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Newspaper Archive of
The Lone Tree Reporter
Lone Tree, Iowa
July 9, 1925     The Lone Tree Reporter
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July 9, 1925
 
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.% 1.(i&apos;_,5. LONE TREE REPORTER, LONE TREE, IOWA PAGE 7. G SEED, !  '! SLATS' DIARY I of It for Seed, I i $ [ Friday Ant EmEmy says the)- are no justice for a girl in a breech of of the first crop i promise suit now of days. If she was this year is set-  president she of the crop might I says she wood seed, according make them tel- extension see- lows pay about 50 College. The heads thounsanO dol- examined before unless they aver-! lars {$) and soke them good and each, it will not i hard. Then pa up seed. The stand t an says. Yes an if greatly superior I that wassent pun- - ishmint enuff why the ate which the tests at the you mite make them marry the ElxDeriment Station [ girl or som- aIways danger oil onto the farm thing. and there is[ Sat.--:..a was a getting foreign i braggen up her clover grown from untie Tom witch in the test plot3 he is the one I was named after when station last year. lt il was yung aud little but it never the severe Iowa took. She seal he was such nice old fellow. Pa sed. Yes he was nice but he was awry close an stingey. He seal Celled he was so tile he woodent take noth- both in theirling but standing room when he was as surgeons; : to a show becuz he saved the extry ".No, there are deep- money & diddent ware the seat of his of tile hody!pants out and then he walked stiff And they wrote'tlegged _ to keep the creese in them. I Suhday--ma and Ant Emmy left i us today for acupple days visit in Railroad the country and pa and me is going [the 156 miles of rail- ', to keep house all alone. Pa went I keys, from Miami in the cellar and found sum onyans a mile. land cooks them. They diddent teste ,like them at ma cooks when she is Catarrh home gess we .ill use paper plates [so 'e wont have so menny dishes willd°whatwetto' warsh on the last day we are all claim for it-- I Catarrh ot  alone together. •  1 Monday glad we dent half to go  Itt skool enny more this summer till -CO, Toledo, Ohlo;ln the fall. Sum buddy got out a r-- port that they are burgulars in the ! t neiborhood and pa told me to see I tbat we diddent leave enny thing valyubal outside so when t locks up tonite why I just left the lawn more and the hoe where they cud find them 146 without brrkeing in the house and caring I an pa. Tuesday--Ms and Ant Emmy is home ages. Cure to find out te onyans we cooked was sum bulbs ma had boughten to plant this wk. Your rainfall ever or your busi- you know that yog Insurance against damage that rain :to your plans or buM- represents Fire Insurance institution that serving .property faithfully since 1810. SERVICE Near Park Iowa "XVensday--A lady ast Ant Emmy did she like Shake Spear's wirks &i Ant Emmy sed she wfirssent very I well aquainted in town and dlddent i no wether he wa__a plummet or a dentest. Thirsday--Pug lStevens told a. bunch of we kids he cud go with enny gt'lrl he pleases. Jane sed. Ces but the trubble is you don't please very menny of them. Birth. o? the 5hilling An Anglo-Saxon coL. worth five- Verier. and marked with a cross, to enable it to be broken into four pieces, was known as a "scylling," from the word ".qklll," to divide" hence comes the modern term shitlivg. Like Seasoned Meat Dried whale meat, seasoned for s year or two, is a favorite article of dlet in the Faroe iMands. Scientists Take New View Recent fircheological finds at Cro- mer, England. tend to disprove the view tirol there was no'human habita- tion until after the glacial period.- " Directory firms iavite you to do business with them GEO. W. ZOLLER Jeweler and Optician Elgin Watches J 7 Parker Pens Photographs FAT AT CAYE best of everything 2651-207-E. 2nd MEERDK CLOTHING CO. M usratine, Iowa Ready-To-Wear St. Muscatine, Iowa T, BOLAND and Granite Works M uscat:ne, Iowa KEEPING WELL ::7: :-----:=:_: :==$s=__-_ GLAUCOMA Dll. FItBERICK R. GRt Idlter of "Lrl " THE lOW& PANITOEIUM FRED AULL, Prop. Repairing, Dry Cleaning, Pressing Suits Made to Order 208 Iowa Ave., 'Phone 1116 Army Store & Shoe Market Shoes and Men's Furnishings at Lower Prices LAUCOMA is a strange disease of the eye in which the eyeball he- comes hard, almost stonelike and In which there is either sudden or grad- ual loss of sight. Although it has been known since the time of Hippocrates, little Is known about its cause. It is more common among women than men. It is a disease of middle age, rarely attacking anyone before forty. It is twice as common between sixty and seventy as it is betwee forty and fifty. While no race is Im- mune, it is said to be common among Jews, Brazilian and Egyptians. It is more common aong Engllshmen than Scotchmen and seems to be more prevalent among dark eyed persons than among those with ble or grey eyes. There are two forms of this coudt- tfon, the acute and the chronic. In the acute, there Is sudden failure of sight, with a desire to use stronger glasses, sometimes temporary loss of sight tast- ing for many minutes, foggy vision. when everything seems hazy, or when the patient sees colored rings around every light. - These sight symptons m be accompanied by headache at' lnsomnia. The attack may last for over two weeks and then disappear, to return again in a few o'eeks. These mild symptons may lead to a severe attack with violent headache and partial or complete blindness. which I)asses (ff, leaving the sight ha- paired. The chronic form Is slower In devel- oping and, strange to say, is almost entirely free from pain or discomfort. The eyeball becomes harder and the sight fails gradually and almost im- perceptibly. Many conditions have been suspe(-t- ed o£ causing glaucoma such as worry, iJeart disease and Influenza. In the good old days of our great-grand- fatbers, when gout was one of the commonest and most fashionable dis- eases, glaucoma was called the "gouty eye" because It was s frequently found In men and women of from fifty to seventy who had eaten and drunk to excess all their lives. Overtaxing the eyes, especially with fine close work, Is said to favor It. It practically never occurs in per- sons who are otherwise In good health. It probably is caused by some form of poison In the system, either one from a center of Infection or one absorbed from the Intestines. If you avoid infection and overeat- ing you will be pretty safe from glau- coma. // i. 1925, Weetern Newspaper UnloIL) .). 197b. *,re.tern NwOal}er Lt:lon ) And man. she is mine own! And I as rich in having such't jewel As twenty seas if all their sands were pearl. After tasting many essences ws find freshness the sweetest of them all. SOME MORE SANDWICHES Bread shouhl not be too fresh to cut well; let the slices tie as cut. matching th- " "1 slices. For a nice I sandwich the | crums should be removed and the /.ghndwichos m a y be shaped after they are prepared. Cream tle butter ten so treat it will spread better, dd any filling desired. "" Egg Saldwiches.--Cho9 the whites of hard coole(i eggs until fine. Mix the yolks with softened butter or with mayonnaise dressing, add the whites and spread on the buttered bread. Deviled Ham Sandwiches.Take one cupful of cold boiled ham chopped fine, rub tle yolks of two hard cooked eggs until smooth with three teaspoonfuls of melted butter, mix the ham with a teaspoonful of IPmon Juice and on-fourth teaspoonful of mustard, season to taste and mix all together. Spread on thin slices of but- tered bread. CheeN Sandwlche.te cheese fine, mix with cream or melted but- ter, add salt and cayenne, and spread on buttered bread. Water cress and lettuce are both very good In sandwiches; shred both. mlx wlth mayonnaise dressing and place on buttered bread. Scraped onion for flavor may be added. Chopped green peppers and onion mixed with inayonnalse makes appetizing salad. Slletl tomatoes and cucumbers with a salad dressing are good. Chopped meat. nuts, with seson- lags, make good filling. Sweet S a n d w I c h • s .---Chopped blanched almonds with scraped maple sugar, softened with cream. Marma- lade. Jelly or prerves, any of which will spread without running. Cottage cheese and chopped preserved chef- rles. The Store for Thrifty Buyers I /nchovy Sandwlches.Pound to a ---  - _ pnste enough anchovls for the de- .lred number of sandwich.. AdJ Notice to FarmersHighest priee t and Junk, Ship tn oftel. paid for wool. hides to] lem-n Juice sad a little mayonmtlse I Mncatine Iron & Metal Co. ! ". • MAX SKOLNIK, Prop. I )fA.  'Phone 497 527.529 East 2nd St. [ SELLS UNCOT ALFALFA CROP. [lege, estimates that the crop will yield at least three tons per acre, On |his Farmer Gets $25 an Acre and Dodges basis, the man who pays $25 for the Labo Expense ......... crop is getting three tons for $25, plus his lffbor in putting it up. Pred Rondos, story county ftrmer of Ames. has sold part of his alfalfa crop in the field for $25 an acre. The buyer eros the crop and pmqorms all labor in connection wih putting it up The cnly expense F, endau has is taxes and inlerest on his land. Figuring taxes at $2 Imr acre, Randau gets an icome about equiva!en' to six per cent lIl!;r- et on land value0 at $400, or valq!ng the land at $200 an acre. he gets about 12 per cent interest on his inv,:stmeat. The Randau fiehl is river bottom soil, which was found by test to be sweet and thus no lime was applied. The field is said to have been badly infested with weeds a few years ago, but the alfalfa has crowded them practically all out. There is practically an even break from a fertility standpoint where the entire alfalfa crop is removed from the land. the soils specialists say. Mr Randau has 24 acres of Grimm I alfalfa, which he seeded with oas in[ EnUlr'$ Ugly Root the spring of 1924. He is cutting part] The least judicious, or deservttg of the acreage for his own use this 1 who have nothing to recommend them- )ear and the first crop yielded one and selves will be findlng fault with others. a half tons. H. W. Warner, soil, ex-]N° man envies the merit of another who ha engh of his own.--Rule of tension specialist of Iowa Stat Col- I Life. t q l LOCAL NEWS. l We are not going to try to mention all the people who went away on July 4th. Many of them went to Riverside, some went to Columbus Junction and others went etsewtere. Nr. and Mrs. Burrows and Mr. and Mrs. Denning of Illinois were visitors a week ago Sunday at the Fred Stock borne. Last week we stated that q','y had visited t John Burrs, but instead it was at the Stock home. Mrs. W. C. Seymour and daughter Mary Jean came on Wednesday of last week and remained at the Mc- Millan home until Friday when her husband drov through and together they autoed on to Davenport where they spent the Fourth of July, return- ing to Des Moines the first of this week. YOU PLAN ":* LET US HELP FURNISHINGS FOR @ YOUR HOME ,> > <> For many years we have been in the Furniture Busi- ness. We have made a study of the kind of furnishings that should be installed in rooms of different size and appearance. We can help you plan your furnishings if you will let us. Remdmber that we carry a good line of rugs and lin- oleums in neck at all times. If we haven't what you want, we shall be pleased to order it for you. Come in ..o and look over our stock. ,,. ;:. - ::: • ,-"" W.R. BREWSTE R .,.':" !i i Furfiiture and Undertaking Lone Tree, Iowa...; i Extra Special ° ,) During the month of July we are making a Special Price on Envelopes and Letter printed to your order. 500613-4 inch Envelopes printed - -___$3.0p 1000 6:3-4 inch Envelopes printed . - $4.25 500 8 1-2xl 1 inch Letter Heads printed - $3.50 . 1000 8 1-2xl 1 inch Letter Heads printed - $5.50 Prides furnished on smaller or larger quantities on request. BUY NOW while the price is LOW. They will be higher after July. Lone Tree P.e00rter CHAS. A. FIACKE. Publier Lone Tree, Iowa b (