Sonora Bellefonte, Pa., August 6, 1920. FARM NOTES Standard bred fowls produce uni- form products which bring higher prices. Green cut bone, when fed fresh, makes an excellent substitute for beef scrap in the poultry flock’s diet. It must be purchased in small quanti- ties, as it cannot be kept fresh for any ’ength of time, especially in warm weather, and when spoiled may cause severe bowel-trouble. Plenty of fresh water should always be accessible to the hens. If supplied irregularly they are likely to drink too much at a time. It should not be exposed to the sun’s rays in summer nor be allowed to freeze in winter if this can be avoided. In very frosty weather it is often worth while to give the flock slightly warmed water two or three times a day rather than permit them to drink water at the freezing point. A flock of 50 hens in good laying condition will require four to six quarts of water a day, say poultry specialists of the United States Department of Agriculture. The cabbage maggot does serious damage to cabbage, radishes and cauli- flower. A poisoned bait formula which will kill the adult fly before it has a chance to lay its eggs will be sent by th: Bureau of Plant industry, Pennsylvania Department of Agricul- ture, Harrisburg, to those who ask for it. To kill the maggots on cabbage zl- ready infested use carbolic acid and emulsion. The stock solution is made as follows: Dissolve one pound of soap in one gallon of boiling water, then add one pint of crude carbolic acid and churn the mixture hard until all are thor- oughly mixed. i To use—Dilute one (1) part of the above stock solution with thirty (30) parts of water and pour half a tea- cup above the stem of each plant. Apply once a week until the four aprlications have been made. _ This does not prevent the fly lay- ing eggs but it kills the eggs or the young maggots. Use at once in an endeavor to save infested plants. Given free range, turkey hens us- ually secrete their nests in obscure places, such as patches of weeds, tall grass, or bushy thickets, and often wander a half-mile or more from home before they find places that suit them. To find these “stolen” nests is often a long and tedious task, the usual method being to fol- low each turkey hen as she separates from the flock and starts toward her nest, taking care that she does not know she is observed. A much easier and quicker method than this is to confine the hens early some morning soon after they have come down from roost and let them out late in the af- ternoon. Those that are laying will then head straight for their nests in order to lay the eggs they have been holding. _ If attractive nesting places are | prepared about the barnyard, turkey hens sometimes lay in them. In the North, where the laying season often begins while there is still snow on the ground, they are more likely to select their nests near home than is the case in the South, as they do not range far during cold weather. Nests are easily made from boxes or barrels, or by scooping out a little earth in the shape of a shallow bowl and piling brush around it to satisfy the hen’s desire for seclusion. Of all nests, however, the one most prefei- red by turkey hens is a barrel laid on its side and a nest shaped in it with straw or hay, according to the United States Department of Agriculture poultry specialists. When only a few turkeys are kept it is the usual cus- tom to allow them free range through- out the breeding and laying season. If many turkeys are kept, however, it is usually found most convenient to use breeding pens or inclosures, in which the turkeys are kent until they have laid their eggs for the day, let ting them oul late on each afternoon. When confined to a breeding pen sev- eral turkey hens often lay in the same nest, but on free range each hen u:- vally makes her own nest. The summer or early fall, soon ai- ter the lambs have been weaned or marketed, is the best time to dispose of ewes that are not considered desir- able for another years breeding, say sheep specialists of the United States Department of Agriculture. The ewes that are to raise the next crop of lambs can then be prepared for fall breeding. Ewes of the mutton breeds do not ordinarily breed well nor keep .in good condition after 5 years of age. Their usefulness, ho.’- ever, depends more upon the condi- tion of their teeth than upon their actual ge. Fine-wool ewes usua'ly remain useful to a later age. It is a good plan to sell aged ewes be- fore 1hey become too run down to be valuable to the butcher. The ewes that give the most milk and 1aise the best lambs are likely to be ‘juite thin at this time and should not be judged by their appearance. Nonbreeding ewes, poor milkers, light shearers, and mothers of infer- ior lambs should be marked as their defects are discovered, and should be disposed of at this time. Their plac- es should be filled by the best individ- uals among the yearling ewes and from the best breeding older ewes. With our present knowledge of and experience in sheep-scab eradication work it is comparatively easy to re- duce the infection to a point where it ceases to cause economic loss, but the complete eradication of the para- site over such vast areas is a problem requiring patience and diligence. Where the eradication work is super- vised by a well-organized force of trained field men, the percentage of ‘infected flocks can be reduced very rapidly until it reaches a fraction of 1 per cent; but to reduce that fraction to zero requires very careful and systematic work, with the full coop- eration of the sheep owners. As soon where the economic loss is little or nothing, many sheep owners lose sight of the importance of continuing erad- ication. It is necessary, however, for the protection of the sheep indust- ry that the efforts be continued until the pest is completely eradicated. If lambs are sold at from 3 to 5 months of age they may run with their dams until that time. The lambs to be kept for breeding purpos- es should be weaned at the same time and put on fresh pastures where there is no danger of stomach worms. When the weaning is done at this time the ewes can be put in better condition for the fall breeding. Ram lambs left in the flock worry the ewes. When lambs are to be kept on the to leave them on the old pasture for three or four days and remove the ewes to a scanty pasture to check their milk flow. As soon as the lambs cease fretting for their dams they may be moved to fresh pastures where the ewes have not been. Ewes with large udders should be partially milked once every three days until they go dry. New State Law Abolishes Little Red School Houses. All rural schools, the attendance of which falls below ten pupils, are clos- ed and the scholars are sent to an- other school within a mile and a half of their residence and if none are within that distance, the scholars are sent to other schools and the trans- portation is provided for by the State. The reasons for the new law are that the State may save money on education in that manner and because of the scarcity of school teachers and also there is an « lvuitage in schools with large attenderce:. The law refers to the past term and not to the coming one. In some in- stances schools are affected because of the neglect of parents in sending the children to school; thus lowering the attendance. This new law will save a large amount of money for the district, on account of the smaller schools costing more in proportion to the larger ones. This law has been passed and the school authorities have no option in the matter. It is hoped that the par- ents will regard the matter in its tru» light from the standpoint of better educational facilities for their chil- dren and that they will support the school directors in their endeavor to obey the law. ee eee. A Singular Similarity. “Sir, I am an uncompromising dyed- in-the-wool Democrat! My father and my grandfather were Democrats, and 1 have never seen occasion to change my allegiance. I » “Ah, yes!” impolitely interrupted J. Fuller Gloom. “A clam is a clam be- cause his father, grandfather and sun- dry other ancestors were clams.”-- Kansas City Star. {i Guarnerius. second played by Carl Flesch as the disease is reduced to a point farm the best method of weaning is | in The United States. This country has long recognized a responsibility in the case of depend- ent children, and has passed many laws which provide for the mainten- ance and safe-guarding of child life. But the so-called “Mothers’ Pension” movement, which provides care for the dependent child in his own home, has come into existence within the last ten or fifteen years. These Mothers Pension Laws, while new, are not detached and unrelated to former laws. They make rather a change in method, and are in accordance with the whole trend of modern thought along the line of child conservation. The earliest laws to provide for the care of dependent children in their own homes were embodied in the school codes of several States which provided that books and clothing should be furnished to needy children to enable them to attend school. The laws of two of these States, Oklahoma and Michigan, went further in pro- viding in addition to books and cloth- ing, for the payment of money for the support of the children. The Okla- homa law, enacted in 1908, provides for a “school scholarship” equivalent to the earnings of the child to be paid by the county to the widowed mother, when the earnings of such children were regarded as necessary to the support of the mother. The Michi- gan law of 1911 authorized the pay- ment from school funds of a sum not exceeding $3.00 a week per child to enable children of indigent parents to attend school. For some years Cali- fornia, in the absence of any law cov- ering this point, had given such aid under liberal interpretation of one of its juvenile court acts. In this case the dependent or delinquent children were committed by the courts to a charitable institution which accepted the commitment, and whenever it seemed desirable permitted the chil- dren to remain in their own homes, giving the mother the amounts order- ed by the court. Wisconsin, also, without definite State enactment, gave financial assistance to the families of dependent children instead of com- mitting the children to a charitable institution. In 1909 the White House conference on the care of dependent children brought before the people generally the need of providing something bet- ter than poor relief and more cer- tain than private charity in the matter of aiding mothers with depend- ent children. It also gave considerable publicity to these new “Mothers’ Pen- sion” laws. As a result, in 1911 both Missouri and Illinois enacted laws providing for the care of dependent children in their own homes. Agita- tion for the adoption of such laws spread rapidly, and in 1913 out of 42 State Legislatures in session 27 had before them bills providing for simi- lar legislation. During that year new “Mothers’ Pension” laws were passed by Pennsylvania, New York, Mas- “You can make this surprising experiment in our store = The Test of the Two Violins Violins differ subtly in tone! New Edison Realism by that fact. We have an ‘Ave Maria’’ Rr-CrEAaTION played by Albert Spalding with his This famous violin has a brilliant, singing tone. ¢¢ Ave Maria’ Albert Spalding bimself recently took part in a test of the New Edi- son’s Realism, at New York City. He played in direct comparison with the Re-Creation of his performance by the New Edison. Mr. Henry Hadley, one of the jury of the three listin- guished musicians who listened from sachusetts, and many other States and Hisory of “Mothers” Pension” Law | existing laws were revised and amended. Both 1915 and 1917 were years of great legislative activity throughout the country along the line of providing in some form for the care of depend- ent children in their own homes. By the close of the legislative session of 1919 “Mothers’ Pension” laws had been adopted in 39 of our 48 States, and Alaska and Hawaii. In the re- maining 9 States, with several excep- tions, bills are now under considera- tion. The United States is a pioneer in “Mothers’ Pension” legislation, but she is not alone in this work. As far back as 1913 Denmark and New Zealand were operating Mother’s Pen- sion laws, and soon afterwards Canada. Our method of administer- ing this help, while varying in the different States, is proving very sat- isfactory, and it is interesting to note that no less a country than Great Britain has turned to us for guidan~e in legislation of this sort. No form of social legislation has been more popular during the past 5 years than the so-called ‘Mothers’ Pension” laws. In neglecting to pro- vide real constructive help for the de- pendent mother with little children society has paid a heavy penalty in broken homes, sickness, child labor, deliquency, and many other ills re- sulting from the mother’s struggle io give both mature and support of her family. The mothers’ Assistance Law is designed to prevent this breakdown of the home and to supplement the other laws for child welfare. “The surprising rapidity,” says one writer, “with which this provision has gained recognition in American Legislatures is a significant indication both of the great need for public action and of | the growing conception of the State as having a duty towards its citizens.” Difficult Impression. The young man on the train, ob- serving that the handsome girl across the aisle was looking at him very in- tently thought he had made an im- pression and in a few moments he changed his seat to the vacant one beside her. “Haven’t we met before where ?” he ventured to ask. “Well, I'm not quite sure,” she re- plied, “but: I think you are the man I saw hanging around the night our automobile was stolen.” The young man vanished into the smoking car amid the snickers of those who had overheard them.—Bos- ton Transcript. some- back without question T'S Salve fails in the treatment of I , ECZEMA, RINGWORM, TETTER or ; other itching skin diseases. TT J Try a 75 cent box at our risk. FOUf Mone: if Stradivarius. mellow tone. Test the We have a RE-CrrEAaTION with his genuine realism for you. The NEW EDISON “The Phonograph with a Soul’’ behind a screen, said: performance tone for tone.” parison-tests. GHEEN’S MUSIC STORE, 2) Brockerhoff House Block, - - Bellefonte, Pa From actual photograph taken in the Edison Shop, Fifth Avenue, New York City This violin has a rich, Come in and compare these two RE-CrEa- T10Ns—tone for tone. makes clear the distinction between the singing Guarnerius and the mellow Stradivarius, you know it has perfect “The Re- Creation matched Mr. Spalding’s The New Edison is the only phono- graph which has given this con- clusive proof of its perfect realism. 1t has triumphed in 4,000 such com- 67.06 C. M. PARRISH, Druggist, Bellefonte If the New Edison PRICES! HALT! Since 1914, the total price- increase in the New Edison has been less than 15%, Mr. Edison has, personally, ab- sorbed more than.one half of the increased costs ofman- ufacture. He'may not be able to-do this:much longer. 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Dubbs’ Implement and Feed Store BELLEFONTE, Pa 62-47 2 | ITTTITIIIURNRONRRRINY aA) Ih / | | \ ~~ Studebaker SPECIAL SIX SERIES 20 Satisfying Performance Economy of Operation Power Durability True Value BIG SIX..vececescasssscstcscncnne « $2250.00 SPECIAL SIX....iotceececsese esse 1785.00 LIGHT SIX....coeeeccsccaccens eso 1485.00 Cord Tires on all Models—Prices BEEZER'S GARAGE North Water St. 4.50 - BELLEFONTE NAAAAAAAAAAPANNAPNNNIIINNPINIIIIIIPININIIPIIINNPIG £. 0. b. Factory—Subject to Change