The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, June 30, 1904, Image 3

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    A
——
FEMININE DAIRY WISDOM.
Do not put the young stock In an
out-of-the-way pasture where they are
seldom see:. They will become wild
and unmanageable unless you go to
them frequently with some salt or
some dainty.
Never disappoint
will always come to
will be easily handled
back to the wild so easily
must be taken in this matter.
In the June
may
grain
them
thay
length
they
and
hark
care
them and
meet you
They
that
pastures it
feed much
not
the flush of
not be to
to the do allo
to shrink in their milk flow
ff fo
Necessary
If
cows, but
ire allowed to fal
of time, the milk
i no aft
$i sarink, and n
secre
will
full
can 1!
80% now quarts to
the acre,
ly. If cut
ed it makes fine
Every farmer
ld of alfalfa
rank
form
rows rapidly and
before the heads are
hay
good
brains
have a
requires
should
fi out it
at satisfactory
put fir
more
table and
K
is no
woeds:
the cul
money - in
they only
hay
ing
Tif
3
Hette
il
SETTING TREES TOO CLOSE
Don't crowd your trees on too small
if it is a
are
yieid of nice
for the chances
left
a space,
fruit you
are ten to
The
an
carris £ y es is
Zod
after
one that you will get
Argument that more
more fruit, don't
trees On
acre the work if
worse than
found
plant.
BOY.
eral
arge
ing entirely soma
orchard, it seemed,
Lombardy popular
sickly looking. From
it
peach
trees in a larg
had acquired the
habit, and were
the condition of
peared to have
the owner, presumably becau¥e it
not yield Any wondoar did
boar? no sunlight
the lower branches
the orchard, ap
adandghed by
did
not
for
tall;
Op;
avail
waste
Overcrowded :
ground and
only a few leaves except at the
ao room for frait
able food exha:
money and
buds: all the
sted Why
foolishly? In each
case there was plenty of same
kind of land adjoining, but if
had not been, fewer trees should
been set properiv. Each should
have room spread in natural
way—not crowded till it
lofty habit. Of cou
be remedied to
time
the
tree
the
assumes §
rse the latter can
me extent by prop-
er pruning. but it result will
not satisfactory Some dealers
recommend planting peach
tween trees, Lat this
at the expense of tha
tor aside a little more land for
the orchard and it good. Peach
trees are as a rule the most crowded,
and are probably worse injured hy
overcrowding than any other Quince,
dwarf pears and plums are capable
of being planted close with the least
injury, but they, too, must have suffi-
client sunlight and food. —E. 'W.
fones, in the Epitomist.
to
the
be
trees be
done
bet
apple is
apple trees:
set !
have
plant
THAT NOVEL ONION PULLING.
I notice an article from H. A. Green
in the Epitomist in which he proposes
to make his chickens dig out his
onions in order to save time. [ fall
to see the economy of the plan even
if onions were not injured by the
chickens, as it seems to me that it
would be quite as much troubls to
gather the onions after the chickens
had scattered them in every diree-
tion, even if they escaped uninjured
from thea the chicken's
claws. Then he makes the statement
that it is a well known fact that
chickens will nt eat onions.
statement when applied to Weat Vir.
ginia chickens is entirely false, Of
seratchea hy
dian chickens and Canadian onions,
\
and that they them with a
| relish, I have chickens biting
off the tops of onions almost smooth
{| with the ground, and that when there
| was plenty of clover and grass handy.
| The chickens can’t pull onions for
| me unless they find their way into
| the garden without my knowledge, —
{ A. J. Legg, in BEpitomist.
will eat
seen
DON'T CROWD
One of the
i which causes
chickens than
lies, is
CHICKENS.
greatest evils and
mare deaths to
anything else,
It is
crowd
one
little
except
their in
together
much and if
hundred chick together
crowding
want to
a8 possible
ciination to
just as
have a
itl
You
want to
We
all
hav
lier
strong
re trampled to death.
: that too many not
the
rtant
therefore important
he ; wend roost in
And it is
chicks of
Same coop
also imp
different
p. A
not to allow
age
the same «
ilies
large
means
SSArS
oat
h foliowing Is
Half fll similar
th water, and ad one
cotadensad
in ofl or
barre] hal
¢
pound of formaldehyde
led formalin)
{sometimes
ca Place about twe
bushels of the = ed oats wide
ini as
4 Sack as will adily go into the bar
rej ibomerge the oats in this
for
from
a few
wasle the
of formaldehyde
it to drain
as not
empty the
to solu
oats on to »
and pro
until al
Charles
Or canvas to dry
ceed in the
the has
D Woods
Ploughman
Same manner
se Fy
seed been reated
in Massac
PRESRVING POSTS
I see an enquiry about
I will give formula: Equal
ro 1 i 3
Coal ana iin
fence posts
parts of
add finely
mix with
form of paint. Paint
into the ground,
and 6 inches above
have
be @
oll ood
oil
powdered charcoal, and the
ollg until in the
part
especially
the that
the end
ground
Ros
the should two coats:
before
posts
all
remove the
the
the paint is
they should
Sap ff
bark only: then paint
Though 1 0
give it
diana
paint
posts should
Asone«
if OFX
with
appiied
b sawed
if
the
part iocust
when seasoned
paid for this re
free to th
ceipt,
readers of The
Farmer I ne tried
ax | only put in a few
a time: then I think I will
ful if I last long as
John Bennett, in Indiana Farmer
ver the
posts at
be
the
thank
as posts
The Old English Coffee Houses
In 1667. we are told, the first coffee
house had been as a nul
#ance. In 1708 there were 3.000 coffe
houses, and each coffee house had its
There fee
prosecuted
we
carrying on the game
which suggested the new nicknames
bulls and bears, and coffees fnouges
where the talk was Whig and Tory,
of the last election and change of
ministry: and literary resorts such as
the Grecian, where, as we are told,
a fatal duel! was provoked by a dis
piite Lreek aceont, in which,
et us hope, it was the worst scholar
who was killed, and Wills’, where
Pope as a boy went to look reverently
at Dryden, and Buttons’, where at a
later period Addison met his litthe
senate. Addison, according to Pope,
spent five or six hours a day lounging
at Buttons’, while Pope found the
practice and the consequent consump
don of wine too much fo his
Thackeray
coffen
Byer a
health
notices how the club and
house “boozing shortened the
men of those days. "English
the world over. Only a fow days
» I watched on old Wyandotte hen
pulling out a large onion, and she did
Ber work so well that only the out-
sida peeling was left. I feel quite
sure that if Mr. Green will allow the
chickens full access to unions for any
lidaerable length of time he will
demcn that chickens will eat onions
Century.” Progress.
\ Sleep in Tiers.
A slum inspector told the Glasgow
of the poor that on some occasions
he had found families slesping in
tiers—the parents on the floor, than
4 mattress and a layer of children
on top,
Japan, excluding Formosa, has 8
population of 40,000,000.
THE ARMS OF WOMEN. |
or painter is |
artistic reputa- |
is diff |
merely |
beauti-
pair |
any scuipor
the stake his
the atatement
find a
arms
Almost
that it
woman with
nothing of
make one perfect
Aphrodite
sculptor
the
fea
uit
on
to
to
To
f arms for his
Vade, the English
securing
each
ood
ul
say
ones
George
had five
best points in!
he armas of
The face |
of
ful
R100
possession of a beautl
the posses
nerally the
often
iretty arms. It is ge
Plaia
arm
have
women
1 women
1 y
AOE
and work:
rounded
The
have more gre ¥
. roa.
An
ayvond
of Morocco a
charming
hand; the
ladies
A woman
arm and
t arm. ham-l
he DORR
Hey ma)
Viadame
wident bull
But to th
itienuated
3 $ Hh
12h » the gymnas
:
tone down and
may
garies of nature
A COUNTESS'S ROMANCE
London Truth ts
vas of Wal
inaband, |
wig-Holsisin Augusten
forth, ia 1864, at
ng dances of
The Bmpress
to invite
at
{ors
Bad 43 05 gn
PalelE
ihle
&ho them
of running againat
and the
rs found a society
New Orleans lads
standing at
‘hasseloup-Lanbat
eld marines
Frederic k. who had come to Pa
agplain to the emperor the
Holstein tangle received
tion to one of the
$0 dazzled at the show of youth
maideniy
_e
would i5
North
Slidells, Masons
vail as bel
figideralys
of X
ourt, the ie |
Marquise
whose husband
i
the portfolio Prince
Beauty
man
ners, that he forgot all about hie mis
sion. He at first fell § !
the Southern belles, but as France
a not Turkey had to make a
stholce, and he chose Miss Esther ee
a, it seemed to him, the flower
the bevy, and proposed to her and
Sad the happiness after some delay to
be accepted She has attained
‘senaiblie” age of t soven
Frederick laid hia case of a
ovesgtricken elderly prince before the
Emperor Francis Joseph, and stated
yor
in love th al
w
he
of |
he
woenty
his suit, If he promised |
Mizg lee, in the event
the title of
Noer being a village
Francis Joseph sympa: |
o confer on
family under like circumstances. The
i865, and the wedding took place ia
on November 3 of the aame |
Prince Frederick die at Bair |
interesting married Count
orsee, at Lantenbach, in Wurtem
FASHIONS THAT REIGN.
Pale bine and pale pink mercerized
lawns are baing made into most attrac
tive agd dainty gowns for midsum-
Mer Wear,
Gray voile costume Is becoming
more and more a favorite with the
well-dressed woman, both for a walk.
tng gown afd with a trained skirt
n metal neck chains, relieved hy
small fqwels, are still popular.
A Spihish mantilla drapery veil for
dremaay is amoung the naw show:
in
Bhatt _embroidory or taco
in al
—
most exclu sively
mer bodices
The
onion, ia b
very effe
wear
A number of
green are
fags of
welght
used to adorn sum
new golden-hued brown, called
quite a fad
h for house or
coming it i=
ive Dot
street
fine s al
iades of le
among the advance
SAampies o
broadcloth
The taffeta
newer and
shirt-waist kind
Mora
with or without
A novelt
whi
Oored
te mu
WOMAN'S AVER
Talk eth
gender
DEINE a
Brooklyn
with
Glve
$5
man the other day, ° inn in it
A Womans
i Woman
of Buran
tars t
AE
she'l]
AUtes
she is after
index
1 she'l
than
2 1 her an aay
it in a second.” and away
Bo, turnis the pages again
“The other alight by actual timing
t took m; fe two minutes
to find ‘Mary in Heaven’ in a copy of
Burns, for not only did she lose act
turning the pages but if
tome to anvihing liked,
as ‘Holy Willie's Praver and
Steward,” she'd dally over them
do men do that.
thing they go for is the ir
twenty
time
she'd
aijeh
‘Polly
a while
first
tayely
‘he
dex
Many persons were doubtless star:
hy newa from England that
the House of Commons has just voted
in favor of granting full Parliament
suffrage to women by an over
whelming majority—182 to 68. It ia
not & great surprise, however, to those
have kept track of the steady
growth of the equal rights movement
in Great Britian
In 1883, municipal
the
suffrage waa
It apparenily proved
satisfactory, for in 1881 the mame
right was extended to the women of
Scotland. In 1888 the women of Ire
land, both married and single, were
empowered to vote for all officers ex
cept members of Parliamens,
Belle of Ancient India.
The belle of ancient India wore he
hair tied by a jeweled band two or
three inches back of her head and
thea brilded Into an enormous ball
two-thirds the size of her head.
More than 4,000 Japaneses flaking
vessels were, before the warediying
their trade fa Korean waters and on
the coast of casters Si
Tine Table in Effect May 2,
MONTAN aN
A
New York
ington
y VAAL
fRu4Q inter
ew York,
jassc ger
“
4%
é 45
| 6 0
for Montan
1.15 On
ieave Montandon
1m. rey ingleave Lewis
Ly 0058. mo and 4.45% p.m,
WW, ATTERBIURY J. R. WOOD
ral Masiager Pass. Traffic Mar
GEO. W, BOYD, General Pam ger Ant
i
en
ire
(sone
FURTHER USE FOR X-RAYS,
of Pearls in Oysters.
At a time when considerable atten
tion is being paid to the pearl indus
try of Ceylgn, and the government is
taking extensive measures to protect
the oyster fisheries there, it ig of in
terest to record a discovery recently
communicated (oo the Paris Academy
of Sciences by M. Dubois relative to
using the Roentgen rays to examine
the oysters. It has been found that
these rays enable an observer to de
terndne at once whether a living oyvs
ter contains a pearl or not without in-
jury to the animal, and in case the
pearl is small the oyster may be re
placed in the bed until further growth
takes place and the desired sige i#
reached. In the scientific examination
of the pearl oysters In Ceylon it has
been ascertained that the popular be
Hef that the nuclel of pearls are
formed by minute grains of sand o4
other particles holds good in but few
instances, and that in most cases the
pearls or pearly excrescences are pro
duced by the irritation of boring
sponges and burrowing worms. The
best germs rosult fram the stimula
tion of a parasitic worm which be
tomes incased and dies. Harper's
Weekly.
i
{
Spring Mills Hotel
BPRING MILLA, PA.
PHILIP DRUMM, Prop.
First-class accommodations at all times for beth
man aud beast. Free bus © and from all
trains. Exc@lsut Livery attached, Table
board first-class. The best liquors and
wines al the bar,
CENTRE HALL, PA
JAMES W. BUNKLE, Prop,
Newly equipped. Bar and table supplied
with the best. Bummer boarders given Fpecial
Healthy locality. Beautiful soBgery
Within three miles of Peuns Cave, & most beauty
ful sublerranean cavern: entrance by & Lost
Well located for hunting and fish ing
Heated throughout. Free carriage wall tralns
Oid Fort Hotel 2
ISAAC BHAWYER, Proprieior ;
#8. location : One mile South of Centres Ball,
Accommodations first-class. Good bar.
wishing Ww enjoy an evening given »
&llention. Meals for such occasions
pared on short notice, Always pre
for the transient trade.
RATES: $1.90 PER DAY. 5
id
Penn's alley Barking Company
CENTRE HALL, PA,
W. B. MINGLE, Castrinf
Receives Deposits . .
Discounts
fotel Haag
BELLEFONTE, PA.
F. A. NEWCOMER, Prog.
Heated throughont. Fine Susbiing.
BATES 31.00 PER DAY
Special prepmsations for Jorom, Witoosseng
aad say persons coming to town on special ef
Caxions. Eegular boardess well cused for.
ATTORNEYS.
f.H ORVIS C. MH. BOWER
Q&vis, BOWER & ORVIS
ATTORNEYS AT-LAW
BELLEPONTER, PA.
Office tn Crider's Exchange building on second
ros
Notes . . .
a -
————————————
EL ORYY
Soor.
DAVID ¥. FORTNEY W. HARRISON WALKER
ORTNEY 6a WALKER
ATTORNEYS-AT.LAW
BELLEFONTE. PA
Offoe North of Court Houss a
CLEMEN L
C ENT DALE
ATTORNEY AT-LAW
BELLEFONTE PA.
OSios N. W. corner Diamond, two doors frome
First Nationa! Bank. Jren
WwW G. RUSKLE
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
BELLEFONTE Ba.
All kinds of lege! business sitended w promptly
Special attention given wo collections Ofon, Md
Boor Crider's Ezxchaags ire
S. D. GETTIG
ATTORNEY -AT-LAW
BELLEFONTE, PA.
Coliections and all legal business sttended ww
promptly. Cons Lous German sod English,
Office in Exchange Building roe
B. SPANGLER
ATTORKEY-AT-LAW
BELLEFONTR.PA.
Practices in wll the oouris Consultation ia
English and German. Ofos, Orider's Exchange
ERY .#
Special Effort made to
Accommodate Com-
mercial Travelers...
D. A. BOOZER
KN.
50 YEARS’
EXPERIENCE
Patents
Traoe Manxs
Desians
CorvymicuTs &C.
Anyone sending a sketch and & ion
quickly ascertain our opinkm free whether
invention is probably patentable, Commanion
tions strictly oom8dential. Handbook on Patents
sent, free. Gidost ney for searing patents.
Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive
special notice, without charge, in the
Scientific American,
A handsomely illostrated weekly, Larpost oie.
ealation of any sclentie journal a
; four months, $i 80id by all newsdeniem,
MUNN § C30 Hw Yor
¥ 8, Washington, D.C,
BARGAINS!
a
The readers of this pa.
per are eounstantly upon
the alert to ascertain
where goods can be pun
chased the
prices, and if a merchant
does not advertise and
keep the buyer conven
sant with his line of
goods, how can he expect
to sell them?
i, A»
THINK OVER THIS)
at lowes!