e KFurrow nd Views About the Farm UTES 1920-21 will hnd continue ree sessions sly, starting and Lacka bk. The pro- until carly be the rule ing sessions it has been attendances THE BUGS ts that win- that can be plowed now. he land lay er as to to penetrate. ome good but is done by the he pupal cells e wintering. ion on insect 5 write to the t of Agricul ndustry, Har- sO ['ROLS LEAF CURL me to spray curl is in the es have fal- reasons for me, the most ht the spores Fe all on the hd buds and fn have suffi- ng the win- welling, the scales, after prevent their oping leaves oncentrated as for San information eases write ustry, Penn- Agriculture, AY Correspond- Agriculture, field of po- ion County >» more on unsprayed. d and the Te couttty ESS bF APPLES must cases ir ap- the andle heen the nia ur- fted he grower whose reputation is known to the "wholesale trade. This con- dition has been brought about by the fact that in the past, growers have been prone to pack their apples care- the top of the barrel or box and ne- glecting the middle asd bottom of the package entirely. As a corrective message, the Bureau of Markets is having apples in many sections of the State graded and packed and it is believed tha* the grading and pasking regulations, if promulgated and made permanent, will do much toward securing a per- manent place for Pennsylvanip apples on the wholesale market. SEEK TO STOP SALE OF SPOILED FOODSTUFFS The Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture is endeavoring to inter- est officials of the United States Army and Navy in preventing the sale, to the public of Pennsylvania, of food- stuffs unfit for human consumption. Under an opinion from the attorney general’s department, the Bureau of Foods, Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture, cannot prevent the army or navy from disposing of these spoiled stores, when they are sold as being unfit for food The Bureau, however, can prose- cute wholesalers or retailers who of- fer the goods for sale and this has already been done in the case of a number of Philadelphia dealers who offered for sale candy that was ran- cid and wormy. The government holds large stores of candy and other stuffs at Gray's Ferry and other points in Pennsyl- vania. This staff has been held so long that much of it is unfit for food. The government, in selling it has plainly marked it as being unfit for human food, yet unscrupulous men have purchased the stuff and offered it to the public as being fit for food. The co-operation of the army and navy has been sought by Director Foust of the Bureau of Foods and an effort will be made to effectually pre- vent this stuff from reaching the pub- lic. . 1921 DOG LICENSE TAGS ARE AVAILABLE NOW If you own a dog that will be more | than six months old on Jaruary 15, 1921, get a license tag . Get the tag at once and save the and rush of waiting until the last minute. confusion vania Department of Agriculture to the dog owners of the State. The | Dog Law of ws that all dogs mugtbedicense: 1 or hefore the 15th | day of January of each year. The county commissioners of the | sixty-seven cov~ ‘ies of the State have been supplied with the 1921 liceuse | tags and the ccunty treasurers now in a position to issue the licenses. are | In the meantime, special agents of | the Department are continuing to as- sist in the rounding up of delinquent dog owners who have failed to take | out a license for 1920 and many prose- cutions are planned for the remainder of November and December. But if you are a dog owper and | have paid your 1920 tax, seucre your | 1921 tag and license immediatly and | be on the safe side. Dogs unlicensed | on January 15, 1921, will be regarded | as outlaws and may be killed, while | the owners are liable to fine or m- | prisonment. | ess it to keep the dining Even the nt use, be- ith even a nickel is than to bh less re- r copper cleaning you must then do polishing fing dish, need real yith nickel \ powders, | and rub | | pany. ’ 1e visitor laimed in nder per- hlk on the red. You bir study.” a bit sad- ou see, I el a child 2 f 0 ave Short Hours are Best | to Dr. Hayes’ office. Philadelphia—A more for his employer in an eight- | hour day than on a 12-hour schedule, earn as much money, do better work, be more cheerful, and have more time for recreation. man can produce | These views which sound like a trade union declaration were ex- pressed by Robert W. Wolf, vice president of the American Soeiety of Mechanical Engineers, in a speech in this city. Mr .West presented his conclusions on the basis of a 16-year record of | results attained by substituting the | eight hour day for the 12 hour sys- tem, particularly in the pulp industry; beginning in 1904 with the Fenimore | mill of the Union Bag and Paper Com- In changing to three shifts the | workers were paid the same rates for | eight hours they had been getting for 12, and in return they had increased not only their total output but its uniform quality, said Mr. Wolf. Enough A little lad who wanted a small brother was told by his mother to pray for one, and this he did until hope and patience were alike ex- hausted. Not long after, however, he calledgitno his mother’s bedroom Lg three tiny baby brothers kame cradle. time the little fellow he heaved a sigh of re- he remarked ® se I hadn’t stopped solemly, pray | ded to the | speak. | properly | year. | of | justments. { : : | ordinary flu patients, who | able to afford relief. Prince of Spain Saves His Throne The State Journal includes a special page featuring the marvelous restora- tion of the sense of hearing to Prince Don Jaime, son of King Alphonso and Queen Victoria of Spain and heir to the Spanish throne . The prince was born deaf, caused by the queen mother witnessing the horrors of a bull fight, in which the matedor was killed by being impaled on the horns of the vicious animal. The tragedy occurred glmot at the feet of the queen, who sprang back in terror, almost falling abckward, which eventually proved to be the cause of the misfortune to her unborn abbe, twisting its neck and paralyzing the auditory nerve. Don Jaime is now twelve years Of age and has had the advantage of examina- tions and treatment by the greatest specialists throughout the world and the most eminent physicians and sur- geons of all Europe and America were baffled in their efforts to cure this scion of a noble house—a future king. And then—after twelve years —years of anxiety and mental suffer- ing, during which the wealth of a kingdom aws lavishly spent for help, a marvelous thing happened. The boy’s hearing has been restored and also the power of speech. The cure was not accomplished by the distin- guished physicians and surgeons whose services had been sought from all parts of the world during the inter- ral of twelve years. It aws left for an obscure practitioner of London, who made its his business to cure diseases whoch had baffled medical science, and who accomplished his cures by correcting displacements of the spine, or what is known as “spinal adjustments.” The prince had been pronounced in- curable, but as his chances to even- tually become king of Spain depend- ed on the removal of his affliction, it was decided, as a last resort, to try out the new treatment. The London healer diagnosed the case and immed- iately discovered what all the regu- lar doctors had overlooked—that two of the joints of the” prince’s back- bone had been displaced, causing pres- sure on the great nerves to the ear and paralyzing them. This displace- ment was corrected by the Chiroprac- tic method of spinal adjustments and true to the diagnosis, the boy's hear- ras restored and he soon respon- efforts to teach him to ing one and feature This case is a notable worthy of the space of a page in a great Sunday newspaper, but it may | it | being performed This is the advice of the Pennsyl- | known as work is midst, not be generally should be that SO this same right in in Broken Bow, if you please, and our | people whom we know, as neighbors af- and the cured of up vCLepy being if written and friends, are flictions, which, featured would | space of a number of pages of Sun- day papers for every Sunday in the Dr. L. C. Hayes of this city, who is well known by the profession of the foremost chiropractics State, is daily performing the method of spinal ad- These cases range from are seek- ing quick relief, to the most compli- cated ailments to which the human system is heir to. Rheumatics, who have tried everything and failed, stomach troubles, liver, heart, lungs and kidneys respond to this treatment of the spine, and the incurables, peo- ple who have been tuberculosis, goitre, deafness, epileptics, paralysis, asthma, the blond, and a long list of other diseases and ailments, from which the science of medicine has been un- As a last resort and with perhaps the last hope seem- ingly gone, the patient finds his way A diagnosis is made and an examination of the spi- as one the cures by [ nal column tells the doctor just what | teh ailment is, the cause, and the ad- | justment of the deplaced vertebrae, | which have caused a pressure on the nerves that lead from the brain to the affected parts of the body, re- moves the cause and a curd is ef- fected in a very large percentage of cases. Fevers and sickness o fall ordinary | kinds, as well as insomnia and ner- | vous troubles, | and that bugbear of the present day, are quickly relieved | appendicitis, comes under the list of quick relief and permanent cure, from the chiropractor’s method of spinal | adjustments. The cure of a prince, from faraway { Spain, of a hopeless ailment which | blighted his life, and by a scientific treatment that is in its infancy com- pared with the age old science of | medicine, which failed to give relief, | is heralded over the world as one of the miracle wonders of the age. Current Buns for Children The historic custom of giving chil- dren of the old Cinque Port town of Sandwich a huge currant bun was observed at St. Bartholomew’s Church the other day. Close Call “It wag” a near thing, but I made iD ”” e operation, you mean a2 another 24 hours the gerecovered without BS. Would You Give Up Hobo’s Liie for $40,000--- “Hank” Sticks to Free Life St. Paul, Minn.—"Income Hank” has just gone west, stretched flat on the top of a passenger coach, convinced that he can’t give up the life of a hobo for $40,000. “Income Hank” out on the road, he is Henry Inbusch of the Milwaukee Inbusches a ewalthy and established family, when he’s at home. Jut “Income Hank” isn’t at home very much—just a half hour in the last three years, he has spent in Mil- waukee. Awd since his first adventure, when as a boy fresh from graduation at St. John’s Military Academy he first rode the rods to the north woods, he has traveled a matter of 79,000 miles without the railroads ever being the richer for it. Decided to Quit A month ago “Income Hank”-—he hears that name out on the road be- ause of the small bequest his family sends regularly whenever he supplies address—decided to abandon the road. He obtained a position in the Bur- lington yards in St. Paul—as a car inspector. He remarks he ought to know about box cars, having ridden for a matter of 17 years. The other night when he crawled up over the vestibules as of old to the top of the going out passenger, he had given up any such notion of re- formation. With it he had given up any expectation of receiving the $40,- 000 which is to come to him, provided he has stopped his wandering by the an a bt in them time he is 40. He Isn't 40 Yet “Income H isn't 40 But he was convinced as he slid up the “deck” of that passenger he couldn’t quit. He knew that the road, the box car and the rods have him, and that he never will abandom them whether he likes it or not. “There fine pictures and fine rugs in my old home. There always were. But I never enjoyed them, even as a small boy. And now—I guess I'm 1” ank yet. open are better in a box car.” The Inbusch family has representa- as high officials in Milwaukee and distilleries. He's Real Hobo “Income Hank” is a hobo. about that. tramp, or tives banks Please make no mistake He is not bum a bundle stiff, or even a seissorbill. These lat- ter are established professions, to be a or a sure. A hobo, however, is just a bit higher according to a social scale, Now a bundle stiff his while in the Henry. bundle travels without A secissorbill always walks, “counts to speak technically. A bum his way and a tramp not only arries on back, a hobo luggage. ties,” begs but steals occasionally. At least that’s the lexicon road as furnished by “Income Hank.” He works occasionally when he needs money, that is, when the mood is upon him, and between times he travels. Indeed, he travels far and wide. He's got to travel. It is in his blood. And that’s why. »an’t quit, even even for $40,000. begs of the “Income Hank” Boys and Gitls Do Good Work on the Farm Mt. Morris.—Livingston County boys and girls who have done junior project work in garden, crop and poultry projects, are daily complet- ing their record books and sending them in to the county leader of junior extension, Bruce W. Emerson, at his office in this village. They are en- which is awarded to them on the com- pletign of their project work. This achievement emblem is of the four- leaf clover design and is awarded State Bankers’ Association. Boys’ and girls’ club work has been plang for the coming year are being formulated by the Livingston County of representatives of Association, Pomona Grange, district superintendents of schools, Bureau Association, county board of tions. It is planned to have several community exhibits of junior project work throughout the county this fall. The first of these will take place at the Taylor school house in Caledonia the latter part of this month. At this time the boys and girls will bring in their calves, pigs, poultry, garden and crop products and a regular com- munity day program will be put on. n Expert “Are you a skilled chauffeur?” “Yes sir! collisions and run over five persons, i and every time I got away before any- | body could get my number!” The first lamp having an air cham- ber was invented $y a Swiss, Jules | sible to | linens | standing near to watch or prod. through the courtesy of the New York | a success in.Livingston County and | $ : ’ > moves as if on greased wheels. Putting Things, Off Procrastination is certainly bent on the theft of time, not only yours and" mine, but everybodie’'s. It all comes about by leaving things undone until we want to go somewhere, when there is a mad rush which could have been avoided if just bit of foresight had been used. Heated arguments in the bosom of the family, late trains, and that half- ready felling that takes the joy out of life, could all have been avoided. When we get home from our sum- | mer vacations we know every weak | spot in our baggage. We are familiar with its poor locks, inefficient straps, | hte multiplicity of useless trays, the | back-breaking weight of suitcases, | cheap, bu a of broken trunk | castors, dilapitated hat boxes, and | all the rest of it.that spells trouble. | We empty our traveling receptacles | | | roomy and send them downstairs or upstairs for the packing the winter, and then forget. In y are brought back for | their weaknesses, half- and forth again, and so nper, It is almost impos- get a repair man for these | thihgs in a hurry, and our old wor-| ries begin. How much better is to have all | the repairs made before storing the | baggage, when all of the deficiencies are fresh in our minds! Then we can rest easily and work expeditiously | when next the commodities are | needed. Keys should all be tagged. | Trunks and bags should be marked, | and a list kept of what is stored in them. All bathing paraphernalia should be sarefully washed and mended, to be | ready when wanted. All regular vacation stuff that changes but little from year to year should be cared for in the same way, | and anything lacking should be listed | for spring shopping days, instead of | being left until haste and clistering | heat make shopping an awful task. | When men’s clothing needs pressing and repairing, why wait until the last spring the and forgotten, s does our t | | | of the week when everyone is rushed, | and the work likely to be poorly done? Jegin in time. Fresh collars, cuffs and shields are needed often in tailoredsuits, so don’t wait until it is time to go out before replacing them, then madly tear around and stir up. the entire famlly. | Do it now! Like mistress, like maid! You cannot help who get into you have set the eample. One woman never thought abnut filling lamps until it began to get dark, then she had to get a candle | Another | with if quarrel slack ways her to see how to do the work. woman never mended small tears in until had “worth then if rent felt something.” not jetiers she a while,” she said she as had The answer If we could have she “done having time | thread- old story of friendly counted written Taxes should be placed on the in- they my is to bare. we the time we waste reams. dividual’s loss of time, and if high how we would begin economizing that | were enough to scare us, we now waste! how which It all love to watch others work. A man digging | a hole in the street will have such an | audience in a that the | police, if not too busy watching, will | have to interfere and move it on. If we have servants working for us the temptation is to stop and see how tehy take hold. There are few of us women who treat employes as men do —put them to work with definite in- structions, then fire them if they don’t suit. If we did that we should soon have better and more competent ser- vice, for most of them know enough to obey directions. When they are not put on their mettle they lose in- terest on the job. This same idea works all along the line of household endeavor and makes hard work out of misdirected tasks that should slip by without a ripple. It would be an eye-opener to many of us where we go behind the scenes of one of the monster modern theatre permormance, is astonishing we short time production during a and see how every one has a task for which he is responsible, and nobody Cach employe knows if he doesn’t do his the minute, the whole fall. Silence, expedi- | efficiency—and all | | part on may own structure tion, patience, Our lives should be just so balanced board of junior extension, made up | then there would be time for every- the Bankers’ | thing and nothing would be left un-| | done. Farm | ‘A Dangerous Answer sipervisors and county fair associa- | Why, I've been in nine | | ‘weather will be upon you at any dav. 8 ! cannot be bought at these prices anywhere else in the | country. / “What,” asked the lawyer of the expert witness, “leads you to conclude that the crazy?’ Well, for expert, “he’s a golf player and talks defendant in this case is one thing,” replied the nothing but golf.” “Hold on,” interrupted the judge, “I'm going to have that 1 play golf myself.”— answer stricken out. Detroit Free Press. NIGHT GOWNS now, the cold These gowns Flannette night gowns Buy your flannel gown 54 in, wide 74 in., long at$1.85. an © ther heavier quality out of scotch flannel same si 5. We also sell these gowns in extra size 56 in., wide 85 in., long for 50cts., additional. These gowns come in Blue & Pink stripe. On receipt of money order or check or we will send | as | serge in a | der | red leather belt. | with | short | scarlet | in several [and { duced | that | of | cloth | is | yoke, | sleeves and sailor collar. [ tailor’s me C. 0. D. i . ADELPHIA MFG., CO. \ - 206 So., 231d. St. PhiladhIphia, Pa. Fashion Notes No radical change has become mani- fest in the designing clothes. of children’s Loong straight lines generally main- tain though one observes a little more skirt fullness, both at awistline and at the hem. This is especially true for frocks of serge, where the girdle confines the gathers or plaits. It rather amusing to observe how juve- nile styles follow the subtle tenden- cies of adult modes. The increased length is shown by the drop to the is knees, which is only practical and/ comfortable for winter. Greater fullness, even a bouftant effect, permitted for the festive party frocks of frosty tissues of satin and panne velvet in delicate tones, which is being utilized for one- piece frocks and wraps, besides irre- sistable pokes and picture hats. The greatest boom and standby of the school wardrobe the year round is the practical one-piece frock. It has solved the vexed problem of more than one perplexed mother who found her hopeful eternally outgrowing her clothes. Such may be made a little large without being unbecoming and receiving the observant usually details. is even dresses always criticism from who is regarding wearer, quite keen such The one-piece frocks of this season carry a dapper well-cut air. Many of them are as beautifully tailored and carefully No for mother’s may be winter than In fact, designed better selection autumn and desirable quality. as wear. made | serge swings in with all the seasons of the year. Some of these new medel are designed in one-piece from shoul- to hem; tions with gathered placed under ther belt. Navy blue stitched with in two plaited self-matching others are sec- or skirt a or lea- is most charming of serge scarlet piping and a narrow, glazed A model of this de- had fienly plaited four rows of silk about hem. sleeves were trimming. section, several rows silks or scription a skirt the four- The circular neckline and their the is cut inch treated to Sometimes long or short, battlements the bodice scallops or having rows of simple running | stitching done in contrasting worsted. Duvetyn and wool jersey are de- signed in this manner, and in the more dressy models are embroidered in silks treatment frequently and intro- deeply- wools for border which the pointed V-neckline The little in one-piece dresses besides the vest panels, are for center, with cunning gilet is shown hand embroidered, matching the cuffs on the sleeves. One the latter blue combined v darl desirable usually is of dark tan type Ww and em- broidered in » silk. An alway) f SCNool moael linen, having a laid and of serge 01 deep in three or with portion back, long This 1ATTOW four box plaits fron model braid carries is trimmed with lines of rule, well-fitting or embroidered, and, as 1 marks, a straight, | belt and a’ sailor's scarf-tie. In linen, serge or twilled goods such end organdie a frock will give no of service. White and broidered collars and cuffs enliven the The or colored and em- necklines are square pointed, U The double flat-shaped collars opening on the shoulders are seen on many cloths, darker models. circular. crepe de chine and even velvet frocks. Handsome Irish crochet collars are again introduced for children, prefer- ably of type and flat, circular styles. the bodice the small, sailor collar For short- waisted at the sides where the skirt is gathered, pre- serving a plain panel effect for the front. Blocks and circles of contrast ine material and color are appliqued with a blanket buttonhole stitch. Silk and velvet are applied to cloth. Gay smocks are also worn in plain dressier frocks, a is suggested or and figured materials with dark skirts and leather belts. Shepherd and Scotch plaids are attractively de- Both styles main- checks signed for dresses and coats. the yoked and one-piece for in heavy duvetyn, Some tain coats storm serge, velveteen, silvertone and of the models feature the high choker col- that be tweed, cheviot. new coat lars, others the shawl may i adjusted according to the fancy of the wearer. A Great Favor yeti doodoa$ fdg2wlofg “You know Jack Carter ” “Oh, yes.” “What “Jack? met!” “He seemed to be all right, but I don’t know him so well, and before lending him the $100 he has asked me for, I thought I'd just inquire a bit.” ' «Jack has asked you for $100?” “Yes.” “Well, as a great personal favor to me, I'll ask that you let him have it." “Favor to you? How so?” “Well, Jack owes me $50, and if you lend him $100 and I tackle him before he has. a chance to get rid of it, there will be almost an even chance that he will settle up with me.” ” is he? fellow sort Finest you ever According to estimates of the fuel administration, the amount of natural gas wasted in the United States in 1919 was equivalent to $1,200,000,000 orth of artificial city gas. What is Wrong With the Color Scheme That people are physically and mentally affected by colors is a scien- tific fact recently under discussion in medical journals because of experi- ments in the use of colored lighting for the treatment of certain ailments. It is said, for example, that certain colors are just as irritating to the of many people as is the sound of a saw being sharpened, ac- cording to the Ne wYork Herald. The stimulating effect of a red flag on a bull is well known, but the fact that bright red handkerchiefs are used by some trainers to stimulate athletes, especially long distance runners, has been much of a secret. nerves The same line of experiments have shown that scarlet colorings have a beneficial effect on indilent children; that blue is magnetic, soothing and conducive to mental concentration; blue and violet in combination helo- ful in cases of insomnia, while head- aches yield to mauve, violet and green. Special exhibits demonstrating the effects of color lighting were a feature of the exposition opening in Grand Central Palace on October 6th. given, such as the prospective effect on a wild, raving husband of substi- tuting a blue lampshade in the living room for the purple and orange shade, which has subconsciously driven him from home. When he becomes a quiet stay-at-home, the use of a com- bination of blue, mauve and medium red is likely to lead to a desire on his part to take wifey to the theatre, etc. Life Saved By Massage of the Heart annual electrical Here suggestions were Never give up a case of apparent death under an an anaesthetic hope- until of the heart and its various accessories has been given a fair trial. Such advice of the Lancet (London), in summing up an article by Dr. Lionel Norbury on the subject of cardiac massage. Heart failure under anaesthetic is less common than it used to be. In . 1911 276 such deaths were reported in Great Britain, but in 1917 and 1918 in all the military hospitals of the British Isles there were only 136. The method employed is to cut a hole the diaphragm, through the diaphragm or in the walls of the chest, the hand and gently massage the heart while arti- ficial respiration until the pulsations. less massage is the either below insert is being performed, organ resumes its normal { Comparisons said the woman whose motor car had run down a man, “you been walking very am careful driver. I have been driving a car for seven ” “You know,” must have care- lessly. 1 a very years. “Lady, you've got nothing on me. I've been walking for 54 years.”—De- troit News. Deep Laid Plot “Mother and the wearing my oldest and Sunday,” said “That's economy. “I think it’s diplomacy. If they an keep me looking shabby they know I won’t have the nerve to show up at any of their parties.”—Wash- ington. Star. Recoid The Port of London Authority, says the New York Herald, is supposed to the largest cat fancier jn London pays $2500 feed The money goes for cats’ meat, girls insist on my clothes every day Mr. Cumrox. ” Cat Fancier be and a year to its pets. and fight is fed to mousers who rats and mice that the docks and warehouses. the meat the army of infest There is a regular feeding time for cats, the middle of the They not given enough to dull their appetites for rats and / mouse these about day. are fare. OUR WEEKLY LETTER Will keep you informed from time to time of developments likely to affect ket action of securities in which u are interested This letter is a very important part of our statistical service, and we be- lieve you would find it of great as- sistance in making your commitments, To secure it regulary each week, it is only necessary to drop a postal card to Desk P. 15 with a request for same, and your name will_be placed on our mailing list. PRICE, GUARD & CO. 430 Widener Building Philadelphia. Pa. Locust 5316-7-8-9 Race 5117-8 New York Office—32 Broadway Direat Wires to all Mar Ps