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NMMMMM . rarm lopicsj INSECTS ON CUCUMBER VINES. If the cucumber vistea look dry ruia yellow and the blossoms are dropping off pepper them copiously with red pepper, especially the under side3 of the leaves, and the blight will be stopped. It is caused by a small elu sive insect which, however, the red pepper seems to find and destroy, W1"" REEDING HOGS. One farmer, who raises about a who, in ons akes a on al onths head n corn at an ounds. in acre by the [t as by to pro re few of soil fee the eturns. has a kge and th the Jiy.be plans lems. >f ncx to the them. Isirable is not Jock, it farm means er ob ;he de' but on eeders ri that them ked to same areas. I under com ,:<;and tof the Breed* Its em-' com . suc tey get Ihole in janine, 'place 5rink it any. of d die, e ones The upset ?ethod for relling jdecay ?nsiv?, would The lye good |e with, feels .there limst!/ scar ce.-Farmers' Guide. { FAT HORSES THE DEMAND. 1 The day of the thin-fleshed hor3e Is passed. Strange, yet true, high priced feeds have brought an in creased demand (or higher condini tioned animals of all kinds. The poor, old cow is not much In demand, fresh beef and fat beef la what the beef eater asks for regardless ot price, The canned beef 1? not the thing with' the common people or the uncommon. The same ia ..true with mutton and pork eatorg; everybody wants high conditioned, fleshy animals. The poor old horse and thin young horse ls discriminated against in the market until the horse dealer has be come a horse conditioner, or more properly speaking, there has been cre ated through this demand for flesh a new middle man wi'iose business is buying up the out-ol!-condltion horse and putting him in the feed lot,: where a bunch of his kind are con gregated to be fed out, fattened like a lot of steers -for the fat market, ex cept the fat horse goes to the city horse market to be sold and put into team work on the streets. The heavy draft horse made fat is I In demand, and if in matched teaing brings the top prices in the markst. Fine, stylish, big horses, of course, mean much more than merely fat horses, but this excellent quality of hors8 to sell for the highest price must be in high flesh. A fat horse always looks good, especially to the man who knows little or nothing, about a horse, no "matter what his imperfections may be. This is where the old saying originated, no doubt,, "A high condition of flesh covers up1 many defects." It is now customary among profes sional horse raisers and dealers to grow and put flesh on tho colt just as rapidly as he can stand it. The soon er he attains horse size the sooner he is marketable and the more money hie makes his producer. The stock raiser of to-day of any kind of ani mal seeks early maturity, and the faster and fatter the animal grows j and develops the better for the profit j Bide of the account.-Twentieth Cen? tury Farmer. ; Occasionally. End-seat hogs, like other animals, vary in size and huskiness; hence lt happens that a smaller one will occa sionally move ov^r.-Iudianapolit News. QuiteSo. "How can I show my love?" "What do you mean?" "Words are inadequate." "I see. Arid kisses are unsanitary It's a tough world." CROCHET DOYLIES. When, crocheting an edge on round luncheon doylies simply turn the hem on the wrong side and baste the hem. Then place a large needle in the ma chine, leaving it unthreaded. Follow the hem carefully around and you will have a number of holes of suffi cient size to insart the crochet needle and of equal distance apart. Crochet the edge and when done pull out bast ings and hem will hold and still have a neat finish not obtained by hand hemming.-New York World. AN EMERGENCY SHELF. My pet emergency dish for lun cheon, dinner or supper is based on a can of chicken. If for luncheon it is creamed and served on toast. For dinner it appears as chicken pot pie with cream gravy.' For supper, what could be better than a chicken y'?lad when mayonnaise is always ready. In connection with th's, may I suggest to every, housekeeper an emergency shelf, on which should be found can3 of soup, salmon, a jar of salad dress ing; most anything that will -keep. Such a.. shelf robs unexpected com pany of half its terrors.-Boston Post. A DISCARDED WAIST MADE NEW. I had a favorite lingerie Waist, trimmed in an elaborate fashion with val. insertion, which had broken apart and fallen away from the fab ric, rendering an otherwise good waist an article for the rag bag. Ona day I conceived this plan for renovat ing It, which I carried out with flat tering success: After carefully meas uring the insertion on waist I got | the required length of new, but bought it a trifle wider. This I bast ed over the old as though basting over a pattern showing where to ap- j piy same. I then stitched both edges of new insertion to waist and cut the j old from beneath lt, turning back and finishing the raw edges in the usual | way. I now have a practically new waist, "a thing of beauty," and, if not "a joy forever*" then with a new lease of life.-Boston Post. ABOUT OLIVE OIL. In this country there seems to ex ist an unconquerable dislike for oil in all Its uses and states. As a matt.r of fact, it Is efficacious ? as a beautifier and h?alth-builder. It is an excellent fattener, and if one can acquire the habit of taking a j tablespoonful after each meal it ;.s an aid to the digestion, complexion and general health. After every bath anemic children should be rubbed with olive oil to ! strengthen them. i Hot olive oil will relieve the lame- ? ness in the feet which is caused by long standing. It is also excellent for a skin which has been made hard and dry by ex posure to the weathe: A little oil rubbed Into the-s&Irr atv nI^h^jnj^e44^3Qft.^^ .Ancient-.-Egyptian ,^??r?T*^"?-|^*lts J va*fre~and' usj^dTtt almost a?to'?ither^ as iin uagenty y , Aa an Idjuntt ih cooking it te in valuable The Italians .>use! it for fry ing, and the French chefs, who are noted for "their sauces, flavor every-, thing with it. Salads would be almost- tasteless without it. "."he objection to it is that In this country the pure quality of oil is hard to obtaiu. If it is bought whole sale of a reliable dealer it is nearly sure to be reliable, and ls lnvaluabla in ::he household.-New York Press. Cream Biscuit-Mix two teaspoons of baking powder with three cups of flour and one-half teaspoon of salt, add "butter the size of an egg and work it well into tho flour, add suffi cient cream to make a soft dough, roll one-half inch thick, cut out and bake in a hot oven, Mocha Gem Pudding-Three-quar ters cup brown sugar, tablespoonful butter, cream together; one-half cup milk, one-half cup coffee, one table, spoon cocoa, one dessert spoonful of cornstarch, two teaspoons baking powder, little salt, made as stiff as molasses gingerbread, baked In pans. Egg sauce for pudding; One egg well beaten, one cup sugar, one-half cup water; flavor with vanilla, Baking Powder Biscuit-Two cups ] of flour, two teaspoons of baking) .powder, one-half cup 'of lard, one half teaspoon of salt; sift the flour, j salt and baking powder together, then.rub in the lard with the tips of. the fingers, or cut in with a knife; . add milk or cold water to make a stiff dough; turn on a well floured board, roll very lightly with the roll ing pin; bake fifteen or twenty min-| utes. Uncooked Fruit Cake-Take equal parts, by weight, of nuts (English walnuts, Brazil nuts cr a mixture), dates and figs and put them, through your food chopper; grease a bowl with butter, then press the mixture J down hard in the bowl and let stand over night or several hours; then turn out on a plate and slice with a j knife like cake. Yon will have a der licious fruit cake without trouble of baking. You can substitute' raisins instead of figs, or you can add cocoa* nut IX you like lt. Prohibition States. The following eight State? are now under the prohibition law, which pre vents the sale of liquor: Alabama, Georgia, Kansas, Maine, Mississippi, North Carolina, North Dakota and Oklahoma. Changing Times For a "Juggernaut." As sequel to the Jaggan Nath Car Festival at Mahesh, In which one man was killed and several injured, Po lice Inspector of Serampur has been suspended.-Lahore Tribune. _^ ,. NEW TERRORS. Grandma seems uncommon nervpuu * As she looks the family o'er; Now and then says, '"Saints preserve us? 'Twa'n't like this in days of yore. " Now and thea some one by rocking Boats left mournful tales to tell ; . Or a man whose fate was shocking Swam not wisely, but too well. "But to-day I'm apprehensive Of disaster;! worse, I ween; We are taking trips extensive On the wing3 ot gasolene. And they'll merely call me silly When my voice is heard afar: 'Do not rock the airship, Willie!' 'John, atop racing with that star!' " -Washington Star. ROUGH ON RATS. "Yes, the dye In her false hair caused her tc have blood poisoning." "Sick from rat poisoning, eh?"-^ Houston Post. PARTIAL TO ANIMALS. Church-"Is she fond of animals?" Gotham-"Oh, yes; she married a Wall Street bear."-Yonkers States? man. VERY CHILLING. "What is hauteur?" "That's what some salesladies dis play when you ask to see something cheaper."-PhiladelphiaEvenlng Bul letin. REFORMED SPELLING. . Bacon-"Are you doing anything to help along reformed spelling?" Ingbert-"Sure; I've just dis charged my typewriter." - Yonkers Statesman. " TOO BAD. "Where's jour mistress* maid?" "Upstairs, sir, arranging madame's hair." "And madame? Is she with her?" i-Lippincott's. PRACTICAL DEVICE. "Why don't you mend that large hole in your umbrella?" "I keep it to put my hand through to see iC it is" still raining."-Meggen dorfer Blaettsr. WHERE DENIALS END. "What is the proper time to an uounce the engagement?" "Depends on how fashionable you are. Some dony it right up to the al tar."-Kansas City Journal. FOR BUSY PEOPLE., "In the old country, when I was boy, we had a village letter writer." "That's an innovation that ought to-*w?&_well around a summer ho t( _ ' VUfU--lers-?topr -- i don't want to'go any higher." Jack-"But 3'ou won't be able to Bay you've been to the top." Vera-"Oh, yes, I shall."-Path finder. A FATAL OPENING. "Did you advise your daughter to learn the use of money?" "Yes; and it was a foolish move. She immediately demanded some to practice with."-Louisville Courier Journal. FORTHCOMING CLASSICS. "He's starting out in the literary field very confidently." "Yes; he expects to make 'em elon gate that five-foot shelf by at least eighteen inches."-Louisville Cour ier-Journal. FORESHORTENING. Magistrate-"Was his motor going so very fast?" Cop-"Your Honor, lt was going so fast that '.he bulld?og on the seat beside him looked like a dachshund." -Kansas City Journal. ; ;?ALWAYS HAS BEEN. "It's hard to see a future president In a village yap with cowhide boots and highwater pants." "Think- sc? Seems to me that's Just as pron Ising material as a city dude with sunset socks and a clam shell cap."--Louisville Courier-Jour, nal, SrC SEMPER. "You are all the world to me," said the man who had been twice di vorced." "Yes," replied the pretty grass widow, "an! if I married you it wouldn't be long before you would be looking around for new worlds to conquer."-Chicago Record-Herald. THE MODERN WAY. The Whistling Girl and the Crow ing Hen looked at each other and burst out laighing. "We'll show 'em!" they exclaimed RS with one voice,and then, with their heads in the air, they marched in past any number of girls who couldn't whistle and hens which couldn't eTow and signed for the vaudeville circuit at $1000 a week.-Puck, Tho Helpful Bellboy. For four consecutive nights the ho. tel man had watched his fair, timid guest fill bur pitcher at the water cooler. "Madam," he said on the fifth night, "If you would ring this would be done for you." "But where is my bell?" asked the lady. "The bell is beside your bed," re plied the proprietor. "That tho bell!" she exclaimed. "Why, tho boy told me that was the fire alarm, and that I wasn't to touch it on any account."-Success Maga zine. Looking at this photograph one r an Invisible "jump" and endeavored I of the imagination. The rider, it may amateur who is well known at M. J' holds tho record for the jump withoi; Arabian from Tarbes, and is a six-year A Ladder Extension Log. ' BY I. O. BAVLLT. A painter cr any other mechanic is sometimes called upon to paint or re pair work which is very unhandy to reach. Perhaps a ladder is to be supported, in some manner upon' a slanting roof of a shed, or other build up W tu auppurx-a uauuci ou M ' . th -wing Roof. ing. Such a case happened very re cently, when the ' following scheme was adopted by a mechanic with suc cess: A ladder, A, was supported from the peak of the shed roof by means of j a platp, B, bent in the shape of a, hook. Two painter's hooks would do ' THE AGE MARKET D, Scroll-Saw Guide. KY W. ANO K. I'AUKHl It>T. The object of thc* device hore illus trated is; to enable one tn obtain a true edge with a scroll-saw. On tho saw plate is clamped a semi circular Ruido, by means of two thumbscrews. Thc guide plate should Scroll-Saw Guide. be raised from the saw plate about one-eighth of an inch by running sev eral washers on the' screws between the two plates, so that th? article to be cut .may be slid under the guide, j as is hereafter explained. Two slots ? INVISIBLE FEN?E, night well ask whether the horse saw to take lt, making literally a stretch bc noted, is A: ile. Blanche Allarty, an [olicr's private circus in Paris. She Lt obstacles. * The horse is an Anglo -oid.-The Sketch. ; just as well. The plate, B, was about eight or ten inches wide and three feet six inches long before being bent. The grip on the root peak should not be less than six or eight inches. The second or working ladder, C, was sup ported on the first ladder, A, by an extension leg, D, made ot four by three timber of tough quality. The ioct of this leg, D, was shaped as shown in detail to fit against the rounds of the ladder on the roof. A plate, E, furnished with a number of holes for a couple of U bolts, F, was screwed down to" the leg, D. The holes were staggered, and spaced two and one-half inches apart on each side, allowing adjustment of one and one-fourth inch each way, to accom modate different pitch of roofs. The distance apart of each group of holes in the plate, E, should equal the dis tance apart of rounds of the ladder, usually one foot, so that the rounds of the ladder will bear on the U An innovation in railway train lighting has been adopted by the Western Maryland Railroad, which taps the West Virginia gas fields. Two of its best trains between Cum berland and Baltimore are being equipped with storage tanks for nat ural gas.. If tho experiment proves a success the road plans to use only natural gas In all its. trains. OP Aiif. \Y IN 1920. -From Ally Sloper. about three inches long should be made In the guide to receive the screws and permit adjustment of the plate. A strip of one-fourth-inch walnut about two feet long and one inch wide is procured and a quarter ireh slot is .cut in T?\cxtending nearly its entire length. A thumbscrew is fitted to run in this groove and engages a block which is adapten to slide along the under side of the strto. At one end of the strip a permanent block ls fastened. To make a straight cut in a "board at any prescribed angle with one ol ita edges the walnut fatrip ls fitted to it parallel to the line of the desired cut and so that the two opposite ex tremities of the board are clamped between tho permanent block and the adjustable block. The guide plate is then clamped in position, its edge parallel to the plane of the saw, at such a distance that when the strip is placed against the edge of the guide, thc saw will exactly coincide with the line to be sawed.-Scientific American. New Yofk City.-The blouse that ls closed at the left of the front is one of thc very newest and latest. This one Includes that feature, and also sleeves that are made with Inset fluffs that are in the very latest style. In the illustration the material is silk serge, and the Duffs arc of chiffon cloth in matching color, the undcr sleeves are made of lace, and the trimming ls handing. The puffs of the sleeves can be of the same mate rial if preferred, however, and for the collar and the under-sleevcs any con trasting material ls appropriate. If plain sjeevc3 ore preferred they can be substituted, as shown in the back View, The blouse ls equally well adag&d to the odd wnl9t and to the entlfl gown, and It consequently can be utilized for a variety of materials. The blouse is made over a fitted lining, and itself consists of frontB and back, the fronts are tucked to yoke depth only, but the backs from shoulders to waist line. The fancy sleeves are made over plain founda* tionF, and these are faced to form the cuff or uuder-sleeves. The lining is closed at the centre front, the blouse, Invisibly beneath the edge of the right front. When the lining is omitted, the cuffs, or under-sleevcs, are joined to the sleeves beneath thu trimming. The quantity of material required for tho mcjri.m size Is three and five eighth yards twenty-one or twenty seven or two and one-eighth yards forty-four inches wide, and five eighth yards eighteen inches wide for collar and cuffs, three and three quarter yards of banding. Figure Preserved, It Is far moro important to have a j pretty figure than a pretty face, as j everybody knows, and women who j value their looks take as great pains to preserve their lines as their com-1 plexlons. This ls not to bo accom-' Webed merely by tho eyeful selec-, HOL *f a corset, but diet, exercise and massage t?Ust be carefully attended ? to, even to thv ?oint of sacrifice, in ? some instances. Small Motoring Hats. The new small hats are delight!IA to wear motoring. Their close brims give them a jaunty air and make the adjusting of the veil an easy matter, too. The fuller the hair beneath the prettier the effect. Thc Lingerie Bag. The lingerie) bag is a quaint and pretty fashion, and the familiar leath er handbag has been outplaced by this, the latest novelty. Belt Novelties. A Eovelty in belts is a handsomely tailored leather one, with chatelaine of the leather from which swings an envelope bag of the same kind. The Cutaway Coat. The cutaway coat in all materials is the fad of the moment. It is seen in cloth braided, in embroidery, in lace cr In brocade, trimmed in lace, the latter a dressy garment for after noon or demi-evening wear. These coats are particularly effective in the lighter colors or pompadour . silks, and are favored more by taller wom en than those who cannot claim queenly stature. Plain and Tucked Bishop Sleeves. The bishop sleeve Is always a grace ful oie. Just now it makes the latest style, and is made both with and without a cap and both plain and tucked. Here aro three, all of which arc attractive and graceful. One is made with an oddly shaped cuff, one with a deep cuff pointed at the inner edge and one is cut off in~three-quar ter length and joined to a straight band, but all are equally correct. For the sleeves any pretty thin material is appropriate, and the cuffs can be made to match or of contrasting ma terial, as liked. When the cap is used it should be in contrast, and a pretty effect ls obtained by making the a.p to match the blouse and the sleeves of thinner material, such.as chiffon, net, lace or muslin. All-over lace makes exceedingly handsome cuffs, but any pretty material can be utilized. The sleeves are all made over fitted foundations which are cut with up< per and under portions. The plain puffs, or bishop portions, are slightly full end gathered at the upper and lower edges. Whichever cuff is used is arranged over the lower portion of the lining ?nd the cap ls arranged over the completed sleeve. The tucked sleeve ls made in three-quar ter length, and finished with a short er band. Any of the sleeves can be made unlined. If preferred. The quantity of material required for the medium size is one r.nd three eighth yards twenty-one, twenty-four or thirty-two inches wide, three-quar ter yard forty-four for any sleeves; three-quarter yard twenty-one, twen j wour or thirty-two, three-eighth : yard v>rty-four for caps; one-half i yard of rai-over lace for pointed cuffs, five-eighth j\rd of banding, one yard of edging for tu^ed sleeves.