Waynetown Despatch, Waynetown, Montgomery County, 12 May 1922 — Page 3

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TABLETS OR UOUID

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FARM BARGAINS

Cheapest best farms in United States. 140 Acres, 40,a. under plough, ?10 acre. Equipped farms $1,600 up. Pennsylvania's finest 124 stores with $30,000 Improvements, equipped, (18,500. Free list: Georgre Ott, Titusville. Pa.

HELP WANTED

Government Positions Open to men, women, 18, over. Hundreds appointed every year. Good salary. Write for free list positions. O. W. Bobbins, 817 14th, N. W., Wash'n, D. C.

RE-JTEW-TONE for Your Victrola Records A remarkable new Invention in liquid form thatj will "thoroug'hly clean any make of playing records, removes scratches, keeps reoords looking new. Guaranteed to re-new" the tone" of old records, also will louden the tone of violin string's. One bottle will convince as to Its merits. Every bottle guaranteed no free samples sent. Price fifty cents per bottle, sent postpaid anywhere. All remittances must be sent money order or registered letter. Agents wanted everywhere. Big profits. Good commission. WELCH & SHAVER, 302 Adelaide, St.. Detroit. Mich.

Salesmen-—We Pay Weekly

and offer steady employment selling our complete and exclusive lines of fresh-dug-to-order trees and plants best stock and service we teach and equip you free a money-making opportunity." Standard Nursery Co., Rochester, N. Y.

WANTED—10,000 HC51E SEEKERS Opportunity of your life. Subdivision of a arrand estate. Address E. Stafford, P. O. Box 84, Lake Monroe, Fla.

PILES, FISTUI.A, ULCERATION, COJVS'l'IPATION, bleeding, itching, cured at home. Trial free. S. TARNEY, AUBURN, IND.

Sell! Your Patent to progressive manufacturers on our list (satisfy suspense). Plinske Brog. 1018 S. 19th St., Manitowoc, Wis.

SPECIAL FOR 30 DAYS—Regular 75c spark plugs 35c, postpaid. Written guarantee one year! PILOT PRODUCTS CO., 2032 E. 22 St.. CLEVELAND, OHIO. Agents wanted.

THICK, SWOLLEN GLANDS

that make a horse

Wheeze,

Judge.

Yet 'most worn wives rather th:

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"THtY 8MB I HAD T. B. AND WOULD NOT LIVE THREE MONTHS"

Mr. Harold W. Schmidt, Box 98, Breese, Clinton Co., 111., believes he has reason to praise Dr. Hartman's Remedy, for Catarrhal conditions.

months

Roar, have

Thick Wind or Choke-down can be reduced with

also other Bunches or Swelllings. No blister, no hair gOlie,

and- horse kept at

I work. Economical—only a few drops

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required at an application. $2J0

[.bottle delivered.

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Young, Inc., 310 Temple St., Springfield. Mm.

The Literary Bug.

"Now, girslie, I'll put you among the, booljs, department'of classics." "But I've bhen selling lipsticks and rouge. I don't iinow nothing about classics." if "You don't neea to know nothing. "Just see that absent-minded gents don't walk off without their change."—

prefer to become angels.

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Headache

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Chronlo

BtonchtefCatarrh. I do not get tired, feel like a giant, am «lx pounds oyer normal weight and •Die to work every day. In March. 1918.1 contracted a aevere cold with spitting and took to my bed. They said I had T. B. and would not lire three months, After taking a couple bottles of Pe-ru-na and a box of-Man-a-lln Tablets, oopW walk around and In seven months went back to work. My trouble was dua to Chrohlo Catarrh of the nose end throat, which I bad ten years, extending d6wa Into the bronchial tabes, "fe-rxi-na waa my life eaver."

A HALF CENTURY IN

VA^MHVIV DUbr«VUIIW 0e0009s0000909009cc00009qs000090c0000(

USE

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Iandofftosperi^.

offers to home seekers opportunities that cannot be secured elsewhere. The thousands of farmers from the United States who have accepted Canada's generous offer to settle on FREE homesteads or buy farm land in her provinces have been well repaid by bountiful crops. There is still available on easy terms

Fertile Land at $(5 to $30 an Aero

—land similar toAhat which thrdtigh many years has yielded from 20 to 45 bushels of wheat to the acre-^oats, barley and flax also in great abundance, while raising horses, cattle, snfeep and hogs is equally profitable. Hundreds of farmers in western Canada have raised crops in a single season worth more than the whole cost of their land. With such success comes prosperity, independence, good homes and all the comforts and conveniences which make life worth livingFarm Gardens, Poultry, Dairying are sources of income second only to grain growing and stock raising. Attractive climate, good neighbors, churches schools, good markets, railroad facitities, rural telephone, etc. For illustrated literature, maps, description of farm opportunities in Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and British Columbia, reduced railway rates,.etc.. writs

M. 3. JOHNSTONE

219 Traction-Terminal Bldtf. Indianapolis, Ind.

Authorized Agent, Dept. of Immigration and Colonization, Dominion of Canada

The Empty Bin a(nd Bowl. The Ukraine, which has been known as the sugar bowl and flour bin of Europe, is pretty nearly empty and it is a question whether the country has enough to keep its own people until the next harvest. The wheat crop last year was hard hit by reasofi of the absence of the snows which allowed the seed to be frozen in the gound for lack of protection granted by the jtoantle of snow.

Sure Relief

FOR INDIGESTION

6 BELL-ANS

^1 Hot wafer j. Sure Relief

ELL'ANS

25$ and 75$ Packages. Everywhere

SLOW DEATH

Aches, pains, nervousness, difficulty in urinating, often mean serious disorders. The world's standard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles—

COLD MEDAL

CAPSULES

bring quick relief and often ward off deadly diseases. Known as the national remedy of Holland for more than 200 years. All druggists, in three sizes. Look fdir the name Gold Medal on every box and accept no imitation

Mixed Drinks.

He had made several vain attempts to swallow the mixture but, somehow or other, he could not getNit down. When at last he did manage to catch the waitress' eye he called to her and said: •'There's something funny about this coffee. It tastes like cocoa.".

The waitress sipped it, made a wry face, and sipped if agfiin, to make sure. "I'm sorry," she said. "I've given you tea."—Tit-Bits.

WARNING! Say "Bayer" when you buy Aspirin. ..

Unless you see the name "Bayer" on tablets, you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians over 22 years and proved safe by millions for

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Colds Rheumatism

Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis^ Earache Lumbago Pain, Pain Accept only "Bayer" package which contains proper directions.

Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets—Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists. 4«pWr'",« the trade mark

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Barer Manufacture of Mtraoncetlcncldester of SaUcyllcicld

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USE OF MILKING MACHINES GAIi

Increased Number Being £mployed Makes Cleaning Methods of Much Importance.

HOT-WATER METHOD IS BEST

To Keep Mechanical Devices Sweet and Clean All Parts Should Be Scrubbed at Least Once

Every Week.

(Preparedly the United^States Department of Agriculture.) The increasing use of milking machines in the United States ma^es the method of cleaning and caring for them an important one. In studies of dairy sanitation the number of bacteria which survive various methods of cleaning and care enables investigators to determine the relative merits of various systems of cleaning machines. In addition to laboratory observations, the United States Department of Agriculture has tried out methods of/cleaning and sterilizing mechanical milkers on a number of farms.

On 13 farms where only ordinary care was given, the highest bacteria count was more than 2,000,000 per cubic centimeter, and the average was more than a' quarter of a million. After the machines had been kept clean and sterilized by the hot-water method, the average of 261 samples showed less than 20,000 bacteria per cubic centimeter, and one sample showed onlyone thousand. Of course, with careless methods, milk produced by. hand milking may be badly contaminated but the milking machine, beipg ai^ additional piece of apparatus between the cow and the consurper, should receive special care.

Hot-Water Method Best.

Sterilizing milking machines with

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chlorine solution has been done on a good many farms, but the tests made by the department have shown that much better results -come from the use of the hot-water method. Just after milking, the machines are rinsed with cold or lukewarm water drawn through by vacuum, the stream being broken occasionally, by pulling the teat cups out of the water and immersing them again. This is done 10 or 12 times. The process is then repeated with hot soda solution, and the cups and tubitfg are washed with a brush at the same time. Then the partis are rinsed by drawing clean water through by vacuum.

After this cleaning, the long milk tubes

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the teat cups attached are

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Milking Machine in Operation.

detached from the head/ of the pail, the air tubes (on inflation types of machines) plugged, and the whole immersed in a tank of. clean water. The water is then heated to 160 degrees or170 degrees F. This may be done by setting th'e tank on a stove by setting it up and building a lire under it or by introducing steam from a boiler. The parts are left in this water until the next milking.

The effect of heating upon the ^ubbfer parts lias not yet been fully determined, but so far the temperatures used' have had little effect on the life of the rubber.

Clean Thoroughly Each Week. keep tlie machines sweet and clean they must be taken entirely apart once a week and all the parts scrubbed with brushes and hot soda solution. The vacuum line should be cleaned every two weeks by drawing lw# soda solution through it, but if milk' is accidentally drawn into it the pipe should be cleaned immediately after milking.- Pails and covers need to be washed and sterilized with steam or bflilipg water after every milking.

It is important that the development of mechanical milkers should not be handicapped 6y improper methods of cleaning them.

WOOD ASHES ASSIST GARDEN

.Material Should Be Scattered Ovet* Soil to Get Benefit ofPotash .. Fertilizer.

Do not waste any wood ashes from the grate. Strew them over the garden. They are rich in potash fertilizer. It will leach into the ground, but unlike nitrate*, .will remain there in suspension and the plants can get the/full benefit. You are throwing away money when you throw away wood ashes. They are especially valuable for daffodil and ..tulip beds.-

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CUCUMBER DISORDER SPREAD BY INSECTS

Mosaic disease is Widespread in the United States.

Wild Cucumber Vine and Common, Milkweed Are Principal Host Plants of M-aladyr—Enadica--: on Is S on

(Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) The wild cucumber vine and the common milkweed, as shown by investigations by the United States Department of Agriculture, are the principal wild host plants of the cucumber mosaic, or "white pickle" disease. This disease is widespread in the United States, bilt is most general and serious in the Middle West, where the major portion of the pickle-growing industry is located. Cucumber mosaic is caused by a virus, and the most common means of spreading it is by two kind!? of insects, the striped cucumber beetle, the melon aphis, and by pickers." The disease is not carrted through the winter in the soil or by injects, and trials IIHVO shown that

Mosaic Disease of Cucumber.

CORN FOR SILAGE PURPOSES

Early Planting of Well-Matured Seed of Large Variety Is Often Most Profitable.

In the north

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early planting of

well-matured seed of a large variety of corn is often most profitable when the crop is intended for silage purposes. Of course, if a grain crop is desired, the corn variety must be chosen that has the best chance of maturing a good yield of grain. But if silafee is the object, the same degree of maturity is not necessary. Thei production may be increased simply

by choosing a somewhat longer season crop, one that will reach the proper ensiling stage at about the same time the Northern grain would have to be maturing. Here is one more place where the Northern silo owner can get the Jump ,on some o£ his less fortunate neighbors.

BIG DANGER IN USING LIME

When All Acidity of Soil Has Be.en Used Up, There Is Trouble in Raising Sorhe Crops. •''-"nV.- Vr.

A test was made covering 15 years of growing truck crops with manure, at the rate of ten loads to the acre, qnd with other fertilizers. The fertilized plots "yielded good crops for a few years and then failed. Doctor I-Iaj'twell of the Rhode Island experiment station -does not advise any fertilizers in 'continuous crop rotation without green manuring. He said that Rhode Island was responsible for the use of lime, and now it ought to be responsible for saying that there" is danger in using too much lime. When you have used up all the acidity *in the soil you are in for trouble, especially with such crops as spinach. If you do not get any pink on blue litmus paper, -the soil does not need more lime.

BIG VALUE Of ALFALFA

Alfalfa pasture is worth $25 I to $35 per acre when it will feed 20 pigs per acre that will gain I 200 pounds "each during the sea1 son. If they are fed without I pasture, they will need 1,500 pounds more of corn and 800 pounds of tankage. In addition I to this we can cut a ton or two I of hay from the same land ano I still have better grazing than 1 if it were not mowed.—J. M. I Evvard, Iowa Station.

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SELL GRAIN THROUGH CATTLE

Farmer Who Puts Feed Into Steers and Returns Manure to Land Is One Who Succeeds.,.

(Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) An investigation into methods and costs of beef production in the corn belt, conducted by the United States Department of Agriculture, covering three years, and 906 farms, shows ihiteresting facts, concerning the present status of the' industry. The man who feeds cattle is marketing his crops as he feeds them, and, therefore, is. justified in expecting a return equivalent to average market prices for the feeds. Even if he sometimes falls short of a

Cattle in Feed Lot Near Flora, 111.

returrt he has not necessarily experienced a loss. The corn belt farmer who sells grain sometimes receives more for his crop than the one who feeds it to cattle, but on the average, for a period of years, except in certain limited areas, the mail who puts

seeds from diseased cultivated cucumbers rarely produce mosaic plants. It has been found, hdweveri that seeds from mosaic fruits of the wild cucum- the feed into steers and returns the

ber will produce a certain percentage of mosaic plants when planted and the disease may thus winter over on this wild host. Wild cucumber vines appear along fences and-streams from three to four weeks before the cultivated cucumbers are planted, and the striped cucumber beetle feeds on these wild plants and then flies to the cucumber fields, carrying the mosaic virus If It exists. The common milkweed Is also subject to cucumber mosaic and as It lives for many years the disease is reproduced each year from the. diseased roots. Insects, ^particularly the melon aphis, are also the" agents which carry mosaic from milkweed' to cucumber. Eradication of these wild hosts is strongly advised as the most effective control measure yet known. Field experiments indicate that such treatment not' only reduces the amount oi: disease in the fields, but also its seriousness by delaying appearance by two to four weeks just at the time when' the plants are producing large yields.

manure to the land is the one who comes out ahead. The conclusion is based on feeding in Iowa, Indiana, Illinois, Nebraska and Missouri.

The figures which contain the results of this investigation were obtained from a large nurhber of farms and from several agricultural experiment stations in the Middle West. One phase of the work deals wife the cost of maintaining a herd of breeding cows for producing feeder cattle. It was found that' feed represented 69 per cent of the cost of keeping cow for one year, while the other 31 per cent was for interest, labor, equipment, and incidentals.

SWINE FOR HOME SLAUGHTER

Members of Shipping Association in Indiana Solve Problem of Having Pork Supply.

Members of the live stock shipping associations in Dekalb county, Ind., have solved the problem of having fat hogs on hand just when they are ready to do their home butchering, and the United States Department of Agriculture thinks the plan could be worked by other co-operatives. Many of the members of the association who do home butchering often found themselves with hogs ready for market or slaughter before the farmers were prepared for the work. Under, these conditions they arrange with the manager of the association to ship their hogs to market at the time the animals are ready, and later, when the farmers are prepared to butcher, they buy the desired number of hogs from the association on the regular shipping day. The hogs are sold to them for the net market price returned to the members contributing hogs to the shipment. This practice is an accom* modation to the members, as often a farmer who is raising hogs for home slaughter is not ready to butcher at the time the hogs are in best condition, and he is not prepared to feed them as long as he desires.

KING CORN DISCOVERS RIVAL

Experiments at Nebraska University Show Dried Sugar Beet Pulp Is Valuable Feed.

Dried sugar-beet pulp will soon become a real rival of corn in livestockfeeding, declares the University of Nebraska College of Agriculture.

This statement is based Qn an experiment conducted by the college during which different rations w£re fed 12 lots of Utah lambs, 31 to each^ lot, for 100 days, to determine the food value of the,sugar-beet by-product in comparison Avith some of the standard rations, such as corn and alfalfa or corn, alfalfa, and cottonseed cake.

The beet-pulp-fed lambs led with a profit of $3.80 per head

sat

the end

of the period, while the corn-and-al-falfa-fed lot showed a profit of only $1,83 a head. The experiment proved, furthermore, that either corn or dried beet pulp is necessary to produce a '\nished lamb.

Hog Harvesting Time.

Farrowing time is harvest: tinfe in the hog business. Success at this time means live pigs that will quickly grow' into cash failur'e means dead pigs that will grow into—an entry on the wrong side of the ledger.

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Clipping is a practice that should be niore universally adopted* than' it is, tor it is an excellent thing for the work horse* that has been idle the greater part of the winter and is put to heavy wol'k during the spring, ,\-4

Wk

WHY THAT BAD BACK? Does spring find you miserable with an aching back? 'Do you feel lame, stiff, tired, nervous and} depressed? Isn't it time' then, you found out .why you are unable to enjoy these fine spring days? Likely your kidneys ha,ve weakened. Winter is hard on the kidneys. Colds and chills and a heavier^ diet with less exercise tax them heavily. It's little wonder spring finds you with backache, rheumatic pains, headaches, dizziness and bladder irregularities. But don't be discouraged. Use

Kidney Pills. Doan's

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A former city on the site of erusalem was called Salem. An Assyrian Inscription has been found calling tha place Urusalem which meant "city oi peace."

AUTO HITS TEAM

Laurel, April 18.—Unable to see a team driven by Lester Briscoe, 1303 Myrtle avenue, yesterday in the heavy mist, a large touring car driven by an unknown man ran into the team and seriously injured the driver and killed one of the mules. The accident occurred on Main street near Johnson's hardware store. A crowd quickly gathered and one of the by-standers was Heard to remark that a person' shgjild be punished for not protecting himself against such an accident. He said that he knew of a preparation called "SEE THRU" that could be bdught for a dollar from a concern in Baltimore, Maryland, called the Baltimore See-Thru Corporation that would have prevented the accident as no matter how hard It should be raining a Wind shield treated with- this preparation would always remain as clear a® on a bright summer day and that every person who drove a car should not endanger life by going without it He said that he had driven over from Govanstown several nights before and could not understand how the driver of the jitney could make such* speed on a rainy night until he tojd him he always used "SEE THRUAfter the driver explained to him' how simple it was to have a clear wind-shield and guaranteed to be so as long as it rained he said he did not lose any time sending off his dollar for a box and that he found that it certainly did the trick. Advertisement.

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