Ligonier Banner., Volume 44, Number 29, Ligonier, Noble County, 7 October 1909 — Page 3

o OWBROVK t > ‘ r : R ! ’llb . Py \ - e e L - 'f)" PR Ty "ld“ iz a" P 4 &Y L - ( & r P — - %, = ' ' € v R ) T ]Mwfl..‘ a'»\ s ) ¢ "-" DR et o « v Ll v = .—— = ‘ b : ..y — - N Xiis i 2 - N . Kepp ¢ feoil ¥55 ' : b.. bhie roule A Vi oy by eyt 1O i wmiird Prea Feoni PR hiiit rop merest wgy ¢f ' g ATy £ Cleas S “then beoy & Py 3 ] ’ When t sheen A : L , ¥ you Tha ttira ¢ 3 i o In = : rins oyt lOW Wi 1 ¥ t rernoving g i . k2id b:i v i ¥ # £33 " : (i oy . Foa i two g : gt X &#53 4 2 v 5 catile ] % i i Torivi * ¥ ¥ ¢ & : found A Bl Yorv e i e o wl ity 3 ¥ gk 3 :0 W 1 pry to k : "!) ¥ A . & o ¢ . i ¢ b ¢ thie: e P % T u i Hoh ! 8 siir e that You are reinly | it Waxt thae a 4 thin 1) falt . nitovw tng and sowing and hinistoing 1 ! the harvesting apd then the winter time of readine pluty R-andg } inn picg for the Sexl yours work What vou put inlo your farm rather than what soy take out determines how good a Tarmer you ure Ex-Lian Hoard of Whecansin put it aboul @ ght i a recent speech wWhen i il “The way we ook at farming is all W o tlur phtlosophy 18 false We do not geo that we migst baild up rathier than destroy if we hope to add to our fortune in the end ! mast do two things on my farm and do them constantiv: ¥ Bulld up my soil: spend woney, time and labor on it 2 Baild up the efficteney and productiveness of my herd by wise breeding, feeding and care” Average milk of good quality should contain about 87 per cent ofgwater and 13 per cent solids Milk econ tains bacterin of many kinds and in VARrying numbers. They cause the souring of milk as well as the ripen Ing-of cream and cheese and produce many other changes In the appear ance nand flavor. The number present in freahly drawn miilk varies enon maously with the conditions of milkfng, and, as they are greatly increased with dirty and careless handling. cleanliness In all matters per taining to the milking and marketing of milk and Keeping {t In the rome cannot be too strongly insisted on Disease rgerme. notably those of typhoid. diphtheria. seéarlet fever and tuberculesis, may also- he carried in milk, so that the purity of the supply is of vital importance to every family and community. Early and late blight on potatoes are common in most séctions. Effec. tive treatment is preventive rather than curative and must be begun early. If vour fields have suffered this vear -either from early or late blight study the conditions carefully and then pl;-m another season to spray thoroughly. The vines should be sprayed every two or three weeks, or oftener {f rains have come and washed the coating of Rordeaux off. ILate potato blizht is often respon. sible for wet rot of tubers in the bin. Its progress on stored potatoes is checked by dusting them with airslaked lime. The cost of spraying potatoes s about $1 per acre and the gain .from five to - six sprayings amounts to an average of about $25 per acre. When potatoes are thoroughly sprayed they not only produce much more of superior tubers but the tubers are less liable to rot and future infection of the potato soil is reduced. '

The lousy hog will not fatten up. It fs little use to clean up the hogs without cleaning up the sleeping quarters also. The manure and bedding material should be burned. llf one dislikes to do this, it is all right to haul it onto land some distance from the hog pens and plow it under fmmediately. The pens must then be disinfected by scrubbing them with fimé milk. Any other disinfectant would do, of course. As lime milk {s cheap, the disinfecting should be repeated once or twice. The hogs must not have access to the pens in the meantime. If the hog-pen can he made fairly air-tight it may be fumigated with sulphur. If properly done, this will certainly kill the lice. The fumigating must be' repeated in three or four days. Having cleaned the hog quarters, get busy on the hogs themselves. The most effective way to free them of lice is by dipping. Dip a second time in a week or 10 days to catch those missed or which have batched out since the

Gotid machisery 18 well worth s Ing care of : A wrorg gate on ap egg does sot thasky ile vontenin - - A Dry shioltors and beds for the hogs are psrehiial fo bost resuits © Now is the tme 1o cull your stork ard wet the fock ln shape for the win et tun v ' : ’ " Dem'ts as well ae Jos are 8 ronven lent and proper tiing 10 have sroubd the farm < : o > Never be omo busy 2__2;3{ Fou cannot he fricndly sand lend » helpisg bhand 0 x neighbor in troabie : : = Ratatioa ot g~ff§gflg et the felds out of the fur of deteriarßlion and maker for entiched soil and grester crops O Nwe 1 ts e lnte 1o Bolid srd B g i,f_f YOur sappeintnenl ol your 140 k #pur you on to belter deeda next shavoh ' - o ; 1 the eolt lots its tongee bang ou! it z?.rx,e;w»'_,v’:-. N IHRY fee sure thore i wavie reswrn for r 0 Pigd the cause #O4 remose it - ' ‘ A Hitie siray o the r*xfi;&: Iho tigst Eanpebiar 00l Linve Sinem Suen oy @ Do sieire o 0 Yl !;,; e Bk Huray Y ehvaper than iR After n davs wosk Br 8§ locy drive Aver the Fesds erntge st the hirees Wiosiie By oteeens MR el waien Alra rob 4 SH the iape ang n{.”i’“'!.‘v Wl ?‘ The v ht ;-“‘;4}?‘-.&‘?#« g 0 e oo entiovnily 1o the chichons That ther ey Lhets v oenly ie pnident (rom Ihe roanner g wiiey ey gu alior Tuem.. ! T wsot hort the beets to be lor i the ground ol frees g wentlior wenes. . Dhen Thoy .‘l.:&'fi'if_r‘."\i,ig Sl ownild Backed in dnoist sand _is".:cér PiSsced oA P Ceiinr i % Wateh the hized et When Lie ! tinding 1o the wtoek 12 he i orouy And Bridal you can ®ell Gubense with big servicen, for Ihe solinale will pit thrive under His care - ; The Nalena &tfi;-‘:ry shaw wil he Leid at Yiwaakes October 14 10 4 1 Hawl oriet M the pationa) dalry dizmion of the GREEn tural de purtent of the gavermipent will aperale with Mapager Vao Normun of the Dalry associalion I pakivg the show & success, e The burean of apimal indastiry, whirh has been copducting experi ments for the past flsrm*-_:m;ana_ hus concioded that bellee butter can be fsade from eream pasteurized and not tipernied, that 18 churned swee!l than by the Gid procosies ang betlor than Itaim the pow process of pastenrizing and ripesing with & pare eultiure start ¢ New buller msde In this way, without the addition of & starier and unealted. has oo mild a fAavor to pledse piost doalerd] bt it andergnes fewer changes in storage. than when made in the ondinarty manner and sy be gold. after vbéifix beld In artif. el cold storage, as highgrade butter, The Ontario experiment station has been freating winter wheat {n differ ent wiyk 1o kill the stinking smut and the résults have been very satis factory. Untreated seed produced an average of 38 per cent of smut in the crop of iast year and 93 per cent. of smut in the ¢rop of this sesson. Seed ‘wheat which was fmmersed for 20 minutes fn a solution made by adding one pint of formaldehyde (formalini to 42 gallons of water. produced an average vield of grain per acre of 504 bushels, and that which was untreated produced . only 46 bushels per acre. The trestment here mentioned was easily porformed. comparatively cheap, effectual in killing the smut spa:'-rms’. and fnstrumental in furnizghing the largest average yield of wheat “per acre of all the treatments used Look out for weevils in the grain. Thresh as soon as possible | Fresh grain should not be exposed to fttack by being placed In bins or granaries with that ~already infested. Before storing; the old grain should be removed and the floors, walls and ceilings of the bins thoroughly cleaned. It the granary bas been badly infested. it should be fumigated. Cleanl!ness is very important in preventing injury by these insects. Dust, dirt, rubbish, refuse grain, flour and meal serve as breedibg places. Frequent agitation or handling of the grain will destroy many of these moths, because they are unahle to free themselves from a mass of it and perish in the attempt. The simplest, most effective and inexpensive remedy for all insects infesting the farmers' grain stored in tight bins, is eareful fumigation with carbon Dbisulphide. Use about- one pound to 100 bushels of grain. Pour the bisulphide into shak low receptacles and place them om top of the grain; then close the bin tightly for 36 hours. Do not breathe the vapor nor allow lights or fire near.

The balanced ration for cows s set forth by the New York experiment station as follows: The nutritive ratio, or, in other words, the protein supply for feeding milch cows, is a subject which is just now .ree ceiving a great deal of attention. There is undoubtedly a reaction against feeding standards, largely, 1 feel sure, because the place and function of these standards were so long a time misunderstood. Much s said about a balanced ration, as though it were a nutritive formula which is to be applied to all animals under all conditions. There is, however, no such thing as a balanced ration uni versally applicable. The needed pro tein supply for the 40-pound cow, capable of producing 14 pounds of butter per week, is entirely different from that of the average cow producing 200 pounds of butter per yvear. Equally true is it that 30 pounds of rich milk make a much larger demand upon the protein supply than 30 pounds of poor milk. A balanced ration, then, in the true sense, is one that is adapted to the work »f @

C‘fl’ffifflxm‘;%m‘.fiif;‘{}'fttfi%fwv:flwfy‘?stflflfm:fi»ffih}xf.’f4’32:!2‘ L = MYSTERIES OF NATURE & ; By QGeorge Frederick Wright, X ‘ > - 5 A 4.‘,. . D 29, % Continent Tilted Up and Down ¥ s Y R e R B Re R R e

4uk cevel of L 0 favßl 8 BUTe Tol siant (han thal of the land The ox panne of the vcean {8 threw tlincs sa greal me that of the jand, &nd e deith wiore than 165 Umies s greal If all the innd sbould be surk in the ocean, 1t wouid ralse the gebural wa ter level only sboutl 300 feest 1o genernl we ey sy with ‘;mfi_m*fs._‘cfin? Sdencn thnt the ousnn beds topresent portlons of the sarths crést which have been sinking frote the ogrilest geoiogicsl tines, while the eonlinents represent those portions whick with z':;;::':a:\"~~*~"'5tlui;x=::§. Lesve on the whole, becu rislng. 18 prolmbly fe not true an in ofiefn wtated that Ihe areas of mnd and wmaler have sbifted pleces In pas! timie so that conllnenls were found wherse the fmaln ceean beds fvw [le and ocents sseel Wlthout In terruption ever the continental aroas 1) there 1s the bent of .i‘.i:’}f}i‘fl‘:"f‘ thst Wrge portions of this r-'fi”!!?‘{'én(‘ Cay tineuts wore gl various fhnes below the leve! of the som o - Bt while thin la trie, It weenis equnlly cerialn that during the suhal dunee 6! theee areas below Ihe sea levol, they oxtated wither a 8 shsliow walier borders of the maln sontinental Brese Gr s nlernal seas For ex Ruple the groat depls of wedivientary rocks which cover the Mississippl Baein, extending from the Aljeghony wountaing 10 the Hoeksy mountabe are sballow water deposits, So shal low, indecd, waa the water during long periods that it was fittle more than & swamp ib whbeh (He vepeialivon hat forgied the nutherclis seame of enal could grow and fourish HGE the lovel was oot conslant After 4 larpe po cpmuintian of vegetable mativr that could be turned into conl had taken pieoe, there wan o sUgRT sud very Feotle sinking of the whele area sh that mud and sand wore brought in from the nelphboring higher lunds fo torm 4 complete covering for the coal. g that when {1 was tursed Into roek 1t wak able to protect it dand preserve 1 for future ages. This process of slow bt irrogular fiinkfin’: of the Mis sigsipp! basin ~continged until thouwands of feot of sedimenthry material Rad been washked into it g the Mis Rixsipn! ts earrving sedinient into the Gulf of Mexfeo at the present time These succossive strata, like the leaves of a book resord the various downward movements of the long coal perfed Jn other conntries, sspecially in England and China there s the same record of longcoptinued down ward movements of continental areas during the coal period It this downward movement bad continued alwaye, the coal would have been inaceessible beoeath the depthe of the sea, where, indeed, much af ‘lt does still remgin In Nova Scotla the best seams of coal are mined many miles and at a depth of many hundred feet bßelow the bottom of the sea. In England also same of the best seams of coal are followed out underncath the sea, and it is supposed that coal Teins are continuous from southern England to the continent far beneath the bottom -of Dover straft. But fortunately the downward motlon of the coal arca was In due tithe arrested, and the contrary movement begun, which has brought this priceless material within easy reach of men in the mountains of Pennsylvania and China, in the hills of England and in the plateaux of the central andg western stales of Amer fen. Other fllustrations of great changes in land levels are too numerous to be mentioned tn detafl In Colorade there was a gradual sub sidepce of land below sea level during the carboaiferous and cretaceons eras unti! from 12000 to 16000 feet of sediment had accumulated over the sinking area. But at the end of that perfod the area began to rise, and this rise has continuved antil the present Ume, when 1t stands many thousand teet above the level of the sea. Simiiar witness to guch changes of ievel {8 borne by extensive sediment ary rocks containing abundant sea shells of late geological age, which are found at a height of 10,000 feet above the sea on the Pyrenees, the Alps and the Caucasus wountains, and at a height cf 14,000 feet upon the mountains of central Asia. A map of the eastern continent during the early part of the tertiary period shows a great Mediterranean sea covering all central Europe and extending into Asia, submerging the highlands of Thibet and most of the mountains of Turkestan. But that this was not a general subsidence of the continents {s evident from the simple fact that these areus are covered with sedimentary strata. If mud and sand and

. Col. McClure's Pajamas. “The late Col. A; K. McClure was a brilliant raconteur,” said a veteran Clover rlub man. “T'll never forget his pajama story. “Col. McClure told this story at a Clover club dinner in the old Bellevue of Philsslelphia. It was a story about the Spanish war. g : “There was a regiment it seems, recruited from Conshohocken, Cinnaminson, Wawa and Manunka Chunk, and the ladies of those Pennsylvania towns got together after the regiment's departure and made a lot of paJamas for the soldiers. Pajamas were a new thing in those days; smart, exclusive, and so forth; the ordinary man wore a night shirt. « “Well, those pajamas, in a half dogen big packing cases, went duly Cubawards, but no word of their arrival ever came back. The ladies waited about a month. They then wired to the colonel, a genial, whole souled Conshohockener: “'Anxous to know if you got the ;pajamas last month.’ ' , ~ “The colonel had never heard of

gravel are Sepoaited in weler (here st Lo osome &rve GOt Tar awa) froo which they could be derived : | Whils these gosersl facts coticern Ing chengos 10 land level 8 asncient geoiogionl times baryond &) guestion Bre very lupressive less sllenlios than they medl! has beon given lo ihe facts showing that corresponding changes are siil] puisg 00, 851 Bave produced wiriking resuils withln e tentl Umes 3wl po'nt fo interesling tuncissings with relerence to the fi tre - In compection with (he glkcial perind, Bk le the miosl Tecent of s the gociopical épocks, hene ;Zs’s‘ili’iil"“ of level are very evident, sid connaet themrelves with the eary history of askind | AL the cioss of Ihe Tertiary perind. wiich cultiinsted In | the gincisl crn. the coniral and northern part of Nauxth Americn stood &t & bevel of 2000 or 2000 test Bhove that 1t 8t prosent oociiies . This i proved by the existence of innumerable chan nels ‘now deeply Luriced by glacial ds bris. or exiending dul into the ‘:‘Kmn:a sorows the shaliow, suboierged shell of the continetit both upan the Atan tiv and 'noifle consts in lilipols, in Dhic and in ecentral New York thess buried channeis are found dowg de fow sen fevnl showing that (he land must fave heen veéry much elavated te allow the sirefgme whith crossed Uese rorky porges to make thelr way {6 the sea frofr these distant ioland poluts, The eities of Cleveland, O, and Syracuse. N Y. are bullt over fuch buried gorges. The Delawars, Ihe Hudson and the 8t lLawrence rivers hen emptied into the sea, rute Bing through deep porpges or capyons, which crossed w level coastal platn. The' forde of Greeplang and of Nor way snd of the Puacific coast of North Americs hear siwiiar testimony, since | they probably, in mosl cnses mark the lines of anclent rivers which coursed through them to the sea when the fand was so much elevated that what are. now the bottoms of thess chunnels were occupfed by rushing mountain torrents in short, these fiords are drowned river valleys . But at the close of the glaclal pertod the land levels fn all ‘this nporthern reglon were much lower than at the | present time On the southern coast of New England sea beaches were thrown uap about Afty feet higher than thaoge which are formed pow. Along the southern shore of Malne the land had sunk =o much that ses shells are found in clay deposits 250 feet above the present sea lével. The Champlain and St Lawrence valley wag so tuel depressed that whales sported in salt water over the site of Middlebury col | lege, Vermont, and seals ventured inte ‘ an arm of the sea extending far uy | into the Ottawa river, while at Mon treal modern sea shells are found 500 fect above present tide water upop the top of the mountaln which gives Ihe city its name Golng farther north -the indications are that upop the shores of the' Arctic sea. l)u&l'; glacial subsidence amounted to 1,000 feet. Everywhere across the continent there {8 cumaulative evidence that this post-glacial subsidence was as exten sive as the glaciated reglon, and that it Jocreased in mmount from south to porth. - This {s & very i!mportant consideration to be kept in mind In working out giactal and postglacial prob lems. Thiz differential northerly de: pression st the close of the glacial period caused the great lnkes to flow at first into the OUtawa river across Lake XNippissing over the site of North bay .into the Mattaway river, and so into the Ottawa a&long the line through which the Canadian govern ment is talking of bullding a ship canal; and which is already utflized by the Cunadian Pacific raliroad. This pass fx now less than 100 feet sbove the level of the lakes. - Wepyright by Joseph B, Bowles) | j He'll Make a Citizen. | “That wan couldu't interpret a aln. gle passage of the constitution™ | “Yet you npaturallzed him, judge” “Well, he was away up on the bat. ting averages. | guess he'll make a good American” . , | Bl R : To Please Her. o "1 didn’t want anyone to know [ wae here” she remarked as he found her in the parlor. ; “It's all right,” he assured her, "Il keep it dark.” . | Grudging Praise. “Did the critics say anything favor able about your performance of Hamlet?" “Yes" answered Mr. Storming ton Barnes. “They admitted that [ bhad selocted a pretty good play.” i

“'Story is a lie out of whole eloth, probably fabricated by enemies to ruin me politically. Admit am not total abstainer, but never had pajamas last month or any other time.' "—Philadolphia Bulletin. : ’ Science Finds Work. Science says that we have got To swat the fly, and that's Preliminary to & hunch é That we must swat the rats, The Landlord. “Oh, it's "raining!"” exclaimed the flat dweller. "1 must run and let down the awnings.™ v “Let them down?” inquired the visitor. “Won't they get all wet?” “Of course they will” she answered, “but my windows will keep dry It costs us money to get those windows washed, but the awnings belong to the landlord.” : -Misunderstanding. The horseman told the farmer, “Grass to my steed, 1 pray.” But yelled: “No, no!” when the farmer Who was deaf, kept asking: “Hey?™ Every evil to which we do not sue

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‘ OR MILES and miles as far a% the eve cun ses, &fi?flfmfis the corpland. heayy goiden . owhestl hreaking uron a sbhim mer of onte, and cats fading ot the whitsaens. ot barley. with never a hedee or a [onco bitween to iimit tbhe sehse of distance Here and there a clomp of willows bends tn the breere; and here an Cthere s mass of rock scattersd and seamed i all directions, tiges above the crop For the rest. all is a gloricus biepding of gold and silver burnished by radl st sunshine——a plaln of ;firi‘sr}' reach. ing to the southern horizon. On the north a line of dark fores!t sweeps in a semielrele, with a little gray vil inge sheitering within ove end of s deep curve: and a mile away an ave nue of plape trees, seen across the waving corn and bleaching stubble, shows where runs the straight highrond—the road that takes one to Paris The corn grows up to the walls of the village, only a sandy track divid ing them. Here and there a coltage stands on the edge of the crop, sm: bowered fn “ines that climb to the very chimnevs, QOver the wun baked meadows are scattered littie orchards of heavily-laden apple trees, and oth. ers crimson with plums. and every where—at the cottage doors among the wheat, almost in the dust of the lane—rise the feathery fronds of asparagus. Poppies and cornflowers are mingled with the corn, and rosy. stalned soapwort and the dainty blue of chicory fringe the path. Here and there the vivid azure of borage gleams above the general tangle of color. varied with masses of pink spurred hiossoms, not unlike columbine, but even more delicately fasbioned and tinted. Thew Weather has set in fair and harvest is in full swing In the great French platns machinery fs still the exception ratber than the rule, and the rhythmic swish of scythe and sickie mingles with the sighing of the wind among the courn stalks, and makes a gentle music fitting for an August afternoon. j We see a little plot of perhaps half an acre actually enclosed, that is to say, itz limits are delfined by & wav tng green belt of asparagus; and with. in it an old woman, in the sgpotless white cap which characterizes the pearant of portherns France, s slowly gathering together the reaped cata with her curved book &nd binding them in littie sheaver. Her son rcut her oats for her days ago, she says, but it bas been too tfi for her to work in the field - Od¥y today the breeze has come, and by and by, when he has finished carting yorder, Plerre will belp her again , in the next fieid, 1f one can say “pext” where everything seems to hivnd indefinitely, carting is in prog ress. Three big Normandy horses wearing high wooden collars faced with brasswork, stand patiently under a balf-empty wagon from which the men are pitehing on to the stack; and the women and children are gleaning in the stubble. As the day wears on apd they escape from their house hold duties more women fock to the fields, big, sturdy women, some of whom turn up their sieeves and bow to the reaping with the strength of men. Others join the gleaners. Here and there may be seen an eatire family, the father hard at work loading or' pitching, the mdther and children gleaning. g T ~ The sun is sinking in a golden haze that rises like the dust from some

What Is Rest?

It is strange how people differ in their ideas as to what rest really means. According to accepted authority the definition of the word it: “A

state of quiet or repose; a cessation from motion or labor; freedom from evervthing which wearies or disturbs, ete., etc,” but as is the case with pearly every subject that is worth discussing each individual mind places its own interpretation upon the definition. What means rest to some persons briugs no refreshment to others, and it must be admitted, we suppose, that each person is the best judge of his needs. The most widely accepted theory of rest is to do absolutely nothing, to lie quletly in a relaxed position, to lounge about and give one's self up to complete repose, to do nothing that requires any effort of will or exertion of body. There are times when such absolute ralaxation is necessary for the rehabilition of nature, when mind and body worn and fagged by a too constant application reach the limits of endurance and crave

tremendona threaling Boor, and the white roud 1o Parir s barred with the shinduws of the plage trees whicd Na poleon p}fi:,}f&*:rs_ o sheiler bia marci ing troops Motofiste ought 20 bivaa the memory of Napoleon, or Onoe off the ovii. paves which surroynds he towns, there are no roads 1o the worid sy good as those he made all over Fravce. Behind the svenue of plases are apple and pear trees laden with fraft, and. aithough within reach of ail who pass by, appssenily pnloudoled Either the {itfle boys of Frases are of supérhuman virtee or they got filled 10 Tt'{‘»h“_{!i{!} before reaching the bigh way Coming from the north, the pob ny road runs abroptly inloe Wie for oBt apd {2 compaliad In curve anmong the rocky ridges. Glades Lranch off 10 fifi!‘it and left losing (hemseives in the green twillght distance asd ex. cept for the murmuring of the feaves tter silence retgns Here gand thers the beeches give way 'o thickets of acacia and hornbesm, sod ReENELites the tangle {8 broken by & group of plues rising from the nesdiesirewn Bolt. - iy There s an simogphere of iegendry rbout this ancient foreat © It i 8 not difficult to ‘pleture " medieval Enighis or richlycapartsoned horses @oving in glittering procession between the smooth trunks of the beeches, or a merlip chanting Incantations and weaving spells among the crags above them. o . It 18 a relief 1o turn under the acacia and plungs among falien tronks and rank herbage towards m hghter spot, where open sKy can be seen A Brassgrown mound reveils Usell as the remains of a wall of rough hewn stones, and beyond It les & elearing bearing reazsuring traces of human.. iy, A crop of green malze ls wav. iog luxuriantly in the breege. Further on are fruit trees—almonds full of green nuts, standard peaches, appios rome with heavily burdened boughs weighed down almost to esrth, others cliothed with futtering gray moss: and only green with clumps of mistietoe: #pd under these old trees the grasa is hidden in a. shimmering dloud of harebells. Presently the joy of har vest will even penetrate the sadness of the forest. So when the sun has set, and twilight 18 fast creeping over the vast plain, the village appears once more. The strageling strect ig full of color—even after the glow of harvest fields. 014 tlled roofs splashed with orange lichens rise against the darkened forest = Every step calls forth- an exquisite picture. Rustice howes nestie among trees, walled gardens of dreamy seclusion, leafy lanes only leading to the deeper leafage of the forest. Nothing jarring. pothing new; only a litde village of old France —a gem of exquisite simplicity set in the pure gold of the corn. At litte talies in the inn courtyard people are dining or playing cards in the leigure. ly way that obtains in.the country, while a horde of mongrel dogs. varying from an atom faintly suggestive of A griffion to a sedate monster ohvious Iy claiming relationship to a mastig, wander casually in and out among the tables and solicit scraps. with eloquent eyes or gently insistent paws. Above the clatter of wooden soles and chatter of homeward-wending har-vest-folk there arises a rumble of heavy wheels. Up the street comes a wagon piled high with sheaves, and drawn by two cream-colored oxen—muzzied and bowing low beneath a ponderous wooden yoke, :

0. K. MOORE

Roentgen Rays Wagons for Army. Field Roentgen rays wagons are the latest addifion to the medical equip ment of the Austro-Hungarian army. Careful experiments carried on since last February have demonstrated the practicability and value of such wagons under all kinds of conditions.

It has been found possible to get the apparatus at work in seven min utes. Any sort of electric current in the neighborhood can be employed, and, failing such, the dynamo mount. ed in the wagon and driven by a benzine motor can be used.

Each wagon carries 12 gallons of benzine, sufficient for 24 hours’ work. Besides the photographing apparatus the wagon carries 504 plates and films of various kinds, chemicals, a dark rcom which can be unpacked and put together in four minutes and all the necessary tools and other requisites. In no case less than 170 cases of the most varied character the field Roentgen equipment has worked with. out a hitch. The photographs proved most exact and answered all scigutifly

NOT wpm THIS SEASON. Lt L 5 ¢ d B Ss, W ey b e o g Pg i 3 e L s o ] A 7 e ANNETE 45 *,' 3 %\M E« ‘3 & £ o R o 5. i ?‘- i o !25 oV adt 4 iy e - - N E. f WS AN Wt 4 : lfi!‘fx e 3 — Rt 305 - p ¥ 4=e R : : TThere taed to be & wosderinl ocho Sere. | uniersiand” Lo T O"Yew wir. misrvelous Vet Lied vess e of the toariety fnecliesd {2 atd sow 4 W't Bbawner " i FEE i e o s s e L PAINT FAULTS.- - ilt {2 n M:‘ggmafln"’.w‘:-rw:l‘g,;:h?f;'tf_fi B dars to Boal B AN refaark with A gt I B omstweilis {0 Yave poasd pEipiny digs theas davs etier 43 & RO ie nol B 0 oy thery afe Lo poked imtere™” This Bowewer, ta B 9 Irue . Therey e gl paind sisd thide ave greal paintors. et dbe guedtion GG binpioy tham Segvther,. - - e R 0 Sl A watisfg ey asintlte Mob RUbasl pure sehite. ’*-p; There 0 War e make nuve you adie geiiing pore-white lead wirouts ey g L Hes ABal Uie Res Lears Na ttonal lead fompany e famoor Laded Bor Panler fradersoatk wiich e % prsitive Sunrattos of farfty - Homaver, Spyans ran lewl while lead Sa sl Fand Uopmpany, 1562 Totwy badg Nedw Yord ity il send 100 s legds tester and painfdry wutfs . Lnauiting” of Lok of folor scherves, sperificas tous, sl , GG réquisl e e s st s s Nunte'y Wark Like Rostoltom: . F & A¥er The adveryd :“',:',.(’id‘f:,“.;, b 5 the dinner an PRlete okl an hutior ol the fencs ol ariveresty, aap thatl w 0 stevbed by adee riieltig . e Guiresd Bivd wawk ' _ ! 5 The sictenens tn this Pusitess ape ”‘«' ’% h‘ gl ‘lw w 1 .\ think thaf working as Foadadrtom ol Crmden worked 8 fan ran Yotid ap 8 Bread 8% ‘*!:‘i‘.;fi;fi foars iy i Hoshatiomp wae o ronder e winef gagod o 6 & BLEIs sirevy hooon g dav, sn bhe waa jopchios bo was Beard in give & vef of pain T : Wohatw the naier, B < REERT B PRrienter gkt ) Y pedox Al in my Lt the roofu answered, oy Wall, wly den't you pult jUoeat? piid the cßEpenier B o What! In vy dinner Booir™ welled & 5 r T ) y o ¢ Z & - Rt LLiodn, Tepn wokhividy !":“a;»ii,’(:;_ phita Revard G T " “EMEY Luere™ . . The expresalen iy hoere” 00l Biblieal nrighn acd s sbe foand -in the Uhird ehapter of the Tt bk ol Timeahy, where the qualifications feg . vusaty for ke o%ed OF & Lishap pre thus el Torts “This 15 a trus paying. Wa was desirark - thy uf fice of bihop. he diaireth a ogl work., A Lighap gist ‘then Ye Blame boua i Sinibard of e Gi fe v Pgedsped SEER, 100 LRRSRING O 0L R le TRIANL sober of goved Beßavior, iven o hoso pitAILY, S G teach: 5o given 16 wine, ro sPiker. pol greeds of -Qihy igcre; tal patient 00l a brawidn, Bl caveious” 7 ) S Hamline Wikard 00 {s cver Aty yoars oid and, hie an old fresd 4 s he de proded wrim st we surely 3 the family Soctor who pay be mibes suay. . I you are on confidential terpis with almost any family vyou discover they are tersibly hard up. - There are immilations, den’t he fopled, There # no etetute’ Toll the denlés you want Lewis Ningle Bisder cigar. Palm tree prosperity does not de pend upen weather or climave. . . Mrs. Winslow's Saathing Syrap, P ¢ hlidren teetlildg , sofione i pooae, rpduces i Bammrnalont ROAFS pala, CUrer wind cous B s boitie, The true Christian does. a. great Mmary things he does not have to.da

s ‘ ; oY S o OUCH, OH, MY BACK"” A IT I 8 WONDELFUL BOW QUICELY Ti¥e s g FPAIN AND STIFFNESS GO WHEN YOU Usg I T ) : A LA ) ‘l' . " - "y " 5 3 i .\'é : ,’.—f‘_’,i ; L~ £ Ly For stiffness, soreness, sprain or bruise £ I-"‘-‘ Nothing is better that you can use; = - "4:/'/ Lumbago's pain, theumatic twinge, ey Your back feels liken rusty hinget: . --‘ ‘ Sciatic aches all pleasures spoil, ; bt | '. For happiness use St. Jacobs Oil . ‘ ; | 25c¢. and 50c. \ ; . E - CONQUERS PAIN w I\ St. Jacobs Oil, Ltd., Baltimore, Md. . ; 7

f.‘}(’I'Z'I‘I’Z’Z'ZOIOIO2O2OIO:'IC'ZOI’ZOIOZ'Z‘IOI'ZOZOI‘IO2OZ’I’I‘ZOIO2'IO2':‘IO2OIO2OI‘2OIO2O2O2OI'Z'I‘.’,:E B | 3 - stops itching st once .3 ot : Most effective remedy ' 4 ? 1 s 5 ::n Known 10r eczema and 'j % & - s - other skin eruptions— ¢ i is the best dressing ¢ * for burns, scalds, carbuncles, shingles, ringworm and a certain cure for g o = ; o ; s # el w ltching and inflamed piles. 50 cents a jar, all druggists or sent ::- ‘! direct on receipt of price. ,f. < . ik 5 :0: RESINOL CHEMICAL COMPANY, BALTIMORE, MD. ,:: . : k ; . & : ), [recommend Resinol Ointment to all of my patients and friends for Eczems and o w other skin affections. Fravcis A. Groves, Nurse, Boston, Mass. ::« DG ®, . ’ , e ."Zozo:oZOIOIOI01010Iczozo:oio:o:o:o:o:ozozoto:ozolo:ozo:o:o:t!oxozoxozozozozozo::o.'.'10.0.0.0:~:».¢:§ o 5 S, f&‘nuiv! a five acre farm in the suburbs of grow- PR ~#’»,’;%nn ing, bastiing, phenowmenal Jacksonviile-the ,f“\"k L, ‘.}.’«f'q{-}\’.o fastest growing city in the world—interest Y ‘:‘3’,:.-’3". :-%‘gfw v you,if you conld make it earn you s good iiv- & Pe ‘Q «%-;,.J"‘.; PRAeR A% ing andacomfortabie bank account each year? ” fit o e R TS We are an oid estabjished firm. We own our e . Loh ol UL RIS iroperties, stand behind our eustomers, pro- OLY et D NP AP BE W S tect their interests and divide our profits with {{‘ 8 '&&vfisg‘-{?’(‘f}f‘;’:f them. That is why we have more than five = ‘{( /'é) RO ISR NE o thousand customers on ouf books today. We % J .}}:& :55"3...;3.5 b 2 will seli you a # ’ SN == f_q';‘;::_'s\i;!‘_-;-‘._;:' §3 FIVE ACRE JACKSONVILLE FARM FOR $lOO &= ii gl on terms of %uu $5 cash and #5 a month, without interest { f‘/:' Ry or taxes, until pald for. Lnndnm apd dry. Soil rieh. Tities per- \A~ il fect, ask any bankastoour {lity. When you deal wnrnu P, you deal at’irst band with o re—ihe only salsiaciory way. - ’ » g . JACKSONVILLE DEVELOPMENT CO., Capital $500,000, Jacksonvills. Fla. e e i e i e e so oo e e ee B e For Pink Eye, Eplzootic , : Shlgln‘ Fever ) : & Catarrhal Fever Sare cure and preventive, no matter how horses at are infected or O ] “exposed.™ u«m‘:‘nn mnmmfi&?.a,mu \ N & ’;'l m;- mw D"m D?MMMIeLA Yo /S gnd isatine p rentady &%J}uf&‘aunm'g '\‘i'l’ffi‘%‘fi’ and Corea.”” T AT T hea g > B X and ~ : L DEY~ SPOHN MEDICAL CO.. &hgmists ana GOSHEN, IND.. U. S. &

;4; . . £ CuredbylydiaE.Pinkham's -» 3 - Yegetable Compound Paw Paw, Mich —* ] suffernd tarrl: T — ».l. PSR L 1 oy f- : j. 3 )* & jj' 5 S 8 & » 5 g ; : - aod mation and conges ;:_-: Weng | AT, /_‘»._‘, ¥ dovtag %vé\v AT : IYy s 130 e s bivgwr # ¢ BN ¥ ‘::,,;:i, e Lo lly !“&W ”é‘ti Vitik st Y EPeis. e :}! Ve Lo b =d AR ! am el .23 BMa Difarin Ancsther Operation Aveided, ik 4 : ] vant w 0 ; 3 e & e iy it 33 € s enGE i p 5' TR ‘ 1 <-A “ ¢ 5 t i i t g 53 ' £ i Py (. : Al 1_« iG] A L s b Pinkhas Yegetatle Com ; ‘ ity 3 ¢:: :',’ ' b i - hir: bean worth IniLous W ILALY BUL vl ™ e * : Ara VA Rank MATe 1 our anik DCpObl(S 810 6r 1277 United States Gold Coin Bends ) \ % i i r : ; I 3 € EBRYAN. PO Box 728, Dept A, Chicege ' s This Trade-mark ‘" Lliminates Al = ;8 . g 1,, ; Uncertainty 'J,f%zv A f 5 iy oo E T A . 1 : 3 LN g Saiaster of it 'é‘ . . ; : Ll L o g For your uan 3 & every oy of white Jexd (LS WATHREL (E 43 TOMPANTY 1922 Tra® Buitag Ree 120 : Don't Fea” YIRGINIA FARM Wl Livfe muotesr roctitel Miid siiuwate LR ol A Wirdings, Baseri terma W Cieps prig Big ex ligatraied ks Catxneg ¥ : tassyimaNy s 190, Evia 5 518§ 3 .Y l_"\\!'l‘nt;fixli B Sosihern A . ':Q.‘t 3 & »,‘«‘ . Mo »: ,nn PATENTS J. . CRATLLE & COMPANY, g Lrdiie . Asy LIERE * B i A " Wiiie [or {ree i ) 2 TS Watson F.(aloman, et PATEN tw: lth’.’tu- v_!fl;’ ‘lw*.“x’.'fl AA; v i Thompson's Eye Water W. N. U, CHICAGO, NO. 401309,