The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, May 27, 1909, Image 2

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    FUR PUN NS SE CVI, £0 RIT A ae
LIVE STOCK.
for the
stock ia
nis werk,
which he
class of
of
interest in
with
breeder
and
the animals
ful
true love
and
working, no
live stock it may be.
a sad fact that breeding
stock the average farm
heen given attention
importance
To be a
thoroughly 1nd
with :
The
a
LO
It
the
has
which
on
demands.
Ruecessful |}
tand ang
of his
ligree, howev
! breed
1
animals.
is nothing
ird of
of an animal a longer or
time. Its
to trace the
some
’
nedigree
» oye
ys \ 43 0 Booey 3 “gh a
or jess taan 2 ed the
more
ancestry
for
object
breeder
or Is
instances standard-bred
harse and
the perfor:
in all
of
A 1 is
blood,
however,
rity of
ends large
genuine
he individ-
especially
those
remaon
anthonti
proportion
no vaine
10 fice Fo
generations
ed
the
animal. The
near an
Is far more
of pedizree atgence
exeellance, a
high or-iced ani: have
who!l’y on
gree ana
merits.
If a
mals whose {ndivi
hy
ant than the length
o! sunoh
reat many
been bought
2
the strenzth of their ped:
podlgres
heen
many a
for a pe
taken a very
It ia a fa t
good blood
sare that »
A now a
lecticn and
H one is starting a herd,
his fo i !
yA0
nl
word
breeding
gelect mai with
care and endeavor ¢
form as possible. Then s
with idea o
eral ]
the herd
it
ever,
got
tha :
i as
hould
ha }
of stock, exrent
butcher
mus:
eat
we must
mals they
of the ur
of the
is only op:
be sald
ma's io
it becomes
er of pure
these
bards the typ
most desirable
demands. T
may
which treats
improvem
meals.
It is
covers
the
fmproven
art in so f
these prinsis
ment
fore
which gov
of live
the
at
ti
fo
abou
be
a science
and -
principles
ent
1
vere
will
taries he:
van ene
ing
Suerege fn]
the piinciples a
and co:
been many th
most the nuimbe
Ppleded, there have been many
ples proven bevond a doubt a
present genasration of |
breeders can do far better and more
@clentific work toward the fm.
provement of their herds and flocks
than their forefathers were able to
sccomplish—W. H. Underwood. in
the Indiana Farmer.
FARM NOTES.
or
govern
trol ane hott rh there havo
y advanced
iy
equa large
nd the
ve stock
tow
88 well as in anything else, and thas
Iarmer is fortunate who knows just
how fir to go.
The same amount of feed given to
when fed to any other kind of domes
tic animal,
The amount of land between the
two fences on an ordinary highway
is sufliclent to grow erops enough to
pay for an improved road bed wida
encugh to carry the traffic,
No off season with poultry. There
ghould be an income from the pouliry
yerd every day in the year, tut the
winter months are bullt especially fox
*he busy season. ‘ :
Ny
RAS GRA ROT SRE Ne DE SRY a SE Re
belong to
metimes
| and the te
story
long from front to
dicates milking
Salt, sulphur and chs
things {or the brocd
a in th
{ help themselves
with
the edges of the box
ut the rain and the
learn to lift the covers
Mares nursing foa's she
ration that will not
crease their flow of miik, but material
ly enrich it. Oats and bran
| bulk, with about one-fourth In bulk of
corn added, makes a good ration for
a in milk. T} should always
| be moistened before feeding
Good
animals,
than
11 +i
At all times a
properly
accurately,
good
feed lot
Boxes mu
that
This
ho
box 2
hingo covers projec
gry
& 2
en a
fn
i
in equal
mare
geed gral
is
urist
ken
weak, n
wel
one kept
Selling
fertility
The
about
Ave
POTATOES PAY
MAKING
ir clay lo
A
sidered
a
t
per acre will be in ) 1
0
amount of available 1 Y food
and
t a three
ab germ lasts
fertilizer with
potash. This
as 1.500 pounds
usually use 500 to 800
0
tr £11
never drill
we
applied
acre, but
and than
pounds directly
Mountain
it with
Se
.
pounds,
500
more
into the row. The
Green variety sesms to he
©
us.
leet your seed
fall and keep
re of
over
“gr
yell
atu a8 degrees
tard
goven
on
a
sprouting in the
chaos
ies
Do
2s8ible a
to ten in
a
S000 as
thron
© wes lk
not
» a y 3
¥ oy ori
D r April
Snray
rows
a +
five
apart
#
time yy +
imes mixture of
Green and
years tha
the potato
(x00d seed
drain od
PAINTING
roughbred
neat, comfortable
that is
orchar
deo
rated
neat,
Ta and
wavs
The
WHY I LIKE
Because
worker on a
| excited In a heavy
than a horse, but
He is always as good as cash
bank. He never falls thr
in a bridge, and generally keons
| of ¢anger. He is an excellent saddle
| animal if you know how gaddie
| him. His feet stand hard roads better
| than those of a horse. He Is mors
| intelligent than a horses. He is never
| In love, but attends strictly to bye’.
| ness all the time. He ‘is never sick
but once, and then he dies. But who
hoe tirelons
gets
oats less
tha ar
ne
fe
nore work
in
does
ugh a
to
He never stops to fight flies as a
| horse does, because his hide is tough.
jer. He 's just as gentle as a horse
{if he hus not been gpoiled in break
i ing. His age cuts lttls fizure In a
| sale; nobody crres much how old a
| mule is. He will bring from $160 to
| 3250 when he is full grown if he 1s
big and smooth and strong.--Jacoh
Berg, in the diana Farmer.
In the last eight years the three
great. iron countries have produced
210,300,000 tons of pig iron, of which
ed Btates.
Belginm Imports yearly about $1.
500,000 worth of awramobliesa woth:
cycles and blevelop
DR TAI I AV 0 AR PSO a i
i i i
HA CoA SES SS RW ABR Sb 5 in
23
x
—
urning Point
Steel, Copper and
New York City.—In an article on |
the improved industrial situation the |
Wall Street Journal summarizes as
follow: :
WW Core ¥,
Steel Corporation,
president of the]
says |
is operating about i
’ i
Of normal capaci
Electric Supplies.
the Pennsyl-
d the Cam-
port fac-
"Representatives of
vania Steel Company a
bria Steel Company re
’
a
a4 satis
almergs Company
business
repres
work
“The Allis-
ports improvir
stinghouse
nore men at than at
any
‘A repr
Oil Company 3
company is normal.
spregentat!
Com
of General
SAYS
has been receiving
$51.-
year and
year
or
ve
HL pany coOrpora-
since Februs
orders at
000.000 and
that
ry
tion
rate of betwee n
$53,000,000 a
orders in the current
to reach $6
boom year.
Topping,
ublie Iron and Steel
says all the blast furnace
of the corporation is operating
seventy-fi per cent. of the finishing
capacity.
“The
the
Liat
taral
fiscal
4G O00 G00,
“hy 1 + #5
chairman
of
Company,
capacity
and
ve
equipment companies
improvement in busines
not coming in as
case of many other
report
n although
rapidly |
indus- |
orders
As
tries,
“Tha Western
shows a large gain in bi
are
in the
Electric
sine
“The
Company states
orders have been received
two weeks At times
un as high as 20.000 t
Steel
rex ord
and Wire
breaking
over the
they have
in a single
American
that
last
ons
Rubber Com.
States
t cient
pany t suffi business
is on the books to assure ste ady oper-
ations for the rest of the year
“Representatives of the American
Cotton Oil Company and the Chemi-
prosperous conditions
“Representatives of the Amalga-
mated Copper Company report large
sales of copper at advancing prices
and a heavy shrinkage stocks
“The Internatignal Harvester Com.
pany is doing a normal business
“The Leather companies show shat.
isfactory gains in business
“It is evident from the above that
turning for the better, so
far as industrial conditions are con-
cerned, has beenreached and passed.”
»
8
1
point
New York Clty
calfe, vice-president
manager of a Is
harvesting machinery, who
ing the annual convention of
Mannfactur . i
Waldorf, t
prosperity
seems 10 me no
nd on the ha
i Mot. {
general
raling
ttond
atiena-
Edwin
rE
B in
i
ers
alked
w
turn
getting
and so
the
ring. it
next year
the conditions
1808 and 1907
“TAL present
however,
buyers have arrived at the conclu
that prices have about youd]
tom, and are looking around to
large orders. Thus I heard of
United States Government the other
before there
which
the moment there is, |
Large
:
sion |
'
i
one hopeful sign
read bot- |
place |
the |
ne ;
day advertising for a year's supply of
a certain clase of goods. On the other
hand, manufacturers are AnNX.
0 contracts a long way
ey are expecting a in
bind
the not
rise
n
bee Ae
back
are
the tarify
much
whether
Aldrich
settled bus
self to the
“1 don’t
or
0" ¢
1e8tion
the
Is
it.
should
eDoOris
why
All
are good,
not
of
and although
in some parts of the Northwest spring
sowing has delayed by cold,
there is still time to make it up. Any-
how, with the prices of cereals what
they are, sure to be an in.
crease In the acreage sown.’
giv won
the r
winter wheat
boon
there is
A Pittsburg Estimate on
the Progress of Trade
Pittsburg, Pa.~—Opinion differs as|
to when the country’s business activ-
ity will such as to pronounce it!
fully recovered from the after-panic
reaction. Increased producing capac-
ity, as compared with 1 in the
steel trade especially, naturally raises
the level on which econditio must
now be judged. A few weeks ago it |
was estimated that it wiil be the end
of 1911 full capacity would
be engaged Several things have
since come In sight to affect the pres
diction If good erops are
this vear, trade authorities now
dict that the first half 1810
gee a remarkable expansion in
mand for iron and steel, as compared
with t present situation, and thes
believe sufficient business is at hand
to keep eighty-five to ninety per cent
oe
GO"
20%,
"oa
ns
a is
before
i
{
harvested |
pre i
$6 of will
de
Wi
ne
of the capacity of the country in op-
eration. As compared with 1906 and
1807, this would be equivalent to
about 100 per cent
One thing that
with next year,
be reckoned
providing the tari
is not revised to the liking of the
try, is the Congressional elee-
The speeches made by Sena-
tors Cummings, Dolliver, Bristow and
others have been overlooked as POS.
factors in the near A
Democratic House of Representatives
next year, and convening in
December, 1911, might affect
heas conditions considerably
must
coun
tions
gible future
elected
busi
Far.
t the
finitely, even if
a
question be settled de
their protection than was antiel-
Immigrants Are Coming
Back and Customs and
Washington, D. C.-—While Presi-
dent Taft isn’t bragging about it, two |
departments, Treasuryand Commerce
signs of the return of prosperity.
Commerce and Labor has charge of
the immigration work, and it is
first tangible
of foreigners with the money that
Now,
Washing.
zines of Vessels 500 Miles Away.
New Orleans, La.--That a wireless
operator in a station five hundred
miles away may explode magazines
in battleships of any navy with the
H. A. Folk, who has taken up the
matter with the United States Gov
ernment.
Folk has been experimenting with
wireless telegraphy since Marconi
ved its successful utility, He re-
uses to divulge detalls until the Gov.
ernment acts on the proposition.
that the immigrant station at Ellis
Island again is the busy place that it
always is in ,rosperous times.
At the Treasury Department the
first indication that the American
people were becoming hard up was in |
the falling off in internal revenue re.
ceipts and in receipts from the cus-
These two failures in the
great revenue raising means of the
Government accounted for the tre-
mendous deficiency that promises to |
confront Uncle Sam at the end of the
fiscal year, June 30,
With Increasing receipts and de-
creazing deficit the Treasury Depart-
ment is optimistic.
Biggest loom Ever Expected as
Yoon as Tarif Bill is Signed. |
Cincinnati, Ohlo.-Frank A. Van-
derlip, president of the National City
Bank, of New York, sald at a dinner
given here to financiers from the
East who have been inspecting the
Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad, and
the Commercial Club of this eity, |
that this country was on the verge of |
the greatest Industrial boom it has
ever known. |
He sald that “this boom would
start the minute that President Taft |
signed the new tariff schedule.” i
\.
a European
an American,
are valued
the
bas
5a y
Sweden, Netherlands, parts
France,
of Greeks
not pl
yr BEL OTT.
represen
many,
An elite of 8,
ungarians. Austria doeg
teolf holding the ideas
ed in 8ir Perey Buntinz's Review. Nor
does Spain or two naticns
geographically penins ut moral
iy insular, and Europe
Sir Percy and lady Ban often
come France, He is
in Prench literature and I
covld speak on a French
pure snd French a
ter, the late Mis. Amos.
ing could, {if cared
(which she does not), b of
very remote Plerrepont (Ducal K
ton) her grandpar-
Gig be
ine
T » Ed
iad
$Y 03
on
Portugal
outside
versed
dare say
to
platform as
facile 8 hi
she do ro
OAs not
ngs.
ancestors, Two of
came {rom Metz to
of religious pers
Bun
me
Some year
way
ting
prives of
of her,
called
was to
parisr
civilization at
dregs of
The painful
their complaints or thelr ace
themselves has not vot ti
patience or exhausted the com
of the lady of fi
what worn appearance
ing spirit of
sad denignity
almost
seen h
Bishop Fligher,
esting of 8 victims
the conductor of Catherine of Aragon
to Truth,
high tension
feuda
frail figure
the back
sainlly
in her
one of
"111
Henry VIN
the Celestial City —L-ndon
AN AMERICAN GIRI'S
American girls
dependence do not
of the
by
to go about
Frenoh
whose
agree
French
ma
wh
sheers
proper
ed
has
mind
«7s
But every one faded
her an
the gave him
ment,
4] nti
w
rig
her
. “
h worked
strong arm. To ox.
tended hand. palm one
of those minute bits of {ractional cur
rency that they have over
anced on her palm
“Poor man.”
tating French, #0
80 pOCr You have to bee
the money I have”
No masher ever persisted aft
New Yor
:
4
sie
up, with
t there bal
pS _
ale remarked
wy ;
in Sorry you
Here's
all
au
er that
kK Sun
WHAT wn
What to &
lem, ian't
eve of grad
ARTMIog
realls
face, it
after all. By we, | mean
age intellizence—not geniuses
careers, but girls who either be
or necessity
fiving In scene
It
ang of the advaniaces and disadvan.
tages connected with various
phases of professional, business and
home fe that seems to be the corner |
stone of perplexity and the cause of
fallure in many cases. You must take |
time to study the different occupa. |
tions and thus decide for which yon |
are best adapted. Here is a chance
for the college-trained girl to show
her appreciation . of the merits o*
sir
cholen
own
decide to earn thelr
was
is ignorance of the requirem nts
the
inclination for ability, by persuading
herself that what she likes to do fis!
The sooner the artist by sholee reals
izes that she is a houskeeper by abil
lty, the better it will be for prids
and pocketbook. The first thing, then,
cupation is to find out what she can't
to decide for what line of work she |
is best fAtted, considering tempera. |
opportunity ih general ~The Delines
tor.
A TOOTHPICK QUEEN.
The Crown Princess of Roumanis,
who before her marriage was Prin.
tess Marie of Bdinburgh, expects to
manufacture 25,000,000 toothploks thiy
ears. She is owner sad active
thplek factor
ney
enans
17
Years
irgest and most
| Toothpicks from the
all
and to }§
hotels in individu
The Crown Prin
manufacture
| which are use
sla. It is said it is
jon
ror
is expected
be in
movement is
of the
and
her usual
factory go into
'
ries are
to
od
for socie
€ 10 use
slow
revival
mothers,
with
a ch
pens
Press
ance
on
two-gored
front,
lap-fnishea
skirt
the seams
and trimmed
if or fail
front
where
f Bus
Of buttons afc
recgored skirt
th a narrow
pane] form
urning la
in chev
is
cloth-finishe
serge
weighed
or
gligh
d fabrics
be
appears 1
pers Bazar
¢
ee]
nnecessar)
DEFENDS
Mrs. John Hays
nant that
London has
American girls
the English ne
£ hay
a certain
seen
ties of
ally
us
those of on
altogether t first
*
Sidme vy
m
“
gnnors
8 ghe
SHE'S A CHICKASAW BLONDE
Jlonde Indians are as rare as Indian
blondes. Yet there Witness
Mrs. B. H. Colbert Indian
Territory. She 1s an Indfan-—not a ull.
breed, but with enough aborie nal
blood in her veins to preserve many
of the of the rie ra
She is blonde an
Her complexion is t!
dy
are such
ot
tae
iy
it
a
” nral
r pral
of
ex
at
test
treme type
of a babe, fier eves sre the bird
her hair is the
She is i of hi
prouwder
white descent
nd-
too
of blue.
ehade
coat ry.
WO
much
A "
101 n
peaches-a ream ooloring
fond
none I of
in
as it
a
i
(4
palefaces
Tiskon
Colbert lives
isn't as bad
Chickasaw an
ceptional ability.-
DRAW THE LINE
To be approachable. agr
able, does not mecessitate being
miliar on short acquaintanes,
viting the intrusion of the ind
To know the fine line between
sweet dignity and ridiculous hauteur
—between self-respect and vain pride,
between sympathy and obirusiveness
is an allimportant education for a
he on,
fa.
nn
to
. oa
WO
ar
el 8%
ing.
it is the eduoecatiam which bring:
these things, for they
for your associates in this byjer 1s.
tie journey thromgh the world. where
we are bidden by the Master to
“Love one another'-New Haven
Register,
.
THE TEA APRON.
The woman who wants to assume
an ultra-feminine role should not fall
to provide herself with a tea apron.
These little accessories give the wear
er a wonderfully domostic alr. AL
though very frivolous little affairs,
much beruffled and embroidered.
these aprons afford considerable and
not unnecessary protection te the
dress ~New York Tribune,
AR SSO nd.
If tan or bronze shoes are wera
with a suit of blue linen. then ine
guimpe is of drown net t
4