The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, June 13, 1901, Image 2

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    HATCHING
POSES.
EGGS TOR
In using eggs for hatching purposes
endeavor to select those from hens ra-
ther than from pullets, as chicks hatch-
ed from eggs layed by hens are usually
stronger and more vigorous than those
from pullets' eggs.
to lay before they are fully matured.
DESTROYING WEEDS IN LAWNS
When appear
sometimes difficult to
even when the lawn is frequently mow-
ed, as it may happen that dwarf weeds
will drop seed, which will grow, while
other weeds are propogated by sending
out roots in direction, from
which young plants ¢ The best way
to o pour about
one teaspoanful of sulphuric acid on the
of each y plant can
stand the effec
weeds in lawns it is
every
nme,
destroy such weeds 1s
crown weed,
ts of the acid.
FOR LETTUCE
1
plants
temperature
weather 15 becoming
plants may be put
ground. The early lettuce
cially grown during t
young
Very.
artifi-
winter, but with
will
lettuce grown be- |
}
ae
early plants now ready good prices
be obtained from the
fore the main crop ¢
CULTIVATING ALFALFA
EAST
been
und
Ur
has
been fi
mn
land it will produc
may be moved every mo
and produces from
hay, according to
soil. i
Jerse y
1 *
acnce
ect
SCC
hat
other soil
ordinarily
GOOD IN
attacked
destroys
flies, gnats,
vegetation,
growth
remains
ing again
USE cADING.
spreading
sizes, begin- |
The of incubato 15
They are now
ners preferring t
a 100-egg incubator will
chicks as e
chicks
gether under
use
can
more
to a
all
that
rhe
144 ie
take piace g
the growth, nutrition and
teria. The flavor they
substances of things
changes they produce
certainly the evidence o
but evidently the resul ducing
successfully the first or last condition
depends on to what extent co-operation
exists between the dairyman and butter
maker.
No dairyman is doing his whole duty
when the cream made from his milk 1s
tainted by the presence of dirt produced |
bacteria: no butter maker can do his!
duty when he is compelled to receive |
such cream, and, although the butter |
maker may receive many hard words!
unseen, |
for not producing “extras,” the loss ulti.
mately falls where it belongs—on the!
milk producer. The only injustice is
that the loss does not fall on the dirty
one alone, but on his neighbors as well,
on the just as well as the unjust—
Hoard's Dairyman
RAISING OR BUYING FEED.
Where the farmer grows the fodder
and grain for his animals he is justified
in feeling that it has cost less than it
would if he paid the cash for it in the
market if he has been successful in get-
ting good crops. He has made a market
for his own labor, the labor of his team
and use of tools, and for the manure
that wis a waste product of his stock.
All of that forms a part of his profit,
and the crops may be said to have cost
him the seed, hired labor and fertilizer
bought. But it may not be the cheap-
est feed for him to use. He may be able
to sell it and purchase other food ma-
terials that would give him enough bet-
ter results to repay him for the labor
or drawing both ways. Bran and gluten
feed produce so much more milk than
corn meal that he may sell the corn he
has raised, and buy the other feeds
which he does not raise. Other foods
are better for hens than the corn, or
even than oats, The man who tries to
be so independent as neither to buy or
sell, had better set up a hand loom and
a cobbler’s bench, to save spending
money for clothing. We could fatten
cheaper when we sold them and bought
our corn than we could to have fed the
| roots, and we thought cheaper than if
{ we had grown the corn—dmerican Cul
i tivator,
MANAGEMENT OF CATTLE.
This is an age of invention, improve.
ment and pregress. Those who have
lived half a century and have kept their
eyes open must admit that they have
witnessed great and wonderful improve
ments in the science of agriculture, the
foundation of all Yet there
is still room for improvement in every
department of agricultural pursuits, In
the first place the majority afraid
sciences,
are
the best breed of animals, but they
farm. Too close and saving to save a
dollars that might have been made had
mals’ breeding or ancestors it
10 L A fine
male or female may breed the mu
and scrawny
lop
valuable of
ant
: \
easy be deceive looking
St un
ig calf whic
y one of the most beau
animals While
prop
y gre
f great disaj
may mite
tiful
on
the other ind, a well
ail WwW
hay
re dama;g
than
unnecessary
proper Care
HO animal
appre
more an cal are
is
tle, as they
naturally gentle, it then only
owners.
factor not to
management ol
f
know what i
farm
to do and when to do
o the best advantage requires the high
rder of Another |
gE we
. Of (
common sense.
must
arly
tree
il Certainly caus!
of the doubled
1
and the in
tree to be
Tey
i
qual
rease
ity should n con
ore than
labor expended
frequently
notice
in fact,
the
signs of
this wa
meeting |
tree-doctors
%
ent at
calle
of a better name
It solely at
t is solely confined to the
been noticed that in ar
orchard some trees were termed blightec |
while others standing beside them wer
full of vigor. Why? Because the vig |
orous trees were capable of extracting
the soil and atmosphere all tha
necessary for their sustenance
preventing the weaker stoch
ence hear
You must give the weakes
which necessary to thei |
N¢ hat
NOW Vilas is
or 1
soil? It has
was
we oO
“blight.”
trees that
growth,
Vegetable nature is very much like hu
man nature—it will steal from its neigh |
bor, and in vegetable life we must give |
back to the tree that which has beer
taken from it. Lack of moisture may
prevent bearing the following year. The
full annual duty of a tree is to perfec |
its fruit and prepare for the next year's
crop. A continuous moisture supply |
Is necessary to maintain activity in the |
tree, as it will make a large draft upor |
soil moisture while making new woo
and large fruit, and if moisture fails
then it may be forced into dormanc
before it can furnish good, strong bud:
for the following year's bloom,
I believe root-spraying to be thor
oughly practicable, notwithstanding the |
fact that it seems to have been neglect
ed. The keynote of success is to supply
the tree with fertilizer and moisture a |
the proper time. Some years ago i
damming water for an ice-pond, | ob |
verved a leak. Investigation showed if
followed the course of a root and found |
exit at the end. This convinced me the
water could be artificially supplied
the roots b a spraying process with suc |
cess ~F, C. Hall in The Country Gen
tleman,
“That makes me soar,” remarked th.
inventor as he looked at his flying ma
1s
hogs and cattle on turnips and onions
»
chine. |
- ™
fi &
-
Hand embroidery is having immense
vogue just now. A little of it smartens
the summer frock and gives it distinc-
tion,
impression of having been turned out
ready-made in hundreds of the same
pattern. Applications of hand embroid-
ery need not be profuse nor elaborate,
girl who desires her summer wardrobe
faithfully to reflect the changes which
come over the face of fashion.
A NEW CORSET COVER,
A new shaped corset cover is especial
be-
It
that reach
ntraire, the
the suprlice
1
slender
nade with a yoke and
to the wrist
woman
bonpoint is
sleeves quite
stout should
adjure cover
fq
5
This, instead
fastens in the back,
O
are brought around front ag
hion. It is fitted to the
of two darts just in {
Orset Covers 1s
WOMAN'S LEGAL POSITION.
Thus in New York t
a woman has a larger control of her
3
4
State, for in
1
estate than her |
1shband has «
if she likes may
she cuts h
nn
whereas
ng,
He 1
t
Known
{re
fa
ite interest in
during
thelr
1
mt ihe
ig INSEL
operty
*
: TY
a Gay weil,
hushand that
seld
i
never a word
ness has ever passed his lips”
Her words now an
pathos.
“He is
she said
can ;
how busy
have
he
4)
when he is
want his
thought
country, and
done enough
pires he will
seitle down
me.
Lieveiand Pilon
are so
Among
4
h room and ends in
| too fi
Has
in the hat
room, it
love for the flesh-pots,
Iron the blood
the woman
must have to be rich,
means ro
Moreover, no
who eats,
y cheeks and lips
grace
when
wonian
and
can have
is merry
drinks
None are so abstemious as our great
singers and actresses, Their appearance
15 their capital largely, and few indeed
are the stage plople of the better class
who cutrage nature by misuse of the
palate or indolence.~~Philadelphia Rec-
ord,
THE SHAWL IN HISTORY.
Shawls 3
of an ity. F "0
shawls been
of
styled the gar-
thousands of
a staple in the
expensive presents. Eastern
of old loaded favorites
and distingushed guests with shawls,
with dia
have
1"
weil as
when they
/
1
them
with
in is of dol-
Wiis
1 to carry
¥
return from
Eg yt
tittle
ju
y hats and sunshades to match
Or perk
linen,
stitch
with a
a cut steel button,
curve reaches oss the
dlandy”
looking costume is a Tuscon
straw, Port and fur-
ther decorated with a big bow of velvet
A similar frock is of creamy
paca, with a big sailor collar of
ivory muslin enriched by hand
broidery, and a deep waistband
checked silk in cornflower-blue ¢
tied at one side with a fringed bow
with many of
ing and drawn
in gd ne waist
whose
back
long
To wear with this
hat of
wreathed with yes
em-
Fragilely love-
ly is a frock of white mousseline, painted
a dream of summery grace is a frock of
of ecru lace on the skirt, and a bolero
white chiffon,
of white rice straw is tilted up at one
whose vivid tones of pink are repeated
in the scarf of crepe de Chine, which is
drawn across the bodice of the
far down the skirt. New
mercial Advertiser,
York Com-
wes
BEAUTY WISDOM.
It is wise to be beautiful in the sense
tithesis. No sick woman ever was or
could be lovely.
Sustained effort and a big amount of
patience will move mountains of flesh
and cover valleys of dry bones. Fresh
blood will paint sallow cheeks and red-
den bluish lips, but in order to do the
work one needs self-control and faith.
It is another case of “faith without
work” being “dead” when we “believe
in" exercise, yet are too lazy to arise
earlier or retire later in order to pursue
the work,
A week spent in frantic over-exertion
or daily steamings is the method of fool.
ish beauty seekers,
There are no secrets of beauty these
days. It begins in the kitchen, continues
FASHION NOTES
Very pretty girdles
glace silk or white ribbon, appliqued
tonne flowers
Wash skirts
folds stitched
are trimmed with bias
at the top, and sometimes
Summer suits of brilliantine or mohair
narrow bands of taffeta
will be much wom, and are very styl
ish
The golf glove opening in the back
has more reasons for being than the
regular kid glove, which buttons on the
ARSENIC FACTORIES.
Habits Acquired by the People Who Work
in Them.
White is the form
| arsenic is t
| and the Tyr
Gaetz, was the :
this practice, in a report which
in Austria i
i the cause of the
1822 to the Gover
numerous dea
2 i:
those dd!
arsenic poisoning in
found that arsenic was kept in most of
the houses in Upper Styria under the
ame of
tion of *
His statements
firmed from pers
1
“hydrach,” evidently a «
huttenrauch,” or furnace sn
were
Dr, McClagan,
Suede gloves, the stylish gloves of the |
season, have, many of them, the clasps
the color of the glove; some of then
set in a little frame of metal
Foulards having white grounds with
are to be
more the rage than any others. They
White currants and their foliag> make
a pretty, light, attractive trimming for a
Long, white breasts are
Many of the wash shirt waists come
a broad pointed end tic, ong of the ties |
which are single thickness and hemmed
made of the material of the waist. i
Outing skirts of wash materials come
figured in many ways—polka dots, smal
plaided designs, and with embroidered
small figures of various styles. They;
are made in regular outing style.
The coolest things in gloves are the
so-called novelty gloves in silk, which
have coarse-meshed backs and the regu
lar silk palms. These gloves finish wath
three or four clasps of the shade of the
gloves,
The most comfortable things to be
worn in golf gloves open in the bach
instead of the front, and there are ne
additional seams or buttons to hurt the
hand in playing, while more freedom
is given to the muscles,
There are 10,000 camels at work is
Australia,
they take
begins
il twelve or fifteen
g down upon
ine o'clock the hen
akes his place » male ostrich, how-
ver. with remarkable intelligence, re-
the female for an hour in the
middle of the day while she goes in
scarch of necessary nourishment
A pair will follow this regime with
the greatest regularity for about forty
days, when the eggs are hatched. —
Colorado Springs Gazette,
Sherlock Molmes, Jr,
“Hist! Hist!” whispered Sherlock
Holmes, Jr, nudging his companion
and leaning over so that they could con-
verse without being heard by the con-
gregation
It was in church, on Sunday morning,
and the organist had the soft pedal on.
“What is it?” the great amateur de-
tective's friend asked
“Ine man who just passed the plate
urieen egRs
C
EVES
street car conductor.”
“What makes you think so?
know him?”
“think? My friend, ‘think’ is not
the word.
merely think?
saw this good brother before, never
heard of him. As you know, we are in
a church where netther of us has ever
worshiped in the past. The people here
are all strangers to us, and we are
strangers to them. But the man who
passed the plate to us used to be a street
car condustor. When vou dropped that
nickel in he began frmbling aronnd, in
the vicinity of the third button of His
vest, for the bell-punch.” Chicago Rec.
ord-Herald,
a
Trousers Required,
Knights present at the opening of Par.
liament were Sffeially directed to wear
their collars, also full dress with trous.
ers, Men of title might naturally be ex-
pected to wear collars, and surely con-
ventionality would have suggested the
latter without formal instructions)
Do you
I know. Yet
A SSAA A —
SUNDOWNER.
A PECULIAR PRODUCT OF ANTEPO-
DEAN SOCIOLOGICAL CONDITIONS,
Why the Ne'er Do Well and the Chronic
Idier Find No iecessity to Beg in the
Cities—~The Vagrant in the Bush Cets
a Hearty Welcome.
The
under
conditions
grown up
CO ~
peculiar sociological
which Australia has
great
alth have brought about some un-
usual results. Not the least of these is
the total of hing like the
tramp, know him in the
large cities like Sydney, Melbourne and
Adelaide The ne'er-do-well and
perennial idler, thanks to a form of pa-
ternalism that its junit in
find in the
lation no necessity
on or
ounter has
art
gar-
nto and vigorous young
monw
1
g
absenz=
anyt
as we here,
the
ti has reached
the southern hemisphere
of Poy
large centers
to
tne
beha
Tags,
ate
ve
1001S
generic
of the
kindness wrap-
food they rust
again on
1
MCIINCGsSS
leaves
makes the
¢ pleasure,
his
ble to sing a new
few months
ic halls or
crops
u ‘ e discovery of new
ficlds in the West. But whether
] yone of these things
like in-
face a genuin
Tf WCaArs
a
the
feel an
1
tries, as best
for the hospitality
pleasant bearded face,
generally quick
only element
in contact these desolate far:
houses. He never steals, is cleanly in
his habits and, stranger still, very
seldom a drunkard He shuns the cities,
or, if he ever visits them, has money in
his pocket and lives well while there.
The sumiowner ambles up to the
ranch house gate and as he comes into
sight gives a cheery “coo-ey.” The boss
steps out of the door.
“Good evenin’, matey. I've come clos”
ter thirty miles since mornin'.”
“Hard trampin’, 1 s'pose. Drop yer
pack in the barn and come on in”
His majesty, the vagrant, asks for a
towel, gets it and goes down to the creek
or maybe the cement water hole for a
plunge. In ten minutes he is back at
the house, where he takes his place
among the men and eats a hearty meal
of damper, boiled potatoes, beans, and,
if the fates are lucky, jam or fresh
meat,
His increase in numbers has not yet
become so great as to make him a prob.
lem. When it does, no doubt it will be
settled by progressive Australia in the
way she has settled questions of much
more serious moment. —John R. Rathom
in the Chicago Record-Herald,
him the
er comes
is
He is Not a Philanthropist,
Dr. D.
has given over $2,000000 to educational
institutions, says he is not a liberal man.
man. [| am the
§
Where are the courteous old-world gen.
themen to whom these little matters were
an instinct >—London Chronicle, |
3
ix