LL —————————————————SS——————= Pr - —— + } 3 A Cruelty to the Cow. FEEDING GAME—PREPARATION found when they landed in Pennsylva- shoes. : —_— : OF SHELTERS. nia. Remember that the demands on 2 Druoreadic “Bagging” the cow that is to be ne wild life are far greater than they | opm enn EE EEUSUEYSUEUEUSIEUEUSUSUSUEIEUELEIEIS = —~Srio sold is a common evil in this country. While we hope that the winter be- | were ten years ago, and if we hope to | SMS l= le la le SE ise] SEs le = | In England they call it “udder stock- | fore us will not be anything like the | save the birds and animals we must | Sli Iz Bellefonte, Pa., November 19, 1920. | ing.” It is letting the cow go past | last one, says Seth E. Gordon, Secre- each do our share to protect them | SF Te ee | $0 OT three milkings so that her ud- | tary of the Game Commission, still | from the rigors of winter and vermin, | [ic 30 | der may stock up and give her the 2p- | we must prepare now to have all game | as well as kill in a reasonable manner | gi BS A Ue | pearance of being a really better milk- | fed and protected wherever and when- | so as to leave plenty of stock in our | or] p< i Te ub ALTH SCHOOL | er than she is. We have never been | ever needed during the coming winter. | covers. ic TA on | able to get a conviction in Massachu- | The supply of game left over after - = ; fe 2 Ue | setts for this abuse. The cattlemen | the hunting season, especially quail, “Penn State Ballhead” Cabbage Rec- Hh ( el I= - - will always testify that it is not | ring-neck pheasants, wild turkeys, ord Producer. is Wwe Il enough painful to be a violation of the | etc., must be fed and supplied with : —-— Fr 1 l Bi Pennsylvania State Department law against cruelty. We are glad to | shelters wherever needed in order that | Eight years ago plant breeders at | or ; + iN ik see the following “Warning” issued | they may come through in the best | The Pennsylvania State College school LL o : se - a vil of Health by the Minister of Agriculture of | possible condition ready for the spring | of agriculture, in an endeavor to suit | Ff Le, STIL te GREATEST Uc A Great Britain: 3 Dling season. In sections where | CTOPS to the soil of the college farms, Hl MOTHER ne) 2 / the D. Tic = . “The purpose is, frankly, to deceive | game has been fed systematically in found an unusually large, solid and Li ——— FH Questions. the customer and to secure an unduly | the past, sportsmen today report the | well shaped head of Danish Ballhead i Ly ai responsible high price for the animal. Merely on | best hunting, and right now while the | cabbage. It was segregated and made Bh = 1. Name the disease resp the ground of dishonest business ‘ud- | farmers over the State are husking | to_ produce seed. More seed was ob- | lig : Frit for Hunchback? der stocking’ would be indefensible, | their corn is a splendid time for land | tained from successive plantings until | Ff Lr 2. Name a contributing cause? but two further weighty reasons | owners and sportsmen to bear in mind | during the past season one acre of | Si = 3 Name some early Symptoms {| against the practice should be borne | the necessity for sparing a few plants all descendant from the one se- | Lg : =i of Tuberculosis of the Spine? in mind. First, it is an offense against | sheaves of corn fodder to build shel- | lection, yielded nine tons more than Ic Lo the ow to Ariel wRRMESISTY Suffer ters for quail that may be left over, the average eouiieteiol Sw of fhe 2 : Ue ; ing, and offenders are liable to pun-|so that they may be fed at such places | same variety. The develo selec- | Bf ] TUBERCULOSIS OF THE SPINE ishment on conviction. Secondly, | without = ay being covered De by | tion, which has been named “Penn i al A t e O] | 1€ Sh (POTT’S DISEASE) ‘stocking’ is bad business, as it may | snow. I am confident the farmers of State Ballhead,” last season yielded = As seriously reduce the yield of milk, not | the State will gladly co-operate with twenty-six tons to the acre, as against be I= lled the chair only during the period of prolonged | the sportsmen in setting aside some seventeen tons produced in adjoining Oc f When Bh Wale Ly I he was distgnsien, but after all subsequent | fodder and arrange same into suita- rows from ordinary Danish Ballhead | g i to away Aas calyings. ble shelters. In addition to fodder, | seeC. ! : su. = about to sit down; “it was Just in] “The Ministry of Agriculture hopes evergreens or almost any kind of This latest contribution of State I The drive for membership in the Red 1 ifun,” he said; of course it was—had | that the purchasers of cows will, both | material that will hold up the snow | College specialists to the betterment | Zl 3 =p he realized that serious results might | on grounds of humanity and in their | will make suitable shelters for this of Pennsylvania agriculture, 1s not HE Cross 1S On. I follow, he would not have done it own interests, severely discounte- | purpose. looked upon as phenomenal by C. E lc : he i and Bob was very sorry—ever since, nance the practice of ‘udder stock- | © Right now, while the sportsmen of | Myers, professor of plant breeding, | Fl The work of this wonderful organization 3 he has been SOITY. ing.’ ”—Our Dumb Animals. the State are in the field enjoying a |who has done the experimenting asso- ; fj ) : Chaples was severely jarred, he ERD TI re avs “of pleasure they should |ciated with the development of Tut | pil needs no commendation from us. What I= ) Little Work in Germany. make necessary arrangements for this strain. He says it is simply the result | {Uc 1 cried a little, then forgot about it. ake mee Sry ar g ements fo this | of applying AY Al known principles of | it Is. doh h 2 | afin oid i Several weeks later he epmiplained \ Many of the 50,000 former German department will be only too glad to) plant breeding to one of the import- | Jn it is doing here 1s only an In nitessima Si of pain in his stomach and his ' ocers discharged since the signing | assist sportsmen and land owners ant truck crops, and merely one phase IL : : i of De dosed him with castor oil. | of the armistice have joined the great | wherever possible so that not a Ninel | of the investigational work that is be- | fg part of what it is doing all over the I His back hurt, he did not want to army of unemployed in Germany, 2 | covey of quail, or ring-neck pheas- | ing done at State College. At pres- | BB 3 play. He fell into the habit of walk- | few have gone to work at hard labor | ants’ or grouse, or wild turkeys, or ent there is no seed available for dis- Uc world 2 ing carefully, as if he were balancing | and others are trying to make small any other game that may need atten- | tribution, but plans are being made to | Fl fic something on his head; when he | pensions pay for the expensive neces- | tion will be left to shift entirely for | have some for the season of 1922. HE Do you know that the Red Cross nurse I= ‘stooped to pick up things he did not Se ee en, 4. aristocrat Jienioe) ves, Which oud result 50 fh . Case Jor the origingl She Sai Lo id : 5 oy y BL - | destruction of a go ercentage of | eventually ev - | FR Sl : Pon er other graien: be Sion ic, once wealthy families are in no bet- | sur breeding Birds hp ie left | ing strain, came with a desire to find Le has already made 945 visits to distressed fre ‘ed with a stiff back behing "| ter situation than their comrades Who | over should the winter be a severe a plant that would give the best pro- [ . 3 a te ‘His pain became greater. A lump a8 | relied for a living upon their army | ,ne duction on the limestone soil of the =I homes in this community ¢ ! if made by a knuckle of bone apPea™ | pay. They have long since disposed | "pont simply lay this aside, without | college farms. As convincing proof Ie 2 ed over his spine; as it grew he be-| of most of their personal property and | resolving that you are going to do that Penn State Ballhead will give the | 21 le came shorter. ° it is not uncommon to see one of them, | your share to bring our wild life | same mammoth production on other | 55 tsite Outside of Bellefont Ie His parents lived a long way in the | suppressing his pride, and offering 10 | through the coming winter in the | soils, it was grown last season with an lc Visits Outside of Belleionte =I country, roads were bad and doctors ' some foreigner a family heirloom fo pink of condition, so that we may exceptional yield on an entirely differ- | ol Joh ss. Milesburg - - 10 ch ‘were scarce; the child had no medi-| enough money to pay a grocery bill. | hang to future generations at least | ent type of soil in another part of the : i fi ‘cal attention. ose Whore on Jord a remnant of what our forefathers | State. Uc Rockview - - 2 Unionville - - 8 i : That was twenty years ago—Charles a pound of meat and all day for a —_— | . = Pleasant Gap - ia Snydertown - « X Ic dives today—a hunchback. All his life pound of butter. A number of them | aanAnnnn ANAAAAAAAAAAAAAA NAAAAAAAAAA NARAAAAAAAAINS PONE . 1 ‘he has been handicapped by his PD have been unable to hey egiinn : 3 a] Howard - - - I Molasses Hill 26 Us pearance and by the physical weak-| clothes and are working in uniforms : s AL ‘ness resultant from his deformity. thin and frayed by much wear. Bellefonte Trust Comp any ¢ r= Axemann IO =i Hunchback 1s caused by “Tubercu- The wives and sisters of some of $ 2] Li losis of the Spine” known familiarly | Yess men have Ene nie the Shops B Jlefonte Pa. $ oi] Uc ito medical men as “Poit’s Disease.” where they earn marks a monti, ae . . ) . . Sil DO is, ome mot the {1 8am Which 2 gues of Su 518 of the | § $ 21 Join the Red Cross, and Help Expand this Work I= ’ of- international hotels frequently pays ” | SE F actual cause of Pott’s disease, by £ 1 1 The widow of a . ¢ I : fering a spot of bone weakness af. | for a sng e mea. : 1 Q SH ee | » af | .slonel who was killed at the front is ou ou a e a 1 2 ] fords the germs of tuberculosis a fa-| supporting four children on a pension y ¢ ue 'vorable point for multiplication and | of less than 700 marks a month.—EXx. S$ Ln Y r Sh St Tr i ‘development. Tiny brokea blood ves- | ar "To protect your Joved ones. ? = eage S oe 0 e sels allow a seepage of blood through! ___Jf you want all the news you P QF the bone substance * ich pests oe i can get it in the “Watchman.” To safeguard your estate. Haluk 1 $ L : THE SHOE STOR E FOR THE POOR MAN os germs which. may have found their | ino a Will you can appoint the Bellefonte rust € | {0 ia I way into the circulation. Nearly every ——— TMM c By making is or ew ¢ =i] Bush Arcade Building 58-27 BELLEFONTE, PA. Ie case of Pott’s disease can be associ- | HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA. ompany as your . : ? Sh = enue ated with an injury of greater or less —=— = You can thus assure to your heirs the business manage- Q SleyruELEEE EEE EL USE ELE SR UELEUEE severity, sometimes months before the ment and financial responsibility which this institution affords. § | _ earliest symipiuts ave Iaiieeniie | Why Have Catarr he Y rishes ¢ ’ be roa in the distribution of your $ The weight of the head, shoulders, Dut Wises ca ios ¢| Come to the “Watchman” office for High Class Job work. and chest are supported by the spine : property, for if you do not leave a Will the law may divide up 2 | or back bone, which is made up of in- 50 Digagrevable to Yourself and All your possessions in a way that you might not desire. {i —- . m— — ‘dividual bones called —ertebrae. | About You. : | . : If we were to superimpose a NuUM- | Catarrh is generally conceded to be . p {ber of flat padlocks, one over the | 5 constitutional disease. Therefore it How Have You Made Your Will? p jother, we would have a column which | requires a constitutional remedy like ¢ 1 & C 1. & C ‘might be sald in some degree to re-' Hood's Sarsaparilla which reaches { yon O. yon 0. Do not write your own Will. “Home-made” Wills are isemble the backbone, the flat bodles every part of the system by thorough- 5 i ‘of the padlocks taking the place of the Lb purifying and enriching the blood. dangerous and often cause law-suits, because, when drawing a THE STORE WHERE QUALITY REIGNS SUPREME. bodles of the vertebrae and the hasps | The medicine rGUREEC the cause of the | § (Will the law must be known, both as to wording and terms. { ‘representing the ring of hone which | trouble, which if not checked may lead lout Ki i Will end have 31 i surrounds the spinal cord. ' to more serious disease. Consult a lawyer today about the making ot your Wi n & When the presence of germs of tu. | , In 46 years of use and test Hood's him name the Bellefonte Trust Company to act as your Execu- Sarsaparilla has relieved many cases $ as told by yehaary Istiars of Lope tor and Trustee. $ i-mendation. y not get a bottle to- . . day and give it a trial? It combines J. L. Spangler, C. T. Gerberich, N. E. Robb, 3 { ? iberculosis cause the bodies of one or ‘more vertebrae to decay, the weight, ‘which the spinal column supports, pressing upon the weakened bone Until further notice we will continue our 33% Reduction in the following departments: i economy and efficiency. Keep Hood's : Vice President Treasurer ‘hastens the process; the bodies of the | Pills on hand as a family cathartic. 65-3-tf President ic 1 ivertebrae give way causing a forward 65-44 | AAAAPAPANNINIA NAAANAAAAAA MAAAAAAAAANAAANANINANN | buckling of the spine and the charac. | ‘teristic deformity. If the disease be recognized early ‘and means be employed to place the ‘affected © rt at complete rest, at the jsame time relieving It from the pres- igure caused by the weight of the up- per part of the body, complete recov- ery may be expected. * This effect may be accomplished by ‘the application of the plaster of paris jacket or by one or another of the |various devices for relieving the spine ifrom the support of the upper part lof the body. Rest in bed—lying flat— iis tiresome, but rational treatment. The method of treatment employed .depends upon conditions surrounding ‘individual cases and should be left en- tirely to the physician in charge. When deformity is actually ent, THE UN IVE RSAL CAR 1t cannot be corrected, but can be kept from getting worse. Pain is an early symptom of Potts ‘disease, but.is not always associated Coats and Suits Furs Silks Georgettes with the seat of the trouble; It may The Ford Coupe is one of the most popular members of the Ford Family. Itis Hosie ‘be referred to the stomach, abdomen, “us s qs . : ‘or legs, tut sudden bi Cpe a permanently enclosed car, with sliding plate glass windows—an open car with 1 \ produced by stepping stiff-legged from Then in inclement weather, enclosed and cozy, dust-proof and rain- 1 t ja step almost always causes pain at plenty of shade. ou : % . P . poo ot on the seat of the disease. proof. Big deep seat liberally upholstered. Just the car for traveling salesmen, physi- The same effect may be produced if . i i nd a regular family car for two. Equipped . firm downward pressure be made upon cans, architects, COMIACiOrS; builders, ania resn y . . 1 rp Mus ns the head, the individual in question with electric starting and lighting system. Demountable rims with 3} inch tires all sitting up straight. : : 1 1 Injuries to the back are not often around. Tire carrer. A car of comfort, winter and summer, spring and autumn, Percales followed by Pott's disease, but it is with all the Ford economy in operation and maintenance. The demand is big. well to keep in mind, they somciimes Use Genuine Ford Parts are, and that any part of the back ‘bone is liable to attack. ; Children with slight injuries get USE GENUINE FORD PARTS. well quickly. If pain and stiffness persist and they appear to get worse instead of better, medical advice =i2 = BEATTY MOTOR CO, Flim—Are you ever bothered with Bellefonte, Pa. pn —— Outings Ginghams Calicos A Visit will More than Convince You rheumatism ? . Sil Flam—Yes, continually. My friends | are forever telling me all about theirs. —————————————— As Speed is Recorded. West—How fast can your car go? | North—The best I've been able to | make so far is fifteen dollars and ! costs. ! Lyon & Co. « Lyon & Co. THE STORE WHERE QUALITY REIGNS SUPREME ——— ————— — Subscribe for the “Watchman.”
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