that no lime should be put on the land that is to be planted to Irish potatoes r nor should the lime be applied at the I- same time as commercial fertilizers or y poultry manure, as it has'the faculty e- of liberating the nitrogen contained " in the fertilizer and causing it to be lost'In the air. I Unlenched wood ashes contain some d lime and considerable potash, but o should not be applied at the same time Y as the lime. Coal ashes are beneficial is as a means of lightening heavy soils. It However, theyhave very -little fertil y izer value, the United States depart - ment of agriculture says. GOOD FARMSTEAD PLANTINGS Trees Are Used for Windbreaks and Ir Shade, Whil Shrubs Are Needed to Cover Unightly Spots. Suitable plantings are necessary to unite the.parts of a farmstead into a pleasing, homelike whole, says the United States department of agricul tuge. Trees are used for windbreaks, as frames for the buildings or a back iroid for them, and to give shade. Shahs are needed in abundance to hide partially the foundation lines of al~ ina~gs, support their corners, give ;asonu for turns in drives or walks, ad ~t een unsightly objeets. Na e tre es- and shrubs and theose known 9W trial t thrive is the locality are as best o we-. UgpWOgVeflW OF DAIRY HERD 'thssent FwS vtblre Owner Re a- *mmdb *umr w 00a DADDTYY NING lFAlkiTAlff BILLY BUGLER STORY. "I am so glad that the boys and girls like me." said Billy Bugler, "and I have heard that jL good number did Well, I ami not conceited about it, for my missy tells me it is wrong to l,. conceited. but it does make me happ3 and she says that that is all right." "Sl1t- lpraiso: me up herself and tell, mne I'ml a love of a dogl and all sort of things like that. HIow my little doe heart does go pitter-patter with joy when she tells me that. "You know that I'm a Boston Bull with a white head ann white chest and white paws. "I must tell you of the pillow that was mnade for nme. "My missy was having some mat tre"se(s and some pillows fixed for the beds in the house. And she thought it would be nice for ine to have a now pillow. "So she ordered one to be made along with the mattresses and the pil lows for the house. "That was a nice way to treat a little riog. wasn't it? And how I love my pillow. "It's just a nice square soft pillow and I can curl up and get on it ant lie down so 'softly and'so snugly, and then I can dream of my missy and my master and their kind words and their low voices. "I love low voices, don't you? My missy has a very low voice and so has my master.. I do hate people who're always saying at the top of their voices: "'Lie down. sir.' "And 'Beg. sir.' "I understand just as well when I am spoken to softly, and I fancy other dogs would too if they were taught that way and didn't hear people speak ing so loudly. "Sometimes they think people are only speaking to them when they do speak in loud tones and when they say things crossly. "But that is different from my missy and my master. "Well. my missy took me for a trip with her to the seashore. I live near a great big river but there is no sea near my home. The sea got tired. I believe, before it got as far as where we live. Not that we live way, way off, but it is fairly far from the sea. and as the sea seems strong enough A Rest. at the seashore I tftink it must have thought the walk 'way back where my home is was even too much for it. "It must be a very long walk. My missy and I take long walks. But we certainly didn't walk from our home to the seashore. No;' we took a train. "We had a beautiful time therer though some of the time I had to wen a muzzle and that is a fearfully hard thing to do in the summer. Every dog perspires through his mouth. That isn't a very pretty thing to say, but it is the truth. And we pant with our mouths when it Is hot. So that a muzzle for a dog in the summer time is a horrible thing-especially when small places think they're needed for the dogs of the place. "In a city where there is such a ter rific heat and where dogs can't get under trees and lie in the grass it is different. But not so in the country. "However, I didn't have to wear my muzzle very often, I am thankful to say. "I utled to go swimming with my missy. She would go into the water and then she would whistle for me and I would jump along over the waves until it was beyond my depth, and then I would swim out to her. "She would take me nla her arms and give me a rest when I reached her, and then I would swim back home. "Sometimes the water was chilly, and after I had been In once I would le on the beach, and putting my head on one side I would beg off from going In a second time. "But I did enjoy my swims, and the waves, when they were little ones, were lots of fun. There was just enough then for me, but when It was very rough my missy only had "me paddle about ond get my little feet with their white .oesm wet! My white paws, I mean:! ' "And whan we were atthe seashore we took msy pi9 eag me. that was Wa 4ig tal r m. I to ...n it and hav a beui t--tea. it . - ad l to,. , It . _i * -il. r ii Ebumeý-.a.:' ýj :ýass4;,: "Hurry, Baby Has the Colic" SDon't take dangerous chances by letting baby fret, cry and suffer-use the safest proven remedy for colicky or teething babies. MRS.WI NSLOW'S SYRUP The Infants' and Childaen's Reclator It quickly aids baby's stromach to digest food as it should and keeps the bowels open, brings surprisingly quick relief from colic. diarrhoea. constipation. Satulency and other similar troubles. LMadleof purely vegetable in.rediens, guaranteed to contain no narcotics. oiates, alcohol nor anything harmful. This i complete, open published formula appears on every labek Serns Soadum Grate Oil d Ania Carawa lycerine Rhhabau Sodum Bicuarboat Fennel Conadser Supsa Syr At All Drassits te ANCI.O-ANERICAN DRUG CO.. 215-217 Feis. Street. New Taik GsaealSell Asea Harold F. Rtitdie & Co.. In. r't Write for the booklet "Our Mrs. D. S. Hamilton of Milner, Wives and Daughters." Full of Ga., Route 1, writes: "It gives information every women should me pleasure to testify to the have; including voluntary testi- benefit whiehboth my daughter and myself have derived from mony and advice from women in the use of STELLA VITAE. all walks of life who know by For some time the doctors of experience what Stella Vitae eor neighborhood had treated will do for women. my daughter rithout muccess. do for women. One bottle of STELIA VITAE Stells Vitae is the famous pre- inthreewees' timecompletely scription of an old family phy- cured her. My own health has sician, successfully used in a been restored by STELLA long, life-time practice, Sold ITAE; and no doctor has been called upon to treat any mem under agreement that if the first ber of my family sinceIbegan bottle fails to benefit money will using Dr. Thacher's Berne be refunded. Ask your druggist. dim." THACHER MEDICIE CO., Chaasea. term.. U. S.A. METHOD IN THAT MADNESS Why Dad Could Not Bring Himself to Make Serious Objections to Ger ald's Smoking. "Henry !" Mrs. Brown's voice was stern. Mr. Brown recognized the signs of a com Ing storm, so he prepared to listen. "I saw Gerald-our boy-smoking a pipe today-actually, a dirty, smelly pipe !" the poor woman ended with a sob. "Well. what can we do?"' exclaimed her husband: "The boy's seventeen, and has two dollars a week pocket money. I don't see-" "You mean to say that you will al low him to smoke? Why, it's sheer madness!" Henry nodded. Then, after wit nessing the unique spectacle of his wife speechless for once, he strolled off into the garden, where he came across Gerald in a corner with the pipe going full blast. "Hello, my boy!" he cried. "This is something new, isn't it? Er-by the way, I've left my pouch in the house. Can you give me a fill?" Then he, as he walked away put fing happily, murmured: '"It may be madness, but there's method in it. I can see Gerald's pouch being quite a money saver to poor old dad."-Rehoboth Sunday Herald. Too Short. "How did you enjoy the sermon?" "Too short." "That so? I never heard anyone complain that a sermon was too brief before." "Well, you see, it was this way: Id hardly dropped asleep before the thing was over." Nowadays. Willis-"A satisfied customer is a store's best advertisement." Gillis I "Old stuff! A good-looking girl elerk Is."-Judge. for your breakfIst (mpeNuite A eadyto-eati1odthat cot bliWe andisfill of the mid nonRislualt of wheat amd.mialted bar1ly. At~to~rW!~WW!UI I a ir- C , y-_,i -y " BUILT MANY CENTURIES AGO Florida's Shell Mounds Believed to Date Back to Before Beginning of Christian Era. Florida's shell mounds, which are found in different portions of the \ state, are unquestionably of human construction, and were probably built by some race of people who inhabited the country about the beginning of the Christian era. These mounds were found overgrown with herbage and forest as long ago as when the first red man set foot in Florida, and the fact that the deposit of earth above them was sufficient to give place to the root of trees proved their great age. There have been found in all these mounds pieces of pottery imbedded in the shell conglomerate, as well as ar ticles made of shell and bone, rude stone implements and many bones of fish and animals, such as deer. terra pin, rabbits, alligators and others. There are in the entire state :,out forty mounds, the most impor : a of which are those of King Phillip's town, near the outlet of Lake Harney, which are 4.50 feet long, from 100 to 150 feet broad, and with an average height of eight feet. Wanted: A Ticket Seller. "I see you advertise for a ticket seller and ask that ladies weighing more than 200 pounds kindly do not apply." "Yes." "Lsn't that discrimination?" "No; merely common sense. Any lady shaping up larger than that could not get into my glass chge."-Film Fun. As She Saw the Elephant. Little Catherine. aged four, saw am elephant at a circus for the first time. Looking at it, she exclaimed: "Oh. mamma, look at the fat horse with a tall near his eyes."