"BAYER ASPIRIN" PROVED SAFE Take without Fear as Told in "Bayer" Package f&AYEpl WA Does not affect / the Heart Unless you see the "Bayer Cross" on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians over twenty-flve years for C.ilds Headache Neuritis Lumbago Toothache Rheumatism Neuralgia Pain. Pain Each unbroken "Bayer" package con tains proven directions. Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Drug gists also sell bottles of 24 and 100. Have a C lovely (bmplexion You can make and keep your complex ion aa lovely as a young g irl'a by giving a little attention to your blood. Remember, a good complexion isn't skin deep ?it's health deep. Physicians agree that sulphur is one of the most effective blood purifiers known to science. Hancock Sulphur Compound is an old. reliable, scientific remedy, that purges the blood of impurities. Taken internally ? a few drops in a glass of water, it gets at the root of the trouble. As a lotion, it soothes and heals. 60c and $1.20 the bottle at your drug gist's. If he can't supply you. send his name and the price in stamps and we will send you a bottle direct. Hancock Liquid Sfffcraua Company Baltimore. Maryland Hancock Sulphur Compound Ointment ?90e sad SOc?for un with Hancock Sulphur Compound BABIES LOVE m&wmhows syrup Tbs laisats' sad CUdrsa't KsgaU^r Plunit to gir9 phMMt to toko. Guaranteed purely ve? ^^^^Vetable and absolutely harmless. V \ It quickly overcomes colic. ? / 1 diarrhoea, flatulency and ? Jj *7 other like disorders. \ The open published HK Vf / formula appears oo ^?jf ^ V7v 4every label. |H " DON'T SUFFER WITH Indigestion, Heartburn Constipation or (Jan Dr. Me Lane's Famous Htoma.h <'ompound.wlll sweeten your stomach and relieve all distress. Dr. McLsiif'j famous stornsch compound has helped thousards. Will surely help you Quick relief. Very palatable. Don't send us any money. .List pay your postman tl on delivery. Money back guarantee. THBWARHKN' I'ltODl CTS CO.. 57 William St.. Newark. N. J. Fnwprrt of Profit - Making In high ? lass en terprise welcomes investigation by man who can Invest moderate sunt. American Auclo Co.. Carpente/s Hldg.. Washington. D. C. 19 to IS% Earned on Syndicate I a vestment*. Mortgage Loans. Apartment Buildings. Hotels. Chain Stores, etc. Sold on monthly payments. Brokers wtd. P. O. Bo* 431. New Orleans. La. W. N. U., BALTIMORE. NO. 28-1927. Stern Position Sympathizer?Ami tiitl her father rome between yon? Jilted Suitor?No?behind me!? Tit-Bit*. A# odemH usbanda Husband* with Idlly-Roat appetite* ?re the easiest to live with.?Woman's Home Companion. Study your own self.?St. Bernard. ? I (If Ma Buzz gets it in the neck FJT spray dears your home of mosquitoes and flies. It also kills bed bugs, roaches, ants, and their eggs. Fatal to insects but harmless to mankind. Will not stain. Get Flit today. h DESTROYS //?is> FBe* Moaqrftoea Moths . jf u Ants Bed Bags Roaches ?**?*. 0 ? sail sail am an. #ajJ 11 i 1 IT "' \ R?.'' * "Wild Boy" Beyond Reach of Science ' The recent discoveries of children supposed to have lived their lives among animals, and who consequently developed animal habits, add iuterest to the "Peter the Wild Boy" exhibit at Berkhampstead School museum, al though there is no reason to suppose Peter was a wolf-cldld. Peter was found in 1725 In the woods near Hamelin, In Hanover, where he had subsisted on the burk of trees, leaves, and berries for an unknown period. When round he was apparently about twelve years old. A year later lie was brought to Knglaud. but even under skilled tui tion he ,v.:s incapable of receiving any instruction, and never developed the faculty of speech. lie died In 178i>, ut Axter's Knd farm at North Cross, where he lived since Ids arrival in England, and on a brass pluto in the church Is u sketch of his head drawn from ua engraving by Bartolozzi.?London Tit-Bits. Recovered Radium Some leUetlng that would make Craig Kennedy proud was performed by Prof. J. B. Kdwards of Georgia Tech In Americus. Ga. Several tubes of radium valued at $4,000 were lost from the hospital. With mechar leal devices perfected for detection of ra dium waves. Professor Kd wares traced tlie receptacles and their precious con tents to the city Incinerator five miles away. , Unscathed, the radium was re turned. Hospital attaches believe the tubes became entagled in cotton that was discarded and thus were tossed into refuse receptacles. Bell-Ana Universally Used Friend Tells Friend of This Wonderful SURE RELIEF for Indigestion Samples on Request For correcting over-acidity, normal izing digestion and quickly relieving belching, gus, sourness, heartburn, nausea and other digestive disorders. The great value of BKLL-ANS has been proved by over 30 years' use. Doctors, Nurses and Dentists recom mend tills tested Safe, Pleasant, Sure Relief for Indigestion. Not a laxative. Send for free samples to: Bell & Co.. Inc., Orangeburg, N. Y.?Adv. Suit We're Born With To find out how uiany yards of skin it t^ikes to cover a human body. Doc tor Takuhlra. Japanese physician, had a special variety of thin strong paper which adheres closely to curved sur faces pasted over his nude form. This was dried, then removed, cut Into flat pieces and measured. In this way Doc tor Talvuhira discovered It took 10 square feet of skin to cover him, al though be Is only 5 feet 0 inches tall. . , . That Is another thing we shan't have to worry about from now on.?Capper's Weekly. For bloated feeling and d ressed breath ing due to Indigestion you need a medicine as well as a purgative. Wright's Indian Vegetable Pills arc both. Adv. The soul never grows old.?-Long fellow. Money Isn't everything, hut it re duces earthly fears one-half. And all that glitters Is not guilt. ForDaodnf, Ten Y J&SS "?> Co*. Mc, lot I JSr \\ t,li* ^ yoo*fi*?t l/iflt M thought for foot / comfort. The Ik Antiseptic, Heol. b| powder to ",,? yo?r j? llll Sold aoiotm Plan Moviet on Cloudt Ciiant moti..D pictures on the clouds is the iilin of ex|>erlinenters with pro jectlon iippuratus In Germany. Ite cently at Jena they threw still pic tures on the clouds and the pictures eutne out with great clearness. A deed lias heen drawn In Bangor Maine, for a parrel of land with a street frontage of five Inches and a depth of 100 feet. ill c. a? ? .i ??1 i i ? i; ? CULLING CHICKENS AIDS BUILD FLOCK ft seldom pays to raise a weak 01 crippled chirk. One of the secrets of successful poultry culture lies In dis carding weaklings as soon as found I Often the owners of chirks are too ''chicken-hearted" to kill weak chicks Out fhey should consider that such action is really more humane than nursing sick or crippled ones along, letting them die later after they have consumed a lot of feed and a lot of lahor has been spent on them. Generally speaking, weak chicks are the result of some s|?eriftr trouble. Often It is a disease such as white diarrhea or coccidiosis. Both these diseases spread through dro|>fdngs. and leaving weak chicks In the tlock Invite further spread of disease. If tlie trouble is caused by some fault Ir, management or feeding. It Is usually best to cull out the weak birds and try and correct the fault. Culling chicks helps to rid a ttock of weak vitality. Ou several occasions we have had letters from our readers telling about white diarrhea In theli chicks this year, and later in the letter they mention that they had a little trouble last year. They have saved I birds that recovered from the disease ami they have spread the disease to chicks this year through the egg. These diseased chicks have, in turn, spread the disease to their mates with heavy loss. Cood feeding and management must he combined with culling. Kven the best chirks cannot make a satisfactory growth if they do not have the proper feed. Culling helps owners who prac tice proper feeding and management Duck Eggs Incubated in Much Same Way as Hens Duck eggs ure Incubated In much the same way as are heft eggs. The temperature of the machine should he kept at 101 to 102 for the first five days, after which It should he kept as near 10.2 as possible. After the first five days fhe eggs must he turned and watered daily. A great deal of water Is used, many people sprinkling ho much on that if runs out of thf bottom of the Incubator. The period >f Incubation is days. A good feed mixture is the follow ing: 2(H) pounds corn meal. TOO pounds low-grade, -flour. 1(H) pounds bran, to which Is added 10 per cent * of boef scraps If milk is available, the beef scraps may he reduced Plenty of sand and greeri feed should be provided at all times. Of Much Importance to Keep Chick Rations Dry Kiich year finds an Increasing nam ner using a factory-mixed or home mixed mash In the starting and grow Ing of their chirks. The use of a feeder or mash hop[>er Is a part of tliis method of feeding. If the feeder Is placed outside the house It is very Important to see that the top and sides of the feeder are tight Keep ing the mash or starter dry is very Important. There Is nothing worse for young chicks than sour, wet mash It Is frequently a cause of digestive trouble that stunts the growth of a large number of chicks, even If no death loss results. S*0-*-0-*-0*0?O !*<>-? 0-*-0-*0-*-0*i ? Chick Precautions | KOOO^O'OliO^^OO^OS no not crowd at any time. ? ? ? Avoid moldy litter or feed of any kind. ? ? ? Kill nil weak, crippled or deformed ? hicks. ? ? ? Clet chicks out on the ground as soon as possible. ? ? ? Feed sparingly, but often, during the first two weeks. ? ? ? P.e sure chicks are not chilled while being transferred to brooder ? ? ? Be sure the house and all equipment Is thoroughly clean and kept clean. ? * * * . Oo not remove chicks from Inrnhn tors until they are at least thlrty-sli hours old. ? ? ? Remember that crowding means losses with the youngsters See to It that they have ample room at all times In their brooders or hovers. ? ? ? Do not feed chicks before they are forty-eight boors old. They will eat, and may appear hungry, but they are better off with no other feed than that provided by nature for at least 48 hours after hatching. ? * ? Be sure your brooder stove Is regu lated before chicks are placed under hover. ? ? ? New ground Is far safer for chicks than ground .where poultry has been previously grown. ? ? ? Plenty of green feed and milk are essential for the natural and normal development of the baby chick. ? ? ? Don't allow the chicks to become chilled. Keep them growing by feed Ing wholesome rations. ? ? * IS A HEALTHIER STRONSER GIRL Because She Took Ljdk E. Pink baa'* Vegetable Cbapoaad The fertile valleye of Oregon help to ?apply the tablet of America- Tble Is possible through the magic of the bum ble tin can. In ode of tbe can ning establish ments, Julia Schmidt was em ployed. It was com plicated work be cause she did seal ing and other parts of the work. It was strenuous work and she was not a strong girl. Often ibe forced herself to. work when she was hardly able to sit at her machine. At times she would have to> stay at home for she was so weak she could hardly walk. For live years, she was In this weakened condition. She tried various medicines. At last, a friend of hers spoke of Iiydla E. Ptnkham's Vegetable Compound, and she gave It a trial. "Everyone saya I am a healthier and stronger girl." she writes. "I ami rec ommending the Vegetable Compound to all my friends who tell me how they suffer and I am willing to answer letr tera from women asking about It.'" Julia Schmidt's address is 113 Willow St.. SUverton, Oregon. Girls who work in factories know just how Miss Schmidt felt. Perhaps they, too, will find better healths bj; taking the Vegetable Compound. For speedy and effective action Dr. Peery's "DeadShot"hasnoequaL Onedoseonly will dean out worms. 60c. All druggists. Bible la Being Read More The old hiding place Isn't depend able any more, wives are warned. A Los Angeles man, turning the leaves of a Bible, found a S5 hill. CORNS W ' Ends pain at once/ In one minute pain from corns is ended. Dr. Scholl's Zino-pads do this ea/e/jr by removing the cease?pressing end rubbing of shoes. They are thin, medi cated, antiseptic, healing. At all drug and shoe stores. Cost but a trifle. DXScholl's 'Lino-pads Put one on?the pain U gone I HANFORD'S Balsam of Myrrh For Mosquito Bites, Sting of Bees and Venomous Insects AlUnmdMlitMn.nni.Sa fint Uoi. ii IB MITCHELL EYE SALVE heals Inflamed eyes, granulated lids, styes, etc. Sure. Safe. Speedy. 25c at all druggists. Hall & Ruckel. N. Y.CL K remote makes the skin beautiful tor only IL*. FREE BOOKLET. Ask roar dealer or write Dr C. H. Berry Co. Dept.. *75 Michigan Are., Chicago Some people are too good to be in teresting. Tn?i*t on having Dr. Peery's "Dead Shot** for Worms or Tapeworm and the druggist will get It for you. 372 Pearl St.. N. Y. Adv. It's pretty linrd to be good-natured ami dishonest at the same time. CHILDREN CRY FOR "CASTORIA" Especially Prepared for Infants and Children of All Ages Mother! Fletcher's Castoria has been In use for over 30 years to re lieve babies and children of Constipa tion, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diar rhea; allaying Feverlshness arising therefrom, and, by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimi lation of Food; giving natural sleep without opiates. The genuine bears signature of BEST for the ^Complexion r The beaaty of Clan's is the beauty k brings to As complexion?toft, smooth, dear white akin, free of pim ples, blackheads or other blemishes. Glenn's Sulphur Soap CMkiBM%NiHk? ***** / cTTic SWEEp* CLOVER IN FAVOR FOR COWS Sweet ctovev bay la a satisfactory substitute for alfalfa Id the ration of the dairy cow, say dairy specialists of South Dakota State college. If It is well cured and' not too coarse It sup plies nutrients quite similar to alfalfa hay in quality and quantity. It Is not as palatable a dairy feed as Is alfalfa and because It Is somewhat coarse and stemmy the high-producing milk cow should not be required to clean up all that she Is fed. In localities wbere both legumes can be grown success fully the usual practice of dairymen Is that of relying upon the alfalfa crop for hay and upoD sweet clover for pas ture. ? With a few exceptions sweet clover seems to give excellent results as a pasture crop. While the number of trials to determine Its value are lim ited In number several experiment sta tions report no 111 effects on dairy cattle when pastured on sweet clover. Furthermore these reports show that milk Row was maintained satisfacto rily and no complaints were received reporting the odor or flavor ?f the milk as being disagreeable. Occa sionally the loss of a cow from bloat Is reported when sweet clover Is pas tured. liut bloat seems to occur more frequently on alfalfa pasture. Unless the crop is pastured closely the growth will become rank, coarse and unpal atable. It Is estimated that sweet clover makes equally as nutritious silage us alfalfa. The amount of moisture in the legumes as cut for hay Is usually high and If silage is made of this green material It Is advisable to let It become slightly more mature than when cut for hay. One South Dakota dairyman reported satisfactory results with sweet clover silage last summer. There Is. however, not enough evi dence In support of this practice to warrant more than a reference to It. Calves Thrive on Skim Milk if Supplemented Under most conditions In Colorado the price of butter fat makes many dairymen hesitate to feed whole milk to their calves. Whole milk Is nature's food for the calf, but. skim milk, properly supple mented will, In the light of many ex periments, make a feed whicb is equal ly as good. Whole milk may make a better calf than skim milk, but not necessarily a better cow. Skim milk Is the whole milk after the fat has been removed by the farm separator. It must be supplemented with feeds which are high in energy-giving nu trients called carbohydrates and fat. Such supplements are corn meal, kaf fir meal, ground barley and like feeds. The following ration Is one suggested In the feeding of skim milk to calves: ground oats, one part; ground barley, one part; wheat bran, one part; skim milk and hay. - Corn meal or kaflr meal may be substituted for the ground barley in the abqve grain mixture.?Extension Bulletin 23CA. Colorado Agricultural College. Skill in Getting Most Milk From Herd of Cows Knowing how to calculate good ra tions does not constitute all the skill In getting the most milk from a herd ot cows at the least cost and with the least wear and tear on the cows. Knowing feeds and the calculation of rations and not knowing cows Is much like the theoretical agricultural econ omist who knows the theories of co operative marketing without knowing the American farmer and his agricul ture. There are thousands of dairy men who are doing a good Job of get ting a lot of milk from a herd of cows who do not know the arithemetlc of calculating good rations, but theso are men who know cows. S0?0?0?0?0B0?0?O0^>H | Dairy Facts | g0^^0*080*0?0?0?08 Watcb the bags of the cows about to calve, and make sure they don't become so congested as to be Injured. Better to milk out a little than to have a caked bag. ? o ? The cow which freshens during the fall may be expected to produce from 10 to 20 per cent more milk than does the cow which freshens during the spring months. o o ? A good vsrlety of feeds In the grain mixture will be appreciated by the dairy cow. Successful dairymen nse corn. osts. bran, gluten feed, oil meal and cottonseed meal. see Calves shonld have fresh water even though they are receiving milk. ? o ? A small amonnt of gronnd limestone In the ration of a dairy cow, one-half to one per cent of the ration, can be fed to advantage, especially If alfalfa Is not Used. ? ? ? The symptoms of scours are profuse bowel discharges of exceedingly offen sive matter. The calf shows Intense suffering and nsnally dies within 24 to 36 hours. p"ffc4- MsJ]: "We didn't catch anything: * ?but ofc, Jboyl wehad a dandy lunch?Monarch Cocoa and . ' Teenie Weenie PeanurButter WW8"A* sandwiche*." (MW rW wall pVEHY nciratM MoaaRlr pnekw* bm I 99 lff|CU>??_ i*TO-" Mi E-th. Lion Hod. thvaMot trademark in JVMMfil the United 8tat** coreriny a complete Mm Wrn **" I of the world's Aneet food products?Coffee, Tee. Cocoe. Catnap, Pickles. Peanut Better. *JR^mCajW Canned Fruit* end Vegettblca. and other MO>^RCH a^^,rS-^: Qnakty ior To years Elevator for Mount Blanc Mount Blanc, Europe's tallest moun tain, will' soon - be "climbed" by ele vator. The cableway, with a car sim ilar to a hotel elevator and carrying from f?0 to 70 people, will soon be in operation from Chamonixto the sum mit of Aiguille du Midi. The uscent may then*be made in two hours and without guides. Construction of the elevator cableway was started 17 years ago. but was interrupted by the war. Men who can write brilliant max ims seldom guide themselves by tlipir precepts.. A cricket makes more noise than a hornet and commands less respect. BUUNEBS BLACK* KOHMlg ' I>o<-?t?l In good live citt,,; with U8 for quick sale. s ^ hardwaki; stokk T4nware. stove*. metal shop; rent $;to 24 yrs.; present owner now r*-t,rinr , , bargain. Price $3,509. File 196$ 41 GKNER.U, OTOKE Mildred. Pa?, eat. 30 yrs.; rent $39- . *1.*4?0 mo.; large stock A-l fixture* ' c'lj* roiet V4 ton truck. Price $7,000 File i HOTEL AND PROPERTY " New Albany; 20 ? rooms well furnUhe.l 1(Ui, hotel; dining room seats 59 people PrJ?, owner 15 yrs.; retiring Total pric