The Cedarville Herald, Volume 46, Numbers 1-26

W griCt M(«MMnaUiN Chief "Old Pokey." of the Plu. tndiank, is makings ids last' etaa all alop.e -agei 1 sist tMe whitemda t the hifl#- of Utah. His small ban Of twdnt^-sevea warriors was < tured.btrf ho escaped. J . Ray Wi shown.ificjow, is In charge of Ui__ Sam’s afffo who captured the tol-< lowera ohd will bring in the old| Mrarrlofe ..... - ;<! fiH&GOO^ ^ kxh W hjj ?< h ! h ^ O i ^ i S ^ HOW tO SAVE MONEY WHEN SHOPPING By MRS. iHARLAND H. ALLEN S 3 , Harland H. Allen,) - THE EIGHT CORSET If you stiflewear ’em, It Is important that you should know the kind of ear- •St you can-wear with greatest com­ fort, and tile kind that gives you the best lines. There are recognised to he nine types of women to be fitted with corsets, and all up-to-date corsetlerres now pfo- tide for these types. They are; (1) Tho short,, slender figure; (2) The tall, '•■figure; (3) The short-wnlsted |re; (4) The short, heavy figure; The tall,-iieavy figure; (0) The ■hip figure; (7) The full-bust fig- ; (8) The swayed back figure; and The noitanTifigure. , ere are a, few Sugj^stlijns ns to kinds of ‘cornets that are best for build. .. . 1 you have a short, .slender figure, itttfcwe a corset moderately short, light la-weight, and with few stays. J he same holds for the tall, slender re. with the added caution that fbtf) corset mufct ba long enough over thij$ hips to give- rta unbroken line. W^er wear a corset too tight, as this e a# makes a slender woman appear a»Ore*lender. l>or the short-walsted figure, the cor- •efiwhould be fitted rather loosely, and wdfn we’ , down onjthe figure. Be •uhh that the corset is short enough belhw the waist line In front. The short, heavy figure requires a corset with. short stays, to prevent "hli-ditag” when the wearer sits down, thus making her appear shorter- wahsted than ever. J£ you are tall, inclined to the heavy figure, Wear a corset with a very long ikErt. Let the lefigth come at the back and sides, however, keeping it short in front. A corset that Is too tight on a large woman will cause her to appear to be “all corsets.” The full-hip figure has the same problem, and the corset rmtrt be long and well-boned over the hip*. Several Strong elastics are necessary to fasten the Corset to hose. Bo not wear cor- #et tight in an attempt to reduce Slse; o f hips, or termination of the corset will show, giving an ugly fine, FOr the full-busted figure It is gen­ erally moro satisfactory to wear low- huated ooraet and confine the extra fiesfi in a well-fitting brassiere. The awayod-back figure takes an or­ dinary corset, and where the back is tdry mush curved, a small corset-pad la attached to the Inside of the corset whore needed. I f you have the happy perfect fig- pro, yon hav* only to choose the cor­ rect :«fM for your waist, and a com­ fortable length and weight. A else tWo inches smaller than your Ordin­ ary measurement Us the general rule. iA T ftk iifc i i 'TW^fWof Waffled gomwifcted t ! ■’»•• I * f t * *1*40, m M or || UM . "Win *u your tar. mm, VAHORItrO.'lt. , j t t v*1. SUn .” : 1 I ■ ■M nam nnux mm PLANTCORNFOB LARGESTYIELDS Nothing Gained by Seedily Be- foreCondrtfons of Sofl and Atmosphere Are Right. NEITHEREXTREMEDESIRABLE Greatest Total ttotwth of Stalk Made From Fiantino In May or June— Experiments of State Stations Corroborated. I ' ’ • <Pr*j>»rr<l by tlis UMt.4 8 Ut*s Imparttn.nt ■• . »( Asrietllture.) No gain is made In yield or maturity by planting com before conditions of soil aud atn osphere are right, in the •opinion of the United States Depart­ ment of Agriculture. Com growers in localities with a long season have observed that early, and late plantings of the same variety usually show wide differences in growth and number of days required to reach maturity. In general, corn which Is seeded early requires n longer time to come up than that which Is planted later. The plants also grew ■more slowly, are shorter, and boar their eara lower. These are commonly observed effects of the date of planting. Best Yields From Early Seeding. . - Studies recently hffve been made by the- Uhifed States’Department of Agri­ culture at the Arlington experimental farm near Washington, D. C., In order to obtain data which would supplement that obtained earlier at the various state experiment .stations. Numerous experiments" have been- conducted by the state agricultural experiment sta­ tions to determine the imluence of the different dates of planting on corn yields., The state experiments re­ viewed indicate that the best yields of grain. may be expected from the early seeding® and the most rapid de­ velopment and greatest growth from the later seedlngs. Neither the ex­ tremely early nor the very late, plant­ ings are desirable. The department investigations were directed more to a. study of the effects upon growth and development than to determining the most desirable date of planting from the standpoint of yield. The results of these studies, which extended over a five-year period, are presented'in Department Bulletin No.- 1014, Effect of Date of Seeding 09 Germination, Growth, and Develop­ ment of Corn, by B. B . Brown’, and H. S . Garrison, which may be had upon .application, to the department. Thd varieties of com used In the experiments cover a wide range In the length of the growing season required. The data tabulated are limited to the characters -that seem t o ' have been consistently affected, although the points studied, included the’ rapidity of germination, the number of days from emergence to ripening, the, height of stalks, the number of ears per plant, the average weight of ears, the average yield per plqnt, ahd the .number of suckers. . In all the experiments the germina­ tion of com increased in, rapidity as the date of seeding occurred later. When sown early the short-season northern, varieties came up sooner than the varieties from the central and southern states.' When sown later the differences In this respect were not usually apparent, , • May or June Favored. The total growth of stalk was greatest from the seedjngs in June and PTant Corn In May or June for Boat Growth and Yttld. 4 May. The total growth was least and rate of growth slowest from the April 'seeding*. Development was more rapid to the later than In the earlier seed- •tugs. The numher of ears per stalk, the rise Of the eijr, and the amount of suckering bore no consistent relation to tlte date of seeding. The pollen- shedding period was longer In plants from the early seeding* than In those fftun the later seedlngs. Seedlngs •nrltar than normal resulted hi slight p in s In the date of silking. These experiments corroborate the conclusions of the state experiment station*, that corn may be planted m the vicinity of Washington and other localities with a similar season, any time after May 1 , without danger of the seed rotting. The best conditions of soli and atmosphere usually come between May Id and May £ 0 . Start Vegetable* Early. Hotbedii and cold frames give a chance to,start vegetable® earlier and gain on the weather and Insects. Spwucljettea “ourocAsrtR. Do You Know of au Cider Horse? Sadly InoompJtte. A deefi dated March 15 1807, recent­ ly recorded on Long lrhutd, conveys *the Valentine farm on tho high­ way leading from Jamaica to Great Plate* On the Jericho turnpike, thence to th# highway leading frmn Llttv Plata* to ftaeky mu, including the kottefing*, orchards, gardens, meadows, eommonn, seedlings, trees, woods, path*, water and water .nurses,” but ghme no other description of the prop, wtty dr any ladtaiUoo at lbs Math «M W all JmMftwhat tt to, ISOLATION The doctrine of isolation is being preached by politicians, but( not by statesmen. They misinterpret and give a wrong construction to the utterances of Mr. Washington, in which he advised that America in her inception avoid entangling her­ self with foreign alliances, The reason Washngton gave that advice was that America was coming out of England, breaking away from the mother country, and could not afford to he involved in European al­ liances with other countries and thns incur more of the mother’s •prejudice and anger. - I t is absurd to preach such a doctrine today. We are the . superior power in the world. We. are in the world:1 We ark a part of the world. And we must pay our obligations, dis­ charge our duties,- and take, our place by the side of the other- members that make up the great world governments, Fo r us to be Pharisaical and to go by on. the other side is to re­ ceive the contempt of the world. The world is pleading, the .world is hungry, the worid needs us* America is responsible for the world’s condition, which has been produced during the last two or three years. Had Amer­ ica taken her place at the table of the League of Nations, and. cast the deciding vote, there would have been as a result, rehabilation of the world’s finances. Peace, progress, and prosperity would exist- today in­ stead of chaos and confusion- M ilwaukee Youtln Quits Engine fo r Congress Nathan Dougherty makes claim that "Patsy" Dobbin Is the oldest /horse la the U. S, For thirty-two years Patsy has hauled lumber at 'Philadelphia, although POttsLoned now Do yon know of a horse older thanPatsyT I Johnny p , Schafer, of Milwaukee, was firing and an eactnear an t Chicago railway five years ago, Now he 1* the youngest member ol * He t?kcs h,B 6Cat ff°m Wisconsin next term. He picks too 1821 tte “ the PTO* reMlva Republican candidate f o r president U Pageant Week Pitches Horseshoes fiV" x V Mto. C. A. Lanham, Of Blooming- tpn, HI., pitching 2yi pound horse­ shoes, has a record of thirty-five ytagers Jn winning the state cham­ pionship! at Aurora. She 'challenges Soap Kept in Bond. Uj> to less than seventy years ago all «eip manufactured* In England was (made In bond nnd subject to duty, and each boiling pan was fastened down at night by an excise officer. To Scnuirj how ftoori a cigarette ^ really can bo madir you must try d tie cfacder-Au/Se/Ca SPRINGFIELD, OHIO Beautiful NewSpring Dresses selected from our regular stock offer­ ing surprising values— Priced Values $29 .50 to $39 .50 H ie Fashionable Silks The Smartest Models The Newest Colorings >Hillmill ■ I I 1 ' 11 Hilii'iri’ 1 nil IiIn'lim• Ml.. II III. I. REDUCED! A limited number of our better Coats, Capes and Wraps. Work with lh* Fears' iprin(i— not »gs«rt*l thrtn, ‘jtkts "third *pritig” cHcckitho r^botmd and •tops tho sidh*»vj»y, Sava tires/, futl, and Catdepreciation. Mod* arateln price, tMtlriiutorit r ’ A* MURDOCK,) Cedattilic.and Jamtotowa ISTOURBUSINESSA SUCCESS! Finestationery is a Mg aid toBusines . Printingfine stationery is ourspecialty. ■J J v- , *4^ * •** - -M * *

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