The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, July 31, 1924, Image 7

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EE —————
REMARKABLE
RECOVERY OF
MRS. SPINK
TG
my own
to do for
¥ who is doing
1 tak the Vege-
Compound and feeling better than
I have for four years. The medicine is
surely wonderful and agood thing to have
in the house.’”’—Mrs. GEORG
Minnesota Junction, Wisconsin.
A country-wide canvass of purchasers
of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound re 98 per cent. benefited,
sale by druggists everywhere.
That Explains It
Tramp—You wouldn't believe it, sir
but I carry my life In my hands.
Unkind Man—Ha! Now I know why
you don’t wash them-—afrald yeu'll
drown, eh?
Sure Relief
FOR INDIGESTION
BELL-ANS
It's a wise flapper who doesn't neg-
lect the education of her parents.
Lots of folks are pleasant to talk to
but disagreeable to listen to.
FOR OVER
200 YEARS
haarlem oil has been a world-
wide remedy for kidney, liver and
bladder disorders, rheumatism,
0 HAARLEM OIL 2
A 47 :
Germination of
Alfalfa Seeds
There Are Present in All
Lots Two Types of Ker-
nels: Hard and Soft.
The germination of alfalfa seeds
shows that there are present In prac-
tically all lots two types of live seeds,
The first type absorbs water and
germinates readily In a few days; the
other type has a hard seed coat which
prevents immediate absorption of wa-
ter and hence delays germination.
These hard seed coats gradually soften
and permit germination. Tests con-
tinued over a long period of time In
the Colorado seed laboratory show
that practically one-half of the hard
seeds germinate In three months and
practically all of them In six months
when kept under ideal conditions for
germination in an incubator,
There has been carried on and is
now being continued much Investiga-
tional work In an effort to find the
causes of the hard seed coat and the
agricultural value of such seeds. The
most comprehensive plece of work
which has been completed at the pres-
ent time seems to show that it Is rea-
sonable to regard approximately one-
third of the hard seeds reported at the
end of six days as properly belonging
to the germination per cent, This is
based on actual fleld work.
There {8 some reason to believe that
methods of threshing alfalfa seed re
duce the hard seed per cent, since
seed harvested by hand this fall and
tested In the laboratory has 65 per
cent of hard seed while machine
threshed seed from the same vicinity
has approximately 20 per cent of hard
seed.
It Is characteristic of alfalfa seed
Imported from Turkestan to have prac-
tically no hard seeds, those imported
from Europe to have a comparatively
small per cent, while seeds Imported
from South America and Africa vary
much as do those grown In North
America,
A lot of seed containing a high per
cent of live seed, even though some
of them are hard seeds, Is superior to
a lot having the same germination but
ao hard seed.—Anna M. Lute, Colorado
Seed Laboratory, Colorado Agricul-
tural College,
Lack of Ventilation Is
Quite Harmful to Bees
Carefully examine all of your bee
hives, says E. 8. Provost, extension bee
specialist at Clemson college, In dis
cussing summer care of hives, und see
if there Is room. If there Is not room.
put on a super with full sheets of
foundation; and If they don't need an
extra super, prop the hive up at the
four corners with blocks about a half-
inch thick. This will give a door all
the way round and will let the alr cir.
culate In the hive much more freely
When bees are hanging out on the
front of the hive they are doing noth-
ing but loafing, but If you can get
them into the hive they will help evap-
orate the water out of the honey.
If the hive is In the sun all day, It
Is a good idea to make a shade board
This may be done hy taking rough
planks which are a little longer than
the hive and leaning them on top of
the hive so that they will break off
the sun,
Destroying Grasshoppers
The use of polson bran mash Is the
most effective and practical method
for destroying grasshoppers. This
bran mash Is composed of twenty
pounds of bran, one pound of white
arsenic, two quarts of sirup, three
oranges and three and one-half gallons
of water. The bran and arsenic are
mixed together while dry. The other
ingredients are mixed together and
when ready to use In the field the two
mixtures are united and thoroughly
stirred. This polson bran mash is
sown broadcast over the area where
the hoppers are bad, the above form-
ula being sufficient for about five acres.
Why Butter Is Washed
Washing the butter has for its ob.
ject the removal from the butter of as
much of the buttermilk as possible.
The churn should be stopped when
the butter granules are the size of
wheat kernels. The buttermilk is then
drawn off and the butter washed with
an equal quantity of clear water at
the same temperature as the butter-
milk. The churn Is revolved eight or
ten times with the wash water and
the water drained. The washing should
be repeated.
Pasturing Sweet Clover
Sweet clover may be safely pas-
tured In its second season from two to
three weeks earller than any other of
the common pasture plants. It will
carry a tremendous burden—-more
than any other of odr pasture plants.
Therc Is more danger of not keeping
enough stock on it than overpasturing
it. In its first season it will carry 2.-
000 pounds live weight to the acre and
will, of course, carry much more the
second,
Inoculation of Alfalfa
To inoculate alfalfa after it Is sown
use soll that carries the bacteria. This
you can get from an old alfalfa or
sweet clover fleld. The soll must not
he exposed to the sunlight much, as
this kills the bacterin, It 1s best to ap-
ply the soll on a cloudy day and har
row it In at once. It is hardly safe
to harrow aifalfa too soon after It Is
‘Give Chicks Proper
Care During Summer
——————
Prevent Overheating by Ex-
posure to Sun’s Rays.
In extremely hot weather special
care Is necessary to prevent chicks
from belng overheated by exposure to
the sun, confinement where ventilation
Is bad, or overcrowding.
Skim milk, either sweet or sour,
and buttermilk are especially valuable
feed In hot weather, making the diet
lighter without reducing its nutritive
value. The milk should be fed In a
drinking fountain or In a dish covered
with wire netting so that the chicks
cannot get Into it and become soiled
with milk. The use of milk does not
do away with the use of water, which
should be given as usual.
Some hens are loafers and can be
found and removed from the floor by
culling. This practice eliminates hens
of low vigor and lessens chances of
disease outbreak. Removal of the poor
producers allows more room for the
better producers and for the pullets.
Often more eggs can be secured from
flocks, better fed and housed.
Culling the hens for egg production
should be done during the period from
July 15 to October 1.
Normally, there Is a good market for
a declining In price from
until after the holidays
Poisonous Mixture Will
the potato bug. The young potato
est amount of injury In the average
An easy and practical method of pol.
soning them is to dust them with an
arsenic dust.
Take one part of powdered arsenate
of lead and ten to twelve parts of
alr slaked or hydrated lime and mix
together thoroughly. In case the lime
appears to be a little lumpy, It should
be run through a wire screen such
doors,
home.
Make a sack of about six or eight
inches wide and a foot deep out of a
material that is avallable and
the lime and arsenate of lead, which
while the dew iz on.
One timely application should prac.
tically rid the patch of the pests
Watch the plants carefully and if a
the same~By D. C. Mooring, Exten.
sion Horticulturist, A. and M. College
Better Methods in Live
More than £8.001.600 worth of
stock were fed and cared for in 1928
bers of 4H clubs conducted
gricultural extension workers
by ag
of lve stock management for
own and their neighbors’ benefit
These young farmers, according to re
ports to the United States Department
of Improved methods In live stock
work to completion as senior farmers
completed during the year.
Cs ———————
Clipping Kills Alfalfa
About as many stands of spring
sown alfalfa are killed by too frequent
clipping during the first summer as
are choked out by weeds. Da not clip
back young alfalfa unless it Is abso
lutely necessary. The young plants
need to make the greatest possible
leaf development in order to store up
a reserve supply of plant food for fu-
ture use. This is Impossible when
they are cut back at frequent inten
vals,
Flies also eat up dairy profits.
® * =»
Good hogs and good dairy cows
make a good combination,
. - .
Some men are as successful at dodg-
ing work as others at making It for
themselves,
*. * »
Oh, It's not hard to get up In the
morning If there Is a flourishing gar
den calling you.
. ® 9
Cats can move very quietly and
quickly. That Is why they are so suc.
cessful in destroying birds,
* »
Cure legume hay without ruin, yet
with the least sun possible. Hay caps
furnish the answer. Ask the county
agricultural agent about the hay har
vest weather forecasts,
La
Experience of the older growers of
alfalfa Is practically unanimous In the
assertion that alfalfa will stand more
rain and still make good hoy than will
either timothy or clover,
*
A good farm garden can be made
source of wealth and health, It takes
a little perspiration to get It started,
but after that it will almost take care
of itself-—barring weeds.
Mother Seal Brings
Up Family Strictly
Maternal discipline Is as pronounced
among the seal fmmllies as among hu-
man beings, according to men who
have spent many years along the
shores of Cook Inlet, Aluska, aud have
studied aquatic life there,
From the time a baby seal is laid
snugly within a bed of dry seaweed
until he recelves a final spanking and
Is directed to hustle for himself, he is
subjected to unrelenting discipline,
Contrary to popular belief, a baby
seal 18 as helpless In the water at
birth ns a human baby would be. I
must be taught to swim and Instruct.
ed In all the lore of seal life, includ
ing how to hunt food and escape its
enemies,
Churles Coach, who has made halr
seal hunting a business for years.
says he has watched a mother seal
teaching her baby to swim. The
mother would flounder out on the rook:
ery, gather the baby under her flipper
and slip earefully into the water. Sus
pending the baby on her flipper, she
would bark, grunt, whine and wheedle
to indicate what was desired. If the
baby refused to perform, It was effec
tively spanked with the mother's flip
per. The young seal gradually learns
to swim by floundering a few strokes
it from danger every time it becomes
exhausted or starts to sink,
Some of the henchcombers adopt
baby seals as pets. They become as
dogs and, If one decides
them, are as hard to get
An Instance was cited
to banish
About midnight there
was a plaintive wall at the cabin door
Like the traditional cat, the geal had
some back. He howled until he was
a plece of fish,
Stockings in History
The antecedents of present-day
stockings were first worn by men, save
the Detroit The early Anglo
stockings were known
“scin™ hose and were a mark of wealth
and station. They were made of leath-
er and wrapped around the leg like a
bandage. King Canute wore stockings
reaching to his knees and striped hori
zoatally in two colors, The Introducer
of what has hecome the modern sock
was King Robert, while King Edgar
enswathed his legs. with garters of
News,
fais
brought a return to the cross garter-
ing. and William the Conqueror's hose
were of red leather over which there
was a cross gartering of blue with
The dandlies of Franee under Charles
the Wise wore stockings of different
Black and yellow,
green and purple, and green and yel-
some of the combinations
The fashion of em-
broldering stockings with colored silks
vogue in the Fourteenth
Queen Philippa, consort of
Edward III, had stockings of seven
different colors. It was during the
reign of this couple that the circular
garter came into use. Under Crom
well the gay colors and embroidered
bright hues returned hen, with long
trousers for men, came socks, and silk-
embroidered ° stockings took their
places chiefly as Intimate associates of
women,
Seasickness
“New York doctors” says the St
Louis Star, “express themselves as un
with the much-heralded
‘oxygen cure’ for seasickness. They
say seasickness Is Dere to stay: that
there is no cure except to stay ashore,
“And not always Is one Immune If
one stays ashore. There are those
who become seasick through swinging
In hammocks, In a rocking chair, and
swing sharply around curves. For
these the pronouncement of doctors
comes #8 a real blow, Their sad ex
perience must be undergone again
when they travel abroad. They must
still get their thrills of a sea voyage
from books, and through anticipation
of the delights that await them when
they disembark at the end of the
Journey.”
His Reception
*T went to Lum Lagg's house last
night,” related young Dodd Durnitt,
a swain of Slippery Slap, “and Miss
Lobelia, his daughter, came to the
door with a shotgun In her hands. 1
took one look and tore out, and she
fired a couple of shots at me as 1
was splitting the wind away from
there, but didn’t hit me.”
"What In tunkett do you reckon
made her do that-a-way?” asked an
acquaintance.
“Well, I went there to tell her that
they had arrested her dad for running
a still, but I reckon she must a-fig-
gered from my looks that I aimed to
ask her to marry me, or something
of the sort.”-—Kansas City Star.
Round-House
The minister and his wife were on
their first pastoral esll of the geason.
The home happened to be that of a
woman who was seidom seen at
church,
The minister's wife, desirons of cre.
ating n good Impression, opened a con.
versantion by asking: “You get yom
children up to Sunday school in time,
don't you?
“Land sakes, woman,” was the re
ply, I'se got 13 chilluns, an’ by the
time I'se got de last un ready de fust
au's comin’ home agin.”
i
|
By reason of the fact that she
speaks from her long experience as a
professional nurse, the statement of
Mrs. J. Clark of 415 Walsworth ave-
nue, Oakland, Calif.,, will be of in-
terest to all who are In need of an
upbullding tone.
“In all my fifteen years’ experience
as a trained nurse,” says Mrs. Clark's
statement, “I never found the equal
of Tanlac as a stomach medicine and
tonle, Two years ago an attack of
influenza left me without appetite and
my stomach in sech a bad fix that the
little IT 414 eat seemed to do me harm
Instead of good.
“Stomach pains would make me so
weak 1 would feel right faint. The
least exertion would completely ex-
A Misnomer
Bhe—Did you notice Ethel's bob?
He—Bob? It looks like the old
Harry.—Boston Evening Transcript
haust me and six months before tak-
Ing Tanlac I was 80 weak I had to
hire my housework done. 1 was In
bed most of the time for two months
and was getting desperate,
“Tanlac was foore than a match for
my troubles and eight bottles left me
feeling fine, 1 eat and sleep like a
child and have energy and strength
that makes life a pleasure. Tanlae
is simply grand.”
Tanlae Is for sale by all good drug.
gists. Accept no substitute. Over
40 million bottles sold,
Tanlac Vegetable Pills, for constipa
tion—made and recommended by the
manufacturers of Tanplac.
Easy
Paul—What would
were In my shoes?
Edwin—1 would shine them.
you do if yom
Mother! Fletcher's Castoria
been In use for over 80 years as a|
pleasant, harmless substitute for |
Castor Oil, Paregoric, Teething Drops
and Soothing Syrups. Contains no
narcotics. Proven directions are on
each package.
" There’s a Difference
The rich bachelor who dines oot
daily Is called a welcome guest; the |
poor one a sponger.—Charles Narrey. |
A FEELING OF SECURITY
WHEN YOU USE
SWAMP-ROOT
You naturally feel secure when you
know that the medicine you are about to
take is absolutely pure and contains no
harmful or babit-producing drugs,
Buch a medicine is Dr. Kilmer's Swamp.
Root, kidney, liver and bladder medicine.
The same standard of purity, strength
and excellence is maintained in every
bottle of Swamp Root.
It is scientifically
vegetable herbs
It is not a stimulant and is taken in
teaspoonful doses,
It is not recommended for everything.
It is nature's great helper in relieving
compounded from
it. The kind you have
always bought bears signature of
Yet They Do Not
There are few gold mines to discover
and few oll flelds to tap, but anybody
can learn to put on plaster.—DBailtimors
Sun.
AND CHARM
face as the inevitable lines of fatigue and
ALLENS FOOT-EASE
Necessity. Shake it in your shoes in the
morning, Shop all a) Danse ail eve-
ping—then let your mirror tell the story,
It will convince you. Allen's Foot Eang
is adding charm to thousands of faces
let us show you what it ean do for you
Trial package and a Foot Ease Walks
Address
ing Doll sent PF .
ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE, Le Rey, K. T.
For Sale at All Drug and Deparement Stoves.
He that riseth late must trot all
{day and shall scarce overtake his
| work ai nirht
i
troubles.
A sworn statement of purity is with
every bottle of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp
If you need a medicine, you should have
the best. On sale at all drug stores in
bottles of two sizes, medium and large.
However, if you wish first to try this
great preparation, send ten cents to Dr
smmple bottle. When writing, be sure
snd mention this paper.—Advertisement.
Those Dear Girls Again
He-—1 had a nightmare last night!
She—Yes, 1 saw you with her!
No matter how careful! you are
om needs a laxative cocasionally
indian Vegetable Pilis help nature gently,
rut surely 372 Peart Mt. XN Y Adv
————
other cide.
To Have a Clear, Sweet Skin
Touch pimples, redness, roughness
| or Itching, if any, with Cuticura Olnt-
ment, then bathe with Cuticura Soap
and hot water. Rinse, dry gently and
dust on a little Cuticura Talcum te
| leave a fascinating fragrance on skin
Everywhere 20¢ each.—Advertisement
True love may fill the cup to over
flowing, but it's the other kind that
| slops over
Don't chuckle if you put over & substitute
when an advertised product is called for.
Maybe your customer will never come back.
Ben Mulford, Jr.
Young folks may giggle too muck,
| but old folks lament too much.