The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, August 12, 1915, Image 7

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    THE CENTRE REPORTER, CENTRE HALL, PA.
$10,000 Conscience Fund.
fen thousand dollars was added to
De — STN 1
| FOUNDATION OF DAIRY HERD OFFICER CARROLL CURED
THE CHARM
OF MOTHERHOOD
Enhanced By Perfect Physi.
cal Health.
The experience of Motherhood is a try»
Ing one to most women and marks dis-
Pinctly an epoch in their lives. Not one
woman in a hundred is prepared or un-
derstands how to properly care for her-
self. Of course nearly every woman
nowadays has medical treatment at such
times, but many approach the experi-
ence with an organism unfitted for the
trial of strength, and when it is over
ber system has received a shock from
which it is hard to recover.
right upon this comes the nervous strain
of caring for the child, and a distinct
change in the mother results.
There is nothing more charming than
beauty. The unexplainable thing is
that, with all the evidence of shattered
nerves and broken health resulting from
i
i
EASY TO MAKE LOADER
gp
Will Handle All the Hay Six Wag-
ons Can Bring In.
Ilustration Has
Proved Quite Satisfactory to
Farmer Who Designed It
Keep the Mow Ventilated,
Device Shown In
A home-made loader can be easily
rigged up. An Illinois farmer has made
ame which he thinks a great help. He
says this stacker when equipped with
a fork and an active horse, will
handle all_ the hay six wagons can
The rope is fastened at the
top and bottom of a strong, slanted
pole, and tne fork hangs over the
center of the stack. The wagon is
alongside the board sideways |
ple time in which to prepare, women
will persist in going blindly to the trial.
Every woman at this time should rely
Compound, a most valuable tonic and
invigorator of the female organism,
In many homes
once childless there
are now children be-
cause of the fact
that Lydia E. Pink-
ham’'s Vegetable
Compound makes
women normal,
healthy and strong.
Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confl
dential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will
be opened, read and answered by a
woman and held in strict confidence,
Before retir-
ing, use with
warm water
and insure a
restfulnight.
It
Reireshes
. All Druggiets.)
Contains 30° Pure Sulphur,
HIll’s Hair 8 Whisker Dye, Black or Brows, 50s
—— LADIES !!—
USE GILBERT'S
JEWEL
TALCUM POWDER
The Talcum of Quality, for refined
people; Perfume rich, lasting, asd ex-
Quisite; Powder of velvety flueness
In Glass Jars—15¢c. and 25¢,
Sold by all dealers
MADE BY
GILBERT BROS. & CO.
BALTIMORE, MD
We Want an Agent
Bewedies Big offer
our Liniment and Horse
NOAM REREDY C0. Richmond, Ta
Curious,
i "etherhedde
Youn
sane.”
How
He
nas
gone in-
it out?
did they find
SOFT WHITE HANDS
Under Most Conditions If You Uge
Cuticura. Trial Free.
The Soap to cleanse and purify, the |
Ointment to soothe and heal Nothing
better or more effective at any price
than these fragrant supercreamy emol
lients. A one-night treatment will test
them in the forms of red, |
rough, chapped and sore hands
Sample each free by mail with Book. |
Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. XY,
Boston. Sold everywhere.—Ady.
severest
even experience can't teach some peo
ple
Danger in Delay
The great danger of kidney troubles is
that they so often get a firm hold before
the sufferer recognizes them. Health
will be gradually undermined. Back-
ache, headache, nervousness, lameness,
soreness, lumbago, urinary troubles,
dropsy, gravel and Bright's disease may
follow as the kidneys get worse. Don't
neglect your kidneys. Help the kidoeys
with Doan’s Kidney Pills. It is the best
recommended special kidney remedy,
A. Virginia Case
Mrs. M. A. Eanes
78 Polk Bt. Lynch. ery Pe Tels Sony®
burg, Va, says: “1
had kidney complaint
and rheumatic pains
r four years. My
nds were swollen
ard sore and I had
g harp pains all
through my body, es-
fally in my loins.
n's Kidney Pills
rid me of the swelling
and in and made
me feel fine. 1 have
had no cause for com-
plaint since.”
Get Dosn’s at Any Store, 50¢ & Box
DOAN’S KIDNEY
PILLS
POSTER-MILBURN CO., BUFFALO, N. Y,
If the hay is to be stored in the
the wagon. The hayrack ought to be
about sixteen feet long and ten feet
If you are a good loader, boards
essary.
When you arrive at the barn
a load, hitch a steady horse on the
end of the rope attached to the hay
fork, the harpoon as deeply
possible, and the horse will draw up|
set
along
it is to
When the hay has run
carrier to the point
dropped, pull the whip-cord
you are,
With a bright boy to handle the
horse on the rope and an experienced
man on the load, it can be put isto
the barn ten minutes or less
Always begin at the back end of the
mow, or the end farthest from the
chute to the barn floor; because when
hay is put in in that way, it will come
out easier when being fed
where be
in
in
level in the mow
I ye
to help, so m
the best
the fo
when it is being un
U €an get an extra man
ich the better; if not. do
bites
rk. and keep the mow as level as
loaded.
you can between with
PH sgible .
Keep
Ossibie
the mow ventilated as long as
, always being careful te close
doors windows keep out
and to
robably the
. there
g the
over
in i+
in is
i} EwWaths
hay being"
in the field to the barn and
into the ¢« ol
that comes with
When
not start ti dew Is
off the grass. If cut while wet the
grass will require longer for the sun
to dry it than when standing.
Cut just what you can easily handle
in one-half day The next afternoon
rake into windrows, and if
not dry, better leave fit
Ove
dark corners of the mow, |
y other labor
ower until the
the hay
thorous
rnight.
in order be sure that
hay is well cured on our father's
farm, we always put it up into good- |
sized cocks and allowed it to remain |
to perfectly
Easily Made Hay Loader.
two days. This second han!
Timothy hay may be baled directly
from the swath withotit much danger
the hay thoroughly cured before be
baled. IL hay is baled directly
the swath it must be entirely
free from rain or dew, and this process |
A ————————
Serve as Excellent Means of Con-
serving Moisture,
eee |
To protect trees from grass or |
It is
After a few weeks Ber
muda grass will creep through the |
More hay should be added two ot
If the ground Is dug up and pul
a—— in scam
Robber Cow, i
A dairy cow that does no more than |
pay for feed and care is a robber that |
ihould not be allowed to live.
Li‘tle Points, Seemingly Trivial, Ge
Far Toward Making Success In
Breeding Fine Cattle.
We are all quite familiar with the
fact that the weak, bad points of both
plants and animals seem to be more
easily established in the young than
the strong characteristics There
seems to be a natural tendency to
retrogression, or a cropping-out of
the bad points in animals: and these
we desire to
“Like begets like" is
a law of nature. We expect the off-
spring to be like the parent. This be.
ing the case, a poor, lean, long, lank,
fll.shaped animal, possessing a mean,
snarly disposition, will impart these
same characteristics to his offspring.
In the same ratio that this is true
of the poor animal, which does not
adhere to any particular type, so it is
true of the good, well-bred
guard against,
possessing the characteristics of this
breed,
“Johnny Jones should
be a big, strong, fine-looking
for his father before him was
the best-looking men in the
The same is true of animals
Smee this is a fact, let us think for
a moment as to the sire we select
for our foundation. What sort of sire
did this animal have? How long has
How many
brothers and sisters has he, and what
one of
town.”
Healthy and Vigorous Type.
they? Was his
ghe a
of ani-
iwWos
kind of animals are
a good individual
mother? If of a
that bring forth young
litter, has he a twin
if so,
dam was
good
mal
Mais
class
in
brother,
or in a
or litter brother how many?
What percentage are good individuals,
and what records
Now, these
of littie value, but without
have the 4
may at first to be
Beem
s them upon
what can you base your estimates of
future breeder?
BREED FOR EARLY MATURITY
Leghorn Pullet Laid First Egg in Four
Months and Fourteen Days From
Date of Hatching.
SUCCESS as a
A singlecomb White Leghorn puliet
that laid her first egg just four months
and 14 days of her
hatching is one of the results of breed
ing for early maturity obtained by the
College of Agriculture, Ohio State Uni
versity. The usual age at which pul
lets begin laying is about six months.
from the date
group of 720 that were hatched at the
same time. Five or six others from
this group began laying much earlier
than ordinary fowls, showing that it
paye to breed for early maturity. They
were from a strain of single-comb White
Leghorn, bred especially dewelop
early laying. It may be
to know just how this flock was fed.
From the first day of the sixth week
they received twice a day a grain ra
to
and three pounds cracked wheat.
until the twenty-first day they
Up
also
three
pounds
oats, pounds wheat middlings,
#ix wheat bran, four pounds
sifted meat scraps, two pounds alfalfa
meal, one-fourth pound bone
one-fourth pound fine charcoal
milk and fed in shallow trays.
From the sixth week to maturity
ration of two
whole wheat in open hoppers. From
one pound wheat middlings, two
pounds wheat bran, one pound sifted
meat scraps, half pound alfalfa meal,
This was
fed dry in open hoppers. In addition
they were given green foods and grits
as Feed for Stock, Must Be Used
With Discretion,
EY
Colorado Experiment
8 .
Johnson grass is closely related to
Poisoning of cattle from
sorghum and kafir corn is well known.
After chemical apalysis of many plants
Brunnich gave the following advice:
“All fodder plants related to sorghum
must be used with discretion in either
the green or dry state, and should not
be given in large amounts to animals
which have fasted for some time.” The
poison in these plants is hydrocyanie
acid. Poisoning usually occurs when
the plants have made a stunted growth
from drought and have been eaten in
large quantities when the animals are
very hungry.
Animals polsoned In this way usual.
ly die within half an hour and some-
times live only a few minutes. Hy.
droeyanic acld is the most deadly of
poisons and in large doses kills almost
instantly. Animals usually die sud.
denly from paralysis of respiration and
before remedial measures can be
=
NEW YORK.—Wheat- Weak No
2 red, $1.18, and No. 2 hard, $1.19%
¢ if New York; No. 1 Northern Du
luth, $1.11% ¢ |i f Buffalo
Corn—8pot, easy No. 2
Pl% ec prompt shipment
Osats—8pot, eary; standard
No. 3 white, é4c.
Butter Creamery,
geore), 26¢; creamery
Ing), 26% @27¢c; firsts
onds, 22@23%ec.
Eggs-—Fresh-gathered, extras
@25¢; extra firsts, 21Q 22%
18% @20c; seconds, 16% @18¢
by hennery, whites to fancy
browne, 24@ 26¢
whole milk
white and
Go, average
vellow
0441
(82
ECOT
extras
(higher
240 25%; mec
firsts,
hq 2%¢
Cheese State,
Wins
fresh,
and colored,
13% @13%¢
Live Poultry—-W chickens
11@
erlern
fowls, 17¢
gleady
inrkeve
Western
18@ © 2«
18% @1%7¢c; frees}
12¢; dressed
chickens
feed turkeys,
feed, 15@ 16¢
CHICAGO H
$7@7.7%
ge so
a@ 7.4
Vi t
OR $
light
NEavy
$6.7
"rer
[5
pigs
Cattle !
Nat
10.2f Western sted
heifers, $3 2°
eows and
2750@11
Sheep 3}
SERGE R GO
een,
WWIFPHIA
new, gpot and
Westert
red
PHILAI
red
} red
w, 14% @ 14%
13%0@ 14¢ do
@12e
Live
do
Fowl
broilis
leghormns, wel
Poultry
fosters
not
apiece
higher do
pounds apiece, 17@21¢
horns, weighing 1% G2
1K¢ do do weighing
apiece, 156 16¢ ducks
& 4c: do do
13¢ do do
15@ 16«
pigeons
11G12¢
fancy
21@ 22¢
a (31:0
pounds
nts
Pekir
Indian runner
young fcrording
Inrge gires
old, per pair, 21¢
5.05 8 1
» ¥ OH 6 ¢
IR: 64 «3
BALTIMORE Wt Ne $
spot and July, 108 August, 108%
September, 108%: No. 3
spot, 113% nominal
Corn-—-—We
nearby vellow
and red
14 ¢
redd Western
aa ele
GR GS a
at $4.40
quote Car
spat
on
Oats—Standard white, €3% § 64
No. 8
Rye--No
white, &;
2 Wes
demand
bu
lots
for early
Export de
No
new ree
tern rye
delivery In fair
on spot, ye
Western, $1.05 bag
quality, 85 @ 8%
No. 1
per
of
rve, 311
straight ei
glo R0@ 11 No
do. $589 1
oi
No. 2
Straw sg
do, 1
NG
17G
$16: No. 2
1 wheat, $8@850 do
Butter
creamery, choice
good, 24@25;. creamery. prints, 276
28: creamery, blocks, 27€ 28: Iasdles
20021: Marviand and Pennsylvania
rolls, 18%, @ 19: Ohlo, rolls, 18 18%
West Virginia, rolla, 18@18%: store
packed, I15@ 18%: Maryland, Virginia
and Pennsylvania, dairy prints, 18€
181
Live Poultry Chickens Old hens,
4 Ibs and over 16¢c: do. enall to me
deuim, 15%: old roosters, 10: spring,
large, 20: do, extra arge, 21: do.
small, 19: do, white leghorn, 18 Ducks
«Muscovy, 3 1be and over, llc: Pek.
ings, 3 Ibs and over, 12: puddie, 3 Ibe
and over, 11: smaller, 10; young, 23
Ibs and over, 15@ 16: do, smaller, 13
@14. Pigeons— Young, per pair. 15@
20¢; old, do, 15@20. Guinea fowl
each, 26c.
Eggs-Maryland, Pennsyivania and
nearby firsts, 18¢; Western firsts, 18;
West Virginia firsts, 18: Southern
firsts, 16@17. Recrated and rehandied
eps, %@le higher.
Live Stock
PITTBBURGH. — Cattle ~— Cholee,
$0.60@ 9.90; prime, $8@8.00.
Hogs-~Prime heavies, $7406 7.50;
mediums and heavy Yorkers, $81o0@
8.15; light Yorkers and pigs, $8.15@G
8.20; roughs, $600.20.
a :7%
creamery
fancy. 27
25@ 26
Creamery
fund the otber day when a special de
ing that sum in currency, was received
at Secretary of the Treasury McAdoo's
office,
to the United States the
stole, yet his conscience is not satis
fied, and here's avother payment,” read
a letter accompanying the contribu
tion.
This Is the third largest contribu
tion to the conscienc fund. Some
contributions are as low as a penny.
Modern Hero-Worship,
What's the big celebration? Con-
‘No. Cne of the town boys mur
some years back an’
Just been declared sane by a
jury That's the reception commit
kick neighbor
He
Don't because your
of all the children born
OF BAD CASE OF ECZEMA
He writes from Baltimore as follows:
“l am a police officer and had long
suffered from a bad case of Bezema of
the time.
“1 was under treatment by eminent
physicians for a long time without
success Last summer Hancock's Sul
phur Compound and Ointment were
recommended to me and my hands im-
proved on the first application. After
a week's trial 1 went to the Johns
Hopkins Hospital to have my hands
Under their ad.
Compound and Ointment for 6 or %
weeks, and at the end of that time my
cannot recom-
mend your preparations too highly.”
(Bigned) John T. Carroll
Hancock's Sulphur Compound and
Han-
cock Liquid Baltimore,
Md. —Advy
Sulphur Co
Beauty is only skin deep and lots of
so-called wisdom is likewise
Babies.
We can hardly realize that
they are fifteen!
ma jority of these jrucions lives,
of these infantile
more or less opium or morphine,
deadly poisons,
to congestions, sickness, death.
pores of the skin and allays fever,
Castoria
opens the
MUSSEL MUD AS FERTILIZER
Organic
Fert
Remains of Shellfish Secure
lity to Poorest and Most
Exhausted Soil,
around Prince
five to
from twenty
They
are taken
chines worked
or from the ice
A Benevolent Refusal
my boy
:
senator, “don
Ruins a vous
promised that
Kansas City
Needed Gift
The Widow-—Well, why don't you
Bashfal Youth-1 would. only
some sand in my mouth.
“Swallow it, young man
it in Life.
I have
You neeq
vour system
A woman's
a mans headaches
pleasures often be
NO IDEA
What Caused the Trouble.
“lI always drank coffee with the rest
of the family, for It seemed as if there
was nothing for breakfast if we did
not have it on the table
“1 had been troubled for some time
with my heart. which did not feel
This trouble grew worse
“Sometimes it would beat fast and
“1 bad no idea of what the trouble
was until a friend suggested that per |
haps it might be coffee drinking. 1
tried leaving off the coffee and began |
drinking Postum. The change came
quickly. T am glad to say that | am
now entirely free from heart trouble |
Empire Ranch,
¢
often « 51
The Generai a 4
We have
built up
the biggest
Roofing and
Building Paper mills in the
World by selling materials
that last—at reasonable prices.
Our Certainteed Roofing is giving excel-
lent service I classes of buildings all
over the worl all kinds of climate. It
is the roofing with a guarantee of $, 10
and 1Syearsfor 1, 201 3 ply respectively,
and itis backed by the responsibility of our big
mills. Try it once you'll buy it sgsin. Por
sale by dealerveverrwherest reasonable prices.
General Roofing Manufacturing Co.
World's larprst mons Pact urese of Bovfing
and Putiding Popers 2
New Tork City Chicage Philadelphia 50 Lose
Busan Cleveland Pitwburgh Detrak Sun Framciace
Athata Howton Londen
GRAY HAIR
More than a half century of success. 1{ your
dealer hasn't it, send §1 00 and & Jarge bottle
will be sent you by parcel post.
MRS. 5. A. ALLEN, 85 Barclay St. NewYork
fanaa nny YT FEF
coffee and the use of Postum.
“A number of my friends have ahan-
doned coffee and have taken up Post. |
um, which they are using steadily i
There are some people that make |
Postum very weak and tasteless, but |
if made according to directions, it is |
& very delicious beverage” Name
given by Postum Co. Battle Creek,
Mich, i
Postum comes in two forms’
Postum Cereal--the original form
must be well bofled. 150 and 26¢ pack.
ages.
Instant Postum-—a soluble powder
dissolves quickly in a cup of hot wa.
ter, and, with cream and sugar, makes
a delicious beverage instantly.
and 0c tins.
Both kinds are equally delicious and
ost about the same per cup,
“There's a Reason” for Postum.
«gold by Orocers.