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THE Ai)AIR COUlTC NEWS 0. 6. IAUWIC1. Pres. J. I.:C0CKE, V. Pres. R. H. DIETZMAN. Sk W.T.Pyne Mill 4 Supply Co. r ESTABLISHED 1861 INCORPORATED 1889 IwmiiWSiGHTS g macHiNiSTS DEALERS-IN ENGINES. BOILERS, SAW MLIS. GRIST MILLS, FEED MILLS 1301 TfflKTeSNTH-MftlN. LOlHSVILLe SMOKE STACKS Sheet Iron and Tank Work JOBBING WORK SOLICITED All Kinds of Machinery Repaired RX A "R f What Is It I W1lJx! All About? T-TAS the whole world gone stark mad over a very foolish and trivial (ji!cfi-n? Are swords rattling, cannon rumbling, mailed armour plistcnir - ' because Russia winted to show her love for the little brother Scrvia ? Tear as'de the curtain of Europe's politics and see the grin: rjid sinister pimc of cher. that is being played. See upon vl.at v. shrn, j et desperate, excuse the sacred lives of miliioiii may bs sacrificed. Read the history of the past one hundrrti cirs, 's written by one of the feS&- rr&.i rfc.".M3lA - r ii' u:& SZi.f - tf8S-.. -. Mwr..fc " . i&,iTrK!r llSSfefe&fe... .. ff 3!7MSrW's&.,i2r--'s v-; JRe.--:tfKMioSs. ?tjV,.ZS, .tiS, o,r ,rVfSlri 27x "W?1S1 "iF'J IK -C . BSESJEKSE 'mm irCri&; as? greatrst s. huMt" 'ie nr.. has ever known, and learn the naked, shameh.! truth. Just to ijet you started as a Renew of Reviews subscriber, v iiiAe you this eMra ordiszry offer. We will jive to ou m n e i ti m &r t ? t vt 1 1. XliXli I ril; & ?apa. .-cC k' ssr BS&3S KtSi ;??. Ss& i.25K; 1713 r "r,,,r 1W;- aI. T?7 1J l aSiSJRB iu.j.u.y d xxi.iti.iji. y ux t-tic w uim Four splendid cloth volumes, full of portraits, sketches, -naps, diagrams Today is the climax of a hundred years cf preparation. Read in this timely, authoritative, complete, AND THE ONLY CONDENSED clarsic world history of which ever 2,000,000 copies have been sold in France alone just what has taken place in the inner councils of Europe during the past one hundred years. Read in these entrancing pages how Russia has for years craftily been trying to escape from her darkness to get a year-round open port, with its economic freedom. Head how Cermany and Austria, fearful of the monster's latent strength, have been trying to checkmate her and how they have pinned all in this last, supreme stake. The Lesson of the Past HIS master of the pen thow-i you the filoxy that was Greece's 4tr1 m rrTiAmn .1... ... (), ,T ...! - ... .. -. . . . w AiuubM tu. . IVUUICS. UC KU1UC3 J OU IDrOUgQ QC Middle Atcs. the picturesque old dajj of feudilism nd the crusides ; tbrourb the Resistance up to contemporaneous tistory. which Prof. . Rrvic-.r Gfosvenor completes in bnlliznt minner. In the story of the past vi S3 re ice srerecis ot today. And you HI understand them better when Ksview;, j you ret the Renew of Reviews for a yeai for the ReTiew of Re- 30 Triruj !'L, f views will tire you a sine Interpretation of the erenuthit are takiat Ktw York: 7 place with such rapidity. It is not enouch to read the daily news Send roe. on a-- f reports. VourabilirytocoEprehendcondiuons. and to discuts them s proral, charcrs paid ' rationally depends oa a true interpretation of the meaning and the f by you. Duray's his- reason why" of etenu. In your mind you must brine order tory of the Wotld in 4 out of chaos and the Review of Renews will do it for you. volumes bound in doth. g- , Al9 enter my name fo.- VjCt vile " Review of Reviews for REVIEW of REVIEWS fK tVj 7 for a Yeir ?2i Send No S'4i-i Money and lm PJ -v4 for fhirpint and S1.00 a Send the coupon only. It brines the wnole set four volumes charres prepaid absolutely free. AH we that after you ret the books !......,, j tr '.v lUUKUUAICCllU M r i nnniti fx. .(. k.L .W tiams, .mwuiu iui iuin:uiuuui m m. Inr th Ow.an.Mr n t. t .t l.i- ita't worth more ll,:i vri nv tnr hv. ..j . ...:.. . Jiwru rrtliPf. SfTiA trrm h.rt -r ..r wvnj.Mr D... k. . .l worldir:de !mc of Dam will tn.t.. ,!-.. r ria .. j.. jr !JJM appear from our stock room at oacc. Send your .. ra ... fcr aiil ."i C,A" "aJ niT SJ-M aad-we tc-aj and be in xmc w!u Pa'r hip?ine chartes. Tbe bcaudful leather costs only a fev cjsu fT.ew o. Keviewt Co., 20 h-raj PL, .Y. . no.nl. above to $ months, or send $5.00 ca.h In fuU. f I 25 cents for shipping and t er month for three months for the matazinc and retain the His tory ot tie world without caarje. Otherwise I will, within 10 davi. r return the books a: your expense. EVERYTHING IN ROOFING Asphalt, Gravel, Rubber, Galvanized and Printed. A.Iso Elvvood and American Fence. Steel Fence Posts DEHLER BROS. CO. Incorporated 112-116 Caa! Matket Stree? Between Pirst and Brook LouisviJIe. Ky. .( 'J - ..'.'"'' 'U..V-w.' This is the "Thoi-nhill" Wagon -the Wagon that Must Make Good The best known materials the labor of master workmen the aid of the most ingenious modern machinery have been employed to make the Thornhill wagon. The wheels are made with excessive care. For the spokes the manufacturers use the rinest hickory machine driven to insure the right dish. The hubs are gears from ever getting out of line and causing hard pulling. "Thornhill" wagons are equipped with long sleeve malleable non-breakable skeins that insure light running, an'' out last any other skein. Each skeri is fitted to its axle with a Defiance ma chine infallibly accurate. This machine of oak," thoroughly seasoned and banded insures the right pitch and tuck, maker, light draft a certainty. w The axles are of toughest hickory the steel axles of the best refined steel The sides of "Thornhill" beds arc made of poplar. It costs the makers more but it holds paint better and g:v2: better service. Come in and see this wagon sold under a binding guaranteeJ .villi double refined sable iron. Tl.e bolsters are of the best white oak. They have an iron plate at top and bot tom, riveted through and through mul tiplying their strength. The "Thornhill" has a malleable front hound plate that is braced to the hounds at a!! p-ints. This is an exclusive ' Thornhill" feature. It prevents the sou By WOODSON LEWIS GREENSBURG, KENTUCKY. EEEsysicscra: .'raSKt-BEWKKSn FREE FREE ftfe-v f4i'ISi''srak. Memoirs of Napoleon In Three Volumes The personal reminiscences of Baron de Meneval, for thirteen years private secretary to Napoleon Bonaparte, bring out, as no history can, many enlightening and interesting side lights on the character of that greatest of leaders. De Meneval's descriptions have the piquancy and interest possible only because he was an actual eye witness of the scenes and incidents of which he writes. Their reliability and historical interest can be judged by the fact that the very conservative French Academy publicly recommends them. A SPECIAL OFFER TO OUR READERS By special arrangement with the publishers of Collier's, The National Weekly, we are able to give these valuable and interesting Memoirs free with a year's subscription to Collier's and this publi cation, at a price less than.the lowest net cash subscription price of thj two papers. Only a limited quantity of these Memoirs is aailable, however, so to get the benefit of this special offer you must act quickly. WHAT YOU GET IN COLLIER'S i osier's is the one big, fearless, independent Weekljr of the whole country. Its editorials are quoted by every paper in the Union. It stands always for the best interests of the greatest number of the people. Among its contributors are such writers as George Randolph Chester, author of " 'Get-Rich-Quick' WallingforJ," Meredith Nicholson, Amelie Rives, H. G. Wells, Hamlin Garland, Mary Roberts Rinehart, Henry Beach Needham, etc. It numbers among its correspondents such men as Jack London, Arthur Ruhl, Ja..i:s B. Connolly, and Henry Reuterdahl. It is a magazine for the whole family Editorials, Comments on Congress, Photographic News of the World, Short and Serial ?oncs by the greatest writers of the day. i-'nlKop'c 5? 5J0 ) Special combination price time Memoirs of Napoleon, postpaid - - - - - ii i Nev.s 52.50) g $3 "urr-cripiions to this office. If you are already a -, riri uii will be extended for a year from if A.dair Oouncv New-:. Columbia, iKenticky. i 3 Equals 25 A startling statement but a true one in this case. One teaspoonful of medicine and two pounds of your own ground feed (cost about 3 cents equal, in what they do for your animals and fowls, two pounds of any ready-made stock or poultry tonic (price 25 cents). There you arel If you don't believe it, try it out ! Buy, today, a can of Dnn Tpp STOCK & POULTRY D 1S MEDICINE OufM hU fate tMic Hilcca it refdt Write fora trial pacJcaje ol Bee Dee STOCK & POULTRY MEDICINE, also our 32 pace, illustra ted tnok, fully explaining its u?.:s. Address : Bee Dee Stock Medicine Company, Chattanooga, Tenru 25c, 50c and $1. pa caa. At your dealer. BA mmmsmmmmmmKmmmmmmmmmmmiKX&BBmsmeBaamtm HELPFUL HINTS FOR HOUSEWIVES Smoke Consumers For the Kitchen Range. A practical smoke consumer of sim ple design and construction for use in coal burning kitchen ranges has been recently developed, says Popular Me chanics. The device consists of a flat tened, perforated iron pipe suspended some six or eiskt Inches from the fire pot and above the oven, bilt within the range itself. The open end of the pipe is screwed into a hole in the front of the range, admitting fresh air. When the tire is started the heated gases play upon the pipe, setting up a draft Pure air Is drawn iu. becomes superheated and escapes at high temperature through the perforations, when the oxygen combines with the carbon mo noxide and fine coal dust, causing com plete combustion and raising the tem perature of the oven materially. In a seven hour test the amount of coal saved was 14 per cent, while the tem- perature within the oven was S2 de grees higher than without the device. POPULAR MECHANICS The Largest Chain Drive. The largest chain drive in existence, three times greater in size than any previously built, is to be found at the Ox How power plant, on Snake river, Copperfield. Ore. The plant consists of a 3.C00 kilowatt generator operated by two water wheel units, each consisting of two pairs of water wheels of th forty-eight Inch horizontal type, oper ating under a twenty-one foot head. The speed of the water wheels is 147 revolutions per minute, and each water wheel unit is connected to the genera tor by four Morse chains, each twenty one inches wide, the sprockets on the line shafting having a two inch pitch and the shaft centers being ten feet apart Scientific American. Household Hints. To prevent glass dishes from crack ing when pouring in a hot mixture place the dish on a hot cloth. A few drops of ammonia in the dish water will brighten the glass and sil ver. Suet may be kept fresh by chopping roughly and sprinkling it with a little granulated sugar. To prevent a tam-o'-shanter that nab to be washed from shrinking dry it over a dinner plate. To restore faded silks to their natu ral color immerse them in soapsuds to which a little pearl ash has been added Cream Toast. Toast six slices of bread till crisp and brown, dip in hot. salted water place in dish and pour over the follow ing gravy: One pint of milk, let come to scalding point; then stir in a . irge tablespoonful of flour mired with a little cold water Stir till thick, and add butter size of an egg. When mak ing cream toast, for each cupful of milk allow a level tablespoonful of butter and two level tablespoonfnls of flour (bread flour); melt butter, stir in the flour and add a cupful of milk grad ually. stirring all the time. Add a little sa.lt and strain the dip over bread. Creamed Potato Pie. Cut enough cold boiled potatoes into dice to fill a pint measure. Pnt on ounce of flour and the same quahtin of butter in a saucepan with a seaso in.: o" salt and pepper Cook it till thoroughly mixed; then add one break fat.t cupful of milk and stir till smoof and thick. Add the potatoes and sim mer for five minutes; then pour into a shallow b'ikitig tin previously well but tered. Mix a rupful of breadcrumb- i melted butter and spread over the po tatoes. Bake till the crumbs are a golden brown. Serve hot. Meat Loaf. One pound and a half each of 1 vo' and lean pork Remove the bon and gritlo and run it through the me.it hopper. Add one and one-half oupfrK of breadcrumbs, three well beitcii eggs, one cupful of milk, a rounded teaspoonful of salt, one of ground saw and haif a teaspoonful ofpeppe: Mi well together and place in a loaf tin Cover with thin slice of fat p rk and bake in a hot oven for one hour and, i Half, basting often Lima Ccan l-i-rce lioil a pint of linn beaux in salt"l boiling water, add a tir'-poonful ot Migar: when .soft pur t'-oni t'Ti.tigh . ipvo: make a thin white sauce with one tablespoonful of flour and one : butter and a cup of milk Stir tint" Vuooth When hot add a pint of clii- k "ti stock and then add the beans: if to thick, more stock; serve very hot. Whitening Linen. To whiten unbleached table linen o: muslin or other unbleached artie.es. boil them in blue water such as is used for rinsing. After they are thoroughly -(aided "remove from the boiler and hang them on the line without ringing. The next washing will remove the bluing. To Remove Iron Rust. Cream of tartar is said to be excel lent for removing iron rust spots. Use a tablespoonful of cream of tartar to two quarts of water and boil the article in the solution. This is said to have re mored stains when lemon and salt and even oxalic acid had failed to do so. Molasses Candy. Two cupfuls molasses, one cupful white sugar, butter half the size of an egg, two teaspoonfuls vinegar. Boll until candy hardens in cold water. When cool pull until white, twist and cut into small pieces with shears. Nut and Celery Salad. Mix equal parts of English walnuts or pecan meats cut in pieces and cel ery cut in small pieces. Marinade with French dressing. Serve with border oC 'shredded lettuce. Automobile Hints. The lock nut on the valve stem should be screwed down tight against the felloe. If not well seated it will tend to come off with the over all cap. and trouble will follow in separating them. A Koft leather washer placed be tween two iron washers will oftez serve to stop the rattle of fenders and brace rods. The reason that one car will outlast another of the same make is due to tha fact that one man will give wearing surfaces constant watchful care, while another will only renew the lubricat ing material when the parts get drr and cry out for oil. Automobile Dealer. Device For Saving Lumber. Tearing down scaffolding and stag ings with ordinary tools usually result in considerable damage to the plank ing, even when the utmost care is used, and to overcome this a new and in genious tool has been invented, says Fopular Mechanics In using the de vice is hooked over the plank with the legs bearing against the post as shown. The lever is then pulled downward, and this results in pulling the plank away from the post with little or n danger of breakage. The device con sists of two parts, one sliding withia the other. The two spaced plates, com- (LVi Jim $0 , ' ') TOOIi DKAWS I'LANK FKOJ1 TOST. prising a sort of casing, form one cl the parts, and to these plates Is rigidly fixed the rod that n hooted behind the; plank The legs run back into the 'a ing and are nmvaul to a plate th-. extends from the upper to the low- -side and is arranged to slide easilj The lever, which terminates in a can, is pivoted between the plates of the casing and bears against the edse of the plate to w!i:--h the legs are at tached. "When the lever is pulled dox ward the tendency is to tbrost the leg outward, but as these are braced against the post the result is that the casing, and with it the plank, is draw away from the posL Drying Paint. Paints dry better in a free and equal ly well ventilated room than in a ch warm out. In the use of driers the surface must be taken into account Copper ami oak are particularly anti drying P'.ue and cat irou are partir u larly good Qnic'i drying paint is usual ly stronger in odor than slow dry!:!. The obnoxious smell of paint may be changed into comparatively pleannt one by the .Mi;iou of a few droits of oil of spike i.iv. uder. v. Inch will also act as a drier a Ve manner eau de cologne may ! :.(!Twl to spirit va; nlshes and lacnr.er- to meet tliewissir of fastidious people. ','ecquite Voed For Paving. So scarce have mesquite wood blocks become that the city of San Antonitt. Tex.. !ias abandoned the plan of pa' ing 2.-(.WU square yards of its street with this wood, says Scientific Ameri can. .Mesquite is a wood that is almost indestructible, very hard, tough and dense In the southwest for many I years It has been used for the slils or. adobe houses. It makes an excellent material for street paving. Welding Brass. A good flux to employ when welding brass consists of a mixture of sodium chloride, b'orax and boracic acid. Ham mering of brass after welding consid erably improves the metal. It should be done cold on brass with a high per centage of copper and hot on brass with o low percentage of copper. After, cold hammering the brass should be annealed. Blacksmith and Wheeh wrigbt t ., New United States DrydoeW ' The Union Iron works. San Fran cisco, is under contract with the ntvy department to build a drydock lwii feet long by 110 feet wide with 40 fee; depth over the sill, which Is to be ? '! by United States naval vessels In the Pacific. Keep Dust Out of Spark Plug Hole. When the spark ping is removed s cork should be put in the spark" ptagr bole to keep out dirt and grit nntM . ready to replace the flog. , .- li v t ,,i,,;,'e -iiV I'- '5 1 I I. f j bHi-iqa" Aft? r ois 'jjok f.i iv. jlS 11 " AC ' it . ' . '. ' 6 r -r T 1