Traverse City Press, August 02, 1917

Dublin Core

Title

Traverse City Press, August 02, 1917

Subject

American newspapers--Michigan.
Grand Traverse County (Mich.)
Traverse City (Mich.)

Description

Issue of "Traverse City Press" Newspaper.

Creator

Contributors to the newspaper.

Source

Microfilmed reproduction of this newspaper issue is held at the Traverse Area District Library, Traverse City (Mich.).

Publisher

Gothic Press Printing Service

Date

1917-08-02

Contributor

Traverse Area District Library, Traverse City (Mich.)

Rights

Excluding issues now in the public domain (1879-1923), Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc. retains the copyright on the content of this newspaper. Depending on agreements made with writers and photographers, the creators of the content may still retain copyright. Please do not republish without permission.

Relation

None

Format

PDF

Language

English

Type

Document

Identifier

tcp-08-02-1917.pdf

Coverage

Grand Traverse County, Michigan

PDF Text

Text

•r'-l
-' r- ' ' -’. '■•■-r^ 1

Waie Travers# City Press
GHiUW tllAVEM* WOKMfS jlnia NCWVAPU.
TBAVKtas ony. men.

BY CAHBIBR Si YKAR

cnr xsKcauTKW-aooo.

auoot^ wit

EMUB’SFECUt

.re obt.io.d br«
tiHowlU kiri t.r wM. kit tk
'illSEEDBEDMOSIBE mMiyUUM

FiriED
EARLY
FOR
ITALIAN OUTE OIL
191O«HEATCR0P
AMERICAN DRUG CO.

SpedsI Imported
206 E. Front

ISO Men’s Shirts
■ulihctiiren Sanriw
n^XHtcount

llAllUOli CL0.C0.
Suits Sponged and Pressed
forSdeat

Watch hr n Mxt wadL Ftt-whalf
Why. for ttt Big Booster SpedM for
Ugi« for thdr eemtest and play
tbeBi.....................................................
stU^ Ttit on at the Uric Monday
and Tuesday. August 13 sad 14.
Part of oar next wdak'a ianie wIlL be
devoted to a Boostw Special whidi the
E^ea are getting up to advertise tfadr
cooteat wl^ ends Augurt 14 rad their
ho^e talent pl^ of Augud 18 and 14.
The Bagtot are running a popularity
cootHttortheboya and
and the
girt gotttngttie mod votes srfll reedvd
a wrist watch and the boy a hleyde.
Eapt Unsing, Mich.k^Mar,- willow The second prim it a watch, chain and
and b^wood posts hitherto sconed in knife. The play is given by local telfenee^niiding, <*n by pri^ treat eni, under the dhration of Mr. Ogden,
'
preaervativaa be economic who is also ruiihhig the contest
d lor hlgfaitrieed cedar
The merchants (rf the city wUI take
n of the Michigan Agylbul their part in'jnaking this Booster a
nccess add will give bargains in all deIndiealod that these woods, whidi with partmrate. Read this apedal and tee
out "dsetering" last only two or throe where you era trade' to save the most
years, wffl when creosoted give service money.
tor 16 years or atore.
ioate quickly, and to develop a
ent root s/stem before ooid weather
"Tba fence post rituation," the for­
A very pretty weodlng tobk pla*e
estry men declare, cannot be consider.
net in the falL
ly, as fsr as white cedsr
'•Wheat usually follows oats in the the L. D. S. church on Sunday mortitog
Hicbigan rotation. It Is «s excellent when Mr. John Ciq^ sod Was Luej- is coDcetped, and'nooe of the hard­ CitF Dfue Store.
plan to plow oat stubble as soon as pos­ Nelsoo were made man and wife. Tha wood sub^tutes for cedar have been
bridal
party
married
in
to
the
rtrmins
sible after the oat crop ...
a moderate
has been harv­
ested. After plowing the soil, the nf Mendelssohn’s wedding march, and degree of success. In Michigan locaUare either siUceptible to in­
treatment should be similar to that giv­ after they had taken their places, “Oh. iUes
en when fidds are summer-fallowed Promise Mfe” was very pleasingly sung sect atte^ as in the case of the black
for wheat The proper use of tools by Waldo Kapntek Prayer was offer­ loenst, «B they are toe slow-growing to
wUl depend of eonrae upon adt and ed by Elder Roland Kapniek and the mske eoamerciai production of tbem
ceremony performed by Elder It A. practkjhle.
"Whenjplowing cannot be done on Doty. The ring was carried in a rose •'Tb^remedy for tfau cbndition might
account of othei^ work, it is an excel­ 1^ little EHen Curtis, cousin of the be exj^ed to lie in the use of wood
lent plan to disk the oat stubble, and bride. The groom ww sttended by his substitMcp. but the origioal cost of
some wheat growers often disk their mother, Mrs. John Helfricb, and Walter itbese #'teo high that many cannot af­
tields while the oats are stai in the Curtiss, and the bride by her father, H. ford ether their purchase or manufact­
shock. The disking operation is es­ E. fjelson, and Iva Curtiss. The bride ure. There are, however, many cheap
pecially advisable on heavy smls if the w<we a di%ss of dainty white voile and woods ’^wlng threntthout the slate
«..........-if they are
season is dry. 11 may also prove bene- carried yeUow roses, and'tlte brides
id to ward oft decay.
fldal even when plowing is done eariy, maid wore white voHe and carried pink
This means weeany tuxUng but
because loss of moisture from the soil napwlrwgons.
Airaag'attch woodC are poplar, willow
dhtadfood. -The common preserv- die beK.
is prevented and a better" seed bed After the ceremony the bridal party
marobed to the back of the room where log maicrial. Ii coal tar creosote,
can be prepared.
aa Ciuunu—whkh have cxrtuiTe
’‘Farmers, in general, know t^t inmethrtthf usia^_ is to place the ports in tcstumtesl make rtewuv^’rttegassy and
giatulationi of their friends,
the brt^ ii()uid for from two to.four
in. LMMdwwyweAowllwrtok.
t wedding dinner was served at the boors, thepostsare then set in the
home cTlhe brides Rprobts, at '• ’ * •
“ effect pi «he»h-cooling apd
covers were laid tor sevrateen.
' wilhfif-thajMBt j^to 4nw
and Mrs. Claric were the rtidpients
many beautifvlgim and have Itte *

OneottlieteulOH0tiiNor thA
for n sprlns erop uid the <Aer it the
lydepletioiiof mD fertimr.
oT the teed bed
pwiiil tummer
Early Fitdng of Sd! tfevents tewh^if«»o«t(,m
taUow ii cibuioiled, while the disadvanWeeds and Helps Hold t>^ of lODger summer-fallow are
rcome. Earty pneparadte Moutore 4&
tioh of the seed bed also aids in conthe Ground
troUing weeds.
“It wiU ateo be very desirable on the
But UottnK. Uietu-Eerir fitUng of heavidr aoUa to fertilise wheat pith 260
_ie teed bed for the t«H piuUng of to 300 pounds of add phoaphate per
wbeet is recommended by the eolit de- acre, ap^ed at toe time ofaeedfng
lithe stand does not appear good in
pertment of the Mlchigtii Agrtenl
tiie, following ^ring, top dreeiine ’ "
nltiate of :
'‘Etrly preptratlon of the seed bed,' die hundred pounds of nltrsde
it is ipdicated by the soils men. “it At- per acre should be profitable, <
sentki for the conserving of moittnre. ly if the soil is li^t in color,
the development of pUnt food, and the which often indicates a lackofnitroestablishing of a proper physical eondi- gen.“

imm
IH^veOpeneda .

BARBER
SHOP
St comer of Raodoli^
sod Bay Street

J. ROCKERFEUER

• •' -1

BrMAiLSt.SOYBAJt

cED»idsn GEimrseua

STING AREE’
■ The further adventure otStmgaree, series ,
True Boanfman takes his most popular role, "The
GenUeman Bushranger from Australia.”

free Matinee for Everybody on Plret Episode

PALACE THEATRE
Watch lor Pearl White in “THE FATAL SING" .

BE SURE AND COME TO

WAUDER GROCERY COMPANY'S STORE
• '539 West Front Street

Saturday, August 4th
Yoo wUI find that your money will
get- you more groceries than yon
can get elsewhere. :
:
COME - AND-- SEE - OUR * SPECIALS

Walker Grocery Co.

This is the
Ansco Store

wMiea of abortcBfcfeiHM.Iam
___________
tte**i^'this simple treatment be
iat Artkton’i oTOoP. The rat-rt-tesrp made to last over fifteen years.”
guests were: Mrs. AUce JuhevillC,
Boyne City; Mr. and Mis. Arthur PreCs
and Him Luella Kinney. Grand Rapids;
Elder Roland Kapniek, Cadillac, airt
Mrs. Lyle Weaver, Chatham, Ont
certain articles of diet whid: are almost
a necessity.
One of our enterprising groeera, J.H
An auto party went to Williraisblirg McCormick, has fignred it out to hit
Wednesday evening and foroied.an Odd own satlsfactioD and feels contiden
Fellows Picnic Association of all the 1. that others will agree with him. If
0- 6. F. lodges in Antrim, Kalkaska, the caurse of the next few days you
Leelanau, Charlevoix and Grand Trav­ ceive a little enveolpe with his na
erse counties.
it, pay particular notice to what ii
There will l^ an Odd Fellows picnic inside, and if you are satisfied with it
h^d at Elk Rapids on September 3rd.
in an (
Labor Day. at German picnic grounds. good-sised package of the peanut butAU Odd Fellows, fsmiliea and Weoib
are inviM. Ihis wiU be an annual Mr. McCormick has installed a Hobart
affair.
Electric Peanut Butter machine which
Chas. DeFoe wu elected ebairaan will guarantee you strictly fresh butter,
Dd Edward Martin secretary,
made while you wait. This is a great
jrtber information call Ed. Hartip.
addition to his stock of pure toods, as
it will be the means of having fresh
butter always oq^hand. ■ It it almost an
impossibility to get dairy butter, now.
One of the old real.pioneer reddents and peanut butter will overcome this
of the Grand Traverae region pawed ■carcity to a certain extent. Give him
away at her home Monday, after an ill­ a trial order anyway, and if you are not
ness of quite a long time. Her father, satisfi^ teU him ao, and he will make
John Wyncbcomb, pcitled near Mon- it right This is an dpportunity tor
roe Center as one of the first in the you to save some money, as the peanut
region. Besides other relatives she butter will be o
leaves two sons, Hprry and Edward, pound than dairy butter, and in tuis
soda hort of friends tbroughont the da)' of increased cost of everything, ev­
city Funeral services srene held from eryone hat to save wberevw they
the home, 216 W. Teotfa SL, Wedoetday afternoon, faiteranent in Oakwood.
A burglar, or periupa moreiUian one

JuitnsQtw/tYOFDoncn

L a 0. F. nooc AssootncHi

-ntS-IHtCYLaOMtOE

An evening of music was enjoyed at
the borne of h: E, Nelson, Seventh St,
Monday night by at number of. friends.
Arthur
Jlhur Frees
Fr
^ Grand
Hr. and Hra. An
Rapids were there with
phones snd there were other musical

evening was veo* enjoyably «pcnt
Lemonade was served te4he course of
the ei'ening.

ORGAN SALE
Sw^t Tone Organs $5.00 iip.
I«Eb THE ROOM ANB. ALL ORGANS
JSEU. FOR ONLY SlocSlPER MONTH.
PARLOR AND PIANO CASES.

swmSySica'-

.The Govenunef^ ba»
asjewT emTDtie to do.
thirirl^ by hoping to
conserve the food siq>yiy. Can your own veg­
etables and fruit and in­
sure the canmiig with

Everkeep
Canning Tablets
lOc per package

CUffi4IBjO»

C o M I N G I
Thursday,

HELP
win the

Born, to Mr: and Mrs. Earl (%apman,
1016 Boyd Ave, Wednesday A««uM t.
a son, Vanoe Eart.

did some-pretty bold-^eces of work
Wednesday n^it Three boines weiti
entered and money stolen froaa the very
rooms in wMch^oecupants were sleepThe home of Dr. E. B. Minor, 636
Sixth Street was entered and about 160
taken from the garments of the doctor.
Henry Curtis, 436 W. Seventh, suffered
the same fate, but only |204ras secured
here. A pocket-book at the home of
Walter Curry. W. Tenth, was rilled of
eonteots, <16, apd another found which
contained no money. A wii
removed wasTbe means of utrance at
the two former plaeea and a bole ent
near the lock on a back door acrean tite
m'eans at the other. Keep your doora

Bora to Mr. and Mra. Roy DObSoo, one knows who srill be the next vtetim
Wiert Tenth St. Monday July 30, a son. and it’s just as liable to be yon as the
next fellow.

Town and Country TriparMARK A CRAW at the aty
Boi^ Store. No fancy pricea.
.

Tbe cherry crop is being harvested,
tsrought into town rad shipped. T^e
cn^ is nniefa lirger than was at Rtrt
expected and the growers are bavtog
quite a bit of trouble to get ptcleera.

SPECIAL

Quick delivery to any part
of city. Telej^ne calla aolic*
C^lBl Inn. Beokhp Mich.. ited.* ScotPaCity Drugstore.

hopkTns

Wait’s
Drug Store
Qdldrais’:
Wrah Suits
20se Diacount

HAMILTON CLO. CO.
WEST WINDOW

FOR SALE

CBEAt
DMamRY
CALL

City Bakery
ClB. 288

BeU 114

Take No Chances!
Useoniy the “FOSTER SEALFAST” Fruit .
Jars. SanitaiT glass toptf Cost a litrie more
but worth it. Absolutely Ae best of all.
:
PINTS
quarts ' 2 QUARTS

McCormick, “of Course”
CKOCEXIES
Ci»iseBiPbotie271 402 SOUTH UNidN STREET Traver.e City, Meh.
ALUMINUM WARE PREMIUMS FOR CASH TRADE

Mid-Summer
iNOTAHomncnKEi
THE BIG MUSICAL COMEDY

“The Elopers’
A New Mm ill Ameteot Phpe

100 - LOCAL PEOPLE IN CAST -100
(F. A. Ogden, New Tort, Director)

THE M16HTEST AND FUNNIEST
SHOW EVER HERE.

Lyria Theatre
August 13th and 14A
Anspkes Traverse City EajJrt
^ aOUNinD BWBim FBREfflOI uw
Qeuy Your TICK£^K<

iSHiS

CONVENIENT LUNCH CABINET FOR UOTORS

f;,/' :

>>/■ -0

iHs

^

PROPER WORbNO OF A ORAG

lEsm
AMHi^bwCbh
LESSOK fOH IULY1S.
HEZBIQAH, THB FAITHFUL KINO,
am-n

Howto Oat BMt F
Whoftovor PoeolbU.
HOTORI8T8 EATINQ LUNCH^ ON ROADSIDE.

If a dirt road UTwerfy bunt, «»o
road drag iRU
la good condmon. like any other work th«e
is a best way to do It. These nlea
bom the Midway MsgaMiMb tdl how
to get the right resolta.
*'Uae a light drag.
•^Ql It over the road at as antfo
so that a small amontt of earth b
pushed toward the cento of Die road.
“Drlre a team at a walk.
“Bide on the drag: do not walk.
•■Bagin at one aide of Uie rood, i«tnming up the oppoNte bde.
•sssssasadsassssswsaasssss
*BTag the road as soon after every
! GOOD CAR REQUISITES t rain es posdble, but not when the mud'

AiLmDtomoMIe laodi box. dealgi^ed «bd massfactared In PorU^nd. Ore., b
Intended to be carried on tite raBOlng board of a car. to wU<d> it may be att.cb.1 bj OOUM bl two
tboiolwtp™ wm. W-au* It
a ^tcaae. One side lets down to fonoia pladc table, and the box contains a
series of hinged and swinging drawers for food and bottles, also a metal-Uned
lee box wUb water, dnln. and a ptafb and linen cdmpartmeot nie matertaU
naed In conetmction of the bot are flr wood and eenew,' the oatalde hetng
black enameled and the Inferior natural finish. Variona abea are made, tun­
able for from three to eight persona. Ihe largest else b 84 Indies long. 19
Inches high, end 9 Inches deep, the Ud making a IS bjr 83 Inch tabla^opnlai
Mechanics

Really Handsome. Care Stand
Out and Receive Praise.-

TteioMBmliinism

I
>
;
>

able tVdo the fa-low«ng things,
according to the bead <d the engine^ng department of one of
the large motor car mannfactoriea:
.'
To run ataadlly an4 pleasantI ly on bl^ gear at speeds from
* fire to fifty miles per hour over
smooth roads.

through deep sand, •
I mud or snow easily and without 2

Tweitr-FlR Tem’
E^otaenWlfli
KU«TS«ir

'l
fa
for the tronblet to
' Very troly yoori, _____
OTTO S. O. VBTSB.T,
Pharmaeist.
MSI TtoBaa. Oor. Ubety Sts.
Sr*. M, MM.
Awe Wto llaf East MB De Per Tas

sSsl.S.'?fTnrwf^£:
tod bteddcc. When writh«. be sore aad
mention tUi p^. - Bapiar fifty«ent
aad«msdJlet^^bottlei to mb at all
........jy and the War.
Prof. -<3. Sbnley Hall of the Clark
hnlvetBlty. United States. pUcdi the
•nblect of appUed paydiiialgy on a
high plane b ration to ^ war. Ba
ttatea:
“Whatever system has bate em­
ployed. It b evident that appUed
psychology has produced resnlb in
thb war whldi It wiu never potalMa
. to attaih before. Mm have endued
more, they have shown more herobm
and daring and have mhmlttvid to
more punishment then in any pre•vloas wu. Mo such aboghter would
have been poaribb Inyformar war*
g a panic. Thb has
.y for the various grades of aervice
t for apodal activities within each
grade Our country may as wsU tblni
ta going to war without fint-dan toltbry equipment' aa without a knowl­
edge of antUed peydiology. The coun­
cil of national defense seems to have
reeognbed this; and the National Besearch coundl within that body will. 1
tmdarsbad. contain represenbtlTe

sfter sedng a few diiRdiea shot up
. In this war. Ponmdl doesn’t imprssa
me aa nmklng high as a ruined dty.''

%iyei« fluids
—Ttaytoefan

To climb any ordinary hUl
• whero there are travded roads,
: oohlgh.
To get away from a standstlU
about ak quickly as use's nel^
bors' caiB.
’ <
-To do a)l theso things as
cheaply as possibly and without
skilled care and constant attea-

2

2

a
*
2
2
a

TO CUT AUTOMOBliS, FWRIC

----

Wat KnHO Drawn QuIeUy Aeren Is
Better Than Shears —Strips
Maks Oaaolina Raps.
A ^ knife drawn qrrickly acrosstte fabric b a better method of-SIb
than with shears.
A stralghtwith................................... -

I & ed5~bcr~m

one of the brltft snd sttzsctive spots
in the btto history of the Ungfiom of
Israd. It was a most tborouA reto'
mation and Ood net hb sed upon It

flfaPaCd las tfaii WmBm

DQAN*5 VJrar

KbnMMMW CO. BUfMiaH.Y.
«ud>t to give tbdr daasas a comprebwalve view of all that He«kiah did.
recorded In U Oiroiu dtaptecs
£9-82.
I. Hcaddahb ProdamaUsn.- (w.
I
1-6), Thfc proper Introduction to thb
iMon would be to return to chapter
twentydne and note the restoratton
of ttie worship of Jdwvah. Bow It
b«an In cme man’a'heart Hes^lah;
bow he called the peimle to be dean
then called tmc« a ‘
of the house of Ood and lb n
(TV. 18. 19). How. be called thent to
renewed aacrlfleo and woraMp (w. Brefamerboy riUiilitiws Wenwato
20. 21). The restoratlcm of Die daoffering and <rf the bnmABQ^ and
the result of theee^Eeringa ln*1he Lovltlcal music and In the woidilp etlhe
great eongregatlog-t»r-28). The soW. H. U, DETROIT, HO. 27-191^
qud'of Boag always fdlows and
eoto«ni«* a true revival of rdlgtcm.
Having consecrated tbemadraa unto BREAD AS ECONOMICAL FOOD
^ liord, Heseklah eoida out thb
ptoeUmalleo. The ccnaeccatloB of the Would Bs Used Mora Extendvdy If
Huiiio Bsfasd Variety Was Always
people, aa referred In chapter 29. was
Good. Bay Governmont Enperta.
very coogAete. (See w. Sl-SS.) Hesokiah was a man of deep dbeemment
aa wen as of true piety. Be saw ttie
meaning of the sacrifice of redemption wdl made. It would be used more exand put the pamover forward as Die todvdy than at preaat In pUce of
very heart-center of the wordrip «t mere expendve foods, say Rteclallsb
In toe United Stotos department of
Jdiovah. (See TV. 1.2.)
agriculture, and thb wutdd to a dbderstanda the paSMver.
-tlnrt economy. Ftmi toe sbndpotot
12:15-28; I Oor. 6 :T. 8; Bom. 8 ^8. 26; of nutrition It mafceo very UBle dlfference whether breadanto are served la
yohn 1:29.) Ilczcklah Chi n-t
cbQ to tooae of Ismd akma. but tto f<m of brad or In the form of
exbndcd It beyund tb borders to toosa breakfast eeresb. side dbb« with
of iRdmin. tons manifesting the true mat, or desorb.
A ™n agaged in moderstt muscu­
mbdoury «plrit Hashish had am­
ple Bctlptnxal warrant kseptog thb lar work an profitably consume about .
throe-fourths of a pound a day of
bradatnfia In any one of toso forma.
Thb quantity b toe cqulvaleot of one
pound of baked bresA As a matter
whether it to s ipstter <d tone
God approves. Heteklsh. bowerer, uf bet. hewever. it b not proUMe
did not act upon 'bb own.inltbtivo. tost In too avetBge family tob qnscbut aonght counad. (8oe-v. 2) Tto Uty b coosdmed and the defideaey b
man wtao b tto most clesrly led <a made up by toe qae of B
Ood b the maa.wfao b most eager snd
to knew bow Ood b lesAng
other ma snd win Usta most petiat- bralto. but from'both an economical
ly to toelr eonnsd. Tto fact that tto and a hygleric point of view should be
peoirfe hsd not....................................... used moro extenrively than it usually
b. deelare'tto experto.

■Sss^

WMseTidBoiisH

J
o
S

2



2

Idea of Quantify—,

The-----.. ----------atanda out aa one of the elect, and
never fails to receive I
Oon and Aeerfnl piebe. Yettbenumber of motor cars that.measure up totbf canons of artbUc praise b amall.
Jhb b BO because fbe art of creating
them b bnt little practiced in America.
The American cuatwn of duality pro­
duction offeru but little chance for art.
Where a manufacturer alma for volume
of production the creation of beautUoI
detdgna IntoferM with it Only the
whose production b rebtlvdy
limited mtdenakea to sallaty the
canons of artbUc taste. .
in by Restrietlans.
Automobile body building b hedged
about by many realrieUoaa. It b only
in rare cases that the body d«Ngner
b permitted to lay bb own foandatloa,
6ttt must take the aiaaab as It b
turned over to him by t
department and endeav
best he can on a fo
by •Boroeone else, who may not have
rite slightest conceptloo of besuty.
AiDatlc bodies need to be In bslanced prapomm to tbs hood, but alnee
thb b deteruilned by the length of the
motor, and since the length of the body
b detumined by the wheel base, the
body .designer has not much btitude.
WlUiln a definite a^ce back of the
-motor a fixed and arbitrary number of
persona must be seated and seated
comfortably. Door* for entrance i

fa a rewsito of tbas
- - UA

OotaUs •f 'BpUU.ea On«In ^ condltkm ^ to utt* tn ttis

not dtag a dry road.
"Di»g whenever possible at nD saaof the year.
■nie width of the traveled way to
t mainblned by the drag should be
from 18 to 20 feet; first drag a little
more *>■■" the width of a alngte wbeH
track, then gradually Inoeaae until de­
sired width b obtabed.
“Always drag a Uttb earth towards
the cater of the road until It b raised
from 10 to 12 Indies above the edges
cd the traveled way.'
“If the dng cub too mudi, shorten
ehit^
for dragging are
“The beat resnlb
ri
obtained only by roated applica­
A Heavy Stralght-Edpe (or Pladno
a Table to Oaide the KnHs In Cut­ tion."
ting tto Fabric,
the body must ba.'k^ b
VOLUNTEER FOR GOOD ROADS
rebtkm to the bdght 'of the seab
ad b evaed tm sgalnst the edge cif
of the hood.
If. with these restiictlotis. dm body the bble and a p^ect 45-degree cut­ Wo Can Hsvs Anything Good If Wr
Will Get Together snd 'Wetk
designer succeeds in turning out a har- ting angle secured.
After tto gqm or flbrlfc b podad off.
Hard fto Oediwd End.
numlons'cat. to has done wdL
he has not teally done wdl uDlena’ll tto boUand strips are soaked until they
Whg/bsd toads, even, b a moral
has all been fanned oo that It «m ate soft They make excdlat gaaoUoe
questioa. Why should ma wade b
take color comblnatioQB most effect- rags.-^<9alar Sdace Moontfaiy.
mud and punidi toelr bessb wtoe
irdy.
.
OWNER STARTING HIS ENGINE they have tto power to prtvest Itl
To be sure, thb wOl not mea
It b moral ta tost we fsU to uso to
much If the ear ta to to painted a soUd
advantage toe powers and posdblUcolor, bnt when thb b doos tt takes Hsbtt of Flooding Carb
tito that Ood hna glva na, wrlbs B.
out of tto dan of beantlfnl
F. Bcssley In Progreadve Farmer.
We can tovs good roads It we.wlU.
Wo can have any good tolng If we
How seldom «m Rees s privab
In the toriy days the
er atnit hU engine with tbs swttdi win—comnnmitles sctlng together.
lenbtloos In tto way of scroll work off, toou^ tto protesdooal driver Half s desa ma could vetunteer to
and tiimmlnga, ttie moro oraab wu
very ofta adopb thb ptocednra
tto car. Thb was
hb motor b cold.
dmpUetty. and before onken lenmed
average owner floods hb or- SOM wunld feOqw towmt un these sddlUaos to s csr simp' buretor, or bilb the dtoke switches
A mQUao voluntsen wm na
ero so many dust gatherers,' iddch
snd presses the sbrter button Isr arms to shoot down s mUUa ether*
as Wdl nigh Impossible to koR) desn.
ctnally five or dx times. Tha he who have doue to«n no harm; why
Oonsldertag aU tto ^dleapa under
opens tto bonneC, perttape, floods the ahoold.not some volunteer to to bddwfaldi the body deslguw must
carburetor again, and at last geb an 0s in tos nomneea of penes and
b not Bui^rbiiig that so fur
progrebt___________ ,
^nnlnely.artbtic b
It b obvlou that toe Ides of flood­
o%s ftwmdstloa
ing toe carburetor b to obtain a tem­
artlBta, restricted to fixed snd fre­ porarily ^toed mlxtnre. bnt toe val­ ARMY ENLISTING ROAD MEN
quently cramped .greas, forced to pro­ ue of the flooding b lost if U to done
vide proper doors and seab and when itoa the cylinders and Induction pipe Corpsof -nioroughiy Eyrisiyd Bps,
- thb b done, turn out a beautiful are fnU of mmare. any petrol vapor
daltab In Constructing Wetk
creaUon. the dedgna who docs thb b left In thb oveml^ having long aloes
dbtincUy an artlsL
j£ the oglne be turned over s few
buUdlnr'dto
recruttod to
BLOWOUT CHAINS ARE HANDY tiinea with toe awltch off. the air b ex- nsd
tto engloeer reserve corps of tto
pdled, snd a thin mixture ^ air snd United States army. Thbbtoeccrps
petrol Inhaled la lb place. Floodln*
of rTp-ie»v^ ma which U bring oe^
ton fives a temponrlly rich oixtsrv
garised SB a reservs bodyjif thomagbin the eyUndem and toa engine w|U ly trained specisUatf la etsty todtah
aadHeldlng Gap.
Btan at tto first triaL
Of cooBtructloa work.
Bbwout ehalna are among toe Utest
ooveltlM to be offoed toe motor tour­ CARRY .CHAINS YEAR* ROUND
ist. They are designed to psas around
Tto nsds tnriih s yvdrilA to
toe ototceperona Ure, dosing and bold­
inaiiii ri toe vahm oC any ecanivdtying Closed tto blowont gap. Wltoach
A setBed-country tost b not worth a
chain ootoes an Inner patdi to be
Bast to Um Four.
ggnd rand b not werth Bvtog to.
placed over tto bob or qpt on tto 1ftdde or toe shoe, with toe Btoky dde
Bsmstober • that toalna are neadsd
- OMris BsrilMMdto
next to the casing. On dlndia toes s to saaAr M wril to In winter. A
Beri wsoMs are oWatasd to *ar
.bat Up sf toe mab puts of tto Hewtouvy rain wfU SOM make toe stieeb glng tto read to SOM to potoMs nfts
oat ctuiin iMoka under the rim to tto and rands dngeraos. Som. paople
tochimto.^^______________
stoto aUa. against toe Up of sn saxD- only carry one <faaln,M the right nar
Isry took, vtobh stbeha to tto Mb
Bad Roddo ■ Mlndransa.
Iton. A saawdrivar b tto only toeT better, both a toe rar wtisda. but«
Itor conds tra d bar to
'aasdad to mvty thsMrvbs. widto
• ua bur hod hav, oao In
gl Is «L«. •b««Bg to das.

tber dday. Not to with thb atondaaOe young king. Be was not bound
by precedat. but Wtts anxlons to
ago. One company expects to masnplesoGod.
factnre uppers of ahoa from rriiber
HaxsMalib Exhoftstten (w. 7- u wril to soles. Thb company will
HesekUb began bb eriiorbtlon operate lb own merdiant BBrine to
by caning sttatloa to toe treapsocs bring crude rafator from Sumatra and
of thdr btoers (v. 7). At tto a&s carry manntsetnred artlria to aU
tone to retonds toem tost If Ood gave

it

i>in,ewn pairs of rabba sboa a day.
and yMded not thom
More than a mlllioo trea b Sumatra
Lord to ater hb anetnuy. wMeh . . pUntatlons are bring tupped..
tod saoeilBed unttr ttom. they ftoold
»-ando too Beretows «f OsdTwrato. for toey hsd tmsd bam tto
Lord; they hsd “trespsased against tto
Lord God of toelr btbsra.' ~
tost oopaas Ood had "given than
up to doDblba." UteraQy to bad
mads toM "U sstisiltoioBL" TUa
knswn. -a ye i a" (V. 7). Am
with vaopae I sa today tto toaobCm of Indlridt la. <tf bmma. •
musltbs and a
■g-lnW Ood. 1
have hud the deity of Christ a^ tto
iMgifatbn ot hb Word called Into

The Danger
Zqne for Many b
CeDee Drinkiiig

to Jean Cbbt snd taO to ofaw Us
cMMWDd. that ws am tto atrtts and
desototlM of today.
Tto Brut depnrtnn cansd pscgls to
to ‘WtSewtoad’ and Jehtoto b odlBom. WMI). In pbee of thb "l_
noeknesF* of toelr hearts FTnirriBh
entreab thoi to tun again to toe
Lord and not to be stUf-necked u were
toelr btoeaa (v. 8), tost if toey win
turn again unto tto Lord (v. 0) to«y
wO) find oompasriM so tost ttoy atoll

^'Wto*sto ^sr^
Ttoy wars alM to sriTs him. Meat
Messed learib woe to fBOow br toam
and for torir hretoran and torir chBdran. tat aU of thb hrigig pngpari M
hsaad tarn toe bet tost Jstovah *b
gtNtoto and BHrdftd- (Bx. StfM. 7;
Fa. 80C: Jemh 4:2; Mark 7U8).
Tton, STM a now. there were tooa
whs wndd not ylrid ttomaalvto to
Oodh ipnclou tovltttbn. As tto
trieaavBtoad torangh. toa esutoryuf
Bphrata nad Miuamah. tota «to Ze­
bu!oa. «h*r week "laigtito to gesot

Instant
Postum
m B DU—li Ejr

th. eWg^ W

-“TheUVafitaai*;

■.m

%ir MHHtT Mi
COM intTm

m:

m
lUMHER HARO OW CHICKS'
■peeid Care Should Be Ohren TUn
Ouring Hot.Westhw

TU fimiikTriigiU
A tanner' 'n0« 'v'Hr - h>s ted.

«Srt>nnWatean wrt» hU dog tresto a fidd. and tl^teed Urn
*B^^^“uwev«r. throogh tU
mme Add an boor later U was inrortsed to meet lU Irteman to a»of It. ««1 cxdalmad an-

Bye. H. aUROESS.
tment oT Pmiltty
tcnigan Apicun«ra> Ceflege.
I Uasiug. Mleh.—V togye Is.any
EMd—Doea Goode enjoy golfiBg U
—of toe year when toe yoong
^
•Mm no." answered Rat, *Tfs stto its fullest sxtentt
chick abould U more catefuBy ouned'
Kidder—Terr onltody; yon asc BFB
idW. m» '
Slug toan nsoal. u u to toe montos of, ttltoTtfeysaa.
towmdy rdlgiooa
<uly and August, wha tU weaCherrt* are a tat of fsimy thtogi-to
man begtaa to getlnhlsweriDUtwork.
I
know
wut
pleasm
ta
for
1
hiu
It U at tUs tone toaS poUeta which this' worid-indodtag puc« tetoa done good work.—R- L. Btevmmea.
are expected to beeocne winter laycra
tre most iikMy to recrive a setoack.
Mbdas In TteahInB, er Introdocinfl
'Is handHog theob during toe hot
Impurltiee In Other Ways. Will
weather season, tberefora; tt ta wd to
Bar
Saad
From
Pedigreed
keq> a DQiDber of potots In mind.
Jhv Cm» PwMrd nd italMHatCUM.
Look to the water supply. There
tooDld U plenty of It. It should U
kept in toe sUde. ebonld be vat^Or
By PROF. ri. ®F^OOj
limit, .Breeder, Baperiment Btatlon, pore, and contained to a dean vesad.
D«M Ur Tbm.
for It Is throng tU firinklng watm
Beat UndU. Mich.—Ibgre Uve luai
tut many cusesaes
diseases are
Son. tatod. tint BMB oCVn^ ^xantoMt SMI in» Ure poouciy in■■
nboldlBcbl^ domed Tanlac for tU good tt hae done bean developed by tU erperUent M- to toe Bock. Water ahoold never U
la the «■««» of Hoo. Frank v. tlU of toe MldOian Agricnltnrd wl- gireo growing'stock ^Ch Is less than
pAOe (An.
^ —-----------------to recent yeare ImprovU stratoB aO degrees Fahrenbdt.
itbUdam psbUdr. to a BnprtotvT Brana. former Mayor of Btnntotfiam.
Food shenld U In good ooanHty aod
wheat, oatt. rye and Uriey
ncdldne. Mosj pco^imt mm. bow<. Mr. Brane la one of too bmt known
ew, Hxtafllnj nprem* coart JodcM, men to pohUc UIo to AleUnu today, by repeated teste Uve been proved to jt highest duality, with s
,— grain ra­
«yorm «f oar J«dl*« cities pto»to«t being at one tone e^tw of ana of toe U superior to ylddlnf power, and to bri^t grain to It A good
Sostht
greatest
newspapers.
tU
Bto
a
number
of
otter
onaUtiea.
to
«
pt
tion
for July may U made up of two
mte and cwmty oficUl^ Untea Uwm Age-Herald. Be was also «• any other etralns of tbeae crops
parts by weight and one pert of corn.
•Un. doeton.' cdltora ludin* odncnton, to*«UMU cAcUlaand «T«b bU- ______ of pnbllc accounts of Alabama. to too date. All of these varieties If wheat' Is not available nM barley. A
- iBtm at tU Oo9d Uto deeoMd It In ftHng of toe benefits be Ud de­ Uve been built pp. by carefd eelec- masb composed of eqnal un*
don. from s single aeed. In too case weight of wheat bran and ground oats,
thtlr duty to cud« forwd and teU sired from Thnlac. Mr. Brans said:
■For yeara I seSered with gaaorttia of Red Rock wheat, the first planting to which has been added 16 per cent
tU pMfde «Ut Tuklac hu dato for
and indigestion in the worst form. 1 from which tols vurlety Us grown, tj weight of a good meet or fish
•as made to toe faU of lOOS.
■i also good."
non weBtenm lUn of nttiw was hsbiraally constipated and bad
After a time eaeogh seed was pro­
TU pulleta should Uve plenty of
Uve recognimd In tbU medidne a new patiw to my sbonlders and headatoe
- Illy. My a»etlM left ma al- duced from this ortglnd
sUde. TU Ideal place to grow them
dlMOTtsy and a iKlentUle ttinjoplt la
r and ererytotog I woold to enabldNhe college to dlstribnU Is In the middle of a cornfield. Such
tU medlenl world. It l» a wdl-known most entlr^------------------me. FtosUy I got
this variety among a number of se- a iitnatloa Is Ideal for the colony
teet that tUM qdcodld IndorMnenta
*— Iseted farmers, by whom *.tnO s^ Uuse. The pallets may destroy to s
UU bUn flTen Tanlac time hnd time awfni attacks of acow
asdn and they wQl contlnae to U pitatloo of the heart and amotherlng of toU superior whegt are expected to large extent the growing crops' within
^ be Urveeted this seasca.
a rod of the building. Ut toat Is all.
gtren jot as often as new teats of its spella. For a long ttoie *
A wheat Sdd will grow puUets tUt
powers are made; and it also esplalns one or more of these veils er«y night ' AU of this abould be «ved to M
why nanibe»-6f the Wg drag firms of end I woold wake ont of my resden marketed for seed purpoeee. Ut If its will lay most beavUy.
sleep
gasping
for
breath.
Do not overcrowd toe pullets st
holders
dMlre
to
have
toe
*t«ln
tU coantiT are ordering It aninal»d»
“I
bought
a
botae
of
TanUe
and
to
ntet
Allow at least eight Inches
■pected
and
eertifled
to
by
the
college
In caxli|Bd lota.
ms SDiprtse and gratlfleadan I began and the Michigan Crop Improvemrai perch apace lor. eato poUet Over­
to
fed
rdlef
after
toe
first
few
doaes.
crowding
means overheated birds, and
associallon.
every
care
must
U
eie^
Dp. J. T. Bdsfards, of ^’ay«tteTUl^ I k«t taktog toe medicine and now my
Meed to eee lUt toe wheat Isn’t mixed. this may lead to torir catching a cold
Oa., one of
<?f tU boet-niown
Uet-known mennwa
menib«
These precautions me necessary for which frequently develcqm Into some
of the medical profemlon to the state recoray la simply toe talk of Blrmtogthis reason: Red Roto wheat. It has form of roup.
of ueuiaiu,
Oecogla, makes
a biav
statement
ttiat hwm."
ox
iimncB •
.
bea demonstrated, wlft yield from five
A full crop now means a full egg
wDl nndonbtedly produce a profo
Tanlac has done me more good thfn *- ten bushels per acre or superior basket next wlnta.
impreesloo toronghoot toe Sonth.
Leghorns FlU produce eggs wheo
“In my thirty years of actual prac­ Bwything I *T« tried. I now wake up
Jiey are five months old, Plymouth
tice aa a Uemsed physidan to toe state to toe morning feeling flnA
«Tm Idling all my friends about
Bocks, Rbqde IsUnd Beds and Wyanof Georgia," aays Dr. Bdwarda. “I
Smart Man.
dortes wbeb they are. all mootto Old.
bgre nerw
seen anyuuiiK
anything to egoal Tan- Tanlac and an. re<»mniendlng it to
•vtT Been
Fulton Was s Great Man.
After the sapper party tU USk
Sort jofir -polleu when Ihey are
The class In history was studying handed ro'und n-boi of dgari with M
Uc u a medicine to prodoce resulta. them, regardless of their age and
twelve^ weeks
•eeks qltL . Remove uie
toe w^
»
I hare no nesmicy m
the life of Robert Fulton. In connec­ C^nrive sinUe of toe help-ypurseMDr. Q. W. De LaPerriere, of Winder.
._j8s a^
to _
ap those which seem 'blow
*.............
*
tola medidiie
medldpe and 1I am prescnoin
tion with It they, of course.
Oa, la not only Ue of toe bmt known
ture. -i well-raised pullet wlU produce, In toe topic of toe etearoboat which onO-don’t-mlnd-roe variety. ^ ^ _
for my patltots almost erery day.. “Lovely rigars. ye kpowT U ^
while a poorly raised pullet will be a you know, made Fulton famous.
Professor C. T. Clotfelter. prominent p^dans and drngglstt to toe ^te
dared. oITertns the t*«x to toe nr*
edneator and prinripal j>f toe High of Georgia, but U also a man of exten“What are many of the great uses guest. -They were a present from tef;
property
and
wide
Influence,
rankstTS
Bchod-St Bm Hill. Ga.. says; T was
of toe steamboatT- as^ed the teacher.
tog
as
one
of
toe
leading
dtliens
of
wUe."
to Eodi Ud physical ewOltloB tUt I
things might not Uve tappeoU
CABBAGE WORM AT LARGE “WUt
Gently. Inil U'-.ni- I’je
(Ir-.-y^
If toe steamboat Ud not been Invent- -ry man present tm ore tlmt SicohtaB
feared 1 would Ura to' give v my that atlre seefion. Be Us been to
dnUes. I aattered from rtieamattom. toe drag bnstoese to Wtoder for 26
edr’ she hinted.
wonld expand his heart to colossal
RM. OuR— --I Fi«fc “* *•«
nrer. nansm and terrible bll- yesrs.
“Well." answered lltOe Johnny, who nortiona, or ds« toat he Ud sworn «C
Be
Cheeked
by
Powder
Eecenriy Dr. De LaPerriere wrote:
looB taeadaefads. I Uve taka 8 botCes
had been called on," well, um-m-^ Co­ the weed for the duraUon, says Ute
and Sprays.
“Our pevle are mndi athosed over
lumbus might not have discovered
of Tanlac and 1 fed better toan I'Uve
toe beneficial effects of •^anUc and I
fdt in yearn."
America.

B/DON bTwHELAM,
^‘wi^toey Ud all gone ftehete ss.
desire to eay that It U toe mod wo^
Notod Tewi 'UlU.
nnwen Bpeelallet in MAmolegy,
tracted a card tnm under tU toB
derful sdler I ever tad to this s&re."
Hon. Archie B. i
Miehipan A«rieult«r#1 CtHtege.
DANDRUFF AND ITCHING
layer of dgarq: “From Un^ Jai^
Other prodfinent men teo Uve in­
--------- -.junCy*
BaM
r-»n«i«g
Micb.—Fanners
anid
-mat little **ecb saved me tte
tteciabty- not only one of the best- dorsed Tanlac are:
gardeners
with
a
crop
of
cabbages
comDisappear
With
U
m
of
Cirtleura
Boap
box," he mused. "JpHy smart wbeessr
Profeesor Etamr Morris, of Dover.
---------the
cabbage
worm
may find
’i^Otatnse^Trial Fro.
Ton.;
Ti... Pretfeseor W.
w. A. Wood, of
. the
e
Tlsltora
ere
Hsr Psftlofi fihoL
among toelr unwdc
Central Graded SdtooU,
Stooola, Wtoder. Oa.;
'saved toe people to **i« Important of- Catiol
“l-<w Uve returned all my tetters
TU first rwng to restorlac dry. tell­
ig If they haven't a
C. C. Ooopeu.
Cooper. prtetet
presldeBt of the Goorgla A FIELD OF MICHIGAN WINTER
STSr « S^v. yearT^
C
nim. The cabbage appears to Uve no ing hair Is to get rid cf dandruff and and ptesenta. Hortense.” says BgberC
Lswc«rsvflle.
, BARLEY IN EAST LANSING.
n had toe worst form of ipdige^ Home Cotton OU Oo- Lawrencevtu^
— Ototmat into “but yon seem to U retalntog -T
TWi Strata of Uriey, and other end of troubiee. If It snrvlvee trans- itRSitny. Bnh Cntl
tton. suffered bR toe time from gas oo Oa.; Hon. R 8. Shepard, member of
May I y«t dare to Ups
pi.Fitrng, escapee the flea-beetle and *»lp..nexi momlDg shampoo with
my stomach and was eonttouUy tetot toe Atlanta dty eoundl; iXloaA John -pedlnraed" varletlee of wheat oatt toot maggot, and reaches an advanced Outlcnra Soap and hot water. Prevent
tng up tmdigcatsd food." said Mr. An- B. Oalna, of BowUbg Green. Ky- edi­ and rye yield er*U from 8S to 6^r state of growth, tt Is attacked by cab- ■mk and iwip troubles by making CmU"Oh. yonr pnoiogiw"* * —
oeraon. T^oed with nen^c tor. poUtlcal writer and weU-known cent better toan toe averao*- They Uge worms '
to Life, thinking toe edltot wonl^
eurs
your
everyday
prejmr^
leader
to
his
state:
Hon.
George
Samfumlefa
a
toort
out
to
Inoraaeed
pcop.i»« of toe worst aort and nototog
to ran it as one of those pictures floe
We nonce frequently tUt toe cabFree sample eato by mMl with
aeoned to bdp me except to a tam- uel BUey, Chief of Ptdlce to Macon. duetlen.
bagee we Uve watched over ao doaely Address postcard. CuUcura. DepL 1« which they pay a«00 te anybody tote
Oa.; HW. 0. O. Lavender, register of
can anpply a proper tiae."—Life.
grata more than any other white wbrat during toe spring and early summer
feel better after taking Vraitoroaon Comity, Tennosee; Dr. gnm in the state. If eU this im­ Uvu bdea eaten through the formtog Bostdo. Sold ew
ay first bottle of Tanlac and Uve Just W. H. Brown. 4822 Chariotte Ave- proved strain can U planted thle fell heads, while toe outer leavee aleo ehow
Cfsxy AUirt It, In Fact
Irrelevant simiianvy.
BOWstar^umytolid. raadiser- Nasbvffle. Tenn, founder and preri- It WiU bring about a big tocreaee In - inch damage by being eaten. Upon
a.uie—What do the Inmate* think te
‘ktaoper
Is
a
writer
who
Is
well
d«nt of toe Tennsaee Protestant Home
tbenew SKjluml
• --------number of emaU
posted on •street’ corners."
for Glris; JUn F. OarroU, cotton mill production next eeaaon, and more In
of ““
Keeper—They
Just niAv
rave over ».
IL
That’S
nothing;
so
are
mail
boxes."
Keeper—iney
JURt
grea
worms,
varying
to
tee.
IBlfl, without so much as the breaking
That’s nothing; s« are mail boxes."
banktog tostlttttioiu of South superintendent of .CUttahootoee aod of as additional acre of ground—a fac­ found. They are not readily seen ow­
Plttsbnra, Tenn. and one of toe most AUenta and N. M. Taney, managa of tor highly Important In the Utot of the ing to toe fact that toelr color la so
suMessfuI banken sad bustoeso mem contract department Attante^Trte- expoae to men end money which at­ nearly like lUt of the leaves upon
icgrapn vm
pbone ^ Tdegiaph
Co. '
In Tesnevu aald:
Which they aro feeding.
' '
ro Ja a Xante deahr to yow tends toereaslng aegea^
“I sutterod frtan Aeumatlam and
_ ____
adult 01
of W®
toe UIUuaBi;
cabbs^ worn
— ••
In addlUoD to the Red Bode wbrot ' Jhe
•toer allBMttt fU tuny jurs aod
cohimoo white butterfly seen
•pedigreed" varieties of oats, barley
___jnefiUy to toe early spring, in toe
war Spirit Cor
, j
Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree — Teai^f teats of these grains, indndlog spring these butterflies gather to large
proved loai
that uwr
they wlU numbers to moist places and lay their
1 * big knee Eke tW*. hot yomUm more tUn once pUced to a perplex­ toe wheat Imve
nave proven
eggs on aome available plant, and toe
[ onrhmaba^wbnuieoB^ ing position by toe loss of member* yldd the JoUowlng. In bnahds pet a
— wCCUt: «u um rns—
to »i~u.
about .
a week. --Ihe
of his cast during his tour torough- u compared with other strains:
larvae emerge lu
bads (if 160 Bcr«a each or se^ BOpe
whole life cycle requires about five
,t Canada and the United States.
RSD ROCK WHEAT
weska, and there are about three genNo leas toan ten members enlisted,
::;SS; eraUona a year. The last generation
todudlng two ladles for service In
, UnA *urt M cteap.ro toe oPP?™mty Mj«xc
spends the winter as pupae amoi^ »*>«
___ wiU clem it oE without hyitig up war Uspltals. Oae hnmorone Inci­
n the bone. Mo blister. iioMr dent occuried after the engagement
old —tv and rabblsh to the flelU.
“SSSSi rR.hh.gc worms can U controlled by
of a' “depnty" Id the United SUtea.
the nse of powdered araenate of leiid
SU was pot very much interested to
avSaSt...
toe war prior to her appointment,
dusted on before toe beads Uve
ma­
toetolk bemnn
behind me
the
but toe-talk
TU adoption of these Improved formed. Later, as the
-a Wtetmn CsBsda
PiWSlMStbMWetiiaM
•tratos by toe farmers of Wcblgan ture. a spray cosstaUng of balf.aii
^ Of pyrothram. or
•would, vritoout
toe felt one nl^t ImpeUed to voton- sn increase In production with less powder, to a gtelon of waten wlU ^
to-e»dantlyeontr«ltoe’>’
^
s
and
DAISY FIT
■HfotsaoO kills teer as a nurae, was eventually a^ cost and greater letums toan U pos­
wUl te barmltes to man. One wry,
.allflMS. SMiM cepted. and her place had to U fined. sible by any otUr stogie means.
But tos men itoe Uve these otratos however, win not be suffldat ui^
to toelr possenlon now. and those who ordinary eondlBons. .TU ■prarj^
may plant toon Uter. must recogniK Uve to U rteiosttd at intervals
M.V. NmINMCS
lUt the summer.
toat If these varieties are to U kepi
pore, and ftdr high yielding quaUtt*
matotatoed, every poMlblUty of toelr ORCHARDS NEED CULTIVATIOH
vrito other varieties most U
Keetens 8*1 In Good Condition Helps
Before planttag. and later to, har^
^
Fruit Crap.
Mttog and torUhlng. toeae potots must
Be*
Mirth—Ortharda, acU bone to mind:
Make sme toat toe land Is tree trem teidtog to toe
grain toat mar mix.
1^
U^ttrated tborpugbly U
That toe drill Is properly deaned.
lUt an alley •testates esto two

nEimiH

ranB II

RaniDNnnTiux

strain. a<»t Be Pate, however,
te Be CertHied.-

RBlUmE CARE IHTHRESHING

Save the BabfeB’

snssss:

WhenTbredaRdNtrvoDS

OTjeti^ to tone aid strengthen the

?ffc? 6^o£ these wo^-famed fei^

8^

Bring Welcome Rebel

High Priced WheaA
on Fertile Canadian S<^

rsILDOM^SEE
^BSORBIne

:;;®r

IBO

■ssr-^TS

lE&iSS FRE^LES
»">•** 'ss.'s.s:"

icaa

■'s si’ifa a. o. .-»• »~*2

fSmyWc

^PciZftriG-

«».

■____________________________________________________ ___________

Toe Much of It
"Hadn’t we a hreety time of U last
nlghtr- “Too mgto of It, for wbeo
■ got home, my wile stonned."
vntm you take a Ublt out for an
airing the habit rides._______________

toe la* straw Is wmoved from
the binder before beglrmlitg to cut
That toe grata harvested to ktet ste•Uto fro* otoer gusto to teiocktog or

OKhatd MtOfted U g«« ovar
1W.V the nachtoa to dean before once to era days or w
hMhlsg. (TUMh osts befere s fall after hart ratal. Fndt dmands a
great
deal
of raotetiire to d^vrtop j^
psto. or ast a^ a fsw racks utora

uve be« turned tomake to^ motowre .ratdlly available te
Mde oat and shaken.
TUt toe oschs of bto ate teesnsd
’rS*^totog harrow to «
i«t bteoee stmtog.
U* tools to ura to toe otrtmrt tor this
TUt the weed seeds are fannsd cte

•jssssssicssiisssss

^3

. ikaverse


oty press

ini TilmieV CMoIiiir^
telee
to nnyphynlcl betnty itat the i^PrtQtedToe*d«y*mn<!FrMw«bythe ctn mWit Ptweew or to other ettrtbaice. «ch aa modeatj. SW>d ■«« «
* kind heart. He wrote of wch
tialts aa be wonld raloe In a wile.
C.E.Mym.
flen.Mar.
■ If you poaaeaa theae." he added, “yon
ate a treasnre to any man. bnt no mas
eOTHIC PRESS PRnmHG SERVICE la worthy of yon.’'
The prfnceea threw ttie lettera
|l^^Myei% -SoleOwpcn
tboae who flattered
ber into the w
312 South Union Street
, waa touched by the oneyrom thla
; who valued mental radier than phyeleal tmta. She replied^

'oonnc PR^ PRINTINO SERVICE

PUISLIC r@l.UM

pilnceaa'it aodtd the<eoRa^e»dcirN
between them.' tor he never wrote
heracahi. TOat aympathy for die «mfntnnate which be had apohen of eo
elfndveiy did not atand the test to
whlrti It bad been pot.
Alanthna alao received a portrelL It
, neither beautlfai
qq, bomelj’. thoujtb the lace waa not
devoid of character. He. too, inrerred
be had been aem a liWenesa ol the
prlnceaa. When be bad made up hla
vnind what to do Id the matter be
wrote ber a letter at^lne that he had
recelyed a portrait which be
** ***”'
***
favorably

atsianiEiiiB

>lrs. Esastt Evans, 62 years of age,
passed away at thh home of W. J. Ham­
ilton in Williamsbui^ Tuesday nlgbl.
Eor the past year and a half ahe had
Blade her bone at Ur. ■ Hamflton'aFunenl services were held from tbe
borne Thursdiy aftemoo’n, with burial
ip Williamsburg cemetery.
pg. W. J. Higgins and Miss S
’rail were married Wednesday evening
at fhe home of the bride’s parents, E.
Sth St., in die presence of about tinny
their relatives, by Rev. Demas
Cocnlin. After the cerempny « wedd­
ing supper was served by the bride’s
CDotiier and Ur. and- Mrs. {liggins. left
sh^lv after for their own home, 203
Wadsworth St. They will reside hdre.
Mrs. Higgins has for a'num^r of
years been a teacher in tbe schools
lieie, while be is one of the foremost
dentists of tJie cily.

AUMiE ACCIDENI
MAY PROVE SERIODS
MRS.JOSEPHDffifnflHJI

LaPlant Cat Raa|
upon the curb
in making
turn

An old pioneer of the region, Mrs.
Wilhelm, passed away at ber
home, 430 South Union Street. Monday
light after -an illness of but a few
lOurs. She was bom in.Bohemia in
1852 and came to Uiis country in 18G6.
Urs. Wilhelm was a woman of excep­
tionally high qualities and was beloved
by all who k
knew her. She had a great
many frit
Quite a serious aeddent ocoirchurch a
red at the comer of Seventh and. |
greatly missed.
Union.stre^ at about 5-.30 o’clock [
s, she leaves two daughtei ,
Dr. Rowley ana Miss Grace Wilhelm of to^iight A car driven by Miss
, and three sons, Emmopuel P. Edna LaPlant, daughter of Chas:
city,...........................
helm and Dr. Julius M. WOhelm of Taplant, of Washii^on St., ran
this city and Jerome B. Wilhetin of up on .the curbing by the Camp-'
Morgan City, Ala., who is enp«ed in
ship pudding for the.govemmeot. Fun­ bell Drug Store and hit two i
10 were walking past the j
eral services
Friday altertiooa in charge of Rev. Store.
Demas Cochlin. Interment in OakI’he two giris. Miss Evelyn
wood.
Cook and Miss Lillian i%rr, were

S^S^dng a Wh value on » af®!*' they meet and get
tbetie heart. She deslped a husband < xiie prlntees replied that they would
who would be sympathetic with her. better • correspond lor awhile before
as ehe would sympatWie with him.
meeting in order to learn ol each olh
prince Carnins believed he had
gp^d, bad or indlffercet q-.iBlIUea.
etmek tha chord that would win hhni fo, geveral months they wrote each
I the prlneeaa. Bo he wrote her a second
' other, and then the priucess nett a
' epktie expatiatlpg upon tendeiscss brief note stating that abe had leaned
of’heart, eialtliig It above all other bnt one thing abont her suitor. He
- BfKUtHaiAHAM
vlrtnes. He wee atre that If be mar­ had abon-n blmsclf a true mau la de­
ried lier he would feel for her In all clining to. put himself In a position to Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Wright and
pd Rap
her iroubles-for even royal persons decline to marry a womnn because naIbere was once a king who eovened
------------- expect
1 laid upon her a physical ..
a land so rich and waa eo powerful have tbem-and be had no doubt that
she would respond In kind. blemish. Sie appointed a ttine for the Ui^rltiiture home. Mrs. Wright wa
(bat an alliance with hU fumfly was
Tbe ^»iaceB8 was. abont to invite meeting.
formerly Morion Saytes, S32 E. Sth St.
considered desirable by all tbe other
Prince Carolns to an Interytew w’Alanthna went to the palace cxpcct- . W.'.ldo W. Kapnick and fister Mrs. R.
potentates. The king had one child,
Ing to BOQ t^ womi
woman whoso likenfeas D. Weaver returngd last week Friday
daughter, who was of
ol a marriageable a letter came from an^er royal
'
had been sent Urn. He met, a different ifrom Chatham, Out., where they have
no
.....— - ---------p to tbe time she was twen-1 sonage who signed- hldeelf
A’forest fire in the vicinity of Lake struck down to tbe sidewalk and
ty years It sge she had 1^ kept t
been for the past four months.
become tte bhsband of a prln_ _y from the outside world, shut upI gladly
I
Ann caused considerable ooncerh"fucs- Miss Cook was knocked unconsI loess wbo would Inherit a kingdom, he
In m wing of tbe palace. Koonehadit
) low cious^hile the car ran over the
Ncls Joroenton lecently brought fiom day. Tlie smok* clouds
know’ before be entered the Uste
e princess married Alantbus. who he woo^ north ot the city what later and thick that the fire appeared to be
even seen her excepting her ^rnlly; must
i
limb of Miss Pgrr. •
ihd’a limited suit of attMdents.'
I for her hand what drawbacks there turned out to be a young king who
tlic bills just .west of the city.
In attempting to tom the corOn her twentieth birthday her to-' might be concerning her. He suspert- had just Bcceded to hU throiie, thus turned out to be a flog staff for the P
With................
Ute wind
.. blowing
.
„ a_
gale,. the fire
tber SMit a letter to several neighbor, ‘ed from the fact that a suitor .would uniting in time the two kingdoms. At M. rouDdhouae. A dime eollectiou was.......
ner and go around another car
bur
Mating iLat hts dangb-' not be permitted lo see her that there the wedding Prince Carolus appeared, taken up among the ■employees of' Ibeitravelrt quite a dUlance, sparks aomeLaPlant lost control of her
terwoold correspond wlth any man of was-somo physical blemish‘about her, and when he aaw that the princess had roilrtiad by C. L. Hall and a brand wev. times flying au hundred feet aod stertroyal blood suitable to become her bus-1 Should anch be the case any man who sent him another portrait than her Old Glory purchased,. T.he flag tod ing a new fire. The home of EUis own-car and it ran up onto the
bfn.t and that ehe would marry some - should meet her as a suitor would be own be remonstrated wiih her.
stoff were raised Wednesday afternoon Rayl, about Four miles from Lake Ann curbing.. When it struck the
one of these conospondeuts. prurided; |>isced in an embarrassing position, "Did not your highness prove.” die by the employees that are
re here, butcaaghtfire.butitwasextiaguisbedbebut ^caught fire, but it was extipgnisbed be- curb it was not going over five
be was wUllng to marry her. He was a refusal to marry her after seeing said, "that your bobsled aymiMithy was wilhout any ceremouy • r address,
as |fore any serious damage wu done. No
''
miles an hour and stopped within
e her till after be bad been her wonld pnt a alight upon her.
msdr
most of the cirploycea were cut oF|gnral damage was done to person prope to be placed I
selected for her consort, end If after thus wonld
Urty^. by the fire but considerable cut­ a few feet of where it struck
such a position. * If she would Ulssure
seeing her'be was not minded to
over
limber
and
wood
to
the
amount
of
m
at
the
main
c
ly ber he wonld be excused from do­ him that there was no phyrical blight
n re-*2f),000 w^destroyed by the fire. It time of going to press lo what
si school is bel
upon her he would then write her .............
ing so.
w^lde swath for about 10 extoit tbe girls
. A number of princes e itered tbe lists again.
___ This
-- letter caused tbe princess msiderably eulai£ed and extended.
injured.
.day after a month’s visit here with rela- miles
and
wrote letters
princess. Most,
Mast, to hesitate.
___________
. _ to'the .irincess.
of them expatiated upon
pOD her
bi bestfty, i Soon after Carolus bad sent bis let„!tivef: They .were aetompanied home uiide
which they hsd never seen, comparlnr! ter to tbe telocess be received a
Town and Country Trips—
ber to the full moon. |o a fountain
^t a young woman, one-half
one-hal of
MARK A. CRAW at the City
the snnUgbt, to the fairest;i whose
trhose face was covered with a marbn
flaahing In tbe

Book Store. No fancy price?.
up6n thc'ed dlsfigoremait It^ras-a red and are working with electric, drdls
flower tliat had ever gru'
Don’t hesilate to call the Press Of-; Mr. and Miw. Raymond.
. earth.
pnrple birthmark. Carolus naturally other tooU’and the
— .sparks-from tiiesef
I flee whenever you have n n<,ws item, children of South Bqardmj
inferred
tlikt
It
W«a
a
Ukeneaa
p|
the[ciugbt
fire
in
thegii
There »'BS one coiresp
Wed•
I
-------------------------- — short time with friends in1 town
t
D^ay . 1 jheir way home from Old
jliUssioD.

A PRINCESS’
CHOICE

I--- ^

Standing of Contestants
FRIDAY, AUGUST 3rd IN

THE PONY CONTEST

...

Naine, Age, Re»dent%

■/

j .

^ --

Cart McManus, 11 yeais, 420 FiflJi Street. , Samuel Harbold, 15 years, 23,7 Washington
Claud McGuire, 11 years, 302 W. 12th St.
Joe Babel, 13 years. 112 E. Ninth St
,
. •
Reginold Eldred. 11 years, 145 E. Sixteenth SL •
Elton Ely. 4years, 611 Finest.
Wilford Nash, ll yeais, 326 So. ^ni« Street, •
Phyllis Wahl, 9 yeaiB. 829 Webster St ■
knoble Chase. 8 years, 608 Garfield Ave.
Theodore Crain, 12 years, 312 W. Fifteenth St •
lone Skutt 7 years, 741 E. Eighth St (

Josephine Kehoe, 4 years, Webster and Boardinan.
JSmes Macholda, 11 years, 406 S. Union
Dorothy Daehn, 11 years, 525 Webster St
Sylvia Ford, 7 years, 205 Viiie St
E. Sterling, 12 years, Elk Rapids
- '
Edward Thiel, '
.• ,
'' Chester Supemaw, 11 years, 328 Fifth St
Arthur 1. Webster, 6 years, 713 Lake Ave.’ •
Gerald York, 6 years, 729 Lake Ave. .
. .
Esther Root 9 years. Tenth St
.
John Mackin, lO years, 648 E. Eighth St.
Ralidi SbanncHi, 10 years, 1002 Cass St
Gerald Anthony Fifarek, 1 year, 118 N. Oak Hinton De Witt, 9 years, 216 W. Seventeenth .

ChOdrens’
Wash Suits

;

Edison Shop-Come and hear
latest records on the New Ed­
ison Diamond Disc Phono­
graph. No needles to change.
Scott’s City Drug Store-SSS

20^ Piscount

HAMILTON CIO. CO.
WEST WINDOW

HohieS

St^ding

'S

i’i

^ i
•i


I

richer, better flavor, AdelidoasDess
before tuknown. Tbe Hogbes
. Electric Range is setting tins new
- standard of cooking egoeflence—
.malriKg g

gf

•Elactric IteDga gine • uiteadty of
•aaeied tai advance.
. The «ughee Blecirle ev«i, vriih Be
baevOy innlated. beat fetaUl« vnOa.
eavee grmay in mate ataddaga end
givaa.tba mate a fla«^ bacite flarm.
.Cakae aite brmd itea evwdy ami brown
emftemlr, t " ‘
--------aro no air corranta to cany off tha rich
Jnicaa, nor gaaniae fanaeto eenmidnan
tha food.

mm

wm
• - ->i

.-V

___ft any «____________ _
Blaetifc Rangte ara being boeght by
^^1 iTn^ loemiad^fa
growing groep of naan?
Lrt ttl tall ycte more ahoat *a riaanSoaaa aite coovenlanea.«( ibe flegbM
. Blaetiic Ro^ and teiw yea bow emeh
batter laaolte you Ctei obtato with B than
' wBbai^otbtecoaldacaMbod.
BOr

City Electric Light
J142 E. tyont St.

1
|

\

:f»
SERIODSIY INJURED

S9C3B®®;

■a room at the home of herwn,
C. tsrfulver. «C E. Front St., tod
broke her hip. She was token to the

Saxon “Six”
CHUMMY

ROADSTER

RATES—One cent per word for firat inser-,
tion or three issues for the price of two, ex­
cepting Real Estate Ads which run at one
cent per word per issue. - SITUATIONS
Wanted run free of cturge.

By WAR^ )|ILL£R

her only regret M twing there »s that;
shchaa-nothingtodo.
. „-i 1
Mrs. Pulver waa boro in 1824. m Hfl. “Well." sold Frank Eagatob. “1 am
liar towariJip, Prince Edward county,! here."
r^n.H. and was married toJohnA.] “So am 1,”jwplled'the woman who.
PulvM- in Kewark Canada. To this'Uiougb ebe bad been dlewced trom
u2n were born four children, two of
“Where .are the paperaT"
FOR SALE-Farm wagon and ll^t
whom are sfill living, one in D«fr<nt "There." She p^ted to »
bn^y. Inquire £G6 E. Front Street c
andC.E. Pulverofthiscit}-. Tiic husmeato on a tabla
i office.
33-3
• at Cadil.

Asevid^ce of the gasoline’
^nomy of Saxon «Slx”
• note this — recently 206
stock model Saxon “Sixes”
in a 300 nule non-stop
oertUied run averaged 23|5
macs per gaUon.

M

CLASSIFIED ADS

THEIR SECOND
HONEYMOON

FOR SAt^ .

FOR SALE-Good. estobUsbed ice
e has always been a great woricer
. Jie Methodist churdj and alwa) a at- better off.”
‘Oded until her bearing left her. Slic “Moiher wouldn't let me."
“And if yon hadn't been nndermothreveled a great deal and was
-■
• you would have been better
matter of a boBbaod.'
jlaUUidads some with passes, and s.ems
eeaUng hlS*^ at the tohlc.
1) tj be veiy contented where she is wly | ,^ting
_ np
ip, a i>en 4nd4>egtDntng to put
it she has nothing to dd. nnd thinks bla
i,|g aignature
nim'nti
that
to the documents.
e must keep
Usbei—......
, busy. She lau;:hs md| “How about the quarrelsome boahandar
talks with the attendants nnd
lOSlcheerfulmoodalloMhc time.: He paid no attention t
'engrossed In looking ov(
menu and signing them.
again
id fins be bad
FVod W. Ixiesberg. head of the'TJies-:
iic rose from bla chair, took up
berg' Shoe Factory here, passed awaj I i,iR ha, an^ ^as abont to leave when
at the generalhospitol Thursday night, ■ Kbe raid:
where he was taken on acrount of nj “Vou seem to be In haste."
eeneral breakdown. He' was boro in' “1 am. I have but two hours to at-

FRED W.'IEESBERG

Saxon'* Chummy” is S93S f. o. b. Detroit

LOST

WANTtn

rentoiy.
413 Union Street
FOR SALE OR TRADE-^ pool tables in good condidons. Can use auto.
WANTED—To exchange, a
201S. Union. Ward Bums.
gan for w
Apply 239 East Front SL ,
FOR SAL&—Hqund pups of choice
breeding, 4 mo. old. Cheap if taken at
once.
These pkps will make good
general purpose dc^ E. A. Knowles,
8U So. Union or 201 So. Union.
PROFESSIONAL
FOR SALE?-^mpletely equipped DRS. TRUEBLOOD A TRUI tlLOoH
motor boat ^1 less than cost of cqgine. Osteopathic Physicians. FITS-U glassInquire Peess opice. /
fitted. 06 Wilhelm Building.
I

FOR SALE—Hot on ;IGth St for salv
vheap. Sec Grinncll Bi

Where are you going on a trelnT”
FOR SALE-Two nicep geniitie horses,
Louis. Mo., for 23 years. IIecaitieto| ‘T.1 the seashore."
Drt. W. J. HIGGINS - • DENTIST
cheai
J. W.
Tias-erse^ity in November Ihli, and] Tbe seashore—what.
FINE Prejaretions
34-3 GOOD Dentistry
ater'a Furniture.Storc.
established the Lcesberg
6 sweltering Inland to this hot
for Painless Ext
any. Xllho he bad been here but- ai.R.p.,ther!
Smith £ Price Bldg.
short time he-had made many friendsj "Tbc Nautilus la at Marblehead." he FOR’SALE-Attractive ,&room sumbath.
andI wUl be gt'catly
"I am to reach
her there, and ler cottage, basement,
Pt'catlv missed among hisjodaed.
his.odaed. .'T
r
150foot waterfronts Tra^se.Bay,
business associates and iftnployccs. Hcj Vm going for a crnjBc.”
3-4 acres; 2 minutes walk south^bQ
leavosawifeandtwodauBlxUTb,Ni>rma; “In what watersr
“Clovers’’station We-Omena. Price
and Veds and one brother inHariford.: ,''1
reasonable. Mrs. F. C. Schaefer. 34-3
Wl,., md they h.vD the «d.n.0., .1
*'
hd.l ol mend. Tnner.1
mill
be-held from the Weaver chapel Sa.ur-,„j,
where wo"- FOR. RENT
day afternoon at 23a, with tuml mi gj,g B,<,ppea. Her eyes were i
FOR RENT-Flve rooms, water, gas. Do your feet hurt? Callouslles and
I wot
!C«u8-rcmoved without the use of.the
324 EAST FRONT STREET
i “Where wc went on our wedding electric lights. 324 Union St Also knife. Ingrovsn nails cured. MarioeMo
34
Tip? No. I’m not going to make iny- store below
BeU Phoue 136w
Cite. Phone 1134
Shop, over Peoples’Bank.
ieW mlsemble by going there."
FOR EENT-Two houses and unfurn­
Edison Shop-Come and hearr, He ma^e another effort to get away. ished rooms, close in, city water. Call
CONNINE & CONNINE
latest records on the New Ed- bdt it faUod.
at 606 Cass.
34-3
The Hannah & Uy Milting Co. have ison Diamond Disc <Phono-i "Who’Etii^ug with your wife, die
a new grein sign on the front of their graph. Nojieedles to change, ybrodton's and
Biake."
building.
Scott’s City Drug Store.
'3S*o-B Mary Blakef
"I can’t stand here answering ques­
DRAYLOip
tions to whld> you can have no posslHeavy. light^yin^Prempt^rvJee.
le Interest and catch my
SPECIAL
"Are you going to maJjy Mary
Chicken and ,Pish Dinners
Phone, Cilt. G876
Blaker
and Suppers
“WhafetbattoTour
75c
BENRU.SSEL
Crystal Inn. Benlah^*^. ‘ >1l#hepi*tty7” «
Ught Dray ft Bw*ce Uae. Cits. P
thyst^-Inn, Betrtak, Mich.
'Too bet!".'
8g& Res. Pbeoe 234.
“I have a mind to go with yon."
"Toal" ■
BERTMULLEN
“tVh.r not?Light and Heivy Drey. Household
"Whv. wo re divorced. We’re not"—
Goods Moving a Specialty. Auto Track
"What difference does that ntokel j
rvc' hpurd of divorced peraona being Phones. Citx, OmccBTS
cscflleiit fttenda"
>
■•But”i
, "Dot whatr.
.
•:IIow would you'Brt on with". >
CHEAM or PHOTO PLAYS
Taxi, Transfer and Dray
"Mary Blake? First rate. I wouMu’t
—Office Phones0 notl
Ckz. 311 and .W . BellHB
Res. R-IUSCititens , .
This Is arrant bon"Come. Edit
«‘nse. Three yeais ago
MATINEE DAiLF AT 2;I5
EVENING AT TiOO
CONTiNUOUS
aeCitz. Pho*'-’’’
E. Eichth
ted too your mother
because 1 objecti
Now you propose
running our aifi
PLUMBING AND REPAIRING
YOU CAN COME AS LATE AS 9:A5 AND SEE A FULL SHOW
<0 go on n yucbtlug toiir with me.
ROY GUTHRIE. Mgr.
J. D. SMITH
of my guests being a girl wjjo. I think,
Large Comfortable Cars «
imbing and Repair'work. Estimates.
.would n« refuse an offer from me.
,;You also intend to occup.r the best Prompt SeP'icc RegulRtion Prices 'hcerfully furnished, Res. 91S WashAdiOrs II
Phone R397. 12-i
': room on tbe NnntQus. that would nnt- 324 E. Front Phone 1134; BcO 13Cw ington SL Citz. Pbon
unilU- be given to her. Could there
PAINTING AND PAPQIHANCING
be anything more absurd?"
MONTAGU LOVE in
'
BURTON HOLMES,
liumor: she elmEDWARD MARTIN
Painter and Paperbanger. Estimates
>r the fourth time in flv# minutes.
oheerfully gives. 219 £. Tenth St.
Citz. Phoue^RSll
12l9

SPECIFICATKMJS: New body design, larger body, new finish. 12"
brakes, 4Ui” full cantilever tyoe rear spring. 2” crankshaft, tilled
windshield, new style top with Grecian rear bow, new style fcnd<
-----------------------inted.dn cowl dash, ehrome vanadium valve sprin

.rs::. ■;

Saxon Agency
F. C. Rice, Agent

I ^
I •

150 Men’s Shirts

Manufacturers Samples
20?£ Discount

mmQETS

HAMILTON CLO. CO.

Olity 3<lrniifr'61;o)i

at Anbrrsqti’s

£^vic^Ufieati%

BOYD’S

BOSE Of GOOD PICTURES, PERFECT VENIlUTiON MO THE $5,000.00 PIPE ORGAH
CHANGE OF PICTURES EVERY DAV.

SAXON TAXI LINE

; PROGRAM FOR THE WEEK OF AUG. 6th to AUG 12th
MONDAY
“YANKEE PLUCK”

Children 5c

X|JES.

TRAVEL PICTURES

Adults lOc

FanRie Ward, in
“The Winning of Sally Tempie”
.

Children 5c

.

Insix'acto

THURSDAY

ci.iu,«.5««u

DOUBlRBill-THREEACTSVAODEVlllE
“THE CHILDREN OF THE FEUD” in 5 acts
and a ?-act Keystone Comedy.

Aa.it.i6c»«

,

^

CMdiOTK,

I

:

"I have. Please accept my aympa
thlcs.’-'
TUere waa another silence.
which be showed, signs of Impatience
TO get away.
"What ante does yonr train leave?"'
she asked
- ."At sao.".
“1 think you will need to take a later
one."
•rirhat! nave my gnesta on hand
and I abscDt?"
“Yon might telephpne them that y.on
have been delayed.”
"What reason can I give fpr the de

Hearst Pathe Weekly

“ttie Sleep Walker" An extre good Comedy



W£D«

Nance O'Neil in
“THE FINAL PAYMENT”

Sycts, •

Adulto 15 cents

Minaelonna Home
' Creamery

i

lUarenB ce

FRIDAY

' “THE WEAKER SEX ’ in Five Acts.
■ and a 2-act Keystono Comedy
-SAT.

AdulBlO,

MnMirray, In
“ON RECORD"

Childn-n 5e .

SUN

AdultslOc

Lionel Barrymore, in
“THE KiLUONAiRE'S DOUBLE”

tAct.

,6-Act Metro Wonder Piay.

HearetPaflie Weekly.

and a Two* Act Com^y

vaudeville at an admi-«lon of C: for clilldreJ ai»4 Ibc for aduite,
at there priccB In the ^tc of Mit^Uui.

ifle for adul_ ____
je art* of h«li elA!>s •iest and best show
tne big.it

^Jeaturo. 6very00i

"'Thy. yen migtt’'fwy that you have
invited me to be of the party and ’
will need time for preparation."
“But I have not Invited you.”
At this stage of the argorowit tea
came to bring about a crisis. Ue went
tqi^cr and put bto arms about her.
•"Edith, have you come to see yonr
errorr’
There was no reply to this, only tears.
“Very well, get readiy to go with me.
i We will take a later train."
i “Burt
I "Bnt whiit?"
.“We must be married."
“1 wUl arrange for that"
Whei4hey arrived at the yacht, B
man and wife. they, found no one I
tbe crew.
“Where are vonr goestor ahqatted.
"I telepiiottcd them that yon .Were
to be of the party. DouWleas they
Jarred not to stand to tbe -way of our
lecood honeymoon."
This aeeond honeymoon may rml have
tisd tbe rest of the first, but it was a
rreat relief to both. Provldroce had
MMved the canao of tbeir sciwraUon.
there was now nothing toTutorfere
w^A^ihtfptoeaa. •_

Phone R852

414 S. Union

ERAFK HUNT
Painter and Paperhaoger.
HioBe
GCS6. ' Residence 661 East Eigbtii SL

GERANIUMS
tor

BEDDING PURPOSES
Porch boxes, baskets, etc.

PAINE’S GREENHOUSE
traverse on SHAM

LAUNORT'

Dn' CIcattIng and Steam Pressing
Both Phones
GEORGE F. ROWE. Prop.

EAST SIDE TAXI UNE
E. H. Burrows & Son
1004 £. Qghlh

L O. O. F.
Garni Trraerra Ledge No. 608

N. G.

Secretory

~ LAWN MOWER REPAIRINC

• INSTRUCTION
' Ladies—N^Tiy not learn
beauty cultore. and nun:

$50.00 REWARD
TO ANY PE^CN fora medidneequal.to Tiger 00, acrerding to tbe
testimony reported in ••'nje Friend rf SuHering Man" around each bot­
tle of Tiger Oil. Again we challenge an equal to.T^er Oil for the cure
National Grocery Co. and

^

LAWN M0WERS-4Jep»ircd and
round and kept in shape all summer,
lalled for and delivered by • '
J. K. LONGWELL
Price 75 cents;
CaJI 42 both phones or3S Citizens phone .

■ Citi. Rione ’TTG

of the greatest ttumher of disea^

-

“Sg’'’?™.:-

Sold by druggists, grocers, agents.
^

-

DR. JOroi LEESON. omku, M*.

Ti^vrasE erfy press
WESTERN 6IRIS TRAIN FOR AIR RERVIC^

Dwee d^MitBent, • al^<cac|«, tbc
officeCB ot tbe btmsv of iMOlar ■ibtn,
• mUltUT bonu. tbo BV^v-oniy r*.

CHIUICE FOR HHIH
:Comml8siims.

VBl. PMD AND CUED m

tv bOMOtal .vaeent B*^,.**^
ymat and aaaWaM IMter. nimtuy

It paases a certain strsugUi
to commanded- by a general.
Today
la no general In the Unit­
ed States army, but It la probable that
wltbln a few months ccogresa will re­
vive tbe Tsnk-wnd name name officer,
trim, taking tbe title of general, aball
have supreme command of all the fightl^fMCca In tbe fidd.
■•y COWARD B. CLARK.
An army u cofflpoaed of sivy corpa.
Tbere may be two or tbrbe or mote
corps in an army. Bobstiines when
aatf* DM la im A oaDC In pniw of
tbere to a bnge nnmber of troops In
ttb* nstfan
to aa old aa tte
tbe field <me genval to jmt In supreme
<a^ ttaalL to la tbe pride of tbe
'command while bis foreto are divided
Into several armies, each tme in com­
le dvlUan
mand of a Ueutenant gensrat It la
nada tbe btotoiy at tbe atandlss Settlfleai* of awrlt.........
likely that ctmgreM' soon. wfil make
anny dial tbe ptide 1a not mlaplaeed.
Win Addltteael Pv.
MaJ. Oea John J. Perablng aTlentenThere aeona to be ibraughont tbe
ant general and pqt him In command
On the'flrW re-enllatmwt
■enltodne&ta In tbe repolar anny today. ate In thc OoRed States army yets $3 of tbe First corpa, consisting of several
Ibe ncMratloa of taeo between tbe additional pay ead> month, and this la plvtalmia of troops, to' see atevlee In
aaed
for
each
aaeceedlny
mIW«iea at twmty-ooe and tUrty-one for
jwaaible adecOon aa eoldlert In tbe mmt It will be seen from the table
that men who qualify as yood ehots,
i major general. It la *...
new national army doeanotlnany way
who. becanae of their capablUtica. of several brigadea. each one of which
prevent tbe restotered nan from enllst! given certain positlona, receive
brigadier gehael.
iny today In tbe X^nlar army, tbe navy
It
la
possible for a brigade to condst
or tbe Uadne oorpa. There to dlU a
of a combination of cwaliy. Infantry
ebance for a man to become a voliinserves 4n tbe aviation corps recdves an and artillery, but frequently each bri­
teer and by becom:
of Lea Angdea, Cat, have formed an aviatloo corps and offer tbdr awlCM and m^lnes
nnka of an army wtaldi baa made bia- addltioa of 50 per cent In hla pay wtdie gade to composed of regtinenta aU of
for coaat patrd wegk. Mtos AUee La,<3mi*ilb. leader of a»glriB^a fla^ avU^ totte ^ •
tory and wlU eontinne to make it M be la on duty that reqnliea him to the some branch Of tbe settee. Tbe
tone. The others are, left to rl^t
ri^t Zanette TOtitlng. Mra. A. B. Oodiran. Mrs. ’WUlUm DoffF. Ds_ .
tbealrjtone.
•ly and frequently In tyidcaJ infantry brigade, for Instance.
Sony aa American fl^Uny men take the
lores
Francis
and
Tea
Eltdtin.
aertal flights, or while bolding tbe coDsista of
■ ■
field.
KglmantB of infantry, while a typical
In tbe reynlar army tbe wU«ed
regular army of tbe United cavulry brigade conslstt of a head­
da aaaored of a fine qnallty of leederdtlp. He la nnder tbe command of States dates back for Its orgahUstion quarters and three reglmeats of caw
the year 1789. when It was a t>ody airy.
.
men who know tbe war game from Ita
men barely 000 In number. Prior
»nV the Regiment ,
begl&nlny to lb end and who nnderatand tboronybly bow to tnatiU a otrlct — this Ume there was s force, tbe
unite
of
whidj
we«
paid
by
the
dif­
dtadpUne which la yood for the men
colond. wbo baa under Mra a Ueutenand for tbe aertice becanae, while ferent states, or It ml^t almost be ant colonel, whose ddUea are rather
neceaaarlly etrtcL It haa for ita aplrit said colonies, for It was not until 1789
indescrlpt, although hla chief duty Is
a kindly constderstion and a knowl- that the United States aa the United
mitg the place of tbe coloneT in bts
States
came
Into
^stance.
The
fed­
edye of the needruf the aohller. More­
absence or in case he to wounded or
over, the re^ar army officers know eral government 'took over a part of klUed In battle.
these
state
forces
and
formed
tbe
orig­
bow to car^ tboronybly for the bealtb
Each regiment la divided Into batinal
re^ar
army.
of tbeir men.
The regulars fought Indiaps from tnllona. end each battaUon Is com­
.ThorouQhly Trained Leadeffi-.
the very start of their existence aa an manded by a major. A battaUon conft mvat not be tinderwood from t
organized body. They made a fine dste of two or mote companies, troops
tiiat tbe «(
record for themselves .small na were or batteries, and each company to com­
be wdl led end v
thdr numbers In the war of 1812,1-atcr manded hy a captain. In 'eacb emuthey took up the work of guarding the p&ny there la a first Ueutenant and a
frontier, and the history of the army second Uepttoiant and complete eomof men who have had the best kind i
for years and Teats was one of aelf- pieanent of noDcommiadoned ofltcers.
tiylbUiE with special r^erence to tl aacrlflce, of devotion to duty, and of first aergeantt, dnty sergeants, sad
guidance of those who aball be under achievement In tbe fields so tar re­ coipdrals.
The company to dlvWsd Into sqnpaa
their dontroL In tbe national army in moved from driUzatiOD that tbe people
each organization there will be aome never-realized what their little force for^jurpoaes of Instraeawi. dlsdpUae,
- ind ordte-. eaCb aqnad eonslatregular officeta, whose dnty it will be was doing for them. To the fact that
___ 'corporal and oeven .privates
to Impart to the newer oflteen the the high work of the^^gnlars was done
thlnys which they have learned by long ' for so many years in remote fields was The corporal Is the aqnad leads, and
experience. Both aerricea wlU be of due the la<i of the petple's apprecia­ when absent la replaced by a destg-.
the talgfaeat-order.'
tion of tbe berolsm of tbdr standing Dated private It mlBlB I* s^^^
from the "luad, consisting BaN4^fi68a
The young man wo enUats to the ireg- army.
only of a Cteporal and savsn prt>«tea.)
nlar aervlce baa every dtynce of pro­
LongfJotor
tbe whole formation of on armz;4s4emotion. Be enters as a xwlvate, but
It was the regulars who Buffered in
tbere to on opportnnlty for'Mm while tbe Fort Dearborn maasacre-oft tbe vdoped and In a sense regulated. T^
atm an enlisted man to secure a poal- dte of Chicago over a hundred yearu aqttod la a smaU base unit from wMrii
tioo which will pay him *S1 a month ago; It was the regnlars under Major anntoa take their growth by a serta at
in hddltioQ to hla entire support so far Dade who In Florida, hopelessly outMen who enter toe United States
Bs^ood. clotbluy. lodyiny and medical
attendance are cncaued. Tbe gov- almost, the tost man was kUled, tbe army aa recrultt have the aame ebance
that men had years ago not only to beeioment gives aU these things £ratto.
Seminole Indiana under tbe fine leader­ come commlaaiooed officers, but to.
Tbere 1s elwsys ah ^pwtnnlty ft ship of one c4 Osceoto'a cMeftalna. It
enlisted mei; of me United States was toe regulars who wnt to death In reach the M^ place of command of
anoy who are mentally and physically the. country of the Elostoud under the oU toe armies of tbeir country. '
Does tolB aeem to be an exagger­
> ^ert to secure commtosIODS. and there­ white cUef. Custer: It was a Uttle
by to pass frpm the tanks of an en­ band of regulars who met Big Foot and ated Btatanent? Only recently there
listed man to that of no officer, and Ms warriors on Wounded Knee creek died a Ueutenaut general of the United
be- assured of a profestJuu for Uio Id 1880 and won toe fitot after appaU- States army who commanded all the
Test of hU life. Ikdlsted men who re­ Ing tosses. It wai the Jegulara wbo, forcea of Uncle Bam. He entered tho
main enUated men In the army can re­ foutot Red aont Crazy Horse, <3ilef servtbe aa au enUated man of regulars,
tire after 80 yeara servlc* with good Joseph, and who followed Oeronlmo, going to a recruiting office Jn« as any
boy of today can go to a recrnlting
pay and allowance.
The Kid, and other aavage Apaches, office toere to don the uniform of a
Pay in tho Army.
into toe mountain fastneases of Mexi­ private, later to enter toe ranka. and
co. It was toe regulars wbo from the If It U In Mm to work Ms way up to
-^In order that the young
desires to become a volunteer throng beginning until the present day have toe top. '
enltatzoent in tbe UMted Stntes army, dared everything, for their coufltry.
Private Oow to Top.
tor-probable tM serviee In the field Tbeir record is a magnlfleMt one.
On ?uly 22. 186X. UeuL Oen. Adna
The regular army 1s now being
of the prengit war. may know Just
B. Cbaflee oppUed for enlls^teit aa a
’ whst hla pay wUt he. the foUowlnf brought up to a war stabdard.of
table la given by which bo con de­ strength. When toe ranks are Tull regnlar In the army of the United
States. Tbere was notMng to dlffertermine absoat at a glance what hla there will be following toe colors
ratiate him from other young men who
"monthly money" wm amount to, and put of the regnlar ea
whUe studying tbe table he ahould ye- 285.000 Americans. Any yonng Ameri­
can
todpy
has
an
opportunity
to
be­
menibat that tbe government takea it
come
by
volunteering
a
m^nber
of
this
Upon Itself to keep him In food and
dothlng. to give him. lodging and med­ devoted band. It means aervlce. and wMch exlsn today and In wMto John
J. Pershing, now commanding oorical attendance and,ln.tact to provtde bard servlcs. but It also means Mgh forcea in France, saw Ms first hard
tar him eve? neeaasw. of Ufe fine of serviee, and In all human probab
fighting dnty. Oenenl Chaffee rose
illoriona service. HarfiaMpa there
be in plenty: dangers, a multitnde. but from private to sergeant to first :erthere are tbe coi^*nsationa of eervlce ceant. to eecond Uentenant ud
that U aervlce, and of a sense at throng toe rest of the ranks mtll
patriotic dnty done in a field of life be was made Uentenant general of toe
Ur. EU Hlokl, vice president of the
into wbieb -devotion to conntry caUa United States army, the ranking officer Americsn-Japsn sodety of Tokyo, who
Scene In the officers' training camp at Piatttoi^ N. Z.; practicing ri^
of Unde Sam's forces.
toe yonng American.
nrobaBly wiU be toe next Japanese — .paling from tbe top ot a boxcar. Inswted la a photograph ef Oohmd WaK,
was a eoMler of the highest bUsador to toe United Btetea.
Orguilzation of the Army.
U. 8. A. In command at tbe otmp.
i
'
- ...........of toe army today ordte. Bla career In the Spanlah, z-maHfn war was maritedly effidenb
la dlffuent frdm tbe < _
In Cate of Danger.
other days. In the old days toere was He fought at Ban Juan and later went
When Ma detedunent came to relieve
no avtatiop eervlce and Uttle or no to toe Phlllpplnea. WMIe there he wat
signal sen-ice of any kind. Tbe med­ ordered to take command of tbe Amer­
ical eervlce waa crude; tbe artUlery ican forces wMdi were to Join tbe al­ Lieutenant N. natmally took p^
bad not become toe great, factor. In lied forces In their march on Peking, don of the only Sbdtte- bficonld find—
warfare that It la today, and tbere was toe fori>ldden dty. That was one of a sort of but rudely contrived by hia
leas epedallaation along aU lines of toe most snceessful and hard-workioi tJ^«<«esor Bffild toe bladcened and
expeditions ever diepatched by the
mlUtary eodeavor.
Let ui take toe American army aa It United Btatee. Chaffee won fame tor ttfXed riU-ga.
Is provlded-for under toe law .of today, hla service. ' Wltoln tbe compass of ■ad daZ by a furiona tsmpast <d toot
a time wbrni we are In war with a Ms years to toe-army be bad served Is udabeU.
AddJtlonal Fay Por Month.

PMd. CloaiAQ. Udgi»B «nd Modksol
- AttohdoMO Pro»IB»d-Mwy Who
Havo KntOMtf Swvleo
PrtvatMH«v*a«lMd44lgh (Unk.

mm

,,;W=.issK»-

LATEST MOpa OF FRENCH WAR TANR

IN THE PLAnSRURR TRAlNINR CAMP

MAY BE AN AMBASSADOR

wm

o'

Ea

•9

a

'P:.- ■

'

.-.il: <5*;t

OIL TANKER THAT SANK A. SUBMARINE

B Se raguiar army wg aMtil teethe
great neri nalonol army, toe Kationa}

^w did duty as a eopefe 0«

ot!

8.S!»WTr

to; JIbtety of toe worlds

offleei, working
___
matt, ustil tbffir rscelTed
filflra tbs
BfifiTupon toe prearat WiF fcbSS
hlgbeat mUKary honor pcMsIble un­ coid««pttB
of 84 reglmentt of iniaiill». der toen exteUni law, p*T»K>tlon to
tb (uglBeiite of cavalry; lU feglmeata /vMomna of tiie army wlto toa rank
.
Horsa Cheto««t» •
«tMd aitiUteT. a COOK artillery corpa,
brigafia fiMMsB. army CMpo. and
are cegtetered tor posslbTe service does
Mt prevdit tbdr vdnntoertng for servfM In tbe regnlar army, the navy oe
tbe Marine corps. There la a ehanes

a.

SSA

THE LIVER

} SQUASHES TO BHJaE. FOOD SHORTAGE [

Br KIN HUBBAKd

^r

AVlll»efnVt ADDITION TO <UI

er Miu;..
traeOre
t-> iIk- iimiie Riracn.
They m::y 1h- iih'iu <1 .m l:i i.nxtic:t!Iy
any part of the cobutry. and iheir cul­
ture Is easy. Tim or throe hllla w.I
ad tti' li
furnish eaaa&i for nn arerag^mrd
• ta'a.r
fcmUy. They ore not fastidious os to
. dTfUcatlon. ‘ We're-nnhl&' abeed setsoUa. though they, like most pirden
tilng the aflaln of Uie world wUle tbplants, prefer a warm, sandy loom. Tlie
brten
hear
U
aald
of
a
feller
that
be
sreat American Uver atrofflea alonfr

._____ ________ _-AA.Ti..vlT
entered
Inf
this
er
tiist
with
bis
whole
doin’ two Ueert* wort without a friend
tb are abnndunce of manure and
heart
U
wn*
hie
whole
User.
Most
U ritliar btaneb o' congreaa.
cultlratloiu The hills may be
Th’ honiao llrer (fewediih “Lefrer") o’ th’ credit that goes f th’ heart right­
spaced
five
or
six feet apart. The
fully
belongs
f
an
agUe
Uter.
Th’
U a large gland that reposes In tb’ up­
ts will oce-opy the ground a
often bnti in where th’ Urer
per right hand coroer o’ th‘ abdominal heart
If the fruits are harvested
arity an’, when condltiona are as they fears f tread.
Some fellers are rery lariab OB tber moat tiMble stage.
^onld be. It wel^ one-fortieth as
Bquiidies ore tender plants; and can­
t' do sometUn' fer then llrer.
9och as th’ bodyt’ whl'cb it Is at­
tached. It la tb’ main gaaabo o' th’ Next f a poor reUOre thw halnt noth­ not endure the sUghtest frost so se*
tinman woiha bat. Dothwlthatandln' th’ in' they're less interested In than ther shonld not be planted until the mU
m Urer. Some gtrU become great­ weU wanned. Ten or a dosen seeds s
Important MU it playe In ear pnmlt
«• UfevJlberty an’ ba»lne*s. « 1* Ui’ ly exerdsed orer a mole on (her back planted nsuMly In eadi hill. These
Bboold finally be thinned to one or two
tDoat^&naed. moat mlseonatreed. most an’ then laughlnly p
plants. The aotl must be stirred by
Ignored, most Imposed on. moR neg- spot on tber dieek.
lectM u' Bed abont organ of wblcb ; One o’ th’ hardest things that come shallow cnltlratioB nntil the plants
tiS' medical fraternity has any knowl­ op dotin’ th’ Urer’a dsUy routine la <^r the BolL
handlin''
a
large
steak
after
its
owner
There are In use In this connoy aeredge.
Kert ti a ydler dog tber balnt ootb- has consumed It an’ sunken hearlly eral types of these equaShes. They
ponder orer th' must aU be used wbUe very ImmaWra;
io* that responda as nadUy t* kind­
o'
Mexican
ness as th' human Uver. Pninea. when
properly stewed, sie fine fer th’ Urer, fain an' view with-alarm.
-When th’ human liver (Latin “Jehot how many of ns are-darin’enougb
to’ order them? We oceaslonaUy eat cnr"> U happily situated an’ th’Uu»
to tramc
an opfio lest t please th’ lUer, bnt we leadin’ theretr^ are
rar^ take tii’ llrer Inf onr confidence ther la nothin' that looks as bright an’
' when we attend a Jefferson Day ban- beautiful as tb’ vsprld.
gnet We are not chummy enough (dmyriiht.
4MN»iV Human Uwr (Latin -Jawi-) H Happily Bltuata^jnief I* HcOiln*
.
- ThatLa^-a* Aghtan'BMutifalaBtb'.WaHd.
3BOW xnaiiy of tis

If the thumb nail does not resy resdUy
puncture t&e skin of the frnlt, the b«Nt
stage for eating baa paased.
illop or Pattypan aqnadies occur
hlie and yellow cdlots. Tellow
i^umuier Croohneck la alao modi plant­
ed and la a good .;ruiety. TbuM
squashee hare abort rlnes and nra
oBually enUed bush forms. RngUah
forms of summer aqnashes are eaUed
rcmnble marrows, and can be obThere Is also an Itnllan summer sqnaA
under the name of Cocozelle. -whldi la
offered by o few scedsmoi. These last
have long vines, and shonld be glraa.
08 much as eight or ten fast betwae®
hills.
winter sqnaahes sodi as Hobbard.
Green and Y^sw. DSUdons and Bos­
ton Marrow require the cnltnral treat­
ment given above, but ahould be glva
ten to twdve feet distance between
hills. Winter sqnaMies should bs
stored In a dry place where the tem­
perature does not go below 4S degreen
or 50 degrees'F. An upstaha room U
much better for this purposs than a
cellar. Tbs fruits must ba thoroughly
ripened, but not frosted.

Bj HN HUBBARD

-

rOr

VTBMHMnn> •

Qnin of Ml Euihsls Par Aera by 8st Plants Elghtssn Inriieq Apart to
Rows Thrra Fast Wldo-*'-’^
Thlrmtag fietursd at Ohio «ttOut All 8hoeto
tlon on.Tasttd Seed.
Thinning eoRi tos Tesnlted In a
gain, as a tour-year average at the
Ohio experiment station, of
bu^
ds per acre In the caae of eeed ttsteo
for germination before pUntlng. and
of MT buriiria Jn the esse of untei^
•eed. The average ^ reqdrrf for
acre K c&n was 8.T hours.
In one case three keri^ woe plant­
ed per hlU. and on the plot to ^
pariaon a generous quantity of used
I drowed and the plants wero
used to three per hUl when 6 to 8
_J»es high. With tested seed an sverage yield of
buaheta
■«
obtained
•a wiui
with corn ptanreu
planM Oiroe
kSRieU per Un. and «B» bushels pet
acre was harvested from tUnnad eoro
With untested s^ a yield of
per sera was secured from

Where tomatoes a« to be trained
to a sln^e stem, the plants are art 18
inches apart la rows three feet vrtda
AS aoon as Che young ptont begins to
grow after bring transplanted It ss^
out brandioe or ritoott from the ails
of the leaves. When ttese shoots ap­
pear pinch them ooL .whldi Win canss
thstoato stalk tn abodt up ve(y rapid­
ly. Put np a stake fira feet tall and tie
tbaiitont to It AS tbo plant gwwa
mora suckors wiU form. Conttona to
ptoitit thesa out and train the plant to
the sttka. The frolt wUl he fwmed
on flower dnsters ebout ulx tochsi
apart on the main gtem.
Tbs method of training does not
produeo as many tomstoes p«r ptont
bnt the fruit to much larger In rira aito
of higher qnsUty. This method ^
lows a great many more pUntt per
nme. th^ors the yield *t* om *•

jmt remsU-U ti some oEher editor. Vi’
'When we look at th' great mast cf...........................
grmt dlflkalty In cootribnOn' V tii’
- Itttratn^ that tests , th’ writy o
U knowlD’ wblcb mtgsslne
b~.a 'stores an' news stands we can’t
bain rhiwvtn’ vriiat a scramble ther editor rips open a story bs conntt th’
t’ UA. —.............
an’ calls^
............................-...........
miM be fer even standln' room to te‘ pn^ ui
■Hleorge
Un
we ue about tewteeo
field o’ Ilteratnre. 'Most
*Most anyonuu, hundred wwds next mootbr an'
romdln’ forty kin easily ramybw teGeorge
answw
right
off th’ bat (belti’
fiay when two or three family Story
tboronghly v«n»iii«r wttii th’ number
papas, a couple o’ magasin^ a si^
O’ ads): Tea. U^n Jest balance up th’
.da.But a>’ aotbor nevec qultt.
ter crime an’ th’ prise
MTs Ubiarr eonstituted wbst ^ tlmas bs drys up fer a we^ ~
days, but he’s aooa at It agin,
ne mmomimv
kaowaI tnat
that iner
ther mnsi
must be
—tairy"^ made up of paper backed •ome editor that’s boldin’ bis forms
Sida-thrimn’ storlm of advents opsn far hli story an’ bs malls It an’
rsomllf it tin he bits th’ ri^t editor.
Writio’ looks awful easy, an’ BMOt com St only BO cents a -bushsL one
of It must be ewfnl easy. TSiat's th’ would make 65 cents an hour by thinreason so many neglect tber personal ntog on ads basis._________
--------------- on’
an become
uecomewriters,
wniera. v-—
i ve
Hratimn Bobert Buchanan an' Th’ eqipearance
pI!^k Th’ great popularity o’ A^ oftoi thought rd lay off some after­
Bede, Tb’ MlU on th’ Flom. Black noon an' write a novsL Bnt writln’
fer
magastoei
is
tb’
best
sport
It’s
as Not. Many Farmers Ever Think of
SSy. Lena Blvera, Uncle Tom’s
Oshtt.BoWa**Cnisosan’BooAto- toxy an’tasctostlo' as flahin’. You're
Amount of Wsits BtHps ou Btther
U your twuie Is bnUt to aeoommofiantad dwindled t’a fair demand, but your own masta. Yon don’t even have
8ids of Barriera.
date 60 hens, keep that many, and try
fbe available. Jest so your story A
Wef be found among th’ others.
jMt think o’ th’ eppsUln* Utsiary long enougb or abort enou^—Jest M
F>w’fanner8 stop to thtokhow m^ to keep them to the best posslbto shsps
for
profit—you'wlU gel it But U you
o’ tidsy. It would
“ th’ editor reMves to August far th' land to taken up by tbs fences. Tbs try to crowd la 60 per cent mors you
May number. All he wants is rown fmee ittrif takes lltUe room, hot It l»
^K»fd skatin’ rink f
fer R as’ plroty o' time.
impossible to grow anything for sev­ will raqnlK more feed and wlU have
line o’ currant lUeiature. In a»
Wbsn we refiect that ragrim^s Prog­ eral feet on both sides of the fence. fewer eggs, ft Is pure greed whlA
an home th’ car«6’ away «
^
^nlated Utartture has corns ti be ress wus writt-o to Jail, that Sllno The department of sgrienltew reports often randan a flock nnproflttbto
^moAot a problem as th’ removal PdUeo an' Tasso did ther best wrttto that the crdlnatT rail fence «euP'« Have newt boxsa to toeooto*«^
o* adies an' garbage. A Uteiary ^ briiind th’ bars, that Sir Walter a strip over 22 feet wide. Abont 8.«w ptoesi for the shy puUstt. and keep
poaal plant U one o’ th' urgsn^eeds Balelgh’s admirable history o’ th' feet «f such a fence takes up an acra
time. On returnin’ from a worid wus written vritb Us hands of land. Hedges taka up a Httto more
l^e vacation one boa ti tunnel thro’ bandcnHed behind him to th’ Tower titan the raQ fenea. the vrtdth varying RREEOING FOR HEAVY LAYERS
th’ gwat «fn.o' papers an’ iw- o' London, that Leigh Bunt wni toyin' according to the wldtii of tbo.badge
out B fine whte Bimini wus writttu, row.
Rnes tf readi tii’ from
n to EiiluHsI
BO toMsr teiy myswy abo« how th an' tiiat DaUoi Defoe told tb' ^sss
«f tt’ wnrid lives. It ^tta.
T Bobinsou Crusoe wUto.he wus to
Palnta to Otoam ^
Far ever* men borihet's an mtsur a leek-up we-mdit eoafess mt U' ESTIMATED COST OF DUCKS
fia th’dm «»«» f-a date world fday to piftty toUsU-after aU.
n» SOCagg hen to s poasfbiuv^
tewea aMkta’aloadthro-tv (CoprrigU. Adams Newmeper fisrvlcaj nengao From Elfiiri to.T«»rivt Cants asle^loti and broadtag «
Par Pmmd, Dspsndtog an Currant
iSJs^TSttll box bearin’ adhiok
Bscsmsiy ■tttatiou.' The tew
Priam of Oruto.
What’S In a NsimT
took up tide ttoa of broadtog.
Mrs. Ooods-rDb you have imA htsuch attciltog raaotm. anon entoad •
amntotlon awmg other teneae^ It e hatoMe up ttt •ncBss vritb your bnsbandl '
tog
a
aparialtr
of
growtog
Mra. Batttr-J csrtmnly ham Bs
laaa. Mow thsro aro a gnat many
the
feed
coat
par
pound
of
prodariiw
uMd to play a dtogncefal game eaUed
post imt 1 Insisted that ha slept so dnric meat rangm from fi omts W »
M«r ha playa pocket hUUards iMtaad. cents, depeuffing upon tb» <aam
arirva of grain aad utom faadh

pk'

GIVE HENS PlENTT OF ROOM

VACANT UNO ALONG FENCES

mmm

-—

1

CROokNBCK t« POPULAR VARIETY OF 80UA8H.

FOR IWCREISED CORN YiaOS TOMATOES ON SIRSLE STEM

Dli^ Bl..t I. 0~ .■ th- DDN-t N-d. .• »■ TI„«a



'"’"SSXnSLS’S'.SS:

I Onr y^paDiii’ literary Ontpnt
I

Gartieil in Olngham for Hay.
Bln tnm»» nn wWtt D«n r>

to make up the pretty dress and bloom- •were an reqttirsmentt. ft ft ma^
era in whldi-tbe Bttie lass of three or up in Nue. pink, green, ydlow «
more years la garbed tor play. Thsas
bloomer sett ere altogether the mo« cvu™. Skirts are fun enooft to s^
sensible thing foe romping chUdrea
end there are several well-aat-up Md complstt freedom.
attractive modeto In dremsa with furten wtth^ pesW « b«e bn^
bloomen to matdi to diooee pom.
^dSTood « an^
They indudo long and dwrt-walsttd
fro«
' ' bdtt, and are mede «C sklrta of playtime drosees.
rotated gnr«|«M>™ wltii coUara. coSs; ptctuied is an exeeflait moM ^
plain
bloomers.
It has a hl^ t»ett
and halts in white or In coatrasting
dipped
tiipoogh
W
color or pattern. In gln^am, pique or ham and a panel at the front ^ ,
heavy cotton wesvaa.
ealeadi from nack to hem. .Theratte
There are
*'*’
«r a^ pockets are of gbutfSA
in entten that ahoold be cornddaca
'
their dnrabOlty. now that sniam------ wta fadug of
bera. and little folia. Riending thdi bntt^ and ere need for faMMlBg
bodies
and DdL
___
dme in the open, foo sure to climb and
For rough-and-tumble wear In tto
•cramhls if left tn teemselvee to enjoy
eountry
ai»«w
and
platan
doth
aria
Ufe as they Mtould. ttiey wlU do jBri
aieae tiilnga. ’Klnderiarttn doth. made up tn Uttie garments with bod­
cloth and khaki aie equal U ies and fall btoomara In oba to b*
aU aorta of rongb handling and an] worn without rtlrtt. They are ahowa
In eh«M color and In dark Mas.
DDt of tqbblng.

ft is ittn»ted"ir!«>«»»"■!!?:

Rwival of PrlnM Cottoitt.
«M when printed cottoos ......

Of gmy,
erny, is
to piped »•«wlto
■ppsaiuhto Of
hisa. It to cut OB nesriy sU
amawara. «l(h Umsoo sleeveo. hound
^ to mforead atoag tbs top wMh too
ft tate» >6
has a brit bound vritii tbs bins ptrcula.
n has two praetioal poiftstt, and teaten wllh flat paart buttons.
Biwdero and pIptogB. to Plato ootoro
tunas, cahoo b«^ t^ make a good eoutrast with tha
body « tbs .gartbsat, r- ---------up« to supply tbs dsoor

file of American wosusb. tor avWyW
vroar. OtUco, perasla, towm dlinlly
and gtogham mat most of thsir
^Irem^ at a time **hojb^ <*
^ days Iren tosnt at hw^
Vtnt with

'ffSTk^ w

gTmsihs mUco of oM. and tha
M of today atoirm to bstiic
--- eriatoaL and tesrinatttg. ft

'Vr;

The Ri^t You’U
Hiiig
in Underwear
Find It Here
THE MOST RELIABLE-tTHE MOST P0PUUR- SUCH AS “WHITE CAT,” “B. V. D.” ETC.

A

Men’s Union Suits at .
.
• 49c, 75c, $1.00, $1.25 and $1.5Q
Ladies’Union Suits at
.
.
. 35c, 49c, 69c, $1.00 and $1.25
Goopel Athletic Klosed Krotch Union Suits .
. $1.50 and 2.00
Ladies’Vests at

.

...



12c. 19c, 29c, 39c and 59c
Oj '

Girls’Union Suits at .

*




Boys’Union Suits at
...
. \ •

Childrens’combination Suits, Waist and Pantsy'
worth 65c, at

- “15




35c, 59c and 69c
49C

.10', 15', 20' and 25'

The Sale of MusUn Underwear and Hosiery
Ladies* Muslin Petticoats worth up to .

Ladies’SUk Hose wdr^^S^ and $2^ ^

..^es- corset Oo^

Ladies’ SUk Hose in white, black and fancy
colors, worth 75c a pair IjgQ gmd gjc

uSwWeUde“lSle worth 39c and

ggc and $1.15

....... .... .... .....—--Baby Silk Socks tan only worth 39c a J|4q

. Indies’ SUk Hose'm white, black and battleship gray, worth 50c a pair
^90

J. H. \ T E- IN B E R G
150 Men’s Shirts
Manufachirere Samples |
20^ Disconut

HAMILTON CLO. CO. I
DATES OF EAGIES'
SHOW .CHANGED

SERVja^TATIOM
Where Ypu’H,
Find Me
I'm the Willard Sorvke Station Man .
' and you’ll know my place ot business
by the red and white Willard Service
.Station sbjn.
I’m Willard working for you, helping
you to look after your baiteritrs—keep­
ing yw out of battery irotble—or help­
ing >ou out wiien you
into it.
1 have th“ equipment ar.d the iniimate
knowledge of batteries'necessary to give
you the best repair and recharging seivice. And you don’t lose-the use of your
• ■ machine while I'm doing the work—for
I have a rental battery for you whate^
the make or model of your car.
Come in and get a^u^ted. and while
you’re in ask for your Wiliard Service
Card whidi entitles you to free testing.

Circumstaoces have caused the dales
„f •-■Tire Elopfers” to be changed from
Aug. 6 and 7 to the I3tb and 14th.
Rehearsals are going on every afte.rnoon and evening under the directioD
of F. A. Ogden of New York. The casi
is working hard and a real worth while
show is promised to the fun loving ^ople'of thecity.
•'
The Lyric Theatre has been engaged
for lire two nighU. TbisAhow differs
from all other amateur shows ex er here
as Jt is a professional senpt—the show
Win" had a long New York run under
aaothor iiaoic-most amateur scripts
wiifcti ospeciully for amsieurs. A
bi“ f- i.tii:e also is ti-c chorus of 15
'young l.ftlies wlm do n-al chorus work.
A bike and watch contest running in
leclton witli the riiow is causing

Cr.v..tJ Inn, Beu'ah, 5flch.
^

SEND THA r

Furniture
Repairing
TO .

HUTCHINS
PROMPT SERVICE
WORK GUARANTEED
PRICES RIGHT

TRAVERSE CITY BATTERY SHOP
115 E. State Street

' Traverse City Mich.

SMISM
■ . V-1 ri'

i.ii :

Childrens^
' Wadi Suits

WANTED!
More competent help to care for our steadily
increasing business at the Progre^ Laundry.
Incidentally we might mention that we

C HALLENGE
any laundry in the state of Michigan to i^uce^^er.
domestic toish collar work than is produced lyUB. ,'
the Progress do your collar worit and foncy iron­
ing. We specialize on both of these.

PROGRESS LAUNDRY
-Phone 125

-'

228PwkSt-

■ Bedroom Suites
to Suit u4ll
A tastily furnished IxAoom
is always sure to win favorable
comment. And attractive fur­
niture need not necessarily be
expensive either.
Beds,Chiffoniers, Dressers
and Dressing Tables
You who need complete bedroom
«ns-and you who merely wish m ^
to your present furmtbmgtwdl £nd
what yon want here.-AU the Isttst
styles in whatevnr finish yon prefer.

Style and Stability, at Pleating Pficts
i|
FURNITURE COMPANY
HAMILTON aO. CO. I NORTHERN
la souila UMON STREET
20% Discount

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