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V #* a > z \ <** A PAGE FOUR r ? ?? ?====? A'ENANT IS xhelan \ LAID HKPORK 8KNA1 \ ytnued From Fes;? Thr?e.) ">uW' Jd>rkable. They could go fc _ AN, mrd with confidence to make a ' smngements intended to be permanei _*" The moit practical of the confere 'ware at last the most ready to ref ' to the league of nations the superi tandenct of all interests which did n admit of immediate determination, i all administrative problems whi< were to require a continuing ove sight. What had seemed a couns w of perfection had come to seem plain counsel of necessity. The leagi of nations was the practical .'tate man's hope of success in many rf tl most difficult things he was attemp lng. And it had validated itself in tl thought of every member of the coi ference as something much bigge much greater every way, than a mei instrument for carrying out the pr visions of a particular treaty. It wi universally recognized that all tl peoples of the world demand of tl conference that it should create sue a continuing concert of free natiot as would make wars of aggressic and spoliation such as this that hi just ended forever impossible. A ci had gone out from every home i every stricken land from which sor and brothers and fathers had gor forth to the great sacrifice that sue m sacrifice should never again be e: acted. It was manifest why it ha been exacted. It had been exacte because one nation desired dominie and other nations had known r mann? nf ilofunQo evrnnf n rmo man 1 and alliances. War had lain at tl heart of every arrangement of tl conferences affecting the statos < Europe?of every arrangement of tl world?that preceded war. Restn peoples had been tohl that fleets ar armies, which they toiled to sustai meant peace; and they now kno that they hud been lied to; that llcei and armies had been maintained I promote national lAuhitions an they knew that no old policy meat anything else but force, force?alwaj force. And they knew that it wt intolerable. Every true heart in tl world and every enlightened judj ment demanded tl'ut, at whatever co: of independent action, every govert ment that took thought for its peop or for justice or for ordered freedo; should lend itself to a new purpot and utterly destroy the old order < international politics. Statesmc might see difficulties, but the peop could see none and could brook r denial. A war in which they h? been bled white to beat the terrc ?* that lay concealed in every balam of power must not end in a mere vi tory of arms and a new balance. Tl monster that had resorted to arn must be put in chains that could n> be broken. The united power of fr< nations must put a stop to aggre sion, and the world must he give peace. If there was not the will < the intelligence to accomplish thi now, there must be another and final war and the world must lie swe] clean of every power that could r new the terror. The league of m tions was not merely an instrumei 10 aujusi ann remecly oiu wrongs ui der a new treaty of peace; it was t! only hope of mankind. Again ar again had the demon of war be< cast out of the house of the peopli and the house swept clean by a treai of peace; only to prepare a time wh< he would enter in again with spiri worse than himself. The house mu now be given a tenant who could ho it against all such. Convenient, i deed indispensable, as statesrru found the newly planned league nations to be for the execution present plans of peace and repar tion. they saw in it a new aspect b fore their work was finished. Thi saw it as the main object of tri peace, as the only thing that cou complete it or make it worth whil They saw it as the hope of the worl and that hope they did not dare disappoint. Shall we or any oth free people hesitate to accept th great duty? Dare we reject it ai break the heart of the world ? And so the result of the conforen of peace, so far as Germany is co cerned, stunds complete. The dil culties encountered were very mar Sometimes they seemed insupera!\ It was impossible to accommodate t interests of so great a body of n tions?interests which directly or i directly affected almost every nati in the world?without many min compromises. The treaty, as a rosu is not exactly what we would ha written. It is probably not what a one of the national delegatio would have written. But results we worked out which, on the whole, be test. I think that it will be fou that the compromises which were i eepted as inevitable nowhere cut the heart of any principle. The wo mi the conferenoe squares, as a who wtih the principles agreed upon the basis of the peace, as well as wi the practical possibilities of the int? national situations which had to facad and dealt with as facta. I shall presently have occasion before you a special treaty w France, whose object is the Ctnii rary protection of France from i provoked aggression by the pov with whom this treaty of peace 1 been negotiated. Its terms link with the treaty. I take the liber however, of reserving "it for specexplication on another occasion. role which America was rut LANCASTK rv ss*? banks to safeguard r*' leagues and I got to Paris?deter- i nAimo a mii\ PT . u mined by the universal expectations R(jNQ\ A Nil \ T A m of the nations whose representatives, drawn from all quarters of the globe,1 we were to deal with. It was univer- ^rot#ct eurttjes r_ sally recognized that America had en-| mail Investors Free or F01 tered the war to promote no private Nominal C args. ' or peculiar interest of her own but _ . . ... . ' , !! only as the champion of rights which _ In. bu^. ??nd?- J?? " she was glad to share with free men Bond*' rlft d SfV t and lovers of justice everywhere. We _ !"P*k P*?P e 0 . ^ ?J had formulated the principles upon States have done more than perl ?f which the settlement was to be made * P?triotic duty-they have mv? Crh -the principles upon which the ar- ,n ?"nd"t. I ***, T: mistice had been agreed to and the world, gold obligation. of the I Cl narh.vs of near* un.lnrlnUn-.nH ?d States of America. a one doubted that"our" desire was to I But the safeguarding of these JC see the treaty of peace formulated curities has become a problem 8 along the actual lines of those prin- niany folK. Only a few persons, fe I ciples-?and desired nothing else. We ativcly, have either a safe in X' were welcomed as disinterested hou*> or ?(hc?' ,or ? ??fe-dcposit friends. We were resorted to as arbi- 'n "10 vaults of the bun*. II nr ie ters in many a difficult matter. It an/ Patriotic citizens are kee a- was recognized that our aid would be b"nd? and stamP8 about the hous r, indispensable in the days to come. th* bureau draw?[; I 1 ra We were generously accepted as or on th? And ?vt o- the unaffected champions of what treasure is thus hidden 1 ?b was right. It was a very responsible thieves there is the ever present io role to play; but I am happy to re-, fe; ?f ^ and the lo8S of th? m ie port that the fine group of Ameri-1 *nv?H "h cans who helped with their expert There may be no further call is advice sought in eve-y transaction the people at large to subacrib ?n to justify the high confidence im- buge bond issues, but the gov is posed in them. j ment n*?d? the daily and we .- . . . - , .. . sums which come in from the J And that confidence, ,t eeem, to >nd w.r s?in? su " nte. I. the mewure of our opportunity Mll u k t down 13 and of our duty in the days to come, , , , . , . ' . . . , .. , . danger or loss has deterred some 16 in which the new hope of the peoples , ^ .. h of the;v7r,djis b? fUltf,Iled ?r <li8" they might otherwise buy. Hence - appointed The fact that America is wiH be a future questio d tbe fr,end ?,f the n?t,ons' . whether r> n| Qne -d they be rivals or associates, is no new s^pR ^ Wn uk howeve n fact; it is only the discovery of it mfet thig ,ituation. o by the rest of the world that is new., Fir,tj .very or stanip ce, America may be said to have just cmte nmy be rejfi3tered with >? reached her majority as a world pow- TreftSury Department. Registra ,p er. It was almost exactly -1 years m(>ang that the owner's name and J ago that the results of the war with number of his security have lp Spain put us unexpectedly in posses- .. 1? v.. fm i - . , . , , - . - - . . , niKi?i?riru uy tnc juvernnifiu, ' l sion of rich islands on the other side ^ nobody but hlmiielf ran 'd of the world and brought us mto as- ?iblv gei the mon#y which ^ , n. sociation with other governments in or 8tamp ccrtjflcate calls for ^ the control of the \\ est Indies. It tiftcates may be registered thrc s was regarded us a sinister and onu- ^be neare?t postoffics; bonds thrc to nous thing by the statesmen of more the nearest bank. id than one European chancellory that . . , i i i u ? i i And the second method for s 't we should have extended our powers ,. . . . , . . , ... . .. . . guarding has been provided by 18 beyond the confines of our continental r , .? . Z , , . . . i hanks themselves. Every bankis dominions. .. , , , , ' . . tional bank or savings bank?and 1 hey were accustomed to think of mTy trust company has, of eoi J- new neighbors as a new menace, of ampl? and 8rcura vaults. For the _ j rivals as watchful enemies. There who doe8 not f?#l that he can af , were persons amongst us at home , to a 8afe deposit box to 1 10 i who looked with deep disapproval Ubcrty Bonds and War Sav m ! and avowed anxiety on such exten- stamps in, many of the hanks " I sions of our national authority over trust companies have announced t ' i distant islands and over peoples willingness to keep these secur whom they feared we might exploit, for hira in their own vaulU. | not serve and assist. But w-e have 1 been their friends and have sought to Ofmr-FQQr'f T| I\AI I A DC L" serve them. And our dominion has jHJLL>Lia?JIUL 1/ULLAlw )r been a menace to no other nation. We Timor- nrnni/i e i redeemed our honor to the utmost AKfc 1 iiUufc WUlvKJ c" in our dealings with Cuba. She is weuk, but absolutely free; and it is 18 her trust in us that makes her free. In War Savings Stamps 1 i Weak peoples everywhere stand ready Never Fall to Yield You Hanc 19 j to give us any authority among nome Profit. 8" ! them that will assure them a like . " T 7 'n friendly oversight and direction. They f ' ? ar ? ' " know that there is no ground for *at "th? ?uc/e"'ul fear in receiving us as their mentors ^ dolaris. failure. The suec ? and guides. Our isolation was ended ^I doBar brings back another dc r?f , , f ; with it. It makes itself a dollar t'1 20 years ago; and now fear of us is .. , , = ; something?two dollars and sc L ended also, our counsol and assooia- . . . , . .. - , ? - i i i to thing?a whole family of dollars a tion sought after and desired. There K . . * .. rif . , ? Rut the careless dollar goes "l can be no question of our ceasing to " . . ' somewhere and is never seen as e * POWOr' c Kt!1UCSt,?" A Texas man the other day lo d ? whether we can refuse the moral lif,.time.g RavinrB_|78G. Hi. ,n leadership that is offeree 'js- W'.cthef ,ari had goU9 otr j? the pocked t>s we shall accept or Deject the confi- two faga stock promoters. He ' ! dence of the world. not taught his dollars to keep $ The war and the conference of company. " peace now sitting in I'aris seem to Hun 'reds / years ago a raai me to have answered that question. whom a handful of money had 1 . uur participation in tne war estan- tniatad buried It all in a napkin, lishsd our position among the na- got no increase?ha did not even 1 J tions and nothing hut our own mis- ^hat he had. taken action can alter it. It was not The dollar that succeeds ia e . an ace* dent or a matter of sudden gctic?and careful. War Sar 0 1 choice that we are no longer isolated Stamps do more than aave your H and ilevoted to a policy which has | jar8. They put them to work ^ only our own interest and advantage compound intcreat. And they n ^ for its object. It was our duty to go fail. Your government guaran in. if wo were indeed the champions (.very one of them. of liberty and of right. We answered _ ?' to the call of duty in a way so a man occe bought Manhattan ' spirited, so utterly without thought anH for $24. He had the >J4. of what we spent of blood or treus- War Barings Stamps and bo rea<! er I \ire. so effective, so worthy of the llfJ admiration of true men everywhere. Provide u silver lining for the < 11 ' so wrought out of the stuff of all n* <Aou4_ War Savnga Stamps that was heroic, that the whole world ft. re saw at last, in the flesh, in noble n* action, a great ideal asserted and r'- vindicated by a nation they had LANCASTER EQl y- deemed material and now found to lc- be compact of the spiritual forces that must free men of every nation from a_ every unworthy bondage. It is thus President in* that a new role and a new responsi- G?cr*.inrv on nil;*., *V.???! n?lir?n u r) or that we honor and which we would reasurer Jt? all wish to lift to yet higher levels of Press Chairman ve service and achievement. ny The stage is set, the destiny dian. , , * k- The Woman C it zen of the issi n* closed. It has come about by no r? plan of our conceiving, but by the J,,lv 12,h ,s an In Me.noriam t< ar hand of Ood who led us into this war. Anna Howard Shaw. The trlbut nd We cannot turn back. We can only I the great woman who has pj kc" go forward, with lifted eyes and away are full of beauty and t to freshened spirit, to follow the vision, flic excerpt which follows seen It was of this that we dreamed at our strike the keynote of the charact ' hirth. America shall in truth show , ,)r ghaw; -Her great fear was a. the way. The light stream, upon the j shp mjRht out||ve hftf ujjefulne8 ith D?th ahead, and nowhere else. I 'I don't want to go on speaklr New Kind of Construction. 1 tor j jiave gotton passe,' she v Several exhibition halls and assem-, Bav .My frlends must tell me bly rooms have been built In Norway (h(> t|me comeg/ . by attaching to the uprights a net-1 1 1 ting," fashioned from wooden rods j And her triends listening, he >u about a third of an Inch square In the old golden-throated eloqu n~ eross-seetlon, which are hound to* I , ,. , , _ ,. rer . ..... . . watching, seeing the old fine fla gether with tin-plated iron wire, and , subsequently covered with a durable, wit. marking the old sure way ol ' plaster. Structures of this sort, saysI vlnelng by the pungency and r< Popular Mechanics Magazine, are less argument of her logic, th easily and quickly constructed and ar? fleeted gay loveableneaa of her ^ said to he useful In winter tlma. jsonality, knew always that the ~ " hud not come. " ~ ^ ~ *. f "IIL. "" ' ~ ?? " B NEWS, LANCASTER, 8. C. mCAVTNfC QTAMPQ sists. through her de uATlllw U1 AMlJ for consolation to the PS MADE HOME POSSIBLE t:riTl\TnZ lived to see victory ci i ef Man Whe Buddenly Found Hlmaotf struggle to which she r Wit hoot Roof Ovar Haad Waa Abia marvellous resources o to Buy Property. The greftt 8uCrraRe lt tory This true story tolls how War SaT- e g,eat wom*n or litod Stamps built a aura protection doad G woman " one< form one Washington war worker ' ' beIoved friend j k(. * o- 1 ihe cause whicl the Early in the war savings campaign of lhe efrort8 of the ! JniW he began a email systematic inveet- ne,,r> the orator, has b ment -in Thrift Stamps which ulti- mau>8 political freedon ( mately grew until he had an invest^ _ , , _ _ , . for m.?t ot $100. H. he acquired Pc,l<m" Sodrge Amend rel- hit stamps without depriving him- Pnssed. State by stat the gelf or family. The investment "just t'os o' ratification box grrew" out of incidental savings. ploted. *' ? Presently this incidental money There are no words became scarce. The war worker and measure the part I)r. i In his family felt the burden of the war- this monumental victo tine high cost of living, and the anx- Sj,e was or the suf rlom ^ and expense of extraordinary ill- Us 8?ver-tongued orat ness of the two children. Then an- . , ,, , dan- xu vi a 11 ? t. humor, its deathless other blow fell. He awoke one mornon#y ing to find that he had no place to ulnP"- % jjve She staked her whol *or His residence had been sold and c<>n<luored for it an e to he and his family were asked to va- death cannot rob her cate. He could find no houses for victory that was so lar* y rent within his means, and was con- South Carolina aloi fronted wfth the necessity of leaving j other of the state su The th6 f*ty ?r buyi.n/ * b?1"* f?rL hi* lions, sent beautitful 1 p.o- tMVly- He ^U,dA-n,0t $buy- ,W,thoUt simple funeral servlct making a substantial initial pay- , . 8 ment, and ready fund, were seem- he,d at L)r" Shaw 8 ho th* ingly beyond reach. Heading the list or tl " " Then he thought of his War Sar- floi,u offerings was Pn r to Stamps. He remembered they nur Kteat champion of were redeemable on ten days' notice, Wilson, with his usu with accrued interest. With the pro- ness and sense of fairm ceeds of these stamps and such small js making an earnest ition "ums could *ather h? ade certain of the Southei I the Payment on a new homo in th. makl the fa(a error l..? suburbs. "?en . , . ? . -atilv tiMiiendment. nnd Recently he refused to sell it for . , , , pos- $1,200 more than the purchase price. ian< U ?m,,nnI ? J>nd Thi. man is a War Savings Stamp lo. k<'nP "P his Or- enthusiast--and "he is on the straight courage by sounding tl >u;rh road to financial independence. other Southern states >ugh stand on the quest Start your mind going along saving llrough speaks with an lafe- lines and then watch it travel. Buy reason that he lias see the ; w. 9. S. regularly. I out woman suffrage, ai _nm" . far-reaching Influence I fVirso, Pull together to produce more, to _ man eliminate waste. to save and to lrn Tord j vest In W. S. S. BOUNTIFUL CROI teop INDICATED IN ing>s and Keep your money at work for ym* heir Re-invest your Liberty Boud Interest Largest ('mips of When ?* ?* Harvostetl?Othei ?? K\fleeter? ? -? ? I DCMCMDCD TlIC AWT III Washington. July ^ I\XiITItiITlDLiI\ IHIj ATI I ? j farm crops this year wt ll'vl <> the department of agr Save and have! <> .forecasts based on com rh#y y Remember the story of the <1 | the first of the month, o ant and the grasshopper? The \ [ and rye. now being liar ** ant worked and saved. The end <> the largest production < of eaeh day found him with a J [ Record crops of swee Th? < little more added to what he < > lutcco and rice also ' *s. :: tad th* brAfo^'A The Jfrm"S; ! and the production of ,, [ hoppef danced and sang and < , >U~ O fiddled his time away. Winter corn. oats, barley, whll and , came; the ant had plenty. The <' I hay is expected to be 1 ,m*" o grasshopper had nothing; he < > average for the five ye _ J! had not saved. Ho went to the i Value of the wheat. ? y ant and asked for help. Said -? I crops combined amoui o the ant; "White I worked, you 622.000. based on Jul 4*1- o fooled yoar tlrae away" You !! The value of corn i $ , of j Mn danre now for aU 1 cara- ; wheat. $2,577,420,00 had Ar* y?u an person or a ? $994,727,000. po_j < grasshopper - person? Some r? ' food i> V. . . . . 0 i Plants diseases am .. time are you going to have to , to < ask for help and will someone o 1lons- however, made jeen < > t?l 1 you to dance; or will you ][ during June on prosper H# ? be independent? <> oats production. The teop < i " you nave now, you'll have J J a loss of 75,000,000 hi later on. Let the end of everv -in-" ?.? ? ?" ?? n?r- ? Wl'*k ^n(' more Thrift Stamp? <, , (|on af 43 qOO 000 inr* ! on your card. At the end of ev- < > _ do! o ery month b. able to .how mora X P^spoctlve oats crops. at War Ravings Stamp, past* i on <> t?res caused deterlorat ever O your certificate. Ixmd your o dltions of winter whet \\ monay to the govarrmant at 4 Hons while plant dlsea > per cant interest, rompoun?!?d <> central districts. Tlu J quarterly, and see It grow. J [ footed spring wheat in Isl- 1 T?k? atock of yourself! o 1ho bolt where black Ruy ? What are you worth? Will poare(, am, fiomewhal ly JJ next New Year, Day find you <? O worth more or less? Which wul ' n>P' com o you an ant or a gruaxhop- ' ? Mie area planted to will 0 P? 1 3* tatoes. flax and rice 1 < > last year, while the ar b J potatoes and tobacco 1 Production forecast JAL SUFFRAGE LEAGUE. ,try'a principal farm CI on the condition of th uerc announced today OI'FK hfW: ment of agriculture a: Miss Margaret Moore urea In millions of bus MiH8 Nannie Hill Moore winter wheat. 839; Mr8 S> L A,,en 322; all wheat. 1.161 Mrs. Leroy Springs ! oata , 403; bar,fty , white potatoes. 391; ue of| At seventy-two, she was still speak- 1^2; tobacco, 1,453 1 3 Dr. Ing, still campaigning, still blitely 13-2; rice, 42.5; hay, es to assuming tasks the very summary of, P'ea* 156; npi assedj which made women half her age gasp r'a'> 24.5 (barrels); p ruth, for breath. No soon had she laid Condition of the ci as to^ down her work as chairman of tho and crop acreages not ,er ot| Woman's Committee of the Council nounced follow: 1 that, of National Defense than the spring! Winter wheat, 89.0 u 1 fmirwl hnr achpflnlpH tn tnur tho r*nun. mnl ' wnrini' whont Rl ? ig af- try wl,b ex-President Taft to apeak! and 102.997.000 acn k'ould 'n behalf of the League of Nations. j barley, 87.4; rye. 85.' when 'To be useful?to be used!'?to the, White potatoes 87 , . 000 acres. * very end her young, eager cry rang Sweet potatoes 90.1 aring out the same. acres. lonce?| It was while on this tour for the Tobacco 83.fi and 1. ah of League of Nations that a he was Flax 73.5 and 1,851 r con- stricken with the illness that was to Rice 89.5 and 1 091 elent- be her >??t." Hay 9i | e re- The editor of the Woman Citizen Apples 56.6. per- closes the beautiful memorial in these Peaches 69.0. time words; "In the dire public and per- Wheat of last year sonal loss that has befallen suffra- Ing on farms July 1 a 4 \ TUESDi\?r itJLY ath. they look fcSj^SSgggSEsEsesEss reflection that t overtake her PRIMmiiI II t. At least she vIlHliuy 11 \/l own the great *k* WOir^BXlTTri FBOylNO OBI had given the ^ Excellent Winter i f her talents. OrMlnrjCrep?Beet Orrn *e#A?Oood X ?ader is dead. Crlmeon Clover car atnr Is cloud I rrom ine ursi 101 juiy ator is aeau. Ortoborf it Id partlcu ?r minister is I nl?le as a soil ilmproyt I and cotton. sowing It i working, turning >t ?? (ip?,i I following Mayl and g is aeaa. crcascd crops each yc i was the goal I be SUB]p TO S r;:?r c. wood'S si , . a They arc carefully so ii is here. The I for g.rmluAtloi Intent has been I ii"P"ritlcsl and I able weed seed* \ SEED POTATOES foi I rot a to pr<>wors nA? g' I dcrful pric. s Just Ji<>\\ with which to I liberal udcage in lure . , I r<>ta?o?S may sell li 3haw played in I m.xt winter. ? ry. I Write for "Woody . I clal" giving timely Mi Trage struggle. I nn,j pri,es. Mailed tY< or. its wit. its I ?' _ ^ spirit of trl- I T.W.WOOD & I SEEDSMEN, Blcbm e life on it, she I d with it. and nor us of the 644^^0 bushels, rompi ;ely her work." 063.0(N> last year and 3 ig with thirty average ju|V 1 stocks Trage associa- years 1913.17. (lowers for the Condition and produ :s which were jn thousands of bushe me in Moyian. princ|pai southern state (lose who sent Virginia, 91 per cent Mident Wilson.1 an(1 5^570 bushels, suffrage. Mr. Nor(h Carolina< 89 a al far-sighted- GporKtat 83 an(, c,6.0 ess and justice. ?? ?? TonnoFSoe, anil R" effort to keep Alabama. 7? and 66.1 rn states from M,ssissippi. 70 and 58 or refuslnp to Louta|una, 7 5 and 33, On the other m ouisiana is try, . Building 1? Den own falterlnp ?. . , , There are at present ,e governors of, f ,,omnHrks bul,dlnp ?n how 'hey ^ jnn,j materials and tnon ion. Governor , question ran probably be ithority for thel so that of materials, but 11 Arkansas try] runpement of the tlnui mi has seen its must first be made. Th< for pood. inp Iras Increased from 5 I> J S. square meter ($7.72 per to 720 crowns per VHP ($17.0:1 per square foot) ? AKIa cournplnp prlvnte in it In FORECAST poratlons are now condu of the buildinp enterprl hapen and the provlnc t and Itye Kver h,qp tjiese buildinp cor r Itcrords inp the war, tire povc $1,(KM1,000. This was and by a law passed Fel provision was made to 14.?Ilountlul corporations and compel >re indicated in some of the extra expenf Iculture's July All In all the state anil litions existinp subsidize the buildinp c Winter wheat 'he extent of 00 per c vested, showed creased costs which an . so that the houses cos ever attained. Al .A . tlon 40 per cent more tn t potatoes, to were predicted Jhe Foo, gtn sprinp wheat ^ foo, streftk l8 le potatoes and da,ne(1 orR?n nf the hi arper than the js j|>,. conscience or t ars. Ill 13-17. asserted old Pest us Pesf corn and oats attribute which prompt ats to $8,.340,- estimate our own Imporl y farm prices, that we can beat the o 4,768,475,000; bis own paine. to bellev 0. and * outs, WW H"n- ,s of friends who devote earnestly solicltlnp him 1 other condi- flc<? nCrept pomposity heavy inroads d ,sh nfter ,i?shlnp wlcb tive wheat and n innn with a horse I forecast shows horse sense. to plant ishels of wheat garden seeds, to cnll chi e and a reduc- ances 'Ttrothor,' to buy bushels In the on the Installment plan. High tempera- Thft conscience enn be rc ion in the con- l tc? b-v mor"1 "uns,on dlx Is removable by an ? it in some sec- ,hp on)y (>fflcar|ous tnot! s?> increased in ^ foni 8tronk |? ' beat nlso nf- to S(,n( himself and some parts of prayerfully pluck it oni [ rust has ap- time, as one picks the li damaged the out of a new garment from a sunflsh."?Kansn corn, white pos smaller than ? reage of sweet s larger. DR W R RE s of the conn- ?? rops, estimated e crops July l. Specialist by the departs follows (Fig- />i r? heis): Chronic and spring wheat, # ; corn, 2,815; DiS <|S< >31; rye, 103; sweet potatoes, (pounds); flax. Men and M 1 1 6 (tons) ; apjless (commer- t leaches, 50. ( rops on July 1 TV1 1 T) previously so- t^UCS <MQ K / i per cent of nor9 ft; corn, 86 7, Cured Wil|)<?llt.O| f?h; oats, 87.0; , n...t Loss of Time ai .6, and 4,003,, and 1.023,000 Guarantc 774,300 acres. ???^ [.000 acres. ,..00 seres. 12061-2 Mai s crop remsln- ColllIDDlSp mounted to 1ft, JH ... 15, 1919. Be !ovSfI sou. hk. H| tnd Spring III II of i*iir u n top Crop I ' i be sown / 19 to early In * larly valy- jH r for eg#:i ^9 at the list fl under the rowi?s inar^ EEDS I Iccted *tnd l and free I H objection- llfl Fall Crop la ttinrr won- ^9 riant a BB and July. igh attain HI Cron Sne- K9 iformat ion HH M \ SONS, Q (.pd, Va. a9 T B trod Vith 7.413,000 the-Hi for the Ave ^1 ction forecast Is of corn ia s follow: of a normal, |H nd 63,989. fli 63. B 646. B 994. S mark. B three phases B dillleultles? w iey. The land 'K settled and al- B u general ur- I nclnl question 1 ; cost of build- ,S 110 crowns per square foot) J1 square meter II . This is dls- 19 itlve and corcling one-third :]B ses in Copen- j1 iul cities. To- ill pomtIons dur rnment voted j1 not sufllclent. 11 Itrunry 5, 1918. J C finance these 4 8 tsate them for 11 tes of building, yfl municipalities jfl orporatlous tocut of the In- fH ? 190 per cent, I 9 t the corpora- jfl an before. eak 1 s mnch nn or- I a nmnn hndy as I jfl he appendix." I f] or. "It is that I ? s as to over- 1 ii a nee, to fancy M 5 ther fellow at I * e that the ?v- flB with a hen! I 4 their lives to- 11 to ran for offor ahlllty, to tws. to expect a tilth to have- Km congressional ance acquaint- MS nonessentials- ^K and so forth. 1 ducod or erad- I-c, i. The appen- I \ iperatlon. Rut 1. ; hod of getting for the victim 1 carefully and I t a little at a 1 ] lasting.thread* M f or the hones- a $3 is City Star. AGISTER I in -|j 'omen. j upture 1 Iteration or id I'ndfr | in Street a