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Mi :1 SOiv- for aii by PLANTING NUT TREES i G00D F,LTER m C,STERNS -iolved one Calumet. For dally use in million! of kitchen hat proved that Calumet it highest not only io quality but in Uavtning fower as well un failing in remits pure to the extreme and wonderfully economical in use. Ask youi grocer. And try Calumet next bake day, . RECEIVED HIGHEST. AWARDS Wart" Pur Pm4 gxeealttew. ChMrge, Ilk Paris 1441. frranaa. WIS. Von don't mm money kAm yoa fan1 cheap or ilf-can balflng powdtt. Don't ( mtdti. Buy Calumtl. It't more economical mot wholttemt giatt hutHwlU. Calumtl it Jot mptrtoi U tout mll and tod. GAVE HIMSELF AWAY. Forests Have Been Cut Down For the Best Timber. Black Walnut, Moat Valuable for Wood Used In Manufacture of Fine Furniture, Also Bears Oily Nut of Fine Flavor. (Ir J. U. W. BMITll, OkUhocna.) Among the great natural resources tit the United Hiatus, our native nut bearing tret occupy a place of no mean Importance; but they hare been treated like other natural resosurcrs of the country eiylolted, wasted and destroyed until the outcome la gctttlag to be alarming. Our fertile lauds bars been robbed of their productivity by the onecrop system; the forests have buen cut down for.the best timber and no pro vision made for a future supply. The walnut, the chestnut and the hickory, also the pecan have fallen before the woodman's aie, with their fellows, the elm, ash and oak In the effort to make room for more grain crops, cotton and tobacco. Thousands of acres of valuable timber and nut trees have bea destroyed In this man ner. In many places It will be genera tions before the overage yield per acre will again attain unto that which was destroyed. I!ut It Is too late to grieve over the errors of the paat, but It Is not too lots to quit the wasteful habits, to begin to repair the damage done and save and Improve that which la left The black walnut, the most valu able tree In the world for Its timber, which Is used In the manufacture of the finest furniture and cabinet ma king, bears a large, oily nut of fine flavor, which finds a ready sale at a fair price. The shell-bark hickory In another native tree of sturdy and lofty growth, the wood of which, on account of its great strength and elasticity la highly prized for the manufacture of agricul tural implements and la unsurpassed for fuel. The American sweet chestnut, the butternut and the pecan are all trees of fust growth and are valuable for both timber and nuts. Our native nuts have already made a respectable beginning in forming tho body of various food products whoae marketable value is growing rapidly such as butter, oils, confer- tions and concentrated food stuff that ) are meeting an Increased demand. i There Is no diet more nutritious an4 easier to digest than our native nuts. There are thousands of farmers who have no nut trees of their own, but whose land la highly suitable for the growing of thete trees. Such farmers should plant a few nut trees, such as are adaptable to their climate and Roll, every year, and not be deterred from planting on the grounds that they would have to wait so long for results. The planting of nut trees ia elevat ing, profitable and pleasing and in harmony with the laws of nature. The planting, propagating and grow ing of nut trees has a great future be fore It, owing to the natural adapta bility and the rapidly increasing de mand for nuts to us In the various food products. ' Illustration and Explanation of Devics That Has Been Used With Satis factory Results. In reply to a query for a filter for a rlMtern, a writer iu the Uural New Yorker makes the following reply: "The accompanying diagram shows a simple filter much used, and one that gives good results The water enters through pipe a, settles in seft tllng chamber b, passes through per forated bottom c, through filtering chamber d, where It Is clarified, then out of discharge pipe e, to the cistern. The overflow f, should be connected to the overflow from the clatern. The bottom Is inclined so settlement will collect at g. Make the bottom, tides and partition of concrete; proportion one of cement to two of sand, well tarn pod to make It as near water proof as possible. If reinforcing is used, the sides may be three Inches and the par tition two Inches thick. For the fil tering chamber, get any convenient screen, having an abundance of one quarter or three-elghths-lnch holes, for the perforated bottom. Fasten secure- .tin- 2tt- mm TWO W0HEH SAVED FROM. OPERATIONS By Lydia H Pinkham'. Veg etable Compound Their Own Stories Here Told. Cistern Filter. ly, putting supports under It so weight of Altering matter will not press it down. Next bottom put a four-inch layer of coarse gravel, then a six-inch layer of fine gravel, then fill nearly U) bottom of discharge pipe with clean, coarse sand. To clean the filter stop up discharge pipe e, and pour clean water in filtering chamber d, and pump mud and water out of cham ber b. If this is done occasionally renewal of the sand and gravel is not often necessary. It is best to put a slab of reinforced concrete two inches thick over the top; proportion one cement to three sand. This may be easily taken off for cleaning the filter. Make filter two feet wide; Inside measurements given throughout Beatrice, Neb. " Just after my mar riage my left side began to pain me and the pain got so severe at times that I suffered U-rrihly with It. I visited threw doctors and each one wanted to operate on me but I would not consent to an op eration. I heard of the good Lydia E. finkham's Vegetable Compound was doing for others and I used several bot tles of it with the result that I haven't been bothered with my aide since then. I am in good health and I have two Httl girls."-Mrs.R,B.Cunj,Beatrice,Nebw Tho Other Case. Cary, Maine.-" I feel it a duty I ows to all suffering women to tell what Lydia E. I'inkham's Vegetable Compound did lor me. One year ago I found myself a terrible sufferer. I had pains in botit ides and such a soreness I could scarcely straighten up at times. My back ached. 1 had no appetite and was so nervous I could not sleep, then I would be so tired mornings that I could scarcely get around. It seemed almost impossible) to move or do a bit of work and I thought I never would be any better until I submitted to an operation, but my husband thought I had better writa to you and I did so, stating my symp toms. I commenced taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and soon felt like a new woman. I had no pains, slept well, had good appetite and could do almost all my own work for a family of four. I shall always feel that I owe my good health to your Vegetable Compound. "-Mrs. Hayward Sowkrs, Cary, Maine. TRAGEDY OF AN AIR DEATH How the Grandchildren of Colonel Nieuport Concealed His Son's Death. "Why did not thurlfs tome back yesterday?" querulously di-niundud Colonel Nleuport. the eighty two year old futhcr of the airman killed near Ktampes, 8 lne et U)lre, recently. Ills eldest brother, Kdward Nieuuort, was killed In the military maneuvers of 1911. The news of the second son's death had been hidden from the father, and his relatives rould only re ply: "Charles has gone for a great flight" "Ah. well! And why. then, has not Kdward come to bid me good night?" They could not make him remember that Kdward was long dead. With tears in their eyes, bis grandchildren brought him letters and flowers to dis tract him. "What haa happened?" asked the old colonel, "Why, nothing, nothing, grandfa ther." The old man's memory returned and he was heard muttering: "It Is dreadful to lose your boy. I would rather have died before him. And the second his brother's equal nothing ran have happened to him? Oh, no. The tame house rould not twice suf fer a blow like that" Smiling, he thought of the honors which hsl younger son was gaining. Suddenly the sound of military music camo up from the street It drew nearer, and as the beating drums passed tho old soldier's window he got up with difficulty, leaned out of the window and saluted the passing reg iment Newspaper boys followed the crowd, shouting, "News of the acci dent" Gentle hands dragged the old man back "Go in, grandpa! You are getting cold." Paris Journal. GENERAL SHE CALLED HIM. Annual Apple Crops. During the paat seventeen years one of the orchards of J. O. Wells of Ontario county, N. Y., has borne fif teen crops. The two failures were due to frost at blossoming time. When it is stated that the leading variety in this orchard Is Baldwin, the Importance of thinning needs no further comment Mr. Wells thins to aix inches or more. Lady of the House Is your milk richer than Sklnnem's? Milkman Well, it's purer. Lady of the House How do you know? Milkman (absently) I have a filter on ray pump. How Thought He Had 'Em. Fanner rtrown Hello, John! you feelin'? Farmer Jones Poorly, I felt all right yesterday, but I kinder think to day soinethln's the matter with me I feel sonio o' the symptoms of Bcia. tica. lumbago, dyspepsia, ringworm, bronchitis an a few other ser'us ail men Is. Farmer Hrown Du tell! What in th' name o' Tophet did ye do las night? Fanner Jones- W'y, I read the ne Farmers' almanac till near moruin'. Overloaded. Tho postman, staggering under his tremendous burden, stopped at No. 23 and rang the bell. "Hero's the two dorou house blinds you ordered sent by parcel post ma'am," he feebly murmured as the lady of the house came to the door, "and tho patent washing machine and the new iron gate for the front yard but" and he smiled a feeble, wilted sort of apology "I'm afraid you'll have to wait until my next delivery for your portable garage." Above all, don't count your turkeyi before they are hatched. Raising of fowls has made gigantic strides in the past few years. The thermometer is an absolute so ceaslty In any well equipped dairy. A dairy herd that is really profit able is never made up of nondescript cows. There are two things that go hand In hand in the poultry yard, and these are care and profit Now is a good time to overhaul the i.rk harness and put in rivets ant stitches where they do the most good. Salt, hardwood ashes and charcoal aie Ideal to keep in hog pasture, and if there is any other thing needed It Is pure water. Get rid of some of the many roost ers that are worrying the hens to no good purpose. They are deadheads and eat up the profit of the flock. Cheap pasture lands, good fencef HER PUNISHMENT VERY SEVERE Tom 1 don't know a thing I wouldn't do for you. Qrace Then you will have mother and father come and live with us. Tom Good you reminded mo; but I don't know of anything else I wouldn't do for you. RED, ROUGH HANDS MADE SOFT AND WHITE For red, rough, chapped and bleed ing hands, dry, fissured, Itching, burn ing palms, and painful finger-ends, with shapeless nails, a one-night Cutl cura treatment works wonders. Di rections: Soak the hands, on retir ing, in hot water and Cuticura Soap. Dry, anoint with Cuticura Ointment, and wear soft bandages or old, loose gloves during the night. These pure, sweet and gentle emollients preserve Mrs. Ckppell Says That Her Pun ishment for Five Yean Wat More than Anyone Could Ever Tell. ML Airy, N. C In a letter from this place, Mrs. Sarah M. Chappell says: "I suffered for about 6 years with womanly trouble, also ston, ich trouble, and my punishment was nore than any one could ever tell. Several doctors had treated me, and I had tried most every kind of medi cine I could think of, but none did me any good. I read one day about Cardul, the woman's tonic, and I decided to try It I had not taken but about six bottles until I was almost cured. It did mo more good than all the other medi cines I had tried, put together. My friends began asking me why I looked so well, and I told them about Cardui. Several are now taking it." Are you a woman? Do you suffer from any of the ailments due to wom anly trouble, such as sleeplessness, nervousness, weakness, and that ever lastingly tired feeling? If so, let us urge you to give Car dul a trial. You have everything to gain, if it helps you. and we feel con fident it will help you. Just as it has more than a million other women. In the past half century. Begin taking Cardul today. N. B. Wrlit tt! Chattanooga Medicine Co, Ladies' Advisory Dept.. ChattsnooKS. Tenn., for Sudsl ' Imtructitmi on ymir cue ami 64-page book. m 1. - K n.I11 .nla tx In. ana irc u the hands, prevent redness, roughness bor problem in a way that makes the! . ', . , , . ., dairy farmer Btare and the profits are not very much less. CONCRETE WATERING TROUGHS ARE CHEAP and chapping, and impart in a single night that velvety softness and white ness so much desired by women. For those whose occupations tend to in jure tho hands, Cuticura Soap and Cu ticura Ointment are wonderful. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post-card "Cuticura, Dept L, Boston," Adv. 'Home Treatment for Women, wrapper. Adv, sent in plain Concrete Water Trough for Two Fields. Fair Comparison. "Do you mean to say that you com pare yourself to Shakespeare?" "Why not?" Insqulred the manager of the Clothesline Burlesque company. "Shakespeare had pretty much my ex perience. The critics roasted him and the authorities were always threatening to close his how." Washington Star. Your neighbors may know that you have money, but what thev may not Xnow is bow you get it. Concrete is the cheapest material with which an everlasting watering trough cau be made, ana a large ridge placed in the bottom will, in the northern climates, prevent Injury to the trough from freezing when filled with water. This frost-proof riage need not be as loug as the interor of the trough by several inches at each end and In localities below the frost line need not bo used. The siao of tho trough Is a matter of choice, but tho entire trough must have a foundation of gravel or stone to a depth below the frost line, after which tho wood form is placed for tho outside, and the bottom filled to a depth of four or six inches with con crete. Largo troughs require a six Inch bottom, while for troughs less than seven feet long a four-inch bot tom Is sufficient The overflow and supply pipes should be placed before the concrete Utility of Small nock. Shfp. if.treatod kindly, are more Maly handled and more easily trained than either horse, cattle or hogs. With Just a Uttlo more effort one can teach thm to drive or to follow from the pasture. Every farmer should havo a small flock, for the purpose of utilising the waste about his placo, cleaning his fence rows of weeds and bushes, and enriching his soil. And when you Consider thojtwo sources of profit, tho Cheap Way to Mount Pictures. To mount pictures Inexpensively for the nursery or children's bed rooms, cut. all the white margin off the picture, then get some thin, smooth boards 1 inch larger all round than the picture; stain the boards with dark oak stain about two Inches round the edge; varnish them, then paste the picture on the board, leaving an even edge of the stained wood all round; hang on the walla in the usual way. The Reign of Woman. Women will serve as public porters and dining car waiters on the special train which is to carry the Illinois suffragists to the Washington parade, and except for the train crew and sol itary man to shine shoes it will be an example of feminized railway trans portation. The male shoeblack prompts masculine reflections on the new dispensation. But mere man may take heart. The time is still re mote when there will be women at lo comotive throttles or in the more re sponsible posts in railroad operation. - New York World. is put in and when they aro connect ed underground, says Modern Farmer tn describing the building of cement troughs. After the bottom is complet ed placo the form for the ridge and fill. Then place the inside trough form and fill with concrete made up of one part Portland cement, throe parts sand and three parts aggregates. The placing of an Iron rod. two in ches below the top, adds much more strength and at little expense. Keep wet for two days and then all but the outside form should be removed and the interior slushed with cement and water, mixed to the consistency of thick paint Apply with whitewash brush. This will make It nearly water-tight, at least more so than a stone trough. The outside form should not be removed for four weeks, but the trough may bo used a few days after the Interior has been slushed a above. sale of wool and tho sale of lambs, at today's prices. It Is clear that within a few years on most every farm thorr will bo found a bunch of sheen. Crime Note. First Small Town Police Official A crook was just in to get permission for a little criminal work tonight. Second Ditto YeKS work? FirBt Small Town Police Official Not much. First-class ;'io!d-up by the original New York company. Puck. ELIXIR BA1IEK STOPS CHILLS and is tlie fln-Kt kind of tonic. "Your 'Italirk' acta like mut'ic; I hnva given It to numerous people In my par Isli who were Buffering" with chills, ma laria and fever. 1 recommend it to those who are sufferers and in need of a good tonic." Itov. S. Szymanowaki, St. Stephen's Church, Perth Amhoy. N. J. Kllxlr Bahrk, t0 rent, all druggists, or Klocitwskl & Co., Washington, U.C. Adv. Sfe-. - - - - I ll few-5' ' ALCOHOL-3 PtR CENT AeSftablf Preparation for As similating itie Food and Rcjjula ling hV Stomach and llowels ef IM S lis i ! Pi ti 0; S! 1 Promotes Digction,Chrrrful nr ssand Rest Contains neither Opium. Morphine nor Mineral Not Natic otic a. sou otsifiarmra JmiH JhJ A perfect Remedy forCorwHo lion . Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea, Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and LOSS OF SLTtP Facsimile Signatare of The Centaur Company. NEW YORK. For Infants nnd Children. SJBJBJSJjSSSJSBJBSSJBJJBJBJJBJJJJBJBBBJBJBS The Kind You Havo Always Bought Boars tho Signature of Guaranteed tinder the FoodJ"4 Exact Copy of Wrapper. I II" I. J v "4 l A In Use For Over Thirty Years Tiia iMtTiui Mswasjv, mmm von try. ohaTn. for feu (jTp ijm PINK EYE ffl DISTfMPfB HRHii rrvrn AIL NOr n04i uisrasrs Cures the sick and sets as a preventive for othsrs. Liquid riven on th tonfue. Ssft for brood marcs and sll others. Bent kidney remedy; 50i- ni 1 a bottle; SS and !0 a doien. Sold by all druggists and horse good hoUKs, or sent, express paid, by th manufacturer. SPOHN MEDICAL CO.. Chemists. GOSHEN, INDIANA elievesNemraleia Sloan's Liniment gives instant relief from neuralgia or sciatica. It goes straight to the painful part soothes the nerves and stops the pain. Don't rub it penetrates. proof Mis. Rudolph Nisckk, Oconto,Wia., write!" I have: used Sloan's Liniment (or toothache and neuralgia in the head where nothing elsa would help ma and I would not be without the Liniment tn the house." .MMMviliaMl Could "Work" Him. Tho Preacher Aren't you afraid of your future In tho noxt world? The Dying Man No, sir. If satan Is any kind of a fellow at all he must belong to one or more of the nineteen different lodges of which I am a mem ber In good standing. Puck. It makes a man feel good when he is pretty certain he is going to miss a train and doesn't. is also good for rheumatism, sore throat, chest pains and sprains. Pains All Cone Mat. C. M. DoW'KBR, of Johannesburg, Mich., writes "I wish to say your Liniment is the best medicine in the world. It has cured me of neuralgia; those pains have all gone and I can truly gay your Liniment did cure me," Pain All Cone Mr. J. R. Swinger, of 547 So. 12th St., Louisville, Ky., writes: " I suffered wilh quite a severe neuralgic headache for four months without any relief. I used your Liniment for two or three nights and I haven't suffered with my head since. I have found many quick reliefs from pain by the use of Sloan's Liniment and believe it to be the best Liniment on the market to-day. I can recommend It for what it did for me." Price 25e., BOo., and $1.00 at All Sealers, Send for Sloan's Free Book oa Borsee. Address DR. EARL S. SLOAN. Boston. Mass. ' sjsiaawsjii.MSM xMmvw.imuMHKmmmiBi&M II 11 '4 A Truth may be Btranger than fic tion, but the latter commands a higher price in the magazine field. riLF.H CUBED IN 6 TO 14 UY8 Tour dntttnt will rntund money If-PAO OINT klKirr tula k eura an can of lieblnf, BUd4, Bloedlusur rrutrualaa Pikes In ( t U to. Wa. Honesty. No man Is bo dishonest but what he considers his next door neighbor more so. Milwaukee Sentinel. The man who pleases only himself must furnish all the applause. Only On "IIROSI, QnlKK" Tkat Is M11T1TI BK(iyi) CM'ININB. book or la aifaatur of . W. l.KOV B. Cares a VulS la On Imr. Cures Urip ia Two Kara. a. Dally Thought. Such are the habitual thoughts, nuch also will be the character of thy mind, for the soul is dying by the thoughts. Marcus Aurelltis. rarOldKorM,MhrRrmdles Won't I'ar Tbe worn raee tto Dialer f how lonf atanaing. le irr. roner a It Ik. Mine Uoi. ate. 8c,1.0U. era eared lb wonderful, old rttabi Au-.taepue lieallna: Oil. KrlleTe. rain ajvl New Treatment for Lice. Two hens, badly Infested, were dipped In a bath of boiled elder Cow ers, twigs ani leaven, the elder con coction being mixed with soma soft soap. In both instances all the lice were killed and the plumage In no wise damaged. Uaual Accompaniment. "This ircBh air movement Is merely tentative." "Well, of courso, tents will have to go with It." Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure consti pation . Constipation is the cauim of many ilbeama. Cure the cause and you cure the disease. Easy to take. Adv. WM 1 It VUbM Every Good Boll Counts In many cotton fields there is too much weed" and the bolls fall. To prevent this balance the plant food. The old idea that cotton does not need much Potash is hard to eradicate. But the loneer Phosphates have been used on tho crop the greater becomes the need of more POTASH Try a cotton fertilizer with 6 to 8 per cent. Potash and use liberal side dressings of Kamit, It will pay because Potash Pays Mix yiur eld stylt ftnil'nfr with an tqtal quantity of Kainit. We now sell Kainit and all Potah Salts direct. Write OS for price and for our free bock on Cotton Culture. GERMAN KALI WORKS, Ibc hear, New T llisnlai A Shak.Ceka task 4 Trm Kd,.. Sa.aasal Caatral Saak BUf .. New Orlsass bole Kit., Adaala 5a Fruclica A married actor doesn't care for cur tain callB at home. ITCH lUliwvaJ in 30 Minnie. Wowlford'a Hamtary Xxition foe all fu4a of contagious Itck. At Druggists. Adv. . While the way of the transgressor may be hard, it is seldom lononome. ra. WlnaloWs Bootfilng Srrrns) fee OhiMrea teething, soften the earn, retfneen lnflamsaar ttOBllara paianraa wlai eoUuJ&e a botlieUSi One touch of fashion is apt to make all women freaks. , I , S-fS. V'7r5?l BE SI r- ftK.,jiTA t.sv "-wW.":-. . I .V.. ;Ti. I mmmt J whsMSJUfrfea ' V I ftoBvcrr L. DOUGLAS .00 3.60 4j00 .so AND Boo SHOES MEN AND WOMEN BOYS SHOtS In f WOULD $2.00, $2.60 nnd tS OO. The larg est makers of Men's S3.50 and S4.00 shoes in the world. Set very eaarse vonr dealer to ahow ya U Uonalaa M.AO, M.oo and .AO shoe. Juat as rood la stria, et and wear mm other make costing M. to S7TO-tn amy airreranoa I tn prie. dhows In all leather, t jle and ahape to inn frrnony. 11 yon eouia viait vr. L , llnngla larg factories at Hroekton, Maaa.. and aw (oryoarwalf how earafuUy L. Donsrla show are snadw. ra would then ndaratand why thee nra warranted to fit bottwr, look hotter, hold thwlr snap and waar longar ill no nay other maaa iwr ma prtoa. CAUTION I zixzr to TAKt NO SUBSTITUTE. If W. It Dnofias shoas are not for sal In your vtelaltv.wriu W.I.. Donglaa. Kmekton. Mae. w.'jcr v.'B mfsm 20fr 3iV..'.??lII 90 JMIteWWl mm lr-'" Mall Sssf e'jllua. traled lirder Oaiaiog free. ui) liooijll I loo A fels feot brj C Uss. Its. rrts tl.00 ff J If Y.r Is fltsr1sif r.wNk, "KfcftOViKC" V, - J i e Ut fcv Va VlMt-Mawwafeey w . J CI., .. f rate eapily. 25c at all stores. (Adv)