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A GUARANTEED REMEDY FOR ASTHMA Yonr SOS ET will BK kki-tnoid by yonr dnvg.st without any question if thi* remedy < 1 . e* not benefit every e;ise»»f A m» lima, HmudilH! Asthma, Hay Fever or Illttirull 15rt atI iIiik ho matter how Tloient the atiacHa or oLbiinaie the case a DB.R.SCHIFFttWN'S m AsthmadoR In either form (('.«.*»rette. Pine Mixture or Powder) positively Kives INSTANT KK1JUK ;n everv case and has permanently cured th<*<:sands who had b-en considered in> ur ibie, afier bavin# tried every other means of relief in vain 8ufl«T**rs a re afforded an opl<ortumty of availing th* m**- v. s of this 1 M* ney llacfc" guarantee offer as through purchasing from their own regular J»ruggiM. Mey ar** sure trie r money will he refunded by him it the remedy fails. You will he the sole judge as *<j wiieth* r you are benefited and will get your money back if you are not. We do not know of any fairer proposition wLioh we could make. R. Schiflmann Co., Proprietors, St. Paul, Minn. Anything to Comfort. "I wouldn't grieve su about your boy going to war." ''It is dreadful ; I can't bear the thought." ''I know, but you remember that if In' stayed home lie might ta!:- it into his head to marry some girl you have uo use for." Force of Practice. ''That singer knows how to manage her range." "She ought to know. She used to be a cook." DEATH LURKS IN A WEAK HEART, so on first symptoms use "Itenovine" and be cured. Delay and pay the awful penalty. "Renovine" is the heart's remedy. Price $1.00 and 00c.—Adv. Deliberation is a g< broken few records. thing that has A PHYSICAL WRECK Laid Up In Bed, Barely Holding Onto Life. Doan's Effected Marvelous Recovery. "Will 'out warning I was dragged to the brink of the grave by malignant kidney trouble," says Robert \\ en gatz, 114 Cypress Ave., Bronx, X. Y. •'My kidneys seemed to stop acting and the pains in my back were terrible. Big, bloaty pulls came under my eyes and attacks of dizziness often blinded me. My limbs swelled twice normal size and I could press big dents in to the flesh. "I was confined to M. w » bed and had convulsions Hi. Wengatz. several times a day. Despite the best of treatment, I grew worse and was taken to the hospital. I didn't improve, however, and was brought home again, barely holding onto life. "Toward the last of 1915, a friend persuaded me to try Doan's Kidney Pills and I cannot put into words what they did for me. The first box helped more than all the other medi cines and treatments I had taken. I continued and from an emaciated wreck of a man I have taken on good, solid flesh until I now weigh 22.5 pounds and am in the best of health. Doan's «.lone deserve the credit." Sworn to before me, JAMES T. COUGHLIN, Com. of Deeds Get Dou'i at Aar Store, 60c a Box DOAN'S %*Ä 5 V FOSTER-MILBURN CO- BUFFALO. N. Y. MALARIA Chills and Fever. Biliousness, Constipation and ailments requiring a TONIC treatment! GUARANTEED and made bq BehrensF Waco. Sold All DrufguU I W. N. U., MEMPHIS, NO. 38 -1917. <SMUKg-L Net Contents lSFluidDracti ALCOHOL -3 PER CERT I AVegelahtelVcparatio^^ similatingtteFood I tinétheStntnachsflMliw^B» Cheerfulness and Rest, /y. y y /to*»** W* , A hdpful Remedy for ' Constipation and Dian rj ' and Feverishness and , Loss of Sleep j resulti ng tt^fr oman MM* 7 fac-Siinde Si dnrtnmrf IB* CBWtMJnCOKWOt Exact Copy of Wrapper. CASTORIA For Infants and Children, Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Always Bears the Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA GAINED20 POUNDS ON TWO DOTTLES Harry Wilson Felt Like He Couldn't Last Very Much Longer. HIS RELIEF SURPRISING "1 Feel Like Taniac Has Made a New Man of Me and i'm Glad to Rec ommend It," He Declares. "A gain of twenty pounds on two bottles of Taniac is going some, hut that is just what happened to me since I began using it," said Ilarry I ». Wil son, an employee of the Llumble Oil Company at their Goose Creek, Texas, plant, the other day. "I had a spell of malarial fever sometime ago," he continued, "and wasn't able to get straightened out af terwards. My system was badly run down. I lost iny appetite and had to live almost exclusively on a diet of raw or very soft boiled eggs. My head ached so I thought It would split, rheumatism made me miserable and my system was clogged up with ma laria. I fell off to a hundred and twenty-eight pounds and was in such a had fix I believe I couldn't have last ed much longer. "I was sure surprised to find this Taniac getting hold of my troubles be fore I had taken many doses. I feel hungry all the time and am actually ashamed to eat enough to satisfy my appetite. My weight has increased to a hundred and forty-eight pounds and I feel line in every way. I have got over that tired and drowsy feeling and have more life and energy than I have had in several months. I fee! like Taniac has made a new man of me, and I will gladly recommend it to any body." There Is a Taniac dealer In your town.—Adv. "Wife a Good Sport." W. S. Desmond, a carpenter of Huntington Lake, Cal., is above the se lective draft age limit, but he wanted to join tiie army. He told his wife. She objected. He offered to match pennies with lier. She agreed. He suggested heads, stay at home, ttiils go to the front. They matched and tails won. Des mond enlisted in the field artillery. "My wife's a good sport," he told the recruiting officer. CLEAR YOUR COMPLEXION While You Sleep With Cuticura Soap and Ointment—Trial Free. On retiring, gently smear the face with Cuticura Ointment, wash off in five minutes with Cuticura Soap and hot water, and continue bathing a few minutes with the Soap. The influence of this treatment on the peres extends through the night. Free sample each by mail with Book. Address postcard, Cuticura. Dept. L, Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv. A Measly Haul. First Burglar — Hello, pard' I haven't seen ye since you cracked dat crib on Jenkins street. Git anyt'ing? Second Burglar—Yes, hut I didn't know it until about a week afterward. I got de measles. A Mean Hint. Bell* 1 —I had all I could do to keep Mr. Jims from proposing. Nell—To some other girl? TIMELY PREPARATION FOR FILLING SILO point It is nlwji ys a great dea ! belter to have things ron dy for tit ie silo long before they an • ii reded. 1 t does not take any more t i: me to se e that tit, 1 knives of the eil T t** r an- -iia rpem-d and that the hinder Is in good \ vorking or der at one peri' >»<! of ! lie y. •ar titan it does at a i lot lie r and it m; iy menti a good many do ila r> to ill e ram lo r. writes ('. W. 1 I'tlgsiey. in Field and Farm. No mon. •y i- saved 1 •y attempt ing to get aioli with too i i t tie lie! p. Filling tie- -ilo it 1 tlm be : is rut her heavy work am 1 ii ,s a rule we do not like that part oj r ii whirl, d. •mauds the handling ol' hen \ y bundles . d corn. If teams and men <*iii nugii are on hand to eomplete the w> >rk in a shot ■t time and less trouble will be experienced ill get ting help. Heaviest Expenses. one of the heaviest expenses in eon neetion with tilling is tin- eost of an engine and an engineer, and when an ititlit is hired the farmer -iioiild that it i- used te full capacity. This - - V s V* i ' ' " Jw ■ ; /.%., Î ,. - ?< T * E M'"*Xe.V ■M FARMER CANNOT AFFORD TO BE WITHOUT SILO. can only bo done by supplying a stitfi cienl amount of labor to keep every thing running. Some farmers favor a smaller cutter and letting the filling period extend over more time. In some instances tills Is nomieal practice, who uses a small carrier—the type least power—and farm gasoli dinary hel| probably an eco I know one man •utter with a chain that demands the runs it with tits engine. He uses the or f the ranch with perhaps tin additional man or two and extends the filling of a hundred ton silo over a period of a week. This of course lias the disadvantage very often of allow ing part of the corn to become too ripe, as It is now, while that which was put In first may be a little green. Different Cutters. The cutter selected will depend somewhat upon the kind of silo and upon the system of filling adopted. If I ! I * I ! 1 i j j j j j DETERMINE AGE OF CHICKEN Among Many Other Signs or Indica tions Legs and Toes of Young Fowl Are Quite Smooth. You can rarely tell the age <>f a fowl after it is over one year old. The tip of a young chicken's breast bone is flexible. .-<• are the pelvic hones, but are rigid in the old fowl, 'the legs and toes of a young bird are much smoother than the old. There are fewer pin-featliers in the old bird, and more long hairs. The plumage of the young bird is usually brighter and smoother, and not so faded, as In the older Mrd. The face of the old bird Is more wrinkled, and there is more of n shrunken appearance around the eyes. The hen often has a baggy, broken down effect behind. The spurs nre an indication of age. Tf you notice beneath the wings of an old bird, you will fall to see an evidence of veins, hut in the younger birds the purple colored veins are visible under the wing. You will find the bottom or ball of the foot of the mature birds harder and much more calloused than in the case of the younger fowl. i i j TWELVE THINGS TO DO IN SEPTEMBER 1. Plant n big turnip patch if you have not already done so. 2. Avoid loss by keeping the cotton picked as fast as it opens. 3. Select your cotton seed for next year's planting front the best stalks, and then have them ginned separately. 4. Select your seed corn in the field, and then carefully store to prevent loss. 5. Start pluutlng oats, especially in the narthern half of the cot ton belt. 6. Try a patch of Abruzzi rye for early fall and winter grazing. 7. Be sure to plant crimson clever on all cotton lands that are to go In com next year. » 8. Try some bur clover on your Bermuda pastures ; It will give you valuable winter and spring grazing. 9. Save an abundance of seed peas for next year. 10. Start the children to school and visit the school yourself. 11. Don't rush your cottoa on a depressed market ; arrange to hold all you can for better prices. 12. Save all the hay and other roughage possible for winter feeding. blower entier of large en pirn it y will probably gi\> ■ !,< s; results. If the 1 grower m tilli ng his own silo and de t sires to own 1. is maeidne. a eut ter with knives from : ! to mi im hes. d. -pending lll'oli tie rity of tile silo. ' .'.ill give til" best rest;! ts. If the silo i s above ground a blow er entier should he used by til! no tilts If if lias an i under* ground -ii,, |. e 'till get along with a • haiii rarrior. Vo !; i;j:;.-r the - ! \ if of "titter, it she mid ! a\o a dN trihutor. This is mr.-' l oil.!.' of pipes fastened w.th snaps and rings In a manner to .. ak< it flexible. It ex tends from tl ie end of the Id ow er or from the end of the carrier ti ■ within 1 a few feet of the bottom of ih e si le. Evenly Distributed. In this manner the ensilage Is evenly distributed nil over th" silo, which is not 1 lie ease Wilt'll the I'll! fill'll merely falls from the top either with a blower or chain carrier. Tic heavier part* if the ensilage such as kernels am pii >1 eats will fail point of distribution, while the lighter portions, the husks and tin* stalks will I he scattered further away. This makes ! it necessary to fork over the ensilage I and with the greatest of care ............ * husks and stalks are not evenly dis I trihuted. The distributor will give an absolutely uniform distribution and will save the labor of at least one man in the silo; although there should al ways be from two to three men tramp ing Inside while the filling is going on. In tilling it is well to keep the outer ! edges a little higher than the center and to do most of the packing at tTic* 1 outside. The mutter of packing is very i important. Do not attempt to save j money on labor by cutting down the j number of men in the silo and while j they are there see that they keep j moving. A man standing in one place j all of the time does not give much service. EXCELLENT AS COVER CROPS Bur Clover and Melilotus Indica, For merly Regarded as Menacing Weeds, Now Useful. A score of years ago bur clover waa considered but a weed and such a menace to lawns, gardens and fields that all feared to encourage it. Later it became a famed cover crop. Like wise Melilotus Indica, the yellow-flow- j .•ring melilot, is now a high-grade cover crop for dry lands. Yet for all time it ims been a vile weed known to all. PREVENT BACTERIA IN MILK __ Much Can Be Accomplished by Keep i ing Cows Clean and Giving At tention to Utensils. Cows free from manure and dirt, es i pecinlly In the region of the udder and j flanks; utensils that are carefully ; cleansed, scalded and dried; and care j fnl protection of the milk from flies j and dirt after production, will pre vent the entrance of bacteria into milk. ÿcc tfiek Sc Werk Many Women in this Condition Re gain Health by Taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Convincing Proof of This Fact. Kidgway, Penn. — "I suffered from female trouble with backache and pain in my side forever seven months so I could not do any of my work. I was treated by three different doctors anti was getting discouraged when my sister-in-law tout me how Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound had helped her. I decided to try it, and it restored my health, so I now do all of my housework which is not light as I have a little boy three years oicL" — Mrs. O. M. Ruines, Kidgway, Penn. Mrs. Lindsey Now Keeps House For Seven. Tennille Ga.-"I want to tell you how much I have been benefited bv I vdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. About eight years ago I got in such a low state of health I was unable to keep house for three m fhc family. I had dull, tired, dizzy feelings, cold fee and hands nearly all the time and could scarcely sleep at all. The doctor said I had a severe case of ulceration and without an operation I would aluavs be an invalid, but I told him I wanted to wait awhile. Our druggist advised my husband to get Lydia E. Pinkham's \ egetable Compound and it has entirely cured me. Now I keep house for seven and woik in the garden some, too. I am so thankful I got this medicine. I feel as though it saved my life and have recommended it to others and they have been benefited''.-Mrs. W. E. Lindsey, R. R. 3, Tennille, Ga. If vou want special advice write to Lydia E. Pinkliam Medi ci,,.- Co. (confidential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter w ill be opened, read and answere d by a wom an and field in strict confidence. S ur e. I Husband—The agent said that this | car was easy. Wife—lie must have got you and th, car mixed. There Is No Art in Taking Medicine. Just follow directions on every bot tle of "Plantation" Chill Tonic and see how quickiy those dreadful chills will leave you. It leaves the liver in healthy condition and yet contains no Calomel. Price 50c.—Adv. Soldiers and Officers. The lieutenant was testing the squad in visional power. "Tell me, No. 1," he said, "how many men nre in the trench digging party over there?" "Thirty men and one officer," was the reply. "Quite right. But how do you know one was an officer at this distance?" "Cos he's the only one not working!" —Scottish American. LIFT YOUR CORNS OFF WITH FINGERS How to loosen a tender corn or callus so It lifts out without pain. j Let folks step on your feet hereafter; wear shoes a size smaller if you like, for corns will never again send electric sparks of pain through you, according to this Cincinnati authority. He says that a few drops of a drug called freezone, appliei^dlrectly upon a tender, aching corn, instantly re lieves soreness, and soon the entire corn, root and all, lifts right out. This drug dries at once and simply shrivels up the corn or callus without even Irritating the surrounding skin. A small bottle of freezone obtained at any drug store will cost very little but will positively remove every hard or soft corn or callus from one's feet. If your druggist hasn't stocked this new drug yet, tell him to get a small bottle of freezone for you from his wholesale drug house.—adv. On Writing Letters. "I was told by Capt. Harry Light the other dny," writes a Canadian major, "that there is a new style in trench letters. The censor's duties have been reduced by runny per cent. The soldier now has the sense of the situ ation engrained in his thinking. He sees through the need of keeping quiet even on matters that call for some criticism. There Is more humor and matter-of-fact ness about his letters. One of my men who can't write very well, was telling me the other dny that one letter a week Is all that he can summon up his courage to write, and ho gave tilts ns a reason : The people at homo don't, can't understand life here. We have got to go through It. Why tense them with anxieties—they have enough to put up with In paci fists and political grumblers.' And I think he is right. Don't you?" it. Chronic Indigestion. Ton can't eat your cake and hava "I have the consciousness of It long er thnn suits me," growled the dyspep tic.** A new stump hurnlng apparatus has a wind vane which Insures Its always having a good draft. _ Dipping in a strong so ution of alum will give new life to old hair brushes, If your eyes smart or feel frea!ded, Ro an Eye Balsam applied upon going to beé 1* Ju*t the thing to rtileve them. Adv. An apparatus operated by com pressed air, recently invented, literally blows Ice cream from molds. The ancient party who dubbed wom en the "gentle sex" evidently never witnessed a bargain-counter rush. A FRIEND IN NEED. For Instant relief and speedy curt* use "Mississippi" Diarrhea CordiaL Price 50c and 25c.—Adv. The Limit. Belle—Is Jack's wife so critical? June—Dreadful! She'll pick flaws In â perfectly good lie. Jack says? To Drive Out Malaria And Build Up The System Take the Old Standard GROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC. You know what you are taking, as the formula is printed on every label, showing it is Quinine and Iron in a tasteless form. The Quinine drives out malaria, the Iron builds up the system. 6o cents. Women Drive War Automobiles. Between 150 and 200 women soon will be driving military motor cars be hind the French front. Women have tried since the begin ning of the war to enlist in the auto mobile service. The Club Feminin Automobile was the center of this group, and it had secured the signa tures of several hundred of the thou sand women in Paris who hold licenses to drive motor cars. The passive re sistance of the different war bureaus held them hack until now. The women are obliged to enlist for three months and to agree to submit scrupulously to military rules and dis cipline. They will in the beginning replace motor ambulance drivers in the foreign sanitary sections who are transferred to other services. Later on they may replace men In other au tomobile sections. Love In a Cottage. Be—Their engagement is broken "ff. I understand. She—Oh, yes. He—What was the reason? She—Why, both were satisfied that they could live on love In a cottage, but when they got to details they .list covered that each of them contem plated supplying nothing but the love. The Point. "I am afraid our bulldog has a twist In his pedigree/" "Don't worrv. It Is only his screw tail." Too many things we wait for are n worth the delay. WhOiWfintf bread and butterjwhen a feller can have? POST toasties says ïiùéty' /MADE OF' \ CORN /,