The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, July 30, 1914, Image 7

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    IN SUCH PAIN
WOMAN CRIED
Suffered Everything Until Re-
stored to Health by Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegeta-
ble Compound.
Florence, So. Dakota. —*‘I used to be
down pains and
backache, and had
headache a good
deal of the time and
very little appetite.
The pains were so
bad that I used to
sit right down on the
floor and cry, be-
“ cause it hurt me so
and I could not do
any work at those
times. An old wo-
man advised me to try Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound and I got a
bottle. I felt better the next month so
I took three more bottles of it and got
well so I could work all the time. 1
hope every woman who suffers like I did
will try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound.’’ — Mrs. P. W. LANSENG,
Route No. 1, Florence, South Dakota.
Why will women continue to suffer day
In and day out or drag out a sickly, half-
hearted existence, missing three-fourths
of the joy of living, when they can find
health ie Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound?
For thirty years it has been the stand-
ard remedy for female ills, and has re-
gtored the health of thousands of women
who have been troubled with such ail-
ments as displacements, inflammation,
ulceration, tumors, irregularities, ete.
If youn want special advice write to
Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confl«
dential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will
be opened, read and answered by a
woman and held in striet confidenee.
Mrs. S. y.% Allen's
ed - Color Te
[OT Your Youthful INT
The Wretchedness
of Constipation
Can quickly be overcome by
CARTER’S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS.
Purely vegetable
act surely and
gently on the
liver. Cu
Biliousness,
Head-
ache,
Dizzi- a
ness, and Indigestion. They do their duty.
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.
Genuine must bear Signature
Sew Ford
Keeps
The Skin Fair
You can have a beautiful pink
and white complexion if you use
Glenn's
Sulphur Soa
Contains 30° Pure Sul
Use it daily in bath and toilet.
Prevents and removes skin troubles,
Healing and
: TEAY
HAIR BALSAM
A toilet preparation of merit,
Fo 10 erad ie nit dandrufl,
Beauty to Gray or Faded Mair,
Se. and $1.90 as Drugyists.
& shortbreath often gives entire pelie
Inisto28 days. Trial treatmenteent Free
Dr. THOMAS E. GREEN, Successor to
Dr. H. H. Greens Sons, Box 0, Atlanta, Ga.
————— EE ——
A Mere Toy.
all of his time at play
Hez-—~How does he manage that?
Honest,
Dyer-—What do you think has beer
most influential in shaping your ea
reer?
Ryer—Work.~
~Judge,
Granulated Eyelids,
Eyes inflamed by ex
sure to Sun, Dust nd Wind
quickly eeved by Marne
Sore
Eyes iia
Your ist's Son per Bottle. Murine Eye
Salvein Tubes 25¢c. For Dookotthe Eye Freeads
Druggists or Murine Eye Remedy Ce.,
W. N. U.. BALTIMORE, NO. 31-1914
DEMAND FOR MELONS
EASTERN CITIES.
Culture of Montreal Variety Confined
Almost Exclusively to Small
Group of Growers in Can-
ada-—8kill Required.
WILLIAM STUART.)
Some time ago the writer in
article on cultural studies of
Montreal market muskmelon, showed
that the commercial culture of the
famous Montreal melon is confined
almost wholly to a small group of
growers near Montreal, Canada. It
was also pointed out that
large portion of these melons were
marketed in Boston,
delphia and other large eastern cities
at extremely remunerative prices,
practically no effort was being made
by American gardeners to meet this
demand. More recent observations
have confirmed these statesments,
and in addition, have shown that not-
withstanding the fact that the Mon-
treal growers have for the past few
years received from ten to eighteen
dollars a dozen wholesale for their
melons, they have not as vet suc
ceeded In supplying the demand. The
(By
A Field of Montreal Melons,
writer was
by
years
1 in order to
mand whi
hotels an
¢ rr
Of m
it is
on certain
land of M«
this m
occasionally
flavored m
been
Bre
been
types
mtreal. 1
to have
while
treal
ually
The
when
wers: ind
lacking
crop is a munerative
conditions fave om §1,6(
to $2,600 per acre a u ial re
turns Mr. U. 8 Bla stimates an
average crop at $2250 per acre,
operating expenses, including
est on Investment and depreciation,
of $800. One grower informed the
writer that his average sales from
geven to eight acres was In the
vicinity of $16,000.
These me
The writer
mission house
melon welg
personally
which
with
inter
slons vary greatly in size.
formed by one com
had purchased a
pounds: and he
one eighing
gejected by
was in
that
ne
“ie
pounds been
the grower for seed pu
The average weight of
ranges from 8 to 15
mean weight of
that is to say,
for shipment,
age from
rposes,
No. 1 melons
about 10 pounds;
a dozen melons, packed
will on an aver
120 to 130 pounds.
There seems to be two
types of melons under cultivation,
one of which is roundish oblate, the
other more or less oblong, the first
weigh
distinct
Montreal Melon Weighing 22.5
Pounds.
type being slightly deeper ribbed than
seem to be geparated by any
growers; in fact when
put to a grower as to which
he selected from both, provided thick-
ness and flavor of flesh were satis
factory. As none of the growers in-
terviewed made a practise of hand
fertilization of melons Intended for
#eed purposes, it is not at all certain
that either of these types is fixed.
Feeding Value of Whey.
Whey is a by-product of cheese, and
possesses more or less feeding value
when fed to swine in a judicious man-
ner. Most feeders prefer to feed it
sweet.
| Much Will Go to Waste at’ Harvest
Time Unless Steps Are Taken to
Get Them Into Shape,
| (By W. F, PURDUE.)
Unless steps are taken at harvest
time to save the straw stacks, much
{of the straw will go to waste in one
way or another,
This is practically true where the
stacks are poorly constructed, as they
{ usually are with our modern wire
| etackers if there are no hands on the
| stack at the time of the threshing.
The only way a well shaped, water-
proof stack can be secured is to have
| one or two good hands on the stack as
the grain is being threshed. Then,
after the machine leaves, the stack
| can be completed in a short time, as
the straw will save, with but little
| loss,
If it 18 not possible to have the
| hands on the stack while the straw is
being piled up it can be worked over
afterward This should be done be-
fore rain has fallen to settle the straw,
however, and a fairly job made
of it.
The newly stack should then
be fenced go that the stock cannot run
to it before the straw {8 well settled
A bunch of cattle destroy a new
stack in"a very ehort time if permitted
to have free access to it.
Other animals are not so bad in this
i respect, still, they can do considerable
damage.
| Before any stock are turned to the
straw the scatterings should be gath-
ered fromh the sides of the stack
If they remain about
the form steps on
which limb to the top
good
made
will
are allowed to
etack they
the stock can «¢
of the stac) much damage
the stack should
IONE
Loo h
y be
SlocK
BO Ben}
3 Poi
IMPROVING THE DAIRY HERD
This Can Be Done by Better Housing
and Feeding—Capac of Cow
Can Be Measured.
ity
An Excellent Dairy Type.
from year to year. Every farmer has
to be a better farmer, and
grow better crops, better hogs, Lorses
Year after year Since
an essential part of his
and is that part which for
years supplies him with the
necessary to keep the other
parts solog. why should he not seck
to milk a better cow year than
he milked this year? Aside from the
incent toward Improvement for
improvement's sake, there is the add-
ed advantage of greater profit each
time the cow is milked, which {8s twice
per day for 10 or 11 months of the
{ year. Cow improvement will come,
first, through better housing and bet.
ter feeding. The capacity of the cow
can then be measured. If she does
not reach a standard of profit under
good treatment in housing and feed
ing, the improvement must then come
through the breeding of a better cow.
a desire
aud cattle
dairying is
business,
many
next
ive
Keep Hogs Healthy.
| Anyone who has had experience in
| growing swine and who has tried to
extremely difficult it is. It is not eo
difficult as long as the swine will eat.
Medicine may be put into the food, but
swine that are very {ll will not eat.
Take, for instance, pneumonia:
treatment, when in severe cases heart
failure is feared, It is recommended
| that
he is in danger of heart failure?
the swine so comfortable that they
will not be threatened with heart fail
ure,
Spreading Manure,
On most farms manure can be hauled
and scattered every month of the year
to good advantage. Especially is this
| true where mixed farming Is practised.
It is much better to leave the manure
on the land than in the barnyard or
in piles near the farm buildings. A
manure spreader Is a wonderful help
in lightening the work of unloading
and obtaining a& even distribution
yover the soil
The Markets
NEW
new
YORK.—Wheat—8pot
No. 2 bard, 87%c and No. 2 (new)
86%. July shipment ¢ § f, New
York; No. 1 Northern Duluth, 100, and
No
afloat.
Corn—S8pot firm; No.
elf iY arrive,
Butter—Steady
Creamery extras, 27% @28c.
Cheege—Steady and unchanged;
ceipts, 1,506 boxes.
Eggs—8tate,
by hennery white, 24@ 2%¢c.
Dressed Poultry-—Quiet;
chickens, frozen, 14% @20c: fowls, 12
@19; turkeys, 25@26. Live- Deady
Western chickens, broilers, 22@ 23%
we'd 4
fowls, 17@ 17%; turkeys, 15.
2 yellow, Tc
receipts, 6,900 tubs,
re
Wes tern |
PHILADELPHIA
port elevator, No. 2 red, spot,
@84c; do do, July, R2@ 83c
Northern Duluth 98% @09%ec.
Corn-—-Car lots, new,
79% @80c; steamer yellow, 79@
3 vellow, TRUK @ 79
No. 2 white, 46 @45%¢c; stand.
44% @45c; No. 3 white, 43%
4, 41% @42%¢c
Western golid-packed cream.
fancy, specials, 30%c; extra,
extra firsts, 28¢c; firsts, 26Q
seconds, 28@25¢; nearby prints,
average extra,
seconde, 24G 26«
of faney prints
extra, 26¢
gtandard crate
lots, in ex
old, 53
Neo. 1
Car
ye How,
9 Er Cs,
No. 2
do do, No
Oats
ard white
Q 44¢ No
Butter
ery,
28%¢c
27¢;
fancy, 22
firsts, 27@ 2R¢:
bing sales
Eggs
0@ile:
fob-
30Q 38
Nearby
$6.75
nt receipts, 36@6.0
dozen, fir
per dozen:
per
ounds 1.50
c@$1.10.
Wheat-—-No
B45. August
BALTIMORE
and July,
i No. 2
4
and July, 8835: Aum
ber
r
853,
=4
red Western >
spot
September
16st and
ontract, 75%e¢
75%¢ nominal
Standard white
white, 42
Rye--Western,
G€7; No 4 do
nearby, as to quality,
port delivery; No. 2
&64c; No. 3 do, 61Qg62
asl
Hay — Timothy
21.00; standard, $1850@2
$18@ 1850; No. 3. $1600@ 18.00, Light
mixed, $1850@G18.006; No. 1,
$18.00@1850; No. 2, $15.00@ 17.00,
Heavy, $1650G17.00. Chicago Clover
No. 1, $1450@15.00; No. 2, $12.00@
12.00; No. 3, $1004@ 12.00
Straw--Straight Rye-No. 1
@ 14.00; 2. $12.50@13.00
Rye-—~No. 1. $11.00: No. 2, $16.00@
1050. Wheat-—No. 1. $800: No. 2
$7.00@7.50. Oate
No. 1, $500@ 88 50;
No. 2, $7.00@7.50
Butter—Creamery, fancy,
choice, 27@ 28; creamery,
@ 26; creamery, prints, 20@ 30;
blocks, 28@ 29; ladles, 19@
and Pennsylvania rolls,
rolls, 17@17%;: West
Virginia rolls, 17@ 17%: storepacked,
17¢17%: Maryland, Virginia and
Pennsylvania dairy prints, 17G17%
Cheese—Jobbing lots, per Ib, 168%
@17c
Eggs
nearby firste, 20c: Western firsts, 20:
West Virginia firsts, 20; Southern
firsts, 19. Recrated or rehandled eggs,
iL@ 1c per dozen higher.
Live Poultry Chickens—01ld hens,
heavy. 18¢; old hens, small to medium,
18; old roosters, do, 10; springs, 1% @
Corn
dull; spot
Cats
§8@6%¢c: No. 3 do. 86
64065; bag of
new, 60 72 Ex
Western, 63
No. 4 do, 60
lots
rye,
No. 1. $20 50@
a 0B
No. 2
0 00
clover
$13.50
Tangled
No
RL @29,
good, 25
creamery,
20; Maryland
1IR@ 18%: Ohio
21. Ducks-—-0ld, do, 11@12¢:
gpring, puddle, 8 Ibe and over, 16@17.
20c; old, do,
Live Stock
NEW YORK.-:-Beeves-—Calvees, $2;
veals, $9.50@12; culls, 7@%; butter
milk calves nominal.
Sheep--$3@5.25;
lambe, $7@ 9.40;
lambs, $8.75.
Hogs-—Recelpts, 1,000 head; easy.
culls, $2506 2.75;
top price Virginia
CHICAGO. —~Hogs—Bulk, $880@9;
light, $865@0.06; mixed, $R.55@9.05;
heavy, $8.40@ 9.06; rough, $840G 8.56;
ples, $7.80@9.05,
Cattle—Beeves, $7.70@0.90; steers,
$6,406 8.30; stockers and feeders, 85.75
@8; cows and heifers, $3.90§9.10;
calves, $7.60@11
away.
You'll finish refreshed,
pisced anywhere, at-
tracts snd kills dl
Sies. Neat clean, or.
Damental, convenient,
chong Lasts ail
tenson Maude of
metal, can'tepilior tip
over; will not soil or
injure anything.
isarantesd effective,
Alldeslers ortsent
express pwd for 81.06,
TAROLD SOMERS, 100 DeKalb Ave, Brockiys, N. XY.
DAISY FLY KILLER
Family's HEALTH I
bvde Candies ®
L060 eubie feet, de Tor bbe
pric oh
Tk: s Buu
Fasune i indents (a,
ais
tpocing Bal ime re, Bd
mikes # y Dab
Tefant
IN NO POSITION TO PREACH
Stranger Lost the Confidence of Truth
ful Fish He Made
erman When
His inquiry
even Know
Can't Find This Perfect Woman.
: p ne
fan 1
Spar jard
Iuded discov
Mole Trap the Best
The best
ground mole
will probably be
$
way 1t exterminate
is to use a mole traj
good {rag successful
eventually
man of many
the different
It is possible to be a
parts by
kinds of
trying to be all
fool at once
PRIZE FOOD.
Palatable, Economical, Nourishing.
woman has outlined the
and that
She
A Nebr.
from personal experience
writes:
“After our long experience with
Grape-Nuts, I cannot say enough in
its favor. We have used this food al
continually for seven Years.
“We sometimes tried other adver
1 was
“After using Grape-Nuts a short
am a well woman. My two children
Nuts, which they eat three times a
day.
“They are pictures of health and
have never had the least symptom of
stomach trouble, even throligh the
most severe siege of whooping cough
they could retain Grape Nuts when all
else failed.
“Grape-Nuts food has saved doctor
bills, and has been, therefore, a most
economical food for us"
Name given by Postum Co. Battle
Creek, Mich. Read “The Road to Well
ville,” in pkge. “There's a Reason”
Ever read the ahove Retort A mew
from time They
oe Eeauine, true — Pe human
Wieneret
ATLANTA, GA. 4 you see 28
¥4 Arrow think
of Coca-Cola,
56 CENTS WORTH
WONDER a ¢
LIFTER, CAN OPENER, BOTTLE OF
STOVE LID LIFTER and TACH EXT
ER : r '
¥
for
ho
Agen: * wanted; rei ie
Write a
fetime The
system, 1303 Maonadneo
Slop wags waver formules a
# for manufacisrin
g pelle vip oh Sent 16
HOBBS CO. BOX 631, Lot ISVILLE, KY,
¥ ernishing
(hieageo, TL
Arthur ¥ I Stile
ck Block
re
® Ter.
W in 2
IMMENSE RELL ER- Big pr
ple box Wonder ( i }
ware Housew You £72Y Ab $11 Bos 3 BY
GULTED y CL Indias
ure it in ten
min
utes wi
SYRUP
mplainte,
like 11 be
be w Can be
d 3s cents, at a druggists. Trial bottle
AHRKEY & SON
THEY HAD TO BE
RE 0
whadie
" "D. ¥ , Haceasrown,
“SEBENS?
Method of
Mat.
Quite Plain to
Bena's
ter of 8
Reasoning in
noer
a 5
rstand.
lication
Was co
Lizzie
ely
Mollo-
mplet
sold
ample of each
Address post.
~ Adv,
intent
‘Cuticura, Dept. L., Boston
Revolutionary Patriot.
lovell, a distinguished pa
the Revolution, died 100 years
town of Windham, Me. Mr
rn in Boston in 1737 and
Harvard college at
He delivered,
James
triot of
ago in the
Lovell was Ix
graduated from
the age of fourteen
April 2, 1771, the oration before the
town authorities on the Doston mas
Sacre Because of his display of pa
trioctism he was imprisoned by Gen
eral Gage immediately after the battle
Subsequently he was
conveyed to Halifax with the British
end remained in confinement
until exchanged for Governor Skene in
the latter part of 1776. From 1778
until 1782 Mr. Lovell was a member of
the Continental congress. In later life
Boston.
Long-Lived Family.
The record for longevity is held by
land, the oldest member of which, Mr.
James Garrett, has just passed away.
Mr. Garrett claimed to be the oldest
fisherman in Scotland. A native of
Stranraer, he was almost a hundred
years old. His mother and father,
who were also natives of the district,
lived until they were one hundred and
one hundred and three years respec
tively. His oldest surviving son fis
now well over seventy years of age.
The Superior Sex.
One reason why man is superior to
woman is because a man always
knows where he got his headache
Cincinnati Buguirer,
It isn’t anti] A man approaches the
top that the world fs anxious to give
him a boost.
It's a corking goad idea to bottle up
your wrath.