{ title: 'The Tupper Lake herald and Adirondack mountain press. (Tupper Lake, N.Y.) 1924-1937, October 16, 1925, Page 3, Image 3', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070317/1925-10-16/ed-1/seq-3/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070317/1925-10-16/ed-1/seq-3.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070317/1925-10-16/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070317/1925-10-16/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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r Of tffer? »f •m«nt women in •WOHH in fg tut « , •» I'i v»n nuti. c «nd signel fcy bile eye fciay. tainesi slsnei (r of th>» e&M- 9M, ConBTCM- it Government Institution!, I Women's Ac- » Natil It*. lUreitlnj !„ Republican are I to b« without r. itpubiit nnatlon. Mm nven anj from loud, Fla.! \I , but The Nt- nly U tha but ihowlnf tttAtt valuo in ether INGE lore than ice Policy SERVICE ; the time is Agency a protec- :VE YOU yresjnc. r.e, N. Y. ICE uummt HULL is Estimate* KE. N. Y. Municipal Bid* McBRIDE fING and Mapping •v'N. Y. < Ground lieriei says that ie New England richest and m^t aters. About ISO corded from this of commercial isentatlvea of the a fishes, such as e, pollock and re- a herring, maefc- libut, flounders, itlying bank tish- »e northeast rep- rtant fishing urea Unerlcnn fishing illy catch about f sea foods fom Bull rs coveted a <\ oW nelgltbor nn<i l» ld On their chosen that a traveling d bear had nsl:ed King at the neigh- vrier put the cow glvq the bear the e thieves arrived; he cow, while the amor of cries nnd , barn. The noise the lookout cried: ira ?\ The horror in Tarn's voice B» iVUVUVAVWVWVaVC aaa •0 THE TUPPER ilAKE HERALD S»-EItter 17—Fee» &—sr:uul»s«« jrttt a 31—Seedy 14—To |Nw •!« 15—A a*»atlr« It—A arialer'a aaMU»r« «l—Graa* cleat Ufcfcr.) 32—To talk Mir 34—-To «•!«« »•—A >n»0Bltlo» IS—Stamfcle (E».> 30—Pateta ant tke w»r 83—A act of atam'a datkea «S—To raeaar, aa Utali tkiaaga a kola 88—I aoa »t—Am emnln 41—Tkat wklck la mlttra 43~WklIa 45—K4ca (varlajat) 47—.*. ta« roaealtcd atraorn 4»—CommMd !i£ —Of aa txrellcat taallty W—Tkat mam M —A lexlala avytaiaa;* 88—A atraaa; alkallae aolntUa «»—By »—Street (a»bi,) «3—To (iM»t «5—A eoatlMftt (akHr,) «0—A rodent «8—Wltkla 70—Doca wtrnmm TO—Marckwl •• TS—Tkoa* ]wk* —Ut mmtttHU Vtrtloal. 1—The r*M«4a »f UUin S—Abova s—A fox 4—The «pIritaal yart at« hvataa htlag •—BehaU! 7—Natlre atctallle c*aa»aaB< ft—Aa aarlcat Kcntlam IU •—Aa artlrta at f*W 10—To tklak U—A tall, haMhMllka I*—Cereal B^BIBJI »-o •afar* tk» H ie ebb anfi 3ow of ilu 3T—.A aegatlve 38—A p>MBt 42—A curpmter'a tool «—In lack * rnunn 46—.Tiar \ 5ft—R.yiil Mckaeaa (»b»r.) SI—Sreadlnl 53—O0een of C«IIFK<I OI a 64—Not all 57—A ft-reair rabataBC* •»—A tktck, Mack Uqnl4 •X—The tnd of «nytfci«B •4—To laiaeoj rlsaely «7~A areasaltloa, 8»—A aoUt of ike romf»a 71—A aolat of tke eoaipaaa Tke •olmtioa. will appear !• aext 25—Sketch** Tt—*o*t (aka*.) 34—LoBKt antwa aat Bjtaccfcta aaaxkta •y e«aa#riaa» UajraaK* • HOW TO SOLVE A CROSS-WORD PUZZLE Wata tfc* *»rr*et Uttara an flaeeat ta tka rthltt »mcea tkU will a*<U wari* fcatfc vertically aaa fcarlnatallr. Ta» **»t Irtte* ta t«ek wara to InaUeatt* ky a ««»a«r, walth rcfexa t» tke acaaltlaa Uatea kcUw tke aaaalc. Taa» Wavl aaae* tka eolaaaa aeaita \harAoatal\' aetaca a wara wkleh win SU fat watte aaaeci »•> ta tht ant klack a«aarc to tke rlakt, aaa a aaakcr uuitt \verttcal\ <a>aae» a wara which will all tke white aqaarea t» tke ant alack oae helaw. Ita letter. *• ta tke blaek •pare*. All wttia **ti ar« aletloaary woraa, excot »raacr aaatca. Ahhreriatlaaa. il»t, laltlaU, tecaaleal terau aaa ohitlete foxau are Udlratea ta the acaaltltai. g iSSSSJSXSmtfWSSSS^VS^^ FINE FEATHERS By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK N ED, a young cousin of Nancy's, has a flock of the finest Plymouth Rock chickens In the neighborhood. He wm getting some of the best of thwn ready for the county poultry show when we were op in the country 'ust trammer. I found him one morn- ing out back of the barn with a pul- let between his legs cleaning and oil- ta K Its feathers. He dipped off all the lmtse ragged edges, straightened out the ruffled plumage, and soon had the young pullet looking like a high school girl ready for a party. \I supposed that fine feathers did not make fine birds, Ned,\ I Bald. \Well maybe they don't,\ he re- sponded, \but If a chicken's feathers are dirty and all rumpled tip, the Judges are Ukely to overlook its other K'»od points. It doesn't pay to take any chances.\ It looked reasonable to me. \Ben Garvey tost the first prize last year, Just because his birds didn't have their feathers In good shape. He had the best lot there, really, but they looked us if they'd slept in their clothes. You can't be too careful 'il'ont their feathers. You usually judge a chicken by the way Its feath-' **rs< look.\ I straightened ray tie unconsciously nml picked from my trousers a bunch «f Spanish needles that I had collect- ed (in my morning walk; nay own fputhers were not In the most per- fe<-t condition. I walked on in medl- iy's Mugazlne. titinn. r.urton was one of the best-trained doctors in town. He had done splen- <lirl work in college, and the head of \ip hospital in which he had his in- iprnsnip, said ho was the best man : 'Q the list. I had often wondered why he got fl n so bndly when he took up his prao- f l f fi. I could see now. He was care- IPRS of his appearance. His' trousers were baggy, and his coat was stainea nnrt ill-fitting. Often his linen was •\\lied and his tie carelessly arranged. His patients were likely to suppose \that he was a» careless ta his atten- tion to them as he was in his atten- tion to himself. What he needed was a little oil on MS feathers. I noticed a \For Sale\ sign on the \I'l Lombard house as I passed down *W street this morning. The place tins hpen vacant for some time, hut it l s in reality one of the most beautiful h ,In town-^Rtonchly hoilt well beautifully flnl«he4, and V snrrounded with beautiful trees and Rhrubs. But the place has a neglected look. The house needs painting, the grass should bo mowed, the tree? and shrubs require trimming. The place would bring twice as much if Its feathers were oiled a little. It is true, as Ned says, that a chicken Is likely to be Judged by the condition of Its feathers—and a man is. too. Fine feathers may not make fine birds, but they certainly do tend to give a bird class. Anyway, Ned's pullets won first prize. (©, IMS, Weitern New»j>ap«r Union.) Would Have More Joy in Church Melodie* The director of a large New York theater orchestra in a Sunday address expressed the view that Jazz te dying so fast that it will be defunct within a year. All of which sounds encouraging from the standpoint of good music and restrained taste on the part of dancers. That the prediction' will be verified within the time limit fixed Is open to question. But there can be little reason to doubt the wisdom of his suggestion that the church hymns should be \pepped up\ by being more or less syncopated, to maintain the tempo set by this hurrying and Impatient age. The church hymns are far from be- ing the dirges and dyspeptic wails of the old days. They have been \pepped up\ from year to year until most of them fairly reflect the eheeriness which has been Injected Into religion to take the place of the \fire and brim- stone\ wrath and despair of half a century or more ago. Even those grand sonorous old hymns are interpreted In the spirit of cheerful modernism and they have lost none of their comforting efficacy In the transformation. They do not need \pepping up,\ for to do so would be to set them to tunes out of keeping with the solemnity of the great .veri- ties they commemorate.—Kansas City Journal. Br>er William*' Petition Lawd, make us better'n what we think we is an' keep us gwlne w'en we thinks we done traveled fur 'miff Make us ter see dat de wort 1 whar you put u s is mighty good ter live In. an' dat we ain't too good fer de wort\. Help us ter love our neighbor milch «B we kin; ter keep up de fire an watch de woodpile.—Atlanta Gonstlte tlon. ooooooopoooooodoocxxxxxDooa HOW TO KEEP WELL DR. FREDERICK R, GREEN Editor of \HEALTH\ 0CKKX3O000<XXXXXXXXXXX)00OOO THE CANCER GERM OO GREAT Is the popular horror et *** cancer that any new \discovery whether of cause or cure. Is eagerly Rraffped, Naturally, the greRter the. scientific authority buck of the claim the greater the amount of belief ac corded to I t So It Is not strange that the report of a newly discovered can- cer germ by two wll-known nelentlaM of London fuund a place on the frnnt pagc-H of practically all our pwmlmmt no\v;.p;i.p(-rK. TIIR Interest to tte> nnh- riii'n us Mast of tte duJnw to RtnrtllttK cowries «f th«> CWIFO ar care of t'fr comt« fr< >n i unknown or Mi-f, WIIOIH tiwvions kjti>wlt*i3Kt«. or »'• V'i'''>'i\'i <!• - : ....,? .la •• if, :nv, •,ii- > •' • • Li .. '..• : 1 Hi, . ).. ; '1 , ,.; I,..- w.f-•}ml i:o/ihliu-ir.it hvu But science has little regard ior :ra« thorlty, and even the greatest men to the scientific world must be able to prove their statements In order to have them accepted by their fellowi. So the claims made by these two men must be confirmed by positive proof and indorsed by others before they can he accepted. Just what, hi newspaper English, !g their claim? Like practically all advance hi scientific knowledge. It rests on the work of their prede- cessor\. It has long been known that aneer could be produced by trans- planting a small bit of cancerous tissue from one animal to it healthy animal. Fifteen years ago nous of thr Rockefeller Institute found that the serum froffl a cancerous growth injected Into a chicken -would cauM •aneer, even after the serum had been strained through a Berkfield filter. This filter Is so fine as to atraln out any germ large enough to be vialblt through an ordinary microscope. So Itous concluded that If this chicken cancer was caused by a germ, It must be one so small as to be invisible, or as bacterlologUts say, a \filterable germ.\ Now Mr. Barnard, by using the ultra-microscope, an instrument in which the object is photographed by means of ultra-violet rays, has founi very small round objects, which he claims are the gernn, of chicken cancer, while Doctor Gye, from experiments on fowls, has con- cluded that this germ will cause cancer. Even If the germ which Barnard has found Is shown by further study to be always present In chicken can« cer, It must still be proved that It is the cause and under what condition! It will grow. BOOKS ON THE RUN- ABOUT CHILD M ANY book* and pamphlets hav« been written on the care and feeding of infanta. Much has also been written about the ..child of school age. But between these two groups there has until recently been a gap. The child of from two to six has not even had a name by which It could be distinguished. Too old to be called a baby, too young to be called a school child, it had no distinct name until, a few years ago, Dr William Palmer of San Francisco very happily desig- nated him \the runabout child.\ The name also tells why children of this particular age have been largely overlooked. The enormous death rate among children In the first two years of life and the need of teaching mothers and nurses how to feed and care for infants have kept all the Infant welfare organizations busy. The need of controlling contagious diseases in the schools and of sorting out those school children who were defective in sight, hearing and mental ability Is completely absorbing the school health workers. The child that Is neither a baby nor a school child ha» been left to take care of Itself. This lack has been met in the last two years! by the publication of a num- ber of excellent books and pamphlets which are now available to mothers desiring information on this most Im- portant and critical period of child life. Some of the best are listed here, so that they can be easily secured: Books. The Health of the Runabout Child. Dr. William Palmer Lucas. Macmll- Ian Company, New York. $1.75. / The Healthy Child From Two to Seven. Dr. Francis H. MacCarthy. Macmlllan company. New tforif. $1.75. The Pre-School Child. Dr. Arnold Gasell. Houghton, Mlfflln company, Boston. $1.00. Parenthood and Child Nurture. Edna Dean Boker. Macmlllan com- pany, New York. $1.60. Mother' and Child. Dorothy Can- field. Henry Holt A Co., New York. Pamphlet*. €hiid Care In the Pre-Scho«l Age. Mrs Max West. Federal Children's Bureau Publication No. 80. Ten cents. The Runabouts in the House oi Health. American Child Health Asso- ciation, 870 Seventh avenue, New York. Fifteen cents. My Little Child's Health. Amert. ^an Child Health Association, 870 3eventh avenue, New York. Ten cents. New York. State Items « Hojmell produge dealers are predict* Ing ?2 a bushel for potatoes very soon. New York's budget for 1926 to fore- cast at *425,0Q0,0Q0, an Increase pi over 125,000,000 over 1925. Supervisor Ellis of ElUcottviUe has challenged District Attarttew laldlaw to debate town and county affairs pub- licly. Former Governor Miller attack* Governor Smith's proposed $100,OW^ 000 bond, lasua for public improve* meats. New Roeaelle Woman's Club wltb> drawa inv.ltation to speaker sciiefl- J to opposa Westcheater charter t» ^a claim »t» at< of J7,00t) on th« last d»y oS tho fair }n j*pfte o! the threatening w<mtl!«r which was encountered. Klmi'T QuackeuliUHii, ajryd! 17 y«ar\ (OVt A.riii<i. ' fii*;y*u C1 , ;;,ir<4<j/< :i -'-t .'i'- '* • ' ; • I., mi . r •.....'.':.' , ,v u :}' • •. it „• Ings, the survivors plan to surrender their charter and abandon their lodge rooms. There are about fifteen mem- bers of the post still alive. If Buffalo buys any one ot the tour flelds selected by the Chamber of com- merce air committee, it wjll have one of the finest landing fields in the country, according to the army and nary fliers who came to Buffalo from McCook Field, Dayton, O., to look over the fleldt that have been recom- mended. Horton Hammond, aged about 70 years, dropped dead in the club rooms in the firemen's building, Wyoming. He had been laughing and talking with the other men In the club room when he suddenly tell lifeless out of his chair. He bad been picking pears during the day and had'apparently been in hi* usual health. Ithaca is credited with a population ot 13,948 and PdUgfckeepste with 86,- 670, In statistics from the 1925 state census, made public at Albany by Mrs, Florence B. S. Knapp, Secretary ot State. Ithaca's growth since 1920 Ii estimated at 1,944 and that or Pouch- keepsle, 870, the 19Z0 cenjut-showing Ithaca 17,104 and Poughkeensle S5.O00. Mrs. Marlette Culver of Medina, who is believed to be New York State's oldest living native resident, and who celebrated the 102d anniver- sary of her birth on September 10, has resided with her daughter, Mrs. Ruth Howell, in a little stone house on tht southern outskirts of Medina for thir- teen years. She has been bedridden all during that time and has been blind, for the oast five years. Howard Lewis, the 4-year-old sol of Mr. and Mrs. Evan Lewis of Betha* ny, who has very large tonsils, nearly choked to death on a piece ot chicken with a little bone In it while eating dinner. His parents took him by the feet and held, him up and with difficult ty his mother got her finger around the side of one tonsil and loosened tha meat The boy was black and blood, came from his throat and nostrils, but he soon recovered, from It. The last empty cell in Sing Sing's deathhouso was occupied on arrival of Michael Kosmoskl, slayer ot Miss Mil- dred Durkee, In Erie county, who was sentenced by Supreme Court Justice Brown in Buffalo, Or. Ella Alexander Boole will pre- side at the annual convention of the New York State Woman's Christian: Temperance Union at Rome, October 15 to 19 Inclusive, with sessions in several churches and halls. Major George P. Bradshaw, fifty thirty-two years a member of the New York National Guard, died in Leonard hospital, Albany, after on operation. He was commander of the first bat- talion, 105th infantry, and served In two wars. Lieutenant Governor Lawman of Elmlra visited Oaklleld recently inter- ested In Inspecting the work ot exca- vation that Is being done on the semi- nary grounds for the new high school building, as his firm Is the contractor for that work. Martin J. Degnan, general chairman of the Brotherhood ot Railway Train- men of the Delaware & Hudson Com- pany properties, and widely known In railroad union circles in the east, suf- fered a heart attack In Albany and died a few minutes later. « The Buffalo Omnibus Corporation filecr with the public service commis- sion *• certificate for public conve- nience and necessarily tor operation ot thirteen motor bus and six alternate routes in the city of Buffalo. The pe- tition signed by Charles C. Norcrosa, as president of the corporation, said it was planned to operate 102 buses ol the gas-electric type, 49 of which would be double deckers seating six- ty tour passengers. Instruction has been given to elec- tion inspectors on operation of voting machines, to be used In Albany for the first time at the November elec- tion. '__ —•--K A stone from Sulgrave Manor, the ancestral home in England of Georga Washington, has been received, to be built into the nave of the Cathedral ol St. John the Divine in New York. Walter Tomnkins, seventeen. Peek- skill High School student, was v.ounded when a shotgun held by John. Leveritch, sixteen, accidentally exploded while the two wers hunting. POULTRY FALL REMINDERS OF FARM FLOCKS The pa'st few months have been our dull months with chickens, About at! we could do was to raise a floe!:, of good pullets for winter egg prodiic-* tlon. Any rutm %ho has tried raisins poultry know* that the last few months have called for extra effort on our part. But the time will soon be here when we are going to reap what we have been sowing, writes J. W, ReekBot, Jr., In the Farm and Ranch. The pullets will shell out the eggs un<1 the prlw wlU HOST Mshw as cold wonUtw comes oa. Our dull nwntlm, you ««.'*», Imve bwn our liHrd-wiitklwj; months. But to reap what Is due m we muftt not lny down *w tlw Job now wputhpr upprowhw*. The to «lo in to j»Pt evprj'tlUnjc In 0M* «\••'»• \ I 1 ' •' i ' 1 '* S' » <-i'-:iU •\:\» '•;.,-i'e WATER ESSENTIAL :• IN CURING ROADS While as little water as possible should be aged for the mix In highway construction, It Is essential that a suf- ficient quantity be used for curing. An Important Item therefore In tU» construction of good quality pavements to water to quantities to mei't the needs of the contractor. That thli supply may always be available, it I* advi*able for the Inspector to «iitlnfy himself that the pumping equipment and pipe UUB la adequate for nil r#- tor tlim* pr!m>ti-y Water in the luutt-rJul, imil turlu)j tin* im\** amnt, Tiie quantity jvmtlreil Batumi Jy varlfH with the pr«){n>i»i« ••wains)? eoBiUtlrm* awl utfter .{itM-uHiir |.i S-H>I| I'-'Jl. lii j:cry-till, J t Sure Relief BEUrANS Hot water VP^ Sure Relief ELL-ANS FOR INDIGESTION 25* and 7b« Pkflv Sold Everywhere Cuticurfl Soap aqd Ointipent Grow Hair on Your BALD HEAD BARE~TO~HAIR A BlMMina to ,<[:• ..., 'I,.',,,: u • Mill. .- • • , jetK by, jirtclmtis, i.mt. iit» .MUHI.H -'it iAu* business this fall for extra profits. Clean up the old store. That is, cull out the nonproducers from the flock. Get rid of the drones. Keep nothing on the yards except money- makers. Torn all the shoddy goods to the market man, and hit the fall an\S whiter months with a flock of healthy, vigorous bread-winners that bring in the dough. If you have a large flock and you are afraid to do the culling, then get the assistance of some one who has had some experi- ence. It pay* to cull You get the same number »f eggs on less feed and house room. The nonlsyert «at up your profits and crowd the producer*. Get rid of them. If you are not feeding the birds as' you ahould, get them on a good ration at once, as the pullets must be In con- dition to lay.,_Jf-y6uTiavVTjr^iHo-l*jL <hlcken* and you have done your part In keeping tht pullets growing all summer and you continue to give them the right kindof^atttntiftn, you ne#4 not fesr-trarwnat yoc will be reward- ed ttd* fall and winter with a heavy egg production. Feeding right has much to do with a laying hen. 8h* can't lay UHIMH her food contains all the element*! that go to makeup an *gf, and ia tht right proportions at (hat, An erg ration will have t« be fed through tnt winter. Tt might pay to look Into your feeding methods. Sometime*, by doing thit, a mtitakt can be detected before tt t» too late. Handling of Pullets in Autumn Requires Skill No one thing require* more skill than, the correct handling of a flock of pullets so that a maximum yield of eggs may be ohtalned all winter. Flrat of all, the. birds must be fat, as this gives them the necessary itfenxth and endurance. To nave them fat, large quantities of hard grain must be fed. Three-fourths of the food they con- sume should be hard grain. It Is not as Important during the latter part of their development that they have as ranch mash a* when ready to lay. If milk Is fed, very little mash Ii neces- sary. They should have plenty of green food at all times. When the first eggs., are found on the range, at least one-third or one- half of the birds best developed chonld be placed In their whiter quarters. If the birds are allowed to remain very long on the range after atartlng to lay, the change to winter houses Is sure to check them and may cause a fall molt When the remaining birds show maturity, they should b« put In winter quarters also. Caution in Culling £3 Urged by a'Poultryman Practically ^gery^rule has ltjr* excep- tion. \Early molting birds are poor layers,\ say experienced poultrymen. This Is true In the main, but there are exceptions. N. B. Chapman, poultryman with the agricultural extension service, Uni- versity of Minnesota, points out that many farm flocks went into a prema- ture molt early in June because of lack of feed, hot • poultry houses at night, and depredations of mites. Egg production by these flocks fell off rap- Idly, tut as sufficient feed is supplied and poultry houses properly ventilated and the mites exterminated, the flocks are gradually increasing production. \When culling such flocks, each hen should be carefuhy studied for evi- dence that the molt is about to .sub- side,\ says Mr. Chapman. \The best hens will come back and they ought to have then* chance. The poorest ones will, of course, contlnua to molt and should be discarded.\ Balanced Dry Mash The use of a. balanced dry mash containing 2 per cent ground lime- stone hi addition to the hopper of oyster shells will usually pwvent the production of soft-shelled eggs. A failure of the egg-making organs to function properly might cause soft- shelled eggs. Such hens have to be located by the trap nest or by obser- vation In small flocks. Then they can he marketf d and replaced with vigor- out pullets whltn will probably be tree from such ttonblt. yf ^I.JJUJ went used. The totals quantity re- quired for each 100 lineal feet of 18- fopt pavement will, therefore, be ap- proximately 300 gallons for wetting aubgrade, 2,200 gallons for mixing, and 10.000 gallons for curing (assuming a specified curing period of 14 days). For each additional 100 feet of prog- ress aa equal amount will be needed The rate at which the supply is to be delivered depends upon the spee4 with irhlch the pavement Is being placed, Few contractors require more than 60 gallons per minute and this amount Ii usually ample for the average job. The slxe and length of the pipe Use ta as much a factor in determining the rate at which water will be delivered «• is the pumping equipment. A table ot friction heads for various alxe plpea will show, tor example, that a new 2-lnch pipe delivering 60 gallons per minute has a friction head of 6.6 feet- for each 100 feet of length, while a SH-inch pipe delivering the same amount of water baa a friction head •f only L86 feet per 100 feet of length. For old, mated pip*, from 25 to 50 per cent should be added to the trictlon loss and allowance must Be mad« for fittings and angles. X Generally, a pipe line having a fric- tion head of more than S feet per 100 feet of length will be uneconomical and a larger pipe should be substituted. A long pipe line with a high friction head Imposes a heat? duty on the pumps and It is frequently necessary to Install a booster pump along the lint when the available pipe line la ot small diameter. By making a atudy ot this Important subject of water supply for a job, tht Inspector can often render valuable assistance to the contractor and guard against delays and unpleasantness do* to lack of water for curing. - iky); ; '••• •>% Had U 4 • * C\t «*? bottle* at 8««-»- Hiir. Now bis • full growth oJlaiir u shown photo. Construction of Roads in Arkansas Progresses The cost of building roads is al- ways an Important Item. Hard sur- faced roads may seem more expensive but they more than pay for them- selves. This has been well illustrated by Melvln T. Traylor, president of tht First National bank of Chicago, in an address to the forty-ninth annual con- vention of the American Bankers* as- sociation. Be Is quoted as saying: Much of our recent debt has been for good roads. In most parts of the coun- try these cost In the neighborhood ot $25,000 per mile, but they add immedi- ate Increased value of $10 to $25 per acre to every foot of land they trav- erse and they certainly add Increased dollars to ey*ry ltenr produced op farms bordering or near them, to say nothing of the comfort and happiness which safe and easy traveling over them brings to the rural communities. \There are many methods of pro- viding funds for road building. Regard- S of the manner hi which the funds are obtained, the principal thing to b« considered is that the roads shall be so built that they will render service at little expense long after payment for them is completed. Any other type of construction Is waste; waste which Is doubly abusive in that construction and maintenance go on larger and larger, while at the same time the user and those who benefit from the roads are payjng an excessive cost tot Inadequate highways. \More and wider roads of permanent fconstruction must be built. Otherwise money Is being spent upon construc- tion which soon wears out—which is Impassable during weeks of the year and which is fettering the growth of the transportation system and com- munity development. It rests with the people who furnish the money whether toads shall be built for the present tr for the future.\ Favor Better Roads The popai&rllemand for better roads reared'lts head recently when the gov- ernor of Kansas, working with the highway commission, issued an appeal to state bankers for a loan of $88,000 to meet a current federal aid fund al- lotment, which, the legislature had failed to appropriate. The first letters were addressed to bankers of small Kansas towns and villages. In the executive mall the day after the first appeal went out to small banks cam* •ffers totaling 1111.000. Mbtld htadj, Stop Falling Hilr, Dandruff, ltd* 1*1, and suny fwm» of Eczimi. Cwiiay»aawc» aiwatw—I IIIIHHM W. H. FORST, Mfg. SOOTTDALE, PJL •K«ll«k!«, eornpltU Information am*. lc« tor l ytftr and t aumMra lUattrata* Alaaktn MafMln*. II. Mon«y-*aek avaraaw I**. F»iBflnd«rotAJaak».AncB<iragt, At»»a* •TAKK.T1MX AdKKT* MASK WO MOWaT* »»Ula( tha KefaMA HonldlAtr, graatMt »•»*- M1 w«cw»ltr a*»r iHM»l»«i, IMII* a«k \Writ* SchMBt Mff. C4-. atMB, MfcMa. W: oufiger AKa vt your il«*plac Look younc«r! B* yooagtr! Ag« baa IttU* to do with your looks or your MUogs. IV* ta« condltkm «t your blood that counts! And blood wlU tell! tt tells Is a hundred ways, IX your »v»Um tt surg- ing for rlcn, red blood, you nay took and feel old at thirty. But U yon b*M up tht rad-blood-calls with S. 8. 8. you'll Quickly ae« th. wrloklM fMte away—th« sigrfn* pottchw givt way to firm, solid flesh—and tlw trtah, glowing beauty of youth, tmk* th» ptao* ot a skin sallow and disfifurtd tek blemishes. Rich, red blood »ean« yotttk, and energy! 8. S. S. helps Natara build rad-blood-celU by the nUUoaa. For generation* 8. S. 8. bas baas keeping peopla looUss and fttHag young. Fretb, «*MasIsft purifying, tick, *•* blood that S. &S. helps Natara build. Bonritlraa •very muscle, and tissue ot tht body*, Pimple*, Wotche* and./ blackheads dliappear.f Bolls, ecitma and ra»he»\ dry up. Tour fac«— your body—your waola being takei on the look and power ot youth. Wake up your system with 8. 9, % Build red blood and you rebuild yotttal Get 8.8.8. from any druggist Tba larger bottle Is more economical. S Gallons of Black Paint for $5.00 freight prejmtfl. tl»«d toy U, S, Navy And public bunding*.' For wood oi *tr<-l. Rustproof and weatherproof^ Send check or money order tn RELIANCE PAINT COMPAHY 44 Commerce St. Bronfclya, II. T« Black Water Baths Nature's cure for Eheumatl»m, Nerv- ousness and that run-down condition. Hotel and baths connecting. Steam heat. Open all year. 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