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Show THE PAYSONIAN, PAYPON. UTAH. OCTOBFR 27. 1922 T IMPLEMENT HELPS DOES LAUNDRY YOSK'IVID By A. H, Poiaell HOUSEWORK TOO j Taunton, Mast. 1 used to have pains famy back and legs so badly, with other troubles that women some times ha ve. th e t my doctor ordered me to stay in bed a week in every month. It didnt do me much good, so one day after talking with a friend who took Lydia E. Ptnkhams Vegeta ble Compound for about the same troubles I had, I thought I would try it also. I find that I can work in the laundry all through the time and do my housework, too. xast month I was so surprised at iqyaelf to be up and around and feeling so good while before I used to feel completely lifeless. I have told some of the girls who work with me and have such roubles to try Lydia E. PinkhamsVege-tabl- e Compound, and I tell them how it has helped me. You can use my testiMrs. monial for the good of others. Blanche Silvia, 69 Grant St, Taunton, CL' HOKES ',EV 5 r ' V HORSE JA Th's is tha first of a series three or four articles on the care Df farm machinery. We are now drawing towurd the end of the farmer's bu'j- seas n and lie, already ueury irom the 1 n0r dujs of constant toil, is gather. ng up the remnants of the last crops to be h. ires, ed and looking forward to the season of the year when he will have less work and more hours of leisure. We do not wish to impose njorn work upon the already overworked farmer, but we suggest that he put - f SHOES WELL MAtflfG LOTS Of M0N EY Tom Tilt of Note Rmember Surprised tp Find Her self Feeling So Well or of Farm Mecharv ics, Utah Agr. cultural College .ssisiant Profcs i EA'flNAR? ENOUGH, TOM & Maas. Its the same story one friend telling another of the value of Lydia E. Pink-barn- s Vegetable Compound. forth every effort to lighten his load evt spring and reduce his expenses n equipment by caring for it and giv-.n- g it the proper attention in the fulL First the plows. They should be rouglit into the yard and carefully ooked over to determine if any new arts are needed, and if so, a list of uicse should be made and the parts rdered at the earliest pissible date 1 us to have the Implement in proper working order betore it is needed. The plow should be carefully checked to see that the proper horizontal and vertical suction is maintained, as th s effects to a great extent the successful operation of the plow and the power required to draw It. All the points which are made of steel and not worn out should be sharpened. When all the braces and bolts should be tightshould be thorened, the moul-boaroughly cleaned and polished, then coated with a very heavy oil or grease. Kach bolt on the plow should receive a few drops of light oil thereby making it possible to either tighten or remove it without twisting it off. The plow should then be stored away in a suitable shed for the winter, and nil the other implements treated in like manner. It is very necessary that every farmer provide himself with a small shop that can be heated in cold weather and equip It with tha simple tools with which all of his repair work may be (lone. All the implements should b Inspected and repaired with special attention given to all wearing parts, from the wheels on the plow or hay rake to the pitman bearing on the mower, and the cams and sprockets n the binder and seeding machines. All of these parts should be removed and carefully washed and cleaned with kerosene. All bearings subjected to loads, such as the socket bearings on the disc plow, the plow wheels, and all wheels that carry or guide the implement, after careful cleaning should be filled with clean cup grease add replaced. Means should be provided for the addition of new grease at the center of the hub, so that when more grease is forced in the old grenee w ill work out, carrying with it all foreign materials, such as sand and dust, ut and away from the bearings. Other fui'ill bearings that are lubricated with oil should be given a very liberal quantity of oil after careful cleaning. By carefully observing these points the life of the machinery will be prolonged and much less power will be required in their operation. Special attention should be given to all gearing, commonly called cog wheels, to ace that they engage deep enough. If they are permitted to run without engaged the life of theae wheels will be very short The question may arise as to why all this taking apart and cleaning, so In order to answer that question we first call to your attention the fact that when you sharpen an ax on the grind stone, you use water on the stone to speed up the grinding, and when you sharpen a knife on an oil atone, you use oil to speed up the cutting. These grinding stones, also the artificial grinding wheels, are nothing more than a large number of fine grains of hard materials cemented together, and each grain as it protrudes from the mass presents a sharp cutting edge, and thiff cutting edge will cut most rapidly when lubricated with nil or water, depending upon the character of the stone and the kind of material to be cut Since oil sands and dusts, regardless of their fineness, constitute a grinding material, with the addition of oil It will cut and grind almost as effectively as a prepared grinding compound. Since it is impossible to keep all the bearings of form machinery free from sand and dirt and at the same time all of these bearings must be lubricated to reduce friction and consumption of power to operate them, R Is obvious that in all of these bearings there is brought about an ideal condition for grinding and wearing. From this you may decided that it is better to operate machinery without the use of oil, which of course Is true In some cases. For an example, exiKaed sprockets and drive chains, also exposed gearings that cannot be protected from the sand and dust that may be carried by the wind, should not be lubricated, ns a lubricant in this case merely tends to collect the saml und dust and assist in rapidly cutting and wearing these parts. However, the best designed equipment have fill siuh parts carefully Ionised in w hiih permits of their lubrication and occludes nil of the sand and dirt that s so injurious to all trpt of fsrin Portland, Oreg. "I could scarce y get around to attend my duties on the farm and knowing that I needed something to relieve this condition, I went Into a drug store In Washington and asked the druggist what be thought would be best for my condition. He immediately recommended Dr. Pierces Golden Medical Discovery so I bought a bottle and commenced taking it ahd it helped me right away. After the second bottle I felt fine, my appetite was greatly improved and 1 gained strengtl right along. I am a man seventy-eigh- t years of age and can get around as weJl as many younger men and feel that 1 owe a great deal to Dr. Pierces Golden Medical Discovery. John Franklin Cox, 1248 E. Yamhill SL Go at once to your neighborhood drug store and get the Discovery in tablets or liquid and you'll be surprised at the way you'll pick up. Operatic as Ever Heres a late picture of my aunt shes a former prima donna." Well she enough. Lsnt still? She looks large d ) (CopjrrislM RE4UTV (s KVfr.KV BOX snow w bit stmib EKVMOU4 la ft Diraicatwl wooden for tlm onpl xinn !Urivi A womJer Ua,HMiUi'pHU'hos,pIniplo8.(H:zt'tuu,,e, ful faow bVtirb. Mini 1125. FKBM HOOK I.KT . C. H. dtOMIV CO OUtcmftg'i ftvwmsw, CHICAGO . PARKERS HAIR BALSAM - B After Speeding Three Hours Shinrng Her Up J ANNM f ( HEM STICK NOUR HEAD ) outYa vsjinDoiu the an' looket ovf iDfcnamfl BtopsUalrKallliif Restore Color and B ty Iw Cray and Faded Half 60c, andfi no at lru'-?iif- t. 'earn Ctcm. US fca ItUimt uc.lt - UIMCZRCORMS cat. HmueWia . Mmu eala, Mfum coalorfta t: ( Goed words cool ") Wine I ' )- - "I PUT The. on The CAR " r ' r" lit meah-tha- AIL i great! ts BEDOUIN IN A FEW minuted with LUGGAGE -- UJE GET STARTED WHBT WITH VA ALL the GOWNA DO BAGG Those ?-y- ?l HAVENT bEEN - $ VET r ou ANY J MUbT bOON more than cold Begin In time to finish without hue WLDOUGLAS 567 8 SHOES CTE! Are Actually demanded year after year by more people tlianauy other thee la the world Per sty la, aad HEM I YOU CANT Put TftAT LUGGAGE ALL OVER iMerial eimn Prlae Males pumud by the car. like that SMe pnaw m scratch it youll ALL UP he aria Haaiped ee s Matawery sarvlea. tTfecaboa aaS la Um well, we've cot to Take O Weateni Newspaper Uawa Going 15 Put T r Avw ttJHAT fiHBtfJKSQyS asswa z.ESrc.rvs earth tailars tor wnwn M yea that vhta yea aaarta hey Am at ear atari tOt Pit OUT OHPMPfT. Weealtorwh ereyee lire rhea Seal we aaa aapply raa atth raoaa Thayaoat W.LDoas1 ah more la Baa Praaelaae New Sag Wed. la he Iheathey hr ah h RiSai l aad SS I wmHatoiaMw. ItjtaAPP aar thaaawlthaay pear pi ahaaa nada. . sjf2s5 ihala iha, wntt W- - riaHwl Budding Up a Climax Where people are queer there Is a tool deal ef food for thought In what Bey tay. SHE OYED A SWEATER, SKIRT AND CHILDS COAT WITH DIAMOND DYES BaA, package ef "Diaaond Dye cow ae afanpl an aawn caa her worn, shabby ir a, waist, ooata, atockinga, sweaters, otynnga, draperies, hangings, everything, if ato haa never dyed Wfcre. Buy tamend no ether kind then Dyes heme dyeing is sure because are gaaraateed net t spot, streak, or ran. Tell yeur druggist r the material yen wish te dye is silk, or whether it is been, eotton rWfixed gonds. Advertisement. taioa Sirrction ire pr tint nuh Dia-Djr- ' Y$u can tor.jnve. Ml a slovea' bjr the fit of p Night lorning TeepYour Clean tm Clear lftb Kurin Healthy CeOuAgkU& Bl fj Cftrft Eyes (6nN?ElNt IT HAVENT WE! lUHCRt Do YOU THINK I'm USE 1 ..scldnery. Grasp no more than thy hand will hold. Precedents save tl Inking. He didnt like white bread ready-ruhbe- d or tobacco And probably he preferred horsecars to the trolley He admitted frankly that his tastes were peculiar. He didnt know why. It was just a matter of fact that while ho was an Inveterate pipe smoker, ho never smoked Edgeworth. "But dont let that worry you. I dont like white bread. And there aro many other things that nearly everybody I know likes and I dont. We have always recognized that no one tobacco would just hit the taste of every We have always known, too, that we couldnt makenlf the pipe tobacco in the world evaTii it were possible to make a tobacco that everybody liked. So we have been content to jog along, seeking and finding men who , do like Edgeworth, who find its individual fragrance exactly suited to their pipe-emoke- r. taste. Those are the men we want to smoke Edgewprth. If we can give them the full joy of smoking and keep our factories running somewhere near capacity, it is about all we expect and it is enqugh. One thing we do want to be sure of. It is this: That every try Edgeworth at least once and judge for himself whether or not it is tne right tobacco for him. In a way, it is a selfish desire on our part, for we feel that most real ,ipe smokers trill ike Edgeworth. But to make it as easy as possible for you or any other pipe-smok- er man to test Edgeworth, we will send you free samples if youll wnte for them. Just write a postcard to us and send US your name and address. If you would further add the name and address of the dealer from whom you usually buy your tobacco, we would appreciate your courtesy. Edgeworth comes in two forms Edge-worPlug Slice and Ready-RubbePlug Slice is formed into flat cakes and then sliced into thin, moist wafers. One slice rubbed for a second between the hands furnishes an average pipeful. Is alEdgeworth Ready-Rubbready rubbed for you. You pour it straight from the can into the bowl of your pipe. Both kfads pack nicely, light quickly, and burn freely and evenly. Edgeworth is sold in various sizes to suit tiie needs and means of all purchasers. Both Edgeworth Plug Slico and Edgeworth Ready-Rubbaro packed in small pocket-si- ze packages, In handsome tin humidors, and also in various handy quantities. For the free samples address Laras' Brother Company, 50 South 21st Street, Richmond, Va. To Retail Tobacco Merchants: If yonr jobber cannot simply you with Edgeworth, Larus & Brother Company will gladly send you prepaid by n parcel post a one-- or carton of any size Edgeworth Plug Slice or Ready-Rubbfor the same price you Would pay the jobber. d. th ed ed two-doze- ed |