The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, May 06, 1915, Image 7

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    away
“bargain
roofing” when you can
get the best roofing at a rea-
sonable price of your own local
dealer whom you wl
uy materials that last
ain-teed
Roofing
is guaranteed in writing 5 years for
1-ply, 10 years for 2-ply, and 15 years
for 3-ply, and the responsibility of
our big mills stands behind this guar-
antee. Its quality is the highest and
its price the most reasonable,
| General Roofing Manufacturing Co.
World's largest manufacturers of Roofing
and Building Papers
Mew York Boston
VISIT 5
California's “Jj
Expositions
via
Northern Pacific Ry
and Great Northern Pacific
S. 8. Co,
Low Round Trip Fares Daily
Through trains from Chicago, St. Louts
and Kansas City to Puget Sound, the
Mediterranean of America,”
Stop Off at
Yellowstone National Park
Enter via Gardiner Gateway and Northern
fic RY. for u tour of America's only Gey.
ecriand and Nature's own World's Exposition.
onally escorted tours to and through the
during season ~ June 15 to Sept. 15, 3
SEND FOR FREE TRAVEL
LITERATURE, in
lustrated Expos
and let us assist v
ning your 1915 vacation,
A. M. CLELAND,
Gen'l Pass. Ages, 538 Sorthern
Paeifle Bid: 82 Proll Nios
DAISY FLY KILLER Zac soem ob
tracts and kills all
- lise. Neat, clean, or
3 nameniai, con reuient
cheap. Lasts ei
season, Madsof
metal, ean'tepilior tip
over; will not soll or
injure anything.
inarantesd effective.
Alldeniers orisent
express paid for $1.00,
BAROLD SOMERS, 150 De Kalb Ave, Broskiys, §. ¥
us 14
ous SILO bill in half.
Gataiogue and informa) OG. Flisa & Biro.
Buffalo, N. ¥ Liberal Terms 0 Live Agonts.
EARN
RAISING GINSENG makes more money for
you than anything an Write CHAK, W,
MELD, Dept. X 1114 Falton 5. Brookiyn N.Y.
feed
5 fron
£5 to £90 a week as our re pro~
sentative Particulars FHER
Bagrmans Redicine Co, Washington I €
His Action.
“Ah, squire,” saluted
bore, “what are you
rheumatism these days?”
“Examining the
apother,” snarled
see how much
Judge
village
for your
the
doing
doctors one after
the old codger, “to
they } .
DRUGGIST
Rew ort
YOUR OWN WiLL
TELL YOu
is No =a
Ah!
He good
sho
ile
Pelican
Is she a
Not scrupulously
THERE IS
NOTHING
/
y $0 GOOD AS
ER’S
RIEL 1ATISM
EPRAINS
NEURALGIA
WOUNDS, &e.
Read This Testimony
“For & years | sulfored with Hhoumatism and
bad to walk om cratehes, T doctors said
my caso was chromlo and {pearable 1 i od]
Yager. Liniment. It 1a the best Liniment to
relieve palo | ever used. 11's action 1s prompt
atid affective”
JOHN ABFRMAN, Clermont Milla, M4
= Lottie, 25e., at nil deniers
Lars y 2
GILSEAT (ROS. & CO, I-c., Mire, Bailmars, Me.
A Soluble Antiseptic Powder to
be dissolved in water as necded
For Douches
In the local treatments of woman's mn
such as lencorrhoea and inflammation, bh
No woman who has ever used medicated
donches will fail to appreciate the clean and
heathy condition Paxtine produces and the
prompt relief from soreness and discomfors
which follows its use. This is because Paxtine
fomedases superior cleansing, disinfects
and healing properties
# or ten years the Lydia E.
nkham Medicine Co. has reo. §
emaended Paxtine in their |
private o ndence with wo.
men, which proves its superi-
ority, Women who have pn
relieved may it is
weight in gold.” At druggists,
. large box or by mail. Sample free,
Paxton Toilet Co., Boston, Masa,
“ worth its
DROPSY TREATD. usually g ves quick
re ial, soon removes swelling
agers ar ev RAR
ys.
AS E. GREE to
Green's Sons, thon A. Chatsworth,
sm
W. N. U, BALTIMORE, NO. 19-1015.
eo
"DISEASE OF POTATOES
|
| Growers Should Be Constantly
| on Watch for Powdery Scab.
|
| in Addition to Being Carried by Seed
| Tubers Trouble May Persist in In-
| fected Soil for Some Time—
Disinfection Is Urged.
Although the attention of sclentific
men was first called to powdery scab
in 1841, the disease had already been
known to German farmers for several
years. The first report of the disease
in the United States was made in 1918,
potatoes from widely separated sec-
tions of the country being found to be
affected.
Investigation shows that, as yet, the
disease has not made great headway
in this country and potato growers
everywhere should be continually on
the watch for it, so the disease may
be quickly stamped out. Bevere at-
tacks occur when potatoes are planted
year after year on infected land.
It is claimed that healthy potatoes
which have been in contact with dis
eased ones may carry powdery scab
This naturally leads to the supposition
that it may be spread by means of
sacks or other containers or by means
of tools, such as planters, ete. An-
other possibility is that plows, har-
rows or other tools used for working
infected land may carry with them the
germs of the disease to contaminate
portions of the farm now free from
powdery scab. Perhaps the most im-
portant fact from the economic stand-
point is that the disease, in addition
to being carried by the seed tubers,
may persist in infeeted soil for some
time, thus making it worthless for
potato culture. One writer claims that
manure of a pig fed with potatoes af-
fected with powdery scab carried the
germs of the disease. Other writers
have pointed out the fact that contam-
inated manure may be a means of
spreading the infection.
No potatoes shduld be planted with-
out first disinfecting them with formal
dehyde or corrosive sublimate, for if
by chance the healthy seed has be
come contaminated this would tend
to eliminate danger from this source.
By careful selection of only sound,
Scab, the Usual Appearance When
Taken From Bins in Winter~Lower
Left Hand, Powdery Scab, Warty
Stage-~Lower Right Hand, Powdery
Scab, Canker Stage.
thoroughly healthy seed tubers, and
then disinfecting it is possible to en
tirely eliminate blackleg, prevent the
spread of ordinary scab, and also to
overcome some of the losses from
seed decay and so-called imperfect
germination.
After the sound, healthy tubers
have been disinfected great care should
be taken not to contaminate them by
allowing them tocome in contact with
sacks, barrels or planters, ete, which
may carry the germs of the disease,
to storage houses. After all dirt, po-
tato culls and rubbish have been re
moved from the potato house, the in
terior walls and floors should be thor
oughly sprayed with a solution of cop
per sulphate, five pounds to fifty gal
lons of water,
The amounts of disinfectants to use
and the length of time for treating
geed potatoes are as follows:
(1) Formaldehyde, 40 per cent, one
water, 30 gallons; soak tubers
(2) Corrosive sublimate, four ounces;
one-half hours in this solution.
—— at
Keep Animal Growing Thriftily, but
Do Not Fatten—Other Cardinal
Points to Observe.
The essentials of Brood sow man-
agement may be briefly summarized:
1. Provide suitable food, but do not
overfeed.
2. Emphasize the protein and ash
constituents of the ration.
8. Keep the sow growing thriftily,
but do not fatten,
4. Devise schemes to indoce exer
cise.
5. Provide warm, dry, well bedded,
well ventilated and sunlit quarters.
6. Avold constipation by natural
feeding methods, but resort to emer
gency remedies if necessary.
7. Kill off leo with erudo ofl, and
drive out worms with santonin and
calomel,
£. Practice gentleness at all times.
Hog men cannot afford to neglect
any of these cardinal points when the
cost of production is so high.
-—- —
SEVERAL USES FOR SPRAYER'
Among Other Things It May Be Used |
for Spraying Hen House With
insecticides or Whitewash,
Sometimes the investment in a cer |
tain article for use on the farm may |
not seem worth while because the sery-
ice it can perform is limited to a
brief period during the year. By the i
exercise of a little ingenuity, however, |
an outfit supposed to serve a glven
purpose can be turned to account in
other ways.
Take a sprayer, for instance; it can
be used in many ways besides the
one for which it was made. Did
you ever try spraying the chicken
house with insecticides, or white
wash properly strained and thinned?
I have found another use for the |
sprayer that has added much to the
practical value of the outfit, says a |
writer in Successful Farming. Wall |
paper needs to be replaced from time |
to time and it is unsanitary to place |
a new paper on an old one. A spray- |
er is fine as a helper in removing |
the old paper. Fill the tank half full
of hot water, then create enough alr
pressure to produce a fine misty
spray. Apply this to the paper in two
applications, the first one just enough
to dampen the paper. If the water is
applied freely at first it will run down
too quickly from the surface of the
dry paper. But if it is first damp
ened the second application will be
quickly absorbed. The paper will then
peal off easily and the saving in time
and money ought to pay for an auto
spray and a good nozzle,
SOLVING THE MEAT PROBLEM
Cattie Must Be Considered With Gen
eral Agricultural Interests—Keep
All Breeding Cows.
If the government can take up the
cattle business and make beef by
statute, then the meat shortage is
solved, If not, we must aid and depend
upon the citizenship of the nation. The
cattle must not be thought of as some-
thing apart from, but considered rath-
er with the general agricultural inter-
ests of the country
Btock farming should be encouraged
everywhere. The calves and yearlings
will be needed at the silos and on the
farms and ranches -
There is no reason for antagonism
between the stockman and the farmer,
and when conditions admit of it. one
should be both, says a writer in Den
ver Field and Farm. They need the
game protective legislation for their
premises, for the health of thelr stock,
preservation of bird life and the do
struction of predatory wild animals.
We would advige every man who can
do 80 to hold his good breeding cows
off the market, because there is good
grass on the range, and roughness on
the farms going to waste while mi
Hons of people In the United States
will go without beef in the next ten
years,
The cow in the hands of the man
now able to hold her is the only source
of rellef in sight and she will return
her owner a good profit.
DEVICE FOR TYING UP WOOL
Five Pieces of One-Inch Boards, Hinged
Together, Will Be Found
Quite Serviceable.
A device for tying up the fleeces
after sheep shearing may be made by
taking five pleces of onednch boards
12 or 14 Inches souare and hinging
them together go when folded up they
will make a square box, writes F. W.
Eichmeyer In Missourl Valley Farm-
er. Using a saw, make a cut at the
center of the outer edge of each leaf,
Fasten four half hooks on two leaves
opposite each other. Put four eyes
on the remaining two leaves, and the i
tie is complete. To operate It lay it :
®
Wool Tyer Spread Out,
flat on a table, and lay down two |
lengths of twine, crossing them fo!
the center and drawing them down in |
the saw cuts mado on the edges to |
hold them in place, allowing enough
end to tie. lay on the fleece, pelt
side down, gather all scraps and roll
the wool to center €rom all sides, then
&ring up the sides of box and hook |
them together. Tie your {wine cross |
ways, and you will have a compact |
bundle, .
Use the Cultivator. °
Farmers who watched their crops
parch and shrivel during last year's |
long drought, while neighbors who cul
tivated persistently made good ylelds,
will no doubt be more inclined this
year to the use of the cultivator, one
of the most valuable of agricultural
implements. Make up your mind now
that you are going to keep your land
constantly “stirred up” and not allow
your plants to be handicapped by un
eatisfled thirst
Soft-Meatod Fowl,
The only way to secure a soft-mest.
ed bird is to keep them growing “from
batch to hateh.”
| Wa IL
Tenthers, on the latest models,
expert last sod pattern makers fo this
of equal prices, can sGpate with W. L
workmanship and quality,
shoes they aro nusurpas e
83.50 shoes vompare favorably with
other makes costing $0.00 to $8.00,
there are many men and women wear
shoes, Oonsult them and they will tell
Dougias shoes cannot be excelled for
CAUTION! When buyine W.1,
look for his NAME
on the bottom. Shoes thus # ain
worih the price pald for them
RUATR bond
stamped on the holtom helore they leave Lhe factor
gol. You are paying your money and are entitled
If you could visit the
W. L. Douglas factory
al Brockton, Mass,
und see how carefully
the shoes sre made,
and the high grade
ieanthers used, you
would then under
stand why they look
and Ot better, hold
their shape and wear
longer than other
makes for the price.
. W. L Dougias
"shoes are sold
y through BO
7, Zastores in the
7d large cities
y. and shoe
country. No other make
« Douglas shoes for style,
Wherever you live
BE RIWLYE
¥. Do pot
ta the best. 5 rn
Nas ! -
BEWARE OF
SUBSTITUTES
A Difference.
“Does Mrs. Holdup play bridge?”
“No; she works t"— Baltimore
American »
important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
infants and children, and see that it
SE
Signature of
In Use For Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria
Unreasonable,
"Your board bill in
arrears, Mr. Hallroom. Can you give
me something on account?”
"Good heavens, Do
suppose I'd stay here if 1 had money
enough to pay for my board?”
is twee months
woman! you
CUTICURA COMPLEXIONS
Are Usually Fresh and Clear, Soft and |
Velvety. Try One.
The Boap to cleanse and purify, the
Ointment to soothe and heal. Thus |
these supercreamy emollients promote |
and maintain the natural purity and
beauty of the skin, scalp, hair and
hands under conditions which if nes
lected might disfigure them.
Sample each free by mail with Bool
Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. XY,
Boston. Bold everywhere —Adv.
His
"Beven mer
confounded bores!” emg
clared Alexander Akinside
peplic dissertationist,
a hy
snarled J. Fuller Clohm, the
Question,
aut of every ten are
katicaliv Aa
GRLICRIIY CF
the dys
three?”
widely
known and cordially detested misan
thropist.—Judge,
except the other
Getting All Sewed Up.
It was several after arriving
home from the front that the r
with the two broken ribs was
up and smoking a cigar when the doc
tor came in
"Well are
asked the latter
“I've had a stich in my side all day
replied the wou
“That's all
It shows
tinge.’
days
§
sclidie
#itling
how foaling now?”
ded soldier
the
& 3
wit
doctor
knit
sald
bones
True Christian Spirit
Notwithstanding all that | have suf
fered, notwithstanding all the pain and
weariness and anxiety and sorrow that
necessarily enter lute life, and the in
ward errings that are more than all
I would enter my record with devout |
thanksgiving the great Author of |
my being, profound gratitude all
that belongs to my life and being— |
for joy and sorrow, health and sick. |
ness. success and disappointment, vir
tue and temptation, lor life and death
because | believe that all {8 meant
to
for
Always in the Making. i
In one of George Macdonald's books |
occurs this fragment of conversation. |
“1 wonder why God made me.” said |
Mrs. Faber, bitterly. “I'm sure | don’t |
know what was the use of making |
me.”
“Perhaps not much yet,” replied |
Dorothy; “but then he hasn't done |
with you yel. He is making you now, |
and you don't like ft.”
It would give us more patience with
ourselves If we always remembered |
this. We would not get so discour |
tions and failures if we always kept
in mind the fact that we are not yet
made, that we are only in process of
that God is not yet
through making us. ~Rev. J. R
Miller, D.D
As Seeing the Invisible.
No great purpose has ever been
achieved by any individual until his
epirit has first gone out Into some
wilderness solitude and there discov:
ered its native strengmh, ite absolute
Invinelbility when it relies upon no
help but that of God. This Is the |
experience of all the greatest among |
men. They go apart from their fel
lows for awhile, like Moses, into the
land of Midian, or like our Lord him
self into the wilderness, or like St
Paul into the Arabian desert, and
there, in solitary communion with
God, from that highest of all compan:
fonships, they drink in strength to
fit them for the work of our lives, |
Alone with God, they see visions
which All thelr souls, visions which
never fade afterward even in the
light of common day, but which serve
as beacon lights to guide them, |
through storm and darkness, til] the
purpose of their Uves Is Calfillod.—-
Bdwin H, Eland,
New Kind of Sport.
He had taken a day off to go fishing,
IRETURNED RIGHT ANSWER
Night Watchman in Department
Justice Bcored a Hit “on His
Own Judgment.”
of
when, on his
monger's shop came
tempted and fell,
1 want half a dozen
told the man,
“Yes, certainly, sir,”
masking a number one size grin
& correspondingly large hand
you take them with
Yes, And ' want
and throw
way home, a fish
into view he
walchman
ard in the
assumed
nportance
he
sald the other
you ;
please,
pens during
me.”
own judgmen
“Thow them, sir?”
ter.”
That nigh
the door
o v wt a 4 % f "ne 3 3
Exactly My wife is sure to ask thare
and 1] cannot tell official in Califo:
ment ther
| against suck
this
a lie’ whe
The Battles of Peace.
There are difficulties and dangers
Now
the
great judgment
Judgmen
To
walchman,
Aas
faced
requires
any our forefathers
and er
moral brawn and
Ww hich re “ag
them
muscle this
There are the
corruption in in
the terrible
the dr
meet
the
cong: 2 ¥ he or n
ny and the telegram
can muster z
M ney gens
answew
e's right
temperance
8 ¥ against
and
the social evil, deadly to so
the
there are
Just for You!
Post Toasties are made for the purpose of affording you
all the enjoyment and satisfaction that the four sides, top and
bottom of the big package can hold.
Only the inner sweetmeat of the choicest Indian com is
used. These selected bits of corn are cooked, seasoned just
right, rolled and toasted tili they are big, crackly, golden.
brown crisps—
Post Toasties
Then into the big, familiar, yellow carton, go the
Toasties—fresh-sealed!
The wax wrapper keeps out moisture, dust and taint, and
you get these flakes just as they leave the factory ovens—
fresh, crisp and delicious, ready to serve direct from the
package.
Post Toasties are so superior to the ordinary brands of
“corn flakes” that you will be well repaid for making the dis-
tinction in name.
There's a package for you at your grocer's—ask for
Post Toasties
the Superior Cora Flakes