The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, October 01, 1925, Image 7

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Star
Prices: flo bd
ROADSTER . .
TOURING .
COUPSTER . .
COUPE . . .
COACH
SEDAN
General Sales Dept.—18
Dealers and Service Stations
Praxrs:
Elizabeth, N. J. Lansing,
PuLL!
cars
. Lansing, Mich,
$428
$523
$525
£595
$675
$695
$773
19 Broadway, New York
throughout the United States
Mich.
Oakland, Cal. Toronto, Ont.
Wasn't in the Curriculum
A knowledge of pedagogy dous not |
viways beget a knowledge of the finer |
tspects of horticulture or agriculture. |
For instance, the teacher in one of the |
Junior high schools of a northern In-
diana city had occasion to visit with |
her father the little garden the parent;
had planted In the rear of the factory |
where he was superintendent.
“Daddy, dear,” she said in the tone |
characteristic of girls who have passed |
the teen age, the cabbages grow |
on top of the ground or underneath |
the ground?
“do
Watch Cuticura Improve Your Skin,
On rising and retiring gently smear
the face with Cuticura Ointment.
Wash off Ointment in five minutes
with Cuticura Soap and hot water. It
is wonderful what Cutlcura will do
for poor complexions, dandruff, itching
and red, rough hands. —Advertisement.
Save Work in Household
3 i
Because of the great number
for homes since ihe war, there
labor-saving household articles.
—————————
If the world knew how
super men there wouldn't be any other
kind.
Successful Jubilee
ut
jubilee,
Total
stampede
recently,
Visitors from all parts
nent in attendance, Including
many
ture men
the fiftieth
attendance
and
reached
Calgary's
maore
were
special
ord the
(OO red
anniversar
mounted police d
more than five mile
opening feature of the Jubii
A Substantial REWARD
Thousands of people in Ameri
been liberally rewarded for
having USKIDE Soles on
USKIDE wears and wears
is made only by the
tubber Company, the
manufacturer of rubber
money It saves on shoe bi
able. Have your old shoes re-}
with USKIDE Buy new
genuine USKIDE Soles
comfortable, healthful
good-looking Prot
ping Look for the
the sole—Adv
w
Passing It Along
“Yes, we f
“Trouble
have wonderful
12," sald the touri
can't export your scenery.”
“Oh, we export quite a |}
| posteards.”
Darmanent
roads are a
good investment
—not an expense
cles are
the farm.
it is capable—and at
Not if
efficiency of which
the lowest cost per mile
you thus lose along the
one to four cents a mile
A National
to Improve and
Offices in
so Cities
¥
of Much Benefit
and Alfalfa Greatly
Improve Soils.
With clover grown regularly In a
three or four-year rotation, it will
not be necessary to purchase nitrogen
for grain and hay when, in addition,
the crops are fed and the manure re-
turned to the land, This statement is
made by soils men at the New York
on the effect of legume hay on crops
following them.
Compared With Timothy.
In these experiments, red clover and
alfalfa are ‘compared directly with
timothy, In one group six con-
crete frames to keep soll variations
out of the final results, alfalfa is seed
ed In three and timothy In the others.
Two frames. one of alfalfa and one of
are plowed up !
of
after a full
and removed.
the zams wy, two plats,
and alfalfa,
two and
one ach,
one
nre
the
are
irs
In
of timothy
plowed up
third
after years
plats, of es
these periods all crops are
Growth and Yield.
difference in the growth and
of the nonlegume mensuring
which then follows is the
The
result
timothy
alfalfa
makes
The grain after
color and
alfalfa.
rich green
after timothy, which in-
the alfaifa soll
If the
deal
from
bas not left a great more
The effect clover on corn,
of red
very similar to that of alfalfa. In one
grain and straw after clover as after
ten bushels
than after
wheat made
grain after clover
timothy, when all other conditions
identical Alfalfa and the bi-
ch as red, alsike, and sweet
clover, have a decidedly beneficial ef-
the animal legumes, ns
veteh-—winter annual
timothy ;
such
much less effect.
Spraying on Whitewash
With Ordinary Device
whitewash that
white, that be applied
ordinary sprayer, that dries quickly,
not rab off on clothing
Slake two pecks of lime with boil
ing water, adding the water slowly
stirring constantly until a thin
is formed It water Is added
or if the mixture is
well stirred, the paste will be lumps
salt
Here is a is snow-
can
will
not
to the
Add
one gallon of
consistency
with
for spraying,
a brush if it is
ii
or
to
proper
Just before using, add to each pail
& handful of portland
a teaspoonful titra
Adding these materials
cause the whitewash
The cement
cement, and of
appear streaked,
the bluing counteracts the
grayish color of the cement and gives
appearance, much as blu
Into Cornfield in Fall
Corn In the milk only contains about
the ears are fully
65 or 70 cents a bushel, and it is Im-
goon as It passes out of the milk Into
In the glazed stage
the ears are fully matured,
Year's Feed for a Hen
The following list is a complete
year's ration for a heavy laying Leg
horn hen: Twenty pounds wheat,
twenty pounds corn, six pounds bran,
six pounds buckwheat, six pounds
cornmeal, six pounds oats, six pounds
middlings, six pounds meatscrap,
three and one-half pounds alfalfa,
three pounds oyster shell, one and
one-half pounds grit. A hen of the
heavier breeds will require more than
the Leghorn,
Keep Year-Old Hens
All hens of the heavier classes that
are two years old and over might bet.
ter be marketed. In even the light
classes many of this age ought to go.
Others that are laying but that are
not worth keeping for another year,
should be kept until the egg yield
does not pay for the feed. The best
of the one and two-year-olds of the
lightest breeds might pay to keep, but
only the year-olds should be kept, and
even these will stand culling fairly
elosel; /
Fertilizer Program
for Whole Rotation
Increases Fund of Plantfood
and Improves Soil.
The soundness of a fertilizer pro.
gram that considers not only the crop
Immediately fertilized, but all the
crops In a rotation, is beginning to be
recognized. The balunce sheet which
shows a profit from expenditure for
| fertilizer is not unless it
| considers the residusl effect of fer
| tilizer applications on other Crops.
Here is a case In polnt—In a serles
of fertilizer tests by the Wisconsin
experiment station In southern Wis
consin, $3.00 worth of fertilizer pro
duced an Increase of 8.5 bushels
|onts, as an average on 238 farms If
the tests had with the oat
| ylelds, doubtless the returns would not
satisfied of the fertilizer
jut the following wear,
followed oats
yielded 853
compiete
of
stopped
have
users,
which
farms,
per acre
fertilized
falfn
Rome
clover
of the
more hay
had
where
nine
pounds
the oats
17 farms
fertilized
crease of B50 pounds of
on
where been
Om
followed
al
in-
ro
OAs,
hay per n
first cuttin
an
was obtained
Yields and third cu
tings could not be obtalned hut would
unquestionably raise 050 pounds
inerease materially,
{ In a good farming system
gults above
following With Rg
crops, stock ean fed, and
more manure prodnced to return more
plantfood to the sofl. The net effect
in the
on the second
the
such
carried
re-
on to
the larger
ns the are
Crops
more
he
eral farmy is
ing fund of
continued soll
to increase the revoly
plantfood, resulting
improvement
Way of Burying Cabbage
decay first select a well-drained
i and dig a hole about four inches deep
varying In width and length to
stored Allow the leaves
the
or
the
spot
roots to remsin
bruising
on
loose
on cabbage
breaking
ground.
closely
in
and without
place down
Wrap the
each head
of
upside
outer leaves
The next
first,
and this
pointed plie is
is
the weather becomes
abont row
placed on top
the upturned
tinued until a
Over this, soll
adding more as
Only solld heads
he
the between
roots iE CON.
made
colder of the late
varieties should stored The fiat
{ varieties are as good for
not
§
Inds
| Cabbage is not seriously
freezing provided it is allowed to thaw
out slowly while still buried In the
soll.
injured
Bursting of Cabbage Is
vr » -
Very Easily Prevented
The bursting of growing
i may prevented very easily
selecting the heads which show signs
of bursting and starting the roots by
pulling, or cutting off some of the
roots with a hoe.
is preferable
cabbage
he
i roots and the plant Is
side. This treat
the
the
and
of seeing the
loosened
pushed over to one
ment effectually stoge
and not only that, but
| continues to grow lustily,
the gratification
are
weight, and all due to this starting
the roots, which checks the growth
enough to prevent bursting, but does
not hinder further development.
Feed Dairy Cows Grain
for Maximum Production
A good pasture makes a good ration
for dairy cows but maximum produc.
tion cannot be secured om grass alone
Some grain should be fed, the amount
depending upon the breed of the cow
and the amount of milk she is giving
dally. A Jersey giving 20 pounds of
milk & day should have 3 pounds of
grain in addition to the pasture while
one giving 40 pounds a day should
have 10 pounds of grain. A Holstein
giving 35 pounds of milk should have
3 pounds of grain, while one giving 50
pounds of milk should have 10 pounds
of grain,
FAR
Early molters are poor producers
and late molters are good producers.
* & =» ’
Weeds absorb water. The moral:
Kill the weeds and save the water for
the corn,
® & »
Watch the garden for unwelcome
Insect visitors. A bug In time saves
nine—and the garden sass.
* * -
If the poultry house does not supply
protection and comfort, then it wiil
not be a profitable investment,
*« * a
Do you make a practice of greasing
your wagon wheels regularly? A lit
tie grease will go a long way in pro-
longing the life of a wagon,
-~ Li
Flea-beetles, pests that injure corn,
potatoes and garden plants, will eall
quits when a spray of bordeaux mix.
ture and arsenate of lead comes slong.
- * -
The man who consistently follows
a well-established livestock system
on his farm I more prosperous than
the man who tries to be when con
ditions look good and out when they
look bad.
=
The New Package
| Dutch Cremationists
| .
| Celebrate Anniversary
{ In Holland there has ust
curious jubilee
of the
been cele
{ brated a the fiftieth
anniversary Ne
Uptional
{ Ciely
H fety
Cremation
was founded a radi
| view has
Protestant «
taken pla
ircles
0 a petition was ser
Ham IH and the second
8 Trevis:
| law regard
duction of
cremation 1
WHE ret no angwe
made
{ Duteh
{ Haarlem
| was not 3
Doctor Vallls
the socliets
to iit nly in 1912 wa
fre Wf
ng of
{| crem remains,
1eRt chase The state prosecy
society but the supreme cou
Netherlands, after a
1 that CPE ation
Since
committed to ti
Westerveld
| at
——————
| Much in West to
| Appeal to Tourist
!
The men and women Whose lives re
New York
with an
London or Pi
voive around or Boston
Philadelphia
i
| mentably
past
or
oceagional visi
ris or Rome, are |
ignorant of the romantic
and the almost
of
assertion made
the
boundless futr
possibilities their own
bs
country, is
Ab
the Lawrence
oft in
The
i
{ and uachievem
!
mitiook
knowledge of human
from books
and discrimidat
may be, is not
parable ¢ incisive and
education which is obtainable
personal contacts,
No matter how vivid may be the
| pictures of the Pllgrim Fathers of New
| England inscribed on the printed
pages of history, they are still merely
pictures of the dead past. In the great
Northwest one may touch shoulders
and have converse with living Pil
grim Fathers
derived
i! RO
matter
ing a
par
how
reader he
to
5
effective
from
Prehistoric Workshop
A complete prehistoric workshop
containing 17 heaps of flint tools and
weapons numbering altogether 4.000
pleces recently was discovered by
British and American geologists gt
Frindsbury, Rochester, in the Valley
of Medway, England, says Popular
Sclence Monthly.
ing to reports of the find, include hand
axes of large flint flakes, hammer
stones of quartz. and large rounded
pleces of flint,
The discovery was made in a queer
saucer-shaped depression in a chalk
cliff, and the relics are believed to
date from mid-pleistocene times——the
age supposed Immediately to precede
that of man.
—
First Graduate Nurse
Modern nursing's span is so short
that America’s first woman graduate
nurse still lives. She is Linda Rich.
ards of Roxbury, Mass. now over
eighty years old. According to Miss
Apna C. Maxwell, one of her pupils
and perhaps the dean of New York
nurses, Linda Richards was a woman
of thorough education, great strength
of character and wonderful persever-
ance. She was tall, dark, stately and
forceful. Her personality was impres-
sive and she had a great vision of
what nursing might be. It was she
who set out to fix its standards In a
foundation of intelligence, education
and dignity. Her school of nurses was
at the Boston City hospital,
Mrs. Carnegie Welcome
Merchants and people in general of
Sutherlandshire, Scotland, are pleased
that Mrs. Andrew Carnegie will con-
tor her coming means the spending of
a great deal of money in the district.
A ———— a
There's beggary in the love that can
be reckoned.~—Shakespeare,
S
remedy
a period of more than
fifty years has been found so
reliable in the treatment of
catarrh and diseases of catarrhal
nature,
The
only hz
itate p
ew Dre
wthe same dependable
that over
outside of the
been altered,
package
To facil-
g and reduce break-
age in shipping, the paper Wrap-
per which has identified the
Pe-ru-na bottle for many years
has been displaced by a substan-
tial pasteboard carton.
Pe-ru-na cannot be made any
better. Three generations of
users testify that Pe-ru-na is the
best remedy in the for
es of catarrhal
world
origin.
The remedy our fathers and
grandfathers u h so ‘much
atisfaction is the standby
ills of everyday in
nds of American homes,
E-RU-NA
The Origins! and Reltabie Remedy
for Catarrh
Bold Everywhere
Tablets or Liquid
sed wit
|
still
y
the
Vaccination on Nose
Had Its Good Points
apanese statesman had a
'
little fan er-shaped
scar on the tip
we Japanese of the
have this scar” he
accination mark”
of his nose. “All
“It's our
i% our vaccination mark, In
} compulsory vacelk
te
tip
we
of
vaccinated
the
was a good
to
voce
TIO
you see
DECHRUSe 8
nose top ’
» medical officer
alf’ your «
wae
lon}
you'd been
osetip vneelnation
the
to
soiling.
d. before
iit and
He ton
he tog
had
hanker-
go, just
here In
the one.
the stocking
of the calf’
ite
before
it had
ion is
Loguacious
fters a lot!”
ust have
she 1 heen
graphophone needle ™
ALL RUN DOWN,
NOW KEALTHY
“Honestly, in all my 15 years of ex-
perience as a nurse | have never known
of a medicine that compares with Tanlac™
a the glowing tribute of Nurse M. E
haphelie.
“Fitoe and again 1 have recommended
Tanlac and always with surprising results,
Some time ago my Mother complained
of being generally ron down and om the
verge of a Dervous breakdown. She had
no appetite, ber stomach was disordered,
digestion weakened and ber bowels were
most irregular,
N las came to ber ald at once,
rought on a vigorous appetite so that
she began to eat with the greatest relish,
and made the digestive organs function
properly once more, In a t time she
was well, happy and ot and
over 80 years of age she Dow vigorous
enough to look after her household duties
and , Out quite a little, too. This I»
why 1 praise Tanlac and consider it the
best tonic and health builder over dis
covered.”
What Tanlac has done for others it
ean also do for you Tanlac is for sale
by all Sroggists. Accept
tute, 3 4 million bottles sold.
vaccinat-
3
with
Take Tanlae V
and roo Pills for Sith
manufacturers ‘anlage,
TANLA
Kremola
the wonderful face bleach
makes the skin beautiful.
At all drug and dept. stores or
by mafl $1.25. BooKlet free.
Dr.C. H. Berry Co., 2075 8. Michigun Ave. Chicage
WHY SUFFER ANOTHER
DAY WITH INDIGESTION?
misery is Dares
and it i» such a five
pleasant and supremely good medicine
that if the fest bottle you buy doesn’t
help you-—-your will return the
urchase price.
who suffers from
Wh Tn Alnye Samper
For gastritis, indigestion, dyspepwia ov
any stomach agony-—-acule or chromo,
keep Dare’'s Mentha Pepsin in ming.