THE CENTRE REPORTER, HALL, PA. | {WNU SERVICE) LOUISE , THEN ILL TAKE You HIS ARMY ? we PEPPERED IT AND TOOK HIM Eo BY ASSAULT! By J. Millar Watt NO SAUCE NOwv! ANesaiw, Tis 18 Jus A EMERGENCY BVuT “Hats, +Jrs TAIL “Youve Sor +otD I “There's Jones ahead of us with a swell dame. Pretty nifty girl, eh?” “Girl nothing-—that's his grand mother, mand’ “It is funny I do not remember limping when I left home,” said the absent - minded professor, as he walked down the street with one foot on the curb and the other in the gutter, Change of Bosses Diner—You advertise that this restaurant is under new manage Jueat, but the same manager is still ere, Waitress—Oh ves. but he got mar- 7 Hubby--My brain is on fire. § Wifle—Why don't you blow it out? | Torics BIRTH RATE DROP HURTS MILK PRICE Farm | | Need Seen for Increased Use by Adults. By LELAND SPENCER The decline in the number of young children Ys one reason for the reduced use of milk the past few | years, according to the New York state college of agriculture. The declining birth rate calls for special efforts by the milk industry to push the general use of milk as a drink by adults, and especially to break down the tendency of ado- lescents to switch from milk to oth- er drinks. Efforts should also be continued to find ways to get fluid milk at less cost to families of low incomes. This is the surest way to ward off the | substitution of other forms of milk | for fresh milk. As for dealers’ '‘spreads’ on re- | tail milk in nine important mar- {kets of the United States, the | spreads were reduced during the de- | pression, but are now larger than | ever. The of milk dealers to reduce their spread on retail milk is the main reason for the less friendly pub attitude toward them the past few years. Those acquaint- ed with the situation, however, know that the chief obstacle to reducing the spread is high wages and the | difficulty of using less labor, espe- | cially for retail delivery. As to the outlook for the milk in- dustry during the next two years, the Cornell milk marketing special- ists say much depends on the trend of commodity prices. { 3 LA ity frye il inability Green Vegetables Needed For Well-Balanced Diet | Even the searchlight | food research was turned on leafy, green vegetables their value in man ni apprec import: tectiv before of was pretty generally an they have have very high Leafy, plac © { they «¢ { min ery v th t cent essents {are often low Green | I also excellent min G. Thrown in ire are considerable 3 C and Vitamin Leafy vegetables, in contribute bulk or roughage of which is usually desirable diets of persons i | sources | for ge 31 31. additinn acaiuon, some Aerial Photos Offer Accurate Farm Record ith the advent of the Agricul- tural Adjustment act, and the need for. accurate field measurement to check compliance with the soil con- servation program, aerial photog- raphy came into its own as a cheap, quick, indisputable method of land mapping. Accurate field measurement is im- portant under the AAA because conservation payments are made at a specified rate per acre of land planted. Prior to the use of air photography, a number of methods, ranging from the old measuring wheel to surveying, were used. Cost of checking performance from the air iis about one-third less than the earlier methods of land measurement, Air photography costs about four cents per acre as compared with six cents per acre under older measuring methods. The cost is included as part of the | administrative expense deducted { from payments to farmers. Farm Facts Mushrooms have been cultivated for less than a half century. * - - The importance of live stock in Ohio agriculture is shown by the { figures for farm income in 1838. {Sales of all farm crops brought | $63,881,000 but the sales of live stock land live stock products totaled | $218,685,000. Success of artificial insemination in breeding of dairy cattle, tried for the past three months in six south- ern-tier counties, has led officials of New York state college of agricul- ture to sanction the method for use by dairymen throughout the state. *. * » Farmers now pay approximately $1,500,000,000 annually for power and power machinery but before the World war they sold power in the form of work animals for several hundred million dollars annually. *« 9» One cord of barnyard manure or other well-rotted organic material per 5,000 square feet of garden is recommended as the first fertilizer to apply to the . This may be supplemen with superphos- phate or with a balance fertilizer as needed. ADVENTUROUS AMERICANS By Elmo Scott Watson Peter Pond, Pathmaker HEY say that when Peter Pond was born to the wife of a Mil- ford, Conn., shoemaker in 1740 he “arrived in a restless mood’ and from that time until the end of his life he was constantly on the go. His father wanted him to “stick to the last” but the boy's restlessness led him into the British army at the age of 16. He served under Lord Howe, Sir William Johnson and Gen- eral Amherst in Canada and there learned of the wealth of the country he was helping to conquer. It was urs and he was destined to become one of America’s greatest fur trad- ers. After the French and Indian war was over, he went to sea and after a successful voyage to the West In- dies returned to Milford to find his mother dead. So he took charge of his eight younger sisters and broth- ers until his father returned from a trading trip to Detroit. When his father died Peter as- sumed his debts and in 1760 went to Detroit to engage in the Indian trade. He spent one winter at Mich- illimackinac, then ‘took another turn to ye West Indies.” But he was soon back in the West—at Prairie du Chien and Green Bay, Wis. About 1775 he gave up the trade in the Mississippi valley and went up into Canada. He is said to have been the first white man to reach the Peace river country and when the North West company was or- ganized in 1784 he was one of the shareholders. He helped wrest the valuable Chipewayan trade away from the Hudson's Bay company and he inspired the famous explor- ing expedition of Alexander Macken- zie to the Pacific. Pond sold out his interests in the North West com- pany in 1790 and is said to have died in poverty a few years later. * » . A Dumas Hero WW HEN Irish-born Thomas Phe- ' lan died in Bremerton, Wash, in { the age of 72 it marked a character who out of one of When he was 21 31 America, seeking adventure, in time to ta wars as a fi of Osawatomi In Jackson Mo., he was captured by slavery bushwhack- rs. who shot him and left him for dead. Upon recovering, he enlisted in the Union army, rose from ser- geant to the rank of captain and served throughout the Civil war. Once he and several of his company were captured by Quantrill's guer- rillas and sentenced to be shot. Their lives were saved by a Fed- eral commander who threatened to hang an equal number of Southern sympathizers if they were harmed. After the war, Phelan, with his sword-cane, was a picturesque fig- ure on the streets of Kansas City where he became noted for his skill as a swordsman and his readiness to settle any quarrel on the duelling grounds with rapier or pistol. Then he enlisted in the fight for Irish freedom, joined the Fenians but quarreled with some of their lead- ers because of their terroristic nethods. As a result, three “dyna- miters’’ in 1885 attacked him in his office and almost slashed him to death with their daggers before he beat them off. After many months in the hospital he finally recovered from his wounds. In 1894 Phelan won international ¥ n the border of John Brown was courtmartialed to Devil's Island. fred Dreyfus, and sentenced Phelan immediately which the documents duel. later events proved that he was right. ® = » “Thirty-Thirty’ Jack ras 26 years old, he left the States for Alaska and settled hear Wrangell. There was no monotony in his far-north life-~he became a deep-sea diver, prospector, game hunter, ‘‘mountie,” saloon-keeper and government agent. They called him ““Thirty-Thirty’’ Jack after the Up in Nome, for a while he went into partnership with Tex Rickard, too, ‘“Thirty-Thirty”’ knew later notables including Rex Beach, Robert W. Service, Texas Guinan and Jack London. A few months ago he made a trip to Chicago which was his first return to “civilization’ in 38 years. He said he was disappointed, how- ever, because, although 66 years old, he guesses he is still a pioneer at heart, He returned to Wrangell and put on a big party to celebrate his “de- liverance” from derby hats and oth- (SEE REP | 3A Niu p POULTRY BRED FOR PRODUCTION: RAISED FOR PROFIT: SOLD BY QUALITY: Tarkeys STARTED CHICKS Fuliels MILFORD HATCHERY pjooretie so Ducks Chicks PHOTOGRAPHY KODAK ROLLS DEVELOPED Includin ckle and one 4 ¢ weight enis edged 3 nt f in coin, ust service MOTE Ss with coin to LATSHAW FHOTO S§ s orders RVICE, CENTERVILLE . MARYLAND, Pattern 2207. Here's a hooked scatter rug made of yarn or rags in any size is} Do the flowers in bright odds and ends. Pattern 2207 con tains a transfer pattern of a moti 15 by 20 ot OY & inches, hool i 15 pattern to Needlecraft Dept., 82 New York, N. Y. ( There Are Two Wors ) to Get at Constipation Yes, and only two ways~before and after it happens! Instead of enduring those dull, tired, head- achy days and then having fo take an emergency medicine—why not KEEP regular with Kellogg's i-Bran? You can if y stipation is the kind mi ~gue to the lack of “bulk™ in modern diets. For All-Bran goes right to the cause of this trouble by supplying the “bulk” you need, Eat this toasted nutritiou real every day~with milk c or baked into muffins-drink plenty of water, and see if your life isn't a whole Jot brighter! Made by Kellogg's in Battie Creek. a by every grocer, of Our Intellect God has placed no limits to the exercise of the intellect He has given us, on this side of the grave. —Bacon. How Women in Their 40’s Can Attract Men Here's good advice for a woman during ber change (usually from 38 to 52), who fears she'll lose her appeal to men, who worries about hot flashes, los of pep, dizzy spells, upset nerves and anoody wpeils. Get more Iresh air, § hres sleep and if you need a good ge system tonic take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compaund, made especially for women. It beips Nature build uy physical resistance, thus helps give more vaoity to enjoy fife and assist calming jittery nerves and disturbing symptoms that often Soman change of life. WELL WORTH TRYING! ‘Multiple Saving Save a man and you save a unit; save a boy and you have a multi. plication table.—John Wanamaker, A wonderful aid for boils where 8 drawing agest is indicated. Scothing snd comforting Fine for childrens and grown-up Practicsl. Economical, GRAYS OINTMENT 25° 30-39 Man Changeth ww, Do not think that years leave us and find us the same.—Meredith. t DAISY FLY KILLER