The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, November 22, 1923, Image 7

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    general farm use, carrying pas-
produce or merchan-
for church or social use
The extra
ws are of plate glass and can be
FIRST U. S. MILITARY
rate
The
stowed
military
the
first medal
by American
sas one in gold to Gen.
ngton,
Vaul
in 1779,
Williams and Van Wart,
Maj. John Andre in 1780,
special medals hy congress
The first decoration,
Col. Robert E
staff of the U.
work
S.A.
orations and insignia,
to discover, which had
plication to enlisted
sult of an {issued
General Washington,
for the decoration was
wear on his facings,
breast, the figure of a
cloth or silk, edged
binding. --Detroit
order
ple
lave or
Scant.
Nipp—She trids
ber religion.
Tuck-—Huh!
it even for a bathing suit.
GRAPE-NUTS
Six Minute Pudding
1 oup Grape-Nuts
¥% cups milk
1 tablespoon sugar
¥ cup raising
Oavar, Geape- “Nats with
dd enger,
ro afore ps But
siz minutes direct
Svar the hatte isring co
tantly, and serve with
pudding sence. Mahe
to six portions,
Five United States Siamuldeturing
plants, seven assembly plants a
two Canadian plants give us the
largest uction capacity in the
—. or high-grade cars and
make possible our low prices.
Dealers and Service Stations Evervuwhors
WIDENS MARKET FOR MEAT |
United States Department of Agricul |
ture Gives Hog Raisers Addition.
al Qutlet,
for United
+ $490
« 495
« 640
« 795
« 39%
« 495
« 350
MEDAL
ever be A
wider market st
ments, particularly pork. has
made available by the efforts of
United States Department of
ture and the
nes
heen
the |
Agricul
department, the
most recent evidence of it being the |
opening The Netherlands to shige |
ments of fresh pork. This new mar
ket, with the English market, which |
| was opened to the same products ahout
ma ! 18 months ago, now rails.
Lk T lers a considerable outlet
iat a time when at aj
{ high peint,
Wash- |
Capt.
State
of
gives hog
additional
production is
Resourceful,
A member of the staff of one of a
chain of banks tells this story, i
| "A customer at one of cur branches |
! called at the office and eashed a check |
| on her own account. i
left | “Shortly afterward she returned and |
Pur- | asked to see the manager. She ex- |
DATTOW | plained that, unfortunately, she had
| lost the money somewhere in the town.
Would the manager Kindly stop pay- |
i ment on her check.” ;
]
1782 by
his
of
Yon will never get nhead by follow. |
| ing the crowd.
HINKING moulds the
mind and exercise devel-
ops the body, but food supplies
the materials for building mind
and body.
Grape-Nuts, made from
wheat and malted barley, is a
crisp, delicious cereal food,
rich ia wholesome nutriment.
The important mineral ele=
ments of the grains are readily
available in this splendid food.
The essential Vitamin-B is supe
plied in generous measure.
The nutritious starches of the
wheat and barley are partially
pre-digested by 20 hours’
baking.
Grape-Nuts with milk or
cream is a complete food. Its
compact form makes a little
go a long way.
Sold by Grocert
Everywhere!
Grape:Nuts
-= THE BODY BUILDER
“There's a Reason”
Use of Pullets as
Breeders Not Wise
Practice Frequently Leads
to Use of Immature Birds
and Poor Results.
(Prepared by the Uhited States Department
of Agriculture.)
The hatching results for the season
of 1023 were very poor throughout
most parts of the United States,
There are doubtless a number of con-
tributing causes and, according to Dr.
M. A. Jull, in charge of poultry in-
vestigutions of the United States De
partment of Agriculture, one of the
rauses of peor hatches has been the
gse from year to yeur of pullets as
breeders,
In a general sense Il is apparent
that the hatchabllity of eggs depends
upon the constitutional vigor of the
breeding stock producing the eggs. If
the breeders are healthy and vigorous
and are kept in comfortable quarters,
then the eggs should hatch well, pro-
viding the methods of incubation have |
been satisfactory. Taking the coun- |
try as a whole, however, Doctor Jull |
believes that the hatehing results from
are not as good
Pullels as Dreeders.
The use of pullets as breeders may
in following |
ee of using puliets
the
The practi
In this way hiatch-
because the |
of Immature birds,
are affected
of constitutional vigor pos-
birds, Moreover,
nsually+lay a smaller |
Since the size
older all |
birds as pullets
erable extent upon the size of the egg
producing the chick, it Is obvious that,
lnrger chicks sre produced
the eggs of yearlings, Then |
it has been a matter of common
among poultrrmmen that
chicks from rlings are usually
and grow better than the |
! the
stronger
yeu
influence of Feeding.
Another very Important
tention ig the lufluence of forced feed
ing on hatchablilty. Many fibcks
pullets fed heavily throughout the
fall and to induce heavy
then hatching
pullets are
This is |
Doctor
of
are
winter
and
% from
egR
in the
season the egy thesq
ysed for incubation purposes
a questionable practice, says
Jull, since heavy egg production
heavy strain upon the stamina of the |
hen and the eggs from hirds that have
heavily are very apt be
in hatching quality Finally,
that all factors point
of the use of yearling |
i= a
to
thw
would seem
From April Until Winter |
the growing tree fruits |
peaches, pears and cherries
there are two, periods when
may be all lowell to Interfere with the
orchard work if there is to be success
says Rural New Yorker Through |
April, May and June the various op
erations of plowing. spraying and cul
be dene at
Other work may be run in he
In |
In of such
the proper
times
tween, but these have the first call
ple thinning should he done in July |
to be of great value, although it wil
have some effect if done later, provid.
od weather conditions are right. Ahout
the first of September Bartieft pears
From the middie of
until late In October |
peaches must be handled as they |
ripen, Kieffer pears must be picked |
just when Baldwin apples are In best |
condition to handle. From the middie |
of Beptember until about the middie of
November the apple erop must be har.
veated, whether anything else is done
or not. If Duchess apples are grown
this period is about two weeks longer,
It will be seen that pegches and Kief-
Yer pears do not work In well with a |
large apple orchard, and in practice
they prove to he a very great nuikance,
Cherries, Bartlett pears and apples
work together very well. Where there |
Is a market rospberries will work Into |
this combination. The growing of bay, |
onts, wheat and corn will ll the gaps |
and make practically a complete hurry
time from April until winter sets In
(usually the latter part of December).
—————
Fight on Tuberculosis
Is Progressing Rapidly
Nearly 5,000000 cattle are under
supervision for the eradication of eat.
tle tuberculosin, according to a state.
ment of the status of the work Just is
sued by the United States Department
of Agriculture. A total of 661,200 ent-
tie, Including both beef and dairy
breeds, are In fully accredited herds,
while nearly 3,000,000 more have sne-
cessfully passed the first test in the
process of becoming accredited. There
i¢ a walting lst of more than 145,000
herds that will be, tested as soon as
federal and state veterinary inspectors
ean get to them
September
Soy Beans Quite Useful
Legume for Any Farmer
Soy beans were growin on over 5.
M00 farms for the first time in 1022 or
the method of cultivation modified, ac.
cording to reports to the United States
Department of Agriculture. throvgh
the efforts of co-operative agricultural
extension workars to extend the nse of
this legume ne a green mannre for ine
ereasing soll fertility snd nn protein
supplement for live stock feeding.
Legumes Keep Up
Milk Production
Crops Also Increase Soil
Ir ertility.
Dalry farmers are learning
and more euch year how much
are dependent upon the legumes. [It
is a fact that no section Is n success:
ful producer of milk, birtterygnd
some of the clove or
cheese until
allied crops have become abundant,
Cows will keep up their milk produc-
tion during the winter when fed
legumes with a small
‘Half the amount of grain seems
are changed froin a cheaper roughage
to the clover,
cattle should pl
xtent
in
supply
larger
head of dairy
the
ity
that
ferti
legumes nigo
and they
mutter, in
any other form
soll
percentage than
roughage,
Tests made at the experimental
ty of soy bean hay, alfalfa or
his barns will not have to dig
and still will lose
ing in the way of product Leg
largely take the place of hig!
concentiates like wl] menl
thus lowering the
producing milk. Dalrymen with silage
and legume roughage can go light on
grain and 1
the miik or cream check
If legumex are not
winter,
edy the d¢
Soy beans
everywhere
flown for
noth
fon, INOS
cottonse an
cost
arrives,
avalinble
fect
are heing grown
vith uccexs, clover
some will grow on
with treatment, alfalfa
more difficult proposition, hut
bilities should be tried out before
ure ig admitted, Alfalfa has been con
giddered the hest of
have proved
’
variety any
proper is a
fall
the legumes,
that
the ration for dairy
Clover and alfalfa ean
to produce a crop of hay
year, hut soy beans planted
should yield at least two tons
If clover
experiments clover
COW
the first
HAY per Acre next
and alfalfa are not grown on the
should be taken
to the defect
quire liming before the legumes can he
successfully grown There
farms, on which a few
but which are all
these crops
given the chance
summer
farm,
dein
solls
without
retaedy Nome re
are piso
many
1a
if
ready
abundantly
Proper F eeding Duri ing
the Time & Cow Is Dry
it is false ecopomy to keep a good
dry corn fodder, jus! because
she i» dry, and will not freshen for a
few weeks, specialists from the
handry of the
state agricultural college
'roper feeding
RY
during the time a
her milk flow during the fvllowing iac
tation period. When a cow is carrying
a calf and is producing a
tity of milk,
large quan
she is under such a tre
that during her res!
allow her to build her
ar nourish the ealf
Rome cows have an tendency to milk
nearly up to the date of freshening.
and it ia often a belief tha: they can.
he Oried off for a =aificient rest
period Gxpert herdsmen,
find that no Injury resuits from dry.
ing up a cow which g
five to eight quarts dally
ing a day
and the animal then partly wilked out
after skipping an entira day
Equal paris hy weight of hominy.
ofl meal, bran and ground oats make
a good ration for a dry cow. The cow
should receive enough of ‘his ration
to keep her constantly gaining in flesh
until calving time. Just before she
freshens, It may be necessary to feed
oil meal and bran only. If the udder
shows Inflammation, feed Liran alone
for a week hefore calving time,
Partnership Bulls Will
Make Profitable Return
Herd sires owned cooperatively do
not tend to spread contagious abortion,
ns ix sometimes supposed, say the ani
mnl men at the New York State Cal.
lege of Agriculture at Ithaca. In meny
parts of New York two or three men
who live near together and think alike
about the proper breed and handling
of herd sires have hought them to.
gether and bettered thelr herds at
comparatively small expense. Many
New York farmers have hought co-op
eratively, say the college workers,
Bulls bought In this way have proved
better herd <ires than individual farm.
ers cotild have gotten in any other way
and each farmer has pald less than the
cost of an inferior animal, The result
kas been bigger milk checks and more
valuable herds.
f one milk
Formaldehyde Treatment
for Smutty Wheat Seed
Wheat weed which has smut shoold
be treated after It hax heen carefully
funned, using the formaldehydegprin
kling method, This consists of mixing
one pint of full strength formaldehyde
with 40 gullonk of water for treating
50 bushels of wheat, The solution is
appited by menng of a sprinkiing ean
The sem! is covered] over night, after
which it ie rendy for planting, Treat.
od seed shnuhi nat he planted fn dry
Soll, The rite of planting should he
Inerensed about one-half peck to the
LCT. g
i i
”
-
In constipation, say int
Your bath goss
only skin-deep.
tion.
passage out of the bod
ternal cleanliness.
Nujol is not a laxative
used
physicians throughout
ternal cleanliness.
estina? specialists, lies the
overcoming constipa-
yv. Thus Nujol brings in-
and cannot gripe. Nujol is
the world.
REG US. PAY OFF
WAS AL
Norfolk Man Found Nothing To
Help Him Until He Took
Earle's Hypo-Cod
Mr. Clinton Williams of
Ann Bt, Norfolk, Va, writes
had been feeling miserable
some time and had taken a great
many different kinds of medicine,
good. 1 had no appetite; had
frightful headaches and was subd
ject to dizzy spells. In
ing I would get up feeling slug:
gish and after every meal
stomach would give me a lot of
trouble. 1 was losing weight and |
strength and feeling worse every
day
get Hypo Cod as she knew it would
straighten me out After taking
one bottle I feit so much beiter
is Merciless
nngsilant’
Time
“Time is
“Howza1 ¥”
“It tells on 8 woman”
GIRLS! HAIR GROWS :
THICK AND BEAUTIFUL
Lifeless, Neglected Hair.
A gleamy muss
ef luxuriant hair
full of gloss, lus
ter and life short-
iy follows a genu-
L RUN DOWN
d niter
tter
for
that I got another batt e and
taking it | find myself in be
than [I have been in
All my headaches have
I do not know
what it is to have a dizzy spell any
My appetite is fine and 1
have Increased four pounds In
weight and an still gaining. I can
now sleep and wake up rested and
Iam in
than 1
Hypo-
years
around health
have been in for years’
and has a most delightful wine
ke flavor. If you are run-down
and weak and in ill health get
a bottie of Hypo-Cod today from
| your druggist or send $1 to The
Earle Chemical Co. of Wheeling
IW. Va for a full sized bottle to
{be sent you prepaid Aflvertise:
{ment
} A womy
Nervous
0's nerves often nmke a man
if Worms or Tepeworsn persist In
system, See the ren! vermifuge, Dr Prery
"Dead Shot Only 58 cents at your drug
gist or 272 Pearl Be NY Adv
but little here
about half
or
w
Man
and he
amount
below -
that
wants
usually gets
neglected scalps
with dependable
*Danderine.”
Falling hair,
the dandruff
immediately. Thin,
wispy or fadiag Lair is quickly invigo-
rated, taking on new strength, coior
and youthful beauty. “Danderine” is
a refreshing, |
Any drug 4 store. ~=Advertisement.
Their Secret,
Family Physician~<I'm afraid you've |
been eating too much cake and candy. |
Let me sce your tongue
Little Bess (perkily)—Oh,
look at it, but it won't tell
Guticura for Bore Hands.
Soak hands on retiring In the hot suds
of Cuticura Soap, dry and rub in Cu
ticura Ointment. Remove surplus
Ointment with tissne paper. This is
only one of the things Cuticura will do
if Soap, Ointment and Talcum are used
for all toilet purposes. Advertisement,
:
you can
No one pursues hraing as he does
the acquisition of wealth, because it
is futile,
0; Br h's
AR Sd phd
Fra CODES TARY
OheBIG 25¢CAN
GREEN MOUNTAIN
ASTHMA
niekly relieves the
BE paroxyeams,
distress
Used for
5 years
and result of lo
experience treatment
throat and In 1
Dr. J. BR. Guild. ARER TRIA
BOX, on Asthma, (te
causes, treatment, etc. sent
he a 8.
aragiists. + B. “Guid Co. Box 71. Rurer wu
Always keep &
box on hand.
oye
L DROPS ac