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Show I i ITS HARD TO WORK It's torturo to work with a laine, aching back. Get rid of it. Attack the causa. Ir'rohably it's weak kidney. Heavy or confmiug work ia bard on ths kidney, anyway, and oneo th kidney be owe iuflamed aud congested, the troubla knaps getting worse. The danger of runuing into gravel, dropsy or bright'! disease is serious. Use Doen's Kidney Pills, a fine remedy for backache or bad kidney. hm Mai. ft. N Case H. II. Ratrh. r.l Oder Si., Wash., Vverett, "Severe ays: in my rmlna bttuk mtwie me Tlia tntaerable, k I d a y aocre-tlva- a burned In a a a I a g. My back ant ao bail I could hardly werk. apeclallata fully ed Lunn'a I'M After Kid-tw- em-rlte- ly cored we." Cat Dou'i at Aay Stem. B0 a Uom DOAN'SW FOSTER MtLBURN CO., BUFFALO, N. Y. ADVICE TO THE ACCD Ac brings Inflrmltle, gowHt wwi such slurgUb Kiancy d mm torp-- liver. Tuft's Pills have a apecttle effect en these organs, atlmtrtatiD tlx bowels, 1vs natural action, and Imparl, visor to toe whole sylscm. USE ALLEN'S FOOT-EAS- E, The snUeaatfa powder to fee shaken Into tba aboea. If fun want rest aaa eotuCort (or tliwd. axhlui, 11 reiwollen, awoatlnc fact, oae Alter1! stool-baa- e. lieves earns aea bunion, of all pale and prevent. eilKsata, euro and aalkioa .pota. Jut tba Uiin fur rJeocln Parties, Patent Leather Shoes, and for BreaMna ka Nm Bhoos. It Is u rtwaiasl aumtort Bold everywhere, diseorerraf tbeaaa. .Try U beta. aeer'il aaynotruu's. Kur 'Kttf trie. Alloa aaycUsa.a44fea sVlMaieie4.1lioj, N. T. DISEASE Dry-R- ot OF POTATOES Fungus Causes and Wilt of Crop. CROP FOR SWINE What is Castoria. Hogs of All Ages Relish Cut Alfalfa When Fed in Slop and Make Excellent Growth. Blight History of Fusarlum aa Field Trouble la of Comparatively Recent Reo-or- d Preliminary Symptoma Are Green Color. (By T. P. MANNS.) The dry rot of potatoes has long been known as a storage trouble. At Intervals since 1824 there has been found associated with this rot by different Investigators a fungus of the genus Fusarlum, which has been variously designated, but the history of the disease as a field trouble is of comparatively recent record. On badly Infected soils the disease Is characterized as follows: The stand Is uneven, though few of the hills are missing. The early growth llyijl Showing Premature Dying in the Field on an Area Which Has Infested With Fusarlum Disease. Be-co- somewhat slow. When tho plants reach a height of 10 to 14 Inches, there la an apparent cessation of growth. The first indication of the disease Is usually conspicuous at this isat time. The preliminary symptoms are a light green color of the foliage, parthe lower leaves; this is acCennttpatloa Overcame Without liruaa or In ticularly alJvcllona s to pllle. nothing low. Mmple. kurinli-sa- . companied during the heat of the day boa. pfrnmnt-ntrsplil, Martina apes. Co.. II. I. It. 11 A. rtealllr.Wa.il. by a partial wilting and an Inward strwtrtinaaa'. formula exterminates pil.a No and upward rolling of the upper cutties ur ni(. Haf., aura lie. rraarla leaves. The color gradually changes Maine. Merrlaea, IM illake M to a sickly yellow, which slowly and covers the affected vines. The evenly END TO PUT SLEEP WALKING wilting and rolling of the leaves extends to all parts of the affected 8ure Cure Offered Without plants. Ae the disease progresses the Just Sprinkle a Few Tack on the field takes on a mottled yellow to light Floor Before Retiring. green color. The growth of the foliage Is greatly restricted, the wiltSomehow the conversation drifted ing becomes more pronounced and round to the subject of dreams, from there Is associated much owto dreams nightmare, from night- ing to the failure of the leaflets to mares so somnambulism. fully recover at night from the wilt . "A rotten habit, walking la one' of the Occasionally hills will sleep!" remarked Mr. Drown, the vil- show only one or two vines afflicted. lage humorist. "Do any of your fel Plants which early succumb to the Iowa suffer from It?" disease pull up easily, manifesting a Yeang Smltbaou, who had always badly rotted condition of the root. had a horrid but unfounded fear that As a rule the blighted stems do not he was delicate, rose to the occasion fall, but remain quite erect, except im mediately. for the drooping top. There is much evidence to indi"Yes, I do," he remarked, "and hare done so for years. D'you know any cate that mh growers are practicing remedy?" potato rotations of too short a dura"Do I know any remedy? I should tion. Most of such growers have at jolly well think I do!" replied the ho tempted to maintain a three-yea- r mortal. "Why, 111 give you the pre rotation of wheat, clover and pota scriptloa now, and you can take V toes, but longer than a three-yea-r rotation should be practiced. roaad to aa Ironmonger." Is !... e VALUABLE prlle-ta- . tip-bur- n I have found that alfalfa makes one of the uost valuable crops for ths hog grower, whether It Is pastured or cut up finely and fed with ground feed, writes John II. Dunlay In th Farm, Stock and Home. Last winter when middlings were selling around $30 per ton I cut aUalfa In a cutting box and fed with the warm slop to all my bogs that did not have access to blue grass or the rye fields. Hogi of all ages relished the cut alfalfa when fed In the slop and they mads a fine growth. The alfalfa was cut to about onO half an Inch In length and then scalded before being mixed with the ground feed. I usually put the cut alfalfa In a large galvanized tank and pour boiling water over it It Is then left to stand over night and If covered will be warm the next morning. I want to purchase a feed grlndet that will grind alfalfa Into a coarse meal, and if I do thiu I think the hogs will find It even more palatable. Alfalfa contains about the same amount of protein as found In the best middlings and at the same time It scemi to act as a tonic for all the hogs thai have access to it. It Is not too late to sow alfalfa and It will pay you to sow at least a small patch even if you only feed the hogi the cured hay during the wintet months, when they do not get green feed. When there Is a good supply of alfalfa, it makes the beet of forage crops for hogs of all ages. Alfalfa, when pastured, should be allowed to get a good start and should not b pastured the first season. In this way it gets a good start and Is able to stand pasturing better the next year It Is well to ring the hogs or' take them from the alfalfa field If the ground gets wet or muddy. "ASTORIA is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotio substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishncss. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for tho relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles and Diarrhoea. It regulates tho Stomach and Bowels, assimilates tho Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. Tho Children's Panacea Tho Mother's Friend. Th3 Kind You Havo Always Bought, and which has been in uso for over 30 years, has borno tho signature of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his personal supervision sinco its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. aro but Experiments that trifle with All Counterfeits, Imitations and and endanger the health of Infants and ChildrenExperience against Experiment. "Just-as-goo- Letters from Prominent Physicians addressed to Chas. AMOUOt, Militant Spirit. We were lined up at the booking office window, taking our places, la front of me was a burly man. Alt went well until a woman broke the line and planked her twopence In front of the burly man. The man wept It aside. "I've always taught my wife," he said, "to be polite to "I'm very glad 1 am not gentlemen. your wife." said the woman. The man la front of me took his ticket and sUd. aa be moved on, "I took that precaution some ears ago." londcta Obroolole. No Facilities. "They say that Cupid strikes the match that U the world aglow. I!ut where does Copld strike the match? that's what I d like to know." Cornell Widens. CLEARED AWAY the Troubles Away. PYwper Food Put Oar own troubles always seem more than any others. Hat when a inaa ta anabte to eat rven a light kraalsfaat, for years, without sev re he has troubla enough. dielrt, It Is small wond- - hi likes to tell of food which cleared away the troubles. am glad of the opportunity to has done trtl y? the good Grape-Nu- t for Ve. ." write a N. H. man. "For msay years I was unable to eat even a light breakfast without great suffef-tng- . 1 would suddenly be ehted with an attack of colic and vomltlng. This would h followed by headache and mWtery that would sometimes I et a week mr more, leaving me weak f (Hold hardly Kit np or walk. I to .t "Since t bea-aIiwvA free from the old troubles t wetiAHy eat GrapoKats one or more time a day. taking It at the hglnninc of the arrpal. Now I can eat almost anything I want wlthsrl trouble. Grare Nn's 1 "When I boiran lo was way andr my onal weight, new I relah 30 pounds more than I evef weir tied in my life, and 1 am glad to speak of tn. fond that has worked the fhrre." Nam" riven f fortum Co. ftaMUi Read the liftls Mich. twrnkbH. "The Road to WpIlTille," to krs. "There's a Reaaon." "After eating I Grpui" a ba 0k. flme fa4f 1im. trrr freailm fall of amssfae, tree eea ax--e tsMerret. ft. trwe. aS A wean Tsrt bwaaaa Sick fields should not be planted In potatoes again for at least five or six years, and even longer time may be required to work the parasitic fungus from the soil. Grass and grain crops will undoubtedly eliminate the fun gus from the soil quicker than will manuring and cultivated crops. In ImThe work of the dry-ro- t proper storage causes an excew of 3 At gelable fflt CENT Prrparailon&rAs similaiiii5ilicFocti3nillJf(;uii ling (lie S iraadis aadDuacJs af ajttj Pronulcs DitfcstonUrf tfJ-ncton ncss and ResijConialns Opium-Morplun- CHEAP ROOST FOR CHICKENS c,-- norMiaaal e KOTNAK COTIC. ' Discarded Cart Wheel Ml, Be Made to Serve Purpose No Trouble In Cleaning House. y (By C. DOVKR.) Tfwrw?' Afe. frW luaaaiaiswan Take a cart wheel and stab the axle into the ground, or cut the axle In two, bolt it to a poRt and set the post in the ground. When the chicken house needs cleaning, all you need to do is AnerCp ci IWrnr dv forComRf 1on , Sour StomxkDtarrlwi Worms ronvulswns .reverts ncsa and LOSS or SLEEP. 1 b -- 2- -- S3 1 II. Fletcher. Dr. Albert W. Kahl, of Buffalo, N. Y., says: "I have used Castoria fa my practice for the past Hi years, I regard it aa an excellent medicine for children." Dr. Gustavo A. Elaengraeber, of EL Taul, Minn., says: "I have used your Castoria repeatedly In my practice with good results, and can recommend It as aa excellent, mild and harmless remedy for children." Dr. E. J. Dennis, of EL Louis, Mo., says: "I have used and prescribed your Castoria la my sanitarium and outside practice for a number of years and find it to be an excellent remedy for children." A. Buchanan, of Philadelphia, ra., says: "I hava used your CasDr. toria In the case ot my own baby and find it pleasant to take, and hava obtained excellent results from Its use." Dr. J. E. Simpson, of Chicago, IlL, says: "I have used your Castoria la coses ot colic In children and bave found It tho best medicine of Its kind on the morkcL" Dr. 1L D. Eiihlldson, of Omaha, Neb, aays: "I nd your Castoria to be standard family remedy. It Is the best thing for infants and children, I have ever known and I recommend It--" Dr. L. IL Robinson, of Kansas City, Mo., says: Tour Castoria certainly has meriL Is not its ago, its continued use by mothers through all thesa years, and the many attempts to Imitate It, sufficient recommecdatloaT, Wiat can a physician add? Leave It to tho mothers." Dr. Edwin F. Tardoe, of New York City, says: "For several years I hava recommended your Castoria. and shall always continue to do bo, as it has, Invariably produced beneficial results." Dr. X. D. Slzcr, of Brooklyn, N. Y, says: "I object to what are calls patent medicines, where maker alone knows what Ingredients are put la them, but I know the formula of your Castoria and advise its use," a CASTORIA Soars tho Signature of CSNUIME Facsimile SiCnamrejs mid-day- "Aa I roam on (rer?" Young Smltbxon thought that hit ears mast be playing tricks with htm "Yea, aa Irontrooger." said Itrown Then he wrote out the following prescription: "One bos of tlntacks Dose: Two tablespoonful to be scattered about the room at bedtime." d" ALWAYS The O.NTAun CompaU. NEW YORK. w ar - r- a 'f- - ""' 1 Pratt"'" under niTPioda . IHaranteed The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. Roost for Chickens, Exact Copy of Wrapper. to lift the wheel off and it Is out ot the way. Then, too, if there is a 'Ha7IW ,wJftFQ1(PftTamp!ytFT8Brfnm chicken on the other side from you that you wish to catch, just turn the WHERE HER THOUGHTS WERE wheel around. Moat Married Men Have Had a Similar Experience, If They Will SUMMER RATION FOR HORSES Admit ths Truth. Good Combination Is Corn, Bran and Little Oilmeal More Carbohy- drates and Less Protein. If corn must be fed to the horses, grinding It will not pay, unless the horses have poor teeth. In which case it might be advisable. Feeding the ear or shelled corn w ould be the more desirable method of feeding. Crushed corn and cobmeal Is not as good because of the coat of crushing, and the amount of food value secured from the cob la so small that It does not make up for the energy required to digest so much crude fiber. A combination of cotn, bran and a little oilmeal make a good summer ration for horses. Feeding a horse about tea pounds of corn and three pounds of bran per day Showing a Potato Rotting In the Soil would be equivalent to fourteen From the Fusarlum Disease. pounds of oata, although It contain moisture, due to the drying up of the a little more carbohydrates and less rotting tubers. This excess moisture protein, thus making a little wider condition, together with tho added ration. A small amount of oilmeal facility with which bacteria and decay would offset this, however. fungi may enter the already Infected tubers, brings about much complica tion in tho form of soft or wet rota. for which the Fuarlum disease Is Under the primarily responsible. average cellar storage conditions It la quite safe to estimate the loss frora t and its complications at from Rotate) your garden crop. one to five per cent. Give the radirhe jut! a little shade. 1,010-poun- d GENERAL dty-ro- riant early smooth peas. Alaaka Is When Soils Cease to Produce. a good early variety. The trouble with soils whn they The farmer la known by the amount cense to produce as they did when of clover seed he rows. new Is not that element of plant A set of ateel drill will soon pay food are actually exhausted from the many times their sma!I cost. soil, but the necessary forces for the One; way to Inrrravt the profit of liberation are exhausted. One of your farm Is to biild a alio. Ih'se forces la bacteria. It Is estiFine) cabbage follow beans but do mated that In the common soil there not grow well after po'atoe. 1 arn r.0.000.o(0 bacteria to the ounce. Alfalfa pasture and hogs make a These bacteria must bave for their combination that Is hard to beat. food, bumus, then they will liberate Sweet peas shmiH be planted a food for the growth of plants. To be soon a the ground can be worked. one a good farmer needs to grow I'm not plant your rwrta,'0 In the legumes and other cover crop tlants same old place and Invite the scab. to turn under for humus, and to Rave mu"cle and lime when cutting these bent lefal bacteria to hands by having a knife. perform their funcllcjs In the to:L Plant radtehes remote from the track Infested by the last Success Further Down. year. In many instances the yield of garWhen short of room, train sqnash den can be increased by pimply vines on treliiaea or wire fence; they re goe l slirrbers. getting down a few Inches deeper with fork or ppade. The French riant cucumber In level rows; la gardeners can give Americans many dry season they 4f better than when lessons In this reepect. The soil grown In elevated be). should be pulvertlited, but work Onions, beets, spnlach. radibe and hotild not b commenced too early. lettuce may be sown as soon as the Plowing the ground while It Is too ground can be worked eallr. wet will cause the soil to pack In Lettuce should not be where tho olid lumps. Good land Is almost raoil la too dry or lieht. Farsley will ta ed In this manaer. stand such soil a 13t?l better. keen-edee- d wire-wor- The husband was reading a newspaper account to his wife. Now and then he paused and asked a question. The nature of ber replies made him doubt that she was listening closely. He accused her of having thoughts elsewhere, and ahe Indignantly retorted that she had heard every word. He continued reading for a few minutes and then glanced at ber. From the fur away look In her eyes he knew her thoughts were not upon the item he was reading. So, turning the sheet aa an excuse for a pause, be continued as follows: apparently reading: " 'Last night, about 2 o'clock In the afternoon. Just a few minutes before breakfast, a hungry boy about sixty years old bought so orange for nine pins and threw It through a concrete wall twenty feet thick. With a cry of despair he Jumped Into a dry mill pond, broke hi arm at the kne Jolnt, and was drowned- - It was only ten years later, on the same day and at the same hour, that a goat gave b'rth to sit elephants. A high wind then came up and killed threat dead horses and a wooden cigar Indian.' What do you think or that, h questioned, suddenly. She gave a little start, amiled, and said: "I think that's a splendid barcafn, Henry. You had better get half a dor-en-, for your stock of shirts I wit. "I once told him of my many vaia efforts to swear off. and of my resolve, none the less, to make another trial. "'Right!' said Professor Dowdea. Turn over a new leaf. Yoa needn't mention to any one the number of the page." 'Right! Quite So. "Ih you believe In the office seeking the man?" "That depends altogether on the amount of his shortage." FOLEY KIDNEY PILLS atCM IN CURATIVE OUALmiS rOM- - aACKOHg. gHIUUATISIs. KIDNSTa AMD LAOOCM TunuDC-nue- ? bur-lesqu- e Woman' "When she ttiot Way, looking I kl'd "What d'd she AoV "fte'nsed to look at me for the rest f the evening "Wasp. fatleasa O- -l I nwmr own 4JOII tit i.a.r, WATtP.Zr.rT w bolts ( .Tr.T.T. LI a-- a. 1 IIOMI DAISY FLY KILLER ZZt X'ZZ VT, ) Pskt, 'ItM taval, . MesAll M mmm Love Would Be Short. not by the moon, i.rar moon." said Juliet. "Oh, 1 a. the 9mt t ) MMaaaatH m fSft H aa farttl m t ttltirt. !)? How about the modern maiden who ffr1lt. AHtftlltriOTiMr. sre g' ing to be loved "till the aand MlTsl flBf t pi fejf tl of the deaert grow coldf V9L OHtK, Its) saWtaUt Iraturi. B. V, Don't their t'hyical gcograjhlcs tell M.9 MA rtPCM RfMtDY, them that the sands of the desert T4 crow ct;M every night, "owing to the ffMtfrtar'- -, WWmm9..l9r ( Our used ir tfai. ftrn p; off Tornmf Uck of aqueous vapor? a t. w atail. ), ft l.. Bit I alas aaajtsj N-- 1 THERAPIQN lZX:z ., W. lLJiiF-a-- . Very Plain Criticism. Children are not always grateful beings, and they are notably hard to entertain. At a birthday patty a kindly natured adult had toiled hard In the effort to amuse the children by means of parlor magic, ventriloquism, dancing and the like. The other adults present were hichly amused, and some cf the children deigned to chuckle mildly. The mr.lher f the hoatess, however, felt that full justice had riot been rendered, so before announcing refreshment she took pafns to thank the entertainer, and to call the attetrtion of the younerrs to hi gifts. "Mr. Flank I very funny, in't he. children?'" she concl'ided. From the reer of the room came a small, shrill voice: "Tes'im, but not so fanny a he ihinks he is!" her' Right Course. The late Edward Dowden was being discussed In Philadelphia. "Dowden's style was ponderous and somber," said a sonneteer, "but I often met him In Dublin, and his talk, unlike bis writing, sparkled with true Irish Hs May Be a Great Doctor Soma Day. William, aged five, bad watched with much curiosity the family physician each day count his grandmother's pulse. When the doctor's visits ceased. William felt the responsibility of bis grandmother's counting pulse dally. One morning William's father came Into the room and found hi young son looking thoughtfully r.t Ms tiny watch. M finger on grandmuth-er'- s wrist. It lodayr In"Welt, son, what quired tbe father. Wlllium looked grave, but without hesitation replied: "Ten dollar, air." rT low." arsz: Young Financier. Freddie came Into the house one day and said that the woman next door had offered him a penny If he would tell what his mother bad said about her. "I'm ao glad you didn't tell," re"I wouldn't marked his mother. have her know for anything that I even mention ber. You're a wise little boy, my dear." "You bet, I am." returned Freddlo. "When ahe offered me the penny I told her that what you said was aome thlng awful and It was worth half a dollar." P) ,. m. mrrw to. yrr' tT3 Tftf fiwf. Wi.r rtsvfMtrrftlr). ,, -n HtMr-iiM-- i, Tt itlf''.f THF.RAPION i f t"t " Easy. "I see yon bave a new cook.'" said Mrs. Keen, a she smiled at the bost- acros the table. "Yes." replied tte bostes. "How did yoa know?" "I've been studying the thnmb jritit Citi the plates," replied Mr rira ksUTsUVOTl.fi tT Mi r at ' tffiUO tO '- 4 w - ff p'4 (, 1 Cl . txrmtmn. f. Vn fsVftS fc ' twwwpT.-waMLB r rJ FACfcftlaV SPECIAL TO WOMEN Do you realize the fact that thousands of women are now using Kef n. c.ri An et tack, h can lay a carrot. but It can't What Ails You? .... i.., S r S3 ja - r- 3 1 3 "t-.-- j; - J3 sw U .. r- - v A ) ? r .wtv? a -- a ' ' . f . i.k tfw ., -'r . a-- .e -. w. - f j amf eec&Kataei. w aenrus arme ana ,. Or. riTce' GoM-- MrrTol fi a 1 VV fas "" It' ' aa,isar . - Di'sccYfTT l JgJ mm a v F ' f --f - sr- - -- a a. ., fr V , M,J r a ' 55 " n -?3 S H 'rrra.1 r.m aea,, tsaar e-- i 11 tet ' A Soluble Antiseptic Powder a a remedy for mucous, membrane af lecuona, sum as sore throat, nasal os pelvic catarrh, infammalion or nlcena-- ' tkin, causerl hy female ills? Women who hae been cured say "it I worth Its weieht in gnid." Iissolve In water and apply locally. For ten years the Lydia E. Flrkham Medicine Co. baa recommended Fai'ine In their private csorreeponrlorir- - with women. For all hvgien'e snd toilet use has t equal. Un!y !". a large box at Hrg(-gis- t or sent postpaid on receipt ot price. The Faxton Toiiet Co, Boston. af3S. W. N. U, Salt Lake City, N.. 20-11- 13. |