. 10 GENERATION Vegetable Pinkham’s A Mother's Advice Prevents Operation Corona, N. Y.—**1 had a terrible in in my left side and had to go to every so often. Doctors had told me I must be operated on, but I do not believe in the knife and would rather suffer than go through it. My mother also did not believe in it and she made me take Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound because it had helped her. It has also helped me for I am better and able to do all my work. I recommend your medi- cine and give you permission to use my letter as a testimonial.”’—Mrs.J. Busch, Jr., 11 S. Railroad ‘Avenue, Corona, N. Y. A Sickly Child Mahoningtown, Pa.— ‘1 would like to say a few words about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. About a year ago I thought it would be necessary for me to take my daughter out of school. She was losing weight, was nervous, and when she would come home from school she would drop into a chair and cry, and say, ‘ Mamma, I don't believe gave her Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege. table Compound end now she isa healthy, happy, hearty, strong girl and weighs 120 pounds. She has no difficulty in doing her *gym’' work, and she works at home every night and morning, too. I am a mother who can certain 7 praise your medicine, and if it will be of any benefit you may use this letter as a reference.” — Mrs. GEORGE E. WHITACRE, 621 W, Madison Ave., Mahoningtown, Pa. Every girl wants to be healthy and strong, and every mother wants her daughter to do well in school and to enjoy herself at all times, .ydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is a splendid medicine for oung girls just entering womanhood. others may depend uponit. Remem- ber it is prepared from roots and herbs, contains nothing that can in- jure, and tends to tome up strengthen the organs concerned, so that they will work in a healthy and normal manner. For nearly fifty years it has been used by women of all ages; and these women know its great value. Let it help your daughter and 1 can go to school another day!’ 1 THIN AND W yourself. EAK SHE Mother Of Six Children Needed Something To Build Up Her Strength So She Started To Take Hypo-Cod Mrs. Anna McCusker of 2060 Bellmore St, Philadelphia, writes, “] am the mother of six small children, and my duties in, the home have been unusually hard and I found myself not long ago in a very much run down condi. tion. I was very nervous and could not sleep at night. The slightest movement of any of the children woke me. [I was growing thin and weak. I had periodical headaches that nearly drove me wild. My appetite was very poor. 1 had tried so many things that I almost despaired of getting any. Hypo-Cod. I am now on my third bottle and I can truthfully say that it has done me a power of good. It bas built up my appetite, my health and my strength and I find my nerves steady and strong. 1 can eat better and my food does not give me any trouble any mors, and 1 seem to be in better all around health than I have been for a long, long tims My com. plexion is good and I am gaining in weight, and I believe Hypo.Cod fa the greatest medicine 1 ever saw.” Hypo-Cod is easy and pleas. ant to take and has a delightful wine.llke flavor. Cet a bottie to- day from your druggist or a full sized bottle will be sent you pre- paid upon receipt of £1.00 by The Earle Chemical Co. of Wheeling, thing to help me until I tried cheaply as one after they are married -~hut not while engaged. W. Va—-Advertisement The man who sa® that two can live as cheaply ns one never had to reckon with milliners an dressmnkers This year the industry has consider- a skirt for every woman and girl in the purchased a total of more than 100,000, of paper. This problem large and steadily of containers causes a growing investment by oA National fo Street oO Plow in Fall to Reduce Leaf-Spot Tomato Blight Can Be Con- | trolled Covering Infect- ed Vines With Soil. {Prepared by the United Sistes Department of Agriculture.) Recent Investigations by the bu- reau of plant Industry, United States Department of Agriculture, indicate that tomato leaf-spot, or blight, which causes an average annual loss of ap- proximately 250,000 tons of tomatoes in the Middle Atlantic and Middle Western states, can be largely con trolled by thoroughly plowing under all dead tomato vines in the full to prevent the overwintering of the fun- gus. The shown fungus, grows Mruits, kinds of weeds, tomato leaf-spot by experiments, and overwinters on various dead plant material, such grasses, corn stalks, wheat stubble, and remains of other crops. It over- winters in greatest abundance on old tomato vines, however, as it starts on the live plants when there [s little competition with other fungi and ob tains a munopoly on’ this material, During the autumn and spring It thoroughly permeates the surface tis- “as as tomato vines i sues of the old lying partly or wholly on the surface of the CENTRE HALL, PA. i soil, and In the summer produces in | numerable fruiting bod | This food supply usuali] into the fall, by which time it spread | to other dead plant remains i lives over another ! of this saprophytic exists | plant debris, it able from | year to year until It f favor- | able opportunity to attack another to- F mato erop., | Causes Death of Fungus, | Covering the infected tomato vines | with at the end of the picking | season causes the death of the fun gus spring. The vi to be thoroughly covered ighly red, h winier y means is to live inds a 0 soil before to obtain this result, as those left partly or wholly If the leaf-spot fu pletely even exposed harbor the fungus sus could be come prevented from living over would be ob The m ane winter viously no more leaf-spot nearly thi the less thi LILES nppt ic, for | until summer ane { it could hardl natural in the distribution the fall in period der conditions damnge short for its } Plowing der In the vines tharougaiy in the prep: the land for the succeeding crop prevent an enorn wintering culture and crop © us amount of over This accompanied by clean rotate oi this The use vines ahonia Is S3OUIG | disease if nt erally practiced gen of a rolling of £ tically or colter to cut the to of the with Ls unless or a ends into the bot furrow as may ald and all ered so deen that exposed, The eastern practice of d | mato fields at the {| and grain parently responsgible for much { wintering of this fungus, i ables it to live and multiply on the vines until the grain stubble or dead grass leaves are available as : food. rod turn the © tom they are the cover ON ered soll in ing. plowing will suffice King not are Cov not be the parts will thes | come sking to end of the or grass If sowing fh. aver fomato Use of Eariy Plants. Owing to temperature limitations i leaf-spot or blight does nof usually appear in tomato fields in the Mid. { die Atlantic and Middle Western | states until June 15 July 1. The | use of very early plants is therefore a means of partially escaping it. This | will not apply, howevar, to the main jor late crop. Moreover, it will not | ald much if leaf-spot develops in the seed-bed and Is carried to the fleld | on the plants, as this produces early epidemic conditions, The necessity of a clean seed bed is therefore appar i ent. Horse nettle, purple thorn ap ple, Jimson weed, ground cherry, and black nightshade should kept out | of flelds, fence rows and | other parts of the farm, as they are j also hosts of this fungus. to be roadsides, ' Food Is Essential in Production of Feathers Food is just as essential io produce { ing feathers ax it is in producing eggs—don’t stop feeding your hens when they molt and quit laying LB Payne, Kansas station, says to eon tinue to feed them a Inying mash, as | theéy need the nutrients that were for merly required to produce eggs for developing new feathers. After the completion of the molt discontinue the feeding of the dry mash and Keep the hens on a dry ration antil about January 1, when the mash should be resumed. Corn, whent, barleys and kaffir, either singly or In combina. tion, would make a good fall feed. Encourage Purchase of Bulls Co-Operatively More than 600 additional lve stock breeders’ associations were formed with the assistance of ngriculture ex. tension workers in 1022, and 300 com munities were encouraged to purchase bulls cooperatively, nccording to re. ports to the United States Depart. ment of Agrieniture. Co-opemtively owned hinproved breeding stock, co- | operative buying and selling of feeds | and stocks, and community afloption of sanitary measures in entre of live stock are features of these organiza. tions, : «FD ¥ Concrete Bee Cellar Will Pay for Itself cnn Illustration Shows Structure Built by Pennsylvanian. The life of a bee Is measured by its activities, In summer it ig proverb. ially busy and its work soon wears it out. In the winter it must live slow- ly to live long. The proper temperature during the winter is from degrees, df the temperature higher, the hees become more active from the heat; If the temperature he. comes less, the bees must become fac. tive in order to generate hent, and | hence consume more honey and die sooner, i Charles N. Green, retained as chief | apiary adviser for Pennsylvania | state ngericulture, fn that | bees under proper condi: | tions from three to five | been ! to 50 oh gels for a ha the board of wintered consume Concrete Bee Cellar. pounds of honey per winter or wintores ir TIVITY 44 43 ¢ Wihiered in summer stand a with With So pared those The crete pounds attached photo shows WW, in bee cellar built by Midd Pa. it of concrete paid for {tself etown « § ts . ib anc in on In bulliding «¢ nti be ent cellar wm cellar, ve but | hit ever be used for veg etable stor: he the should when Ke, ptiiation provided, ped up are heing wiatered In It Selling Thin Chickens Never Proves Profitabl nee chi av } can oO e mar fraction not Gay not i Kens that are to be ¢ fattened for a pound the iD ntiening or cent n it does i 5 i hy “. “ + birds in thin condition are ordinarily range ¥ sometimes when they ' flesh © called, t hut is Lio improves th Ey ereases the weight © Tender beefsteaks always come with and cuts that are st renked iavers of lean “Her $+ FARTS holds gu a ment I. H department at sity says that between thie same with of the Purdue m th Schwarts iver heoretically fat the to the HC distributed in ronsts htween fibers in ng Aan in shortening the time of cook- He it lean bird which requires longer cooking and from whic the water leaving the bird in a dry inusie similar riiin maraing In the roast cooking poultry, the fat w Hy and steaks method of n contrasts with the h evaporates, | and tough condition, There is usually a good market for | birds pen-fed in the fall for the holl- | markets. Birds can stand the | confinement in the fall. Pick ont the ones that weigh around three or four | pounds. They fatten readiiy. i dny Boys’ Club Work Is on Purely Business Basis | third-year member of clubs in Arkansas some months =old ten of his pigs to yolnger club boys In his county. This young | stockman, Paul Giles of Phillips coun ty. Arkansas started in the live stock | business through the winning of a | prize offered to the club boy | in the county who grew the most corn i on an acre of upland. When he re. | ceived his money he determined to in | vest it In something that would give | good returns. He decided to bus two | A pig Bago the boys | mney and care for them clu work. As he lils new work he ae a part of his acquired skill in added to his herd He sold in 1022, according to reports the United States Department of Agriculture, over $200 worth of pigs, had 40 hogs in his own herd, and has the pleasure of seeing other club boys in his county start in pure bred hog raising by means of bis stock, Consider Conditions in Selection of Best Breed | In selecting the variety of fowl that you prefer to raise, it Is well to con sider the conditions it will be subject: ed to. With the average backlotter, cloge confinement is necessary nnd his selection, therefore, If hest resnits are to be secured, should be influenced by the effect such confinement will have upon the various varieties from which he desires to choose his flock, a ® hiss Select Seed Corn From Strong Stalks in Field Seed corn should be selected in the field from strong, vigorous stalke which show no sign of disease. The ears should be carefully dried umder u shed and then stored in a dey, well ventilated room until next spring, At planting thine, esch ear shonld be enrefully exmuined nealn for any sign ~t disease, or SAY “BAYER” when you buy-