The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, September 03, 1925, Image 7

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    a
“AN OPERATION
RECOMMENDED
Avoided by Taking Lydia E.
inkham’s Vegetable
Compound
Los Angeles, Cal. —*‘I cannot give too
much praise to Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg-
etable Compound for
what it has done for
me. My mother gave
it to me when I was
a girl 14 years old,
and since then | have
taken it when I feel
run down or tired.
I took it for three
months before my
two babies were
born for I suffered
: with my back and
ea med had spells as if my
heart was affected, and it helped me a
lot. The doctors told me at one time
that I would have to have an operation.
1 thought I would try ‘Pinkham’s,’ as
I call it, first. In two months I was all
right and had no operation, I firmly
believe ‘Pinkham’s’ cured me. Every-
one who saw me after that remarked
that 1 looked so well. Ionly have to
take medicine occasionally, pot but I
always keep a couple of bottles by me.
1 recommend it to women who speak to
me about their health. I have also used
your Sanative Wash and like it very
much.’”’ — Mrs. E. GouLp, 4000 East
Side Boulevard, Los Angeles, Cal.
Many letters have been received from
women who have been restored to
health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta-
ble Compound after operations have
been advised.
Keep your complexion free of
blemishes, your skin clear,
soft, smooth snd white, your
TOILET
hair silky and glistening, your
BATH entire body refreshed, by using
SIAT=_Glenn’s
Sulphur Soap
At draggists,
Rohland's Styptic Cotten, 20¢
for
Contains 333%; Pure Sulphur.
— - - -
No one ever became thoroughly bad
all at once.—Juvenal.
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.
afe” Accept only a
which contains proven directions
ackage
Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets
Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists
Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Mans.
facture of Monosceticacidester of Sallcylicacid
— —
Ey,
MOS!
Bayer
Bee Brand Insect Powder won't
Stein—or harm anything except Insect
Household Ycning s3ceze In Mo
S0c and $1.00, at your druggist or grocer,
Write for Free Booklet, “It Kills Them™.
A _McCORMICK & CO., Baltimore, Md,
ome ral
WHY SUFFER ANOTHER
DAY WITH INDIGESTION?
The big seller today for acute and
chronic stomach misery Is Dares
Mentha Pepsin and it 1s such a fine,
pleasant and supremely good medicine
that if the first bottle you buy doesn’t
help you—your druggist will return the
purchase price.
One man writes, “1 Cannot understand
why any person will continue to suffer
from gastritis or indigestion when Dare’s
Mentha Pepsin is avaliable.”
And tens of thousands of people
many of whom almost died with stomach
agony--think the same way.
It's the right medicine for any person
who suffers from bad digestion, gas,
Seaviness and that feeling of suffocation
which is always dangerous.
For gastritis, indigestion, dyspepsia or
any stomach agony--acute or chrome,
keep Dare’'s Mentha Pepsin in mind.
ear iour
Of Disfiguring Blemishes
Use Cuticura
L)
y dissppens whan Dr. ©.
Er
SO
Most Profitable
Under Modern Methods of
Handling Insects Are
Not Bothersome.
Orchardists think kindly of the low-
ly honey bee, There Is a very
mon saving among experienced
chardists which sums the matter
In a few words. It is: “No bees, no
fruit.” The failure of orchards In
certain parts of the country, the in-
different fruiting which Is often
blamed on the season, might very of-
ten be traced to the absence of bees,
It does not make much difference, so
far as the orchard Is concerned,
whether it is tame bees or wild bees
that perform nature's method of fer
tilization of the bloom. It does,
owner in that tame bees
him a
chard
give
of extra ground. The same land
well as one.
Orchard Failures,
The discontinuance of the keeping
additional destruction and disappear
ance of the wild bees In the surround
ing woods have all had their hand
in the so-called “fallure of orchards.”
Bees are one of the most
side lines which the farmer can carry.
He can well afford to consider their
possibilities, not only for their own
sake but for the sake of the orchard.
Under modern methods of handling
3
used to De,
bugaboo of
practically
they
old-time
been
trouble that
Swarming, the
the beekeeper, has
eliminated, because we learned
its cause and by practicing precau-
tionary methods, by getting ready In
advance for the “fun” bees can be
hived In a very few minutes Indeed,
have
ing swarming {! they so desire.
fodern Appliances,
Modern appliances such as hives,
supers and the uniform pound frames
all ald In encouraging the modern bee
to produce more than his earlier an-
cestors did. Ten to twenty pounds per
hive fair pro-
duction for one season: now it is not
uncommon for lowa beekeepers to re-
used to be n average
from hive in a favorable season.
one
’
$
had from
conditions per season, 80
keepers report,
The finest quality honey comes from
white clover, alsike clover
clover. It is clear and golden
each hive under ordit
lowa bee
and swoet
2rd
BUCK
but it falls short of
premium prices on the market because
Hay When Planted Thick
Thickly
hay of greater
planted soy beans produce
than
accord
feeding value
planted
ing to preliminary
are being
of agriculture,
results of
made by
University of
tests
the college
lliinois
drill at the
bushels an
stems, only
of ene and a fourth
dairy cows. In contrast to this, beans
that seeded thinner
coarser hay, a larger proportion of the
stems being left uneaten. The plot
seeded at the rate of about a half
bushel an acre produced very coarse
was refused,
were produced
ant chief of dairy cattie feeding at the
college. The difference in the feeding
value of the fine stemmed lay as com-
pared with the coarse hay, therefore
12 per cent, or about
pounds for each ton of hay fed.
For one thing the thinly
plots contained more weeds,
an hn-
hay.
of rate of planting on the quality of
hay.
Different Kinds of Food
When Hen Is Confined
try house and its Immediate surround:
ings, perhaps a small yard, the only
way that she can make eggs Is to re
ceive from the caretaker the various
different kinds of food that she would
obtain on free range In summer, ot
their equivalents. On most farms there
is n-reasonably good variety of grains,
including corn, wheat, oats and ‘bar
ley, and these form sufficient variety
s0 far as they are concerned. In ad-
dition there should be ground grains.
including wheat, bran and cornmeal, to
use in dry or damp mashes, To take
the place of the bugs and worms of the
summer season beef scraps, such as
are furnished by dealers In poultry
supplies, or cut fresh bone should be
given.
Grain for Cattle
For cattle n grain ration of one
third bran, one-third middlings and
one-third oats would be very suitable.
While for the hogs, a ration of 00 per
ent middlings and 40 per cent oats
vould make n suitable ration for sows
ww older pigs, For the young pigs at
veaning time a ration of 40 per cent
round outs, 456 per cent ground barley
ind 10 per cent tankage Is recom
vended as a more suitable ration,
AR
of Soft Corn Crop
Is Plan Urged.
it be frosted or Immature,
the ears are the most
they should be saved in any event, It
Is difficult to save the ears of a soft
In 1917
the lowa experiment station demon
strated that soft ears in the late roast
ing stage could be husked, run
through a silage cutter, and tightly
The silage resulting
days of fermentation was of surpris-
ingly good quality and held its Havor
g0 well that at the end of two months
It was In excellent feeding condition.
will
weeks
not
days and probably be
after tilling.
“It Is necessary to husk
gays Andrew Boss of University Farm,
Paul, Minn.
handled just as
husked corn and the
the advantage of greater bulk
ditional feed.
husks
and ad
the corn finely In making ear-corn s
by tramping, especially near the walls
made from ire par
the addi
ears t
matured may require
and prevent overheating and
in the making
made from ear corn should be eo
with a layer of finely cut
or stover. If such a cover
there will be
of valuable corn. It is not
to make silage of mature or nearly
mature corn. The ¥
Ing and they do
sugar to permit the
which Is necessary
“Ear corn silaze should
1s
sil
age process Silage
vided too eh ow
cobs pres ’ ” ihe
not colin i!
fermen
for preservation
concentrate, not as n
ted Mites Disposed of
With Very Little Work
mites which of
red
i house and kill or stunt
lHsposed of effective
1abor. These slHIges
by the poultry exten
» College
und the hen
:
y the hones
vable roosts and
owing as few
or spray the
tn Aronring
is, dropping
roosts, walls
8 boards and
a ft
oil t
iil-strength solution
O one part stock dip, or
longs lime sulphur to 40 gallons
Applications should be made
six times In
and in
ummer
pairs, one following
jays,
Starting Team With Big
To the driver who would start his
heavily loaded team here Is a bit of
excellent
ciation of America:
The driver must hold his lines taut
Experience has shown that nearly all
lines, thereby virtually
turning
horses loose at the very moment that
they need to be steadied by a moder
ate pressure on the bit
Whipping Is worse than
proves conclusively
horses can or will
efforts when fearful
about to be whipped.
that no
exert thelr best
that they are
Fear interferes
with the deliberate, careful placing of
feet and legs.
a ——————————
Every weed steals water that le
needed for crops. Kill the robbers.
- . -
£1,047.323.170
Yawn by
United States,
were produced in the
- . »
Mixed carloads of fruit are hard to
The trade
terms them “junk,” or “drug store”
cars, and is slow to bid on them.
- - -
Good buttermilk or skim milk 1s
worth five cents per gallon for poultry
feed. Keep the dry mash before the
hens In open hoppers all the time.
- - »
In many sections sweet clover is be
Ing seeded for soil building purposes
and in most cases limestone Is being
applied to the soll in preparation for
the clover.
* * »
The average cost of the corn erop
on 758 farms, according to a De
partment of Agriculture survey, was
82 cents a bushel, compared with a
sale value of $1.10 a bushel,
. 0
Grimm alfulfa is generally recognized
as hardier and superior to most com
mon varieties of alfalfa, although a
few farmers have secured equally good
stands and satisfactory ylelds from
the common alfalfa,
. =
Soy beans should be cut for hay
when the beans in the largest pods
appear about half grown, One’ sue
cessful grower says that they should
be cut when the pods are yet slightly
een and the beans beginning to get
ha
Aetbboctuslotuntotutototustontontoatod volts ot adultes
ALONG
LIFE’S TRAIL
ERE OR RRR RE RRR REE RRR RWW
By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK
Dean of Men, University of Illinois.
3 === =
126, Western Newspaper Union.)
ORE BREAKFAST
[£7 il
BE
BUSY man comes in time to real
ize that he secomplishes the things
lie wants inost to accomplish by uiil-
izing small units of time which would
otherwise he wasted, and the most of
us waste more time than we would be
willing to admit,
When Jones
time to
tells that he hans
write a letter
me
no read or to
what he
ie
the
alr blowing
the
redbird
morning: or in
that
in shape, | always ask him
breakfast, I like to
in the well ns
tan,
in through
before
morning as
10 feel the soft
the window In
the
next
spring
listen to singing
in the early winter,
when | know
end the
the Is chilly
to oy
room
floor hure
ime and
if1amto
townrd the dav's
accomplish the hun
1innl es » Y
unpleasant
feel, to draw the covers over
rest, But 1 know that
Bong
start
extra things which are
every | man to he done
Usy
into map ont a
e¢ day, 1 must
proper program
t
do it before break
house is quieter then than or
Hight outside is softer, my
seems fresher and nlert. 1
rapidly than
writing these par
iv, the
more
ret work done more
£ lum
ni before breakfast
Mey comes, my garden will
i sweet
and
groomed
I shall have a good deal
asure In effect and
ching the plants grow,
“How do yom
all these
at other tl
AErApNHE now
When
tulips
and
| all be neatly
nnd
nlyssum the beds
and Irises
the borders wi
i in order
seeing the
wt
ever * 10 get
ground?
Jones asked me olf a
over
of flowers + ohisegsed
n. ldo it
tell him, and he
irbed, what he can do
friendly
Kast It is
letters 1 write
nmazing
ws and how quickly
pages if he gets ut 1t
I wrote a hook once
not,
ving a plan and keep
privy for
how
of course
a few weeks
vaugand words In a
0d Is fresh, as one's
after a refreshing sleep
HOR
don’t fee
is some} vem really
that
for, trying getting at It
breakfast
to do and
* the time
s————
CUSTOM
is rock-bound, lmmmovable,
in the little con
munity in bh 1hive, If one under
graduate takes off garters the
within a week will be running
around with thelr socks
over their shoe tops
Or roluges
ienst it is
whic
ber cheeks most
certain things are being done in a cer
organizations to
hed, 1 almost
answer, “Why
way.”
change or
which
invariably
we've always
The idea that
improve
get
one could
a Custom seems
those in charge of affairs,
We stick to the
I know a man up in the country.
in the house Into which he has moved,
the coal and carries out the ashes and
thing down in the morn
ing Just as he has heen accustomed to
do since the time he was a boy. He's
always done it that way, so why
I have been trying recentiy in the
academic community In which 1 live
to bring about a change with refer.
ence to a custom which has been fol-
the campus in the pro
cedure connected with thelr initia
tions. There is no sense in what they
are doing, there is no intelligent pur
pose in it excepting that it interests
and amuses those who plan and exe
cute the tricks played upon the init
ates. It wastes time, It not infre.
quently entails dangers, and it in no
way tests or develops the characters
of the Initiates. When I make n plea
for eliminating it, 1 always get the
come back:
“Why, we've always done It that
way. What eise could we do If we
cut that out?”
It never occurs to them that It
might possibly be better to do noth
ing if what is being done is useless
if not harmful,
Mrs, Clifford always cleaned her
kitchen on Saturday mornings, She
swept the room camefully, gathering
all the dirt into a little pile in front
of the door where those who came
and went either stepped over It or
tracked through It. She began her
scrubbing at the farthest corner of
the room, and when she finally reached
the little pile of refuse she gutheted it
up In a dust pan and threw it into
the stove, Why she did not do this
at first, 1 never could understand, ex.
cepting, as she sald, she'd “siways
Permanent
roads are a
goud investment
not an expense
One Horse Town,
Good-Bye!
Any community whose streets are not dur-
ably paved is going to be known as a “one
horse town.”
When that time arrives, Prosperity says,
“Good-bye, old friend. Good-bye!”
People start moving away. Bank deposits
fall off. Business in general begins to take a
slump, and the place is no longer “on the map.”
Contrast all this with the city that is
well paved.
It steadily forges ahead over its hard, even
streets. Automobiles, busses and delivery
trucks, operate efficiently and economically,
regardless of season or weather,
Business is good, and keeps getting better,
Modern, fire-safe buildings spring up. New
industries are attracted to town. Plants and
factories are working full time. Trade at the
stores is brisk, and everybody's busy.
In short, permanently paved streets and
roads are one of the very best/investments
any community can make. You can enjoy
the tonic effect of well paved streets by help-
ing your local authorities to find ways and
means to build more of them.
Send today for our free illustrated booklet—
“Concrete Streets for Your Toun”
PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION
111 West Washington Street
CHICAGO
A National Organization to Improve and
Extend the Uses of Concrete
OFFICES IN 30 CITIES
10 settle 8
discuss
Cuticura Soap for the Complexion,
better than Cuticura Soap
and Ointment now and then as |
needed to make the complexion clear, |
and you have the
Trio ~Advertisement
"Twas Mostly Talk
The dignified old Sou
strolling along Fifth venue
He
gin’'t got mu gse fo’ ‘em”™
je
therner
wes
with & |
was discussing negroes,
“Ah
he anno d thus he conting
gah m he
and
old escorting
aged blind colored an
st roet At t b he patted i
a tied d
ANG saa
"Alxcuse
ned looked
The was
ACTOSE
the
back REID, MURDOC B
“Now you’ all right, mammy!" | PIcAsD - AOS PTE a
And then ! ire . ee
New York Evening orld, in politics experiments mean revo
| lutions. — Disraell
Sure Relief
ESTION
| - NEW
The Real Secret
Bishop Waldorf said in an address
“In their talks to Young
Men's Christian ne some of
our millionaires enunciate rather antl |
views,
“In a recent
SUCOPRS
fEROCIO
tnlk of this kind an
“1 tell ye, young fellers, in this race
ain't enough to know
how to push yerself along--ye got to
know how to push the other fellow
’ +o ut
out o' the way. :
= | DELL-ANS
A foresighted man always provides | Seq ann 75¢ PACKAGES EVERYWHERE
allbis beforehand.
"FIRST AID TO BEAUTY
AND CHARM
Nothing so mars an other
wise beautiful face as the
inevitable lines of fatigue
and suffering csused by
tired, aching feet. ALLENS
FOOT-EASE the Antiseptic,
Healing Powder, insures
foot comfort. itis a Tok
jet Necessity, Shake it
in your shom in the
morning, Shop all day
Dance all evening
then Jet your mirror tell
the story,
| Pheasant Breeding Pays 1000
Per Cent Better
chickens are easier aiend Belle
7 $1 to B20 a ib A pair
worth 125 to §1 yenriy to a breeder. Oost
$0¢ annually for their keep fle wise,
today for the “Reliable Pheasant Standard ™
filustrated, showing 50 varieties in onlore]
alee Angoras Wild Decks Deer, Wild Tor.
eye, elec Price $1 18 Send to address below,
INDEPENDENT INDILSTRIES
551 N de St Philadeiphia, Pa.
UU HEMORRHOID OINTMENT
reliet from piles. Od remedy. Healing.
your druggist, or sent for $8 The
Company, Dox 31 Walbrook Baltimore,
than
the market fr
Sold at Dyug and Depaviment Stoves
RESINOL
and Healing
d Ointment
AUTO BODY POLISH
Make your own Gailon costs less thes
Bottle. Formula 831 00 bd KEMO BA
COO. 148] East 118k St. Cleveland, Chile,
A BA wns " A
House
Ra
TIMORE, NO. 35-