THE CENTRE REPORTER, CENTRE HALL. PA. Find Corn Adapted Advocates Wheat as NEW DEVICE BOON to Resist Drought Substitute for Corn v iQ : A newly perfected device which | enough together to give the feell Z Federal and State Experts Exper) Advises His Use In converts printed words into lnrge of a continuous fottar g n Report Good Results 5 £8. raised lines on aluminum foll so The Impressions on the gluminum N ——— that biind persons may read by touch | rol may be preserved for future ref: of Experiments. - corn in the hog ration, wheat may Proving an excellent substitute for was demonstrated by the inventor, | erence and for instruction purposes Robert E. Nanumbtirg of Cambridge, | or they may le erased by passing (Prepared by the United States Department . 3 8 of Agriculture )—WNU Service. A ROOM & BATH (For One) at $930 be fed with profit as long as its price Mass. The new orinting visagraph, | the aluminum fol! through a pair of Last summer's drought delayed the stays near its present level and does as it is called, rapidly produces en- | rollers, like a clothes wringer. The corg/sreeding programs carried on not cost more than 10 to 12 cents larged, embossed letters on a wide | aluminum may then be used over roll of thin aluminum foil. These let- | again. The re 1 of al i ; intie by the U 1 Ste Senatt. ! - 1 again, il of aluminum resem Jo ¥ by the Unite tates Depart ters may be felt by the finger of the | bles, In size and shape, the music more per bushel than corn, states J. ment of Agriculture and several of W. Wulchet, specialist at Ohio State t the state experiment stations, from one university. blind person in the same way that | roll of a planola, The printing visa. to three years, but it enabled those As 1 feed for hogs, wheat is worth he reads Braille or other embossed | graph Is about the size of an office 48th STREET . WEST OF BROADWAY about 6 to 8 per cent more than the ® © 06 0 06 NEW YORK o 0 0 0 0 One of New York's best Hotels. Convenient to oll type. The outstanding advantage of | desk. —DBost Tranger in charge of the worl to com ears Yard: I Bg ( k ston Transeript, same weight of shelled corn and may shops and theatres—~where courteous are already familiar, The letters are composed of dots nnd lines A capital T has a long line aeross the top, and a row of dots forming the vertical line, There dots are close vv ARANTEE To Wt GVARATEETO you A ROOM &BATH (For Two) at $400 Electric Eye Aids Blind “Electric eyes now are being used to “zee” for blind persons in guiding ous strains of corn under drought econ ’ the product of the printing ¥isagraph ditions and to bring to light unex be substituted entirely for corn In the over the oid embossed 1¥pes 18 that oo ve Fn inl oh : ration, according to Wulchet, In facet, It will enable the blind to have gos The burean of plant industry reports Some tests show that greater returns tess J» hodks hrinted on ink, This that one or more strains of corn at the | *'¢ obtained by feeding wheat alone wil Jnerease their present Junge of various stations withstood the lack of with sme good protein supplement reading Rbout 1.00H mes The New moisture and the temperatures of 108 than by mixing large amounts of corn 3 ok [bile ary Sontatis_uhout degrees Fahrenheit and upward better in the ration, i ia in al ’ nine TO than than other strains. In some cases re To get the most out of wheat, ry ° 4 a Ink, | "ye sistance was not great enough to be of Wuichet believes that it is best ground % he Hsagtap Bie. ] RUMI ex value; other strains, however, silked or crushed. preferably the latter, as pa R rant Se {a Hee and tasseled with little or no apparent grinding Soe does not improve the oy bnbpeimy , woh he blind damage, digestibility i culy adds to the cost, Prof acloi \erson, whether na doc Incommoded by Drought. Soaking wheat Improves it about 1 ‘OF AWveb he yor Yoncher oF engi Dark Green Lancaster. un. gelf-ferti) per cent, but grinding adds about 16 Seer.’ It in on Lelnful ‘oe the Sta. ized strain developed at Ames, lowa, | PT cent fo is value, dent of foreign birth ns hardly any had shown much promise in favorable As wheat contains more protein than literature is av allable in foreign Inn. corn years. Last summer the strain does corn, less protein is necessary guages in eiibossed type rr L demonstrated its ability to thrive an. | !0 balance it. Corn, he says, requires il As ype. der drought conditions as well. Abolit about 10 per cent tankage to balance 3.000 plants of crosses having Dark Green | ancaster as one parent were attention is the watchword, @' HOTEL OF KNOWN REPUTATION BBD DDDDODDOHDS OHA OS Gave Sound Reason for | ing low ig bombers and ama] Multiplicity of Wives Seoul machines were used in the at tack, and the maneuvers were car Maurice Hindus, the Russian an | ried out In strict accordance with { thority, was talking about his expe. | the latest [tallan military develop The speed in which the vil them about their homes by giving them a sense of direction as they move about. The eleetrie exe, or iotoclectrie cell, is made up like a flashlight with a small buzzer con nected to its battery, according to Popular Mechanics Magazine. Con- venient electric lights are then placed about passages and hallways, par veularly at turns, The blind person turns the elee-| riences In Russia, tric eve about much as a person hay completely destroyed wi » ig? wd ey ame 2 FHM { declared to be an indication of the * { tive offensive of the present alr “1 Iunched one day In Moscow with waging war, Mr. Naumburg was assisted in the demonstration by Miss Edith Milner, a student at Perkins Institute for the buzzer sound the buzzer | a commissar who had already had | it and wheat requires about 8 per meme i cent. So by Yorlirs wheat good pied : k is on the rig Thank Goodness included in the tests at Ames. None sults may be obtained although less Bling at Yateriow " Mass Steer Jeg TE — “He said it w a8 to his wives that iti OE i } : ; a. at ald the Jom: of these plants had any of the top ankage “59 other high protein leeds visagraph, she wns able to read from . Sometimes Seems So ne awed: his success 80 haturally ne : leaves burned and only 12.6 per cent are used a book printed In ink with surpris “The lawyers make some glowing tH Tore wives the merrier. He ud | had burned tassels, ITT ing fluency. A month ago she did pleas for these prigonefs™ without counsel and sup In contrast, 37 per cen! of the plants I Pa T " | erp Aa ia it 4 nort he'd «til ive hoor oon No More U seful Feed { mot know the shapes of the alpha fo hear the orations, y dh he'd still have been a 810emak of Krug, the best of 12 commercial va- Y 331. ‘ {i bet printed in ink, having always them has led a better life than er : Bppreniice rieties in the test, had burned tassels Than Silage on Farm fend Braflle. which does bok resem- { have” commented the rs our “Then be wourd up wit in - | Loa and 134 per cent had burned top ble the printed alphabet, | clerk. Worth Pondering Over leaves. The 10 crosses of Dark Green do . Adults who lose their | Lancaster averaged a yield of 53.5 farm, The cntire crop Is preserved | no .nhure explained, hushels per acre, in comparison with with much less cost than from any 875 bushels for Kruz. other method in handling. Good clean Promiss for the Future. sliage that is free from mold is great- | Many other characters besides vield ly relished by all classes of live stock, | and drought resistance must be com | With corn silage and alfalfa hay as | bined to produce a satisfactory straln the basal ration, supplemented with of corn for priciical purposes. This | linseed meal and corn, experiments at requires time for its accomplishment, | the Michigan State college experiment station, ns well as at other experiment t path, nine vears old, spectators awaited ™ whispered “I've laid the Silage is one of the most useful | “The born lends feeds that is produced on the average | — 4 Hu aid. ‘are women.'" { If the devil ear have first chance The Blame Fe | a IH hildren it doesn't make =n “p : R 1 horn Thi s45t ¢ Poets a born and not mi: ence to him how he printing visagraph, which en them to visualize with their finger “Yes, blume it on the Village Built for Bombers | high we build cur church steeples tips the letters whose shapes they | They get the b for everything! To provide target practice for air- | " pers Weekls I y. will remember, | else | planes in a recent aviation moe ni —— - rs The printed letters are magnified ns No Age Limit in height and width, so that they | If we keep in mind our mpars rabian village was built in minia There doesn’t seem to be any are about the size of Braille char- | tive uain acters, with which most of the blind ! worry us so much aerial 1 elaborate reproduction of 2 portance, our troub won us The model was raked § bombs shot from airplanes, fly. apparent drought resistance has been found In self-fertilizes] strains of corn which may be expected to breed true and thereby provide a hereditary source for this characteristic for ose in fature breeting operations, Scatter Manure for Benefit of Pastures On farms where there is sufficient stable manure to top-dress pastures, there is some doubt as to best meth ods of using it to the benefit of pas tare, without being in the way. The manure for this purpose should be very fine. C. W. Gay, animal hus bandman, Ohio State university, gives the following sensible advice: “Top-dress pastures in fall or early spring. The manure of one kind of stock should not be put on sod to be grazed by that same kind of stock. Germs of tuberculosis and abortion disease may infect the manure of eat- tle and spread to stock on pasture. In the same way sheep and hogs may be come infested with parasites if grazed on grass top-dressed with sheep or hog manure. But the parasites of sheep do not infest hogs and vice versa. Cattle manure had best go on corn grofnd, or other ground to be plowed, while cattle pastures may be top-dressed from either the horse, hog or sheep barns” An old plan which still holds good, is to break up and scatter the large pieces of dry cow manure from the places where dropped. We knew one farmer who, in walking about the stations, have shown that considerable calves fed six and one.half to seven months gained almost as fast and were practically as fat when fed approxi er calves that ate from a self-feeder. years out of three. Lack of Protein Cause of Rooting by Pigs Pigs fed a ration deficient in pro tein rooted more and more as the length of the feeding period extended at the Ohio experiment station. Pigs which had a good ration with plenty of protein and salt rooted very little, according to W. L. Robinson, report ing his year's research work. Fish meal again proved to be the most economical protein supplement for corn fed to growing pigs. Min. erals added 18 per cent gain when fed with corn alone and reduced the feed required 13 per cent. No protein sup- plement was used, Ground oats were more productive than whole oats with tankage and al falfa. A ration of ground corn, oats, tankage and minerals proved to be more p.ofitable than the corn-oat com- bination. Cost of prodoction was £602 a hondred. Hulling oats was not profitable for pigs. Ordinary cottonseed meal fed to fields where cows had run, always carried a stick with a natural crook at the end, making a weapon some thing like a golf club, wiifeh with one blow scattered these dried clumps for Safe, Trouble-Free Motoring. Drive in today. where they would do good Instead of | pigs with the regular corn ration did spoiling the pasture grass where they not do well. Some died after the 40th ree COMPARE c lay. day. Special cottonseed mena! fur. nished the pigs a good protein supple — oH, 4 tas " - =] Flirestonsly pues ment and on which they did well. 4.78-19 saxo? | vine Obey pret maxtor | vz ores Firestone i cAR suze Cub | oder cAR sIzK Crder Oleteld Brice | tive Tire Whether they bear or not, fruit 0. P. V. Suitable for { hs re pom trees should be sprayed this year to Either Silage or Hay protect the foliage from insects and At one of the Dominion experi 18.00 diseases, according to W. H. Alder | mental stations in Ontario an experi che nie A480 man, chief in horticulture at Minne ment has been conducted for a period More Non-Skid sota University farm. Thiz is neces | of years to determine the best time | Depth, inches o . LIE " iii a ot : Let the Firestone Service Dealer show you these Firestone Extra Values and have your car equipped Ee] E39 : Lee 9R Firestone § 4.40-21% pg PARE PRICES A ———— Firestone Fhoecial Save Fruit Trees From Insects and Diseases oni § |5.25.18 i Ford. | Chevrolet {14.40.21 |$4.98/54.98 5.50.18 8.75 4.50.20] $.80| 5.60 281 1.5021] 5.09] 5.69 5.50.19 8.90 gary to insure having the trees In proper condition for next year's pro duction, Mr. Alderman’s statement is prompt. ed by indications that some varieties of plums and certain orchards located on low ground have suffered from frost. In such cases, orchardists may be inclined to regard spraying as un necessary for the balance of the season, On the contrary. Mr. Alderman points out, healthy foliage Is essen tial for the development of fruit buds which produce the next year's crop, as the leaves manufacture the plant food material which is transferred back to the wood and stored there. He ad vises "at least three sprays distribu. ted throughout! the season, Beef Rations Shelled corn or ground corn and cob menl are preferred in feeding beef ealves to ear corn or even broken ears by L. P. McCann, noted extension spe elalist In animal husbandry. Oats, bar ley and a limited amount of whent may be used with corn for fattening steers but should be ground. Oals are too bulky because of the hulls to use in large quantities but may comprise a third of the ration, while barley or oats may be used to the ex. tent of one-half the grain ration. for sowing a mixture of oats, peas and veteh (O.1.V.) for silage or hay. The mixture used was two bushels of oats, one bushel of peas antl one-half bushel of vetch per acre. The seed was sown on six different dates each year, at intervals of seven days. The average date of the first seeding over a six-year period was May 23. The average date of the last seeding, June 27. The experiments showed that good yields may be grown either for silage or hay: that the earlier seedings pro- duce the better yields; yet very good results may bg obtained even from seeding later in the summer. Hence, the erop may be grown even on low- lying land, slow to dry up in the spring. Around the Farm Nenrly half the world’s population uses soy beans dally as a protein food. . & » The amount of onts that can be fed hogs, sheep and chickens Is limited Outs has a place In every laying ra. tion. : *. & » Government scientists are experi menting with wheat and oat straw in an endeavor to make use of these farm products In the manufacture of high quality paper, More | Plies Under Tread . Same Width, | Inehes . sn Same Price , . Copyright, 1981, The Bivestone Tire & Rubber On, 4.75-19 4.7520 6.65 6.75 7.20] 7.10 2.38] 7.35 Franklin... Hodson... Hupmodile LaSalle } Packard... Cadillac... 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