The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, February 05, 1914, Image 7

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    DYNAMITE FOR STUMPS
iF JUDGMENT I8 USED IT MAY BE
HANDLED WITH SAFETY.
Never Under Any Circumstances Un-
dertake to Thaw Explosives Be-
fore Fire or in Stove—Always
Foliow Printed Directians.
(By GEORGE ROBERTS.)
land of stumps, one cannot be too
the caps used to set it off. If
with perfect safety. It should be
stored in a dry, well-ventilated place,
where the temperature will not rise
above 90 degrees F. The caps should
be kept in a separate place, as they
are much easier set off than the dyna-
mite. It is unnecessary to tell most
persons that dynamite should be pro-
tected from heavy
Hkely to be done. A few
at Jellico, Tenn. by a boy firing into
the car with a 22-caliber rifle.
Most dynamite freezes at
perature between 40 and 50
F.
the freezing point of water.
dynamite should not be used. Never
attempt to thaw it until printed di
rections, which come with every
(and if no directions are inclosed, ob-
tain them from your dealer),
been thoroughly studied.
a tem
dertake to thaw dynamite before
fire or in a stove,
an augur and a tamping rod. An old
FIND VALUE OF DAIRY COWS
Only Accurate Way Is by Use of Milk
Scales and Babcock Test-—Busi-
ness Methods Necessary.
(By R. G. WEATHERSTONE.)
The value of a dairy cow depends
upon the amount of milk and butter
fat she produces and the guality of
calves she ralees as compared with
cattle can in the majority of cases
ones, but in the intermediate grades
called dalry type make grave mis
takes, If there were no other means
of judging the value of dairy cows ex-
in dairying would be more a matter of
chance than is now the case. The
mining the value of dairy cows is by
The Exhibit Showed the Amount of
Butter Produced by Three Cows—
A Poor, a Good and an Exception
ally Good Cow. The Amounts Pro-
duced Were 12 Pounds, 360 Pounds
and 800 Pounds, Respectively. In
Which Class Are Your Cows?
cock test, With this clean, accurate
and convenient method of finding the
fat content of milk, no dairyman can
Never use a hammer or any other ob
ject for driving the tamping rod
The hole is bored at an angle of
about 45 degrees, so that the charge
Position of Auger in Boring Hole.
will come under the center of the
stump. If stumps are hollow, of
course the charge will bave to
located under some firm part of the
stump. Some blasters throw =a
chain tightly around the hollow
stumps to facilitate their removal.
The desirability of testing cows has
years. Scores
of examples could be cited where test
ing has meaat intreased profits, It
is generally accepted that many dairy
cows yield inadequate returns end
that their removal from tee herd
The easy means of
“robbers” (the Babcock
and ecales) are well known and
ting
what she wishes for
It is not enough that the
a profit. [ach cow in the
herd should be contributing her share
toward the total profit. Until dairy-
detecting the
her feed.
they
depends upon several conditions:
character of the stump; the character
of the soil, and whether it
dry; whether the stump is green
PLANT AND D FRUIT | DISEASES
Many People still ignorant of Benefits
to Be Derived by Spraying for
Fungus, Scab, Etc,
With all the publicity that has been
given in recent years to the subject
of plant and fruit diseases and the
root system. Therefore it is mani
festly impossible to give specific direc-
tions as to the amount of dyn
be used. The amount of
quired to blow stumps of
kind in the same soll
the
does not vary
nearly with the square of the diame
ter, or, in other words, with the area
of a cross section of the stump
area of a cross section of a stump 48
inches in diameter ig 16 times as great
a8 the area of a cross section of
stump 12 inches in diameter
i
the explosive shall be used in a given
case,
ig from two and onehalf to three
times as great as for dead ones
WINTER RATION FOR TURKEYS
Only Sufficient Food Should Be Given
to Keep the Birds in Good
Healthy Condition.
(By C. BE. BROWN,
west Experiment
Minn.)
During the winter €eason the stock
turkeys should be fed and watered
twice a day. Only sufficient food
should be given to keep them in good
healthy condition. When winter is
over it is advisable to feed them a
emall amount of grain each evening
to encourage them to return to their
roosting quarters and thus prevent
them from wandering away with other
flocks. The following ration Is a good
one for the turkeys: Mix equal parts
by weight of corn or barley, oats and
wheat screenings, and in addition to
this green food should be supplied
once a day. For this purpose mangels,
cabbage or clover leaves are the best.
Grit and water should be supplied at
all times,
Poultryman., North-
Station, Crookston,
Valuable Clover Crop.
As a soiling crop, to be hauled di
rect from the field to the manger,
clover has no equal, except possibly
alfalfa. As a green manure crop, it
fs especially valuable. As a usual
thing, failures with clover ean be at
tributed ww a lack of knowledge, or
inattention to, the details of its grow-
ing. It is to the apparently "little
things” that the most successful
clover growers attribute their success.
Breeding Places.
The old decaying apple trees in the
orchard are veritable breeding places
for all sorts of fruit pests. Keep them
well chopped out, using them for fire
wood this winter and replacing them
with new, healthy trees.
Paddock for Stallion.
Every stalion should have a paddock
to run in, especially Af he does not
get regular exercise,
ing, it Is surprising how many people
there are who still imagine that sooty
fungus, blotch, scab, are only
natural characteristics the fruit,
believe that
be prevented
ete.
of
such imperfections may
to a large extent by thorough appli
cations of fungicides, writes W. Bal.
lard of the Maryland experiment sta-
tion,
In the same connection he
the limesulphur solution
was not as effective as a summer
Sprayed Apples.
gection of Maryland where the station
is located, and suggests that to es.
cape Bordeaux injury that the first
two sprayings after the petals have
fallen the limesulphur solution
should be used and the latter spray-
ings,
When the fruit is near maturity and
less liable to guffer from Bordeaux
injury the Bordeaux eprayings should
be made,
Depleted Soil Is by Plowing Under
Some Green Crop.
The plowing under of green crops
like peas, oats, clover, alfalfa and
other grasses, is, next to a liberal use
of barnyard manure, the most ap
of new land,
Where this is practiced in connec
need be no fear of any deterioration
in the soll. Indeed, if a sufficiency of
live stock Is kept and the products
of the farm mainly transformed into
beef, mutton and poultry before being
sold, the land will grow richer and
more valuable with each successive
year,
Profitable Cows.
In a profitable dairy herd some
cows may be good enough to pay their
own board bill and that of two or
three unprofitable cows as well. They
can all be made to pay by the use of
scales and the Babcock test.
Bell the Poor Sheep.
Have you any sheep that are not
paying their keep? Sell them off, Half
a dozen poor sheep make a big hole
in your profit, especially if you keep
a small flock,
COMMERCIAL
Weekly Review of Trada and
: Market Reports.
R. G.
trade says:
“While there is tangible evidence of
continued expansion in general busi.
the betterment is not entirely
uniform. Advices from leading centers
are rather mixed, yet favorable
of an opposite
aracter and sentiment is more con-
fident. In the Important iron and
steel industry the belief is strength-
ening that the turning point has about
it Is
pected that the recovery from pre-
vious depression will be rapid. Labor,
mill
in prices,
concessions are not so fre
466 in the
350 last year.”
“Fallures numbered
Bradstreet's says:
financial,
manifestly
than & week or a month ago.
ently the presidential mossage
helped to clear the economic at:
phere and business men seem more
disposed to go ahead. The fact is
“Sentiment
is better
Appar-
timental, improvement has come
pass within the week and in its gen-
eral aspects the belterment
cumulative,
“Bank discounts in most of the
dominantly commercial countries
the world are lower, t releasing
funds for commercial enterprises.”
111 8
Eeems
pre.
Wholesale Markets
NEW firm;
to arrive;
do
YORK.--Wheat--Spot
No. 2 hard winter, 98, ¢ | {,
No. 2 red. 101% nominal, elevator,
mestic; No. 1 Northern Manitoba,
110%. f o b, afloat; No. 1 Northem
Duluth, 101% f o b afloat
Corn-—8pot steady; new
low, 68% ¢. cf,
Butter Steady ;
extras, 30G 3c;
Cheese-—Skims,
Egge— Fresh
36c; extra firsts, |
33: seconds, J
No
3 yel-
to arrive,
creamery, held,
firsts, 28201
13% @14c.
gathered, extras, 35@
1% 6 34 120
@31;
- LF
seconds,
=
firats,
refrigerator,
WGI;
S State Pe nnsyl
r browns, 35@
mized
7
firsts, 30@G30%;
lower grades, 21G2%;
sania and nearby,
36: do, gathered
colores, 32% @34;
@ 31.
Live Poultry
13%c¢; fowls, 156%: turkeys, 18; dross.
ed quiet: fresh killed W estern chick-
ens, 15624; fowls, 15@ 18%;
18@ 25.
henn
browns and
European, fresh,
Western « Snlclens,
turkeys,
PHILADELPHIA
ern creamery extra
fancy
Cheese
Hutter
nearby printa
Weal.
35
New York full {
1T%@ 17%
Live Poultry
16.
Wheat-—No. 2 red
No. 1 Northern Int
ream
export, ah
iluth, export,
15G065;
10Q
eal
: Febr UATY,
BALTIMORE.
spot and January,
March, 893%.
Corn—-8Spot,
Oats-—No, 3
No. 2
87s
r ed
66% cc; January, 66%
white, in elevator, 4340.
No. 3 white, 43%
Western Rye-— No. 2, domestie,
export, 65. No. 3, domestie,
65@G 66; No. 4, domestic, 61@6
Hay--Timothy-—No. 1, $17.50;
ard, $16.50@ 17: No. 2,
$14@15. Clover Mixed -— Light,
No. 1, $15.50@16; No. 2, $14 @
15: heavy. $1450@ 15.50. Clover--No.
1, $15.60; No. 2, $13@ 14.50.
Straw Straight Rye-—No. 1, $15.50
@16; No. 2, $1450@15. Tangled
No. 1, $1150@12. Wheat-—-No 1.
$850; No. 2, 87. Oat-No. 1, $%@
9.50; No. 2, $3@9.
Butter—Creamery, fancy, 34@35:
creamery, choice, 30@33; creamery,
good, 26@28; creamery, prints, 230
38: creamerv, blocks, 32@36; ladles,
Rye
stand.
$1550@16; No.
20@21.
Maryland, Pennsylvania and
nearby, firsts, 33¢; Western, firsts, 32;
rolls,
firsts, 30. Recrated and re-
Live Poultry-——Chickens, old hens,
do, old hens,
cholce, 17; do,
14@156; do,
turkeys, hens, 22; do, young
rough and poor, 12; guinea fowl, old,
each, 30; do, do, young, each, 60; do,
do, small and poor, each, 28.
Dressed Poultry—Turkeys,
hens, 22@23; do, mixed hens and
young gobblers, 20821; do, old toms,
18; chickens, choice, young, 17; do,
old and mixed, 15@18; do,
roosters, 106011; ducks, 16@18; geese,
nearby, 15@16; do, Western and
Southern, 11@12; capons, 7 Ibs. and
over, 22; do, medium, 19¢20: do,
small and slips, 16@17.
PITTSBURGH. ~~ Cattle — Cholee,
$8.60@8.90; prime, $8.4008.60.
Sheep—Prime wethers, $6.60@06.75;
culls and commons, $8@3.60; lambs,
$608; veal calves, $11@12, A
-
Live Stock
There's no rest and but little peace for
8 person whose kidneys are out of order,
Lame In the morning, suffering cricks
Just one round of pain and trouble.
It would be strange if all-day back-
ache did not wear on the temper, but
it i# not only on that account that
people who suffer with weak kidneys
are nervous, cross and irritable,
Uric acid is poison to the nerves,
and when the kidneys are not working
well, this acid collects In the blood
and works upon the nerves, causing
headache, dizziness, languor, an in-
clination to worry over trifies, and a
suspicious, short temper,
Rheumatic pain, neuralgia, sciatiea,
lumbago, neuritis and gravel are fur-
ther steps in uric acid poisoning.
Don’t neglect kidney weakness. An
aching back, with unnatural passages
of the kidney gecretions, is
enough to suspect the kidneys.
Doan’'s Kidney Pills, a remedy which
has been used for years, the world
over, for weak kidneys, backache, {r-
IE
KIDNEY)
J TK
es,
WITH FATHER #
Youth Got His Idea of the
Duties of a Wife.
ous
me turn them out,” suggested six
year-old Jack to little Doris.
His playmate obediently complied
"Now we'll bulld a castle, and you
shall fetch the water to go round it,
exclaimed Jack
Dutifully the maid
up and down the beach, carry
ets of water
“Can't you fetch
Jack.” she suggested,
it round?
“Girls can’t do that properly,”
swered the boy. "Let's paddle
say, Doris, do you want to mary
when you grow up?”
“Yes-—-oh, yes!” Doris was delighte
the prospect.
The however, ass
air, and lazily extended his
ward her
“Very
lantly
wife
ings’
little struggled
ing buck
the now,
“and let me pour
water
at
med a bot
fect
boy,
to
noncha
be
then,” he
you're going
off my shoes
sald
fo
and
wall,
“It
take
ve
¥
my
is Typhoid Conquered?
Vaccination to prevent smallpox is
80 general this country and has
been so effective in abolishing what
was formerly one of the most destruc.
tive scourges of the human race that
nearly everybody except the
number of people whose temperament
predisposes them to “take the other
glide”
gos In
and recognis
in
it one of
est blessings ferred by
medical advancement But
vaccination ls somewhat comparative
iy new, with which the public as
whole is not familiar. Yet it will be
well for the public to take heed of the
results that have been obtained by its
ase in the United Slates
Cleveland Leader \
It's a fine thing to be a leader, but it
fs better to follow a good example than
to set a bad one.
—————————
Many a man fails to get the re
the
mod
typhoid
great
Con ern
be
ANOTHER COFFEE WRECK
What's the Use When There's an Easy
Way Out?
Along with the coffee habit has
grown the prevalent “American Dis-
ease nervous prostration,
out of the trouble:
“Five years ago 1 was a great cof-
fee drinker and from fits use 1 be
came s0 nervous 1 could scarcely
sleep at all nights. My condition grew
worse and worse until finally the phy-
gician 1 consulted declared my trou
bles were due to coffee,
“But being so wedded to the bev.
without it, especially at breakfast,
as that meal seemed incomplete with-
ful. At the end of about eight days
1 was less nervous, but the craving
making a wreck of me,
heard of Postum and decided to
try it. 1 did not like it at first, be
ever, that when made after directions
on the package, it was delicious.
“It had a soothing effect on my
none of the bad effects
#0 1 bade farewell to
Lvery Picture
“Ok, I shall go mad.”’
We are never too old to learn
things that are of no use to us,
Dean's
coughs by stop
Stores
the tickle
Drops
oc at
They stop
Cough stop
Drug
Fragile.
Elsie (after being lectured)
the commandments break
9
don't they?
Little
Mamma,
ul easy
Astonishing Tobacen Remedy - Guarantesd
to lostantly ressove taste for o gareiles or Lobaooo
Bn any form. or money cheerfully refunded. Bend
Se and receive wonderful remedy by return mal
AdGross Desk K, Tebaoos Cleese Co. Wiekits, Kassne. adv,
Quite Frenchy.
“Your friend is always
isn't he
“Yen,
feur.”
chafling
wos
he
indeed;
Be sure that you as)
Vegetable Pills, snd
ture of Wm, Wright
For Constipation, Bil
on. Ady
Vienna's Model Tenements.
Vienna bulids tenem for
poor. Each building is supplied with
a cooperative for the benefit of
the tenants
its
enis
store
Progress,
“How Is 8h
getting on?
“Splendidly
steps last
your iakespearian
We
week “Life
jearned two
Stinging.
your pardon,
something?”
“Er
haven't
the would be
“No, 1 haven't But
lady th a dog chain
ber you're locking for.”
Slundered,
Cigar, old man?
Thanks! (puff, puff)
this Aren't
too?
ah, but
you
beg
lost
fiir.
Tiss
there
It's
goes a
w probably
Exe
Wye
wooed
smoke,
Exe {examining the
| =No, | think not
{ Wye—~What's the matter?
igive me the wrong
J yransenipt
you going
.
ong
George Ade on Matrimony.
George Ade, discussing matrimony
{in an afterdinner speech at the Chi
{ cago Athletic club, said:
| “Marriage has the effect of
a man a swelled head
“Many a time, looking at this hus
band, or that, I say to myself:
giving
Practical Celebration.
He was idealistic and poeticzl
was practical--a good matrimonial
combination.
said:
wedding?
And she sald:
know it.
day and have it all arranged.
ordered a big wagon load of kindling
to be delivered tomorrow afternoon,
and you will come home early from
the office and carry it into the cel
lar.”
Common Form of Insanity,
A party of Clevelanders entertained
some holiday visitors and having
| showed them everything interesting in
them to Newburg for a view of the
a genial frame of mind and he oon-
ducted the bunch personally.
“Here is a queer case, ladies,” he
sald, pausing at a particular cell
“This man has the delusion that he
possesses the motive power that runs
the universe. He is perfectly harm-
loss, but he actually believes that
without him the world would nol
move. Strange notion, isn't it?”
“Why, not at all!” exclaimed one of
the women. “My husband has the
same idea and he always has had it
Is he crazy, too?”
Thousands of grateful recon
the coumiry
trouble.
mendations throughout
prove their worth,
A PHYSICAL WRECK
| New York City Woman Tells of Awlul Sutfetine
Mrs. Edith Dykeman, 154 W. th
iNew York City, N. Y., says: "Three y
ago I was so run down in health thal "3
was @& pervous wreck. 1 was afflietéd
| with a severe case of disordered 3.
[Rays and doctors treated me without
benefit. My kidneys acted cither oo ay
{ly or else the action was retarded and
| the passages of the secretions caused je
| much pain. My back ached rightfully
{day and pight and 1 often rolled and
{ tossed for hours, unable to go to sign
In the morning I feit all worn out apd
was hardly able to do my housework
Whenever 1 stooped to pick up anyililng
| from the floor, | was hardly abl )
i straighten again. 1 had terrible
Lepells and specks seemed to be float]
front of me. If 1 walked up or
stairs, I was completely worn out 0"
weakness, The least excitement brought
on an attack of nervousness and 1 A
and around, My health
{ Bomeone advised me
ney Pills and the first few doses hel
me. I kept right on until I was ent!
cured and 1 am now in the best of heanlf
I feel Jike a different woman and Dag
Kidney Pills alone deserve the credif™
was all run do
to take Doan's K
They
“1 guess,”
“I've seen the
for 1 once 8:
er by a tongu
“Is that so?
“Well, 1've
han that 1 lived
Yani
Cleveland
were discussing
horse raclie
observed the vanes.
gest race ever run
adjudged win
e's length”
drawled the English
seen a closer thee
two years in Sb
leader
clo
2 horse
The
“Who started
the underworld?
“1 guess it
Pioneer.
the firet exposure of
was the first volcano.”
Only One “BROMO QUININE”
That is LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Logk for
the signature of B W GROVE Cores 5 Cold InUng
my. Cores Grip in Two ays He
And Jam,
does your
“How little boy
nulsion ?™
“WV compulsion
ith pu
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets first put my
} years ago. They regulate and orale,
iver and bowels, bugar-cosied
nules. Ady,
A
woman
afraid of any
ws 8 5 Foon g €
man is afraid of an
because he knows
thing
Erelids and
Roman Frye
Sore Eyes, Grasuisted
prompt y healed wilh
sam. Adv
Bike
Baw
big
neighbors
It isn't alwa
{ looks down on his
vs the rpest man who
Stiff Muscles
are quickly relieved by Sloan’s
Linimest. Lay it oo—no rub-
bing. Try it
Ankle Sprain and Dislocated Hip,
“1 aprained my ankle and dislocated
my hip by falling out of a third story &
win. ow, Went on crutches for four
months. Then | started to use your
Liniment, according to directions, |
must say it is helping me wonderfully,
We will never be without Sean's Lind
ment apymare. a Johnson, Lasosen.
Sension, N ee ¥.
SLOANS
LINIMENT
Kills Pain
Splendid for Sprains.
“1 fell and sprained my arm 8 week
ago and was in terrible pain, I could
not use my hand or arm until 1 applied
your Liniment. 1 shall never be with.
out a botile of Sloan's Liniment,
H. B. Springer, Elisabeth, N.
Fine for Stiffness.
"Sloan's Liniment has done more
Jood | than anything 1 have ever A
stl joints, | got my hand hur
badly that | had to stop eh rent
the busiest time of the year. ] thought 1
al first that | would have to have
band taken off, bat | got a bottle of
Sloan's Liniment and cured my hand,’
well sloon W howler, Morria, Ala,
free, instructive
book on horses,
cattle, hogs and
policy
Dr. EARL S. SLOAN, Inc.
BOSTON, MISS.
Pleasant wow
DENTA s
BREE
fay Tapas
a bad "
25¢c =~ JHE TUBE « 25¢
rr, a ~
FOR SALE--213 A. NEAR NO A. 2
Moa cult, ay i NEAR NOREOLICY
barns. ote. J WH. Bonney, RB 3
Walk The Floor 7”
fh