Newspaper Page Text
THE ADAJLiu jONTY NEWS f Ingratitude Flattery & Etc. Every one who has had exper ience and is of sound mind and disposing memory, recalls some incident in life, where ingrati tude, deception and etc., have played a prominent part and has formed a groove in .which will flow forever a life of misfortune, sorrow, want and woe, generat ed by the falsity and fickleness of those who practice this heart less and growing evil and the in dividual who brings this misery and misfortune to his or her vic tim has, (I will assert without fear of contradiction,) committed an unpardonable sin. The de sire to seem rather than to be is carried into every department of life and its effect is most com monly felt by some one worthy of the respect and admiration of any one. Some one who would have clinched the glided ladder of fame and in the evening of life had a peaceful, serene hour in which to die, a life of useful ness to God and to mankind, full of noble aims and thoughts but instead the frost of ingratitude nipped the bud and that life is completely a failure. This great sin is being prac ticed by the older generation, as well as by the young, and any one regardless of sex or age who says I will and fails to make the attempt, has not only lost re spect and admiration for them selves but the respect and admi ration of all those around them. Every reader has conversed with those whose eloquence dazzled. Whose pretended e a r n e st- ness created witnm you an enthusiasm equal to their own, yet behind all this, lurking in almost total disguise, a monster, which repelled the ad miration their genius attracted. It is without question the great est fault the present age poss esses, and most generally prac ticed by the so called "courting class," of boys and girls who do not realize that life has a soul and sentiment and in deceiving each other obstruct the stream of life along whose current peace, haypiness and contentment would have sailed supreme. If the present generation would turn a deaf ear to this class of people, and impress deeply upon the minds of the rising gener ation, the grandeur and beauty, on the one side, the sham and foulness of the other, childhood, young man and womanhood days would be full of fond memories. We could hear the echo of pleas ant voices whose Hying soul was the sunlight of our early exist ence. We could converse with them in dreamland, and be pre pared to meet every one face to ace on the final day when our records are read and judged. Young.man, young woman, be true to every trust, be frank, sincere and honest with all man kind. Disdain and abhor all those who are influenced by pub lic, sentiment, -unless that senti ment be. to the interest and jus tice of. humanity, and life will be real, and the grave will not be its goal. Respt., ' E. G. Hardwick, Neatsburg, Ky, Surprising Cure of Stomach Trouble When you have trouble with your stomach 01 chronic constipation, don't imagine that your case is beyond help just because that your doctor fails to give you relief. Mrs. G. Stengla, Plain field, N". J., writes: "For over a month past I have been troubled with my stomach' Everything I ate upset it terribly. One of Chamberlain's ad vertising booklets came to me. After reading a few of the letters from peo ple who had been cured bv Chamber lain's Tablets, 1 decided to try them. I have taken nearly three fourths of a package of them and can now eat almost everything tuat I want." For sale by all dealers and Paull Drug Co. Ad The Way We Live. Did you know that the articles which go to make up your home represent almost every state in the union? They do. The average citizen imagines that he lives at home, but he does not. He gets up in the morning and puts on his socks made in New York, shoe3 in Boston and pants made in Ohio. He dips some water from a Missouri buckent with a Chicago dipper and puts it in an Indiana washpan and washes his face with a cake of St. Louis soap. He dries his face with a Rhode Island towel and roaches his hair with a Vermont comb. He takes Cuban coffee in an In diana cup and saucer, sweetened it with New Orleans sugar and stirred with 'a New York spoon. His knife, fork and plate are made in the North, and his table cloth ditto. He eats a piece of Chica go ham fried in Kansas lard, sops his St. Louis biscuit, season ed with Boston soda and Michi gan salt, into Louisiana molas ses He wipes his mouth on a Vermont napkin and seats his family around a Michigan table in chairs from the same state. His meal was cooked on a St. .Louis stove, with wood cut with a Pittsburg ax and hauled in an Indiana wagon. Then the citi zsn puts a Boston saddle on a Mirrouri mule and gets out his plow and works in the field en cumbered, possibly, with a New Jersey montgage. He returns at night and satisfies his appetite with another imported meal, fills his Indiana lamps with Pennsyl vania oil and lights it with a New York match. He then fills his Missouri pipe with North Carolina tobacco and settles down in a Northern chair for a com fortable smoke. When bedtime comes he takes down the family Bible, which was printed in Mas sachusetts, reads a chapter com posed in Jerusalem, then retires to bed, sleeps under imported covers and is kept awake two hours by the yeowls of his cats, which are the only home product lie has on his farm. The Best Medicine in the World "My little girl had dyseutery very bad. I thought she would die. Cham- beflaiu's Colic, Cholera and Diar rhoea Remedy cured her, and I can truthfully say that I think it is the best medicine in the world," writes Mrs. William Orvis, Clare, Mich. For sale by all dealers and Paull Drug Co. Ad. KEEPING SWINE HEALTHY IN WINTER If convenient have your feed and bog nest in a small wood lot or blue grass pasture. Never ring hogs, but let theui root to their hearts desire, writes F. L. Rodehaven of Ohio in the X:u.oual Stockman. Never put more tbuu thirty-five or forty together, and construct a good board pen about 8 by 10 feet for sleeping quarters. Place the sleeping quarters on a raised pieca of ground as far away from the feed ing place as convenient. Board the pen up tight, nut leave an air space at each end and a 2 by 2 feet entrance, Have a wide board hinged to one side to make it convenient to clean out. If you have it on a dry spot do not floor it. but let them sleep on the ground. Bed them once a week with the refuse and left over cornstalks from the sta ble or feed lot By having the sleeping quarters and feeding place separated the. hogs will get the needed exercise in cold weather in going to their feed when they are disinclined to stir about. When the weather is not too cold they will for age for roots and nuts, and not being ringed are able to secure considerable food by rooting. About every four or five weeks, when the weather is warm, The Berkshire breed of hogs have remarkable vitality and strong di gestive organs, enabling them to assimilate less food into the great er gain of flesh which is of the highest quality. They can be fat 'tened at any age. They are prolific careful mothers and good milkers. No breed excels them for grazing. Experiments show they will pro duce tiOO pounds cf meat from each acre of clover consumed and dou ble that amount when fed one pound of corn daily for every hun dred pounds of live weight. When in pasture they should have shade and plenty of pure water. The sow shown is a fine type of the Berk shire. get them up and spray thein with a good dip heated to a rather warm temperate. Never give them too much bedding, and when the nest gets a little dusty give it a good spray lug too. Be sure there is plenty of good run ning water or a self feeding tank for them to drink at. Keep slack coal and salt and wood ashes by them all the time. Feed a mixture of mid dlings, bran and a little tankage or; oilmen! and use some feeding molasses Jlnke this mixture into a thin slop by ,.utting it in the troughs and pouring the water on it Let the hogs do the mix'ng themselves, which they will do to the complete satisfaction of all con cerned. SCAB ON CATTLE. Simnle Remedy For This Common Pei of the Farm Stable. "Barnyard itch" is a white scabt growth around- the eyes an I in blotfh -a on the neck and .sometimes farther oaek on the body. It is a parasite and Vflll spread from one animal to another and will live for years in a barn that has been infected by cattle that have It It is transmissible to people hand ling cattle so affected If they "should happen to rub the affected spots with bare wrist or hand, as one is apt to do in tying or stanchioning. On the human It corner as hundreds of small festers, which scab over and keep spreading and are very painful. After trying everything L could think of. even thebest carbolic acid, brushed on with a feather, and only aggravat ing the sore, In my desperation one day I mixed some hog's lard and sul phur together, rubbed It on freely, and the soi'es disappeared like magic, says D. W. Cobb in the National Stockman I nscd it on cattle with like results f f-TCcnred the stanchions with the mix tuie and have never had a case of it since. I have told others of it. and :hey have used it and killed the scab on their cattle. The remedy is so sim ple and easily made that a child can make and use it Just mix hog's lard full of sulphur and rub it in thoroughly. Danger In Feeding Salt. There is considerable danger in feed rug salt to ewes just before lambing j time. Many cases have been known where abortion has been traced direct ly to the use of salt during this period. Sheep must have salt and plenty of it; but this Is one time during the life cy cle when it should be withheld. Not only have bad results been noticed from the feeding of salt ben when aheep have been fed a liberal supply of beets or turnips abortion ans been more prevalent than otherwleo. This is attributed to the factN thu; U're is more salt in these feeds thai in others. Wheat as a Cattle Feed. In finishing cattle for market con siderable grain is required. Steers can not consume enough of the ordinary roughage to lay on much fat While corn is generally considered almost in dispensable in finishing stock for mar ket wheat can be used very satisfac torily, as a snbstitnte. Owing to thp fact that the grains of wheat are small fiDi hard it is necessary to grind it in order to secure the best 'results.. 4mhHCT Give the Cows a Good Home. A good dairy barn, warm, well lighted and well ventilated and convenient in its arrangement, means that the cows will do their best, because they are warm and comfortable; they will keep healthier because of light and ventiJatilation; they will drcp stronger and better calves; It means a much easier proposition to secure good help. It means less time consumed in doing chores. It means a better prod uct in the way of milk and cream, and consequently an op portunity for a better market, and last, it means a big element in the personal pride that you take in your business, and that in particular gDes a long way to ward spelling success. Has Your Child Wormst Most children do. A Coated. Fui- red Tongue; Strong Breath, Stomach Pains, Circles under the Ejes: Pale, Sallow Complezion; Nervous, Fretful Grinding of teeth. Tossing in Sleep; Peculiar Dreams any one of these in dicate Child has Worms. Get a box i of Kickapoo Worm Killer at once. It kills the Worms the cause of your child's condition. Is Laxative and aids Nature to expel the Worms. Sup plied in candy torm. Easy for chil dren to take. 25. Recommended by Paull Drug Co. Ad Save Seed for SpuirrelS. An interested reader inform? us that the squirrels are very fond of the squash and pump kin seed which the farmer and housewife consign to the gar bage pail. So do not throw them away, but save them, and when you are out walking in the woods, throw them under the trees and the squirrels will take care of them. The writer knows of a case of a man digging out a chipmunk's hole and finding in it over a peck of chestnuts which the chipmunks had stored up for winter.s use." Shortstops. After all crossing the' ocean is almost as dangerous as crossing a Louisville street. Solicitor Folk of the Interstate Commerce Commission, is un doubtedly from Missouri. Why not give Jack Johpson the next Nobel peace prize? He put an end to gegilism. As soon as mediation began to look like a good thing, the Mex ican rebels wanted some. , One secret of success is to pre tend to be happy and prosperous when you are neither. A leopard may change its spots, but Victor Murdock will never submit to caucus rule. Paris may like an opera with out words, but it will never stand for a chorus without girls We understand that the Bull Moosers think the initials G. 0. P. stand for Greedy Old Party. Mr. Mellen's disclosures are however not a part of the rail roads appeal for high freight rates. What do you suppose the wom SPRING Every floor is teeming with the newest and best in Wall and Floor Coverings Stocks tip the Acme of Excellence RUGS, CARPETS, DRAPERIES and WALL PAPER Vie with each other for Early Recognition The Best news of all are our Low Prices, fixed by an Economical Organization, Centrally Located, yet re- moved from the high rent district. Hubbuch Bros., & Wellendorff Incorporated 522 and 524 West MarketlSt. For more than Thirty Years, Louisville's Leading Carpet and Rug House. Special All Persons Who Are Behind One Year on our Subscrip tion Books Will have to Come off, Under the Law, if not Paid at once The Government Will Not carry Papers in thr Mai) for Parties who Owe More than one Year en would find to worry about if they were given the right to vote? Some of those Senatorial can- didates around the country are . Southern Paciffc and other rail evidently running just for past- roads get title to oil lands worth time. Formerly the United States Senate was "The Millionaires' Club." Now it seems to be the wailing place. Latest News. Forty persons were injured when trolleys collided at San dusky, 0. In several sections of Southern Kentucky there has not been a drop of rain for six weeks. John Hudson, a Henderson county farmer, was shot and probably fatally wounded by a neighbor after an altercation. Robert J. Maloney, known as "Willard and Wizard," commit ted suicide by jumping-out of a window in the Cincinnati jail. The Federal Government ap propriation of $10,000 for farm demonstration work in Ken- -1914. Notice tucky was available o n July 1st. By a decision of the Supreme Court of the United States, the $700,000,000. A collision between two air ships, 1,500 feet in the air in Austria resulted in the death of all the occupants of both ma chine, numdering nine persons. The pulpits of 50 Philadelphia churches were filled Sunday by members of the American Medi cal Association on their way to meeting at Atlantic City. Fighting has been resumed at Zacatecus and the Constitution alists, under the personal com mand of Gen. Villa have cap tured three inposts and out posts. " Causes of Stomach Troubles. Ledentary habits, lack of out door exercise, insufficient mastication of food, constipation, a torpid liver, wor ry and anxiety, overeating, partaking of food and drink, not suited to your ae and occupation. Correct your habits and take Chamberlain's Tab lets and j ou wi.l soon be well again. For sale by all dealers and Paull Drug Co. y Ad H t -...