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Show EIKERY COUNTY PROGRESS. CASTLE DALE. UTAH v WOMAN'S NERVES j.'MADE i OUTDOOR CELLARS AFFORD CONVENIENT trsi ii iMvv nnm. I 1 SU Has Found the Saae AND INEXPENSIVE STORAGE FACILITIES By Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound WHITE OAK. "Listenyoung Oaks." said the old 4 at nigh- trest would lie awake and get so nervous I fiHIIIIIIIIillllillillliiilil mm f V would have to get op and walk around and in the morning would be all tired out. I read about Lydia E. Pinkham's Com- - Vegetable thought rund and try it. ily nervousness soon left me. I sleeo irell and feel fine In the morning and able to do my work. I gladly recommend Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to make weak nerves strong." Mrs. ALBERT SULTZE, 603 Olmstead St, Winona, Minn. How often do we hear the expression among women, "I am so nervous, I cannot sleep," or "it seems as though I should fly. " Such women should profit by Mrs. Sultze's experience and give this famous root and herb remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, a trial. For forty years it has been overcoming such serious conditions as displacements, inflammation, ulceration, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, dirtiness, and nervous prostration of women, and is now considered the standard remedy for such ailments. t ,V-.- Get and 6enuinewfyr" the AvoidSf7(T2 Economy in Every Cake iwnpaia so Young kuo uanaruii ana -- Itching with Cutiaira Ointment SIkdipm With Caliears Soap Good Advice. A young airman was presented at a Los Angeles tea to Mrs. Oortlandt Kuthven, the Boston society leader. "I've never had much to do with women," the young airman said. "1 don't know how to manage them." "My dear lieutenant." said Mrs. Kuthven earneatly, "they don't want to be managed. They want to be loved." STOMACyPSEI? PAPE'S DIAPEPSIN AT ONCE ENDS SOURNESS, GAS, ACIDITY, INOIGESTION. When meals upset you and you belch gas, acids and undigested food. When you have lumps of Indigestion pain or any distress In stomach you can get relU instantly No waiting I It GOOD TYPE' OF OUTDOOR CELLAR FOR ROOTS. (Prepared by the ITntted States Department of Agriculture.) Outdoor storage cellars or caves are excellent for the storage of many vegetables. They are partteularly desirable on the farm, as they afford convenient and inexpensive storage facilities for surplus vegetable crops that otherw ise might be lost. - They possess all the advantages of the storage room in the basement and are superior In many respects. The outdoor storage cellar can be maintained at a uniform temperature over a long period. It is possible to keep the cellar cool and quickly to reduce the temperature of the stored product to the desired point for safe storage by opening the door during the night and closing it in the morning before the air becomes warm. All ventilators should likewise be kept tightly closed until the outside air is again cooler than that within the cellar, when they should be opened, unless the outside temperature Is so low as to be dangerous. This safeguards the product and adds to the efficiency of the storage chamber. Vegetables can be more conveniently placed In such a cellar than In the storage room In the basement of a dwelling. When the chief use of the outdoor storage cellar Is for storing turnips, beets, carrots and other root crops commonly used as stock food it should be located near the stable, where the material will be convenient for winter feeding. When It Is to be used for vegetables for the table the cellar should be accessible from the kitchen at all times. If apples or other fruits ere to be stored in an. outdoor storage cellar it Is desirable to have a two-compartment cellar, one for vegetables and one for apples, with a ventilating apparatus in each compartment. Construction of Cellar. As the root cellar must be weathering kept proof that is, capable of free from moisture and free from frost Its type and construction vary with the geographical location. In the southern portion of the country the structure Is usually entirely above ground and protected, by only a few Inches of sod and with straw, leaves, ct. In northern sections outdoor storage cellars are made almost entirely below ground and covered with a foot or two of earth. Storage in Regions of Mild Winters. An above-groun- d storage cellar suited to conditions in southern sections of the United States may be built on a site at slight expense. A row of posts may be set five or six feet apart, extending seven or eight foet above the surface of the ground, with a ridgepole placed on top of them. Agatnst each side of the ridgepole a row of planks or puncheons is placed, with their opposite ends resting in a shallow trench four or five feet from the line of posts. The ends are boarded up, a door being provided in one end of the structure, and the roof covered with sod to a depth of five or six inches. Storage in Regjon of Severe Freezes. In sections where low temperatures prevail it is necessary to. insulate the storage house so that the vegetables will not freeze. An above-groun- d type of storage bouse much used in many sections of the North has thick walls filled with insulating material, such as sawdust or shavings. The construction Is of frame and the walls are usually ten to twelve Inches thick. Both the inside and the outside walls are sheathed with matched lumber so as to make them airtight. The rafters are ceiled on the under side with the same material and the space between the rafters tilled with dry insulating material. The use of building paper in the roof and walls of the storage house Is of great assistance in insulating it. A type of storage cellar much used In northern sections of the country Is built partly underground. The walls are of masonry and extend to a point just above the surface df the ground. On these walls plates are set and a roof of frame construction erected. The roof structure is ceiled on the underside of the rafters and some suitable Insulating material, such as dry sawdust or shavings, packed In the space between the rafters, and then the sheathing, paper and roofing material are applied as In the ease of the above-groun- d type of storage cellar described in the previous paragraph. This type of structure Is preferable In many respects to the above-groun- d type, as it is easier to maintain the temperature at the proper point and its insulation Is a comparatively easy matter. Protection From Freezing. Protection from freezing may be secured with a simpler type of structure by making ft entirely underground. In order to avoid steps down to the level of the floor, with the consequent extra lubor in storing and removing the veglocation Is desiretables, a side-hil- l able. The excavation in the hill should be of approximate size of the cellar, using the dirt' for covering the roof and for banking the sides of the structure. A frame la erected by setting two rows of posts of uniform height in the bottom of the pit near the dirt wnlls and a third line of posts about five feet higher through the center of the pit. These posts serve as supports for the planks or puncheons forming the roof of the structure, as with the above-groun- d type of storage cellar already described. The door is placed at one end and a ventilator put In the roof. The whole structure with the exception of the portion occupied by the door is covered with dirt and sod. The thickness of the covering must be determined by the location ; the colder the climate the thicker the covering. The dirt covering may be supplemented in winter by a layer of manure, straw, corn fodder, etc. Outdoor storage cellars usually are left with dirt floors, as a certain degree of moisture is desirable. These cellars may also be made of concrete, brick, hollow tile, stone or other material. VELVET feed soaked benns than it is to grind will be them; and that eaten if soaked before they are fed than if they are fed dry. well-draine- d As soon as you eat a tablet of Pape's Diapepsln all the indigestion pain stops. Gases, acidity, heartburn, flatulence and dyspepsia vanish. Pape's Diapepsln tablets cost very little at drug stores. Adv. Both Ways. He Don't you think you made a mistake in getting such a shoe? She- - Oome to think of it, I did put icy foot In It. high-heele- an acute attack of Nasal Catarrh. Persona who are subject to frequent "colds !n the head" will And that the use of will MEDICINE CATARRH HALL'S build ut the Svstem. clpanse the Blood less colds. liable to. and render them Repeated attacks of Acute Catarrh may lead to Chronic Catarrh. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE Is tak-e- n Internally and acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. All PrusPTlsts 75c, Testimonials free. $100 00 for anv case of catarrh that HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE will not Is J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. Other people's troubles bore a man more than his own. W ELOir Granutated Eyelids, F?M inflamed by expo. mre to Sun, Dost and Wlot quickly relieved by MarlM LiNoSmarting, -V T At just Eye Comfort. mail 60c or Voir Protista by per Bottle. v For Sflek ef lite Eye free write f?m r SS1 inBoy. T r Remedy Co FOR CATTLE more-bean- d "Cold In the.Head" CUF? BEANS Chicago Food Wasted on Poor Cows. To waste good feed on poor cows Is foolish; to waste god cows on poor feed is criminal. Compare Favorably With Cottonseed Meal Produce Profitable Gains In Fattening. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) The feed question Is being solved in n.any parts of the South by abundant yields of velvet beans which were sewn on a large acreage this year. Owing to the fnereused acreage in Georgia that state alone could take care or 50.000 to 100.000 head of cattle from states where forage is scarce. Large quantities of last year's velvet beans also remain on hand and are leing ased extensively in feeding dairy cattle. In tests conducted by the United States department of agriculture on the government farms at Beltsvllle, Md., It was found that velvet beans compare favorably wjth cottonseed meal, producing profitable gains when the beans are the sole concentrate of ration; that a combination of corn Hage and velvet beans forms a satisfactory ration for fattening steers for market; that It is more profitable to - th' SECURE GOOD WHEAT YIELDS Nothing Will Aid So Much as Plowing the Previous Fall, Say Government Specialists. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) Immediately following the thrashing of wheat and throughout the fall, farmers In the spring-whea- t section are confronted with the task of plowing ground for seeding next year's crop. Experience has shown that nothing will aid so much In securing good yields of spring wheat as plowing the ground the previous fall, and special-lst- s of the United States department of agriculture are urging farmers la belt not to overlook the spring-whethis Important factor. Preparations should be made now to get land ready to produce big yields In 1919. Cows must be milked regularly. Medici The Story la Her Own Wordi. The experience of Mrs. David Hon of Route No. 1. Irwlnton. Wilklnsi Cc, Ga is not exceptional. perZ has been an accepted standard nous, hold, ready to take remedy, for fom. five years. Mrs. Horn writes under date of Juii Good. WTAIC STRONG Winona, ilinn, "I suffered formor and waa than a year from nervousness, could not go bad I For Eighteen Yean Oak tree to the ones which had only quite recently been planted that Is, they were very much younger than the old Oak tree. And the young Oaks rustle! and waved about a little In the breeze and said. "We are listening." "Well," continued the old Oak. whom we will call Mother Oak, for she was just like a mother to the little Oaks; "we belong to the White Oak family, and we also belong to the great and mighty Oak family." Now Mother Oak really could be called a mother oak, for she had given the little Oaks shade on the very hot days before they had grown enough to be able to stand the heat themselves. "What do you mean, Mother Oak, when you say we belong to the White Oak family and also to the great and mighty Oak family. Aren't the While Oaks great and mighty?" "To be sure," said Mother Oak, "but I meant the great family of Oaks is so enormous. We are just a part of it. "Suppose," continued Mother Oak. had the same name; "everyone wouldn't it be confusing? But trees, all of which are alike, should have the same name because that makes It easier for those who want to find out about them. "Now we belong to the White Oak family. Suppose each of us had a different name; bow hard it would be for those who wanted Xo know the different kinds of Oaks. Suppose you were Susy Tree," she said, waving a branch at one near-byoung Oak, and suppose the tree next to you was called Sammy Tree; it would be extremely hard for people." "It would," agreed the little Oaks; "it most certainly would be very, very difficult." "So we are all" called the White Oaks and that Is what I meant when I said we belonged to the White Oak family. We are very much alike. We have sturdy, strong trunks and arms. y . (uv. .ii yog, medicine for eighteen years.using I think It one of the best tonics I ever used. I owe my life to the use of it. I recou. menu ii vo an ick people. Permn cured me of stomach trouble." For coughs, colds, effects of and influenza, catarrh and catarrhal conditions oi every aesenption, Penm is recommended. Thousands havi been helDed or are able to &ttrihnt . full and complete recovery from some temoie amicuon to reruns. Try P runa nrst. In tablet or liquid form. wncrc. Sold ever. FLUFFY PERSIAN KITTENS, RollerC&nariea. Satisfaction truwkiiteed. Wnul Sweet-ttM- PIKBCBOkT FLACK, OpponunHj, t- WasM Risky. "How do you think the boys act when they come home, from win the war?" "All right, but now that you've asked me I fancy I shan't care abeut riding with the chauffeur who has been accustomed to driving one of those tanks." Don't Worry About Pimples. On rising and retiring gently smear the face with Cuticnra Ointment. Wash off the Ointment in five minutes with Cuticura Soap and hot water. For free samples address, "Cuticura, Dept X, Boston." At druggists and by nalL Soap 25, Ointment 25 and 50. Adv. The real reason for the failure i usually that the hasn't tried sard enough. Suffered Terribly! "Every Step a Tortnre," Sayi Mrs: Wiutenack But Doan's Cured Her Mrs. Florence Whitenack, 84 Arm strong Ave., Jersey City, N. J., sayi: "I Buffered with rheumatism for six or seven years. My limbs and joints wen so stiff and swollen, I could walk enly with difficulty and the pains in my hips were so severe, I could hardly bear them. Every step I ' took was torture. My feet and limbs were swollen and so sore, I could hardly bear my weight on them. During the night I would lie awake for hours and be- ' She Had Given the Litfj Oaks Shade. rfTra en vtarmtia T vnmilsl have to get up. Dizziness Br'wlutm came over me suddenly and my right blurred. I was never free from the miserable backaches and rheumatic pains. I tised different remedies, but I didn't get any better. Then I com menced to use Doam Kidney ruit. The swellings began to leave right away and I continued to use them. The pains and aches left my back and hips and I am cured of the rheumatism and all signs of kidney trouble. Sworn to before and we have such good roots that we ROBERT KTNG SEIDEL, can stand storms. JVDfory PuWo. "We are very popular with the men Get Doan'a at Any Star. 60c a Bos who gather lumber and the people TV KIDNKT A who care for trees. And we live to a PILLS very great age. Oh, we become. so FOSTER-MILURN CO, BUFFALO, N. T. old 1" "Then we've a long, long time to five, eh, Mother Oak?" asked the little Influenza can Oaks. be prevented easier "You may live to be more than two hundred years old," said Mother Oak. can be cured. "Yes, you will probably live to be far older than that" the "How wonderful!" the young Oaks sign of a whispered. shiver "And then I told yoil," continued sneeze, Mother Oak, "that we belonged to a very great and mighty family of Oaks. By that I meant that there are many different kinds of oaks, like us in CASCARA QUININE many ways and again unlike us in a good.. many ways. "They say that there are three hundred different kinds of Oak Trees!" Standard cold remedy for 20 year to table! form safe, sure, no breaks up a cola "Oh dear, what lots of Oaks," said In 24 hours relieve opiatea Money grip in 3 one of the young Oaks. "How thrillback if it fails. The genuine box day. has a Red top With Mr. HiU'i picture. At All Drug Stores. to to fam-la such ing belong very big I know what it's like, Mother W""!"P-""a- "s Oak." "What?" asked Mother Oak. . rI 1 i 1, rnt!.l1 "It's just as though we were all wiu reduce limameu, wiw people of one country and there were Joints, Sprains, Bruise, Sot-- I three hundred different families of us, Bunches: Heals Boils. Po" one named the Brown family, one the Evil, Quittor.Fistuia ana Infected aorea quickly White family, one the Black family, as it it a positive antiseptic and another the .Tones family. And and germicide. Pleasant to so on," the young Oak added. doe not blister ok; "Right, right," said Mother Oak, the hair, and yoacsn work lie aon bottle. aVtlrered. SLSOier waving delightedly. "And you speak hook s Kirev. the truth when you refer to us as a ABSORBINE,.. JR.,fte u Bjepoe Dalment tor BntUM branch of a family, for that's a very reduces Painful. Hwollea Veins, Wens. StrslBS. bonis" stops dsIb ana taauumtioB. Pries SL2S per sensible way to speak of a tree!" aeslen or dellTerei. WiU ten To Dors K fo wnm The young Oak was much pleased Liberal Trial Bonis for lOe in stsmM. M that it had been right In what it had W.F. TOUNG. P.P. F 310TennleSt,Sriiifl8eU. said. "And we are going to have our own cups, too, when we're the ( right treatment with s remedy tlat age, the wonderful acorn cups of the eeruire tains no opiates, tiso's is mild but S?J Oak trees, eh?" tivej pleasant to take. Ask your druggist J And Mother Oak nodded to let the young oak know It was right once f rVrG Spanish than it At first or take Fl y. i wmmm Baby Colds morel |