The Chesterfield advertiser. [volume] (Chesterfield C.H., S.C.) 1884-1978, July 05, 1917, Image 3

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* ^ -JVP* ' LEMONS WHITEN AND BEAUTIFY THE SKIN M*Im Tltis Btauty Lotion Cheaply For Your Foco, Nock, Arms And Hondo. At the cost of a small jar of ordicold cream one can prepare a full quarter pint of the most wonderful lemon skin softener and complexion beautifier, by squeezing the juice of two fresh lemons into a bottle conL taining three ounces of orchard white. P Care should be taken to strain the juice through a fine cloth so no lemon pulp gets in, then this lotion will keep fresh for months. Every woman knows that lemon juice is used to bleach and remove such blemishes as freckles, sallowness and tan and is the ideal skin softener, whitener and beautifier. Just try it! Get three ounces of orchard white at any drug store and tWO lemonft from crrnopr nn/l mnlo up a quarter pint of this sweetly fra^ grant lemon lotion and .massage it I^F daily into the face, neck, arms and. hands. It is marvelous to smoothen rough, red hands. Adv. 2 t / No. 666 This is a prescription prepared especially for MALARIA or CHILLS & FEVER. Five or six doses will break any case, and if taken then as a tonic the Fever will not , return. It acts on the liver better than Calomel and does not gripe or sicken. 25c * There's No Pla Like Home r YOUR HOME IS IN TI If you arc asked you STRONG FOR THE ACTIONS SPEAK LOU Patronize the local raei READ THE SPEC To Rje: The Chesterfh This Guarant $15 I S3.00 With Order, Blickensderfer Mi 709 Chestnut St. Write for C ^ Plan Your I ATTRACTS TRIPS I Tours From 1 jlll Expend B New York I Boston B White Mounteins I The Saguenay ^?m> Quebec I Montreal I Lake Champlain I eke George 1 Ausabel Chasm I St. Lawrence I The Thousand Islands I AND I A Series of Ten-Day || Chaperoned Parties of Sele I The very highest class of pleasure comfortable and enj I The Tours cover the most I cipal places of Scenic and Hii I Greatest Country in the Worl ' Write for Rates, Booklets I GATTIS B Tourist Agents,., Suboi i day ri/"*u Winthrop College SCHOLARSHIP ENTRANCE Examinatiou The examination for the award of vacant scholarships in Winthrop College and for the admission of new students will be held at the County Court House on Friday, July 6 at 9 a.m. Applicants must not be less than sixteen years of age. When scholarships are vacant after July 6 they will be awarded to those making the highest average at this examination, provided they meet the conditions governing the award. Applicants for scholarships should write to President .Inhnnnn for Schnlnrsliin oy. animation blanks. These blanks, properly filled out by the applicant, should be filed with President Johnson by July 1st. Scholarships are worth $100 and free tuition. The next session will open September 19, 1917. For further information and catalogue, address Wearing the flag is a pleasing bit of sentiment; but what are you willing to do for it? ' ! IIS TOWN will declare that you're HOME. DER THAN WORDS, thant HOME PAPER :ial j aders of j ;ld Advertiser j eed Machine J ;.oo | ! & 12.00 in 30 Days I j anufacturing Co. ! j Philadelphia, Pa. I ; atalogue M2 f ' Vacation Now | E SUMMER | 'OR 1917 j 0 to 40 Days I es Included $ Niagara Fall* Pacific Coast H Atlantic City f! Canadian Rockies ? Lake Louise Vancouver San Francisco Yellowstone National Park Salt Lake City ; Colorado Rockies Los Angele Tours to Atlantic City ct and Limited Membership service, which makes travel for oyable. ? . attractive routes and the prin- ! itoric Interest throughout the d. and Descriptive Literature. TOURS ird Air Line Railway. NORTH CAROLINA Bk HOW THE IMMORTAL "DIXIE" CAME TO BE WRITTEN By Adeline Leitzbach and Wm. W. Randall. "Songs may come and songs may go but some live forever," is an old slogan that we hear quite often. But there are songs that never die, songs that are sung day after day and will be sung in the future generfations with as much ardor as they are today, songs that call forth a message, that awaken something within us?something we cannot name, yet know it exists. There are some such songs and among them Dixie must take its place in the foremost ranks. Dear old Dixie! It seems to rouse the blood in us, it brings us to our 'feet, it makes us clap our hands, it brings tears to our eyes?why? Well ?that's just it, perhaps if wo knew the reason why it wouldn't' be the immortal song it is. It keeps us guessing, it is an uncertain quantity, and after we've solved the problem we n rn nn Inncror infnmafn/1 *? ? * *- Uf? ..v .w.^va .IIWIVOIVU III It n U don't want to know the reason why, we're satisfied with Dixie just as it is. Once the hattle song of the Confederates, Dixie has become so popular that it is national; in fact, one hears it the world over. Its music is so contagiously appealing that it has become a song without words of universal appeal. There is scarcely a child who I doesn't know Dixie, but there arc a great many of us who do not even know who wrote the song, let alone still more who ever heard how it came to be written, and considering the popularity of the song its history cannot fail to interest. And so, back to its history and how it came to be written. There was nc.cr any question that originally ;*:xie was the work of Daniel Decatur Emmett, while he was a member of Jerry Bryant's Minstrels. But we are getting ahead of our story. Dan Emmett was born at Mt. Vernon, O., in 1815, and he died there in 1904. His grandfather, an Irish immigrant, fought for the Colonists in the War of the revolution, and his father an Indian agent, served in the War of 1812, so there was fighting blood in Dan Emmett, and he entered the army, but after a short military career he joined a circus, and in 1840, with four associates, he formed the Virginia Minstrels, an organization supposedly popular in those days when the minstrel show was the thing in the way of entertainment. Later Emmett joined Jerry Bryant's Minstrels, and it was part of his contract that he was to compose a new "walk around," to be sung at the close of the performance, whenever called upon to do so. Emmett had been writing some pretty Rood songs, and a great, deal was expected of him. While the company was playing in Bryant's Theater, then at 4?2 Broadway New York, Jerry called upon Emmett to write a new "walk around" in a hurry. Emmett was not in a song-writing mood; he delayed and delayed until the last minute, for no idea seemed to come to him, but suddenly an idea came to Emmett. Whenever the cold weather set in up North the negro minstrels of the company would wish memseives back in Dixie, referring, of course, to the land south of the Mason und Dixon's line. More than once Dan Emmett had heard son.e colored member of the company declare "I wish I was in Dixie," and the remark gave him an idea for the song he had to write in a hurry. lie wrote it. Evidently Jerry Bryant was satisfied with it, for the company sang it for the first time on September 12, 1859, and it caught on at once. People hummed it on the streets, they sang it in their homes, and when the war broke out the men in gray sang it as they rallied 'round their flag and marched upon the field of battle, and today the remnant of the army in gray and the last of the army in blue sing it at their reunions just as they sing the Star-Spangled Banner, and the boys in Khaki sing it on their marches, and give the old song renewed life, and they'll sing it as long as the country of the blue and the gray stands united as a great nntion. Dixie did more to salve the feelings of the South and mend the breach between it and the North than a duvcn volumes written for the purpose, or a hundred orators making wonderful speeches could have done. When men sing together they sing in good fellowship and friendship, not in enmity, and they'll always sing Dixie together. Daniel Krnmett lived to see his song the most popular, next to the StarNATURE TELLS YOU At Many a Chesterfield Reader Knowi Too Well. When the kidneys are weak. Nature tells you about it. The urine is nature's index. Infrequent or too frequent passage, Other disorders sugest kidney ills. Doan's Kidney Pills are for disordered kidneys. People in this vicinity testify to their worth. J. W. Bundy, Marion St., Cheraw, S. C., says: "My kidneys were disordered and caused such terrible pains through my back that I could hardly keep going. Mornigs, I was sore and lame. My head ached and I had dizzy spells. The kidney secretions were too frequent in passage, atlhough the flow was scanty. Dean's Kidney Pills relieved <41 signs of kidney complaint." Price 50 cents at all dealers. Don't simply ask for kidney remedy ?get Doan's Pills?the same that Mr. Bundy had. Foster-Milburn Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y. Spangled Banner, of all the songs American writers have turned out, and it must have been a decided gratification to him, in his old age (he was 89 when he died), to hear the song I sung far and wide. He is said often to express surprise at its lasting popularity, for to him it was one of his lesser efforts, but perhaps it is the smaller things that count the most and score the heaviest. Be that as it may, Dixie lives and will go on living forever. Emmett continued on the stage for many years, and wrote many songs, I but Dixie overshadowed them all. His : last public appearance in 1890, in 1 Ohio, marked the close of a busy career, but Dan Emmett, like many (great men, died poor, and the pity of J I it all is that while the product of his I j brain lived the man himself was for- | I ITotten. Kor vonra V>ic *>? cemetery at Mt. Vernon, ()., remained unmarked. It is true that several | societies made efforts to raise sufficient money through subscription to erect a suitable memorial to the man who wrote Dixie, but their efforts failed. The public did not respond, and it remained for James Lewis Smith, a wealthy citizen and former theatrical manager of Ashtabula, O., j a gentleman, by the way, who has! erected several memorials at differI out places, to place a tablet to the j memory of Daniel Emmett, the author of Dixie, upon his grave. Mr. Smith takes pardonable pride in the | i memorial thus erected to Dixie's j ! author, but, after all, when all is said j (and done, the public puys Dan ! i Emmett a greater tribute, greater ' than a monument of granite, greater I j than a niche in the hall of fame, for j it goes on singing his song, loving ; j it, never tiring of it, welding together ? in perfect peace and harmony the i North and the South, and cementing i more firmly, perahps by the memory I of the terrible conflict Dixie must i | recall, the bonds of Dixieland in the ; great republic of which she forms a vital part. In Dixieland I take my stand, To live and die in Dixie: Away, away, away down South in Dixie. Away, away, away down South in Dixie. WHAT THE AGENT COSTS R. R. Bibson, a farmer and member of the agricultural council of Lane County, Oregon, was telling recently what the county agent had cost him and what he had got out of his services: "I pay about $150 taxes, and I figure that the county agent last yefir cost me just nineteen and one-half cents. In figuring the benefit that I have received from the office, I gave the agent credit for the extra profit that I made on the first beef that I sold through the public market. He was responsible for starting the market, so I gave him credit on just one of the animals that I sold. "My sheep were dying, and Mr. Robb came out and found that they had septicemia, and got me some vaccine and vaccinated the flock. "No more of them died and so I gave Mr. Robb credit for just one sheep although I might have lost the whole bunch without his holrv "Mr. Robb told me to take my troats out of the swampy pasture or they would probably tret leeches. They were nice and fat and 1 didn't think it would hurt them if I left them there; but they jrot leeches, all ritrht, and some of them died. I didn't tfive Mr. Robb any credit for that, al. though his advice was worth somej thintr"He told me how to avoid wireworms in my corn by ttrowintr it after a crop on which the wireworms don't work. I didn't trive any credit for that. In all my fitrurintr I tfave him just as little credit as I possibly could, and I find that he has made me ! enough money on this basis to pay my , part of the tax for his office for two hundred years."?The Country Gentleman. Buy Your Grain Seed Now It is now time to hetrin looking for jtfrain fur the winter cover crop, j Oats and rye will probably be scarce j this fall, and if you can tret on the track of any at this time, it would be a trood plan to buy enouirh to son.I down the orchard.?Southern Ruralist Put Up n Good Fruit Pack Put up an honest, well-grade pack this season, for the good of your State.?Southern Ruralist. SCHOLARSHIP AND ENTRANCE EXAMINATION UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA The examination for the award of vacant scholarships in University of South Carolina and for admission of new students will be held at the county court house on Friday, July 13, at 9 a.m. Applicants must not be less than sixteen years of ago. When scholarships are vacant after July 13 they will be awarded to those making the highest average at examination, provided they meet the conditions governing the award. Applicants for scholarships should write to President Currell for scholarship examination blanks. These blanks, properly filled out by the aplicant, should be filed with President Currell by July 6th. Scholarships are worth $100, free tuition and fees, total $158. The next session will open September 19, ; 1917. For further information and catalogue, address President W. S. CurrcU, Columbia, S. C. *** I .I.W" Situation of the Alii* Greatest Need I: Probably history will say that Lord ? \orthcliffe in risking life, wealth and reputation to give Great Britain truths that were either not appreciated or officially admitted, contributed materially toward savins; his country from disaster. In America today the same problem exists. Grave warnings are issued by important ofliers of our government, but in many i official quarters the question is asked : j What good does it do to alarm the ' people? If the chosen leaders of democracy are afraid to tell us the full dangers confronting the nation, can denioc- i racy be the strong virile force we are relying upon for the salvation of hu- \ manity? Can is compete with aui,. u on<i tuviav) An it wwi til ii^utui^ sacrificing for? There can be but I one answer. So let us have plain facts whose import shall not be lessened by the generous gratitude of our allies for what we have already done. No matter how well we have prepared to meet our obligations in this war, if the need is yet greater, we have so far failed. Most of us must admit that under added pressure of greater inspiration we could have accomplished more. If facts like the following had been driven home to our people during the past months, is it not certain that we should have# more men, more money, more ships, more supplies, more speed, because delays, very visible at times, would not have been tolerated? Consider well these facts: 1.?Italian munition plants run part time for want of coal. Germany is not worried over Italian offensive because she knows it is limited by lack 1 of coal. Unless we can send Italy 250,000 tons of coal per month she cannot long continue her offensive military operations. The ships are not today insight to carry that coal to Italy. 2.?The Italian and French navies are crippled for lack of fuel. Germany knows this and seeks to destroy coal and oil ships above all others. 3.?If fuel becomes as increasingly scarce as it has for some months past, the British fleet next fall will be so restricted that the German fleet can escape. Then indeed will Hell be let loose on our own unprepared shores. 4.?Germany had her .uveatest food shortage over a year ap;o. With 1'i,000,000 people in her captured territories?almost the population of the British Isles?to use as she can, to till the fertile soil of food-exporting Poland and Roumania, she is not to he starved this year nor next year nor any other year, as thine:* look today. 5.?America must rebuild and re__ RECEIPT FOR COOKING VELVET BEANS i Clcmson College, S. ('.. June \ very interesting article had been found in the "Greenville Advocate,", Greenville, Alabama, on the use of Velvet Bean as human food. According to this newspaper, culinary exluerts have nroven ih-il Y< iv..? I!.. mo are wholesome and nutriou.i as human I food. A few delieious dishes which can he made from Vodvel Beans are (jiven below. These reeipes were used by one of Montgomery Heading hotels in preparing a \ civet Bean dinner. Note:?Before any of these dishes are attempted the beans should he boiled one hour then cold water poured over them and skins removed. Return to boiling process for half or until tender. I Velvet Bean Puree. Mash bean thoroughly by aid of a colander or run through a meat chopper and make into soup, using milk as a body. Creamed Velvet Be ins. Mash thoroughly and cream as Irish potatoes. Stuffing for Turkey. Prepare as ordinary turkey stuffing, using beans instead of bread. Baked Velvet Beans plain. Plaee bean in crock and hake as other beans. Baked with Tomato Sauce. Same as above with addition of tomato sauce. Velvet Bean Pudding. Mash thoroughly, add sufficient eggs, butter, sugar and flavoring to suit taste. Beat until light and make as you would rice pudding. Velvet Bean Cheese. .viash thoroughly or run through moat chopper with small portion of American or Roquefort cnoose; add popper and salt and servo in small blocks. This should be made to the consistency of NeuchaU 1 cheese. | Dry Some Fruit Fruits that can easily be dried are ) apples, poaches, blacllberries, dew- ' berries, and raspberries. Make some drying screens of thin cloth tacked about a frame. Do not make them too large to handle easily. Then spread the fruit out on these screens, and put them in the sun, taking them in at night and when a shower threatens. If the flies are serious, put a piece of mosquito netting over the trays while they are drying. Shake up the fruit and it will dry evenly. To dry apples, cut them in to four ' sections and spread on the tray. ' When the pieces are so dry that they ' will spring apart when squeezed in the 1 hands, and have a coaling over them, take them in and store them away. 1 A bushel of apples should make between six and seven pounds of dried fruit.?Southern Ruraliat. j > I || - ' es Very Serious; s Ships and Coal equip the railroads of France and . perhaps Russia to win this war. Some experts say we must, to conquer Germany, send 500,000 workmen, mechanics and railroad operatives, besides an army of from 1,000,- ( 000 to 5,000,000 men to France. A ! good start, even, cannot he made 1 within one year, and perhaps two or 1 three years. Do you know that to maintain 5,000,000 men chiefly in Knglund and .just across the "J I milewide Kngli.-n ehanm I 111 V a nee, Great Britain ret 1; lion one t* urtn , the entire merchant tonnage of the I world ? 0.?Duriny the war nearly one- ; eighth the merchant tonnage id' the 1 u..u 1 i.i mm iin n i royi'ii. I Mis is double what has been launched in the same period. 7.?If not another ship were destroyed I v mine or submarine from now on, we still eou'.il not send 1,000,- | 001) men to Kranee and maintain them, one year from today. 8.?Nobody ha- ye added together the total new ; i....: 1 done for tonnage and yet new ir ed- of appaling magnitude are aupeai ine evrrj week. Great Britain r< <pi s; ioned one fout-h the year l'.M e m aimed more meat than the entir- liritish nation 40,000,000 stroiv, in IP Id. And yet there are not enon-h hips to meet the needs of last ye r v.'m a we steadily went Imekv i !. !' w are we to meet the 1 ew > ear spare thai our < .. into the war involves? An i: . r.g number of ships will be u.ailabl' n< \i year, but the additions i ?. ih next eight months ju'e nil it'll' y nl . tale. 1 i hind says one si... - year is worth six next year. '.).?Hot* fate I the next eight months, v. h 1 v siutuhiIi, when Rus.-ia - < I ; \.hen even tin- i ! ; 11?.. . ir . a dec , the sole saviour of M . ii .atal for tlie past thr< y> ?<, may render ed impale:.;. 5. it riot clear that "liirhtinrr for ?i- t. t . ir for America hut pa.it < :' th- .a-.? We arc fitfhlintf for our \ < i. e?. Who s; ys v ? h: r11 t our full obligations? I iult r . uieeivahle condition ran v." bu i ail the ships we oujrht to have il o iJr,. m.\t eijrht months. How < i -a.- come to it depends in part u "n ho \ well we of these patriot mh .-ties br.nir the need home to our pe >plc. Th liny the pris-jrc i enlightened public opinion urr.'c <"u. re. and the executive stall of the nation, with their coop" rata io'i-ncies. to their tr. ;ost in speed, efficiency and unselfishness, and adequate attention :< the iri<- .tes. I need eonfroniin.tr uv' at It's iuon: 111 every extra ship possible durit.tr tin next eipht months. Raymond 11 I'riee. "THERE ARE NO BAD BOYS'' There are no bad boys. We malce this statement ? < ntideiitly, kaowite/. that it will lie indorsed by isltientors and all those wlio have spent their lives in working on the l?oy problem. I Wo will defend it in spite of all the broken windows, stolen oranges and canned Uojrs in Christendom. Thor?' are weak hoys, Imys who lark resourcefulness. hoys whose Mens ot right imhI wrmia arc distorted. hut there never Was (I liny Who <Ii<1 not imtiimlly?consciously or unconsciously?'In tin- things which lie believed to he right. The tronhle mutes when parents, teachers ami tie- e hers who are responsible f..r tin- yI'Uii-'vter's developineiit fail In lii! his time with useful activity. The forces <.f nature mu-~t operate, we eatitiot sto|i them while we take m;r a It i * 111'ti nap. The wiml iniist lilow, the w: ter must How*, ami the hoy's Praia ami tintseles must work. We pat a \\i11 h11i 11 in tlnVputh of the wiml ami it ilraws water as joyously as it upsets the chairs on the veranda and wh the family wash from the line. We put a water-wheel In the stream and it grinds the grain with the cm-: y which it would otherwise dissipate in washing out its hanks ami rooting out the trees. These things we know, yet we ton often permit youthful m-ruy, our most vainaide asset, to run tint. We even attempt to dam it I then complain hecause it slops n\t r and does damage. The program of the l'.oy Scouts of America is the mill in the stream of hoy hood. It pr??\ ides something useful for every hoy to do every minute. Knot-tying, lirst-nid and bandaging, signaling, trailing and tracking, lire building and extinguishing, camp cook 1 hi;. swimmiti-'. c:it'liinii :iinl saving money, liiKinu'. i ipmnkitu: ami map rend in?. pr.-n-ii?*nl -"Italy of Mowers, plants and trees. < arili ami sky are in eluded in the Semtt's pro-: ram for the tirst year. After these a ninth broader field is opeiietl. including foundation work In every known trade ami profession. A hoy's first Idle moment is the Start I titf point of whatever trouble he makes In the world. It Is also the hi" opportunity of tit*- man who h wise etiotikh ami patriotic enotlvh t<> fttrii natural eneriry into constrtielivi channels. Already Ib.tMMt schooltnas ters are directing the activities of Ihn.ooo boys in this country, and the movement is only five years old.?Heprinted From "Seotitliijc." WANTED?OI.D FALSE TF.ETH Don't matter if broken, 1 pay $ Lo $l.r> per full set, sintrle ami parti:., [dales in proportion. Send by par pel post and receive check by return mail. F. TERI,, 40d N. Wolfe St. Baltimore, Md. The ablebodkd man who does nothing is more la:;y than loyal, ar.d mm I ^ 1 ? THE RED CROSS SOCIETY. In an uge charged with being selfish, sordid, and commmorcial there has grown up and developed the greatest, organization for . unselfish >U service the world has ever seen?the American Red Cross. The growth of * tin- Red Cross Society is evidence not to be controverted that the spirit of service is strong in the hearts of the people of to-day. The work of the society demonstrates that there are thousands who are willing to devote l,..:- ? * .m ii m i v nfs i?> numantty, ana me support given them by voluntary contributions shows that there are hun11reils of thousands more who arc willing to devote their means to the alleviation of suffering. The activ ities ot the Rod Cross always has been generously supported by the American public, but only since "our own" soldiers began to take a place in the trenches alongside our allies has this support become bountiful. It is the suffering and comfort of the men from "our own neighborhoods" as well as the physical needs of our allies for which the Red Cross must now mobelize. The result a greater and more imperative duty now confronts the givers in America. No appeal to the generosity of the American people has ever been unanswered. Let one part of the world ? be visited by some calamity like the Mount l'elee and Italian earthquake, China Hoods, the Johnstown flood, the San Francisco ealhquake or any greater or lesser calamity, ar.d the response from the Nation is immediate and geiteroti: to a decree. The serv ices of the American Red ( ross Society in both shies in the Doer War .:tn' in other wars was liberal and saerificing. Fresher in our minds is the wni'!; the American unit has been doing iii Europe in the last three years, especially th relief given the 'ielgian population. 'to meet litis new and greatly enai'L i l denial.d that lias added force of pat it is111 mid a duty we owe our own mi diets there has been a campaign to raise $lu0,0l)0,000 for the tied Cross work. The campaign has ieen cor.ducted with vigor arul earn stness that insula I success. It was participated in by all elasses of Americans from the IT< .-ident of the Nation down to the : ...allest hoy scout, and tin- women of the Nation were partieulariy active. "Red Cross week" was not the only time which one can assist the work of th society. livery week Mould be a tied Cross week with hose who are able to contribute to the work of this greatest agency of mercy. Its work is pressing and will continue a long time. li needs continued support and will not appeal in .am In .t | pie as generous as the \inerie i:. Nation. jAvl winter oats for seed. Washington, I>. C. Farmers in the -oath who have vsn i-r sits of good ualtl . .re urged to stive them for et d rather than to feed them. This rop was kilbvl very generally over he South last winter, ami specialists ' tin- i nit <1 Stag s Department of . a nil use say the indications are | hat tiie seed' sina.ly will be very hoi't >.!'!!> ? 101: . ill the Southern c.i .-i le- i. .v e io purchase .1 ii. r I fr ?>-> v :* loealitics, ml u?- v.. : f<I . v: ams where a * <?l" file e: produced inn,,.| sum- , ;ti!:11?11 bushel to iH.'r l!li> M'ln.l' ii. 1 c.r 1 i Ill i Col'l HI i.thi'l" |ti:.l!' to SiOClc ?)1* > pun its i ih . sprinjr ills inl- feed; ;p; in .rd*r in .m- the v inter its Tor sowi.ij;. Hi . mi it- i?t th.* irity of win to*" j hi' ; nil iju;ii.\i those wiio have hem am .;1111 smi'i in pro'il by savI In*s; !".??* si iil rather i mm f??c*iip I'm*!.:. I .ii:a*r> v-.hu do not know here tin*;, i a i si ii sri'il oats should oiiiir.uiin aii* with their eounly agent. In* director i f their State experiment latum, or it. A. Oakley, Chairman, Commiiu e on Seed S.ocks, United States lie.*;..'i . lit in' A; ricultuie, ?i a.diiii*. ion, i>. ( . Present indicalions .ire that there will he a ready market for all good seed of this crop this year. s /% - % -~i\i*\ V \ Ta It 9 One t Pain Pill. \ J then? ( / I T all* \ ^ H 1 ' >w ^ Easy. '.To Head-Off a Headache Nothing is Hotter l'\r.n Dr. Miles' Anli-Pain Pills Tlicv Give Relief Without Red Aftcr-Eft?cU. j "I c. ii s.iv that I *e Miles' Item 'il'es li.ivo I ii a guit'i-nil to m? j; inl in> fin 'y I irn ii to have ii ti'ii 1 if headaches 1 would al' i '.si he v il l for do; - :it a time. I n? using I 'r. Miles Antt-Psln and never have tin mo head I'M f.ny more I i.m Hfiak highly | fir Miles' Ner\ ne also for It j red one i f my children of a tarrlbls ' Mi*!?mis disorder. 1 ran always (? '? n goi d word for your Rem edies and have recommended them to c K'nil nvny of my f iends who havs been well fdenseil with them." MIIS. Ohio ri BRYAN, , Janosvllle, lows For S*le by A'l Druc;ol?ts. 2 3 D ses, ?.j Cents. VI rn vf.DICAU CO.. Ct;h?r*, Ind.