OCR Text |
Show NOT A EIT I PAIN? OR CALLUSES withfingsrs. This new drug Is an ether compound Cincinnati chemist. It Is called freezone, and can now be obtained In tiny dIscovered-by"- a very little cost from any drug store. Just ask for freezone. Apply a drop or two directly upon a tended corn or callus and instantly the soreness disappears. Shortly you will find the corn or callus so loose that you .can lift It oft, root and all, with the Angers. Not a twinge of pain, soreness or Irritation; not even the slightest smarting, either when applying freezone or afterwards. This drug doesnt efit up the corn or callus, but shrivel them so they loos-- I If1 en and .come right out It I!' j la nn humbug I It works like a charm. For a few 'cents you can get rid of every hard corn, soft com or com between the toes, as well as painful calluses on bottom of your feet. It never disappoints and never bums, bites or inflames. If your druggist hasn't any freezone yet. tell. him to 'get a little bottle for you from hla j ' adv. Aa Mitey Wise Understood It . They were talking about aviation. As I understand It," said Mr. Mitey Wise, the'inonoplane Is a flying machine from which one falls, the biplane Is one from which two full and I get you, chirped the quick thinker. The Is one from which they all fall out." Indianapolis News. THIS DRUGGIST KNOWS BEST KIDNEY MEDICINE I began to sell Dr. and today I believe it is one of the best medicines on the market; and my patrons are very much pleased with the results obtained from its Sixteen years ago Kilmers Swamp-Roo- t use and speak very favorably regarding it. Swamp-Roo- t has bean very successful in the treatment of kidney, liver gnd bladder troubles according to the reports received and I have no hesitancy in reoommendmg it for 1 have great faith in its merits. Very truly yours, OWL DRUG STORE, By R. F. Boies, Oct. 3, 1018. &edalia, Missouri. PLOTS AGAINST UNITED STATES BEFORE THE WAR. Furnished by Germany's Ambassador for the Purpose of De stroying . Life and Property, It U Charged. Money ' v r l pure, doth, rftol the doth were cut and (lidded equally among the men and women of the there would be about 44 countrj, square lnchevof stich cloth allotted to each person; and If the present decline in wool production continues for a few ,on,:rer pre will not be enough doth to mail a respectable breechcloth per capita. .uch was the declaration of a speaker before Woo! n(1 text!lp conference, held In In a short hllndelphla. paragraph this sums up. not alone the situation which we as Americans face, but which the whole drilled world Is fac- lmp'ndlnff shortnge of clothing Is at bnnd all-woo- For every 1.000,0(10 Not only are wool 'nines certain to Increase, but maintain a steady nod heavy market demand from all sides for to come. a generation The reason are very ap- the tion late idly tion. rr V Details Wanted. Even this dog here did his bit In the war." Whod he biter acres of hind In' the United 67 sheep, while5 today, V. been . so the masses - There are nearly 1C-00- 0, fewer sheep In the world today than J5 more than jenrs ago. and iOO0nn0 more profit a the In the consumption of fnr and away In advance of cl tlnr of the other great nations, for although t behind the United Kingdom In the for her factories, all that Is quantity manufactured here Is retained for clothing and oilier uses of our people, and, In addition, vast quantities of woolen fabrics are Imported from A large percentage abroad. of the wool consumed In the factories of other countries is manufactured for export and sold for use beyond their borders, giving the United States a a nation. The Mercudo Central do Frutos, located it Buenos Aires, Is the largest wool mnrkct In the world, liils port and Bnhln Blanca, tha great southern Argentina port, bnndles practically all the wool grown In the republic. At shearing season wool arrives on ships and trains. In 1873 the world's sheep population was something like 400,000,000 sheep, whereas today the nnmber Is approximately 630,000,000, of which being exceeded In Argentina has about nundiers only by Australia, which has 83,000.008 to Argentina's 80.000,000. The United States has something like 55,000, 000 sheep, Asiatic BussIa 30.000.- 000 and Great Britain and Ireland about South America, all told, haa more 25.000.- 000, ra than 100,000,000 sheep, of which i to Ten are man, There In Argentina, every sheep woman and child, or an average of 50 sheep per family. Western Canada Is coming to be a great sheep country, and here, where mlll'ons of acres of grazing land adapted to sheep raising are found, secexists one of the finest natural tions close to centers of mutton and Wool consumption to be found In the world, The part Canada will play In answering the world' demand for woolens Is certain to be Important In JHAVPjwxe 42.000.000 fleeces, ns against 44.000.0oo for or a reduction of 2.0m.ooo In 15 years. Our ?iopu!n-tio- n turd w-o- Vs'C4 V' V f rzrzzr. a?f fioftr AtAxses , nt g zones. also reside In the greatest In fact, sheep are raised In every region where wool Is, In demand, save In the polar regions. It la .natural that the woolen industry should spring up In primitive communities and among people who are too poor to afford purchased material for clothing. Therefore, wool growing and nmuu- facturlng as an Industry has a place In practically all countries. As a country increases in population, however, the lands must be utilised for Intensive agricultural purposes and the range for sheep la reduced In more recent years as a consequence. In our own West this is very apparent The. Industry In Europe and America has not kept pace with that In newer al of the worlds countries. Nearly one-hasupply of wool Is produced In AusNotwithtralia. New Zenland and Argentina. UnitIn the the that the fact production standing ed States Is not Increasing materially, wool is produced In every state of the Union. The varied and wide adaptation of sheep In the United States Is one of the promising features of the future, If farmers will but appreciate the wonderful fea- sheep-raisin- . wool-growin- g present-commerci- lf h IS-fS- g one-sixt- two-thir- d I propaganda.-Malnlemuie-e of a spy system under cotmm rcial Investiga- lows: 'Telegram from Berlin by secret roundabout way for Carl Ileysen : Consent sale Holland three hundred thousand chests (cartridges) and two hundred tons powder. Please get In touch with Holland commissioner. Sender, war minister, foreign office, In representation. I1ATZFELDT. the near future, for fanners have caught the in- (Signed) Prince llutzfeldt was qn official of spiration resulting from steady price and a The' German embassy. heavy demand for meats and wools. Our department of agriculture recently gave The.Hamburg-Amerlcu- n Hue bureau out a statement which reveala the real situation of investigation, the committee states, In facts and figure. This statement was to the aa Innocent pretending agency, was effect that the production of wool In the United at the outset the secret service of tho States in 1015 was' 288,777,000 pounds,' as com- Jlamburg-AmericnSteamship compared with 200.102,000 pounds in 1014, and 206, pany.- Under Paul Koenig, it mana176,000 in 1013, In other words, while we seem ger, it became an adjunct of the Gerto have lost little in production as agslnst 180ft, man service. " secret diplomatic w e dropjxd off 7,000,000 pounds In these two years. SEN. KING ATTACKS AUSTRIA. Promotion of Increased production of sheep unour great economic problem. One of doubtedly Says War Should Now Be Declared the paramount features regarding the present Because of Austrias Action. shortage In clothing Is due to the universal lack of Count Washington. Exposure of proper grading and caring for the wool from von BernstorfTs $50,000 slush fund farm, to factory. Although the United States these produced conn Saturday wool a one outstanding of the leading rank producing tries of the world, thousands of pounds of good developments: 1 Approximately 73 per cent of conwool annually-a- re .permitted to go to waste bewants an investigation of the imand gress la of the cause farmers slackness grading bis The the for that members were apmarket putations present clip preparing educational program of the bereau of animal hus- proached by tJerman propagandists, 2 The state department and other bandry tend to remove this loss. officials oppose an inadministration wool This mean tjiat the amount of imported believe ' there Is to vestigation. Is They American manufacturer equal annually ly to n be gained and that such a f nothing of the clip. Forjnore than eign wool growers, Australians in particular, course would give Germany the immaintain, a uniformly high trade standard In. the pression that a grave scandal was dishandling of their wools. This care In preparation rupting the nation. It would array the for market has served to give that country a wool state department against congress. 3 Senator King read letters into backed by a reputation that readily Insures It full the record showing that Austria, even value at the time of selling to the manufacturer Our modern agriculture needs sheep, more m hile at peace with this country, had sheep. AVe need sheep to meet modern practical paid money In to offset the sentiment' Farmer can positively do nothing of the good work of the allies. He said conditions. this country should now declare war I letter than enter sheep breeding with a strain, btr A tisfrl a: ka j'VTnre' til STiri I fr d, vslif eft have' galfie-d'threputation of being adapted to any War Hit University Hard. region of the continent, and being the "farmer's York. Columbia Kew a tenant's a sheep sheep,' university, sheep, mutton-carrjlnwhich last year had an enrollment ef sheep, and hardy sheep. This more than 50 students, cqiened Tuesbreed Is not only an economical feeder, but like day with a decrease of more than 25 other Improved breeds, good soil conveyors. They per cent In attendance, due to tho . are adapted to the most Intensive system of agrl war. culture. Railroad Strike at Buenos A.5ires. Eufnos Aires. A general strike of railroad workers went into ef200,000 Going to take a vacation this year?" The managers of tha fect Sunday. I guess so. I cant afford to, but I think Td to grant the inroads declare that off wort for a week Just to get rid better knock the men would demanded creases by who ou me Insist the when Im people of asking In rut-- i. cent 73 Increase a rn olve per going to, and where Tm going, and If not, why?" sheep-raisin- Hl lecturers. Financing of the guise of tt tion bureau. j Subsidizing of a bureau for the purpose of alining up labor troubles In munition plants. The bomb industry and other relat- ed activities," Case of Holland. The committee, of which Secretaries Lansing, Baker and Daniels are members, and George Ureyl, chairman, has this to say concerning Holland: It ha long ben an open secret that Holland is merely a way station for shipments of contraband Into Germany, Here la official confirmation from the Von lgel records which would seem to Indicate a suspicious and confidential relation between the Holland commission' and the German diplomat- Ic officials accredited to this country, or possibly a belief by the Germans that they could not successfully get the munitions to their own country'. Thi message in code, with Interlines r translational entered as A 2403 and headed Germnn embassy, Washington, D. Cb, April 6, 1016. It run as fol- sofru-whu- then was calculated be 75,00 1.575, whereas Jo stands today far above the 100,000,000 mark, or a gain of about 20 per cent. In the pnst 15 years the tii: wool production has decreased 4 per cent, thus ' leaving a difference between production au&y and Increased population a chasm of 30 per cent dlvid- - g n Scattered all over the Yucatan peninsula are monuments to a civilization that flourished thousands of years ago. - Just how many thousand nobody knows and scientists differ very materially In The prevailing belief. their Ideas ou however, Is that this civilization was in full awing as late as the beginning of the Christian era. Other scientists assert that the ruin antedate those of the-wubje- trattgTrd-vrithoat-qustioa--- ," tbw pieces on. ruin of all 1 To my mlEu the roost interesting Uxmal, It Is a The House of the Dwarf at where the priests on top pyramid, with a temple side are one on The sacrifices. steps made human down run is chain double fairly well preserved. A to reach the top lf you them so that it Is possible crawl through a&ve a cool head. Once there you wall and come out the In temple knocked a bole sacrificial altar. on a platform which was the the priests stood and with On that platform hearts of living victims the out cut flint of knives still throband held the gruesome objects aloft, to below la the at gaze bing. for the populace aide of the of foot that the at peat quadrangle - YOU, DOlNGCf cot- plentiful have been In a position to buy Clothes BOd clothes, Inwool of made mostly stead of cotton and shoddy. that borv-advi- WHATA2 wools Second, has 1 r rap- than wiail produc- at high wages Urt-mul- PasHDasties Increased more nt demand for wool and mutton, tin? same area can boast of loss thnn 00 The decline In sheep. numbers during this period has amounted to something like 9.000,000 sheep, although our population during the same period has Increased Q00 souls. Last season we clipped slightly ' over Egypt Yucatan can well be called The American Easily Done. have Egypt." The ruins of 172 cities, big and little, Td like to get a little runabout not a quarter of the territory and discovered been Then why dont you ask Miss haa been explored, that Is. carefully explored, for TUghty to marry you 7" the tropical verdure makes the finding of them hundred very difficult. You might pass within a Todays pun Many a government or old pyramid a huntemple weather forecaster has been badly feet of a wonderful discover so effectively doe not It and dred time weather beaten. the Jungle screen these crumbling monuments of the distant past And shield them from the prying Past Eminence. Inouisltlve and presumptuous age. The hyphen seems about done for." eyes of this Of the 172 clusters of ruins discovered, two sets Yet in Its day It cut a dash." represent what were onee large and prosperous Can a man be said to be partial to a dues, of about half a minion inhabitants each. Doubtless at different times each one of these two thing when he gives his entire attenC1 tie was the capital of the country. tion te lt? One of the dtles Is Uxmal, pronounced situated In the southwestern part of YucaSlotlr makes nil fhlngr difficult,- In dus-trtan. and the other Is Chichen Itza, In the eastern all easy. American Proverb. miles away from tho part of the state. One six and the other 18. the Jungle One method of dodging popularity railways end through .Utile bKtff road casea-the. .putts Jeadjng bothik la n- -q neigh -rougbeat fTi a to road that a wfeeded vehicle was ever pounded ftri helping to, save white broad by eating more wool using populaof the world has of greatest competitor, ton, has been In short supply relatively dearer especially than wool. coarse wool. Third, wool-produci- -- First, namely: parent, .fates in 1000 there were vith a steadily Increasing tohand-nnd-mout- t ! ot replied ; I was so ill, sir, that I could not come to work to save me life. How was It, then, Pat, that I saw yu pasa the factory .on.your bicycle during the morning?" asked the foreman. Pnt was slightly 'taken aback, then regaining his presence of mind, he replied: , "Sure, sir' that must have been when I was going for the doctor. - lut thcr dNi bisiires of f.ir rein lung Centum propaganda, lull itn-- mid jilo-- s iu tins country prior (Tie fyphm:inr break with Ger- m.iin, were uunle on Saturday by ihe ommlttee on public Information, In a bulletin staled official expose-the committee quotes numerous Ictus and extend from biters seized by the department of Justice In April, li'IU, in a rani uion the New York dice of Wolfe von lgel. Yon ltd. on bis manifold pro Gorman and anti American aeUvltles, the documents show, was in constant touch with the German embassy and with (burnt on Icrnstorff, German Hpiljtissndor to the United States. lti the form of letters, telegrams, imtii (ions, checks, receipts, registers, vh hooks, cipher codes, lists of spies and other memoranda and records,", the committee says, were found hull- cations In some instances of the vaguest nature. In others of the most that the Gerdamning concIuslvemss man Imperial government, through Its representatives In a then friendly nation, was concerned with Muttons of the laws of the United States, ''Instruction of lives and property in merchant vessels on the- high seas. Irish revolutionary plots against Great Britain. Uomontlng 111 feeling against the United States In Mexico. .NulHirnntlon of American writers F ALL the wool grown In the United States last were mmle into j.-n- more bares government Robert H. Mon ten tells iehx farmers should ft ve. serious attention to production of this valuable live stock sure to be large for many years-dema- nd exceeds supply There are more thnn 20,000.000 men in er arms, wearing out six times their Europe normal consumption of wool. As the war progresses the a nimble wool of the world Is certain to be con- sumed to the last ounce. Cotton, linen, and other Letter to Dr. Kilmer (e Co. fabrlcs may be used, but. wool will he used as Bing hamton. N. Y. long as It Is posslbfe to secure It for the fighting forces. But there is no real substitution for this. WTO Do For Yoa Prove What Swamp-RoSend ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Cotton may serve the purpose during the sumBinghamton, N. Y., for a sample eke mer; for winter campaigning, especially In Rusbottle. It will convince anyone. Yon sia and the mountain districts, wodl Is necessary. will also receive a booklet of valuable inAside from the tremendous demand for wool formation, telling about the kidneys and bladder. When writing, be sure ana menfor warriors, which has been responsible for the tion this paper. Large and medium sise bottles for sale at all drug stores. Adv. present shortage, and which has brought the wool shortage down proposithere Is a shortage In production. Australia, tion, An Irish Comeback. countries, Is nearly An Irishman employed In a large chief among cent 40 of normal short her sheep supply beper factory had taken a day off 'without a killed cause of that by the tens sheep drought permission and seemed likely to lose his job In consequence. When asked of thousands. But this country still has twice as we have tn the United States. by his foreman the next day why he many sheep as In regions demanding woolens living People had not turned up the day before, he i ij horiao.e Apply few drops then Just lift them away wholesale house. ITlIXQ OFF No humbug! -- 1 VisG-'lL- . LIFT YOUR CORNS to pyramid the Inhabitants of the city gathered watch these festal doings. Fifty thousand people could stand In It. Around this huge court runs a palace, two stories high and beautifully carved, which was the home of the nuns, for whose special nuns delectation jveremnde, Tbe of ancient Maya society. were the aristocrats On all fodr of the Inner sides of this palsce are carved two huge snakes, whose bodies are en--, twined as they twist around the structure. These snakes have human head and tassel a for tall. In all the ruins the carving are of the same peculiar design. The patterns of the borderl and the general Ornamentation strongly suggest the Egptlan. bow they were most wonderful of all What able to cut those huge block of stone and then carve them so beautifully without metal hammers or chisel. There 1 no Iron or other metal la the country and so all they had to work with was flint now they raised the blocks Into place none can explain. That remains ss much of tt mystery as the- Pyramid of Egypt This is used as an argument to prove that the same race 4 people did them both. There are many more ruin standing at Chlche Itza than at Uxmal. but In both cities all the smaller structures and private' bouses have disappeared. The age have worn them away or earthquakes shaken them down and the Jungle !aa covered alj. Tlte natural accumulation of soil for ceiv these-sacrific- e lu.ri7aThfl 1 4 1 1 -- -- ' foo 'rpTeredffioia ' rad'nTIeef 'geemYfie bases of the big building still In sight are, of course, below the present surface. Not much has been done in the way of excavating, for. the Is only Just turning Its attention to tbeye wonderful relics of the past. The ruins have several feats la mason work that are beyond our twentieth century architects, such as arches without keystones, leaning walls, round corners, hanging terrace, and so on. The walls are all enormously thick and the rooms rather small, even In the house of the governor or tings, er whatever they were called. Most of theBe rooms are now Inhabited by bats and are not at all pleasant places. There are no Cat celling to be found. All are finished with pointed arches. George Miner, In the Mexican Review. gov-emin- ent home-grow- one-hal- sheep-raisin- -- rent-payin- money-makin- -- g wool-producin- g' quick-fattenin- g g, g -- 6e!f-Defen- |