The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, September 03, 1896, Image 6

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    FARM AN) GARDEN NOTES
F TIMELY INTERE
FARMERS.
ITENS ST TO THE
About Subsoiling.-Picking Ducks A
Tonic for Hogs---Late Peas for Home
Use--To Wean Foals.
LATE Dk.
There is
market for
first new
tites of
AS VOR HOME
generally a
USE,
very
after
fot !
late
peas
FLO
eas, because the
have satisfied the appe
lovers of this vegetable the
amd it
market it
price rapidly deel
pay to
fresh
very
power of ¢
ON
jut a
fall is
and
grow
succession of until
and it is
farmer to
I'he far
eshier vegeta
peas
desirable, casily in the
very secure it by
later plantings
ways to have [1
ner ougn
longdr sen
age City res
of ti adv
he should not
the most of
three paki
mer for
instead of stopping
imes wish they had, they go
on to tell us that the water, soll
and in fact everything,
healthy animal
non-tuberculous
Hiv,
except perhaps
and milk from
before drawn
with bacterial life. No wondes
of us get aged and
fight, lea field
germs, good, bad ferent,
jet them fight it out ameng then
selves, the bad
abead. But ja it
eal to go to the
ilize
finsite
COWS
feems
many
up the
diseonur give
3 5
ing the fo
and md ana
usually com ot
F practi
and ster
reasonable or
other extrenn
all milk or eream and then ferth
ize with the particular flavor-producing
germ we desire? Certainly not
aml I doubt very much If that ti
will come, though such flavors or “cui:
tures,” are now on the market.
ver
thie
TO WEAN FOALS
When plenty of cow's milk can by
had it is just as well for the foal, and
better for the dam, to wean them whe:
four months old. The writer haw
weaned them when three months ola,
and kept them growing right slong, a
well as when running with the dam, by
teaching them to drink cows’ milk and
feeding them LBound onts mized with
wheat bran,
fefore beginning to w
voung thing should be
sen, and the
after the foal is
The colt or tilly
esti
ean a foal the
thoroughly ha!
ter hrol this is dong
better
sr become ae
hoth
and dry. This can be
aed by feeding graln
gularly ght and
set upon th
it that
sooner
drop ol the
shoud
ned to eating
Onis whole
ground, wet
Horn
ground floor, oi
colt ean reach the
After secing
youngst
ing aste, will not
he will
take his
8 fed
cows' milk
him, if
be on hand
ration whenever
It Is well to teach him
before heel
convenient, t if he
aning
wet ground horts
relish that part
POsipo LEM
fam
ard foot over
i
3 1 ia rani]
ead 1s lowers
wolng
KOT) %ay
he fall, tha
CRougn
fis
will
enable
t N I
TODS heds ns
fure to early
over dry seasons and make a fair y
Moat that
our land we turn over the top soil and
hard clay or grave}
crops to bride
ield
farmers Know on much of
along on the
which bax
season It is
_OTAH
Dottorn, Games more
haml to
plows down into this hard layer,
COmpacs
the
and ir
we eottld, it Is not desirable or profita
ble to tarn the Thus
we see at ¢ the importance of the
stiboil Another great advaniage
ix that such soile will hold
each get
Tn
iA
Hp on top.
Git
plow
in sabsoiling
manre
fore, There is no chance for the ma
nure to wash out.
twice ax long nz they
i= held until con.
This let:
i loose bed, where it
| sumed by the growing crops.
(amd alr, is the process which grade.
ally chatigen the whole character of thy
land, and with proper rotation of crops
Land a few goad crops of green manure
{turned under, we would Reon have a
| deep rich soil, Instead of only a few
{ Inches of top or surface soil
has shown its value perhaps
ely on root crops than on oth
This work on the wgolls ! have
swerihed increased the yield of
one-third, The pri
ix wo plain thas
CIN,
lias
lenst
ot crops at
MO] hy of
readily
n practice
stthsolling
ci
wie Hs nm
hiecoms
advantage,
that will
noi—Atnerican Ag
soon
riculturist,
FARM AND GARDEN NOTES
rood cow Is
food |
not always fat; she
ris hier nto milk rather thao
into th
Dalry cows are
their
sald by some to have
y Worn ou
that
teeth at ten years of
they are unprofitable,
See that the cows have sort of
chance to
these hot
some
shade in the pasture, or a
shied,
come to the barn or
days,
Provide plenty of where tlhe
for thelr
r Of your pocket
vater
COWS can get at at,
ge not
pmnfort
only
but for the sak
* heling
Wi
to Crean
Inte
were
om wi
marble over the grave, simply
and date of
Nothing strange was
poted about the stone at the time, nor,
for some months afterward.
It looked like the rest of the sombre
death's ravages,
Mr William Ea.
with his name
birth and death
gighs of
On Memorial Day
ton, a resident of Seabrooke, was look-
ing at the Waters headstone, when sud-
denly she discovered the picture of a
Sho ox
amazenent and called
corroborated her story.
Those who had known the first Mrs
Walters deviated it was a good pics
ture of her. Those who elaim to have
seen the face describe it as perfect in
the eyes, nose, mouth and ears,
amd even the brows appearing plainly.
The hair is also said to be very dis
tinet, falling loosely on the woman's
shoulders. The man who carved the
amined it in
others, who
and the sarface of
the image can be seen. More
davs —PLiladeiplila Prees,
ADVERTISES HIS LIIJURY,
Cack
With the Railroad i
Stoddard of
believes In telling the
Far
County
“ Tut ‘
ner Jake Doniphan
Is ans
world of his gi has be
ped and in [i+] of that
Who whirl by
Wane Ie We
nll
on the Burling
Virol
1s hotse
ad shall know all
Jake's 11
on ro
bout it, Uncle
told or fi
hig house by
tracks
ibles are ienbon re
ide
PHASCTIeT
if he In nn lover of
which stands near
}
Eases
of the raliroad The
on turlington
the romantic
in nort
thu
scenery whivn abounds
HWERLETD IWAURAS, ly oDAtrye
form the car window ns the
Atchils approaches |
a large sign
feet,
train from
on anning station
covering a board one by
five patled to a feet
high, which
This Man
pole twelve
reads
Has Been
The Railroad
Wrong
«1 the
This Rat Cat
hes Birds
umber Used in Box Making
! Bi
R15 (NH) + ty 0 Bite 1
1H u Orth 0 white j§
3
boxes in Chirago and $80,000 wort!
wttonwoosd boxes at St. Louis
total number of
onipany year
ot Chicago concern
every year, The hrm operates
its own box factory at Rhinelander,
Wis, There are fifty othet soap manu
facturers in this country, and Barrel
and Box estimates that altogether 150,
00.000 used In packing
waps alone the larger
mannfactarers expend each year 8400
¥¥) for boxes, If 300800) boxes cost
MOON, 150000000 boxes would in-
volve the expenditure of £203,000,000 for
packages alone. Continuing the
alenlation through the vast range of
packing-box demand, which involves
almost every
used
va 1.0058
uses 1.05
hoaxes iy this
last was 1.0 An
¥
lier
saxon
boxes are
mn
Tyo of SOag
ORp
industry Known to man,
we can imagine how enormous is the
expenditure In its grand total. and
what an amount of lumber is con.
sumed in its manufacture. It is evi
dent that the making of boxes fur
nishes the largest percentage of the
demand for the coarser and common
grades of lumber, and that,
years pass, there will be a sure outlet
for low grade white pine. cottonwood,
yellow pine, and all other lumber that
ean be worked into boxes. — Northwest. |
ern Lumberman,
Met an Army of Rattlers,
Mra, D. (Dell liad an exciting expe-
rience with a mass meeting of rattle
sunkes on the Eagle
she
aliry rond whiie
wag on |} to Hixh
N. XY. But for the timely
Carpenter, the
Wr Wis nnd Falls,
help of Wh.
BOT 8 wold !
doubtedly have enloved a
menl on he coutent
wagon
Mrs
nyold
of plump chickens
gered by familie
footed and doll
wis the pony
and her tre $361
ANN rds
and screamed thie dens
gh which i p ]
heeded
when em j 1
the
tiirou
pouy them
fot
ivy the
Wilgon
Mrs. O'Dell 1}
-
Cricket Saved the
filer Aft
11
finally
etd Ww
nent they were
horses
no bounds, No
would induce
were the first
on to approach the
and their wonder Knew
amount of persuasion
ount These
them to
horses they had ever seen,
The movement of the cotton mi its to
the cotton fields is
increased oconomies that
been enforced on
and this is a movement that
3
the jogical result of
the have
business of every de-
seription
must continne fo increase
Increasing the Issue of Eooks,
The cheapening of devices for print.
ing has had the effect of increasing the
issue of books to a figure never before
attained or probaly pever dreamed of
by our ancestors. in 180M, Tor instance,
there were issued in the United States
1.4% new works, while In Great Brit.
ain during ihe same period the new
books mumbered 5H,300, while there
were 1.185 pew editions of books pre-
viously printed, a fotal of 6.4805, and
for the two countries of 10060, It is
quite probable that not less than 1.000
| copies were printed of each work, and
it is more probable that of the whole
number not ten will be remembered,
Good
+ Od In what gives stereos
i blood and
i blood and g
¢ vigor, vital
Mod Dain cote by aking
Hood's
Sarsaparilla
¢ only HOODS
Ly. Choon
He sur
floed’s Pills 20 the fay iy esthariic
rite fan
TRUMAPET CALLS.
Note
Unredeemed,
id of God
as his
8 throne,
Bap-
the
safe
John the
a Bible
is ajalinst a
0 Use
an angel
fter
1 looks
neaven
Ide
to
phy-
gician
what
they
ought
pes}
SOMEONES,
Mrs
Pinkham
has re-
{| ceived
y the con.
| fidence
of thou
Gancs.
Women open
their hearts to
She understands their suffering,
r {0 relieve and cure.
In nearly all cases the source of
women's suffe sving is in the womb.
In many cases the .-ale physician does
pot understand the case and treats the
patient for consumption- indigestion
~anvthing but the right thing.
It is nnder such cirenmstances thal
thousands of women have turned to
Mrs Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass, and
opened their heart and lives woman
to woman-—-and received her help.
You ask how she can tell if the doctor
cannot ? Because no man living ever
treated so many cases and possesses
such vast expe: ience.
Displacement. inflammation, torpid
action, stagnation, sends to all parts
of the body the pains that crush you.
Lydia E. Pinkham's “ Vegetable
Compound * is"the sure cure for this
trouble. For twenty years it has done
its grand work end cured t thousands.
to say
her.
and has the power