an Si (14 Stock Gi Fe Poultry ‘The old asetianle Br Sick and poultry Ask your merchant! ants : ask your jobberls about Hed Dee! WHEAT FOR SMUT Reports Show That It Pays to Use Formaldehyde at Time of Planting Crops. WORK OF DIFFERENT AGENTS Practically None of Fields Given Treatment Showed Any Signs of Disease — Farmers of Porter County Lost $140,000. (Prepared by the United States Depart- ment of Agriculture.) Evidence that It pays to treat wheat and oats at the time of planting with formaldehyde to prevent smut Is given in reports of a number of demonstra- tions conducted by Indiana county agents. Fields of oats In DuBols coun- ty, sown with seed treated with for- maldehyde for smut as recommended by the United States department of This Large Bettle of YAGER’S LINIMENT contains twice as much as the usual 50 cent bottle of lit iment and Jasta Hl ® quickly alleviates pain canioed from rheumatism, sciatica, neu- 1] ralgia, sprains, etc. § Sold by all dealers. Price 3%¢. = NIM E NT RELIEVES PAIN GILBERT BROS. & CO. DON'T SUFFER HEADACHE o= NEURALGIA Get the long established remedy ° -KOHL.ER- ANTIDOTE gives relief in 15 minutes TALE NC SUBSTITUTE taltimore, Md, Pri. 2 12 CENTS EVERYWHERE ar DRUG STORES ano GENERAL STORES _ Kebier Mfg, Co., Baltimore, Md, ave and one dollar. Write for FREE SAMPLE, Berthrop & Lyman Co.,Inc., Buffalo, N.Y. ND ORi00 BY MAIL SAM E. A BEUGGIST URBANNA VA, ILOCURA CURES PILES THE ONLY INTERNAL REMEDY Beat by mail prepaid, 50c and $1.00 a box. Villocura Co., Washington, D.C. Chuticura Soap| 1S IDEAL “or the Hands Ta, Ointment 2° & Me. Taloam Be. Sample exiled free by *“Cuticnrs, D pt. E, Boston.” INDICESTION Wticicly relieved by SAL-SPEAR-MINTO. Whee Beil Bpenr- Minto Co, New York, mime ssatey if results are mot satisfactory. Embroiderers Beperienced hand embroiderers on scal- oped suderwear. Steady. Work sent out of town. Send samples. ESTELLA-SCHILLER BROS. Wa 20h € roel New York City A smeeess 15 8a man who has stuck to Job Mg enough to do it well wurcm BAREK A GOOD TONIC Sad Piven Malaria Out of the System. “wor Pabel’ acts like magic; I have given = Se mwmerons ple In my parish who were with chills, malaria and fever, | ree te those who are sufferers and In ; . 8B. Bxymanowskl, Chareh, Perth Amboy, N. J 50 cents, all druggists or by s from Kiloczewskl & Co, « MRirplanes | hat collide A Ww hen To0 feet n fhe alr are too high, YIMYRINE agriculture and the State Agricultural treated contained about 15 per cent smut, according to the local coun- Work in Warren County, As a result of the demonstration conducted by the county agent in it was found that a of oats planted with untreated seed showed 33 per cent smut, while Other oat flelds throughout ity that were not treated were with the disease in » per cent. he damage done by the cour infested amounts As the result of $140,000 on to statistics compiled by the ger nt. smut the agent for 1 caused 7 's yield, About of the coun ir s and rly S11 O00, nea me by nd that isease hae rease in the two-thirds of ated the tre saving of effed Smut in Steuben County. unty agent of Steuben county, entative by Formaldehyde Treatment per cent ef the fields showed as high as 40 to 50 per of scab. Where wheat had been sown In corn stubble the scab wns much worse than where it fol lowed ot} The agent took gatherings of farm was cent groand ier Crops, advantage of the ers while how smut were and other cereal diseases causing and to demon strate methods of seed treatment. PASTURE FOR STOCK IN FALL | | Highly Important to Keep Animals in Good Condition Through Fall and Winter, One of the essential factors in keep ing stock In condition through the fall and early winter, which is highly important, is good pasture, Andrew Boss, tor of the Minnesota experiment Nothing excels the though mixtures of grasses and clover are better than el- ther grasses or clover alone, and fur nish the best kind of feed for all kinds of stock. losses live good anys dire subject. ing clover, or timothy and makes good fall feed. Clover growing in the stubble field is also an excellent fall pasture. Pasturing stock on clo- ver often enables the farmer to pick up some of the wasted droppings of the live stock are bene ficial to the land. As They Have Peculiar Fertilizing Value They Should Be Care- fully Stored Away. The farmer who burns wood for heating or cooking should ecarefally store the ashes and not permit them to leach, as they have a peculiar for tilizing value. They not only contain (potash and phosphoric acid in appre ciable amounts, but also contain mag- pesin and lime, and when applied to the land they also act Indirectly to increase the available nitrogen con | tent of the’ organic matter in the soll, GOOD STALLIONS TO IMPROVE COLT CROP Harvest Aid, Animal of Highest Type, Is Furchased, ————— Work at New Breeding Station at Buffalo, Wyo., Carried on by Gov- ernment in Co.operation With State Officials. (Prepared by the United States Depart ment of Agriculture.) A standard-bred stallion, Harvest Ald, 63908, an animal of the very high est breeding type, has recently been purchased by the United States de partment of agriculture and placed at the government's new horse-breeding station at Buffalo, Wyo. Work at this station Is being carried on in co-opera tice with the state of Wyeming, the object being to develop utility horses especially adapted to western range and farm conditions, Harvest Ald is by the champion trotting stallion The Harvester, and his dam is Santos Maid, a mare which holds the trotting record of 2:08%, and a iter of daug! SEE whl ik ot A Sire That insures an Improved Colt Crop. F$.4 oa Peter the Great, the leading speed in America. Harvest gire of Ald Is an cofiformation, and $F y WEE mal, e-bireedink + Experiments Show It Will Corn as Ration for Fatteni Hogs If Properly Fed. ng Experiments periment station : SUrpass corn as hogs if it lots of pigs a of given pig over th iS prope: were § ra ration, bar ay. YOu are in a region ve been us alfalfa, rORpect I i for do n ithe : | the curta ling o the brewing it pay you more your hogs an i Years in Indiana to Show Value of Ground Material. jared by the United ment of Agricults | For two years the county agent Jefferson county, Ind. rying on demonstrations to show value of ground limestone soils. In one demonstration this an average of 25% bushels of « | Were produced to the acre, {bors who helped thrash this {and who have land that is just { good, except that they did not applications of ground liestone, ob- tained only 15 bushels to the acre. This high yield is hardly an exception, reports the agent, for similar results | were obtained by other farmers in the section who used limestone. Prep States Depart- sve. in on wheat Neigh i ADVANTAGES OF SAME BREED Better Prices Secured From Uniform Product and Breeding Stock Se. cured Near Home. | (Prepared by the United States Depart. ment of Agriculture.) There are many advantages to be | gained when the stock raisers of one community reise the same breed. Bet. ter prices may be secured from the gale of a uniform product and suitable breeding stock can be secured near home. FARMER WHO AIDS FERTILITY Dairyman Who Studies Feed for Land Is Not Soil Robber—Something Must Be Put Back. —— (Prepared by the United States Depart ment of Agriculture.) The dairy farmer not only studies how to feed his cow, but how to feed his land. He Is not 4 soll robber, as he realizes that the farmer who re- duces the fertility of his land oh witlmut reason, since he steals from blwsels, ' a Pannier Returns and Hoops About Hips May Be Seen— Sleeves at Vanishing Point. BLACK AND WHITE POPULAR Colors Form Favorite Combination at French Resorts—Stripes In Nar. row and Wide Arrangementse Skirts Are Very Short, From all signs this will be & de- cisive season In Paris In so far as fashlon creation Is concerned, The de- signers seem to have taken on their old accustomed stride. They have turned their efforts unreservedly to leadership In the world of style. To ald them In this crucial! moment there are arriving from the States, from South America, watch the latest This is almost a new experts to ments, ence, develop- experi ence, for through the last five years been allowed to cross the water and only a few of the dress kept up thelr work with anything like pre-war vigor, American women during have developed a style They are dressing now climate and their life suits, which are quite the French w And one thizes with the buyers, ther thelr clients at he will re accept the wonderful thi over from Fra If trained only for bheanty th dazzled in their ted notions e858 EO by the as suits different from oman's, Eympa- who wh fuse brought eyes are be Hne to ince, to ‘letting all of Gar mors of hoops about the hips and even about the bottoms of the skirts, The sleeves now in vogue can hardly be called sleeves, They actually are top of the shoulder. In most instances that is all, and the Parisians wear noon, to be seen of sleeves, Even the blouses for wear lored suits are They will be quite with tal to sleeves, then they will have these little, inade- quate sleeves--that is, they are ingde- a good-looking arm. Indeed, a Frenchwoman's the present mode is little more two strips of material sewed together and cut kimono fashion, though the lines of her frock are not flowing; they follow the outline of her figure, Evening gowns, far from being an The economic use of material there extends to the neckline, which not only opens at back to the waist, but somet! point, These gow also, All that is © ns ed for the front, In order to are strings of jewels attached to the points st and from the back of g to the walstiine either side of the keep this on there beads round the neck, neck strun is the fabric hat for aping. Favorite Color Combination. Black and by all or ¥ ere pe azain 4 counts everything and its wite is ail oads it tion at ench resort me of the 3 and pring, hay since RR a RR APE sos board and the ervatives at 1 not be suited, this of the cons At time vear all of and so it is at Dean ville and the other resorts by the sea- women and is of the trend # ‘hey bly arrayed crowd of some idea as regards dress, the very Iatest rom a French point of view of the times things , and, of jong will follow In some respects the Skirts Are Very Short. Well, the tendency is all in the di- rection of the skirts that are shorter than anything America hag ever worn or even dreamed about. You hear it said that the Parisians are wearing their skirts very lgng, but when you see them with thelr skirts actually ex- tending just below their knees, so that when their arms are raised the skirt pulls above the knee, you know what a short skirt really Is. It is easy on ma- terial and is extremely good looking when the figure of the wearer ean stand the strain. The skirts are tight, length Is what it 18? No trouble about taking a good, long step in a dress of this character, Then the coats, when it is a sult, reach almost to the bot- tom of the skirts, leaving, in fact, only about two or three inches of the skirt to be seen. The conts are either strict- ly tallored or they show a little full- ness about the hips. That tells & story of forthcoming fullnesses of even greater volume, It is so with the dresses. Always there Is a slight gathering of extra material where the hips join the waist. it is the pannier that is greeting us on the broad highway of fashion. As yet It #8 not large enough nor full enough 0 be alarming, though there are ru- rate silk dresses and for suits, as well as for topconts, Now the fabrics are appearing, and they show these stripes in wide and rangements, . Then there is the black the white hat; that is the This they are over the white hat, which is sans ming, a black, lacy veil. the costume even more effective. veil does not necessarily cover face--in fact, It rarely but lacy pattern is so distributed that the white showing through the tive, gOARON wearing does of its own. Hats Without Trimming. The hats, as a forecast of fall head- gear, are mostly without, trimming. The style Is all in the line, but how that line is obtained is « complete mystery. Upon examination the riddle only becomes more complicated. There seems to be nothing there except a band of something stiff to fit about the head. The crown and the brim are entirely without inner stiffening or frame, The trick does not allow for explanation. It is all in the wizard who causes it to be. Yet, when this seem- ing masse of velvet or satin is put on the head it takes a shape and form that ommend It to any wearer. It seems to have been made to set off at its best that face alone, and while you cannot say that the hat is round or oval or square or long, still it has shape, The felt blocked hats worn with midecagson gowns are round as to crown and as to brim as well, The brim turns up at the same distance all the way round and the only trimming for the hat is a silk band of the same color. Hats of this character in beige and taupe worn with navy blue suits are effective. Then there is another ASPIRIN FOR HEADACHE Name ‘‘Bayer” is on Genuing Aspirin—say Bayer Insist on “B yer pa aT, contain directions for Heada: Colds, Pain, Neuralgia, Lumbago, and Rheu- matism. Name “Bayer” means genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for nineteen years. Handy tin toxes of 12 irin is trade of Mono- ~~ Adv, ig 1. ro op- Tie ie, Swabbing Yarns. x 144 have Ir man Was Laid Up In Bed Dean's, However, I BR stored Mrs. Vogt to Health and Strength. Hasn't Suffered Since. : of kid- re sd one of the worst cases MES. VOGT. resis » i wis or Cet Dosn’s ut Any Store, 60c a Box DOAN’ KIDNEY PILLS FOSTER-MILBURN CO. THE “BLUES” Acid-Stomach like a He : 3 not even more thar EATON IC (FOR YOUR ACID-STOMACH) Mowe LIKE IT Cures most trouble in horses and cattle. Fattens them and keeps them fat. Results guaranteed or money back. Made of 80% salt, balance § Shfferent kinds of drags. Ww elghs 3 Ibs. Blocks 5 lbs. Stays bard. Nearly all merchants have it For particulars, Edgerton Salt Brick Co. Goldsboro, N. OQ: Atlanta, Ga. and Memphis, Tenn, Balesmen wanted. Liggettnllyors KING PIN CHEWING TOBACCO Has that fcorive Jatt | Bong Anese at Bx {rg Wits for iol Mtg. Co., Tf Poy iston ot, poi W.N U, BALTIMORE, NO. 1-10, i! S-.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers