South Bend News-Times, Volume 39, Number 315, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 11 November 1922 — Page 7

THE .OUTK BEND NEWS-TIMES Th. . FLAMING JEWEL by ROBERT Y. CHAMBERS MAY re .fa ilulj u m mm

SATURDAY MORNING. NOVEMBER II. 1922

ACT

THE

"tmtiniicd Fnm Our Ivt I-aie). ; I.: 'os.te ;fm-ho magnLVlect Flam-

CHA!-Ti:i: in. Sdorn.r nt fr"io'.v;d. e n t r e 1

i m ".r h

.1

luart r-.-i !r r.v-.v!;f.

a r. I a - a : r. . and

pri 5C r.

arrymg

ir.g Jewel. fire. NoKo-lv

a glory of living, Llindlng

stirred

rai

blir. kfd at

or j-poke. Darhe crystalline

;t ha.-.kc 1 i":12'- a though stunned, i j Thn the young g.r! who had once I

Ho fat-d h: After a . il r.'-f -. tfri to 1- v

rr.-elf near iJarr.agh.

j b-n Hi r .St-rmc Highness Tho-

i our v..

r to v. :

S.Vs fiv.

:f Ods . . Ar. 1 'urstlf-

dorir.'t f Im nil Tvilifis-j

u ii.tc. , , ... , , . .

i .1.. i i lit iitl. 'I'.d you really

' Esthonia.

at her brand-new hus-

,f iutiful. rs m r y n -

you'ro rath-

suppose it

ih' vft that brought me across

AGGORDING TO THE REPORTS THIS WAS POOR POTATO YEAR

FROM THE COUNTY AGENT

UY I. .J. .MAT i m: .

- ' 1, v. if-' I'Vf

i f-c a.n 7

! ; -von

s I Iarrugh, "I'V" , hr.rt. ".'

'.T r.r.-t. American tn

don?.- a thr'-wd .stroke

i , ( :i rr. : r: r . -1 a n

.f in nall,!r.tr th h-t rti;;l-a-(clite I ever h ard -f "Vo'r" crazy l-it kir.'l. ... I " I'll bi. --.o in u'0'.l. . . . One I".l r;r -.. r r t rrr uhat .' ('r'.r rif-r.f fcr In t hi i cris.s " ' Thr"-'-'li ,f no rri.-!, Jar-k. Min V :i-:f' hr.oV iri Tvirh ti. In b'!si-

r.'.. Th-jt .-.1vm c-vf-rythir.c. . . ! lrr' 'Int lifo Ti n hnilt I

Hur rnt,il nnko it all up to hor . a!! fli'-i loncrn-- and yh-une r f flmcirs lump " .'Vinnor.t ti uh- l hi- arm in ca'i--ri: Kv" ar l Tlir-ra mm- down th :a.rr: the former now in way wool .cr:ov..-hr-,. rlifty, and rarryii -r h-r

sown, and toilet

to

-a as the

uid you suppose It was a

for

uii you trinK it was

i that I foi lowed you?"

tht.-j that mu d my j Figures From U. S. Depart- i

The la.s: two iprr.s. at lea I. a fiood many your.g chicks have J.ctl with white diarrhea; some have recovered and therein lit s the d.ir.g:r.

Ve arc

for! ment of Apricnlturc Show

.ch: laughed again, turned to I've:

Tobacco Crop Good.

hite potatoes did not turn ; vil as anti'.... i.r-. cailit r in

out the

"You understand. Telf him that

if he hnd heen in rags I would have

followed hlrn like a frynsy

Th-y say there i, gypyy blod i:i us.h-" although th; yield. TO buh- . . . God know.. ... I think per-! I CI aT", v.-.s somewhat better haps there i-- a little of it in all real ! tJl;ir. I't ytar. Th-; .ou: proj'i,--women " Still laughing .he Placed ! t:'0n is estimated at Ö.CSi.Oöö bush-

p'eajed to announce that

L'r'j u r-ivf r.-ity ha.- worked oi'

a tet whereby each hen in thc flock that can transmit th.s fc-eru to tho tg- she lays can be eas.ly d -tected. Dr. I. I'. Doylo wiM come up on the Hth of November ar.d

make a dtmor.ötr.ition of th:- n od ..n the Lewis White lb ck

a iiitiiiin aii CaIo:nel for Worms. In ca.- the worms have no; sucn a ftart in the herd that it is impei-

to

PROSPERITY IS NOT RETURNING TO THE FARMER, IT IS SAID

P'-t rid of then by manage

ment, it can he done by ing the santonin and

M.omd c:i ni"U.es. advice i

f lk.s to buy the.-e already prepared

ra!

r hind lightlv upon her hart i f-ls for tli0 talc wilI the fluau' - : . . . 1..

In all women perhaps a I lan.ing ! 1 ' l rt.fni ni .1 mn intaiün .ii- ; propose

Jfwol imb( ddrd hf re " j eomiared with 6,740.'','0 bushels . spring.

White Test township

Demonstration, blcod samoles

re than trying to mix them up

They j-hrjld br given s have been kept off of

least 12 liours and the,

h-1 day aft-r thev arc- riven, follow wit ft

in Li phytic.

thomslvcs.

i ! after the p:; j fe-'-J for at

Mack

Then she went to Eve and rutted

I both hands on her nouldprs. itr.v.- away h-r "shall we nut on our snow-shoes

i

o ;r:.ul we are to be friends," j splintered door. Outside In the snow

you

had

now-.- hoes-,

i. rticlos. Stormon t bo,;an

" er-ts m f , nsk(L nark: Jiirrazn nrri i.nmn

v. .-r.t o'.rr to h?r and took her hand. stormont flung open

"I'm

hr said. "It hurt a h.-t to know h li! in rcntempt. But I

to go about it that way." live nodded. Then. suddenly vc 'o-rting: "Oh," t-ho exclaimed, r r .idr-nir.g, 'T forgot tho jewel cafe! It's und or my pillov " She turned and sped upstairs and f appeared almost Instantly, carrying the jewel-cae. I.rath!S". flushed, thankful and happy in th excitement of restitution, ?h placed the leather ca.') In Ilica's hand3. "My Jewels!" cried th) pirl, asto'.tnd !. Then, with a little cry' of

I--l:ght, Fhe plac"! thr cas1 up-n the table, stripped open tho em-1

blazoned rover, and emptied the two !riy. All over tho table rolled the :we'?, flashing, scintillating, ablaze with blinding light. And at the same Instant the outer r!oor crashed open and Quintana covered them with Darragh's rifle. "Now. by Christ!" he Fhouted,

"who stirs a finder bhall go to (lol ; in one lump! You. my gendarme j

men you, my rrlen rnitn turn your damn backs ban's up high!

ifrr eye-;, tender and, mocking, j -chnwn for last month and 2. 5,üjü met Iiis; she lifted tho Jewel-ca. I l,f nels estimated for last year. c!o-ed it. and placed it in his hands'.! Hweet potatoes made almost a "Now," she --aid. 'you have everj - j normal yieM in the state this year, thing in your possession: and weieing 1"5 bushels per acre, which

are safe we are quite sf p, now, j indicated a total production of 375, jewc'H and I." I ''0 bushels, compared with "32,00

the bullet-

hfi dropped on both knees to buckle

on Iive's snow-shoes. Darragh was performing a like oflice for his wife, and the State Trooper, being unobserved, took Eve'3 tim hands and kissed them, looking up at her where he was kneeling. Her pale face blushed as It hai that day In the woods on Owl Marsh, so long, so Ion;:, ago, when thid man's lips first touched het hands. As their eyes met both remembered. Then she smiled at her lover with the shy girl's soul of her grazing out at him through eyes as blue as the wild blind-gentians that prow among tho ferns and mosses of Star Pond. Far away in the northwestern forests Quintana still lashed his horses through the primeval pines. Triumphant, reckless, resourceful, dangerous, ho felt that now nothing could stop him, nothing bar his way to freedom. Out of the wilderness lay his road rnd his destiny: out of it he must win his way. by strategy, by cun-

:a's th way! now. ladles! back ; ning, by violence creep out, lie his

way out, shoot his way out it scarcely mattered. He was going out! He was going hack to Ufa once v1(j.re. Who could forbid him? Who "top him? Who deny him. now, when, in his pockets, he held all

pocket of hla troupers, caught up j that was worth living for the keys

000

tt;shels shown for October and C98,-n-jO bushels for last year. The quality this year is 00 percent. Tobacco made about the average this year. th? yield being 900 pounds per acre. The total production is estimated to be 13, 200. 000

Aft. r thisi I.imcMom CI imp.

we expert io tak-i I'.. Iks irr.erc -tc.l In sil fertility, from several flocks ; alfalfa and ' od livestock will be

Jin the county fron: which the folks i iid to know that a large amount of .r"-vj-- it i. ... . i i . . : i f . . . . . t

ground iiiresiono is being usea n the county this fall. Limestone o? the finest grade can 1 p lail down auyvhere !n the c.r. n:y at 12.74 p r ' r. and it is rxce dir.ly chap i". this pri.-e. No 'onUr Wo Can I "so IJniostono. last wek while I was attending the county agent conference at Iafayette, I became acquainted with a

to sll ha'ehin.g rggs next

nacillKTy white diarrh'.a i

one of the worst diseases of young clucks and e behexe that ;n;iranteelng its absence in hatching t-g' will be real service to the poultry intereftn of the country. Sprcutifl Oats Glw fiHxl Iloturn. A number of the poultry keepers are getting mo.t excellent returr..from the use of germinate. I oats

away there get back or I kill! cure, by Jeus. I kill you like I would some whlto little mice! "

With Incredible quickness stepied forward an 1 swept jewels Into one hand tilled

h'

the the

Ty stray stone and pocketed them.

"Von gendarme," h cried in a rr.eraojng voice,, "you think you shall follow In my track. .Yes? I blow your damn head off if you stir rcfore the hour. . . . After that well, follow and he damn!" Even as he spoke he stepped out:d and Flammed the door: and Darrngh and Stormont leaped for It. Th.n the loud detonation of Quinta na's rifle was echoed by the splintering rip of bullet tearintr through the clos.-l door; and both men halted in the fac- of the leaden hail. Eve ran to the pantry window

ar.d saw Quintana

s-tolen lumber-sledfre. lash a big pair

of horses to a gallop and go floundering past Into the C.host Iake road. As he sped by In a whirl of snow

to

to power, to pleasure the key

everything on earth! In fierce exultation he slapped the glass Jewels In his pocket and laughed aloud. "The keys to the world !" he cried. "Let him stop me and take them who Is a better man than I!" Then his long whip whistled and he cursed his horses. Then, of a sudden, close by In thl snowy road ahead, he saw a State Trooper on snow-shoes saw the upflung arm warning him screamed curses at his horses, flogged them forward to crush this thing to death

in somebody's t tr,at dared menace him this, object

lash a big pair i that suddenly rose out of nowhere

to snatch from him the keys of the world For a moment the State Trooper

looked after the runaway horses.

they'd

S 1 1 A t - . . '

F-ounas ana me quamy sj pen em. , right in five or six davs without usFor last month the estimate was j jRfir artificial heat. It take six to 16.2403.000 pounds and for last eiht quarts of oats for each hunyear It was 12,250,000 pounds. dred hens. These arc put In a bucket The total production of apples In , , covered with warm water and ailowIndlana this year amounted to 61 j ed to 5tand for one day; the cat percent of a normal crop, or 4,148.- jnre then emptied out of the hucket 000 bushels with the quality at 76 : int0 a Knv with i nl aq In (Vi Vi -it -

- I sbas -r a a t. J A v j .j w

county ncrent from Connecticut

given at noon. Thl. dots not refer I Sp. akin.g about limestone in that to oats that have sprouts on thre i county, he said they used 14 carload.or four Inches long but to ones thitjof ground limestone last yer. "Thai's are Just nicely germinated. m This nothing." I said. "Pulaski countstime of year, oats will grt about used over one hundred carloads of

limestone la.wt rear" but when he

Farmers Must Get More for Their Products. Says County Agent E. C. Bird. Th it he many pub shed reports of returning prosperity la various

parts of the United States v.-ro-i.--; fully hiit tin' the farmer is ng.ii". 'on the road to normal profits, v. a ; the strc ment of County Auont Y. C. It rd. Friday.

hile the price of has been declining, market lias been gi

and un!r--s th.is condition is char

even "prosperous South suffer, if. the content on In discussing present

Friday. Bird said: ; The purchasing price of farm products the country over is only 04 per cent as great as in 131. according" to the Prairie Farmer of

proper ty there urban and no;

farm pro v' the whot! adu iiiv r:s n

lit nd" v :1! of Pir l. cor.ditioi-s

has

;iit Wha'evor been ha.s been

percent of a high medium grade. Iast year's crop was estimated to

torn. These boxe are kept In the cellar ar.d shoved alonff each day.

be 1.335.000 bushels. There eeems.At the en.l of flva nr Ki-r riav thx

to be a slight increase in the num-j oats will have sprouts on perhaps

a half Inch long. These are fed at

ber of bearing trees this year.

The yield of clover seed (all varieties) amounted to 1.2 bushels per ajre In Indiana this year from which it is estimated there were 120,000 bushels produced, compared with 79,000 bushels last year. Grain sorghum in Indiana mare an average yield of 23 bushels per acre where urown for grain and ä tons of forage whe.-e grown for that pur-

noon. They seem very palatable and the folks who are feeding thm.. find their pullets "looking up" in egg production. Follow the Blue Print. The experience" of the various people who built colony houses last sprin.g and laying houses this fill i i that it pays to follow the blueprint. Some of the new houses that

rural. Unless farm price.s are moved upward, the prosper. ty claimed by s'om" industrial centers will unques-

t"ld me that this limestone cost tionably suffer. What hurts th them J?.50 a ton and they considered farmer in the St. Joe valley is that it cheap at that, it was reasonably his careful efficiency arid hard worh easlly to see why they had used sc, , have counted so little in brldgin t little. Our folks really have a ; the disparity between his own rpolden opportunity to get limestone turns and the prices and chir- -at the price they do and we would ' demanded by urban Industry. Thilike to urge as many of them as wo ' difference continues and it is can to cover alfalfa and clover I serious. ground thLa winter. In order to j Average prices received durin z facilitate the movement of ground September at the farm are as folIimestono during the next three ow-,: months, the writer will be glad to Corn 61. r take orders ranging all the way from , Wheat 9"'.-

one ton up. ,Hay ... Aftr a piece of sour ground has I potatoes

pern itmou. we unow rrom watenin ieef Cattle

the experience on many farms, that tho problem, of clover growing !

Hogs

have been built give evidence, of the

pose only. The acerage for both

is about the same as last year. J builder trying to abbreviate the plan. The total production of grapes In J The H-1 12 house makes the cheap-

-..- j-i Gencin ui iiji inen . pf-'i, imntest, airiest, and most con

and the quality S9 percent of a high

medium grade. The total produc-

venlent hou that wo know of an1

! those who have followed the plm

tion of pears in Indiana was SS per- !Ct Dpi-lously have hen very 'ad

. m M . i ii. a i n i :

iji iiorinai wiiii ine quality m f2 percent of a high medium grade. Sorghum cane for sirup in In

diana yielded an average of S3 gal- J

they did. Swino Iliihartdry. Haslr Principles in liner Ilu-liv'-vs. Pulaski countv is idea 11 v situated

Ions p-r acre which Is slightly above for the production of hops. Its lt-

generally .solved. We have generally observed thit the man who ca?i gl.iw clover is the man who can make some money year In and year out on his farm.

FA KM lil KFAC. I Towmlilp Mc-otlngs. j Harrison townhir farm bureau will bold their regulir meeting or. Friday evening Nov. 10. Harrison n j f.ni of the townships that usually

has interesting programs.

, if.7 Ol-.' 5.4 4 per l'"" S.2H per 100

per doze"

?&.'2 per' poun ! 31. C per pound

Eirgs Gutter Wool

Potato prices have dropped to level met discouraging to producer:' !n the potato growing areas. Ofveral'.y pr'ces liave declined sllrrhtlv

at the farm v.hilc thy have

the. average. Sugar beets

In In-

SO per-

thei Then he lowered the leveled rifle

j from his shoulder, looked grimly at

Tim irsi

h" fired five times at the house, men, There was no use following; ri-ing and swinging his whip. ho J have to run till they dropped

'logged the frantic hordes into

woods.

In the dining room, Stormont. reo ; the limp tiling which had tumbled with rage and shame, and having! from the sledge into the snowy road :'ound b.is rifle in the corridor out- j anc which sprawled there erimson-d-Eve's b. d room, was trying to the spotless flakes that fell upon

(.')

'he hr

Eve, terri Hi.- nantrv:

"He's gene!" she cried furiously

"He's in some body's lumber-sledge j KANSAS CITY, Mo.,

. n a ra;r ni nor.- aim s uuv- n T v- c ri

if -' w st i.ke the devil!" Stormont ran to the tap-room tele-'

aunn. former secretarn of the

"('ood (U'-l!" he exclaimed, turn-I

In r to I arra 'h. scarlet with

diana showed a condition of

cent of normal. Only 5S percent of the usual 9 mount of fall plowing has been donfl because of dry soil conditions. The averago yield of corn in In

diana is

Th Van P.urert in g comes Nov. 1 4

township meetand It will star

uatlon gives it access to the principal ; with an oyster supper given at the

markets oi tne country at tne payment of minimum freights. Up un-

, til this time, however, folks hav i not been growing enough alfalfa and

clover, to make It advisable to car

ry on a program of hog production

Christian

The supper Is ta

bushels per acre this j for cheap pork is largely depende nt

on legume pastures of some kind

Now with a number of pieces of al

year which I slightly In excess of the 10 -year average. The crop evceeds last year's production by,?.-437,000-bushels according to the monthly report of the co-operative crop reporting service of Indiana, issued today. The potato production exceeds last year's by nearlj' two million bushels and tobacco is nearly four million pounds in excess of last

year. The report follows: a method has been presented, part

Ahe corn crop now oeing narvest-, of which the progressive hog man ed. from the standpoint of quality, can now take and develop a hg! Is one of the best ever produced In raising plan that mear.f profrt evrrv !

me btate, noiwunsianumg some oi , year. In the next five years. a It Is a little chaffp. Considering the (method that will get rid of dis.'-acrs unfavorable conditions at planting ; and worms is the one that 'will m i ke time, the result is very gratifying to j money. This fall we hav see n m r most farmers. th average yield for I wormv n'-r-s thin ..vr- be' nrr. vui-.

the state being Z which is slig-htly

church

j be given at fir.to o'clock and every j member and his 'family is invited j

I After th meeting a motion picture j entertainment will be g-iven and the j place will be announced during th3 supper hour.

The regular P.eaver tcwnshlp

falfa In the county and these p--)-1 meeting is to be held at Center

In? Into tho winter in good fhapr.. j school the evening of Nov. 1 5.

some of our folks are ready to a h p. a program of swine im.pr:vem-nt that will really mean profit.

Sanitation Is Pdg Problem. ham In the work which .Mr S hw.ihiVov

did lat week as well inet ! nmn,rn,i o.i r.tKiare now below pre-war prices.

Elch drove township will hold their regular meeting at the Den-

school house the

a i a .

IM. very line program is i

oth- !

- 1 ers and their families are Invited i

to be present. A motion picture entertainmen' will al.o be given after the regvilar program.

br ' h

ricIng slowly on the whoVc.-iie m irkets. The trend mv. cnn'sar' the other way and farm price-- n' advance materially nil over th" country", or von prosperous South pepd will suffer. Farmers in the St. Joe valh"have be:n up ngains it much of t' - time during the last th"ro v-ir Wlr'I-? local and trad" pubrca'iov-' have featured the returning nrc--per'ty cf !nl'.stry and commerce i' should be remembered that the majority cf forecasts and prediction have bren made by men sitting in snug ofilccs. surrounded by sta'lct cand economic publications, and nc by those conversant with actu'i1 farm conditions. The recent announcement by ho Harvard F.urerof Economic Research that "Prewar pr'ces will not return for 10

evening of,"' nu n;,n 1IS L 1 " 1 ' 1 ' T.

i er. it:?os ror many ot u ;s pruuüi . -

Word received from Perry Cran secretary of the Indiana Federation

The inal closing date for ntr: in The- Breeders" and Uane:-r

Poultrv Show, which Is to be-

7 bushels per acre, individual heg hou-o. however, .ml In excess of tho jood pastures it should be p.sibl-

of Kar mors associations, is to the in inJicnapolirt it 25 N.

ctfect that the regular annual meet-j from ov. 21 to

he

Alabam t :

tho shutters for a sh 't: atul j It.

r-i - i. emruv-nanueii. ?f arrni'u .

;-e franti.aliy for a weapon.:

oy ex. ue.i. came iron. RASAS CITY MAN

10-year average. on this basis a total production of 17(5. T.05, 000 bush-

ELUDES CAPTORS

Nov. 10.

(By I. N. S.) Police today were holding Frank Negro and Charles Itrnno on charres of kldn.inlnc V. A.

. . .. i . . - - - 1 -

a -i.e. rr.tMKta n. arm warm-u Rraunn. former secretarp

I;.-ia..U.ary at I 0 UlKt-.-. r.i.-innlv nmnnnv

After being mis.-ing for several

his

to have pigs farrowed n clean ground so they will net be inf-sel

els Is estimated at this time. Of; with worms soon .aPer blrff'.. this amount 126.D4O.O00 bushels will ' " ' " be husked for grain, 22,920.000 bushels will be cut with the forage crop. ' J nJilf dmiTltv Vnir

. . .. T .'

Wt of the s ate r.nrr

oe r.e:a m inii;anapoiis lec. 1st and 2nd. P. C. Er.-glo will represent Pu-lt-ki county as deUga'e with C. C.

bureau will j btH,n ar :nounced by

,). inclusive.

Manager Ven.oa

i Eor.tr a allrrn.ate.

'v.tion. I r. r v e- r

"what ghastly

drearae i he was within

m.iej of t ;mc:i s: it s ine mo

harv.eful thing that ever happened, to V.i- " ! "What could anybody do under: that rifle?" said Eve hotly. "That; t -...t would have murdered the llrsi p-rson v. h stirred!" I Parrach. exasperated ar.d dread-;

r.ur.iiiaua, i 'mm ir.isfrtiuij i.i 1 rand -rev. wife. -. .-. -.1.1 "r .-t-t-i nr i 1 i.- nrtV1 at

h mortl-j day?, nraunn reappeared at business, ' home la.st night, It was disclose.

ed to-

I dav. This morning he told detectives

. nil ii.ilis l-uo ui lIIIo niUllJiru a. klgh noon on one of the city's main streets, being carried through the

- streets with a blanket over his head 'and of a confinement of 35 hours In i a "northslde bandit roost" where J his captors demanded $000 ransom, j Praunn said he was released last J night, police are seeking a third man.

conto forward

rro

She had

rt.ir cf the stairway where j tana had bru'aliy driven her. ' -!..- stoo l with one hand on j

m ROBBERS IN ATLANTA

CHLOROFORM VICTIMS ATLANTA. Nov. 10. (Py I. N. S.)

1 4,104,00 bushels will go into sil

age and 12.341.000 bushels will be hogged off. With th exception of a few localities there was but little Insect damage and but little mold developed. Much of the crop has already been cribbed and some has been shipped to market. Eightyeight percent of the crop Is of merchantable quality and approximately 10,191.000 bushels of last year's crop Is still on farms. The estimate production last month wns 176,391.000 bushels and for last year it was 163,S4S.0OO bushels. The average weights per measured bushel of small grains harvested In Indiana this year was somewhat lighter than the legal standard. Winter wheat made 56 pounds: spring wheat. 55 pounds: oats. 2 3 pounds and barley 4 5 pounds. The average yield of buckwheat

One essential step in getting a; buniner nnt;ito virt.l nevt ve.ir mnv!

be taken now by plowing the!work ilrxd the "back

ground and planting the patch to

rye and following with a heavy top

dressing

manure.

Board Boosts Clubs Real co-operation on tho part ot the Xoble County Fair officials was shown this year In sponsoring boys and girls' club wrk in another conn ty-J.esidcs Noble. The fair was held at Kendallville, close to the county line, and when the DeKalb fair was discontinued. the club im-mhers

there were invited to bring their! pigs, canned products, chickens, etc

to the Noble county fair. This was! the potato patch, this is to be plow

done and the club members held! their own show In the other county. !

m aciaition. these visiting club to'! manure will make a combination and girls were guests of the fair" hard to beat, especially if ten to management along with the Noble tifteen loads of manure per acre is county club members. at the nnr.uaF ; ppikd. The manure will help give banquet given for the club members! the rye a vigorous growth, add or

C Getz to be Nov. 10. Entries have been large an-' came in rapidly, and all sig:,point to one of the m- .-t s-U'trces.tfu . poultry shows held in Indiana poll in year.--. Lectures by pruminei:. poultry breeders will be among th-

Be Plowed TlllS Foil ;iem of Interest for the smaller

breeder who will thu-s be given a

Potato Ground Should

free course in his choen line of

lot" breedr:

will be enabled to learn a lot of val

uable' raising

pointers In egg production, for exhibition purposes an '.

This ;i lrco 1 n n

was made by F. C. Gaylord potato 1 Flml 'ur Phases oi wie Vvuu uiu-r-peciai;s: on tho agricultural exten-fri ljUlne5S-

iion staf: or I'urdue university. He suggests that the richest

ground on tho farm be given over to

ed S or 10 inches deep. The rye as a green manure crop and the stable-

Se

M.H r.MMS VANISH PHILADELPHIA. Pa., Nov.

new maid, engaged yesterday, disappeared.

has

who exhibit at the fair.

How effectively thi

ieat

jewel ca.-e. look-

at ecry r, I O'. c I irr.ii dy voice; . r.-d.bed t

Q u i r.

cu: oi

pretty, be- J

i

Th is city Is in the thrr of the :reatest excitement today ' Uowing

l. in a perplexed. un"Is It tho satr.e bandit a i e o e ? "

i

i n.

-aid wretch-

:." he

an to redden

It

1 n b U '

I prom- 1

i the third attack in a few days of the I 1 ' i 1 . r A f a r-. 1 . v0." ...kn . . . - - .

i-ii.i'.uiui.u i- u.uii.-. miu ia c a--esrfully entered three homes, chlorofcrmed several women, made awav with valuables. Police d:claix

acre which Indicates a total produc-j naht yt.ar vas ?;10,vn

tion oi iu-.in.nj pusneis. comparea with 09.000 bushels shown for last month and 11 4,000 bushels estimated for last year. The quality is SO percent of a high medium grade.

. L-anie matter to the soil and also aid club work ' in making the soil hold more wJter.

w

i

;cr.i."he said.

! your jewels. . . . I i .'i-i'm that I'll never)

-.r.t ur ;:i your gems iautitt g Jeel are in

no

doubt that carrying out

a clevtr well laid

there I burglar

plans

: s:b'.o i:.terrup:iou3 before "oini, I about the business of robbery. I The victim of the third attack

which include stupifying po:

'i'ut. Jim " "I w. ar if" 1!v. 'I'm su . .-.em " -..:r:" .-he ! - . l..i e (ior.e i t m - are in

e exclaimed violentch a ttupid fool as

wh.Ich came to light today, was Mrs

Henry

a o:e-ted

wiiat you promts' a

my posiessicn 1

excitedly.

gir.f or ment.

Grady in the

Smith, wl Sflfo Vl IT

of an en-

taw ay uepari-

f u

vl ,

V

to

1 ( u: the f.r

,ir hirir witti r foi'eilT.gc r in

em lator.ed :t tray, ther. them aside.

d' lie ite

WHHAT TIIIIVTIXC; I'AYS Hot water treatment of seed

wheat in Knox county was eomplet-i

ed with 3 5? bushels nearly all of

'oble county the;

by th-? facti

that 21 of 35 pig club boys exhibited1 their barrov.-c; 12 out of 12 in tho; gilt club had their pigs there, and j

the lamb club finished 100 per cent Considerable credit is due the coun

tv airtnt. H. V. Wl lnev. and the'

Proper StaragC Will j county club leader. H. F. Sorgen-j n T , j j - : frei, for the success arliievel. Ear-: Prevent Black Heart ;ros ar.d iambs :. ducod by tu.: Improperly stored potatc-cs are IIa; club members were sl.ppd by one; ble to develop the black heart dis-jof the livestock shippers' a o -ia-1 ease. Improper storage means piling; tions In the county and they "bought.

the; a premium over the days tops on-

the Buffalo market. i

When the rye is about a foot high -itt the spring ii .hoi.M be double i dished ar.d turned under by a sec-j

otid pi O win:

dust Plan

muich

of the held on

same dop the soil

until

;n

It's Surprising How

Little Good Dentistry Corts if

You Coil3ult Dr. J. T. Holmes

th.-the

empty

. -

.

y pres-e

mi-Id '.e

d the

r'.r.ger and

which was Rudy wheat, according to County Agent W. J. Pirgott. Jr., Th re has been this year, sown ap-

J proximately 2 0,000 acre? of Rudy j wheat which has had treatment at I some time within the pat three

the potatoes in deop piles in

trie re can be no ventilation in the center of the pile resulting in smoth erlng which always results in the blackening of the center of the tuber. If possible put the potatoes in

Lagt or crates but if the only place

nv.i'l.ihlfl to store the potatoes is ini

a bin. then put two bv fours in thelf Jl Cflcr-' Production and up-to-date bin and rake a double floor so that r.uthods cf growing and har.dhr.?.

the .nir ran ret a: the bottom of.-l-e crop. Tne autnor f.a

the pile, suggests C. T. Gregory ot

it:utilizfjis iTn cf.lfry. "Celery growing" Is the title of a recent Department of Agriculture; Bulletin bv W. It. Beatti whim.

mo will kill moet of the j

wcr-ds ar.d hold the moisture bet-j J For early potatoes, break thei ground this fall. first applying a! heavy application of manure. Th'!

ground shor.M he lef: in the furrow J slice until spring when it should j Many after paying !e dourde disKt-d and planted at the ( If,u:;,j o a revelaarliest possible time. tion to consult Dr.

! Hoi: ri Tit r.ntrÄ mir ' J'-st

n?:inPrT at flu:

Fifty-four Park countv club girls

f . . ' :;. -' ' , i ta.';, v. .' V : r . : -. w; . . ' .! ',,' st- .' ;' i ' . i x ' : -

Poultry Show To Be

Held At Indianapolis I

3

10.

owe s vaiuea at jiuiu1.' were iouua

mlsr.g frcm the home of Mrs. S. G. Morton Maulen, socially prominent.

of 21 S. Twenty-First st. today.

te

! covers the fundamental of success-

(hi gar:;

a: the

their cannel products and bat V u

the botany extension staff of

.".P-re;

la:

ott. '.d

; ( .me

forming luüatera a cr it , i". i 1 1 . e i : V e r".

f .v

th.e three years; all of which triangle. 1 criginal source on tir.v sund'farm. Harrison. Mr.

Pur

due university. Another pood wa to do Is to put a crate upside down every four feet and place a triangular ventilator made of boards In the top of each crate. BJ.xck hear.

came from the j will develop at high temperatures Newton Myers .-much faster than at low to pota-

Myers bean to

the most t?ucce-.sful growers in the northeastern action apply from 1.400 to 1.S0O pounds of commercial

i r ii. i f i i r i i i ? . Li.&. i t i j v"i ; . t

- I - -r ' C i ' ' "

broadcast after plowing ana worke-a into the .oil by ?iklng. The aver-

ents made jn the sewing cluV

r.ty fair htld there reeir display was held in

of the C3urt house ar.d much attention as any

co-

c-r.tiy. Tl

tb.e c rrldo: attracted a-

f.ature cf tb.e County Ager.t. J

bo ,v 1!

cos-ts to nave your Tetb r,i''f" In tL ht cuditi.m. N-i

...r.-h to pay hi-ti jrie wlen yen cm g--t vit-v.l at t r.' ii-drr. Iei;tj

,,.t tr-.it-r.-.e at rea-

fair, according to R. Meeka. In ad-

Wonderful Plates Only $25

, uiii.n. Ju ca:f i 'hiblted th-: :r

club ; stie rs

.ov3 and girls

an

had their

CI ri

ot heirs on i

! ''and for the show. The calves soil1

j to packers at 510.10 per hundred-

alarm In a develop this wheat six years aero

gently

by

a-vay

1 ami.

the J the hot water rr.Khod and careful

cjse detached selection and It has now reached the In the palm of, above proportions In the county.

Th real s-uccess of hot water treat-

toes In a cold cellar will develop the! of potash. Sometime a later ap.I! much do-.ver thnn in tv-.i i-i, ! plication of soluble nitrogen I.-- macSr

age ana.ysis runs about rour percent , v.eItrh. hnA -e'-ht, u-hirh offere,!

cf nitrogen, eight percent of ph(- J rors-iderable encouragement to --he phorlc acid, and six or seven percent . mf:nbt,r, -r(1 bpf mttie nro-

i. fr1-. Z. ' .

I

iucers In the country.

I I m lj

e a

(.;i :.y

ct I

1 .

1 o:

iv the E

or. ; .Ice-)

aar;

mitat.-. ays ab ve

a ;ddf d ir. its -artmmt of

n'.an Jewels

cellar. This Is a spring disease especially because the cellar Is warrn-

I or then, but row Is the time to ! avoid trouble later.

h i 1 Irr.

11 two 1 1 r. ! n g the

als of two

raert Is In treating a few buhels A Iafa:-ctte boy bought some pofor a few men who are actually In-j tatoes for heed. When he cut them

terested in wheat improvement.

I th

K. K. K. Ctgars not nameJ for teeret oclety. but after a famous Yale club. All dealtrs two for 15c.

he found this trouble In every pota

to. He planted them never

e.ess

Iso"

adv.

and got one of those "hit and m

stands, but mostly mi.-. The black heart not only ruin the potato for eating but alo for -eed.

cn the growing crop. On account of the increasing fvarcity of manure. I: Is not practicable t a depend on

manures- for growing large areas celery.

SENATOR OFT $10.000. WASHINGTON. Nov. 10 (By I. N. S.) It co.-t Sin. William M.

The greater part

th

acreage is found In low-:y:ng mucK soils. These soils are u ua'ly hih in nitrogen, but eie-rlcler.t .in 1- in phosphoric ac'.dvand potash. Maximum production 1 secured when

cr Cilder. fl 5. CS 4 to finance his unsuc

cessful campaign for re-election in celery ".v Vork, a cor rRp.tr to a repon

the secretary of the s:n-

"::-i with ate t alav.

A fall upper and lirer rlate, -wik-b Iiruarjat-! at tx.j unuaallj low price., Mad i f -th- t-et rn:itf rials ndtaln-able hy our wn I.it,.jra.u-ry t-xpertf. Th f.;; i pcrfert and yoa wlJ bs tLor- agtlj ( ?atifd. I t

I.T.KOLHES.D.D.S.

the

."II d

?.-fic

.encies ar- .upp:

Kcpper Kettte Klu Clrar ymo)te like two for 25c but eil for two for lie Adv. 292-tf

Coro?r Michigan and Wa C)T-r Central rn;4 Iyook foT Sln

:h.gtnti St. Lir.cola C-l'

St Pays A Tl n o

"S-T" A TPQI r "Mrtnnf'irr'l

fact today. But bear this iii mind: the only rcason it pays to advertise is that millions of thrifty folks find it a paying proposition to be guided by the advertisement. If you will read advertising consistently for a while you'll readil y agree that this statement is true. IT WILL PAY YOU IN MONEY SAVED. Real bargains are offered frequently in the advertisements that appear in this paper. Watch for them. Take advantage of them. IT WILL PAY YOU IN TIME SAVED. It tells you exactly when and where to go for what you want to buy. You don't have to waste time and effort "shopping around." If your time is worth money, advertising will pay you. IT WILL PAY YOU IN ADDED SATISFACTION. Every time a merchant or manufacturer advertises he obligates himself to sell goods that are as advertised. Read the advertisements and be sure you get your money's worth. Reading the advertisements is a plain everv-day business proposition. It is a duty vou owe yourself and your pocketbook.

T) 1 ml ' 1 .

neaa tne aavemsenieuis.

i 3 1

N Sri M p 3 4 l. CI S t1 i t ; si H S- - SI V. U I) ti M r i S r. i 1 1 r tl r, 4 1 I! i' . u n it k 1 ." i I ii ii M r ' 6.1 ii IS i u i i c ,t i U '4 i rd a 3 r. 11 t rj i f 4 i 1