Evening Republican, Volume 23, Number 218, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 9 September 1920 — Page 2

DATS BEST CROP

Statistics Show Advantages Over Com Growing. On Comparatively Cheap Land la Western Canada Farmers Get Reoerd Yields—Cost Per Acre Much Less Than Corn. r Bow much more does' It cost to grow an acre of corn than to grow an (acre of oatsf To get a proper comparison it is necessary to take an 11(lnstration from a farm on which both wropa are grown successfully. An example has Jnst been brought to the ’writer's attention of the comparative ■cost of growing corn and oats on a (Minnesota farm. It is furnished by lamer, a well-known farmer In (Cottonwood coonty, Minn.. In an ar(tide which appeared in the Cottonwood Cltlsen. Mr inmer says: “I had a curiosity •to know how much It would cost to {raise an acre of oats and corn. To t find out I kept account, during the 'year, of the time required and the 'cash expended to grow the above men'ttoned crops." His figures show that lit cost him *31.49 to grow an acre of 'coni and *18.131-3 to grow an acre of ioats, or a difference of *13.00 an acre >in favor of oats. Provided the respective crop yields are not altogether out of proportion to the cost of growing the crop, this seems to be a good argument In favor •of growing oats. But to grow .oats successfully It Is not necessary to use i*lso or *2OO land. In western Canada soma of the best oat-growing land In the world can bo bought for about *2O mn acre. On this land good yields and « high, quality of grain is obtainable. Fifty to slx£r bushels to the acre In properly prepared land la a fair average yield for oats In western Canada In a normal season bnt yields of up to 100 bushels an<J even more, to the acre have been frequent In good years. The quality of oats grown In westcim Canada is attested by the fact that at aB the International exhibitions for many years past oats grown tn western Canada have been awarded the leading prises. There Is on record cats grown In western Canada that have weighed as much as 48 pounds to the measured bushel, and the dominion grain Inspector Is authority for the statement that 85 per cent cf tire oats examined by him In western Canada weigh more than 42 pounds to the measured bushel. The standard weight for a bushel of oats :1a 84 pounds. Samples of these oats weighing opward of 45 pounds to the bushel are on exhibition at the Canadian government information bureau, located In various cities In the United States*— Advertisement

Proper Pride Necessary.

Pride, like laudanum and other pofsonoma medicines, ia beneficial in 'small, though injurious in large quantities. No man who la not pleased with himself, even In a personal sense, can please others.—Frederick Satinden.

Aqueous.

ghe—They say he is quite devoted ito aquatic sports. He —Yes, he drinks jHke a fish, you know.

Sure. Relief^ Sure Relief RE LL-ANS ! !■# FOR INDIGESTION

First in America iTRIWER*S American Elixir Bitter Wine Brought to die American market 30 years ago as die first Bitter Wine. It is still first mid second to none. Unsurpassed for poor appetite, headaches, constipation, flatulence and other stomach troubles. • * At all drug stores and tUalm m nudinnw. JOSEPH TRINER COMPANY •oMW-Irt ****** A^Ctb

Representatives of the United States government paid tribute to the French on Bastile day, July 14, by flying the trl-color over the White House and decorating graves of the French dead at Arlington cemetery. This ph ot <> graph shows Secretary of War Newton D. Baker placing flowers on the grave of Henri Coquelet Just beyond the headstone, a little to the right of it, is the dead soldier’s widow. Near the center of the group is Gen. Peyton G. March, U. S. A., chief of staff.

Navy to Stage Big Maneuvers

Atlantic and Pacific Fleets to Be Combined in Great Sea Spectacle. ADMIRAL WILSON IN COMMAND Not Intended to Concentrate All of Nation's War Strength and Only Vessels Regularly in Commission Will Participate. — Washington greatest concentration of sea power in the history of the American navy will result from the Junction of the reorganized Atlantic and Pacific fleets off the Pacific coast next January under plans now being prepared by naval officers. The great naval spectacle probably will be staged in the vicinity of the Gulf of Panama. Officials of the navy department say the proposed mobilization will In no sense result In “grand” maneuvers. No effort will be made to concentrate all of the nation’s naval strength and only ships regularly in commission with trained crews will participate. The exercises and drills will be simple and mainly of a competitive nature, including unofficial athletic competitions between representatives of the two fleets and of individual ships. Admiral Wilson Senior Officer. Admiral Henry B. Wilson, command-er-in-chief of the Atlantic fleet, will be senior officer of the combined force, with Admiral Hugh Rodman, chief of the Pacific fleet, second in command. The maneuvers will be unique in many respects, chiefly in that they will afford the first actual mobilization of the bulk of the new American navy. Before the war the forces were always more or less scattered and a shortage of several types of vessels, particularly of destroyers, submarines, light cruisers, aerial forces and fleet auxiliaries, made it impossible to concentrate a well rounded out fleet, although the major portion of the battleship force met each winter at Guantanamo, Cuba, for target practice and drills. During the war the shortage In most types of small vessels, notably destroyers and submarines, was overcome, but the entire fleet was never mobilized, due to the use of practically all light craft In the war zone, the detail of cruisers to escort duty and the fact that a considerable portion of the battleship force was on duty abroad much of the time.

Will Set New Mark. The .Tnnnuary maneuvers will set a new mark in American naval progress. For the first time in the history of the new navy the battleship fleet will be supported by a reasonably adequate number of destroyers and other light craft. Submarines will be available in abundance, together with sufficient naval aircraft for all tactical purposes and a fully rounded out fleet of auxiliary vessels. The total number of vessels to participate will depend on the progress of recruiting, as many ships are in reserve now for lack of crews, but it Is probable that Admiral Wilson will command «rt least 300 vessels of all types. The most modem of dreadnaughts to participate in the maneuvers will be the great Tennessee. The last word In naval construction, this great floating fortress displaces 32,000 tons, carries 12 14-inch guns and is propelled by electric turbines. The Tennessee Is attached to the Atlantic fleet. A sister ship, the California, probably will not be completed in time to Join Admiral Rodman’s forces before the maneuvers. A comparison of the ships available for next winter’s maneuvers with the naval strength available for a similar concentration ten years ago affords some striking contrasts. January X, 1910, the flatest battleship in the navy was the New Hampshire, authorized Sy congress In 1004, and completed in 1008. A comparison of the New Hampshire and the Tennessee follows: New ITampahlre—Length, 450 feet; breadth, 79 feet; draft, 27 feat: die-

THE EVENING REPUBLICAN, RENSSELAER, INP.

Pay Tribute to French on Bastile Day

Junior'Red Cross School Children in Italy Make Colanders and Sieves. Collestrada, Italy.—The Junior Red Cross school at 'Collestrada, Italy, is making kitchen utensils from osiers and .withes to supply the countryside hardware that- it is impossible to buy from stamping mills in Italy since the war. Collestrada is in the heart of Umbria, where straw plaiting and osier weaving are two of the principal industries. The orphans at the Collestrada school make colanders and sieves and market baskets in sufficient quantities to furnish the neighboring villages. The reed receptacles are woven very tight and serve for flour sifting. This is an important utensil in a part of Italy where the flour is ground on hand grist mills and contains many coaree particles. Another method of making these sifters is to weave three •thicknesses of horsehair across a wooden hoop, which sifts as fine as the best articles manufactured with steel wire. vs J . > - The woven receptacles of Umbria are not exported from Italy this year because the country can use the entire output to replace those formerly madfe of metal by Italian stamp mills. Even the large output of the Junior Red Cross colony at Collestrada, which approximates a hundred paniers

placement, 17,700 tons; speed, 18 knots; main battery, four 12-lnch guns and eight 8-inch; second battery, 12 3-inch, four submerged torpedo tubes, 9-lnch armor. Propelled by triple expansion steam engines, developing 18,000 horsepower; crew, 1,250, including marines. Tennessee —Nlnteen hundred and twenty. Length, 600 feet; breadth, 97 feet; draft, 31 feet; displacement, 32,300 tons; speed (contract), 21 knots; main batter}’, twelve 14-inch guns; two submerged torpedo tubes; propelled by electric turbines, developing 28,000 horsepower; crew, 1,600 men, including marines. Eighteen Dreadnaughts Available. Eighteen single caliber gun ships classed as dreadnaughts will be available for the January maneuvers that were not completed In 1910. They have a combined displacement of 445,000 tons and a combined gun power of 112 14-ibch guns, eighty twelves, 226 5-lnch and twenty-eight 3-inch. A comparison of total battleship forces available In 1920 with 1910 shows that this year there are 18 dreadnaughts and 19 predreadnaughts, excluding the Oregon class, against 23 predreadnaughts In 1910, including the Oregon class. Most of the battleships listed as available in 1910 are now considered obsolete. Ten years ago the navy destroyer force consisted of about 38 vessels, including 17 torpedo boats, even then practically obsolete. This year Admirals Wilson and Rodman command destroyer forces aggregating more than

Straw Kitchen Utensils

First Man-Eating Shark of Year Caught in Potomac

Washington.—lt remained for the poor old Potomac river to furnish the first “man-eating shark’’ of the 1920 season. A local newspaper published a first page story of an eight and a half-foot wolf of the sea, caught at Plney Point, Md., which Is considerable distance up the Potomac, but where Oie water still is salt. A doctor in the fishing party, .according to the account, rer moved the shark’s teeth and presented them as souvenirs to the other members of the party. Piney Point is not a summer resort.

Pearl Instead of a Boil on Man’s Neck

Twenty years ago, James London of Clifton Heights, Pa., ate some oysters. • One of the bivalves had a pearl which Longen swallowed. He never gave the Incident a thought until a few days ago when he had severe pains in a small lump in his neck. Longen thought the lump a boll, so he squeezed It, and the pearl broke through the sfcin, ending Longen’s pains.

200 vessels, with over 100 more in reserve or under construction. In 1910 16 submarines were carried on the active list of the navy. This year nearly 100 of the submersibles are attached to the two fleets, with about 75 more under construction. Little Change in Cruiser Strength. The cruiser strength of the navy has shown little change in the last ten years. In 1910 the backbone of the cruiser force was the ‘‘big eight” armored cruisers, now reduced to six by the loss of the San Diego and the Memphis. No light cruisers of importance have been launched ln the last decade. One of the most striking increases In American naval strength In the last ten years has been in auxiliary vessels. Both the Atlantic and Pacific fleets now have well-organized and complete “trains” of hospital ships, supply boats, repair vessels, refrigerating ships, ammunition and fuel, ships, in addition to motor patrol vessels, submarine chasers, mine sweepers nnd mine layers, converted yachts, submarine and destroyer tenders and troop transports, practically undreamed of a decade ago.

and colanders each week, Is entirely absorbed by the needs of the nearest villages. The children learn to do the wofk in a short time, for the only exceptional skill required is in choosing the material carefully and soaking the splints and withes correctly.

NOTED GOLF CHAMPION

Abe Mitcholt one oi me most famous of English golfers and holder of the world's championship for man*

“ASPIRIN” WARNING! The name "Bayer” Is the thumbprint which identifies genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for 20 years and peoyed safe by mitlktns. SAFETY FIRSTI Accept only on "unbroken |»dc«se" of genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin," which contains proper directions for Headache, Earache, Toothache, Neuralgia, Colds, Rheumatism, Neuritis, Lumbago, and for pain generally. Strictly American! Handy tin boxes of 12 tablet* cost but a few cent*— Larger package#. lathe trademerfc of Bmyw ltonwfactare of Monomotlcsetd— Ur o t SsUorUossM

Heavy Traffic.

They seldom crowd the roads In northern Minnesota, but on our last tour, when we headed into a tamarack swamp and had to take our top off because of the low-hanging trees, we did feel a trifle uncertain about the route. “Do many cars travel this road T we asked some children who happened along. “Oh, yes,” came the proud reply: “lots of ’em. OAe came last year and one this year, an* now you’re here, tool”

Cuticura for Sore Hands. Soak hands on retiring In the hot suds of Cuticura Soap, dry and rub In Cuticura Ointment. Remove surplus Ointment with tissue paper. This is only one of thfc things Cuticura will do if Soap, Ointment and Talcum are used for all toilet purposes.—Adv.

WAS TO BE MORE YELLING

Safe to Say That Father's Prediction Turned Out to Be Absolutely Correct. The sweetly peaceful scene in the little sitting room was suddenly disturbed by a loud yell, and the honored guest sprang wildly from the chair into which he had Just sunk, while the daughter of the house felt her face grow pale. She had had hopes from this visit Alas, poor girl, were they to be blighted? But father took the matter—and his small son—firmly in hand. With a graceful apology he removed the bent pin from,the chair and the aforesaid small boy from the room. “Now, look here, Charles,” he said sternly, in the back yard, “why did you do it?” “It —It was an experiment father 1“ faltered the laddie. “An experiment!” snorted father. “The only man who has visited yonr poor sister for years, and yoij go and drive him away!” “Well, dad.” explained the boy, “he advertises that he is a painless dentist, an’ I wanted to find out if it was true, an* It wasn’t You should have heard him yeli?” “Yes,” was the father’s grim comment “And some one else is going tp hear you yell now?”

The Magic Distance.

Guest —You advertised a magnificent view. Proprietor—Yes, you can see three miles out at sea. * Love at first sig|it may be due to oversight.

Twenty Five Years of Success proves that the originator of Postum Cereal was building upon a sure foundation v when he devised this most famous of all cereal beverages. Where one used it in place of coffee, in the beginning, tens of thousands drink it today—and prefer it to coffee. Healthful, delightful to taste and satisfying to every one at table. Postum is now recognized as coffee’s one and only great competitor among those who delight in a coffee-like flavor. ... , _ [ S Sold everywhere by Grocer* Made by Postum Cereal Co., Inc. Battle Creek, Michigan

YOUNGSTER MADE WORD GOOD

Though, as It Turned Out It Was at the Coat of Bome Personal Discomfort Marshall, who iq five, lives in a flat building. He is a real boy and although he has a rear yard and a sand pile in which to play, his mother has more or less trouble keeping him off the streets. A neighbor saw him across the street one morning and the next day called his attention to the fact that he was oat of the zone mapped for him. He was one of the busy ones about a vegetable wagon. “Yes,” he said, “I had to get some sings." The next morning he asked his mother for the market basket He immediately disappeared and soon returned, accompanied by the vegetable man. In the basket wei*e three pounds of potatoes, a box of berries and two cantaloupes. Mother had to settle whether she needed the goods or not At any rate, Marshall made his word good with the neighbor that he had to get “some sings.” When quee* tioned by the same neighbor about hie shopping expedition he said: “Yea, and mother spanked me, too.”

And Yet It Was Tough!

A woman famous locally for he« ducks sold one to Brown, her neighbor. But it proved particularly tough, and as Brown had paid a big price for the bird be called on the vender without delay. “What do you mean by Imposing such a duck upon me, one of your neighbors?” he Inquired. “Why, was there anything wrong with it?” “Wrong! It wasn’t good at all!" “Well, it onght to have been," re* plied the dame. “It won the first prize at all the poultry shows for 11 years in succession!”

He Kept On.

“Why are you staking out a lot here, my man?” “Gonna live here.” “But you can’t live here. This is the great American desert It’s too dry." 1 1— “I can’t see that it’s any dryer here than anywhere else.”^—Louisville Cour-ier-Journal.

A Great improvement.

“Jim’s wife can make a tart answer.” “My wife is a lot better than that, for she can make a pie speak „for itself.” If a man itches for fame it probably keeps him scratching.