The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, March 20, 1890, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    I J STS ERIS.
FARM NOTES.
LOOK out that the cattle do not get
Jousy. A little lard and sulphur, thor-
oughly mixed, rubbed along the back-
bone from horns to tails once a week
for a few weeks, is good,
IT is often profitable to grind grain
for the pigs where a farmer has a mull
of his own and can do it at odd times,
But to haul it to mill and back and pay
toll takes most of the profit out.
IT is the testimony of those who
have given it a thorough trial, that
pomace is of enough value as a feed for
cows, horses or hogs to pay a good pro-
fit for the labor in taking care of it.
SoME farmers, even at this day, are
so blinded by their own ignorance that
they are offended when a man tells
them truthfully that their butter is not
up to the standard of tue market.
THE potato beetle will attack nearly
all kinds of early plants. They must be
watched closely, Egg plants arespecial
foods for the beetles, tbey preferring
tiem to potatoes,
CHURNING without a thermometer 1s
as d:flicult as steering a ship without a
compass, The proper temperature must
be maintained, which cannot be done
without a thermometer,
CLOVER hay, cut very fine and scalds |
ed, is an excellent ration for growiug |
pigs that have been weaned. A mess |
of the cut clover given once a day will |
promote their appetites and keep them |
in health,
THE cow may work well, the churn |
may work well, and the condition may |
be prefect, but if there is not an active |
brain behind the whole thing, it will be |
the boiler,
Tre stables should not only be well
celaned a d purified by plenty of fresh
litter and plaster, which neutralizes the
odor of a stable, but also by ample |
ventilation with abundant space for |
each cow,
IT the lat the frost that
cowes at a tim spring appears
ke summer—1 anages the crops. |
Do not be in a hurry to
seeds, Wait until the ground is warm-
ed and all danger of is
frost -
when
is a
ine
nat «
all frost
Peas and onlons, as well as other plants
that can endure a slight frost, may te
risked, but it is safer not to take the
chances of loss with tender plants,
over.
ONE cause of the stacking of corn in
the fields is the lack of room in the
barns, as it is a bulky crop. Cheap |
sheds, to keep off the water, will pro-
tect the fodder, but the loss of fodder
by exposure is due largely to the stacks
being improperly constructed, the
winds throwing them over, A large
proportion of fodder is also trampled by
stock amd wasted.
etm—r——
I¥ your manure heap is low and
cannot manure all your land
trate your efforts to a smaller area, or
purchase fertilizers. Never attempt to
make a small quantity of manure cover
a large space, The free use of manure
will save labor and loss from drought,
as the plants will grow more rapidly
at first, send their roots down dee
and get ahead of the weeds,
you
concen-
THERE is not enough harrowing d
most farms, The land is harrowed,
as a rule, simply to lneak the lumps ard
level off the furrows, but tl harrow is
only passed over the land once or twice,
The proper way to harrow a field is to
keep the implement moving until
whole field is reduced to a condition as
fine as that for a garden, Dut for the
neglect in properly harrowing some
fields the crops would grow better, The
condition of the seed-bed largely influ-
ences the early growth of crops, and
benefits the plants until waturity, If
the harrow could work the ground as
fine as is done by the rate it would be
all the better, In harrowing a (Geld the
work should therefore done thor-
oughly.
one
O01
we
tha
wie
Le
Smart Hoes Sect HicHEST. ~The
market requires hogs weighing not over
180 pounds, and it is cheaper to produce
such a hog than a larger one, as the
ratio of gain in proportion of food con-
sumed 13 greater in a young animal
than with one fully matured, Grain
fed to young hogs gives a profit, but it
is fed at a loss when the animals exceed
200 pounds in weight, and it is claimed
that if the pig is sold at an early age
the price of 54 cents a pound, dressed
weight, will give a profit. Sell the pig
pounds, and keep it no longer than the
time when the ratio of gain keeps pace
with the proportionate amount of food
consumed,
one 1s kept, and the single hog, to equal
the two G-months-old pigs In total
weight, if kept twelve months, must
weigh 380 pounds, the cost of which
will be greater than to
two pigs weighing 180 pounds each in
the same period of time, while a higher
price per pound will be obtained for the
smallerpigs. The fertilizing value of
the food consumed is estimated to be
equal to nearly one-half the value of
the pork.
Tune FeepiNe RATION.~-ASs the
most essential thing in the early stages
is growth, that object should be kept
in view only, no attempt to be made
to fatten the pig. In fact, .at at the
early stage is more detrimental than
beneficial, The frame must be made
upon which to place the meat, but the
use of grain can be made profitable, as
a certain proportion of the heat-produe-
ing elements are also esential, The
food may be varied, consisting of skim-
milk, végetables, grass and grain, the
pig being well supplied with food from
which a supply of the elements for
growth predommate. In other words,
the pig must not be fed exclusively on
grain, or food that will have a tendency
to put him in a very fat coodition. A
fraction over one pound a day should
be the gain in weight, the pig to be
sold as soon as it reaches the weight of
130 youn, or when about 6 months
ie
That
Has never been more prevalent or more pros
trating than he has been mild
and unh influenza epidemic and fevers
have visited nearly all our homes, leaving about
everybody in tired-ont,
tion. of Hood's Sarsaparilia
reater than ever, for it Is absolutely
unequalled as a bullding-up, gtrengthening
medicine, If you have never taken Hood's Sar-
saparilla try it and you will realize its recuper
EN Ynat
Tired Feeling
“My health was very poor last spring and see-
ing an advertisement of Hood's Sarsaparilla I
thought I would try it. It has worked wonders
for me as it has built my system up. I have
taken four bottles and am on the fifth, Ire.
commend it to my acquaintances.”
MarTuews, Oswego, N.Y.
HOW,
winter
@ithial,
languid condi.
is
a weak,
The usefulness
thus made §
strength and no inclination to do anything. 1
have been taking Hood's Barsapariila and that
tired feeling has left me, my appetite has re
turned, 1 am lke a new man"
LaTnaM, North Columbus, Ohio
Sold byvalldrugeists, #1 Prepared only
by C. J. HOOD & CO, Lowell, Mass,
100 Doses One Dollar
six forg
Our post of duty is never in
than one place at the same time.
place, and in one place
this truth,
only.
wa
we ought, pert
haps, to be somewhere
where we are, when we are
where our | resent duty lies,—and
never have a right to be anywhere,
even for a moment, where it is no
There is no such
nn A PHAce
is always between duty and its shirk-
ing. We ought always to be where we
belong: and 1t would be ng fi us
not to be there.
wre
iq
Window plants will sometimes be in-
jured mm cold weather if near
window over night.
———
The Pride of His Class.
bright, har
ri 3
ell Lie
Yuesrne
SOE
ant
-——
To feed apples to
able and much more satisfactory
cording to Home and Fury
sell them to be made into cid
stock is as
Yu
- — .
3 Fong
The marked benefit which people in run down
or weakened state of health derive from Hood's
Sarsaparilia conclusively proves the clalin that
this medicine “makes the weak strong” It
does not act like a stimulant, imparting flet
reaction of greater weakness than before, but
possessing just those elements which the sys
tein needs and readily seizes, Hood's Sarsapi-
rilla builds up in a perfectly natural way, all
the weakened parts, acts upon the blood as a
That
Tired Feeling
purifier and vitalizer, and assists to healthy ae-
tion those important organs, the kidneys and
liver,
“Hood's Sarsaparilla has renewed my grip
I am 65 years of age and was all run down and
discouraged. 1 have taken Hood's Sarsaparilia
| and on looking myself over find that I am much
better, in fact quite a chap. Of course the
medicine will not discount my ars, but it
yi
comes nearer to it than anything el " Clas
ise,
| B Loxa, Shrewsbury, Mass,
} N.B je sure to get only
rsaparilla
| Sold by all 4
drugg $1; six for §
| only by C. I. HOOD & CO., Low 1}, Mass
| 100 Doses One Dollar
| YOU WILLSAVE MONKEY
Trou
and CURE
CATARRH
by
Pain,
will
Time,
sing
Ely’s Cream Balm
Apply Balm Into each nostril .
ELY Bilos 4 Warren #2, N
671
Weahingtion
A TOS
1 REEMAN & MONEY,
Pavexy, Pewmox, OLaiN AxD Last
H o 10 years Msmhe
A. A Freomnan, | Sears Ass dl
O8I30 A MON
$7572"
¢
50 A
Bey
TH can
5 1 ® 8 preferred
give thelr
t
A OA ITS 4 0
ASTHMA Son: ORE
‘Thai |
by mall ta saferere. Br BK SCHIVPEAS
TED
Write
t DARMEBREUSTE
change, | i
A CANVASSER for
and vicinity. Sometd
for : * t
pas
Get it for your
ME OO ¥ ¥ 1
Wile
® i
a Knitting
where every
it evervthing
§
ots for three
For (
CLARENCE C.
226 E.
atalague, aldress,
RICE, M. D.,
TWESTIETH STREET
New York City.
——— -
msiderable value
3 in Popowagie canyon, in
Fremount county, Wyoming.
Fxperience the Best Se hoal,
signs are placed over
CAnGies in in
internaily in d
ful. It act
strfaces of the a)
do My ca
Circulars and testimonials Address,
* J. CHENEY § . Toledo, ©.
&¥ Sold by Druggists, Tx
_~——
Prof. Herkomer, the English painter,
is composing an opera, If he can get
| up one that will draw as well as he
does he will gain new celebrity.
Thousands of people have found in Hood's
Sarsaparilla a positive cure for rheumatism,
This medicine, by its purifying action, nen.
tralizes the acidity of the blood, which is the
| cause of the disease, and also builds up and
| strengthens the whole body. Give it a trial,
Professional traders in Michigan re-
port that fur-bearing animals are much
more numerous there now than they
have been for many a winter,
lars for
i
:
i
i Frazer Atle Grease.
The Frazer Axle Grease received medals
| at the Centennial, North Carolina State
Fair, Paris Exposition, American Insti
tute, New York, and others.
EE ————————— - ———
(Gloves are not worn quite as long as
last winter, and glazed kid is now pre-
ferred to the peav-de-Suede gloves, es-
pecially for evening wear,
— I sisi
A soap that is soft is full of water, hall or two-
thirds {fs weight probably, thus you pay seven
or eight cents per pound for water, Dobbins’
Electric Soap is all soap and no adulteration,
therefore the cheapest and beat. Try Dobbins.
AI 5 AH
Ladies who have fair, curly hair,
should merely brush it lightly from the
forehead and arrange it in loose colis in
the nape of the neck.
A box safet
- -
{matches free to smokers of “Tan
sill’s Punch” 5¢.
Clgar,
Accor ling to the ‘American Art
Printer’ there are 125,000 printers in
the United States,
JiafMicted with sore eyes use Dre, Insane Thomps
son skye water, Drugyists sell at 250. per bottle
Death sivertises itself in many ways,
and it generally performs what it ad-
vertises,
SR
Wateh for “Murray” Buggy adv. next week,
Give animals pure water daily.
BEEF-STEAK PIE. A savory dish,
| and one that suits those fond
is beef-steak |
18 the under side of
cubes, cover with cold
tiy tender,
thicken Lhe
of simple
a he, Cut
f
03
| seasoning,
poun
round into small
| water and simmer gen
with salt and pepper,
alt «¢1 1
slightly, ot
fw
WO
| Season
| gravy
add a the meat
h, cover
potato,
nashed with
bulter
| some milk, and beaten to a cream,
Peat an exg very light, pour over
potato, and bake until a rich
| An onion sl t 1
piece
and
with
bolled in
the addition : of and
the
brown,
iced thin and stewed with
the meat improves the flaver for some
It is important in stewing or
fowl to remember
ng iv)
| tastes
| “boiling” meat or
that gentie simmer:
al degrees
much more savory manner than furious
{ bolling at 212 degrees,
—
BoiLep Fis, After
wed, wash in cold water,
ona coarse towel and rub well with
aalt. If no fish kettle is handy have a
to cover the fish,
the fish
is
size of the fish.
it is done, drain
carefully, turn the fish out ou a dish
garnished with slices of lemon and
| parsley. Serve with sauce,
i s—————
BroirLep Fisn, Take any
| of the gridiron with butler,
tish skin down,
until done, Take up on
pepper and salt.
| but immortality.
the highest strain of omnipotency to be
| so powerfully constituted as not to suff-
| er even from the power of itself; all
| others have a dependent being, and
| within the reach of destruction. Bat
| the sufficiency of Christian immortality
| frustrates all earthly giory, and the
| quality of either state after death makes
| a folly of posthumous memory.
| hath assumed our resurrection, either
| of our bodies or names, hath directly
| promised no duration. But man 1s a
noble animal, splendid in ashes and
pompous in the grave, solemnizing na-
tivities and deaths with equal luster,
nor omitting ceremonies of bravery in
the infancy of his nature.
AT all the experimental farms the
pig Lins beens made the subject, and
many valuable facts have beensbrought
to light, Prof. Cooke, has given the
matter of feeding pigs Lis attention
during the past year, claims that by a
proper system of feeding. and selling at
an eatly age, “two sets of pigs can be
produced in twelve months,’ and that
# larger profit can be realized than in
attempting to make swine pay by grow.
them $0 heavy weights, and caring fi
them until they are a year and a
old.
La
i
FisH., 118% PREPARATION FOR THE
TABLE. ~ IL has becowe an simost un'-
versal custom to make fish a rine
pal dish for the table duping Lent
Even those who are not influenced by
chureh teaching have fallen into the
habit of supplying the table with fish,
principally I imagine, because the mar-
ket in well stocked, and the prices are
moderate. Perhaps there is no food
requiring more care in the prepara.
tion, and for the information of our
readers, and as a help to young house-
keepers, we select the following rules
for choosing fish, and for cooking by |
frying, broiling and baking.
In selecting fish, be sure they are
fresh, When fish are fresh and in sea-
son, the muscles are firm and the flesh
white when cooked. Most varieties of
fish are best in cold weather, though
some are in season in spring and fall,
As soon as possible after fish are
caught, they should be scaled and
cleaned, Fresh fish should pot be
soaked in water, and should be washed
as quickly and in as little water as wij |
Fish should al-|
For boil. |
t
five or elght minutes to every
bread |
corn |
Fish
To fry, dip in egg, and roll
roll in sifted
ii
in boiling lard.
a8
cooked, Parsley, celery tops, lemon, |
fish,
va for fish, never use
+h the fish was botled,
sauce, dunn butter, |
Maitre d’Hote |
cream sauce and
all served with |
In making sau
the water in wi
fish
BAUCe,
gE Bauce,
Hollandare
Tartone sauce,
pigquante sauce are
-
. ~~ tempered man in ow
BAKED Fisn.—Take a :
snaps snarls and s
and fault
bear it any longer Don
dry. Make a on her, my friend ; you litle realize
re) 4 sufferings, She has lost her
stale bread crumbs, | woes disposition, and ll health is me
of melted butler, | of itall Dr. Plerce's Favorite Prescription
parsley half a tea | will make ber well
black pep- a powerful, invigorating
the
tom
said a mild
LTTE
t ©
large fresh
make an opening
remove the insides
y |
and
i8 scaled, iren contd
side and
well and
the
mit
f o
in
dres. | ™ vere :
or oriney
s cup of oy Ale er
, i 3 he oa
taluespo mful
Of chopped
mful of salt and a hitlie
nix well snd Hi body
tha sew Grease Lhe
g pan, and lay the fish
with strips of salt
} with
a
the of
Hin 0
+ in it, |
h Pork O1
iredge
salt
bottom
v and
and flour. L
pan with boill
Bake iit
f fish,
at
BEL
and
in a hot oven,
eyYery i {
When done, Lift the fish
refully on a dis!
wd lemon, frie
nutes to}
te often,
pan,
with
tato Lalls
sAnce O03 r i
wound
lay ca
wiration
nervou
parsley. sli
wr fried oysters, htrcaming,
monly sitendant gpon or :
organic discase of the w it DORs
raf reshing sleep and relieves mental ani
And serve
SOFT GINGERBREAD,
not remember grandmother's
gerbread, wit f
at
y
cold milk
rescription. i= ®
lv compounded
ful physician,
te organiza
OTTERS -
nany condition
of the rvstern,
rescription” Is a positive
nost complicated and obsti-
mpcorrhens, excessive fowing,
uation, unnatural suppres
or fall of the womb,
‘female weakness” antever-
bearing down sensations,
nate Onsen «
painful men
4 Trae
on OK
. retroversnon,
ly medicine for woman's pec-
and ailments, sold by drug-
der n positive guarantee from the
4
5 4 FISSOs
Ty iy
res $i
y i four
: : 4 Nwili
refunded rants printed
wrapper a mithfully carried
¥
NY ¥
»
ey pal
a
ut for
Hustrated Tr
160
Diwotuses
pain
stamps,
AL ASS0-
34 o~
B .
ealise On
ment sealed in
3 ons
Disresgany Meo:
605 Main
Pages,
one ten
fot »
soe,
! A
red
Gingerbread is a deal
and if made in
wins thelr favor at once,
Ii half cupful of
an even half teaspoonful of sox
1 the glass of
f delectable
belies
80 many
9
an cake for children,
be a wa
LELY ans,
solve in one
ii
Hy and Gerpondency
OR. SAGES CATARRH
INO 18%e8 manently cured
a. Add i
IN THE HEAD,
no
matter of how
8 centa, by druggists
long star
8 DOT
bse 14
One-n one-anil
if cupful of sugar,
one
salt,
e1 p tables
+ Alves]
{ea-
of
ful
butter,
1 ! AMI A quar-
ter cup ad flour, and a second half
sifted in
spoonful tablespoon
of
or
g
KB On
one cupful . Iwo i
Best Cough Medicine.
Season Cares where all else fails.
with the |
cakes, if baked in
ill make sixteen
icians,
By dmgyista,
S
LE ’
Both the method and results when
Byrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant
and refreshing to the taste, and acts
mntly yet promptly on the Kidneys,
fo and Bowels, cleanses the sys
tem effectually, dispels colds, head-
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. Syrup of Figs is the
only remedy of its kind ever pro-
duced, pleasing to the taste nd
ceptable to the stomach,
” action and fruly bene
ects, prepared only from the most |
Her lo substances, |
its many excellent qualities com- |
mend it to all and have made it |
the most populas remedy known. |
a 1 Bote] Tore a oe 1
an ttles eading dru
gists. Any reliable re i beets united
may not have it on hand will pro- | counger.
cure it promptly for any one who —p wt
wishes to try it. Do not accept A Great Surpri
any efi A, { 1s tn store for all who use Kemp's Balsam
| for the Throat and Lungs, the great guar
CALIFORNIA Fle SYRUP Co. | anteed remedy. Would you believe that
SAN FRANCIBEO00, CAL, it is sold on its merits and that any drug.
| KV. SEW PORE, AV. gist is authorized by the proprietor of this
wondertul remedy to give you a sample
bottle free? It never fails to cure acute or
chronic cougha. All druggists sell Kemp's
Balsam. Large bottles 500. an $l.
nA TIAA
Headack
doritg Pains
lives
eo gorged
Sluggish
conte
redn
Is & Positive Cure for
DYSPEPSIA
And sll Disorders of the Di and strength
gestive Organs. Tis Hikewise
a Corrohorative or Strength
ening Medicine, and may be
taken with benefit in all canes
of Debility. For Sale by ail
Draggivis. Price, §1 00 per bot.
tie. Ir. Schentk's New Back
om Lungs, Liver and Stomach per box
mailed free Address, rent]
rompt in
ial in its
Perhaps the younyesi
in Davis county.
a
SCOTT'S
MULSIO
0f Pure Cod Liver Oil with
Hypophosphites
0f Lime and Soda.
There ave emwlsions and emul,
and there {a ot winch skimmed
which as
will manufacturers ret
a ine their end liver oll as to make
Emvlsion of PURE NORWEGIAN oon
LIVER combined Hypophos.
almost as polatable
this ronson as well as the fast
of the the Hypo
ir Seer re
CONSUMPTION,
SCROFULA, BRONCHITIS and
CHRONIC COUGH or SEVERE COLD,
Al od
he pont, av theve are poor ton
| To Fury Fisu-—Dredge well with
| flour, salt and pepper, fry brown In
boiling lard. Serve with cream sauce.
Rupture cure guaranteed by
Dr. J. B. Mayer, 881 Arch St, ’bil’a,
Pa. Ease at oboe, no operation or de.
iny from business, attested by thou.
sands of cures after others fail, advice
free, send for cironiar.
nnn i
1
Avoid foddering on the ground,
A
Cann’s Kidney Cure for
Dropsy, Gravel, Dinbetes, Bright's,
Heart, Urinary or Liver Diseases, Nerve
ousness, &o. Cure guaranteed. 831
Arch Sgreet, Philad’s. $1 & bottle, 8
for $5, or druggist. 1000 certificates of
cures, Try it
Be punctual in caring for stock.
TE rp he Be
ssi MPI nA
Feed well, but waste no forage.
ssi
Mare
I
LF A CERTURY
U
fiver &%
Joan the mucon
or eongostied condi FURS
6 to the organs, and
rarover Jone
And All Diseases of the
THROAT AND LUNGS
It is pleasant to the
aid Sons Bot DURIATR A Pat
of opiom or anything
cum, Ttie the Best Cough
joins fu the World, For Sale
by all Iuppiets. Price $8 ©
per bettie. Dr. Schenck Book
on Const milo
free A
Pris Th eh
or sont by
n receipt of price tailed
fie Lat
SpoolHolder
NEW PATENT, Naves
tigne and trouble An in
dispensable article four
every household. No lady
| should be withou! ©
samples can be sees
et this office.
1 scribe and fudy of
Borse Rig 43 a» the aly
specific for the certain ©
of this disease
G H.INGEAHAM M.D
Amsterdam, N Ye
at have solid me G iow
"rn a
The best of satis
D. R DYCHE 800,
Tonge, 11".
£1.00. 801d by Drogas
FRAZE GREASE
NEST IN THE WORLD.
Its wearing qualities are unsarpassed, acta
i
ally outlasti TE A A en.
effected
FOR SALE BY DEALERS GENERALLY.