The Vernon Times, Volume 8, Number 18, Vernon, Jennings County, 7 November 1919 — Page 3
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"m i ...., , , I ; 1 ir x It s. fSL JLJk ic ft i 'jr Ir, : iri i v n --i arc borne ? j ij.., a, i p...;,::,- bv the ' ;iT1" ? t!" t s x. T'ti'v f.ufTer from b.tr.a h dr- n wnn, urn, I caring- : ,An l ii'.1-- ry Tirvs..? ar.d pain in top of head. If they ask their neighbor they will be r, to take a Favorite Prescription of Dr. Pierre' which ha been so well and favorably known for the past half century. Weak women should try it now. Don't wait! Today is the day to begin. Thia temperance tonic and nervine will Lrinj vim, vistor and vitality. Snd Ir. Pierce' InvaliV Ur,u, Ibiffalo, N. Y., 10 cent for fr. d v rf tablets. c"""- M u n c i c, In d. r ;-, " "When I had a se vere cold and was out of sort and rundown, I used Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. I only , used two bottles and the very hrt-t bottle , helped me. After Z. - Z using the two I did not require anv more. This gives me faith in it as a re. ;!.;. and r-ii'jm" buiJiSmp i.p rnedieine." Mis. John Cuiiiirkirs;, CIS 11 Seventh St. Nw .P-arsy, Ir J "I use! Dr. Pierce's Favorite I'r--rri j tior. when I had severe nervous headaches. I found that tho medicine improved my general health and madii my nervousness much less, and, in tim, I was relieved of all the nervous troubles, I have always been u'.ad I used 'Favorite FrppertptSon' and cheerfully recommend it 1o any woman who ne'ds the Ie3t woman's tonic." Mrs. Henry Strack. 4 W ii E 1 1 g Vanicrrc". Alrth! Get 0 IlkatlbiaW l, 3 7S Mulutan AruM. Cnicaso. Agreed. "Vt want mure honest men in politics," ex laiined the reformer. "That's ri;ht," nu'reed the practical politician. "The more linnet men wo have in politics the les peMt ics v ill cost." ISNGl'HEI-IS . KIDNEYS PURIFIES BLOOD Ton can't expect weak kidneys to filter the ncida and poisons out of your pystein rralcsa they are given a little help Don't allow tiicm to become diseased whin a little attention now will prevent it. Don't try to cheat nature. Ar soon as you commence to have 1nriH hes, feel nervous and tired. GET IH "SY". These are usually warnings that your kidneys are not working properly. Do r,ot delay a minute. Go after the cause of your ailments or you may find yourself iu the rrin of Jin incurable diacr.se. COLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil capsules will pive almost immediate relief from kidney troubles. GOLD MEDAL Ilnarhm Oil Capsules will d the work. Thev are the pure original llasr! ;.i Oil (Capsules imported direct from the laloratories in Ilaarlem, Holland, t Ask your druggist for GOLD IE1AIj find accept no pabstitutes. Look for the came v;OLD MEDAL oa every box. Throe sizes, sealed packages. Money refunded if they do not quickly help you. -Adv. Sure of It. "Is thai lovely color of Mws Ella's her nn;" "Ve indeed. She always pays eab when she irot it." State of Ohio, City of Toledo, Lucas County sa. Frank J. Cheney makes oath that bo is senior partner of l:e itrni of K. J. Cheney fe Co., doini,r busisvess in the City of Toledo, Countv and Stale aforesaid, and that .nid firm will the sum of OX10 HUN DRED DOLLARS for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured bv the use oX HALLS CATARRH MKD1C1N1-:. FRANK J. CHENEY". Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this ith day of December, a. d. 1!-.;. t?eal A. TV. treason, Notarv Public. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE is taken internally and acts through the Blood en the Mucous surfaces of the System. F. J. Chenev t- Co., Toledo, Ohio. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. The Vrong Expert. "My doe for sent tno to a dietician to build tip." "Why didn't ho wnd von to an architect?" A Lady cf Distinction. Is recognlr.ed by the delicate fasc?nat lug Influence of the perfume she uses. A bath with Cuticura Soap and hot water to thoroughly cleanse the pores, followed by a dusting with Cuticura Talcum Powdor usually means a clear, sweet, healthy tkin. Adv. It takes two to make a bargain, but both of Vm seldom get stink. IlU by's little dresses will just simply darzl j If lied Cross Dall Dlue I? used ia the laundry. Try It and see for yourself. At all good grecers, 5c. A gentleman is one who has no business in world. Punch. ftr jr. f f.-Jlt ml IZrtrc'.c. ryes. U Cry lire, Pxh. 1 4 I :r.-rt cr Y cm, il Cere, Jfi .luK.-t.-t ,, . c , ,.'ri"t - -i -
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r-t w t ffl :i '; :l W i.. 4 W Hi 14 til 'it sit i lilt w jtiyiiut4 iil ilwttw LU Learn L'cre About Serious Dsscaoa cf Wheat. 1:0 SATisfASToav osimiei Dest Obtainable Seed ShcuSd Ce Used and Thoroushly Cleaned and Treated by Formaldehyde Method Clean Up Waste Places. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) Investigations arc In progress by the United States department of cgrlcul ture, ia co-operation with u number of state experiment stations and individ ual farmccs, to learn more about wheat scab and methods of controlling it. No entirely satisfactory control of this disease has been developed, be cause the scab fungi develop on so many different kinds of grains and grasses and on cornstalks, stubble. straw and other trash. Two things, however, are regarded as important. First, the best wheat obtainable should be used for seed. This should be thoroughly cleaned and treated by the formaldehyde method recommended for the prevention of smut. Second, this wheat should be sown on thoroughly plowed land land where the old cornstalks, wheat stubble and grass straw have been entirely plowed under. This can be accomplished by use of a drag chain. All grass and straw should be burned or otherwise removed from hedges, fence rows, fence corners and nearby waste places. These waste places should be either plowed or burned off. Wheat Scab Takes Heavy Tell. Winter wheat everywhere east of the Great Plains was heavily infected with scab this year. Spring wheat also suffered greatly and many spring wheat fields were left uncut, due chiefly to the ravages of scab. The states suffering the greatest losses of both spring and winter wheat include Missouri, Iowa, South Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia, North Carolina, Kentucky and Tennessee. This disease of wheat is caused by several different fungi which attack the crop at various stages of development. The seedlings are blighted, the roots rotted and the plants weakened to such an extent that they are winter-killed. The heads are blighted, the diseased parts die and prevent the formation of well-filled kernels. The head blight is the most evident and in most cases causes the most damage. Wheat S -4 A A Group of Healthy Grain en Left, Compared With a Group of Badly Infected on Right. from fields with only a moderate scab infection is light in weight and, therefore, grades as No. 3 or lower. Tlie farmer, then, not only loses from a reduction in yield, but from a lowering of the grade as well. Scab Fungus Attacks Cent. Of those fungijknown to cause scab la wheat the most Important one also attacks corn. One of the ways it lives over winter is on the decaying cornstalks left on the ground in the fields. Wheat is often sown on the corn land with these cornstalks left on the surface. The following season the fungus spreads from the infected cornstalks to the wheat heads and causes blighting. In addition to wheat and corn, the disease attacks rye, oats, barley and many grasses. The scab fungi also live over winter on the infected stubble and decaying straw left on top of the ground, and on infected grass stems left around the edges of the field. These fungi spread from" this material to the next season's crop. Prevent Winter Killing. It is a common practice in seme sections of the winter wheat belt to spread straw on the winter wheat after the ground is frozen, in order to hold the snow. Clean straw from winter wheat i--prep.il oa the fields lab In the winter, after the ground is frozen, Is not dangerous in spreading scab to the next year's crop. This straw holds the snow and moisture and prevents Use plants front being broken by the wind. When pi owed under the next summer it adds humus to the soil, Turn the stock into the straw piles from the badly diseased wheat and spread the manure on the ground the following year. Such straw should never be spread cn the fields, for it is sure ta czvrj eczb into next years
GIVE CLCYZC YIELD
ft tt m 1 wm t , j i t 1 n I ( , t I j ink) Dcc:ra'!a Ttiat Star. u' 3 Mzo Every Chanso to Ccrr.z Through. In fdany Sections Application cf Lima Will Benefit Crop Farmers Will Find It Profitable to Make Best Preparation. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) Both red and alsike clover seed were harvested end largely threshed early in October. The fields seeded this spring are the ones from which clover bay and clover seed will be taken next year, and in view of the fact that clover seed is scarce and high priced It Is desirable that the stands this fall be given every possible chance to coma through the winter in good shape, say specialists in the states relations service. A light top dressing with manure, where this can be done, will be helpful, and will be best applied after freezing weather sets in. The young plants should not be pastured too close, nor should they be allowed to bloom and make seed. It the plants come y v 1. ."3"-' .:. . Knee High In Clover. into bloom, they should be clipped early. A height cf four to six inches, just before going into the winter, i3 the most favorable condition. The preparation of the land on which red clover is to be seeded next spring should be considered this fall. In most parts of Iowa and Illinois, the application cf lime will benefit red clover. Oa some lands it is absolutely essential for a good stand. Lime is best applied when the land is being prepared for wheat. An application of two tons of fine-ground limestone is commonly enough, although on badly run-down land or cn land known to be very sour, three tons per acre may be applied with profit. Clover also needs phosphates, and 200 to C50 pounds per acre should be drilled in with the wheat. Eoth wheat and clover will benefit. "Red clover seed Is likely to remain high-priced for a 3-ear or two at least, and farmers will find it profitable to devote all the care necessary to preparing their land so as to give the clover crop every possible chance. PLANT HARDVOGD'TREE SEED Mulch Around Young Trees Will Furnish Ample Protection From Severe Winter Weather. In raising hardwoods from seeds, species having soft, unprotected seeds, such as elms and soft maples, sho-uld bo planted as soon as the seeds fall. The bard, nutlike seeds from such trees as oaks, hickories, walnuts, butternuts, should be gathered in the fall, buried cither in sand In the cellar or in well-drained sandy soil outside, and planted in the spring just as soon as they are taken out of the sand. The seeds can be planted in garden rows, spacing the seeds about six inches apart, or with a dibble the nuts can be planted in specially prepared spots where the trees are to remain. Soft, delicate seeds, like the elm. however, should be planted in the garden and transplanted after they are two years old. A mulch around the young trees will furnish good protection for the winter. Young trees should be trimmed from the vtart, in order to give the best growth and shape. PROPER STORAGE FOR OfliQfiS Loose Skins, Dirt and Decaying Specimens Should Ce RemovedVentilation Impcrtart. Before onions are put In storage or on the market, they should be screened to remove loose skins, dirt and soft or decaying specimens. Onions In storage require plenty of ventilation. For this reason they must be stored in small quantities where there is a cool temperature and dryness. The bulbs should be spread cut several inches deep on slat raclis or placed in crates. Because cf the difficulty experienced in ventilating them thoroughly, bags or bins are not" so satisfactory. In special storage houses the temperature is kept as coed as possible, safely above the freezing point. Whore cnloss are not used until spring, they are sometimes allowed to freeze hard and then covered with a heavy layer of straw cr hay to prevent them from thawing until late winter or early sprinf. Pennsylvania State College.
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Application cf Better Elethcds Hat Done More to Help Than Greater Number cf Fowls. (Prepared by the United States Depart ment of Agriculture.) Poultry production icreased 5 to 20 per cent in 1D17 and 191S in Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa, Minnesota, North Dakota and South Dakota, which comprise district No. 3 of the emergency extension poultry work being conducted by the United States depart ment of agriculture. Efficiency in poul try management through the application of better methods, advocated by poultry specialists of the department and state colleges, has done more to Increase production than the keeping of a greater number of fowls, says the department's representative in this district. In the culling campaign In one - I T i ,. M Good Uniform Flock of Chickens. state enough money was saved to farmers by disposing of 200,000 slacker hens to more than pay the expenses Incurred for all of the extension work carried on In that state, and this culling work was only a part of the extension enterprise. It was the one campaign wherein results were immediate, however, and it also afforded a definite basis upon which to estimate and tabulate the financial saving. The "better poultry" and "early hatch" campaigns were of even greater importance, and the saving and conservation of food through the "preserve eggs" and the "infertile egg" campaigns runs well up' into the hundreds of thousands of dollars the representatives report. More stress is now being placed upon the educational features of poultry work to insure greater efficiency in management. The farmer or poultry raiser will not be content in the future with an average egg yield of six or seven dozen for each hen, when it is known that the average yield should be from nine to twelve dozen. INSPECT SHIPMENTS OF EGGS Federal Food Inspectors of Department of Agriculture Watch for Violations of Law. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) Interstate shipments of eggs are being watched closely during the hot months by federal food inspectors of the department of agriculture, in order that appropriate action may be taken when such shipments violate the law. Shipments containing eggs which have yolks stuck to the shell, moldy eggs, black spots, mixed rots, addled eggs, and any other eggs which are fill by. decomposed or putrid, are in violation of the lav,'. Careful candling before shipment will enable dealers to eliminate the bad eggs. The elimination of the spoiled or partially spoiled eggs before shipment not only removes the hazard of violating federal and state food laws, but it is economical in that it saves shipping charges on eggs likely to be rejected at place of receipt. A number of states have laws or regulations specifically requiring the candling of all eggs placed on sale. Directions as to how to candle eggs, as well as information regarding the best methods of packing, shipping and storing eggs, will be sent upon request to the United States department of agriculture, Washington. Provide roosts and dropping boards. Keep bens free from lice and the house free from mites. Always handle ducks and geese by the necks, never by the wings or legs which are not strong enough to serve as handles. An angry old goose will sometimes strike with her wings hard enough to break a man's arm, and care should be taken when handling geese. Old fowls do not need much corn or cornmeal during hot weather, but a certain amount should be fed to make a fairly well-balanced ration. Cull out and kill all weaklings and deformed specimens among the chicks, so as to stop their feed bill and give their room to more protiiislng youngsters.
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YOUR COLD IS EASED AFTER THE FIRST DOSE uPzpfs Cold Compound" than breaks up a cold in a few hours Relief comes Instantlr. A dos t.tkpn
every two hours until three doses are taken usually breaks up a severe cold and ends all the grippe misery. The very first dose opens your clogged-up nostrils and the air passages in the bead, stops nose running, relieves the headache, dullness, feverishness, sneezing, soreness and stiffness. Don't stay steffed-up! Quit blowing and snuffling! Clear your congested head ! Nothing else in the world gives such prompt relief as "Pape's Cold Compound." which costs only a few cents at any drug store. It acts without assistance, tastes nice, contains no quinine Insist upon Pape's! Adv. Too Much Enthusiasm. Wifey Henry, do you think me an angel? Hubby Why, certainly, my dear; I'm very enthusiastic. I think all women are angels! "You needn't be so enthusiastic as nil that !" ASPIRin FOR HEADACHE f fere a "Bayer" is cn Genuine Aspirin say Bayer Insist on "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" in a "Bayer package," containing proper directions for Ileadache, Colds, Pain, Neuralgia, Lumbago, and Rheumatism. Name "Bayer" means genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for nineteen years. Handy tin toxes of 12 tablets cost few cents. Aspirin is trade mark o Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid. Adv. Retrousse. He Good-day. Where are you going? She Though it's no business of yours I am following my nose! He Oh, I see! You are going tip in the lift? BIFF! Stop jolting Liver and Bowels with violent drugs, but take "CascaFets." "Dynamiting" bile out of your system with calomel and other sickening purgatives is all wrong. Salts, Oil, and Cathartic Waters act by flooding the bowels with the digestive juices which are vital to the stomach. Cascarets are different. They act as a tonic to the bowel muscles, which is the only sensible way to relieve a bilious attack, a sour, acid stomach, or constipated bowels. There is no griping or inconvenience. You naturally return to regularity and cheerfulness. Cascarets cost very little and they work while you sleep. Adv. When subjected to severe knocks a soft stone falls to pieces; a hard one takes on polish. Net Contents 15Tluid Drar hr 1 l!jH .hNtKV'j -j t I ALCQiiQL-GrcnczNr. r ? Tjicrctn'rrorriotirDIiw' 1 I m Sef i and rcverishress . c , : Loss or Six..? , C;n, . T-7.ccxn.cni
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1 fm, tluiliibu ill w Ji Lilb v I T, n f r.ft v,;, n- jc,, vt p-,-neo, .... Corrected His Trcul!?. Geo. Dunninr, ex-Ch'.ct V - . Mate of the 1J. S. Navy, 473 't-rl St., Somervilie, M says: "Ev- rv , l it cf trouble I fu;rere! fnm r v k 1neya was a rcfult of expesur." ..: v I was rctirf d pra.-ticaliy aa 1 11. -.'. I. My kidneys LeciiH' nori f irrcgujar ad the time a.l some night I h f-r-d to get tip every U,-ll l-::r. The k i I ney s -c rt ; i- n burned like fire and t-ro fiL'ed with 1 ricH-d:,'i-IAc sediment. My jomiIa swelled and were t " 'ai-.cd. I couldn't bend c vt r to ' lace my fV.oea ;..ti !. f O V Is f 1 c il :n I ,4 f J 'A iJ. fc.down. Bicht af-r 1 retiif from servioe I trie 1 (if-; ir5-rt r, 1 was turre 1 don 1- v.v of kitrouble. I l--m l -z DoriV i; . nay Pills tnd i. .2 trfo 1 oxfs. that time cn' si ) of kidr.-v tret.! I loll me and r:r 1 its was 1 I r,1 cot fn arte or p-."-i !'it. I tiicJ r insurance atr-tn f-.l t- '.- 'tre" ,1 good risk. I --.ve D-r.'s Ki . t , cred.t fcr puttm me in perfect l.e .hh." Eulscrilted and sworn to Cifac ne. oeoroi: l. DonniiTY. , ......liciary Public. Get Dkt' at Any Store. C3c a Cos DOAN'S ry filif FOSTrS-liIlUH?l CC BUFFALO, fl. V. r U tut U dt St wsod by r Lt EATON IC. the wonderful mori vtomach remedy, rive ou tjultfi rIIr from distustlr.j twichlrsg, 'iod-repeattnf , inillKestiori, bloated, sassy itomach, dyrpep. xia. heartburn and other stomach miserSe Thy are all caused by Arid-ionirrti f r-ma which about Kin peoil out of ten aufer in ona way or another. On writ's as follow: "Befora I vsri K ATOXIC. I could nat eat a bite without belebintf it rishl up. and bitter- I have not had a b.t cf tronbt at nee the first tablet." Million are victim" cf Aeid-Ktomfe without knowing it. They are weaic nd ailing-, have poor digestion, bodlea Improperly nourished although they may eat hear -lly. Orave iisordr nr likely to follow it an acid-stomach Ja neglected. Cirrhosis of the liver, intestinal congestion, (rawtrltia, catarrh of the itomach theia are only a few of the many ailmenta often caused tsii Acid-Ktomacb. A auiTerer from Catarrh of tb Slorrmeb cf 11 yeara' atandlng write: "I bad catssrr of the atomaoh for 11 lonff yeara n f I n'vr found aDythiriff to lo me any pood juet terapor-iry relief until 1 used ISATONIC. it la a wonderful remedy and I do not want t be without it." If yoa are not feellr.fr qu!t? rtffht !. en-rcy and enthusiasm and Uon't knew )'' whers to locate the trouble try HAIOMO and see how much better you will feel i every way. At all drug- store a bo.; for 55" ai your money back if you are net oaOI'cX I 3 u U ''v-j'' Li J vi a SCRAP chew in PLUG form 1 JTk f 4avt f1 r1" "" "5ia "" ? f 1 , t if cA i I . - v 4 1 i i67o i 'IS! t J II i "I M 'II: W. N. U., Indianapolis, No. 45-1319. I ( k i '-ife Tor Infanta end ChiWrcv. ? 1 1 -jllfl ; I - f i 4 f f ' Always ears tho Signaturo v is Ks v k n fy r r 1 1 T I: '..II : v. ; . .1 -i. : ; m m " lT m 's V zJ l If I n I ,'
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