Fill LAXATIVE FORJi CHILD California Syrup of Figs" can't harm tender stomach, liver and bowels. Every mother realizes, after giving her children "California Syrup of Figs" that this Is their Ideal laxative, because they love its pleasant taste and it thoroughly cleanses the tender little stomach, liver and bowels with out griping. When cross, irritable, feverish, or breath is bad, stomach sour, look at the tongue, mother! If coated, give a teaspoonful of this harmless "fruit laxative," and in a few hours all the foul, constipated waste, sour bile and undigested food passes out of the bow els, and you have a well, playful child .gain. When its little system is full of cold, throat sore, has stomach-ache, diarrhoea, indigestion, colic remem ber, a good "inside cleaning" should always be the first treatment given. Millions of mothers keep "California Syrup of Figs" handy; they know a teaspoonful today saves a sick child tomorrow. Ask at the store for a 50 cent 'bottle of "California Syrup of Figs," which has directions for babies, children of all ages and grown-ups printed on the bottle. Adv. Just for Show. i "Why ilms Mr. (iruhcoiu give a mu- j alcalo or.iv or twice. a year? She lias : no taste for music." ! "That's true, but Mrs. Grahcoin is the only woman in our town who can ; afford to pay a grand opera star $1.0K) j for two or three songs and she feels , In duty bound to remind her neighbors of that fact." i WOMEN! IT IS MAGIC! LIFT OUT ANY CORN I Apply a few drops then lift j corns or calluses off with fingers no pain. I Just think! You can lift off any corn or callus without pain or soreness. A Cincinnati man discov ered this ether compound and named it freezone. Any druggist will sell a tiny bot tle of freezone, like here shown, for very little cost. You apply a few drops di rectly upon a tender corn or callus. Instantly the soreness disappears, then shortly you will find the corn or callus so loose that you can lift it right off. Freezone is wonderful. It dries instantly. It doesn't eat away the corn or cal lus, but shrivels It up with out even irritating the sur rounding skin. Hard, soft or corns be tween the toes, as well as painful calluses, lift right off. There is no pain be fore or afterwards. If your druggist hasn't freezone, tell him to order a small bottle for you from his whole sale drug house. adv. The Costly Passion. A dett-oilve was talking about a $20-e-week clerk who had been living at the rate of $30,000 a year for two years previous to his arrest for theft. "It was, of course, love," said he, which started this $20 clerk to buy ing 12-cylinder automobiles, cham pagne suppers, platinum wrist watches and gold mesh bags. "Oh. love: ""Tls love, 'tis love, which makes the world go round, and 'tis love which prevents a chap's salary from going half or even quarter way." ENDS DYSPEPSIA, ESIIOII, S "Pape's Diapepsin" cures sick, sour stomachs in five minutes Time It! "Really does" put bad stomachs in order "really does" overcome indiges tion, dyspepsia, gas, heartburn and sourness in five minutes that just that makes Pape's Diapepsin the lar gest selling stomach regulator in the world. If what you eat ferments into stubborn lumps, you belch gas and eructate sour, undigested food and acid; head is dizzy and aches; breath foul; tongue coated; your insides filled with bile and Indigestible waste, re member the moment "Pape's Diapep sin" comes in contact with the stomach all such distress vanishes. It's truly astonishing almost marvelous, and the joy is its harmlessne3s. A large fifty-cent case of Pape's Dia pepsin will give you a hundred dollars' worth of satisfaction. It's worth its weight in gold to men and women who can't get their stom achs regulated. It belongs In your home should always be kept handy In case of sick, sour, upset stomach during the day or at night. It's the quickest, surest and most harmless stomach doctor In the world. Adv. A Are in an Ohio grain elevatoi Imrned for more than a year. A danger signal has been devised to rani of overhead perils. Ill lr 1 if TO OBTAIN HEALTHFUL MILK Cows, Barns and Yards Must Be Kept Clean Small Top Pails Keep Out Foreign Matter. (By V. R. JONES. Dairy Husbandry De partment. South Dakota State College.) Cows must be healthy and kept clean. Ilarns should be kept clean, well lighted and ventilated. The barnyard should be kept clean and properly drained. Utensils should . be thoroughly washed and scalded or steamed and kept in a clean room. Cows should be fed good wholesome food and pure water. Milkers and attendants who come in contact with the milk should be healthy and clean. Cows should not be fed at milking time or immediately before. Dust from feed falls into the milk and contam inates it with germs. Wipe the udder and side of cow with a damp cloth and milk with clean, dry hand. Use small-topped milking pail. This helps to keep foreign matter from the milk. Remove the milk immediately after milking to a separate room from the barn to be strained and cooled. Cool milk to as low a temperature as pos sible without freezing. Forty or fifty degrees F. retards growth of most germs, and particularly those that cause milk to sour quickly. SCRUB COWS AND DAUGHTERS Iowa College Makes Interesting and Instructive Comparison Record of Holstein Grade. A very Interesting and instructiva comparison is made between the rec- j ords of individual scrub cows and their own grade daughters as shown by experiments at the Iowa college. 1 The best monthly record of one Hoi- ! stein grade shows an increase of G7 per cent in amount of milk and 33 per cent ', in the amount of butterfat as com- ' pared with the brst .-Monthly record of ' her dam, this being the best monthly ! record for these two cows during three ; lactation periods for each one. The ' average for the three lactation pe Holstein Dairy Cow. I riods shows that the Holstein cross had an increased production of 101 per cent in milk and 33 per cent in ! fat as compared with her mother, i which was one of the original scrubs, ! One Guernsey cross showed an In j crease of 110 per cent in milk and 107 j per cent in quantity of butterfat as i compared to the corresponding best j month of her mother; whereas her av ' erage increase, that Is, her increase in total amount of milk and butter for the entire period of lactation, showed an increase of 131 per cent in milk and 130 per cent of butterfat as com pared with her mother. EARLY AND GENTLE TRAINING Task of Halter-Breaking Heifer Calves Cannot Be Begun Too Early Handle Them Daily. Halter-break all the heifer calves before they get very large. Can't do it too soon. No matter whether you ever lead your cows or not you want them broke to lead. Handle the calves daily as they grow. Hub them, fool around their hind quarters so that they will not be scared or ticklish the lirst time they are milked. FOR PURE DAIRY PRODUCTS Clean Milk, Quick Cooling and Prompt Delivery Are Factors of Much Importance.- The number of bacteria in milk de pends largely upon cleanliness of milk ing and handling., temperature at which milk is kept and age of milk. Therefore, clean milk, quick cooling, anl prompt delivery are very Impor tant factors in producing pure dairy products. PRODUCT OF IMPROVED COW Wild Animal Gave Only Enough Milk to Nourish Itj Young 30,000 Pounds Yearly Now. The wild cow gave only enough milk to support Its young. Proof of what man has been able to do in im proving dairy cattle is found In the f.ict that production Is more than 30, "00 pounds, the present world's record for milk per year. daI DAMAGE CAUSED BY CONSTRUCTION OF FRAME FOR HOPPER DOZER. The clover leafhopper does far more damage than Is usually realized. In a publication of the United States de partment of agriculture (Fanners' bul letin 737) by Kdniund H. Gibson, it is stated that the loss from this cause to the clover and alfalfa hay crops of the country Is frequently attributed to poor soil and climatic conditions. For this the minute size of the pest, which frequently enables It to escape obser vation. Is largely responsible. As a matter of fact, continued attacks by the leafhopper, especially in some of the central states, often result In the loss of n considerable percentage of a single cutting. Crowd Together. It Is characteristic of leafhoppers to crowd together In great numbers, as many as fUH having been counted upon one plant. In feeding upon the plant the Insects make tiny punctures. Around these the tissue gradually be comes yellow, the spot enlarging and becoming more pronounced until the leaflets ultimately curl up and the fol iage wilts. The female also forces her eggs into the stem and leaf tissue, frequently causing n gall-like forma tion. Alfalfa, clover, cowpeas and vetch are among the principal plants attacked, but the pest Is common In meadow and pasture lands and feeds on a number of cultivated as well as native grasses throughout practically the entire country. The clover leafhopper Is about one eighth of an Inch in length and half as wide, and is marked In a manner to distinguish it from many other kinds of clover and alfalfa. The fanner will distinguish leafhoppers from other In sects by their habit of jumping, their quick movement?, and their minute size. In certain respects they resem ble diminu'ive grasshoppers. Where It Spends Winter. As the clover leafhopper spends the winter tinder clumps of gr;ss, weeds and trash, the burning of rubbish and vegetation during winter months In waste places and along fence rows and roadsides will do much to prevent the pest attaining destructive numbers the following year. This- precaution will destroy great number of other hiber nating Insects as well as the leafhop pers. During the growing season close cutting or pasturing of grass lands is recommended. Cutting alfalfa crops from a week to ten days earlier than Tjsual will often check the ravages of the Insects ami may be advisable when then1 is evidence that the leafhoppers are causing suflicient injury to justify the risk of loss through premature cutting. Each year this leafhopper. by less ening the vitality of its food plants, occasions more or less damage over Its entire range of distribution, caus ing a positive, although not easily estimated, decrease in the clover and alfalfa hay crops of the country. Continued attacks often result In the loss of a considerable percentage of a single cutting; especially is this true In some of the central states. The leafhopper causes the greatest dam age during the spring and early sum mer months, as the foliage Is then most succulent and the tissues very Favorite Leafhopper. tender, enabling even the Immature leafhoppers readily to pierce the skin of leaf, and stem and suck the juices. The Incessant drain from concentrated attacks causes the clover plants to wither, and although they may not die, the new growth which is put forth Is very apt to be thin and spindling. With alfalfa It Is the first two crops which appear to suffer most. The drain upon alfalfa plants does not show as markedly as with clover, es pecially during a drought, since the alfalfa roots go deeper Into the ground and the plant Is better able to with stand adverse conditions. Knovtn as Flies. In many localities these leafhop pers are commonly known as "flies," but in reality they resemble flies only In having wings, and because they are about the size of many small flies seen in the fields. The adult or pa rent Insects are light gray In color, but i Food of CLOVER LEAF HOPPERS have numerous dark markings which give them a mottled appearance. They are about one-eighth of an Inch in length and half as wide. The manner in which they jump from plant to plant Is much like that of grasshoppers. The primary injury is produced by the direct feeding of the leafhoppers. The single tiny feeding puncture is itself inconsequential, and injury re sults only when a great number of leafhoppers attack the same plant. The clover leafhopper is distributed generally throughout the United States, records showing its occurrence in every section of the country. Its range also includes southern Canada and Mexico. The number of generations of the leafhopper produced annually in a giv en locality varies from year to year, depending on weather conditions, and it also varies in different latitudes and climates. For southern Missouri and northern Arkansas Ihere are usually three distinct broods, covering ap proximately (1) April and May, (2) June and July, and (3) Angus? and September. Farther south or under subtropical conditions It Is probable that there are four or more. Merely Hide in South. In the northern states the clover leafhopper hibernates in the adult stage, at the base of clumps of grass and weeds and under dried leaves and trash. Throughout the central and Clover Leafhopper a, Adult; b, Nymph, Side View; c, Nymph, Dor sal View; d, Face; e, Elytron. southern states It could hardly be said to hibernate; instead, the adults mere ly keep In hiding and under cover dur ing cold weather, coining out on warm days to bask in the sun and feed upon such green foliage as can be found. In Missouri, for example, the adult In sects have been observed feeding upon wheat during January and February, but not in any abundance. Nymphs cannot long survive cold weather, and it Is not probable that eggs survive over winter. In the extreme South west, where conditions are radically different, the leafhopper Is active throughout the entire year. The adults are -quick of movement and jump from plant to plant when disturbed. When strong winds pre vail they remain in hiding, ok they seem to dislike windy weather. Their most characteristic habit Is that of congregating in great numbers on one plant, frequently to such an extent that they crowd one another. This is what causes the concentrated attacks in "spots" throughout a field. The clover leafhopper does not seem to seek shady or damp places, rather pre ferring the heat of the midday sun. Nymphs Not Active. The nymphs are much less active than the adults and are not easily dis turbed. When one brushes against the plants they cling fast to the stems and leaves Instead of jumping to an other plant. For direct control the hopperdozer Is recommended. Any form of this de vice that Is suitable for grasshoppers will do for the clover leafhopper as well, but a much lighter and less ex pensive one can be made for the small er Insects by stretching canvas over n wooden frame. This can be made of such light weight that It will not In jure the alfalfa and clover plant when it Is pulled over a field. Two horses, one hitched at either end, are used for drawing it. On the Inside of the canvas a thin coat of a sticky sub stance made of tree tanglefoot which has been thinned with cheap castor oil is spread with a paddle or shingle. As the leafhoppers and other Insects alight on the surface of this substance they are held fast. Such substances as cheap sorghum have been tried In place of tree tanglefoot. The sorghum. however, dries out too quickly and fre quent applications of It have to be made. It Is best to draw the hopper dozer through the ficyis when the crop is about half grown. PREVENT SCAB OF POTATOES Treatment With Disinfecting Solution Is Recommended to Guard Against Fungous Diseases. Treating seed potatoes with a dlsln fectlng solution to prevent scab and other fungous diseases Is but little trou ble, and the expense Is small. Ad hour's time and a half-dollar expended for the purpose will often add $25 to $50 to the value of the crcp from tc acre of potatoes. ! Clover Leafhopper a, Adult; b, SELECTING BEST HERD BOAR Why Is It Important for Breeder to Choose Animal With Much Care Some Suggestions. (By W. T. WASEL. Colorado Asricultural College, Fort Collins.) The time is npproacblng when the hog breeder must select and mute his breeding herd. It is of prime impor tance that the boar be selected with care. The expression "The male is half of the herd." is often ouoted. This J by experience has been found true, j There is a uniform prepotency in both sexes; tnus, the influence or the two Duroc-Jersey Boar. parents on the offspring is theoretical ly equal. However, the boar has the greater influence on the herd. Each pig in the herd is sired by the one boar, but there are several dams. A well-selected male used on a herd of inferior sows will make a great im provement In the offspring. However, the use of an Inferior boar on wellbred sows will have a correspondingly bad result. The breeder should select his herd boar at an early date, and get hlra accustomed to his new surroundings. The system of feeding and manage ment is very Important in getting the male Into the best condition before mating. PROBLEM OF WARMING FEED Resourceful Farmer Makes Use of Two Barrels and Fresh Manure to Heat Slop for Hogs. (By It. C. ASIIBY. University Farm, St. Paul.) A resourceful Minnesota farmer re ports that he has solved the problem of wanning the slop-feed for his hogs. Two barrels are placed near the feed ing troughs and a day's supply of feed is placed In each. The barrels are heavily banked with fresh manure from the horse barn. The heating of the pile Warms the feed In the barrels, as each day's supply stands for 24 hours before using. Whenever neces sary the banking is hauled away and a new supply packed about the bar rels. Opinions differ as to the relative ef ficiency of slop-f ceding and dry-feeding, but disregarding the matter of ef ficiency, some hog raisers prefer slop feeding for brood sows In wluter for another reason. In winter hogs do not drink enough water unless the wa ter is warm or supplied at frequent intervals. By mixing water with the grain the feeder controls the amount of water consumed by his hogs. MAKING USE OF ROUGH LAND Acres Not Suitable for Regular Farm Crops Will Support Sheep With Little Expense. Every farmer with a few acres of pasture has a good chance to raise sheep. On many farms there are a few acres of rough lands not suitable for regular farm crops. This land with the proper attention would support a few sheep perhaps with very little extra expense for feed. GARDEN WASTES ARE USEFUL Pig Is Primary Waste-User and Must Be Kept in Its Place Avoid Buying Feeds. The pig that has to live exclusively on bought foods will cost more than its pork is worth, unless it is given a special valuation for home use. The pig Is primarily a waste user, and it must be kept in its place. Make it use the garden wastes. ALFALFA IS CHEAPEST FEED Profitable to Have Rack Filled With Third or Fourth Cutting Avail able All the Time. It is without doubt profitable to have a rack filled with good third or fourth cutting of alfalfa available all the tine so every bunch of hogs on the farm can eat this hay at their pleasure. It Is the cheapest feed we have. Is Mealtime-a orry to You IS THE APPETITE POOR IS THE DIGESTION WEAK IS THE LIVER LAZY, AND THE BOWELS CONSTIPATED Under such conditions you cannot obtain the maximum value from your food. Give proper help at onca TRY HOSTETTEtt Stomach Bitte Boffi Quality: And Quantify Try Yager's Liniment, the great external remedy for rheumatism, neuralgia, sciatica, sprains, chest pains, backache, cuts and bruises. This liniment has wonder- ful curative powers, pene trates instantly, and gives prompt relief from pain. It is the most economical liniment to buy, for the large 25 cent bottle contains four times as much as the usual bottle of liniment sold at that price. At all dealers. GILBERT BROS. & CO. BALTIMORE, MD. Equal to the Demand. "I never use any but pasteurized milk In the city," said the new board er; "can you furnish it'.'" "Yes, Indeed !" was the confident re ply: "our cows 're kept in the pasture all summer." The Christian Herald. ACTRESS TELLS SECRET. A well known actress gives the follow ing recipe for gray hair: To half pint of water add 1 oz. Bay Rum, a small box of I Barbo Compound, and M oz. of glycerine, i Any druggist can put this up or you can mix it at home at very little cost. Full directions for making and use come la i each box of Barbo Compound. It will ) gradually darken streaked, faded gray hair, and make It soft and glossy. It will i not color the scalp, is not sticky e greasy, and does not rub off. Adv. Natural Mistake. "Hello, Sis. I didn't know you were going in for athletics." "What do you mean?" "Look at those foils over your bu reau." "Foils! Why, those are my hatpins." The Quinine That Does Not Affect The He Because of Its tonlo and laxative effect. Laxative Bromo Quinine can be taken by anyone witbont closing nervousness or ringing In tbe bead. There Is only one "Bromo Quinine." U. W. UBOVBS If nature 1 on each box. 26a. The Masculine Way. He Men never gossip. She Of course not. They merely Investigate rumors. A torpid liver condition prevents proper food assimilation. Tone up your liver with Wright's Indian Vegetable Pills. They aot gently and surely. Adv. Glass is now made so as to be prac tically unbreakable. Feel Achy All Over ? To ache all over In damp weath er, or after taking a cold, isn't nat ural, and often indicates kidney weakness. Uric acid causes many queer aches, pains and disorders of the organs. Well kidneys keep uric acid down. Tired, dizzy, nervous people would do well to try Doan's Kidney Pills. They stimulate the kidneys to activity and so help clear the blood of Irritating poisons. A North Carolina Case Mrs. D. T. Moore. 811 N. C. says: "I suf" ed from dull, naggr.af backaches, was rest less nights and often got nervous. My kid neys were weak sAd caused me no endVf annoyance. Doan's Kidney Pills stopped the trouble with the kidney secretions and removed the back aches and pains. I rest much better now and I have improved in every way." Cat Deaa's al A a? Stare, SOc a Bern DOAN'S rornatMXBuui co. buffalo, k. t. .4 S f 0 V V 4fi rv