fhe barn doors and letting the wind DOCTOR’S LIFE NOT ALL Ju: biow through, and using a shovel to woh stir it occasionally. Smut is the cause of much damage >" f treatment. is) - to the wheat crop in this State. Like| ‘ ‘Another method of trea the damage of Rh Hessian Fly its | spread the grain on the floor, wd ravages can be avoided by taking ad- | With a sprinkling can pour over 1 | This story is told by the wife of a Be f thods well-known to | Water containing solution of formalin, | physician living in a small town in Sr *'rnis is Tone by destroying | Prepared by the formula mentioned | contra] Kansas to illustrate some of 2 3 _ | above. 3 be spores of smu on Seed Wheat so [the time of pouring on the liquid, 1t | sion: “We were attending church, cording to the following procedure as | is possible to be sure that all is soak- | something rather unusual for us, to. outlined by H. A. Surface, Boor led. Let it stand a short time, then | gether with a visiting cousin and the Zoologist of the State Department o lary it, and use it when ready. Your | baby, when a messenger from the tel- Agricullure, in his reply to a corre- | Ary 1, : : t- | cphone office came in search of the g ? n is not poiscned by this trea vinY spondent: { gra) all killed. | doctor. The minister paused in his ‘Replying to your letter asking for men ii Ye A Dob Injure sermon until they were safely out of = [After it is dry, la for treating seed wheat for | : 6 it the church. Then the baby, who was ® ora fr ae is i poultry or livestock to eat it. partial to his father, became so un- Smut, I beg to say that this is not a] : vill b ffec-| ‘‘It must be remembered that the | ruly on being left in my charge, that difficult operation, and will be effec- Smut germs get into the field in three | I, too, was compelled to leave the tive if undertaken. It is not expen- ways: (1) They are liable to reach | service, causing a second pause in the ie 2d PRRs D0 ren you or IS re from State oftle previous crop. | minister's discourse. Then it occurred owledge y- to the cousin that he had the key to really impossible to fail in this regard | (2) They are taken out by the Straw | the office and that the doctor could . . . ian : jef | which is smutty, because it has been | is surgical case, so he, also, if directions are followed in this brief | ated for bedding, or otherwise mized | fot get Hy 2] £830, 50 1s, 20, siticle. with manure, but not welldecomposed | terruption in the morning worship. Sout, 3% youknow, Is often Ie. | (3) They ara taken tothe field on| “When we reached home the doctor sponsible for the loss af a yery large tne grains themselves, if not treated. | was swinging leisurely in the ham- percentage of the crop, which some- | Knowing this, one can see that to be | mock. times amounts to fully one half of the | sure to be 1d of the Smut, he should, “ “Didn't you have a hurry call to an entire crop. Since this is so easily plant clean wheat on ground where | Bccident case or something 2 het and cheaply prevented, there is 0 Smut did not occur the year before, | sort” demanded the unsophisticate excuse fora farmer losing his wheator un 307 repitod the edie] oan, Daks from this trouble. tte i ‘Just ny old Swedish friend in New ‘The treatment consits in soaking Gotland PHONO! Co Le ot he coe the seed with a solution of the liquid | have 5 “loctie” Sagar in bio oar known as formalin or formaldhyde. | |< Yaneas City Star. It can be purchased from druggists by Addu : the pound in liquid form. In com- Corrected weekly by McKenzie & | mercial form it consists of forty per |g, ith. cent of formaldehyde in an aqueous or watery solution. It is a strong Wheat Smut | Certainly Some Drawbacks to the Profession, if This Incident ls Correctly Reported. and where no straw was spread from | a smutty crop. MARKET REPORT. Iron in Plants. Experiments are under way at the agricultyral bacteriological station in | 95-98¢ | Vienna to increase the quantity of | © on. | iron carried in certain plants, with a | 24-26¢ PAYING PRICE. : nt | Butter, per pound. ....... ici res > 7 t 3 germicide and preservative. One pin * i | of this solution in thirty gallons of E888, per doz 4 190 | View to the effect on the human . jestroy the Smut | Chickens, per pound.................. . | system when those plants are used water is enough to destroy : Country Side; per pound............ 14-16¢ | a5 food. Artificially prepared foods erms, and also the Scabgerms of po- : ang other kinds of germs, when | Shpls bien Dar Sh it comes in contact with them. } Daou cer, per pound..... “There are two methods of treat- ment: One consists in putting the grain into sacks, and setting this into | a barrel containing the thirty gallons | of water, with the pint of formaline | : solution in it. It should be lifted up| Corn, per bus containing iron do not always produce the desired effect, because the iron | | is not completely assimilated. This | f difficulty,, it is thought, may be by; Becker & avoided by causing plants to take up | an increased quantity of iron during | their natural growth. By adding SELLING PRICE. | hydrate of iron to the soil in which | it was growing, the experimenters | have succeeded in producing spinach containing a percentage of iron seven | times as great as that found in ordi- nary spinach. It is believed that the process will prove successful with other ferruginous plants, —e Corrected weekly Streng. i ai I ain | Wheat chop, per cwt contact with all the grain. The grain y : should then be emptied on the barn Corn fg su per cwt. home i floor on a clean spot, and spread thin groun essessensesnernasesisesns sesevese | i ¥ : d’’ per bbl. 5 65 d to dry, being shovel over | Flour, ‘Best on Recor 65 a om % 2 | “King of Minnesota’’ 60 per cent 7g; | i Dispensaries and Playgrounds, § 1ly. ps in - treated at any time be- patent, per barrel.................. 625 If more dispensaries were Jo give fore, sowing, if it is Kept clean after] ie eo re ei nang place to playgrounds, there might not be needed so many dispensaries.—St. treatment, but the best plan is to Largest of All Earth's Trees. Louis Times, treat it just before sowing, and if it A regiment of 1,000 men could read- does not get dry rapidly enough the Illy find shelter under a single banyan | : : lho ti tree. In India there is one of these! C drying can be hastened by dusting a n 5 | driv 3. onsen > little slaked lime over it. The best oes Soc BES 240 main trunks and | hE Lo 14 eX Pil g plan, however, is to dry it by opening | » 8. | ro CHL AND BLADDEP HESE few cool nights are but harbingers of the longfcold winter ahead of us. Heavy bedding’is being hunted up and put to use —and how comfortable it feels, : TI Ae fT Se iy SE so 2 fovea gestions below if your stock is low —the best values we can too. We offer a few sug BLANKETS _ on JEWEL—finest all-wool, five pounds, 70x80, in white, with pink or blue border—for $10 00 offer at the money. thatspare bed ....... = Pre aa sith Lagi — | ALASK A—all-wool soft finished, 66x80, large assortment of colors... .. Tha . $550 ECLIPSE —white, all-wool, in pink or blue borders .............. A ae eas $3 50 ¥ WOOLNAPS—the blanket of reputation. Our assortment includes all thelbest numbers * In greys, tans, plaids and white, all with finished silk edges— $1 15 to $3 00 in full sizes, at prices from .......... ...... cirieiv. oh Cotton Blankets GARNER—in grey or white heavy nap, 64x80 ..... .... tea. 51.50 = TROY —60x76, tan, grey, or white, colored borders.... ...... $1 25 qi GARLAND—grey only—good weight, 60x76... ..... $e. 51 00 —l GULL—{for single beds, 46x74, berdered.. ........... . Bic ny GEM—40x68—grey with colored borders ........... ......... 50¢ mo SINGLE COMFORTABLES—66x78, wool finish, pink or blue borders.. .... ..... i BATH ROBES—uncut, with cord, 72x88, wool finish, navy blue... ....... "... 00. $2 50 = CRIB ROBES—plain colors with figure, pink or-blue .... i. OSH 50c A B C, CIRCUS, JUNGLE, BUNNIE, BO PEEP CRIB ROBES...... ....... ...... 75¢ KRINKLEDOWN ROBES—pink and white, or biueandwhite.... ......... ... : ah... $1.75 CAPP’S INDIAN BLANKETS—genuine Indian blanket, woven by Sioux Indians, $8 50 alkwool ............ .. ...... = $2.00 WARRIOR ROBES—cotton Indian blankets, striking patterns, suitable for auto robes, couch covers, ete Big assortment “of Comforts, from plain silkalene covered, carded cotton fillings, to silk covered wool fillings in pinks, blues, lavenders and combinations, at $1.00 to $5.50 HARTLEY, CLUTTON CO., The Womens Store Hartley Block Meyersdale, Pa. By shoveling the grain 2 the drawbacks to the medical profes- | should be further delay. + structed to proceed at once. . cal attention to the fact that the | ularity of the autumn sport OAYS PENNSY 15 Judge Elkin Scores State For Its Slowness IN ADDRESS ON GOOD ROADS Need the Roads for This Generation, ! He Says, and Not Fifty Years From Now. (By our special Harrisburg correspondent.) Harrisburg, Pa. Remarkable Address. Speaking at length amd out of the fullness of his experience and from his observation, Justice John P. Elkin, former legislator and attorney gener- al, student of men and affairs, striick the keynote of the campaign for good roads in Pennsylvania in a remarkable address before the Good Roads con- vention at the capitol. He declared that Pennsylvania had slumbered while her more enterpris- ing sisters had built highways and that now the people of the Keystone state want roads, desiring that they be built without delay. Speaking about previous efforts to obtain good roads in Pennsylvania, Justice Elkin said: “If we had acted promptly in 1889, as we should have done, we would now be enjoying the benefits of a completed system of highways. We have the opportunity of doing now what we failed to do then. Shall we do it or shall be wait ten, fifteen or twenty years longer? No one has giv- en a single valid reason why there “This is not a political question in any partican sense. It matters not whether ru are Republicans, Pro- gressives, Democrats, Prohibitionists, or what our party affiliations may be, so fr as the question of good roads is concerned. The citizens of the comr -vealth are entitled to’good roads without regard to their political faith.” The ad’ress was given before the good roads congress at which time a resolution to the people of Penn- sylvania was adopted, in which the association commits to the favorable consideration of the voters the pro- posed amendment ‘to the constitution to permit the state to issue bonds not exceeding $50.000,000 for the construec- | ‘BACK NUMBER : i RESOLVED, THAT THE SOONER YoU LEARN To DEAL WITH US, THESOONER YOU'LL LEARN To GET THE RIGHT STUFF AND SAVE MONEY. BUSTER BROWN. IT’S ARITHMETIC To DEAL WITH US. WE WILL SAVE YOU MONEY. WE WILL SELL YoU THE BEST QUALITY FOR THE PRICE ASKED BY MANY FOR INFERIOR GOODS. WE SELL ONLY REPUTABLE FURNITURE, CARPETS: JWALL PA- PER AND MUSICAL GOODS, SEWING 'MACHINE.S AND PAINTS, IF YOU ARE IN NEED oF ANY oF To SHOW GooDs. : COME TO THE FAIR NEXT WEEK AND MAKE OUR STORE YOUR HEADQUARTERS. BOTH PHONES, FUNERAL DIRECTORS AND EMBALMER S$. QUICK AND EFFICIENT SERVICE RENDERED. R. REICH & SON, 130 Centre Street. Funeral Directors and Embalmers. All Telephones, tion of highways. THESE GooD.s, COME AND LooK. No TROUBLE Ir Will Enforce Hunters’ Act. : State game officials plan to begin enforcement of the hunters’ license act of 1913 at once and hunters found without the license papers and tags will be arrested. Fifteen days have been given tc hunters to procure the licenses from the treasurers of the IMPAIR MEN TAL FACULTIES N counties in which they reside and Dr. Joseph Kalbfus, secretary of the state game commission, says that the game Protectors and state police will be in- ‘The state game commission has law allows owners or tenants residing upon and cultivating land to hunt upon that land without securing ‘a license and to hunt on adjacent land with permission. It is estimated that thousands of licenses have been issued, the first shipment of blanks and licenses amounting to about 1,000 for each county. : New Rate. Election officers should be paid for the primaries under the new act of the assembly which fixes their com- pensation at $5 a day, according to a decision by Judge Frazer of the Alle- gheny county court. Some time ago Auditor General A. W. Powell asked the attorney general HEADACHES #ND SHOULD 0! BE ALLOWED 7D B:COME CHRO IC. If troubled with headache, nervousness, ‘dizziness, watery ‘eyes, inflamed e, es, aching eye. balls, pain in the temples, pain on top and back of head—many other eye defects too numerous to mention—should you have any of the above symptoms do not neglect your eyes, call and see us, Consult M. D. GOLDSTEIN, EYESIGHT SPECIALIST. At Collins’ Drug Store, Hartley Block, of is ene owner on Tuesday, October 7, 1918, cers at $5 would apply to this pri- mary. The department ruled that as the officers were elected before the Dassage of the law, their pay could not be increased. This would have meant that each election officer would have been paid $1.25, the amount allowed by the old primary act. A Pittsbarger filed a bill in equity to restrain the commissioners and county controller from paying the $5 rate. The cad#® was argued before Judge Frazer, who decided in favor of the $5 rate. His decision reads: “Whatever restriction there may be upon the power of the legislature to change the pay of election officers for their services at elections provided by the constitution, the prohibition of the constitution does not apply to a case where a new duty of holding primaries is imposed upon the persons who have been elected ag election of- ficers, and therefore the act above mentioned (1913) determines their compensation,” e Women to Hunt. Scores of women have taken out hunters’ licenses in the counties of the state sinee the issuance began at the offices of the treasurers of the va- ious counties ten days ago, and a num- ber of treasurers have reported that in many cases wives have accom- panied their husbands to the offices and secured their cards and tags at the same time. This licensing of wom- en as hunters has been on a greater scale than expected and state game officials say that is illustrates the pop- From 8:30 A. M. to 5 P. M. Remember I visit Meyersdale at Collins’ Drug Store very two weeks and guarantee all my work and will make all necessary corrections and change lenses free of charge anytime. Assesses STSCTSTCEESSEEE v The Style Book v I'he Style Boo \W \v/ Hart, Schaffner & Marx Fall Style Book is \W out. -You ought to be sure of seeing this book ; WV and when you do, you ought to go through it I) carefully to know what the correct styles for men WV are to be. If you don’t see a copy of this remark- \W able book soon, let us know and we’ll see that you \ / get one. v Our Gents’ Furnishing Department W never'was so complete as v right now. W Vv HARTLEY & BALDWIN W The Home of Hart, Shaffer & Marx Clothes, WV rm Ce Slr hl NM en ll «all an fa br in; tir no th E. Clk Mi ent he: eye -anc tO s Sout distr issue Th Fran ty pi Leal fowr dale, Albe Leve and tion | The Grant pasto be de Servi noon to be ing, c as a mont who const prove ance and kb invite NEW Miss and M Very s nery s last tb stock to do | next d store. popula busine: