The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, January 16, 1913, Image 3

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    ———
Xx FOLEY'S Uy
Resinol stops
skin troubles
F you have eczema, ring-
worm, or other itching, burn-
ing, unsightly skin or scalp
eruption, try Resinol Ointment
and Resinot Soap, and see how
quickly the itching stops and
the trouble disappears, even in
severe and stubborn cases,
Pimples, blackheads and red, sore,
chapped faces and hands speedily
yield to Resinol,
Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap
heal skin humors, sores, boils, burns,
scalds, eold-sores, chafings and piles,
Prescribed by physicians for over 17
years. Alldruggists sell Resinol Soap
{25¢c)and Resinol Ointment (50c and 81),
For sample of each write to Dept. 15K,
Resinol Chemical Co. Baltimore, Md,
SPIRIT IN TUBERCULOSIS WAR
Nineteen Million Dollars Expended
Last Year in Fight Against the
Dread White Plague.
Nearly $19,000,000 was spent in the
anti-tuberculosis ‘ampaign in the
United States during year 1912, ac-
cording to the fourth annual statisti
cal statement of this
movement issued by the National As
sociation for the Study and Prevention
of Tuberculosis The expenditures
during the year for sai: and
hospital construction and treatment
make the largest single item in the
total, amounting $16,800,000
This is an increase of nearly $5.00
000 over the group of expendi
tures r 1811 The
‘
he
expenditures in
rium
4 yw exzz +] 1
o nearly
same
the year anti
tuberculosis as
tees
pensaries
spent over
was spent
establishm
freak air «
double
pose In i
nicipal expenditures outside f the
maintenance of
included in the
ed to $280,000.
figures, about $500,
hospitals for
tutions in caring
inmates
ions and commit
over £76
and
sociat
spent 3,000, while dis
clinics
$415,000
tuberculosis
Over
O00
for the maintena
the am
1911
cunt
Offi
institutions, which are
other lg, amount
In addition to these
spent by
penal insti
logis
O40
insane and
for their
Not a Compiaint,
“Well, Oscar, we ougt to
that picture also, 1 should
“No, you needn't be on every plate
I took my camera 1g to have some
pleasant recollections of the trip”
get in
think.”
dai07
Fully two-thirds of what the average
man says is of no consequence
DREADED TO EAT.
A Quaker Couple's Experience.
How many persons dread to eat
their meals, although actually hungry
nearly all the time!
Nature never intended this should
be so, for we are given a thing called
appetite that should guide us as to
what the system needs at any time
and can digest.
But we get in a hurry, swallow our
food very much as we shovel coal into
the furnace, and our sense of appetite
becomes unnatural and perverted
Then we eat the wrong kind of food
or eat too much, and there you are—
indigestion and its accompanying mis
eries.
A Phila, lady said:
“My husband and I have been sick
and nervous for 15 or 20 years from
drinking coffee—feverish, indigestion,
totally unfit, a good part of the time,
for work or pleasure. We actually
dreaded to eat our meals. (Tea is
just as injurious, because it contains
caffeine, the same drug found in cof-
fee.)
“We tried doctors and patent medi
cines that counted up into hundreds
of dollars, with little if any benefit.
“Accidentally, a small package of
Postum came into my hands. | made
some according to directions, with
surprising results. We both liked it
and have not used any coffee gince.
left us and we feel better every way.
We are so well satisfied with Postum
and miserable by coffee.”
en upon request. Read the little book,
“The Road to Wellville,” in pkgs.
Postum now comes in concentrated,
powder form, called Instant Postum.
It is prepared by stirring a level tea.
spoonful in a cup of hot water, adding
sugar to taste, and enough cream to
bring the color to golden brown.
Instant Postum is convenient;
there's no waste: and the flavor is
always uniform. Sold by grocers--
60-cup tin 30 cts., 100.cup tin 60 ets.
A 5-cup trial tin mailed for grocer's
name and 2.cent ntamp for postage.
Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Battle Creek
Mich. Adv.
SIFT BEES 0 FIND QUEEN
Only Preparation Necessary Is to Fix
Up Wood Frame Excluder, With
Thin Wood Strip.
Among all the methods proposed for
there is none more
nearly certain than “sifting.” The
Fix up a wood:
with a thin
three-inch wood strip, to be attached
under one long side of the frame so as
to cloge that much of the perforations,
measuring from the outside of the
frame. This is the only extra prepa
ration necessary, writes B. Keep, in
the Gleanings in Bee Culture. Now
lift the hive body (containing the
colony to be sifted) off its bottom-
board, and set an empty body in its
place. Lay the prepared excluder on
this empty body, having the edge of
the three-inch strip against the out
side of the body. This leaves an open
gpace along the opposite side wide
enough to pass a brood-frame through
easily. Set the hive body containing
the brood-frames and bees upon the
excluder exactly. Remove the outside
frame from each side, shaking and
brushing the bees back upon the re
maining frames. Set one of these
frames aside, and put the other into
as can be.
Method of “Sifting.”
the through the
before and push it along
on the rabbets out of the way. Now
move the brood-frames in a mass over
to the hive side next to the opening
before mentioned; then, beginning
with the frame furthest from the said
below
mentioned
body open
and down on the excluder, one
another, putting each, as clear
ed, down into the under body, push
ing each and the preceding frames
along out of the way to admit
next Last of all, put in the
previously set aside. If care is
the brood-nest will be trys
body to
way changing the
frames
after
frame
used
from the other without
20 any
of the
The smoker
mod«
one
used
bee
should now be
rive
rately to driv the
very
ifficiently to see the «
It is
drive, or smoke
down s juee
she is there not necessary
shake, the
maining bees Just set
one side, and they will soon leave. |
gimpler way to sift fo
us know it
the hods y
any
let
there is
the queen,
Experimental Farms With Dif.
ferent Animals.
At the ada experimental farms
in a horse
that corn
Can
feeding test it was
and bran 5 to 2, or barley
and bran 5 to 2, could be substituted
for oats and bran in the same pro
portions, although both the corn and
barley were less palatable than
oat ration
Three lots of lambs were fed
ration of “nutted oil
oats and hay Vith t
plementary feed, the
and day was .244 pound, at
10 eents per pound;
a supplementary feed the correspond
ing gain was .244 pound, at a cost of
4 cents per pound; with both turnips
and the gain 21 pound
per head and day, at a cost of 10.9
cents :
In swine feeding tests the cost per
pound of gain on a ration of shorts,
ground oath, feed flour, bran, roots and
skim milk was lesa than on a ration of
corn and barley. Pork production was
cheaper when wintering swine in the
open than when confined in pens The
lots, however, were provided
with cabins for Sleeping
cake,”
irnips as a sup
ensilage was
ope n
Delaware Peaches.
Twenty or more years ago Delaware
was noted far and wide for the size of
the crop and quality of her peaches
But yellows and other diseases and
pests of peach trees nearly ruined the
industry. Now, it is said, the peach
is coming back in Delaware. The
growers have learned how to success
fully combat the pests that attack the
peach, and are enlarging their orch-
ards.
Management of Crops.
The problem begins in the fleld
where the crops are grown. Poor
management in gathering reduces
profits. Bruises incurred by rough
handling work against the interests of
the grower. A needless expenditure
in harvesting
should be avoided. Protection from
the sun is often essential. All of
these problems must receive atten.
tion.
Straw in the Bedding,
Using plenty of straw for bedding
improves the quality of the manure
and keeps the land in good condition
because it provides humus, and hu
mus is necessary to all soile It also
keeps the animals clean and comfort.
able and that helps to rhe how
arofitnlle
CONCRETE FLOORS FOR HOGS
Keep Animal From Coming in Con-
tact With Cold Material,
I am ueing concrete
hog houses, and have found that 1
need very little bedding, just enough
to keep the body of the pig from com-
ing In contact with the concrete, It is
easy to keep a concrete floor warm if
the cold air cannot get under it, says
a writer in an exchange. With 100
pigs in the house, during zero weath-
er, I had to keep some of the win-
floors in
for ventilation. I have never had
pigs get stiff from lying on concrete
floors. Good dry bedding, straw or
ghredded fodder, is used, and is re
moved as soon as it becomes damp
and replaced with a fresh supply. Ven-
tilation is such that cold winds can-
not blow in on the pigs, 1 disinfect
the houees often with air-claked
Hime
A dipping tank is essential, not only
for destroying lice, but for promoting
health conditions in general. I dip
my pigs, once in two months, more
often if the animals are bothered with
lice, and use any of the dip on the
market that have crude oll as a basis
1 do not dip in winter, but crowd the
hogs into the house, and spray them,
leaving them until dry. [I spray hogs,
walls, bedding and all,
I keep wood ashes and a little
in a self-feeder before the
the time Hogs need more
matter than they usually get. During
the summer the hogs should be pro
vided with ample shade
HANDY DERRICK "FOR WAGON
Portable Hoisting. Apparatus Saves
Teamster Much Lifting—Rigged
Up In Few Minutes,
lime
pigs all
mineral
No longer need a teamster break his
removing heavy bags of cement
or sand or whatever it may be from
his wagon. Nor will he need a helper
A man in the state of Washington has
invented a portable hoisting appara-
tug which can be carried in the wag
gide in a few
can be permanently
wagon is uzed for one
A square metal frame
supports a crane which swings over
the wagon and out again. A windlass
Or it
Wagon Derrick.
to this frame and operates
have iron
The jaws are low-
grip a bag around the
windlass is then wound
up and the crane swung outward, lift
ing the load from the wagon easily
that two
the end.
Alfalfa Hay.
Alfalfa hay is a much more econom-
ical feed for lambs than prairie hay,
according to results of an experiment
conducted at South Dakota and just
ublished in Bulletin No, 118 It re
quired 3.08 pounds of graln and 3.55
pounds of alfalfa to make a pound of
Lambs {ed a grain ration of
Dakota oats while on rape pas-
made a larger gain than did
lambs fed a grain ration of corn while
on rape pasture In feeding lambs
rape at this station the loss has
been greater than in ordinary
feeding operations
14
South
ture
on
not
To Destroy Stumps,
The best time to destroy hard wood
stumps is after they have stood two
or three vears and the roots become
brittle With an iron bar punch a
hole under the stump, or use one of
the borers made for the purpose, but
do not loosen the soll except by mak.
ing the hole Place the dynamite
well under the center of the stump
A little experience will soon show the
right charge for different sized
stumps, but use enough to thoroughly
blow out the stump
Gleaniiness in ‘Gardening.
Cleanliness is exceedingly import
ant
require less cleaning
often necessary,
objectionable
Vgshing is
although frequently
Ie helps to break down
ness of other vegetables
beans, spinach and the root crops.
. ——————————
Should Not Reb Soll,
flee of the fertility that is in the
land. The thing to do is to raise
crops that will enrich the land at the
same time.
Ventilation for Chickens,
Unless there {8 fresh air to reach
all parte of the body, the hen will
not do well. Unless there ie good ven:
tilation fo csiry off the moisture of
capiration the Louse i8 bound to be
faG>
HAD ALL THE. BEST oF
Wise Girl Selected Yor Husband Man
Who Had Both Seasons for
Garnering Wealth,
“Daughter,” sald the anxious father
to the eldest daughter of a brood of
seven, “your mother tells me
you have had a proposal.”
“Yes, father, 1 have,
plied the young woman
have received several.”
“1 hear the ice
you?"
"He did.”
“And you accepted him,
“1 did not.”
‘Unwige child!
he coins every summer!"
“The plumber also proposed.”
“Ah! That is better. A man of
untold wealth garnered every winter
Beyond doubt you told him ‘yes!’"
“No, father’
‘Wha-a-a-t?
me you
man proposed to
Do tell
let so golden
slip by ungrasped?”
“Yes, father. You see,
man who sells ice In
a plumber In winter.
‘Ah, daughter! Fly
You make me with pride!
BROKE OUT IN HEAT RASH
®99
mean to
an
you
to my
weep
East
was
Georgla Ave,
‘My baby
old when he
small red
rach, afterward turning
They gradually spread until
head, face, groins and chest,
being most affected, became a
of sores with a great deal of corrup
tion. It became offen
ly grew worse, | kept a
him to keep him from scrat
geemed to itch so badly It ma
and his chegt and groin
bleed
Tenn about
months
out in
began to
like
into festers
his
pimples
sive
white
Cros
often
Nothing
had almost
that my baby's case
when hearing of the
Cuticura Ointment, 1 decided to try it
I noticed at once that baby
ter. | continued it for a few week
my ired by the Cutd
They
seemed to help it, and
come to the conclusic
WAR
Cuticura Soap
rested
baby was entirely «
ip and Ointment
others failed.’
is, Nov
Soap and
throughout the
with 32p
gt-card “Cuticura,
Adv
world Sami
Skin Book
Dept. L.
f ear
fre ©,
po Boston.
Early Traini ng.
Easter
has ordered
doors Puck
important ro Mothers
Examine carefully every b
CASTORIA, asafe and o
infants and children,
Bears the
Bignature of LZ
In "se For Over 30 Years
His Guess,
inflated curs
legs it's m
Bost
ITCH Relieved in + 30 Minutes,
Woolford 's Sauitary f i
contagious ich. Al Dru
A man can never n
girl sald when she proposed
It takes a good pugilist
minister to put his man to sleep
OF COURSE NOT.
“Well, it's impossible to
in this world, isn't it?”
“Can't say; 1 never tried it.”
Sanctimonious Penny.
McWade, the milli i
of Duluth, appealing on
retania for a seaman’s fund
generous
Jerome 8
was
he
"nv
penny
Let the collection be
none of the
rable here”
i quarter
reer
A penny side by side
ersation
gaid the
in a pocket into conv
I'm
haughtily
That
penny, but
superior
worth 206 of you
tor
ter
|
than replied the pen
A Tub of Rosewater,
Victor Ro
ing boats
Rosewater hom
Mrs
mall son of sewater
girous of sail the
y of the
cannot,’
¢
Father is
OUT MALARIA
AND hi LD 1]
VE
THE
¢ xpects
DOES YOUR HEAD ACHI?
licks” CAPUDINE. It's liquid
efMecin immediate pod 1
en ang Nervous Fleada
if pot satisfied 0c,
pe stores. Adv,
happs
Cars
free from responsib
nelow’'s Soothing Hyr
rp. saftens the gums, red
ailays palin, cures winder
A bird in the hand fails atch the
worm
HOW TO CURE BHEUMATISM
Prominent Doctor's Best Prescrip
tion Easily Mixed at Home.
This simple and harmless formuls
has worked wonders for all who have
quickly curing chronic and
rheumatism and backache. “From
druggist get one ounce of Tories
(in original sealed package)
ounce of egyrup of Barsaparilla
compound Take these two Ingredients
home and put them in & half pint of
good whiskey Hi ie the bottle and
take a tablespoo before each meal
and at bed-time” Good resulls come
after the firat few doses If your drug-
gist does not have Torls compound in
for you in a few
from his wholesale house Don't
enced to take a patent medi
this. Insist on having
Torls compound the
ONe-OUnee, sealed, yellow
This was published here last
winter and hundreds of the worsl cases
were cured by it In a short time Pub.
Hghed by the Globe Pharmaceutical abe
oratories of Chicago
your
compound
and one
cine instead of
the genuine
original,
think a
hat as
bonnet
A woman always seems to
make over hig silk
she can make a new
of the one she last
Cough, Cold
SoreThroat
Sloan’s Liniment gives
quick relief for cough, cold,
hoarseness, sore throat,
croup, asthma, bay fever
and bronchitis,
HERE'S PROOF.
Me ALBERT w. Price, of Fredonia,
Kau, writes ‘We use Sloan's Lind
ment in the family and find it an ex-
eslient relief for colds and hay fever
attacks, It stops coughing and FLecs
ing sJauost Lustanily.
SLOANS
LINIMENT
RELIEVED SORE THROAT.
Mes. 1 Barwa, of Modellc, Fla,
t . ie of ¥ ur
All 348 yout ;
wore year
and § 8 roid, 3 throat was uble.’
GOOD FOR COLD AND CROUP.
Me W H STRAN 1 ¢
Aver
tie boy next
the mnt y $ y
hres drops on sugar
before g g to bed, and he got up
without the croup in the mo runing.”
Price, 25¢.,500.,81.00
She gare tb
Sloan's
Treatise
on the
Horse
sent free,
DROPS TRRATED. Give guick re
Bef, msuaily retnove swel
Nong and short breath In & Tew days and
entire relief in 1b40 darn, trial treslnent
FREE. Ph. GREENS SONS, Be: 4. Atssts, Ge
of this paper desiring «o buy
Readers anything advertised in its col
umns should insist upon having what they
aikior, refusing all subftitutesor in mitationd
Agents In Fsers Fown rt ow ® :
Be 4 siart at once rR and
rR © $50 a week com assured
stignte todas ACME SALES ©O., Bay
2308, Fairhill sation, Philadelphia, Pa
W. N. U, BALTIMORE, NO. 3-1913
bronchial, throat and I
consumption, the
over ity GOLUEN
“Discovery ton
Nature's own way. It's just the thew builder
edical Dis-
book of 1,008
MEDICAL DISCOVERY =
Cloth-bound, sent poste