CAN'T QUIT Fatigue is the signal to rest. Obey it if you can. When you can't, keep cool and carry-on in con\fort. Bayer Aspirin was meant for just such times, because it insures your comfort. Freedom from pains that nag at nerves and wear you down. One tablet will block a threatening headache while it's still just a threat. Take two or three tablets when you have caught a cold, and that's usually the end of it. Carry Bayer Aspirin when yon travel. Have some at home. It will often "save the day." From a grumbling tooth to those rheumatic pains, Bayer Aspirin is ready with its quick relief?and it always works. Neuralgia. Neuritis. Arm nagging, needless pain. Get the genuine tablets, stamped with the Bayer cross. Why experi ment with imitations costing a few cents less? The saving is too little. There is too much at stake. But there is economy in the purchase of genuine Bayer Aspirin tablets in the large bottles, (I mi Wiped Out Snake Litter While a farmer on the Vet river, in South Africa, wag felling a tree, he saw a large pufTadder crawling over his foot. He Jumped back In time and killed the reptile with a blow of the ax. The next moment the grass was teeming with young ones. The farmer soon accounted for the whole litter, and when he counted the lot he found that he had destroyed SO snakes. Don't Scratch Flit kill* mosquitoes quick I c^ FUT Largest Seller Is 121 Countries Interpret* Chinees Poetry An American woman, Mrs. Flor ence Ayscough, In a poet and trans lator of the great Chinese poet, Tn Fn. She belongs to a Boston family, bnt was born In China, educated III the United States and has llred since her marriage In Shanghai. Decline of the Farm Twenty-live years ago 00 per cent of our population depended directly upon agriculture for a livelihood. To day only 24 per cent are so depend ent. Needed Invention "So Rings Is getting rich!" "Yes; he Invented a shaving soap In flavors, like sundaes." Tropical races never have a great suppfy of whiskers, which Indicates what whiskers are for?warmth. Better purposeless motoring to drive off restlessness than drinking liquor for the same. I WORMS RUIN A CHILD'S HEALTH Drive mry worm out of your child'* ayatem without a moment'* delay. U*e tht safe, ??fatabl* worm medicin* that haa bean ao ancceaafol for 71 year*?Tray** Varmifugt. Pwfca*a ytm tm'i ten yaar ck04 ha ????. Ortttla* th? tank. pic*, la* tka aaatrlla, CmM Maauth an unpluan Bap Frar'i Vanailuta at yaar iragglat'a taday. Prey's Vermifuge Expels Worm* I Crop Rotations Aid to Alfalfa Progressive Farmers Plan to Let Good Stand Re main Six Years. Crop rotations which permit a food staod of alfalfa to remain longer than twe years are being developed by pro gressive farmers of the state, accord ing to T. O. Stewart, extension agron omist at the Colorado Agricultural college. Many are planning rotations In which alfalfa Is allowed to remain for perhaps Ave or six years. If planned according to some systems, five or six years of alfalfa, together with four or Ave other crops makes a 10 or 11 year rotation. Such a system provides more alfalfa than Is desired and too little of cash and feed crops, Stewart points out. Plan for 180-Acre Farm. A simpler plan for a 160-acre farm having a 10-acre farmstead, would In clude SO acres of alfalfa, allowed to remain Ave or six years If satisfac tory hay yields are obtained. The re maining 100 acres can be divided Into four Aelds of 25 acres each and ro tated with corn, followed by sugar beets, and then barley as a nurse crop for red clover. A seed crop of red clover and a cutting of hay can thus be secured from the fourth Aeld each year after the rotation Is under way. A 25-acre Aeld of alfalfa can be brought Into the rotation as occasion demands by seeding the barley Aeld to alfalfa Instead of red clover. The 25 acre strip of old alfalfa Is then fall plowed. The red clover crop cannot be Included during the two years re quired to change the location of the 50 acres of alfalfa, but the original plan can be revived as soon as the change Is completed. Potatoes, vine crops or small grain may be substituted for all or a part of the corn acreage in some districts, Stewart suggests. Sweet clover may be desired Instead of red clover and the red clover may be cut for bay. At lower altitudes In Colorado, red clover will make two seed crops In a single year and has proved to be a satisfactory cash crop. Field for Each Crop. "A well-balanced rotation will al ways provide a good Aeld for each crop that Is grown, furnish a proper balance between cash and feed crops, and maintain a desirable balance be tween cultivated and non-cultivated crops," Stewart says. Destroy Cabbage Worms With Arsenate Poison if there are white butterflies hover ing about the cabbage patch now, there will soon be a crop of those detest able little cabbage worms ' on the plants. If the owner of the patch ex pects to have some good cabbnge heads after a while, he should be ready for the worms with a lead arsenate spray or dust. Be can mix the spray at the rate of two pounds to fifty gallons or two tablespoonfuls to a gallon of wa ter. Making a soap emulsion with laundry soap and the water before adding the arsenate will make the spray stick to the plants better. Lead arsenate may also be dusted on the young plants, using one part by weight of the powdered form to five parts by weight of hydrated lime or flour. The mixture may be placed In a gunny sack shaken user the plants early In the morning ffter a heavy dew. This material can be used with ab solute safety. The outer leaves con tain most of the poison and these are removed before the cabbage Is used. Chemical analysis has shown that a person would have to eat In one meal 23 heads of cabbage dusted or sprayed In the ordinary way before feeling any serious effects of the poison. Feeding Cow According to Production Favored The low prices of dairy products makes It more than' ever necessary for dairymen to feed and manage their herd with care In order to find a profit able market for feeds, states H. A. Oannon, Purdue university. The Drat step In meetng the present situation Is to feed properly. Each cow should have a balanced ration, based on her Individual production. The roughages available will deter mine the grain mixtures to be fed In order to balance the ration. Where legume roughages are available, a grain mixture containing 10 per cent' digestible crude protein will be found satisfactory. Where legume roughages and silage are fed, the grain mixture should contain 14 per cent digestible crude protein. With mixed roughages the per cent should be Increased to 15. Where roughages such as timothy bay, straw and corn fodder are fed the grain mixture should contain 18 to 22 per cent digestible crude protein. Mulching With Paper Is Favored for Moisture The paper mulch, as It Is called. Is a heavy grade of paper, quite similar to that put on roofs. The seed, of course, must be planted In the ground and must not be covered with the pa per, or It wilt never come up. The use of the paper is between the rows of plants, where It keeps the weeds from coming up, and prevents the ground from being excessively dried out The common way Is to plant the seed as usual and then spread this paper between the rows, so as not to cover the plants, and weight It down with pieces of stone or earth, so that Seurtock-Neol Co, NaaMUt Section Overstocked Too much game Is what Is the trouble with the Olympic peninsula, vast wilderness stretch across Puget sound from Seattle, according to F. S. Mavis, United States forest serv ice worker. Roosevelt elk, a distinct species Indigenous to the peninsula, are protected by the law. As a re sult, the animals are multiplying so fast grazing land Is disappearing, Mavis asserted. Woman's Dreaded Forties PHYSICIANS call this perioo "Menopause." It is the dreaded Change of Life. Women should face this period with well-balanced health, or dangerous symptoms may appear. Thie it the time when deficiencies in gen eral health must be helped. Every woman approaching middle age should take Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescrip tion, that splendid herbal tonic. Every pack, p of Proscription contains n Symptom Blank. FU1 out tho Blank and mall It to Dr. Plorca's Clinic. Buffalo, N. Y, , lor FREE medical advica. Observations "Animals have no matrimonial troubles, for they mate by .nstlnct," says a psychologist We've noticed a rabbit never marries a wildcat nnd a crow never ruins Its health digging worms for a bird of para dise.?Life. , For Sturdier Breakfasts Few women ever overestimate the Importance for breakfast?Woman's Home Companion. Women are gamer than men. They face life with a smile, KIM Rats Without Poison K-R-Ocan be wed about th? bome.barn or pod try yard with abeolote safety aa ft contains po II I j> Hill I K-R-Olsmade of Squill, as recofn mended hy UJ. Dept. of Agrtcah are. oven-drieS ?ndcr the Conn able process which Insures mas* imam strength. Used by County Agents In moat rat-killing campaigns. Hoaay-Sask Qnaranesa. Insist upon K-R-O, t he original Squill e at ermin atoeJtlldmggiata.73c.tlg.>2jOO. Direct Ifdealer cannot supply yon. K-R-O Co, Springfield. Ohio E-l-O KILLS-RATS-ONLY ADUDlKEUOWSA AsthmA 1 la Wpri Hnmida JaNai. I S 25 can nd $1.00 a draMtet*. M % 0ma to t.^ | Bill Eason's | Treasure X j t I By CHARLES 'SLOAN REID |j I (A by IIcClure Newspaper Srndloata.) (WNU Servlcs.) ii'T UEIatju Bill Eaton's a dyln'." <1 Cule Hardy bad stopped In front of Tom Uoore's cabin, and shout ed the news through the open door way to Nancy Moore who was en gaged at churning with an old-fash ioned pot churn. "Tub don't sayT" Nance arose from her work, and came to the doorway where she stood with her arms akimbo to hear what might follow concerning Bill's Illness. "He was tuk sudden, I reckon. He was down to Fairfield a Saturday." "My land, 1 wonder how anybuddy found It out, an' BUI a Uvln' there aU by his lonesome?" "They say as Jim 'Joiner went to BlU's to borrow bis chop nx. on' found 'lm In the bed a moanln'l" "Do tell I Did he git a doctor?" "Yes; Doc Malcolm's over tharnow." "I wonder ef BUI'll loosen up 'bout the treasure afore he dies?" "Hit 'ud be a downright shame ef he didn't, I reckon, seeln' hit could do blm no good to keep It; an' hit mought do a world o' good to some'un here." "I reckon." Bill Eoson was peculiar. For years be bad gone about the mountain range with apparently no object In Ufe. Be was In bis seventieth year. Be was called a miser?he often spoke of a treasure mysteriously concealed some where; and his neighbors had whis pered about that Bill somehow had ac cumulated much gold, and had It hid away In the mountains In some cave or cavern. Bill bad loved a girl In his youth with all the Intensity of his sturdy nature. It was thought, too. at that time, that Sue Pelfrey loved BUI In the samS way; but ber dad, Ltge Pelfrey, bad moved away to Mis souri and bad taken Sue with him. Sue had dragged ber arms from about BlU's neck at parting, with tears streaming down her cheeks, and had promised faithfully that she would write to him, and sometime would come back. Some said she never wrote; and all knew that she never came back, for news had come less than a year later that Sue had died. Bill grieved, and few ever had seen a smile on htc face throughout all the years thereafter. "I opine," declared Cale Bardy, "the doctor'll quiz Bill about the treasure, Ca'se hit's little he'll git for his serv ices, ef the treasure h'alnt found."' "Maybe so." Nancy sighed. "Hit's a pity a man hes to Uve tliet way." "Yeah. Well, I'll be goln'. Jes' thought Td stop an' let yuh know." "I thank-ee. I reckon I'll be goln' over to Bill's agin I git this chnrnln' done." By the middle of the afternoon a large company of neighbors bad gath ered at BUl's cabin. The doctor had said there was no hope, that Bill conld last only a few hours Numerous sug gestions had been made about getting the story of Bill's treasure from blm before be was too far gone. Doctor Malcolm bad set about it with all the tact of which be was capable; but Bill for a time had resisted his ef forts. At last, however, be seemed to realize that be was slipping, and slip ping fast. "I reckon yoh're right. Doc," he said In a faint voice, rolling bis eyes toward Malcolm's face. "I?I won't ever git back thar no mora. I?I want mnb treasure." "'K? /?#/??? ho<1 /?AOt Rill O/MTIA strength. Malcolm leaned over him. "All right. Bill," he said; "tell as how to And It, and we will have It here for yoa In a short time." Bill was silent for some moments. Then a sharp pain caused a convulsion of his muscles. "Top o'?Sheepnose? blue-seamed rock agin?burnt chest nut Dig under." He paused for breath. "Teeny oak box." Bill's eyes closed, and a light of relief passed over his features. Cale Hardy and two oiher moun taineers set out for the hiding place. It wan a half mile iway, and the men lost no time. Returning they brought, unopened, a little square, home-made oak box, bound about by half a dozen colls of old wL-e. "We thought to let old Bill see the openln' hlsself." declared Hardy, plac ing the box In the bands of Doctor Malcolm. There was much subdued commo tion, as the mountain folk gathered about the bed. Malcolm held the box over BlU's face. "This It. Bill?" be asked. There was a slight nod of acknowl edgment from Bill, and something Uke a smile found expression about the old man's lips. Slowly his hand came up from beneath the covering of the bed. Qnlckly Doc Malcolm dragged the wire from about the box, and turned back the lid. A dozen pairs of eyes were staring from all side* Doctor Maliolir himself stared Into the box a full minute Then, reverent ly he thrust In his Angers, and lifted out the contents with gentle care?a crumpled bit of paper, yellow from age. BUI Eason's eyes suddenly showed new light, as his Angers closed upton the paper which Doc had pressed Into thetn. After this there was a single gasp, and the old mountaineer was deed;. At the lower side of the sheet of paper, which protruded from between BUI'S Angers were six words: "Tors darUo Una "Pike County, tfisoo." Cm't PLAY i Can't REST v ' * < --child need* Cattoria When a child u fretful and Irritable, seems distressed and un comfortable, can't play, can't deep, it is a pretty sure sign that some thing is wrong. Right here is when Castoria fits into a child's scheme? the very purpose for which it was formulated years agol A few drops and the condition which caused the trouble is righted; comfort quickly brings restful sleep. Nothing can take the place of Castoria for children; it's perfectly harmless, yet always effective. For the protection of your wee one? for your own pence of mmd?keep this old reliable preparation always on hand. But don't keep it just for emergencies; let it be an every-day aid. Its gentle action will ease and soothe the infant who cannot sleep. In more liberal doses it will effectively help to regulate sluggish bowels in an older child. All druggists have Castoriaj Ira genuine if you see Chas. H. Fletcher's signature and this name-plate: Tomorrow Morning I Shave with Ciiticnra) SHAVING CREAMV^p Note how it softens, soothe* ^ and refreshes. w At your dealers or tent port X I Welcome *> NEW YORK and _ 9kflOTBL GOVERNOR naiNTON 31" ST. "?7""AVE. ?ypo^.PtN NA. ItR. STATION 1 1200 Roomt each with 1 Bath.Servidor and Grculat ing lee Water |rowi-BATH^UP PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM (apaita Color and BMrty to (kwr Ifak l^MdMstDrantos. FLORESTON SHAMPOO - Ideal for om in fffynrwtf0** " M?Vf thp hair soft and fivffp. 60 eenta by mail or at drag* State. HtacaxCfaemtanl Works. PaUhocua. NX Want Color in Vegetable* Connecticut, envious of the bright colored carrots grown In California, has taken steps to reproduce the same attractive hue In Its own pro duce. The Connecticut agricultural experiment station has laid out sev eral acres to determine whether it la the California seed or sunshine that makes them that way. Experi ments will also be conducted with California beets, lettuce and toma toes. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are the orig inal little liver pills put up #0 years ago. They regulate liver and bowels.?Adv. Patriot It was a beautiful Sunday morn ing. Simpson, having finished read ing a paper printed with an Inven tion made In Germany, set out with his wife for the meeting house of a faith founded In Palestine. Contem plating the beauty of the land, which had been discovered by an Italian In the employ of a Spanish queen and musing on the liberty it possessed thanks to the help of a French navy, his bosom swelled with SALESLADIES to sell guaranteed made to-order dresses at very low prices. Satisfy your clustomers and make real money. Maldrlte Dress Co.. Baltimore. Md. Rabbit Hutches Newest All-Steel Breeding Hutches with Hay Rack and Pan. $3.75 each. 24 unit developing hutch complete with hay racks and pans; price $60. Agents wanted for hutches and rabblts.Write for wholesale prices In quantity. Sech ler Rabbit Farm. Jacksonville. Pa. (Lehigh Co.). Largest Individual Breeders of New Zealand Whites in East Good News. Radio listeners enjoy pro grams. New. different, largest, most valu able Log ever published. 8end only mail ing expense 25c and receive this big value. Address 8tatlon Finders. Audubon. N. J. SALESMEN Well advertised line of lubricating oil*, paints, and roof coating. Exclusive territory. New different sale* plan. Experience in line not necessary. Must t own car. Permanent position. Salary $160 month with Expenses and bonus to start. Write Franklin Refining Co., Fulton St. & P. R. R., Pittsburgh, Pa. GLADIOLI BULB8. Large S2. medium $1 Sir 100 postpaid. All colors mixed. John . Lohr. 24 Fulton 8t.. Hanover. Pa. Barbecue Outfits for the Highway Stands. Selection of 16 sanitary and efficient mod els. Free Illustrated catalogue. Rotlaserle Range Co.. ?? Sixth Ave.. New York. Bargain?Key Ring, Key Check,your name, address stamped,any lodge.lOc. No stampe. Vlnlck. 2724 Eastern Ave.. Baltimore. Md. PROTEKS CONES I FOB FEMININE HYGIENE . They are aAV*,ULUBU and imc L Tin. Beoommended by Doctors. Used r br Modem Women. Makes the nee of Blehlovlde of Meroory and other Ioani ui |n>iM wnivp*'??* m uva a a. T. Ptr I W. N. U., BALTIMORE, NO. 22-1931. pride. 'Thank God," said Simpson fervently In a language Imported from the British Isles, T am a 100 per cent American."?Life. Cheap Souvenirs A ton of granite chips has been ordered from quarries near Eliza beth City, N. C., for the benefit of souvenir hunters who visit K1U Devil hill, where the memorial to the Wright brothers is being construct ed. Engineers In charge reported souvenir hunters had almost de stroyed-a granite marker at the site of the first airplane flight Doubt "They tell me you're a thorough going skeptic." "Oh, I'm not so sure about that" The man who preaches revolution Is the worst kind of crank. ? A ROOM & BATH (For Two) at $400 ? I A ROOM & BATH (For One) at $2^0 I I at the Hotet I IbristolI ? 4S?h STRUT ? WIST OP 1ROADWAY I ? ????? NIW YORK ?????! I 0?a of N?w YofV'i bast Hotels. Convenient to ol I I shops and theatres?where courteous I B attention It the wotchwocd. B A HOTEL OP KNOWN RIPUTATION'^^ ^A4AAAAAAAaAAAA4aAAA? * ' 1 ? _ '