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Show FALL PLOWING FOLEY'S BILL'S OLD TAT? COMPOUND - CURES STOPS COUGHS , i.Jf CT a Fftwota Bad baautlfta ill hall. a loxumnt gwrth. Fails to BMtor Gray Oalae. lt Toumjul , :iaa PrTnutohair fallu . g J f..wit Pmpiit i Ha summer said to Big Bill McCune In front of Hlckey's grocery: 'BUI, If you don't keep that ol' mule o' your'n off th' streets of this hyarcorporatlon I'll have th' law on ye.' Big Bill bit off a whacking big chew of tobacco before he drawled out: 'Well, If you do, I'll git chure REUEf QUICK EYI TIOUBLU W. N. U., Salt Lake City, MAN SAD-LOOKI- No. SCORED goat.' 'That evening Jerry, Big Bill's mule, Hit "Bluff" Worked, and a Come-quenc- e did not return to the barn. He passed tho Laborer Went Hunthe eight In the village pound, a pasgry Through tho Afternoon. ture largely Infested with weeds and A man entered the hemmed round, wl.1! a hedge of tall shanty where the workmen were eat- burdocks. "The next morning Big Bill started ing Uielr lunches. He was holding a out exploring and soon found Jerry red can. "Hey, fellers," be saluted them, rolling round contentedly In the weeds. "look at this can o' powder I picked They tickled his ribs, which bad atup outside. I've a mind to blow roe-se- tained undue prominence while rami bling the streets of Plumvllle in' search up." "Aw, cut out that stuff and beat It of Juicy grass. out of here," ordered the foreman. "When Big Bill saw Jerry so conThe man looked around, then tented be said to himself: 'Guess I'll walked deliberately over to the stove, leave the old fellow there for the rest opened the door and thrust the can of the week. I'll be out to Hen Inside. anyway, diggin' that well.' There was a yell of dismay and In "That afternoon Aunt Betty Brown a moment the shanty was empty. happened to pass the lot where old Ten minutes later the runaways re- Jerry was nibbling. The sight of the turned. The can was lying harmlessly forlorn creature with his sharp horion the fire and the. man zon outlines touched her heart and she was gone. So were their lunch pails, waddled home for something to bide Soon his bone pile the mule's was concealed beneath a couple of SAME CLASS. gunny sacks. "Every night the city marshal tallied up another day's board against old Jerry. 'At 25 cents a day, that will make pretty nigh five dollars ag'ln th' end of th' month,' he said. "By the middle of the next month the marshal announced that he would auction off old Jerry to pay for his feed. There was a bill against him for $7.25 and It was growing larger every day. The auction was set- for two o'clock Saturday afternoon. "Colonel Wilson was auctioneer. "'Crowd up around here, gentlemen!' he shouted. 'Now. how much am I offered to start this mule? He's guaranteed not to scare at automobiles or tbrashin' machines. He's a family animal through and through Now. what do I hear to start him?" "There came a deep silence, while several of the farmers tried to lift the "And do you love your sister, John- gunny sack that concealed Jerry i ny?" striking points. "Well, I must admit I do, but I can "'Gentlemen.' said the colonel, "we only be a brudder to her tame at sell Jerry just as be stands, fly nett you." and all. Howxmuch am I bid to start hlmr Automobile Aroma. "'Twenty-fiv- e cents,' said old Jack Farmer Hiram was mending the front fence when an automobile Pemble. "The colonel fiddled around for ten whlzxed past, emitting a trail of blue minutes trying to get another bid, but smoke from Its engine. Farmer Hiram's band went to bis they were not game sports. Twentytwice, twenty-fivnose. When the car bad disappeared five once, twenty-fivall done? Are times! you three bad smell lane the and down the far 25 cents! for Pemble to Jack Sold died away be ventured to address the "If yon happen to be motoring along hired man. '"Sam," be said, "they may be swell the road five miles from Plumvllle and city fellers an' all that; but they cer- see an old mule standing patiently near a corn crib while half a dozen tainly was amokln' some vile children pull themselves up by bis ears and slide down over his sides Not Unlikely. you'll know It's Jack Pemble's place." "Well, my boy," said the visitor to Bobby, "I suppose some day you exBETWEEN TOWN AND COUNTRY pect to slep Into your father's shoes?" "Oh, I suppose so." said Bobby, There Is a Vsst Amount of DlsVerencs gloomily. "I been wearln out every-thiAbout What Is Considered a else be wears since mother learn"Bite to Est" me." for down 'em ed how to cut Harper's Weekly. Homer Davles motor car broke while he was several miles out down but if you will, Pay compliments and the good housefrom Concordia, pay your bills first wife pear whose place .he car was stalled Insisted upon getting him and Many a great man baa exclusive the other occupants of the car "a cup of the fact knowledge of tea and a bite to eat" Mr. Davles lf e e n' Returns With Change to Proper Food. "For many years I was a constant Good Humor "We protested against so much trou ble on our behalf, and she protested there wasn't going to be much to It, as she ssld she hsd nothing much In the bouse, and we believe really that meant It That's the thl anuses us 'nothing to eat.' you know, and Inside of twenty minutes the whole party of five were seated at a table, with 'nothing to eat' In th way of hot home-madsausage, bot potato patties, fine light bread, tea and cream, canned p"sch-s- . apple butter, and the Lord knows how much more such truck, enough to call It a banquet for town folks. "Now we have asked Mr. and Mrs. Wlllars to visit us wbn they come to town, and we are going to show thm what town folks call a 'light luncheon.' ThereU be bread sandwiches, rut with Jutt about enoueh bam between to make bait for a fishhook. TbreH be another course on small plates with pictures of flowers round the border, with a little yellow dab of something on a lettuce leaf on them. Then we'll have a spoonful of some sore of frozen stuff, served In hand painted dishes, standing on qfleer little legs, and then will follow a few spoonfuls of coffee, as an excuoe to parade our souvenir spoons the light luncheon will be over, and oer friends will still be hungry. There's an awful lot of difference between 'a bite to eat' In the country snd 'a light luncheon' In town." Kansas City Star. bn the cashier. It makes me sick," whispered paying teller. Cough, Cold the SoreThroat 1 it. very, very terrible," murmured the "receiving teljer. I shall think about It all night," remarked the bookkeeper. "It's awful awful!" said the clerks. There was a moment's silence, then the errand boy spoke. "I wonder who'll get the job?" be chirped. gave an Involuntary Everybody start The errand boy bad been a mind render. Puck. HANDS AND CRACKED Sloan's liniment gives quick relief for cough, cold, hoarseness, sore throat, croup, asthma, hay fever and pronchiiLi. HERE'S PROOF. Ma. Ai.aaaT W.Paira.of Fradeata, o Wa u hkcaa' tank Kan., wrllo luoiit In th f ami)" aiu! Sod It aa eaUant rvUof for oolda awl hay favar aitauka. It atop eouiiuliig awl mm lug almost lualaaUyt" u. BLED SLOAN'S LINIMENT 8t Clair. Ma "My trouble began about fifteen years ago. It was what some claimed eozemv The) form the disease worked under was a breaking out with watery blisters on my hands which would then dry and scale, and then would follow the trouble 0 cracking and bleeding, also Itching and hurting. My bands were disfigured at the time, and tore. The trouble ws very annoying,' and disturbed my sUetA This last February it was ever so much worse than before. I did not do afl my work on account of the condition of my bands. I could not put them In water without mak ing them worse. I tried a lot of borne remedies, also salves and liniments that claimed to be a cure for the trouble, but I did not obtain a cure. At last saw the advertisement for Cutlcura ?""p and Ointment I sent for a sample. I thought tAey would box of cure, so I sent for a fifty-ceCutlcura Ointment and home Cutlcura Soap. A doctor advised me to keep ahead with the Cutlcura Soap and Ointment and they cured me completely. No trace of the trouble remains." (Signed) Mrs. Mary Taylor. Uar. 29. 1912. Cutlcura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each tree, with 32 p. Skin Book. Address pott-car- d "Cutlcura, Dept. I Boston." ' folks don't know Hazel Some what's good for them In this world. Henry Yes, but they're better off than the people that know and haven't the price to get It - RELIEVED SORE THROAT. Mat. L. Baawaa,of Modallo,Fla wrtiaat " I bought on bottla of yoar Ui food la l.lnlinnt and Itilld maall th world. My throat wa Tar aura, tronbla." and It a tired ma of When the Sun Will Die. It may be said unqualifiedly that the sun, like every other thing connected with the present order, will Anally cease to be what it Is today. The time w ill most surely come when the sun will have ceased to throw off light and heat tang before that hap pens, however, the earth and other planeta will have become "dead worlds," like the moon no life of any sort upon them, it has been calculated that the sun will cease to throw out Its beat some here a,bout seven million of years from now. nj COOD FOR COLD AND CROUP Via. W. H. Srainaa, 57?1 Klaiwood wrllaai -- A lit-tl- a Annua, Chlca.0, III., boy aazt atmr bad era p. gaa tha anotbar Hloaa't Llnlroaat t try. Kb ( him tbraa drop oa angar bafora aolnf to bad, and ba fot up without tua croup la tka aaorBit(. Prk0, 2 So., SOo., 9 MO Sloan's Treatise on the Horse sent free. nt Victoria Detested Tobacco. The number of tmoking rooms now over Windsor cattle distributed would considerably aatonlah Queen Victoria could she but see them. Her late majesty could never bring herself to do more than tolerate the weed in any form, and the smoking room was always relegated to a very distant Nor part of her various residences. were the guestst permitted to solace themselves with a quiet smoke In their own apartments, as ci their ar rival they were specially warned not was to do so. Adv. Awful Blow, Queen It Pays Yes." said Slithers. "Mickey my dearest friend, and I shati never cease to mourn bis death. It was There Are Others. terrible blow from which I shall never "What are the principal activities of the official position our friend oc recover." "Why I thought you married bis cupies?" "Those Involved In holding on to It widow?" said Jlmpson. "Why er ahem! why. yea, I did; replied Senator Sorghum. but" Here Slithers subsided Into a deep tnd uncomfortable silence. Harper's Weekly. ta uiniFft to Clip Mftrnsn. irtnaMOttta, ttmymm feeml lb mt euad retider trtMrw1m A b tfc Bemvoat Uet stoteaa Um wert teealand dirt La rmmw eejt.ltery rtta-e- y teaue. sre) morm mmllf baiar sreX saore rood tbsr featvl 4av4 lawlfesjsj tftft wmrf Wa. kataaS i krt fis The Stewart aN wkak SHor.s It,. . Its Style, The average man has a lot more to "The chUd actress in that piece has ssy about what be Is going to do than a part which flu her like a glove." about what be has done. "Yes, so to speak, a kid glove." Mr. WtMtvWe iibln Sjtbp far rblMroa - II II d. rr HI" I II lr1 1 rt fl eaartner Clipping Machine aaa at, tmaflvr milmt ualns Alln e Foot' Kae. th Aelleftl Bowd.r la fee ehak.R lata th hea It ! choe uM or o.w Rfue -- nd er- Utve rmfqn t ih1lltit-- a for MlfK LmIrtsl drra Alla a olm.i-Hor, S. V. Adv. park. He Knew the Klrd. The guide. In referring to the Egyp Sometimes a young lawyer makes tian pyramids, remarked: "It took hundreds of years to build good because be has a wife who lays down the law to him. them." "Then It was a government Job tw e to tt hat rram ehf replied the wealthy contractor. ftrnprrit.r (t?fT' ml rto4? M.ar It PAZAJ drnct o of f". 11,14, Youth's Companion. Bimaifig of lrotw4Uaa iim ie e to I ear, turn. 4 " the aflat B et frae (Mart e,ll4 r4i eVT lanaaaia- avffcroa Ike J emsrf- r Ml star "iw $ gW CHICAGO rttXISLK SHAFT CO. n OhrO CHICAGO I L.U em jfcMBsre wtMFBrtrsr jesf449 Wfll fatrmenpte'ta, BftlesH i I Its rf fcoraw etpf(bar 1 fktt4MSl E. mi. art-- IV.. mi art aralM-atw.a- If you have catarrh and arc neglecting it you arc doing a tcat wrong to yourself. In time it will undermine your whole constitution. You cannot begin too soon the work of shaking it off. Doesn't require any great effort. Begin today. . . Br. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery will ed I m I e BURTON At CHIMItT I, a. SI: av 7.1 a f t nppmr. SI. KHUN Sl...f. M; fil oa i.awa aaa fall arm, Itftl - a ana aaiatr aura artriv "W(tHafaraaea. carauaai aauoaavl ft at Jot. HOWARD bu-sia- . I WM Catarrh (Kelt tBae Best of You sas-septib- -- rfl 91 EPom'tt ILet i There factors taken together m W mi wmm ftMtft Ilt M th Msml- -i IkTtMt UMa t star., si tsj laew Ti i fi AVe. ve, eepw ewWaeaary rr4. IP saaatlttS PtVl IS NECESSITY nd to make agriculture not only racceful, but profitable with less ainfall than In humid districts where, ta a matter of fact, tbe total precipl-.atloduring tbe year Is frequently In etcets of tbe seeds ol tbe 'ar ' rrovrlng crops. Moreovr, eiceot of noltture Is likely to pvov at of crops as deflctescy of ' sieisture snd far more Injurious te tie land. The fact mutt be admitted that the swamps and tbe sea receive I tremendous annual tell of plant food of humid eeuttlng from the "rw-c- r soes of fertility, This teuntries. shirk Is beyond ettlruate. tnott be bade good by some means, so that I petweea restoring lost fertility and mruniag drainage systems, tbe humid reentries are eulte aa severely the semi arid countries bWar fte ! 111 BjBBBBwaBBBBwaaBBYAfafBfa II lr other -- lilts frve rn to Jlttle evetar He M kaaaTesa ". nrM ". fmm, r4 Hse To. VW.aJlae pola.rMra wlo4 oitcjfce IwMIe a "Do you really believe In this bome DEFIANCE STARCH IL atarrba aaly It aaai aan Some people are as unpopular as a rule business?" U PI ft ION DIFIASJCt QUUT. "Of course I do. Ain't 1 married V last year's popular song. n WOkrf. Kntih Tvaaata laral Collaa. Tbe tact tbat nearly half the earth's surface Is visited with less than tweo- tjr Inches of annual precipitation aiakes dry farming, a necessity. Hut a fraction of this vast ana Is of imitation under any cirWhat cannot be Irricumstances. tated must be cultivated by dry terming methods or remain uninhabitn able and practically useless, for genius cannot remove natural barriers, such ss mountain ranges, which place a limit upon Jon. It can, however, suggest tmeth-d- s of agriculture that may be ad tutted to local conditions; methods f tlllsge tbat var ill prevent tbe evaporation of tA moisture, together with the breeding of slants, themselves economic of tnola-x- i re. (Pr eater-cornere- aa The treasurer of the bank was dead. til Word had Just been received over the was busi shortly after telephone. It POHN MEDICAL CO, Chemists and Itaetarlolnslata. Uoahen, Ind., U.S.A. ness hours, and as If by common con sent, all of the employes gathered Write for book aavtug young chicks. Bend aa CHICKS DIE name of 7 frl.ud and fee WHY INCUBATOR that um together In a little group. book free. KaUall itemed? Co., Ulai'kwtUl.Okte. I feel as though I had lost a broth er," said the assistant treasurer. VERY LIKELY. I shaH "ever get over It," added Vast Area Cannot Be Irrigated and Must Remain Uninhabitable Unless Dry Farm Methods Used. e ml Kfal. FARMING Influenza., pink era, epixootlo, distemper tad all nose and throat dtseaaea cured, and all olhtirs, no matter how "exposed." kept from having any of these diseases with at'OHN'8 l.luuin CI) HE. Three to six dunes often cure a case. One bu-ee-ut boule guaranteed to do to. Best thing for brood Biarea. Aon on the bluod. 60o and (1 a buttle, fd and a dozen ALAm bottles. Distributor DrugctsU and harness shops. WUOLE8ALK 1MUUU1ST8. In His Speech. R. The majority of farmers do not realize the full possibilities of their soli because they do not unlock by their process of cultivation the plant food that Is stored a few Inches beneath the surface of the earth. Repeated plowing at approximately the same level forma a sort of floor through which the plant roots pass with difficulty. Beneath this floor Is an abundance of the elements which are necessary for plant life, and unless the tiny roots are allowed to reach down and make use of this food It la of little avail In Increasing the yield of the field. The usual practice of plowing has another disadvantage In that It does not break up the pores of the soli and check the evaporation of moisture. The most methods of cultivation provide for deep plowing. says Kimball's Dairy. Farmer. Some manufacturers are making a specialty of machines that turn the soil from I to 11 or 14 Inches deep, bringing up a new and rich loam upon which the plants may feed. The nse of the power plow, which Is rapidly Increasing. makes It possible to plow to th greater depths. Still another method of loosening the plant food from lower levels by the use of explosives. Agricultural blasting Is coming to be a science la itself. In horticultural work, as well as In regular fanning, the loosening of the soil to a greater depth found valuable and profitable. Deeper plowing will make the farm larger without changing Its boundaries, for It will Increase the productive capac ity of every acre. DRY Shipping Fever the Only One of the Crow of "Mourners" Who Was Truth-fu- l Office Boy Many Farmers Do Not Realize Possi bilities of Their Soli Plant Food Locked Up. '' sufferer from Indigestion and nervousness; amounting almost to prottra-tlon,- " writes a Montana man. "My blood was Impoverished, the vision was blurred and weak, with moving spots before my eyes. This was a steady dally condition. 1 grew and eventually got so nervous 1 could not keep my books potted, nor handle accounts satisfactorily. I can't describe my sufferings. "Nothing I ate agreed with me, till one day I happened to notice Grape-Nut-s In a grocery store, and bought a package out of curiosity to know whst It was. "I liked the food from the very first, eating It with cream, snd now I buy it by the case and use It daily, food was I soon found that Grape-Nut- s suDolrln brain and nerve force as nothing In the drug line ever had done or could do. "It wasn't long before I was restored to health, comfort and happiness. food "Through the use of Grape-Nut-s my digestion has been restored, my nerves are steady once more, my eyesight Is good train, my mental faculties are clear and acute, and I have become so good natured that my friends are truly astonlahed at the change. I feel younger and better than I have for 20 No amount of money would years. Induce me to surrender what" I have gained through the use of Grape Nuts Kept 'Cm Guesting, food." Name given by Poetum Co, did Sklmmol "l!o intlte fill a Battle Ct'wk, Mich. "There's 7 "H one of tbose old- at nony son" R4d the little book. The Road j fhJonwi d.iryman wbo Wl jm la . to WeHTlHe." In pkgs. douM hetber wafer had put la A UHrrt Raaa It trtnm tt tlma. Itrj tbe milk of milk bad bf-- a spilled In aamra mr 4rav aaa" fall af bias the aater." tateraat. AST. ra VOICED ALL THEIR THOUGHTS DEEP PLOWING ON DRY FARM writes: . h PORTER. Bjwrtnt North Dakota, Demonstration Vara.) Fall plowing should be done at sarly as possible, at more weed seeds are started In early plowing, the stubble decays better and more nitrates are formed and other plant food U liberated In larger quantities. Early fall plowing can be plowed deepei than late fall plowing without so much soli at once from below. Early barley stubble can be plowed to good advantage before the yeneral wheal harvest A 14 Inch gang plow travel Ing 18 miles a day will plow flv acres. In a week It would turn ovet SO acres of land. If there Is any delay In threshing or stacking the grain due to wet weather or high winds, the gang plow should be started, even If the shocks are on the fields. They can be set over on the plowed land with but little difficulty by the. opera tor of the plow. From 75 to 125 shocks will have to be set over a day or from four to seven shocks pet mile the plow travels. A shock can readily be set over In from 60 to 90 seconds, thus taking from four to ten minutes per mile. The horses should have this much time to rest, so there Is practically no lost time in plowing land before the shocks are removed- -It Is simply an Inconvenience for the operator of the plow, as he has to stop frequently and set a grain shock over on the plowed land. Set the gang plows going at early .s you can and keep them going every day you possibly can until the fall plowing Is done. A gang plow should average five acres a day, or 130 acres a month. On lands that are not Inclined to drift or pack down bard a section of a barrow can be hauled after each plow to very good advantage. d GOOD NATURED AGAIN W. CPT "I'm just In from Plumvllle," said the traveling man. "I heard a mule story while I was in that town. "The city marshal one day last HAIR BALSAM m Shout Gang Plow Average Five Acres Dally or 130 Acres In Month. MULE BY C. Q. GRANT. PARKER'S B. Y Fourteen-lnc- Is Saia For Childraa Coatains No Opiata VJ COLDS X-RA- ON DRY FARM has a curative c fleet tipon ell mucous surfaces, and hence remove catarrh. In Nasal Catarrh it is well to cleanse the passages w ith Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy uhile using the Ww "Discovcry" as a constitutional remedy. I Fr. ft t . rr , reer, I. Why the "Golden Medical Discovery 'eradicates catarrhal I ImiW hs l i vmm lw tr of the stomach, bowels, bladder and other pelvic affections ", will be plain to you if you will read a booklet of 'aaa fa tt organs, m4 anbyW areafa, from extracts f tnc writings of eminent medical authorities el "eiM 4rWn ' W, t4 ieJ f Jw its ingredients and explaining their curative proper4 ff, erae tvas endorsing ta !af?aei fWfr'eta-f- i ties. It is mailed free on request. f f I WeJ tMi r.isa'si --- e fat ' A w tt--, rej Av SJssSr Aa) -- beytta- -r c 1 y taaja, tsv r . "Tbe "Dixanrery" has been pi'1 up snJ sold in Its liquid form for over I' r37vi mwmmtf Hi 40 gyAA4rf9 ytars and has trven great satisfaction. Now it can be ohrained of medicine m4 Pmr dealers in tablet form as well A trial boi sent prepaid for 53 stain pe. i.m IIt, m tha (i&4P"", Dr. " Y. N. Pierce's lnva!I Address Buffalo, Hotel, wj sM f Va,' W ! mil mr w mm tat I ft. es Dr. area's Pleasant felUte r yulata mmi strwiietkaai 'iwaaaik. Uaaay I mr rain. I a4 Bawala. Aaatal aatwf-- Irttla, aaw ami lira, with a aaamaJM e"" K-- - 'ie 1 f'firA 4 ta fv rHare- 1 one-ce- nt m ! r 'mmjm-- ayvat - iiw . aaaj ItFe1 faa -- t ata mm aw a VeVa--a AaaaaahA V' mrnt aaa.. mfS fV Vr S SaaB) mm J f a , t (wauaaauamrtoc, aatal taawafay aaead snaa |