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THE CASPER DAILY TRIBUNE Thousands Tell It kidney a case to guide . And it’ } of thousands, "Forty, thousan a mer can people are pu raising ¥ Kidney Pate Barely it is worth the while of anyone who has a bad back, who feels tired, nervous and run. x who endures distressing urinary disor- ders, to give Doan’s Kidney Pills a trial. A Colorado Case Mra. John Brumle: t., Gree, “Every Picture Tells ¢ Stary” izzy spells. My swelled terribly and the swelling extend- ed PR, into my limbs id hips. 1 couldn't leep and my nerves were wrecked. After hire ta eat Fela ie an idney Pills restored me to good health.” Got Doan’s at Any Store, 50c a Box DOAN > Ss KIDNEW PILLs FOSTER-MILBURN CO., BUFFALO, N. ¥. telling of Typhoid Vaccine, Results from us , and danger from Typhoid Carriers, THE CUTTER LABORATORY, BERKELEY, CAL. (PROOUCING VACCINES © SERUM UNDER U. 8, GOV. LiCEKSE Paradoxical Blame. “The young fellow yonder is a bad egg.” “And he’s a fresh one, tou.” IF YOUR CHILD IS CROSS, FEVERISH, CONSTIPATED Look Mother! If tongue is coated, cleanse little bowels with “Cali- fornia Syrup of Fig: Mothers can rest easy after giving “California Syrup of Figs,” because in a few hours all the clogged-up waste, sour bile and fermenting food gently moves out of the bowels, and you have a well, playful child again, Sick chiidren needn't be coaxed to take this harmless “fruft laxative.” Millions of mothers keep it handy be- cause they know its action on the stomach, liver and bowels is prompt and sure, Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bot- tle of “California Syrup of Figs,” which contains directions for babies, cnildren of all ages and for grown-ups.—Ady. Consclation of a Sort. Bayard Swope, a New York jour- nalist, was talking about his vecent German visit. “You see in Germany,” he said, “in- numerable mutilated young men. These young men, no matter how severe their mutilations, are cheerful. They know other young men, you see, who are immeasurably worse off than themselves.” Mr. Swope shook his head. “Immeasurably worse off,” peated. And he went on: “A cheery young Bavarian captain who had lost his sight put the matter to me in a proverb which runs: “‘I bad no boots to my feet and murmured, until I met a man upon the road who had no feet.’” he re- Far-Sighted Lad. Raymond, six-year-old pride of an a few nights ago, when his mother asked him to go on an errand to the corner-grocery. ‘ After considerable questioning, the lad explained that he wouldn't mind going if he didn’t have to pass by a lumber yard, which is situated between the grocery and his home. “Why, you're not afraid of those stacks of luinber, are you?” queried his mother. / “It’s not the stacks, mamma, it’s what's behind ‘em,” answered Ray- mond.—Indianapolis News. Russia is a large producer of as- bestos. The best cast at dice Is not to play. Instead of Worrying about the high cost of living, just buy a pack- age of Grape.N uts —still sold at the same fair price. « Enjoy a morning dish of this delicious food, that you've had a good breakfast and Saved Money Isn't that a fair start for any day? Irvington. family, strenuously objected | PFOVINs CONTROL OF ORCHARD PESTS BY SPRAYING (Prepared by the United States Depart- gine to uperate a compressor, so that ment of Agriculture.) The insects which troubie the or- the compressed-air tanks may be re- chardist may be grouped in two main charged. Another type of sprayer is classes, chewing insects and sucking the dust sprayer, which is often used insects, For the control of the first |!" districts where heavy vehicles can- class some form of arsenic, such as | 20t be used and where water is scarce. trsenate of lead, ts most generally used. | T® machines are supplied with a fan The sucking insects cannot be killed | “'T@2gement which blows the material by potson, as they do not eat on the| = the form of a fine dust that entire surface, so some preparation that will ly covers the tree. The dust method kill by coming in contact with their| !5 @S¢ful mainly in controlling certain bodies is used. sene emulsion, and a nicotine extract age very commonly used for the pur- pose, There are two classes of diseases| 87nd the tree. Lime-sulphur, kero- insects. Fungus diseases do not yild satisfactorily to this method as a rule. The codling moth is oftep trapped by using bands of burlap wrapped The female insect which trouble the fruit grower, fungi crawls under this burlap to transform. and bacteria. The fungus diseases} #04 the bands may then be examined may be controlled by spraying with | from time to time and the pupne killed. lime-sulphur or bordeaux mixture. | For the bacterial diseases, no satisfac- tory spray mixture has yet been found. The cankerworm may be trapped by using sticky bands in place of the bur- lap. The females in crawling up the Bacterial diseases, such as| trunk of the tree become entangled in pear blight can be cofitrolled only by the sticky materials and are killed. cutting out and burning the affected parts. There is no general spray mixture that can be applied to secure control over all orchard pests, neither is there a time of year when all the spraying work can be done. Insects and fungus diseases usually have a period in their development when they may be con- Fire Blight and Borers. There are several troubles with which ihe orchardist has to contend that often become quite serious, These troubles are fire blight on apples and pears, yellows on peaches, and borers on peaches and apples. The only re- ef that can be had from fire blight is to cat out all infected branches as SPRAY OUTFIT SUITABLE FOR SMALL ORCHARD. | trolled by spraying. To secure tne re- | soon as observed. quired control It is necessary to know the exact time to apply the spray, and also it is absolutely necessary to apply the right kind of spray. Care in mak- ing up the spray mixture to the re- quired standard is very esseptial in all spraying work. Spraying Machinery. Within recent years there has been a great improvement in machinery for spraying, and it is now possible to get a machine that is adapted to any phase of the work. A hand pump, with a barrel to hold the liquid, mounted on wheels, will serve for a few trees if they are not large. A tank mounted on a wagon, and a hand pump will an- swer all purposes in an orchard not exceeding eight or ten acres. For or- chards exceeding ten acres, especially where the trees are large, a machine operated by a gasoline engine or some other source of power will be found ad- vantageous. A type of sprayer that is quite popular is the com- pressed-air sprayer. “The noticeable feature about this machine Is the ab- sence of the pump and the engine. A strong steel cylinder holds the liquid, and the power is supplied in the form of compressed air from a connecting tank. To use this type of sprayer it is necessary to have a large gasoline en- In cutting out these branches be sure to make the cut sev- eral inches below where the blight shows, and also gather up the cuttings and burn them. It is also essential to disinfect the pruning shears or knife in a solution of bichloride of mercury or to treat the wound with the same so- lution, Soft and succulent wood growth seems to be more subject to attack, so where blight is prevalent the orchard should be seeded down and all nitrog- enous fertilizers should be withheld. Peach yellows can only be checked by cutting and burning all infected trees, Peach-tree borers are generally con- trolled by mounding the trees and dig- ging out the borers. Protection From Rodents. Very frequently young trees are at- tacked by rabbits, mice, woodchucks, and the like, and very serious damage is done. If the trees are still vigorous and the wounds not too extensive, the trees many be saved by bridge grafting. When young trees are set in districts where such rodents are numerous, it is a good plan to use some form of a tree protector. These protectors may be made of wood veneer, wire netting, lath, tar paper, They should be set into the earth several inches, and run upon the trunk to cover up the base of the scaffold limbs, HINTS ON PLANTING YOUNG FRUIT TREES Important Suggestions Given by Missouri Expert in Order to Secure Success. (By J. C. WHITTEN, Missouri College Agriculture.) , After many years of careful obser- by the heavier branches on the south- east side, so it Is less Hable to sun- seald. In order quickly to determine which side is the stronger, better de- veloped, stiffer side to set to the southwest, balance the tree across the hand as it is caught up for planting. The tree will roll over in the hand until it comes at rest with the heavy side toward the palm of the hand. Plant this side to the southwest. Before setting, trim any ragged wounds on the roots and shorten very vation of the different methods of} long roots so they will not he cramped planting, the agricultural college at|in planting. Tramp the soil firmly Columbia suggests that the following | from the bottom of the hole up, in set- points are exceedingly impcrtant in order to secure success: Young trees rather’ than old, large ones, should be selected for planting. One-year-old fruit trees are for the most part preferable to two-year-olds. They transplant more readily and more safely. The proper depth to plant Is the depth at which the tree stood in the nursery. i Young trees planted in this central section frequently have 2 tendency to subsequently tilt toward the north+ east nnd stand crooked. This is due to the fact that our prevailing winds uring the growing season are from «ne south and southwest, and to the partial sunscald of the south or west sides of the tree, which results from heating up of the sunny side of the trunk during sunny days in late win- ter and subsequent sudden freezing at night. The tree should be set fo that Its heavier side is toward the soutiwest and so any sway in the strunk will bend toward the south- west. In this position the tree is much more resistant of bending away from the southwest wind, is shaded ; ting. When the hole is filled, spread an inch of \00se soil over the tramped surface so as to prevent baking and drying out. Peach trees should be pruned back most severely of any wf our orchard fruits when set. All the side branches should be cut off close, thus trimming the tree to a single whip. This whip should then be shortened to about two and a half feet in height. Cherry trees should be pruned least severely of any of our orchard fruits. If well branched, cut out the central stem of the tree so as to leave an open center, Leave three to five main out- ward spreading Iimbs well distributed around the trunk. The reason for pruning the peach so severely is because it rendily puts wae HE KITCHEN CABINET The cares of the day, old moralists say, Are quite enough to perplex one; Then drive today’s sorrow away ul tomorrow, And then put it off tll the next one, DIFFERENT SALAD DRESSINGS. In making salad dressings it is most important that all materials should be of the best, eggs, olive ofl, vinegar and seasonings. Salad dressings should be a pleas- ing contrast to the salad. It is not possible to use the = same dressing on all kinds of salads Without sacrificing the zest of a salad. French dressing is the easiest to make and one of the most popular ones. It may be varied by using dif- ferent combinations with it, such as American cheese, Roquefort, minced hard cooked eggs, chopped olives, onions, pimentos, chill sauce, green parsley, chives, tabasco and ershire sauces, Fruit juices such as pineapple Juice makes one of the most delicious of salad dress- ings, used as a base. Pineappie Dressing.—Mix all of the following in a double boiler: two table- spoonfuls of sugur, one-half tablespoon- ful of flour, two egg yolks, and one- haif cupful of pineapple juice. Cook over water until thick, add the juice of half a lemon and a half cupful of whipped cream, If the cream can- not be obtained use condensed milk, dropping it slowly into the mixture ; | beating all the time. Whipped Cream Dressing.—Take one-half cupful of whipped cream, add two tablespoonfuls of #iregar, two ta- blespoonfuls of sugar, one teaspoonful of mustard, and salt and pepper to taste. Shred a cabbage very fine and pour the vinegar over this, mix well, when rendy to serve pour off all the Iquid possible and fold in the cream beaten stiff. Chili Dressing—Use three table- spoonfuls of olive oll to one of vinegar, add a few drops of onion, juice and | salt and pepper to taste. When ready to serve add finely chopped green pep- per and enough thick chili sauce to color the dressing red. Serve on cab- bage or any desired vegetable combin- ation. Fruit salads are delicious to serve as a dessert or with a heavy dinner, as they are lighter than the ordinary salads, ~ ‘We lose money and comfort, and even temper sometimes, by not learn- ing to be more careful.—Dickens. What a jolly, excellent, lovable world it is —Dickens. SEASONABLE GOOD THINGS. The following is mincemeat which is easily made. Take one cupful of chopped cold meat, a half teaspoonful of salt, two large apples, chopped fine; one cupful of rais- ins, one cupful of sugar, one-hulf cupful of mo- lasses, one-half of a cup- ful of suet, chopped ; one- half cupful of vinegar, one tablespoonful of cloves, one of cinnamon and a cupful of canned fruit juice and a cupful of boiling water. Cook ull together and cool before using. This makes three pies. Potato Rolls—To one cupful of hot, mashed potatoes add a fourth of a ecupful of butter and the same amount of sugar, add a teaspoonful of sult, and a cupful of scalded milk. Cool until tepid, then add two egg yolks, and a yeast cake, dissolved in a fourth of a cupful of water; beat well and add three-fourths of a cupful of flour, and let stand well covered where it will rise in about an hour. Add three or four more cupfuls of flour, knead well and set to rise until double its bulk, Shape into finger rolls, rise and bake in a moderate oven. This makes ubout three dozen small rolls, Bermuda Salad.—Take a half cupfu! of thinly sliced Bermuda onions, dredge with salt and pepper, and pour over it two tablespoonfuls of vinegar and a teaspoonful of sugar. Let stand to season. Cut one and a half evpfuls of cooked beets in ‘narrow strips, mix with a French dressing, using three tablespoonfuls of oll and one of vine- gar, udd the drained ontons, Let stand a few minutes, add water cress, well frossed in French dressing, and serve. Chicken Pie—Cook a four-pound chicken until very tender, after dis- jointing, and put into a deep baking dish, make a sauce of five cupfuls of chicken broth, three tablespoonfuls ench of flour and butter, and pepper and salt te taste. Make a rich crust, put the chicken in the pan, pour over the sauce and a tablespoonful of scraped offion, cover with the crust, leaving a’vent for the steam to es- cape. A short time before serving pour into the pie a half cupful of rich cream. Mignons of Beef —Take thick pleces of tender loin or tenderloin sliced, split each fillet nearly in two length- wise, sprecd between, sandwich fash- ton, some beef marrow that has been mashed and seasoned with salt, pep- per, minced parsely and a little onion. Fasten together with wooden tooth- picks aad broil the fillets. Serve with tomato sauce. Sn Casa eC a Ninteryoon Fiero __! Aheipful Remedy for Gonstipation and Di and Feverishness aod i Loss OF SLEEP resuffting therefrom inlntancy- FacSimile Signature of A tk ——— Dre Gextaun GOMPANE. NEW YORK. GENT: nths,old AtGimd WHS. Serious. “She's only flirting with him. “It's more se 1s than that. her looking up his rating 10 CENT “CASCARETS” FOR ‘LIVER AND BOWELS Cure Sick Headache, Biliousnees, Sour Stomach, Breath—Candy Cathartic. No odds how bad your liver, stom- ach or bowels; how much your head aches, how miserable you are from constipation, indigestion, biliousness and sluggish bowels—you always get relief with Cascarets. They imme- diately cleanse and regulate the stom- ach, remove the sour, fermenting food and foul gases; take the excess bile from the liver and carry off the con- stipated .waste matter and poison from the intestines and bowels. A 10-cent box from your druggist will keep your liver and bowels clean; stomach sweet and head clear for months, They work while you sleep.— Ady. ‘ I saw Constipation Bad Two Beauties of This World. Stella—What is always beautiful? Bella—Snow and any woman who gets.in the papers. TAKES OFF DANDRUFF, HAIR STOPS FALLING Save your Hair! Get a 25 cent bottle of Danderine right now—Also stops Itching scalp. Thin, brittle, colorless and scraggy hair is mute evidence of a neglected scalp; of dandruff—that awful scurf. There is nothing so destructive to the hair as dandruff. It robs the hair of its lustre, its strength and its very life; eventually producing a feverish- ness and Itching of the scalp, which if not remedied causes the hair roots to shrink, loosen and die—then the hair falls out fast. A little Danderine tonight—now—any time—will surely Save your hair, Get a 25 cent hottle of Knowlton’s Danderine from any drug store. You surely can have beautiful hair and lots of it if you will just try a little, Den- derine. Save your hair! Try it !—Ady. An Empty Echo. talks,” observed the Sage. replied the. Fool, “But all some of us hear is the echo.” If you wish beautiful, clear white clothes, use Cross Bag Blue. At all jood grocers. Adv. The Kind It Was. “Did you have u fine kind of auto- mobile trip?” “It was nothing but fines.” > Japan has a goldfish farm that has been in continuous operation since 1763. CASTORIA For Infants and Children,: Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA THE CENTAUR COMPANY, HEW YORK Cry. am has tmed the cultivation of cotton, once a leading Industry tn that country. Send 10e to Dr. Pierce, Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, for large trial package of Anurie for kidneys cures backache.—Ady. slaves were sold England dur Male and female publicly in the fairs of ing the fourteenth centur ACTRESS TELLS SECRET. s the follow. A well known actress gi ing recipe for gray hair: water add 1 oz. Bay Rum, a Barbo Compound, and \% os. of glycerine, | Any druggist can put this up or you can | mix It at home at very little cost. Full directions for making and use come in it will each box of Barbo Compound. | gradually darken streaked, faded srey | hair, and make it soft and glossy, It will | not color the scalp, is not sticky o# greasy, end does not rub off, Adv. The United States coastguard in 1915 saved 1,507 lives. The first sneeze is the danger signal. Time to take— vive CASCARA EP QUININE yx) old family remedy—ti tabiet ‘orm~safe, sure, easy, to, take! io opiates, no unp) t after ures colds in 24 hours. iD days. Money’ back if tt fe ine box with R a "s picture on it—25 At Any Drug Store August Flower Which for 51 irs has the health a thousands To Kill Rats. and Mice STEARNS’ ELECTRIC PASTE U. 8. Government Buys It _ SOLD A Great Discovery| (sy J. H. WATSON, M. D.) tles in the feet, ankles and wrists i Swollen hands, ankles, feet are due to with poisonous waste matter, which set- 3 or eyes in bag-like formations. , pare ly for those easily recog- iptoms of inflammation caused Z Py, i a 'y dera ts, Painful die ailict her sex’ sho will ind rellet neipation from. sho Page it's tonic and nervine tha