The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, January 24, 1924, Image 7

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    Wuiss cAmerica”
“Declares ‘Ianlac
Miss Mary Katherine Campbell,
twice proclaimed ‘Miss America,”
has taken TANLAC and endorses it
in a statement recently given to the
women of America.
ment,
Good Health is the basis of all Beau-
ty, and advises women who would be
Her complete statement as given
is as follows: “I consider it a great
privilege to be able to tell the thou-
sands of women everywhere what a
great tonic TANLAC is. Health is
the basis of all beauty. Without
good health, one is apt to be run-
down, nervous, underweight, high-
strung, anemic. Indigestion drives
the roses from a woman's cheeks and
robs her of that radiant quality of
womanhood that is real beauty.
| “I have taken TANLAC and I do
| not hesitate to say that it is a won-
| derful health-giving tonic. It has
brought relief and good health to
many women, and with good health
one may fave a measure of beauty
{ that will overcome shortcomings in
| face and figure.
| “Rosy cheeks, sparkling eyes, a
i well-rounded figure, a lovable dis-
position, go hand in hand with good
health. To those searching for begau-
| ty, T would say— First of all, ind
| Good Health! The TANLAC treat-
ment has proven itself a boon to
womankind, and I recommend it.”
Miss Campbell has written a book-
{let on Health and Beauty which may
| be secured by filling out the coupon
| below.
Department.
Gentlemen:
® copy of Mise
FER ARAR ERRATA sR TAREE aE,
Kame. .
-
Town...
renee
ATLANTA, GA.
for which send me
Radio Station Uses
Mountains for Masts
A wireless station using mountain
gnow or wind the carriage is pulled
forward. When the stress ceases
rolls backward on Its sloping
road. i
been put into service in Upper Ba-
varia. The wires are supported by a
strong cable and extend from one
peak 5,100 feet high, a distance of
about 8 mile and a half across coun-
try to the top of a smaller hill of
some 2.820 feet elevation. The sta-
tion Is designed to communicate di-
rectly with the Far East. Special ar
rangements were necessary for the
fixing of the cable ends and to allow
for its stretching. The end of the
cable Is fastened to a small carriage
weighted with stones and running on
fls. When th® cable Is bent by
Practical Jokes Unsafe,
{ Practical jokes are not always safe,
{ There is a tale of a naval officer who
i
i
i
i
grew steadily emptler. With a view
| to prevent the “evaporation,” he filled
{it up with the vilest decoction he
| could compound. The sherry still de
| creased: and at last he called up the
steward. His explanation was thor
i oughly satisfactory. “I give the cook
| two wineglasses for the soup every
! evening,” he sald.
| [Inspiring fathers make aspiring sons,
Against
Coffee or
school children, the
warning that “children
50 easy by Postum.
Ration Devised
for Dairy Calf
Substitute Suggested Where
Whole Milk Is Profitably
Disposed Of.
T
(Prepared by the United States Department
of Agriculture.)
In dairy herds whose entire output
is sold as whole milk at high prices,
there is need for a means of ralsing
the calves on other feeds. A number
of substitute rations have been worked |
out at various experiment stations
which have proved fairly satisfactory.
On the experimental farm of the
United States Department of Agricul
ture, at Beltsville, Md, a mixture has
been devised as the result of experi
ence, which is suggested for use in
raising calves where the whole milk
{s more profitably disposed of through
other sources.
Department's Ration.
The department's recommended ra.
tion Is as follows: Take 50 parts fine
ly ground corn, 15 parts linseed oll
meal, 15 parts finely ground rolled |
oats, 10 parts dried blood flour, 10 |
parts skim milk powder, one-half part
galt. Stir up with warm water at |
the rate of 1 pound of the meal mix-
ture to about 6 pounds of water. In- |
crease gradually as the whole milk is |
decreased, until at the time the calf |
Is fifty days old it should be getting |
only the gruel. At this time 134 to |
2 pounds of the meal mixed with wa- |
ter will constitute a day's feed. The |
total quantity of milk used is about |
800 pounds; If less is fed the calves
are likely to be unthrifty.
The time at which calves can be put |
on milk substitutes alone, say depart- |
ment dalirymen, depends upon
same factors as in the use of separ
ated milk, namely, the breed, develop- |
ment, and vigor of the calves, ete. It |
is hardly safe, as a rule, even with the
most vigorous ones, to attempt to put
them on milk substitutes alone with
in one month after birth; with
calves below normal In vigor
milk for two months or more may be
necessary to ralse them,
Feeding Schedule.
The department spggests, as a |
gulde for feeding the above substi
tute to large. vigorous calves, the fol- |
lowing schedule: First 10 days, 10}
pounds of milk dally: second |
milk and 04 |
i
|
|
He i
end
some
whole
of warm
pounds milk
water) : third 10 |
f and O08 pound
fifth 10 days, 2!
aft-
er BO days. 2
milk. Smaller
calves should be fed somewhat less,
and the milk feeding should be con
tinued a fittle longer. In any event,
a total of 300 pounds of milk should
Grain and roughage
should be fed with milk substitutes |
the same as with separated milk. :
Whole milk is the best food for a |
calf: skim milk ranks second. Calves |
fed the, substitute as stated above |
have been subject to no more diges |
tive troubles than the skim milk fed |
calves and the gains in weight have |
not been materially less.
Clover or Alfalfa for
Boars Is Satisfactory |
men!
and no
vigorous
pounds
and less
Herd boars are more often overfed |
than underfed, say Iowa swine experts.
When an animal enters the breeding
season overfat, the results are seldom
satisfactory.
For the young boar, provide a ra
tion high in protetn and mineral mat |
ter, so he may develop a large frame. |
Clover or alfalfa In a rack makes a
satisfactory winter feed and will keep
the animal In good condition.
A ration consisting of 40 pounds of
ground oats, 40 pounds of corm, 10
pounds of wheat middiings and §
pounds of tankage is good. Make a
slop of the ground feed by mixing it
with warm water, A boar should drink
ten pounds of water for each 100
pounds of body weight, but will not do
go unless he has part of it furnished In
his feed. :
Plenty of exercise and sunshine pay.
Boars dislike cold, stormy weather and
it is usually necessary to piace the
feed trough at the opposite side of the
pen in order to make them stir them-
selves,
Henhouse Ventilation Is
Quite Serious Problem
Much of the sickness and loss which
occurs in poultry flocks during the
winter from roup and colds is due to
flocks being confined in houses that
are close and damp, or that permit
the other extreme of being cold and
drafty because they are too high and
the openings are improperly placed.
The ventilation of the poultry house
hus to be solved differently for every
type of house and locality. Also poul-
try-house ventilation has been subject
to much change in the last decade, go-
ing from extreme closed warm houses
to extreme open-front houses. The
tendency. now ig to modify the notion
and the tendency is to strike a course
that is rather mediary.
Feed Chicken Flock Warm
Mash on Cold Mornings
A warm mash on cold mornings will
help the chicken fiock. Mix your regu
lar mash with equal parts of chopped
beets or sprouted oats, Do not feed
over two ounces per bird, When this
Is done feed a quart and a half of
grain per 100 hens at ten o'clock and
all they will clean up In an hour be
fore dark. Keep dry mash before them
all the time
Continued Spread of
Alfalfa Pest in West
Damage By Weevil Cause
of Appr&ension.
(Prepared by the United States Department
of Agriculture.)
Continued spread of the alfalfa wee
vil throughout the Great Basin states
and the Increasing damage which it Is
causing in some of these states, not
ably Idaho, have caused great appre
hension, especially throughout the
more newly infested regions. The In
sect, according to the United States
Department of Agriculture, now oecu
ples practically all the alfalfa-growing
regions of Utah and Idaho, and ls
found in parts of Colorado, Wyoming
and Nevada. It has also been discov
ered In eastern Oregon and more re
cently has been reported from Sierrs
county, Calif.
An efficient means of control has
been evolved by the bureau of en
tomology of the department in the use
of an arsenate of lead spray which
usually gives satisfactory control whep
applied once during the season. In
southwestern Idaho, however, It was
discovered that two sprayings are nec
essary in order to obtain satisfactory
because of the fact that the
weevil continues Inying eggs through
out a longer period than elsewhere
The one thing apparently needed in the
ald of artificial control of the pest,
says the department, is some more effi
growers who
cerned.
As an additional means of control
insect parasites of the alfalfa
will be Introduced from Europe,
are most vitally con
weevil]
An
arrangements for the introduc
tion of these parasites has recently re
shipments of material
bégin to
Yong
spring.
parasitic
arrive in this
ft Is hoped
next by
parasite
and
already introduced
thus eventually to restore
Favor Cultural Method
The cultural method for
by the Purdue University Agricultural
Extension department has been
with marked success by Walter Land
Indiana,
At. a recent
County Agent Horace Copeland,
Landers explained the method
farmers present, The
held In a fleld heavily infested
garlic a year ago. According to
Landers. he plowed the field in No
vember, being carefvl to turn the tips
of
ere,
meating
in order to kill the tops
field to com
duced the amount of garlic
per cent.
Three years of plowing
By this means he has re
about 75
and cultl
garlic but the results secured by Land
ers are very striking
Details of the ciltivation method
addressing the Purdue Unl
partment. Lafayette, Indiana. The
Dept.
Worthless Filler Adds
to Cost of Plant Food
The farmer who wishes to huy plant
food for his crops most economically
will consider three things—filler,
freight and fertilizer,
This Is a statement from the New
York College of Agriculture at Ithaea
The soils men at the college point out
that farmers who buy low-analysis
fertilizers not only pay a good round
price for the filler, which of course
contalng no plant food, but they also
have to pay freight on this worthless
material, thereby making it a double
liability.
The use of high-grade acid phos.
phate, where phosphate alone is need
ed, the purchase of high-composition
chemicals for home mixing, and the
nge of high-analysis mixtures when
factory mixed goods are used, will go
far to eliminate freight and fillers and
at the same time furnish the best of
fertilizers,
Steam-Sterilizing Milk
Cans Destroys Bacteria
That it pays to steam-sterilize milk
cans has been shown conclusively by
tests made by the United States De
partment of Agriculture. Unsteamed
cans having a bacterial count of 154.
000,000 contained 18,000,000,000 at the
end of 24 hours, while steamed eans
having a count of 8,400 immediately
after steaming and left practically dry
had 7.000 in the same time. The bac.
teria count on steamed cans left damp
for 48 hours increased from 4,400, to
nearly 6,000,000.
Economical Practice in
Feeding Mature Horses
It is an economical practice to feed
mature idle horses largely on fodders,
straw and hay during the winter, but
the same practice 8 poor economy
when applied to growing colts. Celis
peed a large supply of avallable pro
tein and mineral matter to develop
thelr muscles and hon if these nu.
trients are pot supplied nt this time
when the Incentive for growth Is great
est, the result will be small and wes!
animals, he : 4 y
i)
%
SAY “BAYER” when you buy Gonsine
Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for
Colds Headache
Pain Toothache Neuritis Rheumatism
; Accept only “Bayer” package
which contains proven directions.
v ‘Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets
Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists.
Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Mososoeticacidenter of Ballcylicacid
Record Catch of Fish. | cess of the 1919 record, The est)
The Lunenburg (Nova Scotia) fish- | mated value jg over $2,000,000. The
| Ing fleet landed a record catch of 812.- average cate a vessel was 3,151 quin
975 quintals of fish during the Iast | tals Thé Marian Belle Wolfe, with
| geason. This is 18,925 quintals in ex- | 5,600 quintals, was high liner.
Neuralgia Lumbago
Gilder Coy foi
Zezt s)
VL
MOTHER := Fletcher's Cas-
toria is a pleasant, harmless
Substitute for Castor Oil, Pare-
goric, Teething Drops and
Soothing Syrups, prepared for
Infants and Children all ages. / /,
To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of up don
Proven directions on each package. Physicians everywhere recommend f&.
Spoke the Truth.
-1'd like to see the man I would
7
— a - - ——,
It Does Shock Some Folks,
Mother—But what enjoyment do yog
| obtain from smoking?
Daughter—The effect on others,
Khe
| marry.
He—I'll bet you would!
Trying to please people can. go to &
| foolish extreme,
The foundation
faith,
of justice iz good
Get rid of
constipation '
by internal 3
cleanliness
' ; ‘HERE is no reason why you should suffer from
constipation. Headaches, biliousness, sleepless
nights, heaviness, are natures warning that intestinal
poisons are flooding your system. If allowed to con-
tinue, you may become a victim of serious organic
disease.
In constipation, say intestinal specialists, lies the
primary cause of more than three-quarters of all ill
ness including the gravest diseases of life.
Laxatives Aggravate Constipation
Laxatives and cathartics do not overcome constipa-
tion, says a noted authority, but by their continued
use tend only to aggravate the condition and often
lead to permanent injury. .
Why Physicians Favor Lubrication
Medical science, through knowledge of the intestinal
tract gained by X-ray observation, has found at
last in lubrication a means of overcoming constipation.
The gentle lubricant, Nujol, penetrates and softens
the hard food waste and thus hastens its passage out
of the body. Thus Nujol brings internal cleanliness.
Nujol is used in leading hospitals and is prescribed by physicians
throughoit the world. Nujol is not a icine orl ive and
cannot gripe. Like pure water it is
Get rid of constipation and avoid disease by adopting the habit
of internal cleanliness. Take Nujol as regularly as you brush
gour teeth or wash your face. For sale by all druggists.
Nujol
REG. US. PAT, v
+ in your mouth at bedtime,
Always keep a box on hand.