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“CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP” IS CHILD’S LAXATIVE V Look at tongue! Remove poison from stomach, liver and bowels. HOME TOWN HELPSI> CITY’S DEET AN INVESTMENT EVERY, FARMER OWES HIMSELF DUTY OF STUDYING NEW BULLETINS ON FARMING Growing Municipalities, Like Indus* tries, Are in Constant Neel / of More Capital. Accept ‘‘California’’ Syrup of Figs only—look for the name California on the package. Then you are sure your child Is havin'? the best and most harm less laxative or physic for the little stomach, liv.r and bowels. Children love Its delicious fruity taste. Full directions for cnlld’ 'lose on jiich hot tie. tilve it without fear. • Mother! You must say “California.’ r-Adv So generally has the ftillure of Amer ican municipal government been pro claim'd that the 1918 financial statis tics *>f_the 227 cities in the country with Over 30,000 population, published by The federal census bureau, come with n degree of surprise. A< cording to the official report, all but four of these cities actually lived witldn their means last year—that Is, their revenue receipts exceeded their current gov ernmental expenditures and interest payments, and in eighty, or more than one-third, Including some of the largest communities, the revenues exceeded nil governmental expenditures, includ ing capital outlays. The group ns a whole collected in revenue about $230,- 000,000 abote current expenses and in terest. or a sufficient surplus to pro vide four-fifths of the total outlay In permanent Improvements. Growing industries or enterprises of trade always require an increase of caplfnl, the Philadelphia Bulletin re marks. Growing cities are confronted with a similar necessity,'and munici pal debt, if created for permanent im provements and wisely, expended, is merely municipal capital, an Invest- I ment In municipal development, effi- Have you ever stopped to reason why l clenqy and convenience which Is a " 7 n ‘ nnv products that a* ex- nPrfssitv for th ” e production of tnx- tensively advertised, all at once drop out ! . . of sight and are soon forgotten? The P nv ‘** property. So that total figures reason is plain—the article did not fulfill of municipal outlay, or the evidences the promises of the manufacturer. This of Increasing municipal debt, are not applies more particularly to a medicine, reliable eriterlnns of the actual finnn- A medicinal preparation that has real plal status of the cities., except as they !n ra In V Hl ? [ almost sells itself, a., like j nr „ mPnsurod , n rn mparison with the an endless chain system the remeiy is . , recommended by those who have been expansion of the communal plant. The benefited, to those who are in need of it. | comparison of '’tfrrent revenues and A prominent druggist says “Take 1 for | expenditures It a more competent basis . V y rr^ : TV J I M *a A* • m $V' v '* .•■V.v.-.v4fVXy.. wB The Price of A Typical Chimney-Corner College of Agriculture. Its Limits. ‘‘Wluit Is heredity?” “Something n father believes in until hist-son starts to act like a fool.”—Life. If You Need a Medicine ! You Should Have the Best example Dr. Kdinar’s Swamp-Rost, a prr paration I have sold for many years and never hesitate V 1 recommend, for in almost every case it shows excellent re- ■ults, as many of my customers testify. No oth£r kidney remedy has so large a •ale.” According to sworn statements and Verified testimony of thousands who have used the preparation, the success of Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp Hoot is due to the fact, •o nu.ny people claim, that it fulfills al most even* wish in overcoming kidney, liver ami bladder ailments; corrects uri nary troubles and neutralizes the. uric •cid which causes rheumatism. You may receive a sample bottle of 8wamp-Root by Parcels Post. Address Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., and enclose ten cents; also mention thin paper. Large and medium size bottles for sale at all drug stores—Adv. of judgment. PLANT AND PRESERVE TREES One of the Most Important Duties Laid Upon the Individual and the C immunity. (Prepared by the United States Depart ment of Agriculture.) The poets, when they got going on the calendar, usually ran to spring nnd summer months, ending at about “knee deep In, June.” Thomas Hood did succeed in getting as far as No vember, but It wasn’t q good poem. i>h. It whs a clever piece of crafts manship, nnd nil that, but unjust. It was all negatives—“No morn, no noon, no other time of day; no sun, no moon, no t’other side the way”—some such libelous stuff as that about a perfectly gorgeous month. But they didn’t write even negative eulogies of December. Poe mentioned It, along with “dying ember,” “midnight dreary,” and such like gobs of gloom. Just the same, December might be made the subject of a .cry excellent poem. Indeed, with a verse here and a verse there; ft ma^almost he said that the United States department of agricul ture has written a great poem on It— one of the didactic kind that, in addi tion to adorning'-the tale, p.^ffls a moral, entitled to he considered poetry because truth is beauty, and beauty Is poetry. The theme of the thing must be said to. be that December Is such a tremendously important month to the farmer. December Important FatJm Mohth. Now, having pulled up long enoHfcb to climb over a period and walk around- the nook of a paragraph—consider. Of course, December has not been gen erally considered an Important month titles and checking the ones he Is In terested In. Then he can mail this checked list to the department of ag riculture/and the bulletins checked will be sent to him without charge. There are a few bulletins the supply of which has become depleted and copies are no longer given away, but they may be bought at a very low price from the superintendent of doo Titnents at Washington. The pro cedure is explained on the list that is furnished by the department of agri culture. Chimney-Corner College Co-educational Every farmer owes It to himself and his family to find a little time to go to school every winter—to read half a dozen, or a dozen, or 20 bulletins that will help him make better crops, to keep his live stock in better con dition with less feed, to carry on his operations with less exhausting strain on himself. It should he mentioned, too, that this chimney-corner college of agriculture is co-educational. A very large propor tion of the bulletins are devoted to household subjects. They contain In-' formation that will enable the farmer’s wife better to carry her half of the load—to feed the family better with less work., to realize more for the por tion of the farm output that comes under her direction, to have the mini mum of inconvenience In the house and to get the maximum of comfort out of it—a thousand'things that will The Language Plant. “Why have words roots, pa?” “To make the language grow, child.”—Ba 111 more A merien n. my DON’T WHIP! Stop Lashing Your Bowels with Harsh Cathartics but 1 take Cascarets. Everyone must occasionally give the bowels some regular help or else suf fer from constipation, bilious attacks, •tomach disorders, ami sick headache. But do not whip the bowels lgto ac tivity with harsh cathartics. What the liver and bowels peed is a Trees are nature’s prime sources of food; their fruits and nuts gave sus tenance to the first tribes of men and are the sweetest nnd most nourishing >f the earth’s ^products. Trees herald the spring, with glorl- r»us banners of leaf and bloom; they clothe the autumn In garments of gold and royal purple; hared to the win ter’s. cold, they are the harp of the winds, and they whisper the music of the Infinite' spaces. Before the earth could he’ peopled It was set thick with trees, and when 4 man Ijas run his course nnd the race we, know has disappeared In the com pleteness of Its mission or perishes In the destruction of Its trees, the earth will spring up again with new for ests to shelter and sustain a new race of men and beasts and birds to work out n greater destiny. I’efliaps if we are wise enough to replenish our wast ing forests nnd’to make ourselves wor thy of the gift of trees we may be per mitted to accomplish that greater destiny which the Mighty Forester, the Perfect Orchardist. the LoVing Father 1 requires in the fulfillment of his sub lime purpose.—Glarenee Ousloy, Assist- int Secretary of Agriculture. MAKE PROPER STUDY OF RABBIT PROBLEM in agriculture. On’ the contrary. It , al°ng in making farm life pleas- has been a very much neglected month, nn * an, l profitable, almost a month ignored. None the less. It does come very' close to being tire most Important month in the year for the farmer. It Is a month of such tremendous potentiality, a month whose usefulness may be so spread out over the other 11. There ’Is no end of things that should be done in December besides getting reddy for Christmas. That, to borrow a phrase from a very old charge on duty, '“Is not on any ac count to be neglected,” hut It Is due to be coordinated. You have read In the old pioneer stories how the boys had to work In the clearing all summer, started to school In the winter* That ought to he true still for every farmer, no matter how* old or yonng he Is. De cember should mark the beginning of the session in his school. His school- house may very well he In his Qwn chimney comer. He has not much Attractive Possibilities Are Quite Often Misleading. Before Starting on Enterprise It la Advisable to Consider How Ani mals Can Be Disposed of to Best Advantage. (Prepared by the United States-Depart ment of Agriculture.) The -Attractive, not to say startling, mathematical calculations which are sometimes made in estimating breeding possibilities of rabbits not infrequently Here are reasons why the fine, fresh pork tenderloins and pork chops, or savory ham, or crinkly bacon, which you enjoy for break fast, cost much more per pound than the market quotation on live hogs which you read in the -newspaper: * An average hog weighs 220 pounds. *, ^ * • Of this/only 70 per cent (154 pounds) is meat and lard. \ V So, when we pay 15< a pound for live hogs, we are really paying more than 21^ a pound for the meat which we will get from these animals, even after taking into account the value of the. by-products. But people show j* ©reference for only one-third of tho whole—the pork chops, fancy bacon, and choice cuts '•-» # , • from juicy hams. *> * *- # This means that when we are sell ing Premium bacon at 43V2F' per pound wholesale and Premium hams at 30<, there are other parts for which we get as low as 6^ or 8? per pound. The net result is an average profit to us of less than 1^ a pound. The choice cuts are higher because of a demand for them. • -fr* —-y-r—- Another thing: Only 35 pounds of the entire hog—or about 1 /6 th—is usually marketed at once. The rest must be pickled, cured, or smoked. This takes months, and adds to the casts which must be met. \ • ** Switt & Company, U.S.A. % 1(4 M.IMlC.OL'S 112.96* rTiLT j a • . ‘. ....... ..iLji Persons to engage in rabbit time to rend all spring, summer; Trim } . “ , — —= r - A fall Now. he does begin to ha\e a | 1 , » , , , . , prob era. Before starting on this en- little leisure—not that he has any time 1 , 1 , .... , I,. , ho I terprise. it is advisable also for one to loaf, but he has his heels on the 1 , ^ to consider well how such rabbits as ground. During the year there ha\e . . , . .. , , - r ., , . can be raised may he disposed of. In been printed a considerable number of | , .... „ , good textbooks on farming. Special- *J& T° Raiser/ O oj^ Modern Building Methods Condemned. The urgent need of enforcing regu lations directing the proper „.use of gentle nnd natural tonic, one that can materials in building is shown in the constantly be used without hnrm. The second annual report oflUhe state fire gentlest liver and bowel tonic is “Cas- murshal of Oregon, who gives the fol- carets." They put the liver to work lowing as a record of defects found and cleanse the colon and bowels of by Ihe Oregon state inspector^during all waste, toxins and-^poisons without the Year^ended March, 1919: griping—they never sicken or incon- Defective wiring, 229; floor and venlence you like Calomel, Salts, Oil, .walls unprotected from stoves, 191; or Purgatives. ~ - defective pipes, stoves and flues, 125; Twenty-five mlllloir fcoxes 0 f Cas- fom> d chimneys on brackets, 482; ex- - carets are sold each year. Thev work P° s e d and unprotected openings, 131. while you sleep. Cascarets cost little too.—Adv 80 An Insinuation. Edith—Jack' has spoken at last. Marie—And was his answer “yes?" —Boston Evening Transcript. ASPIRIN FOR HEADACHE Name "Bayer’* is on Genuine Aspirin—say Bayer The fact that 482 chimneys weFe found supported on brackets, It is stated, is nn indication that a most ' primitive method of construction still exists, and emphasizes the fact that proper building regulations are most essential in all cities, large and small, for fire prevention. . I Insist on “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” In a “Bayer package,” containing prop er direction! for Headache, Colds, Pain, Neuralgia, Lumbago, and Rheu matism. Name “Bayer” means genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for nineteen years. Handy tin toxes of 12 tablets cost few Cents. Aspirin is trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Mono- gcetlcacidester of Sallcyllcacid.—Adr. ‘.'V s ' ~ Making 8ube More Effective. By a “new invention, a submerged anbmarlne can now communicate with aa airplane 2,000 feet in the air. Climbing Hydrangea. The climbing hydrangea,., sehizo- phi-agma hydrangeoides, Is deslruble fo” covering the trunks of trees," rough stone walls or similar rough surfaces where It can support itself naturally. Failures usually result from the Im patience of the gardener. It takes three years for the plants to become established, then rapid progress is made. v The plants prefer partial shade, but do well In the sun and are a pleasing sight during summer when "covered with hundreds of blooms. Proper Soil for Trees. In planting trees* and shrubbery any kind particular attention must be given to the soil. Rich soli is essen tial. The soil around the home, espe cially In cities, is Usually filled in or graded down to clay. Plants cannot grow In soil that contains an abun dance of stones, coarse gravel, cin ders, subsoil day, and sand. Use rich soil, for the top layer at least even though*It may be necessary to haul if several miles. Ists of the United States department of agriculture and other specialists at. the state agricultural college have em bodied in bulletins the result of long and patient labor, on various things pertaining to farming, have put in type facts that will mean dollars to the farmer who learns them and puts them into practice. Pupils Study What They Like. _ Of course, this chimney-corner school of agriculture allows its 1 stu dents a lot of leeway. The curriculum Is largely elective. The farmer N nmy study this and leave the otjier alone, as his interests may dictate. But there will be enough bulletins that are of Interest to him to make a pretty full course of study.* If he has neglected his education at all and isn’t -up* to his grade.” there may be a great deal more than he can handle In one winter. The United States depart ment of agriculture hqs been publish ing bulletins for a great ■ many years. There are more than a thou sand farmers’ bulletins now on the list, and every one of them discusses something that means money to a large class of fanners. Many of the subjects have been supplemented and localized by state agencleSc—the agri cultural college or the state depart ment of agriculture. There is abso lutely no reason why any farmer may not have all the scientific information that exists on all phases of agricul ture that mean anything in his par ticular operation. All he has to do Is to go to school to himself by his own fireside. If he needs tutoring, there Is the county agent whom he can con sult. when he goes to town on Satur- day^or ha might possibly have the agent out to supper and a session by the fireside some night. The United States department of ag riculture maintains printed lists of its various publications, arranged by sub jects. Any farmer—or any city dwell-, er or suburbanite whrf'is interested in chickens or a garden Or any of t^e„ "things that pertain to fanning—cyn have a copy merely by siting for it. For the average farmer It la worth f n •freeing over, reading the. the vicinity of towns where there are restaurants. hot*4s and boarding houses, arrangements can usually be made to furnish "market men or land- lords a regular number of rabbits weekly. But one.should not begin rais ing rabbits OU" a large scale *in a lo cality where’ people are unaccustomed to eating them. No breeder can ex pect to make a profit until he has de veloped a market. He can demonstrate the desirability of the meat*of young rabbits to-his neighbors and sometimes to other.agenciesT If a breeder is not able to carry out an educational cam paign singly, he should endeavor to or ganize with others In such an under taking. By combining they can save cost in advertising and stabilize their output. — Rabbits of recognized breeds con forming In size, build and color to ac cepted standards are always in de mand for breeding stock. Those horn of registered parents are preferred rind are spoken of as “pedigreed.” They can he registered if the owner sa de sires, The cost of keeping pedigreed or registered stock is no more than that of ordinary stock-,and the returns are considerably greater. Such stock can usually be disposed of by adver tising in poultry and pet journals, If there Is not sufficient home demand. Rabbits for meat are .sold at greater profit when from two to four months of age. Ordinarily they are shipped to market alive in crates, like poul try. THIS SHOWS WHAT BECOMES OF THE AVERAGE DOLLAR RECEIVED BY r SWIFT & COMPANY FROM THE SALE OF M^AT AND BY PRODUCTS IS CENTS IS PAID FOR THE LIVE ANIMAL 12.96 CENTS FOR LABOR EXPENSES AND FREIGHT 2.04 CENTS REMAINS WITH SWIFT & COMPANY AS PROFIT FRESH • CRISP - WHOLESOME- DELICIOUS THE SANITARY METHODS APPLIED IN THE MAKING OP THEBt BISCUITS MAKE THEM THE STANDARD *f EXCELLENCE Pwlcr tus th*m. or if twl h» should. <Xsk hun or wnta us <fiv«r^ his name. CHATTANOOGA BAKERY The. Faithful. “What is nn idle jest, pa?" “There are no idle jests, mvi son: I they are Working all the time.”—Life? The Cuticura Toilet Trio Having cleared your skin keep it clear by makfhg Ctrticnra your every-day toilet preparations. The soap to cleanse and purify,, the Ointment to soothe and heal, the (Talcum to* powder and per- o toilet table Is complete em. 25c everywhere.—Adv. fume. without They Made Up. “Jack gave me a rainbow kiss last night." “What kind of a kiss is that?” “One that.follows a storm.” IN t sU FOIE 35 yi:a its The Quick And Sure Cure for MALARIA, CHILLS, FEVER AND LA CRIPPJ It Is a Power!al Tonic and Appetlzei Will core that tired feeling,, pain* in back, Uml>a and head. Contain* no quinine, araenlc or hahlt-lorming Ingredient. f’AKMS on the beautiful eastern shores o Maryland Near the larKe cities and bes ‘markets All level land, 2 crops on earn* land In one season. 70 acres, nice T-roon house, new barji. other outhulldlnRs; orchard Kood tenant house Trice $2,000 ■ 170 ten fine farm s-roorn house, barn, tenant house other buildings, salt water front Have ti be seen .to appreciate the real value A sac rlflce at $7,500 1,000 acres timber and land near station. $15 per acre. PoPt-T-ard wll Ret folder describing above and many othei farms Malcom & Hayman. Princess Anna Maryland. Permanent pastures produce proa perous people. • • •' Heavy wire costs more now but less in the long run. ’ r "'* 4 f The lasting qualities of manure when applied to laud are considerable. • • * A little land well tilled will product more profit than mors land neglected. -Make Baby Coo and Crow Keep the little stomach regulated and bowels open, the secret of health in infancy, by using , MRS. WINSLOWS SYRUP The Infanta’ end Children’s Regulator such remarkable and gratifying results. Relieves ;; \ that produces constipation, flatulency, wind colic, diarrhoea, and other disordera. Contains no alcohol —opiates—narcotics—or other harmful in gredients. It is a highly potent vegetable preparation made of the very best ingredients obtainable. Give It to baby and watch the smiles that follow. At alt Drmsgiuta