The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, July 23, 1925, Image 7

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    MRS. FULLER
MADE STRONG
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta-
ble Compound Helped where
Other Medicines Failed
Walpole, N. H.—*‘I have used Lydia
inkham’s Vegetable Compound and
find it has improved
my health wonder-
fully. For months
and months I was
not regular and had
terrible pains. They
used to affect my
side so I could not
ha work. I read of
Wie ‘others being hel
4 by She Vegetable
7 fy oy ompound, so I
3 SW thought it might
. ——— help me. 1 am very
much better now,strong enough to do
my own housework, and have two dear
babies to care for besides. I tried other
medicines before taking the Vegetable
Compound, but I was never treated for
my troubles. I speak highly of the
Vegetable Compound to my friends and
recommend it to any woman for run-
down and nervous condition. "'—Mrs. T.
H. FULLER, Walpole, New Hampshire.
Over 200,000 women have so far replied
to our question, ‘Have you received
benefit from taking Lydia . Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound?”’
98 out of every 1000f the replies say,
““Yes’' and because the Vegetable Com-
pound has been helping other women it
should help you. For sale by druggists
everywhere,
"BEST for the
Complexion
The beauty of Glenn's is the beauty
it brings to the complexion — soft,
gmooth, clear white skin, free of pim-
ples, blackheads or other blemishes.
Glenn’s Rohiand’s Styphic
Cotton 23¢
Sulphur Soap
Contains 33349; Pure Salpbar. At Druggists.
NRT TI am
Between Seasons
stranger i
of day
The
pass the time
the
ly, and finally
“Are there any
here?”
SLOPE i
stopped
weather
stra
he native shook
alowed, “not just nov
Us country
clothes and
na
sept
i BOL
a bit early.
on
city
our city the
folks ain on their country
For economy's sake, why not buy a ver
mifuge which expels Worms or
with a single dose? Dr. Peery's
Shot" does it. 372 Pearl 8t., N. YT.
Adv,
Heroic
“Kay, feller, I'm trying to stop smok
ing.”
“Well?”
“Can you loan me a cigarette?
Tell
Wanted, a hero in a no
spires your fealty, How
D’Artignans.
WHY SHOULD ANYONE
SUFFER WITH
INDIGESTION OR ANY
STOMACH MISERY?
If you want to fix up your dyspeptic,
out of order stomach so that
relish what you eat with not
bit of after distress, do what
thousands of people have
Getting rid of gas
vel who In.
rare are
the
bloating, belching,
hard
been
cation isn't such &
may think--You've
the wrong medicine
But better late
druggist for a bottle
Pepsin—a
very pleasant one. For acute indigestion
one or two doses is enough, but when
the trouble is chronic, two or three bot-
that's all
stomach
make iife worth living.
Making a start is the malin thing, ee
why not get one bottle today with the
distinct understanding that if it doesn't
help you the purchase price will be re-
Dr. Isaac
Thompson's
EYEWATER
EYE WASH
16 River, Troy, K. ¥. Booklet
Boschee's Syrup
Coughs and
Lung Troubles
Succesaful for 69 years
30e and 0c bottles ~
ALL DRUGGISTS
DR.LD.KELLOGG'S ASTHMA REMEDY
for the prompt relief cf Asthme
and Hay Fever. Ask your drugs
gist for it. 28 cents and one dole
lor. Write for FREE SAMPLE,
Northrop & Lyman Co. Inc. Buffalo N.Y, |
Fratellis
ALONG
LIFE’S TRAIL
By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK
Dean of Men, University of Illinois.
HHA
(©. 1926, Western Newspaper Union.)
GIVING ONE'S SELF
HE regular annual revival meeting
wus going on in the rural come
munity in which 1 lived, and the lead-
ers of the services as well as the min-
ister in charge were very much con-
cerned in getting old Pete Webster to
attend. Pete was & man of influence
in the neighborhood, but he had never
shown any particular Interest in re-
ligious matters excepting to make a
subscription for the support of the
church when the need of the cause
was presented to him.
“We are having revival services at
the schoolhouse this week,” the min-
Ister sald to Pete, “und we are tryiog
to get out as large an attendauce as
possible, Can't we count on you to be
present, Mr. Webster?”
“Well,” Pete replied, “1 always want
my share, I'm pretty much
taken up with other things Just now,
and I'm afrald 1 ean’t go myself, but
I'd be mighty glad to send a hand.”
~ v ”-
to do
There are a good many people like
Pete,
I visited a store
I bad traded a long
gtock was just as good
in the olden days, the store was much
than it had
recently in
time azo. ‘he
as it had been
Yagrsa vi $14 rvs § ad
more elegantly furnished
been, the clerks were polite and
attentive, but lacking
The spirit of the was
changed: a great personality had
dropped out; the man who had been
at the head of things when 1
had given
and
something was
establishment
used to
business there, himself
and one never en
feeling his In
and strength into it.
tered the door without
his powe
tiefied to
the
send a han ‘hen he had
lishment
One
gone
whole
1 had a great teacher
fortunate if he has
fingtratod f
illustrated this prin
's self as well as
x
He was not sat
needed finn:
an old man retired from
wrote me
“1 am satisfied that what
west. 1 could bh
a wide
iy and
ve studied more
wrhans have added to ie
i ! ad
a8 many
chose to
the boys
that I am old
3
life, I am not sorry
give
DREAMS
fdreams
are m
Fr cl illed
breaks In
back and
drean
The illiterate
upon dreams
they w
that
warned of coming
of coming disaster, through the instru
mentality of a dream as might
sense a coming storm by hearing a
rooster crow in front of the kitchen
door, or be warned of an approaching
visitor by dropping the dish cloth on
the floor
The thing that impresses me about
dreams is their revelation of the sensi
tiveness of the childish mind and how
easily and how surely the linpressions
made upon it will remain throughout
life. 1 am an Iaveterate and chronic
dreamer, but my dreams seldom if ever
take on the character of those
phenomena which are thought to In-
duce dreams, nor have my dreams ever
given me any premonition of events to
come. Always they have been con
nected with events that occurred in my
childhood.
My dreams are of mother and of
our life together on the farm, of the
corn to be husked, of the potatoes to
be dug, of the fall plowing to be done,
and what I have to accomplish it seems
in my dreams [ am not going to be
able to do. The hay {8 down, but the
storm is coming to soak it with rain;
the plowing is to be done, but corn
husking will be on and the ground
frozen before l can get at it, Always it is
the toll and the worry of my boyhood
which haunts my dreams, 1 have not
worked on the farm for almost forty
years, but every tree and shrub, every
square foot of soll over which 1
worked as n boy is as familiar to me
in my dreams as if it were yesterday.
I never think about these old expen
snces in the daytime, it Is only at
aight that they come back to me,
look ns omens
tell
they
future, and you
seriousness have
one
Kill Barberries
Common Crushed Rock Va-
riety Seems to Be Ideal
for Destroying Weed.
(Prepared by the United States Department
of Agriculture.)
Crushed rock salt Is the best chemi-
berry which
rust of cereals.
lected salt from more than 40 different
this purpose, The four prime requisites
to kill barberries are cheapness, avalla-
ing animals.
tive,
and kerosene,
Danger in Sodium Arsenite.
Because of this danger it is not
ommended for general use. Kerosene
is cheap and effective but Its action Is
very slow. Barberrles treated with
kerosene in the summer often are not
dead until the beginning of the next
summer. Another great disadvantage
in the use eo wetvsene is the difficulty
experienced in transporting it to the
ice cream salt, be for
the purpose
ideal
as It is comparatively
secs to
Ten pounds will kil
a diameter of 12
Salt ordinarily Is not
proved fatal to some a
ly hogs and poultry. 8S » precautions
plication of salt to barbes
vent any possibility of
stock. If eal
w stures,
horses sl
properly salted be-
forehand to Insure thes ot salt
are
to the
Not Always Favored.
In spite of the fact that salt
satisfactory killer
its use Is
Instance,
shes or trees
Ww ith
barberry un
root systems intermingie
the
doubtedly w iil be
by salt aj
root system of the
somewhat damnag
lied to the barberry.
barberry
and
rn
'
The Japanese Ines
ster
tem rust should not
destroyed.
Should Be Cut for Hay
of times alfalfa
northern latitu
Professor L. F.
The number should
hay in
has not been settled
firm
He holds that
believer in cut?
the two
the al
winterkill, and
we favorable weather for hay
Further,
less likely to
the two-cntting system is em-
y
ployed. hay making comes when
is no
there
interference with corn cuitiva-
Mr. Graber found that alfalfa which
in the bud stage three times a
that
was cut
season yielded 1.86 tons per acre,
the tenth-biocom stage
season yielded 31
tons
cut only twice per year
per
in the full bloom
tons per acre,
When only
£1
stage yielded
two uitings
I
i¢ hay, while the yield Is
coarser, So far
been
also much
larger, is
have
the
hay
experiments not
to
value
determine
of alfalfa cut two
well If such
determine
be
made to
experiments
the relative
hay would serve nearly
as well and that, owing to the larger
yield, it would produce as much or
Motor Transport Brings
Changes in Road Plans
Evidences are constantly growing
more numerous of the rapid develop
ment of highway transportation and
gome expert observers are predicting
the construction, In the near future,
of broad trunk line highways for the
exclusive use of trains of motor trucks,
running on regular schedule time. Toe
amount of freight carried over the Lin-
coln highway between New York and
Philadelphia is so large in volume that
on many days in the year passenger
traffic is rendered actually uncomfort-
able.
This condition exists in other lo
callities and it is interesting to note
that Massachusetts is working on a
plan to give information to motorists
of secondary routes that may be used
with greater ease and comfort than
the more congested main thorough.
fares. One of the heavily traveled
routes in that state, which carries a
farge amount of merchandise between
Boston and Providence, ia the Provid.
ence turnpike and an alternative route
has just been suggested, with good
road surface and insuring passenger
eur tourists greater comfort, Another
Important factor in the problems of
road transportation Is the Increasing
use of the motor bus, which shows
every indication of rapid development
within the next fewy years.
Co ntrol of M el mn
Aphis by Spraying
Scft-Bodied, Greenish Lice
Suck Juices From Plant.
The leaves of melon vines are ocen-
slonally found curled and knotted A
close examination will show the pres.
ence of a large number of soft-hodied,
These lice feed by suck-
ing the juices from the plant
The young are born alive, A ma-
ture female usually gives birth to sev.
eral young a day. In this
aphid no true sexual forms or eggs
are known. Reproduction from unfer-
tilized females seems to place
case of
tuke
Control: Usually this aphid is kept
under contral to a large extent by par-
asites and predators. However, under
favorable conditions the aphids may
become sufficiently abundant to re
The most
satisfactory remedy known is a
spraying of the
sulphate, two tablespoonfuls
to four galions of water, with about
one-half bar of good laundry soup
added. The soup should be shaved und
dissolved In a small
water before being
sulphate dust Ig also an effective rem-
edy. The dust may be prepared by
thoroughly mixing 8 ounces of nicotine
sulphate (40 per
12 pounds of alr-sinc
duster is
vines with
portion of the
added, Nicotine
cent nicotine),
rked lime
for
avallable Ig
be used with falr
applyir
may
sults,
State
George 8,
Langford, 1
Entomologist, Colorado Agric
tural College,
Soothing Cranky Binder
Before Harvesting Time
When i
acres of dead ripe grain are
oor thine for
fuss’ streak.
i
the
binder to develop
of t
and their relief have
the Nebraska Agricultu
1. If the
Jerky motion,
Some he
been st
machine
main drive
loose or It may be dry;
on iL
=. If the slats rip off the can:
elevators are pot quare
3. If the knotter ho is ru
rough, it will not worl
with fi
If the bi
nroterly
properiy.
SOM e
ns
five |
tial
Leg
wilder spring. It should
i puii ti
If the disk does not
knotter
one cord, hence a loc
B NM
shape, there will be a loose end
enough, the
the needle u
hand.
The needie js malleable iron
be hammered back to shape
9. If
hook before
knife, it
the twine is pul
the knot
may be cull
Soft-Shelled Eggs Are
Caused by Two Defects
Soft-shelled eggs are
the
in the feed or to disease in
either due
ahsence of shell-forming material
the |
part of the oviduct which results in an
In
may he
insufficient secretion of lime salts
rare cases, however, they
caused by the fowls not eating en
of shell-forming material even when
abundant
oyster shell
supply Is available Keep
before fowls at all times
is too fat
ahsence of
Kometimes the bird
an
eREs
and tl
iis
muscular
tonicity, the
the oviduct so rapidly
are not
being passed d
hat the
suffi
fat,
down
5 SOOT
supplied In
are
exercise,
too
Cut
hens
more
and add meat scraps or tankage,
AR
To help fatten the pocketbood, thin
the apples,
. - »
Good summer pastures help to pro-
duce dairy products cheaply.
* * *
in co-operation the “co” and the
“operation” are equally Important.
* - .
Lime scattered on the fields makes a
good foundation for the whole farm.
r ad -
Ten acres In alfalfa will produce as
muck protein as Is contained in 27
tons of wheat bran,
. - - »
New shoots on blackberries and
blackeap raspberries should be pinched
back when they are 18 to 24 Inches
high.
» . ¥
While busy with farm work do not
neglect the young calves. For best re
sults. calves should not be turned out
on grass until three months of age.
. » »
One of the greatest discoveries in re
cent years Is, perhaps, that lettuce
and other leafy vegetables help to de
prive sickness of its place in the sun.
* » -
Colts should have a little grain to
supplement their rations when pas.
tures get short during the summer. It
there i8 no natural shade they should
be brought in durlng the day time and
let out at night.
Cuticura
On retiring
druff and itching
Soothea Itching Ecalp.
gently rub spots of dan
with Cuticura Oint-
ment, morning shampoo with
Cuticura Soap and hot water. Make
them your everyday tollet preparations
and have a clear skin and soft, white
hands.—~Advertisement.
wr
ext
What's the Use?
President Nicholas
of Columbia sald at a
“Mechanlenl
tual progress,
write better
Murray Butler |
ten :
progress isn't Intellec
Man can fly, but ean he |
than the Greeks of 2,000 |
years ago? No, he can't write ns well, |
“An American vaunting
mechanical progress, which he mistook
for intellectual progress, to an
Hindu. The American was especially |
proud of a new alrplane that
four minnte
“Think of It!” he sald
that
miles
was onr |
fnged |
makes
miles 1 i
‘An airplane |
{
minute
makes four -240 |
nn
miles na
hour!” ”
“The aged Hindn yawned and sald:
“ "Why do you Americans want to go
fast all roads
the |
-Pittshurgh Chronicle Tele
RO when
lead to
oo »
grave?
graph.
Lights in Coal Mines
Investigators for the bureau of mines
report that
are fa replacing
electric lamps for
safety flame
aver 200.000 of the former now |
the 1
when
the
miners |
lights,
}
He
the
ng in use in
1911,
lights were In
of Pe
4
decrenged
nited
alone, Since
45.000
use in soft coal
mines number |
fin thousand, |
xvgen
of
aw
Women in Government
¢ offal - y y
If affals i” iping ss they are
at presen in a few years Ume we
hall #
Eye
GF Are sore pe Roman
: ©
Pisisam Avs it at mniagh . You &r
healed by morning. 372 Pear i. Y. Adv
He, Too, Lacked Vision
Secretary A. DD. Call
“un Yon ce
Hobo
"Hum
Prove Safety in Flight
n 3 till are feastul of |
well ex
«ft 700005) miles over
stem without
- 4 a
00 passengers
been carried G0.000 pounds
ws matier
Immigrants Come High
Immigrants are being i from
United Kingdom to settle in Aus
£5,000 to
awn
The two govern
ments the and an effort is
being made to attract 450,000 persons
to Australia in this way within teu |
years. Part of the scheme is to re
fleve the unemployment situation in|
England.
bear cost
Only a Job
“Are you seeking work here?”
“No. 1 came to see if you require a
secretary.”
A
NUL
MOTHER :~ Fletcher's
Castoria is especially prepared
to relieve Infants in arms and
Children all ages of Constipa-
tion, Flatulency, Wind Colic
Say ‘‘Bayer Aspirin’
INSIST! Unless you see the
“Bayer Cross” on tablets you
are not getting the genuine
Bayer Aspirin proved safe by
millions and prescribed by phy-
sicians for 24 years,
Accept only a
Bayer package
which contains proven directions
Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets
Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists
Aspirin is the trade mark Barer Msuo.
facture of Monosoetic of Balleylicachd
Live in Oxygen Tents
pure oxygen
patients, enabii
supply [LEN IN0-
breather
and thus siding recovery, two
York doctors, Alvin L.. Burach of
» 3 A le
Binger hie wkefeller tute, re-
tent
that uspended r the patient's
i § « Popu-
is fed
hrough
Prestivterian ho ' ard (
cently invented a port { yen
Hot water
Sure Relief
py
SDELL-ANS
258 AND 75% PACKAGES EVERYWHERE
-_—a
CERES
t
them ¢
Insect Powler
won't stain or
harm anything
except (nsecls,
Household sizes
o McCORMICK & CO., Baltimore, Md. ]
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
Remover Dandru® Stops Her Paling
. Restores
§ Beauty to Gray and Faded Halr
fe snd 510 ot Droggints
# :
slopes all pain, ens oommfon wo the
or ai Droge
feel, makes walling easy. ie by
SALESMAN WANTED
make g money. Our pr
gh. Cail or wie oe Wid
Ladies— Write Today
Ne
air of ladies ful
IORIERY
_ ’
he sum { ne $12
fashioned PURE B K
Valve ten
part lars te
SELHOSE SALES CORP
1496 Brendway at 420d St, New York
RHEUMATISM i=
finte re ¢
Huntington {
Persons Pronounced
INCURABLE
writin epiring irae
we nd
iege
1 Eat lp-
WOM. CC GUHA,
INDIANA.
y ef and
for seie
chemist
faction
Box
W. N. U. BALTIMORE, NO. 20-1825.
re tme
guaran? "Rr
W.i66 NTINGTON
Motor Taxation
Taxes paid by the automotive indus
try in the United States are greater
than the total paid by both the rall-
road and the electric railway indus
try.
Try to overcome your unreasonable
i
a