The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, February 07, 1924, Image 7

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    NERVOUS, RUN-
DOWN MOTHERS
Worn Out Caring for Children and
Housework—See how Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Veg
Compound Helps
Indianapolis, Indiana.—*I was in a
very nervous and run-down condition
while nursing my
baby, and hearing
some talk of Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vege-
table Compound, I
be i it.
improvement, and
am still taking it. I
am not a bit nervous
different person. It
——1ii8 8 great medicine
for any one in yuciious Fudown eon-
dition and I would be glad to give any
one advice about taking it. I thin
there is no betber Tied ine and give
permission to p etter. ”’
TE AxNA Suit, 541 W. Norwood
Street, Indianapolis, Indiana.
The im t thing about Lydia E
8 Vegetable Compound ia that
it does help women suff from the
ailments common to their sex.
If you are nervous and run-down and
have pains in your lower and in
= remember that the Vegetable
mpound has relieved other women
having the same symptoms. _ For sale
by druggists everywhere.
% an at fl Faded]
eRe ~~ dn Chem. W ks. Patchogue, X.
HINDERCORNS removes
louses, ete.,
Onl
Stops all pain, ensures comfort
>» the
feet, makes walk eaxy, 5c. by mall er at Drege
slats. Hisonx Works, Puschogum i. o
INFLAMED EYES
Use Dr. Thompson's Ryoswater,
Buy at your a 's or
1G River, Proy. K.¥ Booklet.
Cabbage Plants
Early Jersey, Charlesten Wakafleld, Flat Dutch,
Succession. Postpaid, 100, 35c; 800, 1.04; 500, $1.25;
pos collect — at $2.00 1000,
Lettuce, Collard, Kale, Srasecls
Kohl-Rabi plants same price.
Sa guaranteed,
D. F. Jamison, Summerville, S. C.
SALESMEN, We Have Openings
for R ents
products. Cash weakly commissions Com -
plete outfit. Write
proposition.
W. 7. HOOD & COMPANY
Old Domindom Nurweries
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
FOR GOOD HEALTH USE W. IH. ¥.
Instead of tea or coffes. Pound bottls makes
480 cups instantaneous food beverage Direct
by mail, $1.00, Try it. GG. PF. HOPF,
15th Street N. W., WASHINGTON, D. C
MILK FEVER?
Harmless compound cures at once. M .
back guarantees $1.00 postpald BD.
HOBART, 3756 Buffalo Ave. leago, IIL
QUINSAL CAPSULES BEST REMEDY FOR
hours. Postpaid 0c and $1.00. WALDMANN
BROR, 401 E STth ft, NEW YORK CITY
sionally.
DEMAND “BAYER” ASPIRIN
Take Tablets Without Fear If You
See the Safety "Bayer Cross.”
Warning! Unless you see the name
“Bayer” on package or on tablets you
are not getting the genuine Bayer
Aspirin proved safe by millions and
prescribed by physicians for 23 years.
Say “Bayer” when you buy Aspirin,
Imitations may prove dangerous.—Ady.
The woman whose face is her for
tune is likely to go broke sooner or la-
ter.
A— — —— t—
“CASCARETS” FOR LIVER °
AND BOWELS—10¢ A BOX
Cures Biliousness, Constipation, Sick
Headache, Indigestion. Drug stores. Adv,
In most lives, how persistently noth
Ing happens.
One Trial Will Convince You
that Allcock's Plaster is by far the
quickest, safest and most certain rem-
edy for all local aches and pains.—Ady,
A mistletoe famine doesn't worry the
girl who is pretty,
Hall's Catarrh
Medicin
COMPOUND
FOR
COUGHS. COLDS
BRONCHITIS
}] THROA £00 BY
Italian Seed Is
Not Satisfactory
Has Resulted im Poor Crop
or Failure in Nearly,
Every Trial.
Prepared by the United States Department
Agriculture.)
of
In October last, the United States
Department of Agriculture called at-
tention to the fact that the American
red clover seed crop for 1923 appeared
0 be a short one and that therefore
t was probable that considerable im-
portations of foreign seed would be
made, Present Indications are that
such importations will be heavy and
from widely separated regions of pro-
Suction and therefore will include seed
varying greatly In its adaptabllity to
the: climatic conditions of different por.
tions of this country, This makes it
{mportant for the farmer to consider
in the light of avallable Iuformation
what kind of clover seed will be best
for him te buy.
Points Well Settled,
“While the department has not yet
accumulated sufficient Information
through Its tests In co-operation with
the state experiment stations to make
possible a determination of the adapt-
ability of red clover from all the for-
elgn sources, the following points are
regarded as fairly well settled:
1. Italian red clover seed Is un-
suitable for any part of the elover
area except the Pacific Northwest.
Italian seed has resulted in a door |
crop or a fallure In nearly every %rial i
made by the department, both In its |
own tests and those made In co-opera-
with the state experiment sta-
How much Itallan seed will be import- |
ed Is not known and, unfortunately, it |
is not possible to tell how much Ital
ian grown seed will be offered under
some other name,
2. In the Central Northwest where |
winters are severe and the snow cover |
usually light, northern grown red |
clover seed only should be used. If |
that is not to be had, other domestic |
seed may be used, except that from
Oregon, which produces a less hardy |
plant, |
8. So far as trials have been made, |
the Chllean, French, and northern |
European seed has given good results |
in the Ohio and Mississippl valleys and
in the North Atlantic const states. |
clover diseases, especially anthracnose, |
the foreign clovers are more likely to
lose out on the second crop.
4. In Virginia and westward to Ten.
nessee, where anthracnose is likely
i
i
i
strains. At present there is peas. |
Under these circumstances seed grown |
used, or Chilean, or French seed sown |
In August rather than In the spring |
On suitable land a good crop of hay |
expected even |
though a second cutting may not be se
cured,
5. In Oregon, Washington and Idaho
all strains have done well, the place
of origin of the seed seems to make
little difference for these regions.
6. Buyers should Insist on knowing
the origin of the seed offered and seed
should be purchased from firms or or
ganizations of known Integrity and re
sponsibility.
Use Only Domestic Seed,
7. It would probably be desirable
for all American farmers to use only
domestic red clover seed, That Is at
present Impossible, howaver, and too
great insistence on this might lead
to an excessive Increase in price to.
gether with the sale of much Imported
seed under domestic labels, Wherever
Imported seed of suitable kinds can
be safely used, this course would seem
advisable to follow rather than to re.
duce the acreage seeded because of
difficulty In securing domestic seed.
Reasons for Failure to
Obtain Stand of Clover
There may be several reasons for
the fallure to get a good stand of
sweet clover. The soil may be slightly
acid, the seed bed may have been too
loase, the soll may not have been in-
oculated properly, and some of the
seed may not have germinated yet.
Sweet clover contains from 10 to 50
per cent of hard seed, which does not
germinate until it has lain in the soll
for considerable time. If scarified
seed Is uséd this particular trouble
may be avolded,
It is not necessary to work the land
again if the seed ig to be sowed In
February; it will be sufficiently cov.
ered by the alternate freezing and
thawing. Sow about 15 poundf of seed
to the acre.
Winter seedings will often produce
one goed cutting the first year and
two the second. The first cutting
should not be made until the crown
buds begin to appear on top of the
Spots. The cuttings of the second year
ould be made just before the bloom
buds appear.
similar - material, Such trees when
planted In the spring seem to do better
than trees which come direct from the
Rursery In either the fall or spring.
Making and Storing
Ice for Summer Use
Method of Freezing in Cans
or Paper Bags Outlined.
(Prepared by the United States Department
of Agriculture.)
Furnishing the average farm with a
sufficlent supply of Ice for use in the
house and the dairy is a problem of
considerable concern in many locall-
ties, especially where there are no
ponds or streams from which a natural
Supply can be secured. A method of
paper bags may be used, says the Uni-
ted States Depdrtment of Agriculture,
in regions where cold weather prevails
for several weeks at a time and wheres
thé supply of pure water is limited.
The cans may be made in any con-
venient size by a local timsmith and
should be of galvanized irom reln-
strips.
moval of the ice easler. The cans are
placed near the well or other source
of water supply, filled with water and
left exposed to the weather. A shell
of ice soon freezes around the inner
surface, and when this shell is from
i
poured over the outside of the can
and the shell removed. If left to
freeze solid the cake would tend to
burst or bulge.
moved from the can a hole Is broken
through at the top of the shell and
most of the water Inside then poured
out. As the freezing progresses, wa-
ter is poured into the shell a little at
a time until a solld block of ice is pro-
duced. By this method only a few
cans are required, usually enough to
layers for the ice house at a time.
About the same method is employed
when special paper bags are used. al
though they do not last so long as the
Another method that can be
used In very cold sections of the Uni.
ted States is to run water into the ice
house and let a layer freeze. This Is
dope by first constructing a dam of
snow around the floor of the house 10
inches from the wall in order to
The interior of the house is
then flooded with a few Inches of wa-
ter, which soon freezes, the procedure
being repeated until the house is filled
with ice. It is then covered with saw.
dust and closed up until ice Is needed,
A great disadvantage of this method
is that in order to remove ice, It must
cut or chopped out with an ax
pleces and considerable waste of ice.
————
New Invention Provides
Adjustment on Windmill
The Scientific American in illustrat.
ing and describing an attachment for
af windmill, the invention of 1. F. Will-
man, Muleshoe, Texas, says:
windmills adapted for use in operating
wells. An important object is to pro-
Windmill Provided With Means for
Self-Adjustment to the Wind.
vide a windmill having means where
by the same is positioned with rela-
tion to the wind and whereby the same
may be thrown out of gear during a
storm or high wind. A further object
is to provide a windmill having a pair
of wooden or metal wheels which by a
novel arrangement are operatively
connected to a pitman rod or drive
shaft,
Sweet Soil Is Necessary
for Many Garden Crops
Your garden may not be acid, but If
it has been kept pretty rich the
chances are it is. When manure and
green crops are plowed under they de-
cay and make for acidity, and no soll
is at its best for most crops when in
this condition. Some crops do not ob
Jeet so much as others, but for a gen.
eral high-producing soll it is necessary
to keep it sweet. There Is little dan-
ger of getting it too full of lime, and
as lime will help to make all fertilizers
produce better results, when using
them it is advisable to first lime the
soll. Lime and fertilizers should not
often cause a loss of plant food by
hasty chemical action.
Skim Milk Valuable for
Feeding Young Animals
Skim milk Is worth very much more
for feeding to pigs and calves than to
dairy cows, but when a surplus is at
hand it is all right to use it. At the
Connecticut station, when sepamtor
skim milk was offered to the old cows,
Suis tour would drink It, even though
wa was withheld for forty-eight
hours and grain was mixed with the
milk. With the four cows, skim milk
was substituted for concentrates ia
the ration at the rate of eight pounds
of milk for one of concentrates. This
substitution caused an increase in the
yield of milk,
i
GIRLS! A GLEAMY MASS
OF BEAUTIFUL HAIR
less, Neglected Halr,
An abundance
gloss,
and life
shortly follows a
genuine toning up
of neglected
scalps with de-
pendable “Dan-
derine.”
Falling hair, ZI >”
itching scalp and the dandruff is cor
rected Immediately. Thin, dry, wispy
or fading halr Is quickly invigorated
taking on new strength, color and
youthful beauty. “Danderine” ig de
lightful on the hair; a refreshing
stimulating tonlc—not sticky or greasy
Any drug store~—Advertisement,
Afraid of It
She—Do you believe in woman's in
tuition?
He—No, but I'm afrald of it.—Town
Toples.
WOMEN CAN DYE ANY
GARMENT, DRAPERY
Dye or Tint Worn, Faded Things
New for 156 Centa.
Diamond Dyes
Don't wonder whether you can dye
or tint successfully, because perfect
home dyeing Is guaranteed with "Dia
mond Dyes” even If you have never
dyed before. Drugglists have all colors
Directions in each package.—Adver
tisement,
Even a lazy man will hurry when a
train stops ten minutes for refresh
ments,
A Lady of Distinction
Is recognized by the delleate, faselnat-
Ing influence of the perfume she uses. |
A bath with Cuticura Soap and hot!
water to thoroughly cleanse the pores!
followed by a dusting with Outicura |
Talenm powder usually means a clear, |
jest,
Neuralgia
Also
sobitde~*T"m not.
fan 3
| health
.
vod digestion,
Wright's Ine
safeguard yous
Y. Adv
sult to Eve
used by n
stores and
's cooking
iilions for 00 years, Drug
general stores sell bottles
make,
’
time. The
Lamb w
|
i
There is
y cleanse the system, purify |
rith green peas suits some |
he bucket shop prefers lamb i
backs, }
:
|
S.B.
no better looking-glass than i
~
ha
——
“Two pleasant ways
to relieve a coug
Take your choice and suit
your taste. O-b—or Menthol
flavor. A sure relief for coughs,
colds and hoarseness. Put one
in your mouth at bedtime,
Always keep a box on hand. MARR
COUGH DROPS pzvmo
CL
HEN you are constipated,
poisons form in the accumu-
lated food waste. These poisons,
absorbed by the blood, are carried
throughout the body. Headaches
follow. Biliousness, sleepless
nights, lack of energy, all result
from constipation. Each of these
takes away piecemeal something
of your health and strength. In
time, intestinal poisoning due to
lack of internal cleanliness may
cause, the breakdown of some
vital organ.
In constipation, say intestinal spe-
cialists, lies the primary cause of
more than three-quarters of
all illness including the
gravest diseases of life.
Laxatives Aggravate
Constipation -
Laxatives and cathartics
ond Wo not overcome constipation,
says a noted authority, but by their
continued use tend only to aggra-
vate the condition and often lead
to permanent injury.
Medical science, through knowl-
edge of the intestinal tract gained
by X.ray observation, has found
at last in lubrication a
means of overcoming
constipation. The gen-
tle lubricant, Nujol,
penetrates and softens
the hard food waste ' I
and thus hastens its
passage through and
aut of the body. Thus
Nujol brings internal cleanliness.
Physicians Favor Lubrication
. Nujol is used in leading i
and is prescribed by 8 fosgiils
throughout the world. Nujol is
not a medicine or laxative and
cannot gripe. Like pure water it
is
Get rid of constipation and avoid
disease by adopting the habit of in-
ternal cleanliness. Take Nujol as
regularly as you brush your teeth
or wash your face. For sale by all
Internal Cleanliness