The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, April 29, 1909, Image 6

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    CARE OF FARM TEAMS.
Farm teams should not be
pampered, but should-be fed a liber?
ation of substantial foods 80 as a
sustain them in a vigorous and spright-
ion A team ill fed and in
low flesh and weakly, will not accom-
lish one-half the ‘work of the one
hat is better fed and cared for,
The harness and particularly the
wllars should accurately adjusted
io the horse. the collar is either
oo tieht or too loose it galls him and
mterferes with his respiration. The
work teams should be fed early in the
morning so that they will have time to
sat plenty of food before it is
lor them to go out on the farm
begin their work. Never
v horse at heavy work right
rating a hearty meal. It will
horse great comfort and rest
parness is removed at noon while they
wre feeding. Let them be carefully
highly
iy condit
he
if
and
day's
after
give a
food before
in the-@lternoon.
lo partially digest their
they are put to work
if a team is allowed to enjoy a rest
and relaxation after they are fed at
moon they will accom: lish more work
with less wear than they will if
prived of this repose. In the evening
let them well cleaned and rubbed
and their legs and bellies relieved of
all mud and filth,
A that is wa
gheculd not be placed at
stable or allowed to stand still
od to cold weather or a current of air.
Move them about gently until toe heat
and pulsation are abated. After this
is effected, should be well groom-
sd and perfectly dried off When they
have been exposed to a rain
should not left to become dry
the evaporation of the da
their for chilis,
lammations are offen caused
treaiment. fully
G0
be
and swealy
toon
tem
rm
they
he
3 ios
oOgies,
remove
and
winter, the)
at noon and
wise to go
to
have been helped by!
cated fo
ness. A wor
tie to do
owed to sta:
day
out and ma
-W. Milton
ling and
k team should have a lit
day and
the stable
ods and over fee
every not be al
id i
exercise and
and then
ie to do a hard day's work,
Kelley
without taken
MIXING CATTLE
There is a good pitty
the following,
ing breeds. by a correspondent
_Breeders' Gazette
The tendency of the American
EEDS
of force in
on the subject of cress
of the
He says:
far
all his farm animals. Even his hens
all became a mvixture after a
two Especially been
case with farmers in the
States. Thoeze who had
fhiave crossed and
stein-Fresian bulls until they hav
neither one or the other, and seme of
them come very near to nothinz, Some
farmers seemed to think they could
outwit the Almighty
Jersey with the Holstein and so
the large flow of
rich milk of the Jer#ey, The differ
ence two breeds is too
great. was shocked and dum.
founded. The result has
many ca the small yield
Jersey with poor
of the Holstein.
There vast difference between
a good Holstein and a poor one both
in quality and qfantity of mi
gseys also differ very much
to quantity of milk. A herd of
class Jersey cows is as good as a
gold mine to a farmer who knows
to handle them by judicious selection
The seme ean be sald of the Holstein
The breeder of Holstein cattle 1s quits
apt to condemn the Jersey cow, an!
the Jersey is apt to condemn
the Holstein, There are noble speel-
mens in each hreed, and the
«the men who ‘handle the animals,
responsible for so many poor ones.
is the result of carelessness, lack of
judgment, taste and discrimination
The Shorthorns are rapidly coming
to the front and the milking strain
of this breed will doubtlegsgeupplant
many ¢f the mongrel Jerseys and Hol
steins that now occupy the land,
has this
h the
Jersey
recrogsas
e got
by
gat
hetwern the
Natvre
been
of
guall
463 the
coupled the
is a
Ter
breeder
breeders,
are
it
LIVE STOCK NOTES,
A well-bred sire will often add two
to three pounds in weight of flesh ov
fleece over a common sire.
It is very Important to protect sheep
from wet weather, although they can
stand considerable cold.
Feeding sheep in low, marshy places
\s about the most unfavorable condi
)
which they can be kept.
gquashes, carrots,
milk oats, shorts and grass pi
{feed hogs than all corn,
though part corn is good.
The should be kept
condition at the time of the birth of
their young, as those in poor condi
tion are not.apt to own their young.
Extensive experiments have shown
that cows produce more milk and but
ter if they are turned out of doors a
than tncse that
are confined in the stalls all the time
All animals on the farm, and especi
ally young and growing, should
nave daily exercise, It is needed for
proper development of bone and
muscle,
The man who whips a horse
| ing is nothing less that a fool
rule it makes horse shy
eventually, ruin his di
The horse timid, and
requires encouragement to become
quiet, kindly to him, then lead
nim up to the object of his fears,
let him see what the object is
and in a little while his nervousness
disappear,
A good lot
thoroughbred boar or are
signs of prosperity on the farm. There
18 always a market for pigs o!
age under 12 months. All
except breeding should
not be kept beyond the most profitable
age for the market.
Young
tion under
Pumpkins, clo
rie
al
ver
better for
ewes in good
those
for shy
As a
the worse,
will spos!
is only
Speak
pet
brood sows and na
good
of
two
good
stock,
suld he
that they may
itis a d m
them to do
worked
attain
horses sh
a0
their full growth. ba
depend upon
work on
In giving castor cll to
OW one or pints to a
to two oun
and two ounces
ths farm
nin
two
ounces geen
to calves
llent purgative
scours®t Is advised
combined
BREEDEN(
Afte
handling
gives
hiling
pays
is a far Detter
breeder than a pox
that a really
neighborh
Frypn
ou
ied
into a
Our farms
County
Jorkal
The sows of
sig}
our aera ni
the best of Berk
to combination
¥. and represent
re blood, trac
Hil
Barrow lee Sth,
ing
lord Lee and
We endeavor at all
in the bw’
ition, and 19
range of the
with
wig —-J. 1
other
to keep our herds
breeding cond
give them the
lots and
beast of nut
possible
this end
wooded
the
provids them
ritious fo
Atwood, in Epitomist
the
a —-
SUNFLOWER SEED FOR POULTRY
Sun-flower is a very valuable
feed
ing t
when
seed
po |
moult
wensive
for pousiir especially at
ime but. it
compared
cause the yield
to the amount of room
require,
Another oblection is the diffienit
the
rathér ex
grains
not in proportion
is
tn other he
is
that the pls
y ot
iiing be
enough to
sarge quantities without maid
thresh it out the
and if you it
hing the will roti
have a good long
can grow a of sun
then cut down a stalk or tw
and let-¢he hens do the
harvesting. If you rave enough of
it will give the poultry employ
all through the fall and the
part of the winter and they wil
the occupation. Eph tomist.
HORSE TERYS3
Horse men are particular to
proper horze terms in speaking of
horses and horse paraphernalia. Two
norses is a pair and horses
a team. Trey is a French horseman's
expression meaning
keeninz goed from gD
ping s n i
cause vou cannot get it dry
store in |
ing. If
mould
aed
away
you
mow
heads
p yi1!
But
run
if you
you lot
easly
enjoy
nae
three is
3 horges abroast
When one horse is hilched ahead
another it is called a tandem hit
may be two
horse tandem. A good many Ameri
cans” are very careless about horse
talk. In New England the expression,
“Here comes a horse and team” very
ing a wagon.
it is just as easy to be particular
and have things right -—Epitomist,
An Englishman has invented a b}
eyle for the blind.
multioyele, earrying 12 riders, led by
a seeing person, who does tae steer
rE up a Ag on
» Footage a =
in the New York Evenir
New
men, with
reac hing
City. Standard Oll
1 Standard Oil dividends, are
for the larger retall
nethods
i vv
who have bes
band of
attrac
ie
1 $s vr 1
JOoRn
a controlling 3
which in many
have no c A
tion of oll
but actively, s
probably we
reading.
Acquiring Many Dusinesscs,
Some of thes a concerns
individual stock olde rs of the
ard Oil Company are heavily
ested are the Hegeman Drug C
pany, Childs’ chain of rest
the Corn Products Refining Co
the New York Glucose Company
the National Starch Company
tages are more to come
hich bear every
fey
a
[Tp
Stand.
are cur
lishment with many branch
York and other cities has
pasaed into the control of St
Oil interests.
Peanuts and milk probably will be
next on the list, for the same reports,
based on excellent authority, are that
these ofl Interests have elready ob-
tained control of what Is known
the peanut trust, and will soon, {f
they have not already, acquire one of
the most extensive milk producing
es in New
recon tly
andard
come of what is known as the “in-
ard Ofl Comnany. This fa entrely!
for the benefit of the large stockhold- |
ers and the work is conducted in an
unobtrusive manner.
Not Be 1die.
80 thoroughly does the Standard |
Oil Company now cover the ground
and the earth that it has all the capi |
tal that it needs and iz practically im-
possgible to put more money back into
she industry, which yields angually
millions in profit. Standard Ofl divi.
dends, therefore, are constantly seek.
ing reinvestment, for it is one of the
axioms of John D. Rockefeller him-
golf that money must not be idle. The
head of the investment department
or bureau was until recently a man
who is now a banker and broker in|
Wall street. There has been a reor-
ganization lately,
good opportunities is under the gen. |
eral direction of an accomplished
financial scout who has a corps of
trained assistants,
There are numerous firms or com-
Money Must
utation and feel that if they had ad.
ditional ecavital they might greatly
extend their business, While they
are making inquiries they may re-
colve a visit from an agent, who says
that he has heard something of their
endeavors and intimates that if the
enterprize meets the approval of his
principals it would be possible to
come to an agreement.
“Can you make
usual question, ’
increased capita
sd i
ng re
From Restaurants to Oil.
perations such as the
Om} ny. ivid
» find thel
A Te 4 0B, .
an ile he Stand-
, is AMORE he investors in the
hildes emporia
E. T. Bedford, a large stockholder
director of tha is the
president of the Corn Products Re-
fining Company, of the New York
Glucose Company, which has the tall
chimney at Shady Side, N. J
Four of the corn products compsa~
26 Broadway,
and there also is the headquaters of
the National Starch Company Re-
ports that the Standard gronp had in
any way become interested in the
manufacture of candy are denied by
leading confectionery companies, and
one of them has within the last week
a circular to the trade ex.
t corporation,
change whatever in the management,
C. T. White, assistant treasurer,
office on the fourteenth
if. there were any
floor, was asked
{O11 Company was. becoming extensive.
{ ly Interested in outside ventures.
That is not the fact,” was his em-
phatic reply.
Mr. White referred to the various
| glucose companies as being under the
| control of men also affiliated with
Siandand Oil and to the National
Starch Company as a subsidiary cor
am
As to the "Investment Department”
which the officials and stockholders
of the Standard find so useful, he said
news to him. Among the larger op-
Oil group as individuals may
mentioned the Amalgamated Covper
and the United Metals Seolling Com.
| pany, in which H. H. Rogers is in-
interests of Henry M. Flagler in Flor-
ida.
Paragraphed Pickings.
The Pittsburg Club has sold short.
stop Charlie Starr to the Boston Club,
Work iz being done in the matter
of unionizing the brewers in El Paso,
Texas.
Reports of the various New York
City ratlway lines for the last quarter
showed rs:eota of $354,000,000.
the collieries at Aberaman, Wales,
wera locked out.
Millionaire E. J. Barney, 78,
Makes Widow of 30 His Dride.
Dayton, Ohlo.-~In the face of the
bitter opposition of his daughters, E.
J. Barney, who is seventy-three years
old and the wealthiest man in Dayton,
was married to Mra. Elinor Chapman,
widow cf Btate Senator W. W. Chap-
man, who is in her thirtieth year.
Mrs. Chapman was governess in the
Barney family pil several months af.
ter the death of the Senator, and it is
de that the wedding ig cause
a complets rupture between Barney
and his two daughters, i
Find Six Out of Every Ten
Children Have Tuberculosis,
Des Moines, Towa. —-An investiga.
tion conducted by the Des Moines
Tubercular Association resulted in
the amazing discovery that six out of |
every ten children examined in the |
city are infected with the dreaded tu.
berculosis,
Most of the cases are incipient, but |
in many the disease has 3 Brogressd to
a dangerous degrees, The association
is considering the sstablishing of a
children’s tubercular camp for scien
tific treatment,
Co
eaitoer: Tea
TastesTenre oe Ss
Household Notes
Pas Pas PNAS og ol AE VSS Viva Vs a
L/S AP, 48004
A biabs ne bo AV AP bes pave vie 7
CLOTHS
linen her
rib
ER
RIBBON-RIM
newest fad in
fhe
The
alded from
run tablecloth
square
slits,
table
other side is the
bon
A
with
i8 woven
bird gh i
foot
damask cloth
through which
be run,
of the
center
rr
bon may about a from
the edge
to the
tied in
of the
Gf course,
with a
aeme,
table, as an outline
The
fiat
ribbon 1s
two
plece
very large, bows at
Corners.
ribbon
matchin
the
io
flowers,
view
8 ete
For a luncheon
ty arrangement
tive, too
——New
pret.
and would be effec
if one ghort of flowers,
p A
Haven Register
were
TABLE LINEN
in contrast to the
other
varieties
and
embi for table
raised embrokiery is
decoration for gh
Here
ference ir
eels,
low ca
tile nre
I
over plain hems
A scalloped ed
brok monogram
eage and a band of
one
addition
size is
lered
ambn
where {from inch t
wide In to
imposng
on most
often chosen
As by houseke 6 Del rs Of
their best | bed
imost half covere
wi embroid
flower
TO C1
- wy
aad. 4
qmove the loose
a great ten
UST ON 81
woman
rule for
Dissolve ¢
an of camphor gt
n ouncs
bailf a lard
t
t
pound of
¢ is melted and blended take
and when it begins to thick.
to give a
orpaments
for
ur
he scam
en add enough Dlack lead
fron Rub
with mix and leave them
a day and night Then
with a soft cloth and a brush that will
go into the crevices and apertures
Another remedy for cut steel that is
not badly rusted is fine emery powder
mixed with vaseline or paraffin, This
is rubbed thorcughly into the steel
work, end then putty powder is ap
plied with oil and rubbed off with a
soft cloth. To prevent cat steel oma
ments from rusting it is a good idea
to rub them occamonally with vase
ine ——Néw York Sun
BRAIDED RUGS
Braided rugs are now the fashion
Formerly one saw them only in the
country but now they are seen In city
bed rooms and living rooms Any
untry housewife might'make money
by braiding strips of rags during the
long winter evenings and making them
into rugs to sell, If city boarders
come to the country in the summer,
they will buy, but a surer way of sell
ing them is to make arrangements
with some of the numerous women's
exchanges or women's industrial
unions that are found in large cities
and where handiwork of women is sold
at a good figure. Hooked mgs are
equally In demand, and some every
beautiful ones may be made by the
country housewife Indiana Farmer
RECIPES.
Eggless Apple Sauce
cup sugar creamed with 1-2 cup short.
ening: add spices and a little salt:
next stir 1 teaspoon scda inte 1 cup
of unsweetened apple sauce,
chopped raisins, 2 cups sifted Hour.
Add raising last. Bake 40 minutes in
slow oven.
odor the
deep
the ture
mislie -
polish them
rately, as the nuts want to be quite
ed with vanilla.
Molasses Cookies—Qne
asses, 1-2 cup sugar, 1-2 cup shosten.
ing. 1-2 cup hot water, 2 Watpogns
saleratus, a little salt, about 'g
spoon ground ginger, flour By Pan
Don't roll very thin.
5]
COMMACIAL COLUML
Weekly Review oi Trade and Lates!
Market Reports
Bradstroe«
Sw
ather,
weather pe
fall
if the 3 the Ea
con fider
for
ances
Soul
there is more
purchasing, higt cots
er prices
+1 Ep
n the forme
i ¢
dy ance of
ing whi
’
We i
TG 0
190K.
aed
agRTeR:
“ holesale Markets
New York. — Viheat-—8
met frre.
pot irreg
“ » »
a is YO
Ort
=f an
anoat
O.
Baltimore Wheat — Spot, 142¢
May, 1.354 were
rather soft i Western
advices and at the nid oer call spo:
was quoted at “o and July at
17%. :
Settling prices were:
Western, 14130; act
1.41%; steamer No. 2 red,
steamer No. 2 red Western,
Corn-—Western opened
spot, 75%: 5%: July, 7
Prices showed little change thro
out the day. Trading was light.
Sales: fresh spot 54;
20,000 May, 75%; 5.000 July. 7:
Settling were: Contract
75%: No white, 755: steamer
mixed. 71%
The closing was
April, 5:
id a
Oats-—White
do.. No. 3. 576 58
@He: mixed, No
Butter Creamery
ib., 230c.; imitation, per Ib.
prints, 3%-b., per ib, 30@G 31: do.
1-1b., 30@ 31: blocks, 2-1b., per 1b
30@31; dairy prints, Marviand
Pennsylvania and Virginia, per Ib,
J6@ 17; Virginia and West Virginia,
store packed, per 1b, 15@ 16: Ohio,
store packed, per Ib... 16@ 17: near
by, rolls, per 1b. @ 18: Ohio, rolls,
per 1b, 17@18; West Virginia, roils,
per 1b, 16@17.
Eggs — Maryian Pe
and nearby firsts. per
Eastern Shore, Maryland and Vir
ginia., per doz., 20: Western firsts
per doz., 20; West Virginia, per doz.,
*®
rices
No, 2
COD LTE
red
spot
1.38%:
1.38%
firmer;
4%
ugh
nr
MAay,
“teady:
May, 75 asked:
a
gpot an
July
No
=n
oY
v is
5 -
rator,
228
per
an.
"- 0
Va
nnsyivania
doz., 20¢.;
ive Stock
Chicago,~Cattle——Market
Steers, $56@ 7.15: cows,
heifers, $3.25@ 6: ahs.
5.256; calves, + Je T6.50:
and feeders, $2.30 25
Hogs—Marfiet ' Ho 20e. lower,
Choice heavy, shipping, $7.15 G 7.25:
butchers, $7.104 7.256: light mixed,
$6.90@ 7.50; choice light, $7.10@
7.15; packing, $7@G 7.15; pigs. $5.20
6.75; bulk of sales, $7 ¢ 7.20.
Sheep -— Market barely = steady.
Sheep, $23.70 6.65: lambs, $5.506
8.25; yearlings, $5.25 @ 7.35. :
New YorkeBoeeves—— Dressed beet
slow, at 8% to 100. CalverReo.
cepts, 30 head; feeling barely
steady. Veals sold at $5 to $7.85:
barnvard calves at $3. City dressed
veals sieady, at 7 to 12e; country
drtaned, Ny he ide.
ansns v MOC ttle Mark
steady. Chole export and ar
beof steers, $66 6.70; fair to acod,
$4.75@G 6; Western steers, $4.
6.40; stockers and feeders, $4
5.76; Southern steers, $4.50@ 6.
steady,
$4@ 5.95;
$2.56 @
gtockers