THE CENTRE REPORTER, CENTRE HALL, PA. Bees Studied on "| Catching Chickens ALONG Delaware Coast Helps in Culling LIFE’S TRAIL i » B t Ww 5 # C . te Carefully Planned Experi- est Way Is to Have Crates ment Will Be Conducted With Wire Sides, to Solve Problems. — — A THIS WOMAN'S REMARKABLE RECOVERY Entirely Due To Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Cr —————————— By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK Dean of Men, University of Illinois. LHHOHHD (© 1935, Western Newspaper Union.) BURTON'S ROOM chickens Is a large involved in culling, and experience ghows that any help in this direction Is valuable, The best way to cateh chickens for culiing, says H. E. Botsford of the New York State College of Agriculture at Ithaca, is to have one or inore catching crates, about four feet long one and a half feet high, and two feet wide, The few of the time-worn questions which | erates should have wire sides and one will be studied intensively by the | end should be removable, The erate United States Department of Agricul: | ig placed where the birds leave the ture. A carefully planned experiment | henhouse und they are driven into it. will be conducted on the coast of Dela- Another good method Is to construct ware, in a region having no nectar: | a small secreting flora. The office of bee cul- | building ture Investigations of the bureau of | caught, entomology announces that one of the | Drive principal objects of the work is to de one termine the effect various weather con ditions have on the flight activities of bees, Catching the part of the work (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) How far will a honey the hive for food? economic limit to the distance the in- sect can travel for raw material? By what means does it find new fields of nectar-yielding flowers? These are a bee fiy from What is the Fence Posts That Last Concrete fence posts need no paint or repairs; they cannot rot, but grow stronger with age, They present a neater, more efficient appearance and hold the wires securely—forming a safe enclosure for field or yard. They can be made indoors dur- ing the winter and set up in the spring. If you make them yourself your building material dealer can give you an Atlas book that tells you how-or he can direct you to a concrete products plant where you can buy them ready made. Of course, you will want to be T IS Interesting how much the places in which we live tell of our char. acters and of our tastes, The club was crowded, the clerk sald when 1 called for my reservation, and instead of putting me into the room which 1 usually occupy, he assigned me to a room left temporurily vacant by the absence of one of the regular guests. There were a few rows of books the open shelves; pictures covered the walls, and the furniture and the hangings at the windows were apparently the property of the regular occupant of the rou. It was curious how quickly and ae- curately the contents of the room re Forest City, Iowa. ~ * first child lived only a short time and I was sick for a year after. When I bent over and raised myself up again I could al- most scream with pa in my back. eday I was so bad that I had to po my washing an ready to go to fe doctor. He gave me medicine but it did no more than if I drank just water. Once when we had been in town a little book telling about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound was left in our car. catching pen outside of euch the birds Professo into the of the exit in fo he where are dateford ground, | and the | stukes four feet feet apart. hottom, with nu: Bi YS four on either side the other euch pair two stakes, top and stnkes two unway the row Juin I have taken five bottles of the Vegeta- ble Compound now and I do all my housework and help with the milking and taking care of chickens and gar- den. Besides I have a fine baby girl eight Tong old, ou, Just the picture of health and I ecling fine myself. You may use this letter as a testimo- nial and I will answer any letters ask- ing about the Vegetable Compound.” rs. Oscar F. BorGeELIN, Route No. B, Forest City, Iowa. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound is for sale by all druggists. — Enough Winnle—What classical music? Walter—I can't is your objection to pronounce it, Eye infection and inflammation are haaled evernight by using Roman Eye Balsam, Ask your druggist for iS-cent jar or send 80 372 Pearl 8t., N.Y. Adv, Just Ahead “What is the happlest day Hie?’ “Tomorrow.” of one's Boston Transcript, Don't be annoyed by ugly blemis Xs. when red, irritated, blotch skins can be quick Ky cleared by Resinol Dairy and Stock Farm NEAR WASHINGTON 277 ACRES Profitable stock and dalry farm and de Mghiful home in beautiful Fairfax County Ya on the Little River Turnpike with splendid roads entire 27 miles to Washing ton, D. C 277 acres, fronting long distancs on the pike Weil known in Fairfax County as the “Chantilly Farm.” Biue Ridge Moun tains can be seen In the distance Owing to location on the highway and its ennvenience to Washington, this property wil share In the rapid enhancement of val. uss which Is taking piace on the Virginia side of the Polomac Ten-room dwelling, oceliar under antire house, porches fropt and rear. large, abaded lawn Barn 3xi00 modern equipment, chine, dairy house, house 10 acres In corn, 30 acres In cowpeas bear ing orchard. 12 acres iu timber, balance In grass and sod; land llea well, gently rolling and very productive; finely watered by springs and streams running through prop arty 30 high-grade cows, 3 heifers, 1 re bull, 2 horses, wagon and harness. Fordson tractor, plows, double disc. manure spreader disc drill, Deering binder. completes dairy equipment PRICE, $29, RBUBY LEE MINAR 308 New York Ave, Washington, D. C. SHENANDOAN cov NTY MONEY MAKERS Fertile Shenandoah Coanty farms, 219 te 308 acres, $1,000 to 310.000 Near big eastern markets, best prices for poultry, live stock and cropa. Winter apples grow to fection here, orchards grow in valge very fast. Also several tracts very fine timber, oak, chestnut, hemlock and pine. Some will saw §.000.000 ft. lumber. Close to depot and water. Alm beautiful summer homes and hotel properties » in lve town of all modern Improvements, stopping place for tourists going to Na'lona! Park BOX 213, WOODSTOCK, SHENAN DOAH COUNTY. VIRGINIA Tomato Plants, the Greater Baitimare. Grown on fresh land. guaranteed free from disease PFhipped with damp moss to roots $1.00 per thousand Pitts Plant Co, Fitzgerald, Oa — 4 -— FLORIDA REAL ESTATE Free Information How the Small Investor Can Share Enormous Profits Being Made in Florida BOX 1145, MIAMI, FLORIDA. DO YOU WANT A RAINCOAT FREE? You can do this and make 310.00 day etary Send stamp for limited free offer Box 46, West End Station, Richmond, Va steel! stanchions for 30 cows including milking ma 2 wmilos, S-room tenant intared DAISY FLY KILLER FAS rs Eon) ALL FLIES Ze EN Ca New Thread Machine An electric "sewing machine” called an “Insect” because of Its resemblance to a fly, welds piping, steel plates of ships and many other articles by means of a white-hot steel wire fed from a bobbin, Dispatch Is the soul of business, Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION vealed the man who had lived in it, | got his name from a signed photograph on the wall-the picture of a well known Phil Adelphia physician, The signature read: "To Burton, courageous fighter,” who hard plece of work well” He had been a coll clear gee, interested Other pictures showed his love [or out-of-doors, for rivers und lakes and high mountain peaks... There were camping with dogs and guns and a beautiful white horse showing In numerous prints. There was n wide sweep of sea with men in a _besutiful sallboat in the foreground. There were mountain scenes of the Jungfrau and El Capitan rearing his majestic head above the Yosemite valley, and of the Canadian Rockies, and every one testi fled the man's healthy out-of door life, His books revealed a discriminating iaste, though a rather narrow range He wus and = physicist apparently were many re: on physics on book shelves and fiction but Ror Robert did a man, It was in athletics lege fo scenes fo love of a clean of interests, un chemist for chelnistry there 1tises und his wus some poetry soe in these, practical & concerned with adventure. with nature and great out-of There were problem novels, no poetry of but Zane Gray's Western tales there, and Kipling's "Captain ageous” and his “Barrack Room nda” the collect healthy on, 100, nos the doors were Cour- There were no children’s faces look ing down from the walls, and the oniy woman's face was that gray-haired old lady-—his moth no doubt. Cupid had evidently him stony-hearted and had gone He was no lady's us clear to see. But the whole atmosphere of Bur ton's room showed him to he and healthy. orderly and friendly. uway discouraged that w» He clear thinker. 1 left respect for him, him and may and a with a great [| had never seen do sO, thoazh ne Yer REMEMBERING NAMES HAVEL an unfortunate reputation for being able remember names, a which, though often 1 fee! under obligation to keep untarnished. It-is worth a good deal to be able to call a man by name whom one has not seen for tweny-five years I tulk to lows a day, pame or better names, | am to served, fifty or more young fel and if 1 can call then by still by their first infinitely more effective than if 1 stall along not knowing whether the an In front of me is Jones or Rosenstein, Memory is a matter of associations the psychologists tell us, and 1 pre sume | have learned usually to make mine unconsciously, nut sometimes the unconscious association refuses to come and the simplest names elude me. 1 could never say Hephurn's name, for instance. | Knew him well: | was never confused as to his identity. | krew where he lived, where he came from. his roommate's name. his busi ness, and everything about him, but fils name was always playing about the outer edges of my wemory. I believe 1 have more than ordinary curiosity about people. When | see a familiur face to which | cannot attach the proper name, | Zive myself no peace until 1 have run the name to rover. My inzy reluctunt memory knows that 1 shall not be satisfied until I get the elusive name, and so usually goes after it at once. Sometimes it tukes me days to find the forgetten pame, but 1 never give up until | find It. We forget names often because we do not get them distinctly and not heariog them distinctly, we do not visualize them, It helps a good deal tc speak a man's name whenever one meets him, and at once to attach to It some other detnils of place or situation or relationships, Mead was introduced to me two or three days ago, and before he got out of the office 1 discovered his home town, his business, his friends with whom | am also sequainted. All these will help me to remember him when he romes to see me again ns he will with in three months, Remembering names is a matter of interest in peuple, of persistence In following up the elusive name. It fs Flight Readily Controlled. no flowers ion of the readily con ASR that the will countryside hus the oun placing of This “honey nt and result flight marily by preva Automatic feeders contain. solution of known al first be the of a he divert atten bees, their flight trolled by the p artificial food. be kept constan variation in the ‘used pri he supplies of flow wili ns a uny uctivities will be ling weather onditions, ing Eravity tances sugar will from one-eighth There bees, specific placed at dis hives « io colonies aryving miles, Italian tha! he three of seule mile will fen each colony on a wo in the weight may Records will variatious be mude of the ring the day learn the hour to hour variation it hones Records of weight At night sive the "ry | studied noereases in weight du to income hy evaporation information on huney. ’ Move Feeders Grad he feeders will g wing ually. raduniiy I | to greater distances from the cole to determine the limit of fii nee onthe ie factor from the nnd Some gh it of distr of honey standpoint of the loaded new and secluded | If possible the m the bee in searching for and the time taken to find These and obscure concerning an econo of the beekeeper Lees with sirup will be pinced places sthieles followed by them other factors the behavior of bees puz ' solved will prove of industry. much benefit With Sheep on Pasture It is necessary, of against bloating when sl tured on rape The Introduced gradually forage, first turning are rather well course, to ep are flork pas them filled by they dry hay iambs should be left | the rape patch but a short time they become accustomed they will pas ture it without danger except the leaves are wet, in which case it is | best to keep the flock out of | antil the plants are dry i rape sometimes causes scours In lambs, It is best turned in upon when eight to ten inches high before sheep at all . ¢ when Keep salt times, Get grain harvesting machinery In shape. ® - » Do not fail to plant soy beans for hog pasture. \ * » Even three-leaf clover brings good luck if you have plenty of it, » * * T. .e heaviest taxes the farmer has to pay are the ones levied by his own slackness, - . =» Much of the winter killing of clover ean be avoided by sowing native red clover seed only, - . * All good saw handles are made of apple wood, because it does not break if a saw is dropped . - . Flowers bring more real joy in rela- tion to the work spent on them than #ny other thing you plant, . . . The main purpose of the farm bu reau movement Is to carry on an edu cational program of self-help, . * » Nicotine dust made with five parts of nicotine sulphate and 85 parts of hydrated lime will get the plant aphids. - . . The creosoted posts undoubtedly will last Jonger than ordinary posts. They do not harbor insects, diseases, or mice, and so far as known they do not injure the plants, - . 9 Milk is coming Into It& own. Per capita consumption Increased seven quarts during the past year, figures from the United States Department of Agriculture indieate, . so» It will cost less for a farmer to help O-in Tack tw und o strips of bourds wire around the Fasten wire across free The into the sides ier end the top birds may caugnt one side be driven pen und easily, For the gested the following: Tak feet of poultry and fasten a strip at each end, | bhy-four bottom of the the other end is and twenty he culler sug work inside house, he ten Kix hy five of one ‘axten about twelve wire feet high two-inch or material of two to the end sever three feet wire. Nall feet from a corner. The swung out into the room five or thirty birds rounded up and ples “HN long one ve to wall fi enn easily passed to the Satisfactory for Eggs White Leghorns seem satisfactory breed When desired it pass lo one of the general-purpose breeds, tarred Pros Rocks, Ithode Is Wrandottes, Thi mention sil the production or 10 be mimer both The most for ot cial egg production ER kerp ike and meat are feds or White s brief Tint that for the ind not breeds good and ment Hyiduals In a breed name that ite from a flock of pou If the the hens that the same, | think little, if any, difference of the contents. | have heard o of the brow breeds say that yk richer and more food va does are for aw eZR LY production It is hreed and not the ines try determ the hens that lay white lay brown eggs are there in the qu their prob thar in 31 ably contained ine white-shelled eggs. but scientific seems to Indicate that weight vestigation of equal in food value the shell It Is often found that horn eggs will hateh a larger per of chicks than some brown egg breeds I think the vigor of the the same fire regardiess of the White Leg» cont stock is egg In determining hatchability Ventilation Necessary for the Brooder House Brooding houses should have enough but tem- enld smell of gas from the heater, they must be kept at the proper perature, too much ventilation in stormy weather will be injurious, usual method of ventilation jow- ering the windows at the front and opening small openings at the back un der the raflers, Such methods nat urally require pretty careful watching in cold weather In some cases the fresh alr is brought In through a floor duct and admitted under the center of the bhrooder, is by under the rafters at the back. In any case, the openings must be provided with dampers so the ventilation can be controlled. Great as Soil Builder Alfaifa stands ‘in the front ranks among the crops which build up the fertility of the soll. Farmers who have grown it report that they get much higher yields of grain and other cropg on land which has been in alfalfa than on land where no le guminous crop has been grown. In the farming sections where no lime needs to be added to the soil and It is ensy to get a stand, alfalfa may readily be made part of a definite system of crop rotation. Clean Land for Alfalfa Plant alfalfa on clean, cultivated land. This means corn or potato land A clean firm, moist geedbed Is essen tial to success, and clean corn or po tato land gives these essentials In @ practical way. Fall-plowed grain-stub ble land, well firmed in the spring, can he made inte a good seedbed for al falfa. Spring-plowed stubble land is the last <iolce. If It Is necessary te use such land, plow early, pack well and seed a little later than usual, Hogging Off Barley While there would be some waste in hogging off barley and while the hogs would not make as efficient use of It as they would If It were linn vested, threshed and ground, the time Big Canadian Lakes The largest lake Can; within the (:reat Bear, urea The second with of ida is the in 11.821 Great 710 les Inke Is 10 miles You naturally feel secure when you take is sbeoiutely pure contains no tarmful or habit produc: ing drugs Buch a medicine Root, kidney, liver and bladder medicine The same standard of purity, strength excellence i» maintained in ana snd It i= scientifically compounded vegetable herbs, it is not teaspoonful doses It i= not recommended for everyihing It is nature's great helper and overcoming kidney, liver and der troubles A sworn statement of purity is bottle of Dr. Kimer's Ewamp blad If you need a medicine, On sa’: at all drug stores However, if you wish first to try great preparation send ten cents to Dr Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., British Labor M. P. a Poet One of the Labor whips of the Brit ish parliament is James Welsh, started composing poetry when he was eleven years ald and Is now 8 novel Cuticura Soap for the Complexion. Add to this the fascinating fragrant A man is foolish to borrow trouble him to lend money. ————— Acid stomach heartburn and pauses sre rorrecied with the use e Indian Adv. Consclenre is like-the frogs In the hr never shuts up, Betguse the and budd | slippers apparel, i the E i found them London were nos the esncries lind uroepesn odd jobs and V CRENTY needy artists of have suddenly are a boom to as real artiste f1.% final toueh upon the stg. Doesn't hurt “Freezone” Drop a little “Freezone” | corn between Betty hard all evening swords’ | few cross el's back.” “Betty.” und cane said ntl were pearly ag 1 F your body is all fagged-out and run-down, if you are losing weight steadily, lack appetite, have no strength or ~why not let Tanlac help you back to health and strength? So many millions have been ben- efited by the Tanlac treatment, so many sands have written to testify to that effect that it’s sheer folly not to make the test. Tanlac, you know, is a great natural tonic and builder, a com- pound, after the famous Tanlac formula, of roots, barks and herbs. It purges the blood stream, revital- izes the digestive organs and en- . ables the sickl body to regain its vanished You don’t need to wait long to resulis, Tanlac right to seat of trouble. In a day or so you note a vast difference in your condition. You have more appe- tite, sleep better at night and the color begins to creep back into your -out checks. Don't put off Tanlac another precious day. Step into “broke the cam~ vety moch pul her fluger inte then on played a neighbor rid his fields of chinch bugs than to combat them himself when they cross his property line. says the United States Department of Agricul ture. Wheat flelds developing infesta. tion should be sprayed in June, and so-operntion helps. saved in getting the cheaper feed, and the labor and expense of harvesting saved, probably would make up for nny waste and loss from this method of feeding. This, of course, applies only to the moall patch grown for early feed, j nu matter of association, unconscious or consciously devised. Some people re member names more enslly than others. but anyone chan learn the trick just as everyone can learn to spell or to like beets If he keeps at It persistently, TANLAC FOR YOUR HEALTH EL on fre EY ey aa W as sound eas an. WB.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers