Clean Pigs Are Profits Result From Sanitary Care. That long-standing belief that a hog is naturally a dirty creature who rev- els and thrives in a mud wallow has been completely wrecked by 500 lowa farmers. The fact is that the hog is as clean- ly as any other farm animal, but until recently has never had a chance to prove it. Given clean pasture lands on which to feed, instead of the old- fashioned hog pen, regular baths and clean bedding, the hog will produce bigger and better pigs, and more of them, At the same time the death rate will be markedly lowered, These are the facts brought out by F. L. Quaife, farm expert, reporting in the Farm Journal the results ob- tained by the 500 Iowa farmers who have given their porkers a chance to lead hygienic lives. Expose Hogs to Parasites. Farmers who raise their hogs year after year on the ground and in the same unclean quarters are ex posing them to periodical ravages of parasites which kill off many and stunt the growth of many more, the test cases, directed by lowa farm bu- rean experts, In one case an owner put 18 sows on alfalfa pasture land, washed them carefully before they gave birth to their litters and housed the pigs in ean quarters where parasites had no to develop. Of 180 pigs born, fat and healthy. other sows were kept in piggery under the conditions. These gave birth to pigs, of which only 16 were the end of four I stunted an same show. +] y crea chance 174 were sold, Eight old-fashioned an old 48 at of aly aiive mont were had } pounds previous the old cot market,” article points out. “Most he men had their pigs IWo or three months iigher period of lu and hog vy Good Control of Oats Sm ut Is Found n ansepte on f four ¥ AX two were R. C, Thomas and J. D . © 16 eas rt of the is unfit of treat. should Cost dust seven cents For lars witment where the dust part and ding can be ained write to the Department of Detany Ohio Agricultural Experiment Station Ohio, obt wr Wooster, Materials Conta ined in a Crop of Sweet Clover good crop of sweet clover con two and one-half tons of dary top roots the acre by spring This amount of will contain 200 pounds of or as much nitrogen | in 20 tons of average farm This is nitrogen than grow a 100-bashel erop 150 pounds of nitrogen to produce the stalks and grain of such a crop of corn Thus the farmer can grow a fertilizer factory on hi? own farm that will fur nish an abundance of nitrogen for his crops at a Yory small cost, to the second year. ns is ontaine manure more is required to Only Necessary of corn. are Oa Ov OeQelenCO OOOO Od $ Agricultural Squibs 8 rotor OOOO Market hulky farm high quality stock and profits, feeds through increase your * - Ed Pine trees can be moved in the win ter time when the ground is frozen so that a pile of frozen earth may be moved with the tree. » - * Leafy spurge is a comparatively new weed. It is gaining a foothold in sev eral however, and attention should be given Immediately to erad leanting it, £Dote, ». - + In pruning young orchards, it Ie sel dom necessary to use a disinfectant to sterilize the small wounds made by the removal of brapches. It Is also true that there is much less disease In CENTRE HALL, PA. 5 NEAL ~ bi Biv Tih % Al, uy Bit rf % oe ENTE er rrtationa) Hota WASEHIYGION F227, CAPIERIDG By ELMO SCOTT WATSON RESIDENT COOLIDGI ation, the week =5 as proclam gett April . to Forest W vy OER ler wi and the | treaty between hristignas tha sath faereement and t! land became the great state The Treaty Elm in 1810 and its was estimated to ha Quaker title te the vanin, { down time years, The famous what ngo ve been 2 of “most but in third trees” the trilogy was not an elm, not know the thrilling history of the Charter Onk which in Hartford, Conn In its hollow trunk It once held the charter of the where Capt, placed it when schoolboy does once stood of Connecticut Joseph Wadsworth the lights were sud denly extinguished on that historic occasion In 1687 when Sir Edmund Andros who had been appointed royal governor of New England, dem that the assembly surrender this symbol of their liberties as Eng. lish citizens, And when the Charter Oak was uprooted by a storm in 1856 the whole state of Connecticut went into mourning, church bells were tolled and this great oak, which was believed to be between 700 and 1.000 years old, is the only free on record for which “fanerai services” were ever Teld Although the following Is by nn means a complete list of all the his. toric trees in the United States which have been registered In the tree hall of fame or otherwise honored by the American people, (some of them still colony anded to him Jsarratioms! Kets * rd efor DGE Pe). oy ie sagen NORCO i dded i mils fired during Yorktown and pre render of « ar Vii Ind. a wain grove in iam Henry Harrieon ith the Indian August 1810 Tree, sonne's ibu y of the Wan which bore the insecrip- the noted piones r. A BAR this tree annon vions ‘orn Wwe i fie great 12-16, i on small tr 3 in eastern Tennessee, while still tion, ad § 2l. standing carved by Boon cilled ar 1760." Daniel Boone elm at Femme five milea west of St, which was part of the land tilled by Boone during his Missouri residence 1820, It is so named from the fact that Boone held court under it dur ing the hot days summer, John Brown's Tree, a whi near Barkhamsted, Conn. under whose branches John Brown of Osawatomie and Harper's Ferry fame played as a child, calling it “my tree” and re. vigiting it every time he returned to the ancestral home in Connecticut. It is also called the Council Tree, because of its use for that purpose by Indians of that vicinity. Morse Elm In Washington, named for Samuel F. B. Morse, in- ventor of the telegraph, who often sat beneath it and related to interest ed listeners the wonders of the tele. graph, Standing at the corner of Pennsylvania avenue and Fourteenth street, this elm had looked down upon every Inaugural parade that on ve Judgment Osage, Tree, fifty. nn about Louis on a farm In of te oak D.C, ALLY 3 ’ iow ¢, YUN ever hog 41 thiz tree led Webst to the ce of the He nes mehed the he twice refused vice president head of the tiel have heen Council beneath first leav- of their ans after held the camped One Indi council ith ing Louis Battle Ground Oak House, N. CC. called the Liberty Tree, It stands on the bat tle ground of Guilford Court House, fonght March 15, 1781, “the battle that won the revolution,” since Cornwallis, there led directly to his surrender. Gener. said to have tied his tree during the bailtle. Tree in front of mansion at Fishkill: by Baron Sten St at Guilford Court algo victory nnd Greene is to this Kentucky Coffee the Ver Planck on-Hudson, occupied ben during the revolution, The first meeting of the Society of the Cin cinnati was held under this tree. Live Oak at Pomona, Calif, mark. ing the spot where in 1837 the first white settiers camped in the Pomona valley. Abraham Lincoln Towa, a hackberry Finn in memory of the President on April 27, 1865, which the goverhor of designated as a day of mourning for Lincoln. The tree is now 110 feet high and nearly 12 feet around. costly Yorktown al horse Decorah, Hohn martyred the day lowa had Tree in planted by Deserters From Army Prected by Pzychosis iy ive chinnged on thes give nn han edtion ple tavles a week sind free valde for Hyer res ville slits ull “roing i ‘ $Y rise hail tides it s TUrwsieiiing fi wi thie douchbaove tlm rt ion uf imirennts HRry For sXe! i * £03 : fs risen thant ied eff Een } tie 10 min pl the young orchard than in the old Nevertheless, according to Col. Hal sey E. Yates, commandant of the dis. ciplinary barracks on Governors is toned, and Ma) F. HH. Dison, psychi nirist for the harracks, the military places of detention do more to re hehilitate offenders and make good citizens of them than alinost any civil pri in the United States, What Is more, they often make good soldiers af the men In this new regime the trained pay. chintrigt. whe Is now retained ot all army digelplinury barracks, Is “ify the most fmportant single factor, ac cording to Colonel Yutes. The psychiatrist's duty 18 to discov er the factors in the previous eivil life and ariny experience of every man sentenced by a court-martinl which have caused the action for which he was sentenced. If his previous eivil and military record has been found to warrant it, the prisoner may be given considerable freedom and a large part of his sentence may he remitted, dustin Hustle while you walt, | Qos spittin J pon cscs § : AUCTION BRIDGE | 1 By PAUL H. SEYMOUR Author of “Highlights on Auction Bridge” aco pron copies wm li ato lptcscnte (Copyright, by Hoyle, Jr.) Article Thirty. Discards ISCARDING is difficult operations ut Auction Bridge and thrown away by carele discards. The fundamental rules regarding this matier are: not to unguard a face card ; and to discard from the weak suit or suits. For In if holding a Queen and two cards of a sult which has not been led, both of the small ones must be saved because if one Is thrown away the Queen becomes unguarded, The discard is used indicate to certaln things hand; and there several which various ate. The card from infer If, for you of the for a most begin. many a or one 10 about a are methods advo to dis partner rded, anthorities method is and let disca simplest wenkness strength In instance, a are clubs yi carding a small heart want to inform you ke a second your In being led and uit but he lienate this ive good by dis- a small dia- void and mond partner quickly not get discard you or think that fal you of strong suit other low d wenkness and a high di strength Trouble the di ecards ary $3 w frequently a har tablished card when of irtner is an es the pi Therefore, t 3 a low perfectly proper for a ow held always you to make suit in which CASeE ohe discard the must poss; from a King In ge whether any ha yon such such } oouid rm by the p artner t, watch- mat- a five. to do From a declarer's standpoin Ing discards is a very important ter. When a declarer can run card suit first it always is wise so and gain information rega adversaries’ hands by their discards. Frequently a declarer cannot decide which suit to start second until he has discards. If the adversaries are fool ish enough both same suit it usually gives declarer an opportunity to establish this second suit easily. The direction in which to take a finesse often can be decided from dis cards provided you know your ad versaries' method of playing well enough to be sure they are not de- ceiving you. In playing a declared trump declarer frequently may be able to lead several winning cards of a suit from his own hand of which dummy is void and dis- card ftom dummy another suit of which the adversaries hold the com- mand. Then use one or more of dum- my’'s trumps on the suit just des carded before extracting trumps. one of that sult. Save it to lead back to him. Drudgery Drudgery, toll—it requires a mini mum of effort, of intelligence, and no imagination or initiative. It merely re- quires constant, daily, monotonous at- tention, Instead of its being as we sometimes say of uncongenial tasks, “took much like work,” it’s not enough like work, There is no personal in- terest, no chance to use the mind, no chailenge to the pride, the skill or in. genuity of the operator, no chance to grow--in other words, no real chante to work at all.—Jesse Lynch Williams, in Hearst's Cosmopolitan, | i i || FARMER'S WIFE GETS STRENGTH By Taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound —“My mother had Pi nkha m's Vegetable Compound and 1 decided to take it for my own trou- bles and found great relief 1 was hardly able to stand on my feet somes times and now 1 fecl better than I have for several years, 1 cred: t the Lydi AE ham's Vegetable Com. ] pound with my present good 1 have taken five bottles of it am now able to do all my house: k and ferd my chic g k the cow the pigs Brame kinin Bchoolficld, Va taken Lydia E, sewing, ar headache, d other die 3d sure Not Send te or froo samples to 3 Inc., Orangeburg, N.Y. Normalizes Digestion and Sweetens the Breath Of ce: : | Hot ¥ water Alt Sure Relief fro FOR INDIGESTION e5¢ AND 7 PACKAGES EVERYWHERE PISO bg Re) EL) Quick Relief! A plessant, effective evrup— 15¢ and 60¢ sires. And ex. ternally, use PI1SC'S Throst sad Chest Salve, 35¢. KEEP YOU AdVER. Ri HT EVERY MOURNING snd NICHT TAKE Dr.Thadiers — [if 55. \% syrup For Galled Horses Hanford’s Balsam of Ri Al dendery are suthoriond te relund your money for the furet bettie df ol voited TEX ference” Studio in and "let's sce: ers tickets and" “What's the to know metic? I've d some ca got to get ar ndy and some wanted grit} itn trouble “Dolng some Tos A We're all of a wrong, if lead and the brickbats COLDS Salicon is the one preparation you can depend on to knock a cold quick. Chest cold or head cold — it's all the same. Two tablets of Salicon and relief comes — Second dose seldom necessary for light colds. As free from dope andl harminl drags as the water you drink, At all drug stores 28¢ Sate and sure-~ihat's Salicon Does Not Affect the Heart Does Not Upset the Stomach mat Fa) us willing to ip right somebody will take the