— Rheumatism and Dyspepsia Are ho Soon Ended Victims of stomach trouble and rheumatism often find that when thelr stomach is set in order, the rheuma- tism disappears, Thousands of people everywhere have testified that Tanlae has freed them of both troubles simul- taneously. Mr. Robert Trotter, 148 State St, 8t. Paul, Minn, says! “About a year ago I began to go down hill. Sour stomach and rheuma- tism in my arms and shoulders kept me in misery all the time, Since tak- ing Tanlac all my aches and pains have gone, and my stomach 18 In fine shape. I'm glad to endorse sueh a fine medicine.” Badly digested food fills the whole system with poisons, Rheumatism and many other complaints not gen- erally recognized as having thelr orl- gin in the stomach quickly respond to the right treatment. Get a bottle to- day at any good druggist.—Advertise- ment, Melodious Irony. “Why did the tears come into your eves when the band played “Hall, the Gang's All Here?" “Im view of the factional fights we've replied Senator Sor tune sounded downright been ghum, ironieal.” "MOTHERS. AND DAUGHTERS Read This Letter from Mrs. W. S. Hughes Greenville, Del.—* 1 was under the fmpression that my eldest daughter had some internaltrouble as ever since the first | time her sicknessap- | peared she had to go | to bed and even had | having,” “the for a week. I always | take Lydia E. Pink- | bham’s Vegetable | Compound myself so I gave it to her and she has received | at benefit fromit. | | You can use this let | ter for a tesjmonial if you wish, as | cannot say too much about what your | medicine daughter.’ — Mrs. WL S. Hucuss, Greenville, Delaware. Mothers and oftentimes grandmothers | have taken and have learned the value | of Lydia E. Pinkbam’s Vegetable Com- | pound. So they recommend the medi- | cine to others. The best test of any medicine is what | it has done for others. For nearly fifty years we have published letters from mothers, daughters, and women, young | and old, recommending the Vegetable | Compound. They know what it did for | them and are glad to tell others. In | our own neighborhood are women who | Sor of its great value, Mothers—daughters, why not try it? DON'T DESPAIR | If you are troubled with pains or aches; feel tired; have headache, indigestion, insomnia; painful pas- sage of urine, you will find relief in GOLD MEDAL mm OR The world’s standard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and aric acid troubles and National Remedy of Holland since 1696. Three sizes, all druggists. Look for the name Gold Medal on every bos and accept no imitation as done for me and for my | Enterprising Twins. Gustaf and Wilhelm Dyresen, twin brothers, were horn in Sweden on Mareh 28, 1850. They entered the Naval sacademy when of age together and ever since have beén running neck and necy for naval honors, Each has held nearly every important post in | the Swedish navy. They are now vice admirals and have only one more rung in the ladder to climb before reaching the grade of admiral. Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION “ 22" Sure Reftef DELL-ANS #54 31g 79¢ beckeges Carvin. USE Glenn's Sulphur Soap ST Vie = ones By this re i bak oan. Bar prepireion, tare bie ro Soft, Clear Skin a A i. _— Ce Soh oP Samet W. N. U,, BALTIMORE, NO. 39-1922 SHEEP-KILLING DOG IS MENAGE Control by Legislation Is Urged by United States Department of Agriculture. MICHIGAN LAW IS FAVORED Good Points of Measure Wou'd Be Valuable to Other States Not So Well Protected, Authority Asserts. {Prepared by the Unitad States Department eof Agriculture.) The sheep-killing dog is one of the greatest menaces to the sheepraising industry in the farming regions, says the United States Department Agriculture, in Farmers’ Bulletin 1268, | Sheep-Killing Dogs, by M. W. Coll, just off the press, All but five of the 20 pages are devoted to a discussion | of the control of dogs by legisintion and to digests of dog laws of the 48 states Special attention is given to the Michigan law, which thought | to many good points that might well be adopted by other states, More Deg Laws Needed. The sheep industry in this country has had many ups and downs in the last 50 years, and In 1022 there were | of is have | He Should Be Protected. only n the as compared with 04,000,000 36.000,000 sheep | country in per cent a period when the population It is hardly prob TEMS. is n decrease of 43.7 during that dogs reduction, but, author, there sheep in a Jrea sections if there wer laws backed up b) of producing possibility age and inexpensiy country’s need of meat and reasons why WD pr £i ’ wool, he oduetion be prises of the farm Bulletin Is Available, In addition to ] laws, the bulleti tention to the | to dog and si in respectable The addres ¢ discussion of | ft- sheen killers, | wf th OMe proof ana {fences iggests how do wers may aid | preserving the members bulletin may be obtained the Department « DD. { 1 ino Washington, culture, INTEREST IN BETTER STOCK | Purebred.Sire Movement ls Rapid Growth; Enroliment Passes 8,000 Mark. With g the utility value of purebred live and especially purebred sires, the list | of persons enrolled in the Jetter Sires—Better Stock™ campaign is rap idly increasing. The middie Au- gust it passed the 8,000 mark, signify- | ing that many persons filed | statements with the United States De partment of Agriculture that their livestock breeding operations will be conducted henceforth on a purebred. | sire basis. This includes all classes of | domestic live stock, including poultry. In some counties of limited area the apumber of farms is relatively small Gordon B. Nance, county agent of] Oldham county, Kentucky, points out, | however, that although his county has only 1,086 farms, 10 per cent of the farmers have signed enrollment blanks, which signifies active partici pation in systematic live-stock Im- provement work, Other counties in which 10 per cent or more of the farmers gre using purebred sires ex- clusively are: Pulaskl county, Vir ginin, per cent: Kittitas county, Washington, 18 per cent; Greene coun. ty. Ohio, 13 per cent; and Orange county. Virginia, 10 per cent. In this conmection | the bureau of animal in- dustry points out that the proportions are for all farms and that the per. centages for farms in which live stock Is the principal market product prob- ably wonld be munch higher. DODDER WILL HARM ALFALFA Where Farmer Is Planning to Let Crop Stand for Seed It Is Wise to Look for Weeds. If you are planning to lst alfalfa stand for seed look your field over for dodder. Once is not enough, It should be done several times hefors cutting, Alfalfa seed containing dodder seed Is unsaiable In some states and is dis eriminated agninet in all markets, It is impossible by any known method to free alfalfa seed of the large-secdel dodders. The only practical procedure Is te see that the field Is free from the growing understanding of stork of have me Oh THE CENTRE REPORTER, CENTRE HALL, PA. HOW THE GULLIES CAN BE RECLAIMED Plowing-in and Seeding to Grass or Timber Recommended. Farmers Should Build 8ell-8aving Dams That Check Eresion and Cause the Filling of Space With Gilt, (Prepared by the United States Department of Agricuiture.) Gullies are a source of great loss to the farmer. They rum fertile land, interfere with farm operations, utidermine buildings, encroach on pub- lic roads, endanger the life of stock | All the mother-love and mar the beauty and lower the | Baby. And being true to market value of the farm. They can | . prepared for babies as you out, found and is prepared be prevented by increasing the ab | of the by till} the surfuce from | and | wutler soil protecung by | conducting the surplus from | field at a low velocity, Guliies can be reclaimed by plowing-in and | seeding to grass er timber, or by building soli-saving dams that check and cause the Sling ef the In checking gullying, the first thirg If possibie, the water should be turned to & in head eof the gully. In shallow i will give a til of soll in a short time, " F i i n Fs : GENT. In gullies, & longer is necessary according te the condition and amount of washing Brush and straw, fastened down, make for Ug In regions where timber are plentiful good gullies have been ebtair of hrush in 1! flow of water bu deeper firmly stopp i. brush in filing the u and results rel by ie dmins z il-aide gullie is smal of dams are commonly it ed down Where the down by the flow dam. the brush on { ross ,OeN is enough n BEEN, nto a gully overiop held and st Simi imi ly dumping the bros! give good results, beg with soll#aving dar will not Before helpful Re or A helpful Remedy Constipation and Diarrhoea. and Feverishness 8% 4 ; Loss OF SLEEP pesuting therefrom in infascy: —————— of Fac Simile Sister of reclamation she part of the not fit into work which may later After t ce and erosion checked f low, te Of in 1 1 a it may clamation taken 1 Pp he head in é + i oan 5 y thei! 4 » ————— p—r NEW YORK. o FO LT i FL 8 Signer ve | ERLE = ber used that ends mporary dams fe, shallow depression It the deep will gradually OH of a lower in the side end T {il be channel, the up with a high dam, he dan fewer w required 1 i. bu i ! Fe + less costly & the vera! low hish high Re are sore ens] dam nlso requ jeans care and attention than a dam solely as a remedy for Infants and Children. And let that lies within your heart cries out to you: Be true to Baby you will keep in the house remedies specially would a baby's food, hairbrush, toothbrush or sponge. Children Cry For RR RA Are You Prepared? A doctor in the house 211 the time would be a good idea. Yet you can’t afford to keep a doctor in the family to keep baby well or pre- vent sickness. But you can do almost the same thing by having at hand a bottle of Fletcher’s Castoria, because it is a wonderful remedy for indigestion, colic, feverishness, fretfulness and all the other dis orders that result from common ailments that babies have. Fletcher's Castoria is perfectly safe to use. It is a harmless sub- stitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. Children ery for Fletcher's Casteria, and mothers recommend it because they have found it a comfort to children and a mother’s friend. If you love your baby, you know how sweet it is to be able to help baby when trouble comes. You cannot always call upon a doctor, But doctors have nothing but good to say of Fletcher’s Castoria, be- cause they know that itcan only do good — that it can’t do any harm and they wouldn’t want you to use for baby a remedy that you would use for yourself, MOTHERS SHOULD READ THE BOOKLET THAT 1S AROUND EVERY BOTTLE OF FLETCHZR'S CASTORIA GENUINE CASTORIA ALwars Bears the Signature of fn av sa Save in Their Storage Build ing Equipment. - His girl is What “Gad! What a short skirt that Hers—"Heavens ! legs she has!” the Untisd Siates Departs of Agricu ft potato wearing !” ture.) long areas in tobacco riers who grow both building equipment their flue-heated tobacco barns : of potatoes The the and the of that have found buildings are for hy ti e On rising and retiring gently smear face with Cuticura Olntment. Wash off Ointment In five minutes with Cuticura Soap and hot water. It ig wonderful what Cuticura will do for poor complexions, dandruff, itching and red rough hands.—Advertisement, he storage chenges needed methods panagement been 1 when the used are described of he two purposes 1 Agricule 1 Tobacco ‘nited States Department a “tiliza- Te Tiny Township Has Mighty Thirst. Rumuruti, a tiny township colony, in East Africa, tinction of being af of Fine-Heated Barns not potatoes farmers who do of sweet Many raise A large acreage feel that the expense of a special storage is not jnstified, although the thirstiest town Times' correspondent at settlement, which has now four liquor licenses and Is planning to have hotel. Dr. Peery's "Dead Shot” ls powerful bint ants 75 years of success has proved It With one single dose, Worms or Tapewerm can be sxpelied from the system, and ne castor oll or oiher purgative should be used in sddition Advertisement Whademean, “Absent-Minded™ headline as we've seen | By the way, a correspondent ronds us the following, which he found In the | writings of Jonathan Swift: “Absent. minded people always kept a flapper in the family as one of the domestics.” ~PBoston Transcript. Every genuine package has ni circ eT The Tobacce Barn. through the use of pits, banks, er cele lars they have been losing a large part of the etored crop. But if some bulld- ing which serves another important purpose ean be remodfleled so as to meet both needs a greater part of the greet potatoes produced can be saved at a small sutlay of money. On farms which have flue-heated tobacco barns or similar bhulldings that serve thelr main purpose before the potato hare vest, this saving Is practical. The bulletin contains detailed plang for converting tobacco barns, bill of materiniz for structures of a certain size, methods of storage house mans agement, and deseriptions of a number of varieties of sweet potatoes, Copios may be obtained free by addressing \his pest, , the demartuent at Weahington, D, GQ PORTLAND CEMENT IDEWALKS or highways, on foot or in a car, the path require- ments are identical —open in all ; 8 weathers, good traction, permanence. #8 i One material, by satsfying these ES | RE essectials, has come into universal Bi i BEE use —concrete. One cement in the last rer century has come to be called “the Standard by which cll other makes are measured "—Atlas Portland Cement. Ask your building material dealer for help and advice, on that walk around your home, or the roadway round your plant. He knows what is best and will tell you. The Atlas Portland Cement Co. Scaler Offices: New York — Boston ~ Phila. Millgr— Northampton, Pa. Hudson, N, Y.~ Leeds, Als. “The Standard by which are measured’ SEE) § Lowe og he Th TRIES Trip #080 B.80 9.65 VACATION BOSTON PROVIDENCE SAVANNAH JACKSONVILLE “hse Meade and stateroom accommodations on steamer Included. Extra charges for pro i space, rough tickets to principal points, Fall on request, CHANTS & ANEES TRANSPCRTATION CO. Plor 3 Pmt Bt th Pla 4200 ~ HOME-MADE RADIOPHONE Any one ean build a perfect receiving get for about $6.00 and hear the musie and voles broadeasting talked about go much, Write for particulars. 200 Federal Institute, Washington, D, GC. iim EE New Hair i FERRE EER *
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers