— iia JOR btarts | hnd | [Anam The Lehigh Valley ( announced that it will accounting department because of scarcity of | ers, i Peter Tye, a bank el Carmel, wearing an the right knee, fell i broke the real leg aboy on roconnty commission uri. lution of th mploy- + Is for $10.840.80 tor boarding 57 pris oners from this co y in 1917 Ehent problem in § i Co Dr. Daniel Bohn © Alinonn. Sv thi plete unity and the ixteently member « he birnfesstanat efforts of the fedg that city to respond te he Wern aopartment of fal and | ment's call for physician Te will ge mnittee v for to Fort Oglethorpe Gia this week committee of A} He was formerly president of the Blair Pennsyvivania has lected, County Homeopathic Medical Society according to ant Phitadelphia wong with other coming ld indi- | ent in the ni ub Lauds, has bey ith the Williamsport h doul feder govergment nine months. Eighty per cen i farm dents are women fittin 1 hor for government clerical TT! vg are Yoiare By this plan the United HY en hi nNan a a pioyment ervice, the state wloy a A um int service and the civilian service Arn Ce and labor division of the Commitiee od feiy will work s through the special war bureau, whici the of each weel fuel. night and together to aid Public Uli and WV, Martin railroad : y Peter labor suppiying Pete : flour of Pennsylvania heen in operation on y Labi ; bourse as i sub-bureau of the federal | refed Ina hotel at Alte ypwment service since lust Martin called Garretts ; wd the latter farm station in the bourse his adversary. La Lerenfter be conducted by a branch oi R : i 1 onder t 1 » police ancieamated services under the con. rend red to the police. : 1 ‘Brevi Kas ni two trol of kl. CC. Felton, who s been C'orevino Kase i, t of | Came to Mount Carmel t« rtment federal direct od by the : ay federal ent for Pennsylvania, also head of the Public Safety Couunit- service in Austria, tf employ- eel : elton 1s Hed at der a heavy fall of coal a tee's civilian service and labor depart- went, : tion has decided that The federal-s » far smploviner The foderaiginte farm evplopitent | Shursdays tll the mid buen is the title given to this agen- . Rd oranit ; i 1 afternoon and cevenipy { and it will handle all the farm la- V5 ' od SE . light may be saved. bor work of the federal, state and if Hn a eaanel ha i 1 NOrristoy council i Safety Committee services. Its work hy : : i 8 + ? 3 1's ution wotesting ) iil be interstate in character, and 'eSUTHHON Sh ' Service Commission tne hy Jersey and Delaware farmers i i 1 crease of fare from J will ve aided as readily as Pennsylva- to tr the Reading ‘i The Fire Company of farmers, : : ambulance of » the i'elton has named Bernard lL. Pottsto 1 ment, and » centralizing, co- 1 Up the frozen springs and npring and perative scheine The recent cold nea hich he has ma exactly whae the | eral suspension of ice amd the PY business organi- the Willimmsport section 0 ie de from the outset.” fact that the {ice has foi thickness that it is imposs dle it. The intensely Chambersburg has caused | Hund | died because of the frig of 1 ion desiring labor 4 uunicate with the (rin employment loor, 2 in cold wei live stock. reds o Hore. an aimant’s home sur- have been as sani- to recovery from calves and colts have died state because it was impe the stables enough to save ry cannot be urged | COWS and horses ave repor part of an employ- | P¢€ ished from the zero wen nsation claim | ¢hickens had to be killed board in dismiss- | [Tost bitten feet und legs. embers of the S » Penn Coal Com- the 0m claim of ? Bow ration of L local xd a r from the i News o caused a sti of a buildings contr, intends with eoal and with the state in the present limited ) provements to | hand the Lebanon ci N n nt once, it | derided to clos th conference. be- I an indefinite tin Lynch. su- ne Killed off. county's "GVemeits, south of Sunbury have i ers for a total of $ ing culm washed on their la ‘alnut to North, make plans for | Kis work, 4 se of the government's call trained typists and clerk Pennsylvania ¢ “robbing pillars.” He was harvesting then. ior ULE HTH HE ‘onl hire girls at Hazleton | male bookkeep Compan for newly organized pay roll branch of it e the knee, shat (LLLUETE CLUTTER LE ETT TTS PENNSYLVANIA BRIEFS — a - - -— r- ae - - = he erk of Mount artificial leg below the ice and \ \ any Hav Work tering the artificial limb at the same ip time, Munitions the | "Ihe cost of living in the Western | Bureau Wi Penitentiary of Pennsylvania has gone Offici up 23 per cert, according to a bil) : presented by the penitentiary to the ers, The bill 5, the enroll ic schools at in the ed t. of stu x themselves sitions, Liquor Deal patriot in n ils hotels, on erson sur nts uil nd rock. 1 ie of wt heat Tw Thursday to conserve light The Norristown Merchants’ Associa- stores be closed March and lopted a Ss au ado] proposed mpany. y (tood Will wn averaged Streains, used a zgen- wing to ned such a ible to iwther about wean vy losses fi sible to heat ted to have ther, Man) because of hot They d have ob- ternational fire fighters 1 municipal fulfillment school equce dent of par .thracite mine workers’ leaders The council ordered them not to work ui e an anpropria- nours a day, the widening of Owners of river islands ten 1 mine o crop ruin- nus, Public in- to 6 cents Mrankel, who has been a volunteer < : b : ! % n Y v i hott a call for each day of last year. \ ther od ie station In bourse ; : Dynes Hiatt i 5a 1 ' 1 eu Charles J. Hengen, one of the oldest ince last April, to take ch: of the y : : : : 2 pn i : A : | clerks in Norristown post office, has WG peraive bureatl. iLike . + Vira ry : a f tt ily i been transferred to ie military post 0 ne Ol . ' ' ¥ AACE, oflice at Newport News, Per n the class of 19106 and i } od d vear cl 5s of the Uni I'he Chester County t Seliool last spring to serve | has boosted prices 10 cents per thou- (lie bourse bureau. He has had ex- | sand fee i SnR 1 t ving A new farm school for 30 boy pupils ich ounlitie exceptionally foi to Le opened on the Jo bie on : farm of 127 acres, adjoining the St, WwW 1 Y | 'aul's Church, at Glen! 1 ir. It NY 1 1 of which . tn i witl lor the third time i ( FD aa YA Messick Dros, men's 101 3 1 1 1 ( Lin ” : ' LN : 3! hester have en ro Ad, tc} time ¢ endl 1 of the de- ' : 1 \ losing 51,0600 woitthh 0 ols nent ol dad td st wit . : } irs Ww 1519 A sStroot. {Phil \ hen Comptroller Ro 1 . . [Chester county Hu Sh : Ee anne al ome bills of ipulying aciivigies of the {ederal- Me wi : feiy Committee service will he | 27 i | : the On. 0 ils ill co a ; : \ | the « i Pk { Ih » Wit { ro the an foi ae oS] fe wl ue y : 3 n\ v i of ag ho is located ! ni tl, represe La nN y Coin 5 1 : tive plant at Ihels | \ | ' ol got fi « i ) 1 Wy Ol : 4 11 i S i Folie | t ait, : : IN ien by the Ww} Bates ¢ thisisoner of hmi- A . ; ' ow of] J. Steuber to g b o old viion, and peri fownsend ? : . : i 1 prices, 10 cents for a shave 1d 0 hie willingness » Wolk out a cen > : | cents for a haircut. em hese official have lispluved a Thirteen inch ice has en | 1 est unselfish spirit thoy are ae- | from the Juniata river Hy { On Uhselisi Ss] 3 ¢ 2 ql solely by the ~ » make rhe | ce dealers, Gum and other Inb8e sunnlyvinge activi- Special courses in gas engine and of this section of efiicient as possi- | tract operation will be given this rep : < . vinta 1 » ' » (oll 1¢ ‘armers, le. The business ofganizations which | vinterat the te Le Lor : . he ater \\ Sheran- ve heen co-opergging with the fed- I'he watel e \ Sh have tire lence in -Houlr has been undergoing was gre elton, the nefioderal director of | relieved by the mild we: ther opening one, who mili- stantly ry while "| height a wide spaced fence with com- WIRE FENCE BEST [It Must Be Built to Turn All Stock | Without Injury. | TWO QUALITIES ARE NEEDED | | | To Be Economical It Must Be Con- | structed as Cheaply as Is Consis. { tent With Durability—Weight Fixes Price. | (Prepared by the United States Depart- ment of Agriculture.) A good job to attend to between the busy seasons is the building and re- oairing of fences. A farm fence should combine the two qualities of service | and economy. To give satisfactory | service it must be constructed so as to turn all kinds of stock without in- jury to them. To be economical it nust be built as cheaply as is consis- tent with durability. The fence that I's erected at a low initial cost is not necessarily economical, for it may be | short lived. Wire fences are very generally re- placing those of stone, wood, and hedge wherever the latter are becom- | 'ng unserviceable. In selecting a wov- sn-wire fence, it is preferable to eco- | | nomize by eliminating unnecessary | wires rather than by using a lighter | weight wire. In pastures where only *attle or horses are to be kept there | Is no need of providing a fence the spacing in which is close enough to turn hogs. Weight Determines Cost. The factor which determines the price of woven wire fencing is its | weight, so that in fences of the same paratively few wires costs less than a narrow spaced one with more wires. On the other hand, it is becoming gen- erally recognized that the use of heavy | wire in fencing is economical. The initial cost of the heavy wire is great- er, but its durabllity is more than sufli- cient to offset this disadvantage. The | labor and other costs in the construc- | tlon of a fence are practically the same whether a heavy or a light grade of wire is used, but with heavy wire the fence lasts so much longer that | this cost of construction is distributed ! over a much longer time. That this is appreciated by a majority of farmers | is indicated by the increase in the percentage of heavy wire that is being sold for fencing purposes. [ Common Type of Fence. For the general farm on which all kinds of stock are kept, and on which the rotations practiced call for tempo- ‘ary pastures, the common type of fence now being adopted in the north cenfral states is one which has ap- proximately ten line wires and a tota! height of about four feet. The bottom wires are spaced about three inches Such a fence constructed from No. 9 wire with a strand of barbed » on the top, Osage orange, locust, apart. all rod cedar, steel, or cement line post: sci a rod apart, and ends and braces | of the same materials as for the linc posts at distances of 40 rods, is now being built on many farms and is proving serviceable and economical usefulness is when its long period of | Bunch of Finished Feeders. | { considered. Such a fence is | | will crowd his land with shacks t C Re g ria 1 his land with shacks, pu aly durable and should us finally finishes out with the greatest | up by the cheapest builder he ean find, | itolv (OD Tania weight, and yields the highest percent | ,; ...° Voie 4 24 mately 22 years. [ wel I So eee highest percent | 4 ,¢ adding to the ugliness of the city | age of p 3 beef, : : | ts 3 ! a / 4 tena thas | | and its dangers, physical and moral, | i br sop n selecting feeders, re is per : : CCRN FOR A GIVEN LOCALITY oS id 8, (there. i8 | *'| Or, he will build apartment houses Utd \ wAkli © haps no point more important thar ; : ht = Nan oy © | with no architectural beauty, and still | : the back. A wide, straight, strong | further handicap the future Tacob | Farmer Must Be Familiar With Pre- | back, with a well sprung rib, is essen Rii : r al Avi hi ee vhcon | 8 AE V § f S ess | g use sav that his ne exneri- | vailing Conditions Before He Can | tinal. The girth of the steer should be SHS nsed 0 Ayu arg long por i Ve { . ence had led him to the point where | Judge Properly. [ large—that i%, the distance around the | : : i | 5 £ ’ he could affirm with positive assur- | al : 3 body back of the shoulder should be! ance, “Thus saith the Lord, thou shalt | The best ear of corn for a given 10- | yo [voc a8 nossible. This mesns more | A7C% “Thus suith the Lord, thou shalt ; ia. + Se tha wil ive Haas : : $350 ‘| have but one family under one roof.!” lity is the ear that will give the | .,0m for vital organs and insures a ’ test profit year after year if plant- | patter constitution than is otherwise | To M ick Wall od that locality. We must be fa- [likely to prevail. Associated alsc 2 ° TION IY ails. miliar with the conditions prevailing | with a large girth is a well-sprung rib fae x for rough ; : V { arg 1 v ; 5 od alig ie sod r ni in a locality before we can properly | making a wide back on which there is prick walis is used hy tho United 3 "OTT " g wlitv ‘he aT id ra © | ‘States government far painting light- judge corn for that locality. The A Ste 1 g \* painting lig ; : ¥ ( > e0siti viii arge | : re 1 | room for the dep on « 1 large | houses. t effectunily prevents sample of corn which is best for Mis- sourl or southern Iowa should net be planted at all in Minnesota or the Da- kotas. Millions of dollars have been | 1 i fe d t largest quantity of high-priced meat. i LAY BLAME FCR POOR Wrong Selection of Seed Often Named | desired, | with corn where much trash lays bur CJ O CJ O 0) J (J (J CJ QO 0) OJ) J) O QO O) O) O POTATOES FOR SHOW Dig when the ground is dry. Let potatoes lie on the ground long enough to dry thoroughly and to toughen the skin, Carefully wrap each tuber sep- arately in paper, Place in shallow one-layer boxes and store in a dark cool place, Take out just before time to send the tubers to the show. | Clean them with a soft brush removing every particle of the the dirt, Avold pressure in order not to injure the tubers. | Do not wash; tubers wilt if washed and have an unnatural sheen, Pick out a model of the type, size, color and eyes of the va= riety to be exhibited. Make the rest of the lot a9 nearly like this model as possi- t” ble. | | bloom and being free from all blemishes of all sorts. Wrap in soft paper and pack |} 0 that they will not jostle or ! jar in being shipped. — A. W. Aamodt, Potato Specialist, Uni- C | versity Farm, St. Paul, [ Butcher Wants Animal That Will De. liver Highest Percentage of Good Cuts—Good Points. | 0000000000 | SELECTION OF FEED CATTLE] The block is the supreme and final test of the beef animal. The butcher desires an animal that will deliver the highest percentage of good cuts, and | penditure of a | Ihe. COSS, [LLP + CITY MANAGER PLAN SUCCESS San Jose Executive Tells Common. wealth Club He Is Well Pleased With the Experiment, “San Jose Is a bully city and being manager of It Is a bully job,” said | v . : | Thomas Harrison Reed, city manager | of San | address to the members of the Com- Jose at the conclusion of his monwealth club at one of the club's | weekly luncheons at the Palace hotel. His topic was, City Manager.” Reed sald his experience has con- “Eight Months as a | vinced him that the city manager ex- See that the skin is clean, smooth and free from sunburn, periment Is a success. He said San . : roy Q andies Y For "YW having a desirable luster and ¢§ | J0S¢ was handicapped for money on | [recount of a dollar limit tax and be- cause 15 cents of the dollar went for | ledueation alone, “You must look for economy of ex- limited income,” said “If he can take a little and make it go a long way and do more than | Ibefore, T think we are entitled to suc- The plan Is right and reasona- \ | } | | [ite and if it is not a success it will {be due to personal defects in the man- | ager.” Reed explained in detail his work of reorganization of the different city departments, - | [chief of police because the chief “did | Inot co-operate and was not responsive { {to the new standard required, which He said he removed the was efficiency only.” He said when he became city man- show refinement. in parts that are not | lager, San Jose was suffering from the edible, in order to reduce waste ! “inefliciency, slovenliness and care- Fineness of bone, lack of paunchiness | lless administration of the old system,” and a small head are thus desired by wherein the “give and take” of pol- the butchers, but the steer with light | ities was the standard. Now, Reed bone, small paunch and a frail head | lsays, he doesn’t care if a policeman, would be unable to go through the | feeding period and make economical gains, Even though the strong, vigorous rapacious feeder may not turn out af the finish into the exact ideal of the | butcher, he is the one that puts on the and steadiest gains, endures heavy feeding for the longest time 1g iC | } 1 t | IS | There n chest and s also greater depth of CROPS || [el] When Preparation of Soil Is | the mixture to produce the color. If Really the Trouble. | a very light color is desired, lime may nnn | be used with the cement and sand. It is not well to blame crop fail- | C ire on a wrong selection of when the preparation of the field is | ir o often the cause. A field planted ¢! »d will too often prove to be nothing Ise than placing the grains among ead and dry vegetable matter under There they have no moist- Ww he ground. Ww theless he “liked the job” proud of the way things were pro- gressing. three one part; oughly. {color, dark or seed. | gredients well mixed together, In apply- diately with prevents the bricks gives time for the ¢ fireman or employee of the department [of public works is.a Democrat or a ‘Republican, and is not interested in this origin, creed or affiliations pro- I''vided he is efficient. He said being a ‘ity manager exposed one to criticism ind made it necessary to fight not mly enemies but also friends, never and was INFLUENCE OF REALTY MEN Dealer's Point. of View May Be of Much Benefit to City or Town, Aacording to an Expert. Henry Turner Bailey, dean of the Jleveland School of Art, aroused wide comment by a recent address before he Cleveland real estate board. On ) . $i1 1 some architectural oddities—which he | mamed- { wstie, His uggestions were constructive as well his comment was ¢ i critical. Excerpts from the talk ollow : “The real estate man’s influence fupon the city’s future is immense. | 'Whether that influence is good or bad depends point of view. upon the real estate “If he has a narrowly se fish ideal he 1 of ‘fr ing through: Rosendale cement, clean, fine sand, water thor- This gives a gray or granite licht, according to the If brick color is Venetian red to 1eisture Take esh and of parts I , x with fresh lor of the cem add are must be taken to have all the in- 1e wall must be wet with r; then follow imme- cement ‘wash. This m absorbing the too rapidly, and to set. The ash must be well stirred during the 1g the v ean fresh ater from the ent man’s | [WE TOWN ure nor soil to hasten or cause ger- | application. The mixture is to be mination nor to support life; hence | made as thick as ean be applied con- Sn the work and seed both have been lost. | veniently with a whitewash brush, It { { The missing hill theory may be sup | is admirably suited for brickwork, Good Ears of Seed Corn. ported, partly, by this fact, and it | fonces, ete., but it cannot be uses to | seems very reasonable to believe it! gavantace over whitewash. lost by bringing corn from the South has something to do with it instead of en — and atte mpting to grow it in the North {laying the whole blame on something of wild. where it failed to mature. One of the | else. is no mis- | a, common Hisioies 2 selecting ret i ality, the | seed corn is to lay too much stress up- y -~ : 3 on one thing—forgetting all other feat- SOIL MOISTURE IS WEIGHT . | ures, some of which are of great im- | Tomirt—— : ® portance. A person will often Most important Factor in Crop Fro. © fe z fice everything to depth of kernel, size duction—Acts zs Food Substance . we : : { or length of ear, or place too much for the Plant. 0d ® stress upon straightness of rows, fill- = 5 | Ing out at the tip, space between rows, Soil moisture is the most important | : rs ete. All of which should be taken into yr in crop production. Water not | ! ! nt consideration, but are not the only as a food substance for the | ° nor even the most important ] rogen and oxygen, : ! s to be considered. tally concerned in the essen | ™O¢ a eee —— es both of the soil and of a, I Grain Eaten by Rodents. It serves a soil condi- : S ! hood she eaten and v ed by rats |ti a favorable physical S 1 St rs and mice on many farms, would pay lition—and regulates soil tempera- | ¥oite : : 3 Hl Iw 1k dl! 3 1 1 v all the farmer's taxes, There 1s more Catarrh in this pect! the country tham all other disens: together, and until the last few was supposed to be incurable, reat many years doctors pronoun ocal disease and prescribed local and by constantly fail) to ¢ with local treatment, pronounced It Ing able, Bclence has proven Catarrh to b constitutional disease, and therefore uires constitutional treatment. Hall atarrh Cure, manufactured by F, heney Co., Toledo, Ohlo, is the o nstitétional cure on the market. It <5 internally. It acts directly on th od and mucous surfaces of the system.) ey offer one hundred dollars for any! case it falls to cure. Bend for circulars and testimonials, ' Address: ¥, J. CHENEY & CO,, Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 76e. Take Hall's Family Pll" for constipation, More Proof. I Will you accept the advice of other citi gens of Lancaster County who tell wha: Pioneer Health Herbs has done for themi Mr. W. 8. Murr, Christiana, Pa., says: “ “Pioneer Health Herbs has given me a new stomach My trouble was Indigestior in its worst form. There was pain, gas and vomiting and my liver and boweh were inactive. Ploneer Health Herbe changed all. § can even eat boiled cabbage whereas before I could nos even take soup with cab My general health has never beer bege in it. better.” Mr. Frank E. Witmer, Lampeter, Pa., sayy since using Pioneer Health Herbs his bowely move like clock work. Mr. F. G. Slick, Ephrata, Pa., says he has enjoyed the best of hea!th for over {wo years all due to Pioneer Health Herbs, Nothing like Pioneer Health Herbs in al the world of medicine. Best for blood, stomach, bowels, liver, kidneys, constipa tion, rheumatism, catarrh and skin diseases. 200 Tablets $1.00 and 80 Tablets 50 cents. 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