Dewan can Bellefonte, Pa., March 14, 1890. THE MEN WHO DO NOT LIFT. The world is sympathetic. The statement none can doubt; : When £’s in trouble don’t we think that B should help him out ? Of course we haven't time ourselves to care for any one, . ] But.yet we hope:that other folks will see that it is done. We want the grief and penury of earth tobe re- lieved We'd haverthe battles grandly fought, the vic- tories achieved. We do not care to take the lead, and stand the brush and brunt, : At lifting we're a failure, but we're splendid on the grunt. Andithere:are others, so we find, as our way we og, . Who a to do their lifting on the small end of the log. They doa lot of blowing, and they strive to make it known That were there no .one else to help, they'd lift it.all alone. ’ If talking were effective there are scores and scores of men Whe'd move a mountain off its base and move it back again. But as a class, to state it plain, in language true and blunt, They’re never worth a cent to lift, for all they «do ig grunt. —Chicago Herald. Another Scandalous Chapter in the Life @f Pennsylvania’s Republi~ cau Bess. Buying Street Railroads With Pub- lic Funds. STATESMAN QUAY PUTS A PLIANT TOOL IN THE AUDITOR-GENERAL’S OFFICE AND BOLDLY RAIDS THE TREASURY A SECOND TIME—STORY OF THE PURCHASE OF THE WEST CHICAGO RAILROAD. From the New York World. How stands Matthew Stan'ey Quay to-day ? Only a brief period elapsed after the exposure in the World of the fearful ar- ray of criminality of which the Penn- sylvania statesman was the principal factor, before the article, thirteen col- umns in length, was laid before him. The great treasury looter was in South Florida engaged in the capture of numer- ous tarpons and other subtropical fish. -He carefully perused the damning tale of debauchery and crime from the be- ginning to the end. "What did he then do? The readers of the World know very well what an innocent man would do under the circumstances. The Beav- er statesman had been charged in speci- fic language with participating in a theft of the public money of Pennsyl- vania. The declaration was made that not only was the money of the people taken from their treasury, but that it was lost in speculation in stocks. Cate- gorically the charge was made that he became reduced to the point of threat- ened suicide, and that Senator J. Don- ald Cameron stepped in at the last mo- ment and saved the wretched criminal from public disgrace. An innocent man, especially if he occupied the exalted position of a Senator of the United States, would have cast his fishing traps. into the river and scarcely have waited for the packing of his portmanteau be- fore he started homeward to deny his guilt and to prove his innocence. But Statesman Quay is made of differ- ent clay. He is entirely aware of the truth of the specific charges discrediting his personal honesty. He knows that other people are conversant with the de- tails of the crimes of which he is guilty. ‘What course is left for him to follow? The bluff of a pretended libel suit might suffice to mislead credulous persons into believing that the dreadful specifications of guilt were false. But a libel suit, even in its earlier stages, would only unmask stil! deeper the acts of which he stands charged. There would be no sub- servient Alderman Neeper to decide in his favor: The Judges of the United States Courts are not to be led by the dictates of a corrupt political boss. No; a libel suit that he would never allow to go to trial would do Statesman Quay ne earthly good. Few persons are better aware of this indubitable fact than he. The only course left was, therefore, si- lence. “The mass of the voters are cred- ulous. They will say that it would be impossible fora man steeped in crime, as 1t is charged that Tam, to hold up his head in public. T can hold up my head and T will do it.” Such were the reflections of Statesman Quay, now known as the man with the pachyder- matous hide. His friends assert that he will continue his tarpoon fishing until April. But if the man with the pachyderma- tous hide, knowing himself to be guilty, thinks he can ride over public senti- ment by silence, the great leaders of his party are by no means in a similar con- dition of ostrich-like security. No cc- currence has agitated the magnates of Republicanism in a similar degree since the present Administration came into power. At Washington the World's publica- tion of Quay’s misdoings came like a thunder clap. The average Senators knew that he was personally a disrepu- table old debauche who had been guilty of all manner ot corrupt practices ; but the details of the great steal of $260,000 from the State Treasury of Pennsylva- nia were understood by only an extreme- ly limited circle of men. Hence the amazement which the World's story created. The President real the narrative care- fully, and then he discussed it with sev- eral good Pennsylvania Congressmen. Senator Cameron was also included in the Presidential inquiries. It is stated on good authority that the virtuous head of the nation received a shock from which he has not as yet recovered. Well he might, as he owes his place to this same vote-buying Quay. Secretary Blaine studied the article carefully. He knows from experience all about violent personal attacks, but the charges which have been brought against himself are as flea-bites to the awful category of rascality of which Quay is guilty. Speaking to a distin- Gaited Pennsylvanian on the subject, r. Blaine remarked that the World's article is unique in the political his:ory of the country. No other pubhe man occupying the position of Senator Quay, he said, has ever had charges brought against him in print in the specific antl diversified manner in which they were launched by the World. As the Secre- tary of State.is the recognized political historian of the nation his comment possesses unusual interest. At the National capitol the exposure, now three weeks old, continues to be a source of discussion in the committee- rooms and in the two chambers. The effect on the party is the principal point of interest. No onecares for Quay per- sonally. ’ In the Senate there are some queer specimens of mankind, but no one mem- ber of this body can hold a candle to the man from Beaver in point of “low downness.” The last phrase was used by a Southern member of Congress the other day in speaking of the affair. Men of the high character of Senator Edmunds are disturbed because they fear political complications. Senator Don Cameron is worried, not on account of the datwnage done .Statesman Quay, but, as when he saved the latter from a striped suit at the time of the Treasury steal, he is alarmed lest the party shall suffer. It isthe parly not Pachyder- matous Quay, that worries the magnates of the national capitol. The Washing- ton Post of Wednesday last commented on a despatch from Florida announcing that Quay was troubled with insomnia, by stating that his friends at Washing- ton are afflictea with sleeplessness on his account to a greater degree than him- self. Many letters have been addressed to his fishing station, urging action of some kind, but to all he turns a deaf ear. Yes, Statesman Quay hopes to fish away the effect of the World's exposure of his villainies, Perhaps he derives sympa- thetic enjoyment from the remembrance of the ancient German proverb, “The fish lead a pleasant life; they drink when they like.” In Pennsylvania no publication ever occurred which has convulsed political circles to a greater degree than the World's exposure. The Republican press at once adopted the policy of si- lence, There was no attempt at denial of the damaging facts laid before the publiceye. Simply silence and that is all. There's scarcely a Republican editor in the Keystone State who is not aware of the trustworthiness of the World's historical study. A distinguished jour- nalist at the head of a Republican news- paper informed the writer that he knew the details of the steal from the Treasury at the time of its occurrence. “Why did you not print them ?” was the interrogation addressed to him. “Because of the effect on the party,” was the rejoinder. This fear of “injury to the party” causes the Republican newspapers to ig- nore the Quay exposure, and the nu- merous reputable gentlemen—men of character and honor—who are at the fore of some of the influential newspapers of Pennsylvania, stultify themselves,not from love of the man with the pachyder- matous hide, for he has tew respectable personal friends, but the fetish of party damage stares them in the face. I have not as yet heard of a single Republican editor who personally denies the story of Quay’s scampery. The World’sstory has been extensively quoted by the Democratic and independent press throughout the State and country. The burden of editorial utterance is that si- lence on the statesman’s part is an ac- knowledgment of guilt. The stalwart Republicans of Pennsyl- vania attempt to condone the misdeeds of their boss by asserting that the charges of the World apply to his acts in the past; that none of the misde- meanors are of recent occurrence. In order to convince these complacent friends who apologize for crime on the ground that it occurred last week in- stead of yesterday, I will anticipate the narration of a transaction which otherwise would have been deferred un- til a future publication. It will be con- clusively shown that the Beaver states- man did not mend his ways with the progress of time. Undeterred by the narrow escape he had when he took part in thelooting of the State Treasury in 1879, the adventurer again exploited the people’s money and enjoyed its profits when he had been elected by a servile Legislature in 1887 to the Senate of the United States. QUAY AGAIN USES THE PEOPLE'S MONEY TO FEATHER HIS OWN NEST. In order to make plain the story of Statesman Quay’s recent exploit, it will be necessary to describe some of his sur- roundings, to refer to certain of his friends and accomplices and to consid- er the means he employed to rule the great commonwealth of Pennsylvania. A prominent politician—a follower of the Beaver boss—sapiently announced to the specialeorrespondent of the World that the exposure of Quay referred to past deeds only and that sympathy would be felt for the man who was try- ing to live down former indiscretions. “How about the affair of the West Chicago Railway stock?’ I asked. “Who in h—Il told you that?” he cried, involuntarily. Then he quickly changed to “I mean what is that about?” I will inform him in the course of the present narration. It has always been the practice of the statesman to have a number of tools on whom he could at all times and under any circumstances rely. Tn different localities in Pennsyl- vania, at Harrisburg, Philadelphia, Reading, Pittsburg and in each of the valious counties, Quay has satellites who breathe, as it were, only to do his will. For a period of nearly fifteen years prior to May 22, 1888, there was no single person to whom Quay could turn, with greater confidence of prompt, unquestioring action, than to A. Wil- son Norris, of Philadelphia. Norris was a bright young man of good fami- ly; a gallant soldier during the war and a well-read lawyer. He married a rela- tive at Lewistown, in Central Pennsyl- vania, a thoroughly estimable lady, who posseseed considerable wealth. Owing to reasons for which neither husband nor wife was responsible, their married life proved a failure. Norris became ac- quainted wich Mrs. Elizabeth Roberts, a widow, who married in extreme youth a boy who left her alone at seventeen years of age. With her he established an alliance which lasted for eleven years. Although his lawful wife was living, a ceremony of marriage with Mrs. Roberts was gone through in which a clergyman took part, and Nor- ris and his bogus wife lived together. Norris was very prominent in the Grand Army, and his strength in that direc- tion gave him a political following which was valuable to Statesman Quay. At first Norris secured the place of re- orter of Supreme Court decisions at arrisburg, and he was used by Quay in the great treasury steal of 1879. Sub- sequently he was made United States Pension Agent at Philadelphia. This of- fice he held until he was given the nom- ination of Auditor-General of the State of Pennsylvania by Quay, and was elect- ed and assumed office May 2, 1887. ‘With Norris in charge of the Auditor- General's office, Statesman Quay had no fear that any of his schemes against the State Treasury would be exposed. As related in a previous article, Quay secured by treachery the office of State Treasurer in 1885, and on Jan. 18, 1887 he was made United States Senator. The full story of Quay’s deeds when in charge of the treasury is vet to be told. Norris and his bogus wife kept house in various locations in Philadelphia. Their establishment was the resort of the higher(?) class of politicians of both parties, and for a considerable period of time State politics were conducted in the handsome apartments. Quay used to receive and entertain his friends at one of the Roberts-Norris mansions, first at 1385 North Twenty-first street, and after- wards at 620 North Eighteenth street. Distinguished members of the Republi- can party used to flit in from the various sections of Pennsylvania or from Wash- ington, anil they were alway secure of a welcome beneath the hospitable roof. If perchance these energetic friends of the ‘Boss’ brought chipper young women along and introduced them as daughters, nieces or wards, never a denial of en- trance was put forth, and they remain- ed as long as the visiting statesmen, their protectors, tarried. In the event of the arrival of one of these aforesaid statesmen who was unfortunate enough not to possess or had deemed it inexpe- dient to bring along a chipper daughter, niece or ward, a chipper and usually very pretty daughter, niece or ward was quickly found in Philadelphia beneath the North Eighteenth street roof-tiles. Quay passed much time there. One night in 1878, the plan for the nomina- tion of Gov. Hoyt was set in Mrs. Rob- erts-Norris’s back parlor amid the clink- ing of wine glasses and the cacchina- tions of certain chipper daughters, nieces and wards, who chanced to be in atten- dance. The secret statesmanship of the Keystone State was born and developed, during Statesman Quay’s regime, under similar ciicumstances. ‘Wilson Norris was a man who would have ornamented any circle had he not been the victim of disease which proved his ruin and which enabled Quay to maintain an ascendancy over him. He was a confirmed dipsomaniac. For long periods he was in unfit condition to attend to business. His bogus, wife Mrs. Roberts-Norris, a woman of remarkable energy and great business talent, used to aid in the preparation of official papers and various other kindred work connect- ed with Lis public duties. Had it not been for her he would have been forced out of the Pension Office for neglect of duty. Quay and Norris used to disagree openly, but to use the latter's own words, ‘The old man is like a father to me, and I can’t stay mad at him.” On one occasion “Papa” Quay tested his filial regard. Norris had been din- ing out azd returned home in a state of excessive fatigue. He lay down on a sofa and sought to sleep it off. Mean- while the Beaver statesman, his po!iti- cal father, came in, and ‘being then in an exhilarated condition, invited Mrs. Roberts-Norris to go out and get some supper. The latter, who was, in the face of innumerable temptations, always true, I am informed, to Norris, consent- ed, and the pair hied them first to Mec- Gowan’s famous hostelry for terrapin and ‘“fizz ;”’ afterwards to the neighbor- hood of the domicile of Mistress Abby Kingsley, located not a dozen miles from the corner of Eighteenth and Chestnut streets, where more ‘fizz’ was absorb- ed. Meanwhile Norris had roused from his slumbers and missed his “father” and his so called wife. Suspect- ing, or rather knowing the for- mer only too well, he started in pursiit and pounced into the room where Quay and his pettie Lizzie were seated at a table with beady glass- es between them. “What in h—I1l are you doing with Lizzie, you infernal old rascal 77 be shouted. “You wouldn’t spare the cradle or the grave, curse you |” And then the irate man proceeded to seize the startied statesman by the throat and to thump his head against the wall. The two were separated and Norris bore the frightened Lizzie home. Next morning Quay went to see his political child, and after prolonged discussion the affair was amicably arranged. An in- timate friend of Norris told the above anecdote to me, with the explanation that Norris personally gave him the de- tails. The remarkable feature of Norris's dual marital situation was that the house where he kept his putative wife was not many squares from the house where he alternated his residence with his lawful wife. One fine morning during Wilson Norris’s incumbency of the office of Auditor-General, a cab sped to the door of a person in Philadelphia with whom he was on confidential terms. The vehicle contained the Auditor-General and one other person. The former quickly stepped out; his companion re- mained within. As Norris passed up the conventional white marble door- steps characteristic of the Quaker City, he involuntarily placed his hands to his breast and moved his fingers as if mak- ing sure of something concealed in the inside pocket of his waistcoat. He rang the bell, was admitted and in a few min- utes wascloseted with his friend. After a few preliminary remarks the Auditor- General exclaimed: “I'm cursedly nervous !”” and then he removed a pack- age from his breast pocket. “Do you see this?” he said, in a low voice, ‘It represents hundreds of thousands of dollars of State funds. It is going to carry Quay through another deal. By God,I’d think he had enough fingering Treasury money. I'm afraid of a smash up.” Then the story was told how Quay had made a fresh raid on the public tunds. : I have traced this act of the pachyder- matous statesman from the beginning to the end, and itis not strange that Wil- son Norris was nervous, or that he should say : “If this affair turns out like the 79 business I'll skip to Canada.” Quay was served when State Treasur- er by William Livsey as Cashier of the treasury. When his election to the United States Senate occurred he could no longer act in the State offica, and Livsey, a pliant follower of the Boss, was appointed to the office of State Treasurer. 'W. D. Hart succeeded him and diel. Then Livsey was re-appoint- ed, and Boyer, the newly elected Treasurer, who owes his election to Quay’s influence, does not step in his place until May next. During the period when Quay was Treasurer he had the power to use the treasury funds very much as he pleased, providing that he looked out for the welfare of “the boys” of the inner circle. In Philadelphia there is a little cote- rie of sharp, able and sagacious men who constitute what is known as the Horse Railway Syndicate. They control tram- ways in various cities, including, as is well known, the Broadway and Seventh Avenue Surface Roads in New York. In order to fight their way along, in common with other corporation mana- gers, they have employed a lobby. It may be said without any qualification that the Harrisburg legislators do not propose to allow the evanescent and fugacious dollar to roll past their pock- ets when a simple act like the casting of a favorable vote will cause the coin to trundle inside. On past occasions the syndicate had occasion to call on States- man Quay for the exercise of his kird offices in shooting bills along towards enactment, and he had been ajuseful and unscrupulous agent, as certain specific instances, of which I have the details, would demonstrate if I were to make use of them here. When Quay was in finarcial trouble he would go to certain members of the syndicate for aid, and as he has generally been in a condition of impecuniosity, on account of his bad luck in gambling, his calls have not been as infrequent as might be imagined. The Philadelphia syndicate cast a number of eyes on the railway property in the Windy City known as the West Chicago Company, and on ascertaining that the business chances were good straightway absorbed the plantby pur- chase. Then bonds were issued togeth- er with stock in the company. The syndicate was under obligation to the Boss, and, when the scheme had at- tained the right stage, a certain mem- ber of the financial clique gave the Beaver statesman a chance to pocket some profits. He was offered $400,000 in bonds of the West Chicago Railway and: each bond carried a share of the capital stock, Among the observations plainly made to the eager statesman was the excellent advice that he should not gamble away the profits of the transac- tion, but that he should give them to his good wife. Quay assented, for he would have agreed to anything that would put coin in his pocket. In order to agree to his part of the transaction, it was necessary to raise the sum of $400,- 000. Did he visit banks and secure the money ? Not a bit of it? Why should he ? Had not he the State Treasury at his finger-tips, so to speak ? = As cooly as if he had never on a previous occasion speculated with and lost a large amount of public money, with the connivance of an official of the Treasury he sent the required sum in State funds down to. Philadelphia and it was deposited in the People’s Bank, located on Fourth and ‘Walnut streets, which was and is to- day the depository of the Horse Rail- way Syndicate. The President, the notorious. “Addition, Divison and Silence” W. H. Kemble, was, as every- body knows, saved from the penitentiary after he had pleaded guilty in court— prior to the conviction of Emil Petroff —by the influence of Statesman Quay over the State Pardoning Board. Quay allotted a portion of what he received to Wilson Norris, and the official of the Treasury previously referred to got a share of the prize. Nota dollar of his own money did Quay use, but he took the State money and by that, which was no more or less practically than simple embezzlement, purchased $400,000 worth of West Chi- cago Railway bonds; together with the accompanying stock. He took the same chances that he boldly assumed when he embarked in the speculation of 1879. The fact illustrates exactly the character of the man. He is a born gambler. Always ready to risk everything he pos- sesses on the turn of a card or the tum- ble of a set of dice, he apparently trust- ed his luck and ran the risk of the State Prison unflinchingly. The fate which overtook him was different from that which resulted from the previous defal- cation, and the West Chicago scheme proved successful. The profits of the transaction to Quay arose trom the sale of stock which practically 20st him nothing but that which by other mcn would be counted as honor. Of course the word is not to be used in con- nection with the acts and deeds of the eminent statesman of Pennsylvania. He sold stock as high as 82 or 83, and, of course, made a pile of money by the daring he displayed. The bonds were used to make the State Treasury good and Don Cameron was not again called in at a suicidal moment. Hart, the new Treasurer, knew all about the deal, and itis understood that he had his little piece of mutton. It is impossible to conduct raids on the State Treasury without the know- ledge of a number of persons, and they require subsidizing to keep them quiet. An experienced member of the Penn- sylvania Legislature informed me that there have been members of the Harris- burg ring who would demand $5,000 as the price of silence and accept $50. Aye, and he named many of them, as I shall hereatter. The fate of Wilson Norris must be re- lated in order to bring to light a portion of the subject of the story. His conviv- ial habits increased during the anxiety he felt over his part in the deal. At one period Quay also became nervous, and he and Norris walked the room to- gether and indulged in reflections on the steal of 1879, wondering whether there would be a disastrous ending to the new enterprise. Norris drank heav- ily, and his “very bad spells” left him dangerously prostrated. In February, 1888, he became alarmed over his condi- tion, and in a moment of anxiety lest his pretty little daughters by Mrs. Roberts- Norris should suffer want,he penned a note to Statesman Quay, his ‘political father,” as follows : PuiLapeLprHIA, Feb. 5, 1888. My DEAR CoLoNEL: In the event of my death I wish as my last request that you see that Lizzie for herself and the children receives my $10,000 in the Chi- cago deal. This is the only legacy I can secure them and I trust you to look ; after it. Yours truly, A. WiLsoN NORRIS. Col. M. 8S. Quay. In less than four months the versatile and engaging writer was in his grave. Congestion of the brain followed a peri- od of wild excesses and his body now rests in a forlorn cemetery near Lewis- town. After his death Mrs. Roberts-Norris endeavored to obtain a settlement with Quay in accordance with the terms of the letter. When the Senator was at New York running the campaign she paid him a visit at the headquarters of the Republican National Committee. Rich were the promises made. A | henchman was detailed to make Mrs. Roberts-Norris’s trip to New York an agreeable one, and she was got rid of as quickly as possible. Atlength, finding out that the ‘‘political father” of Norris did not intend to do anything, the mat- ter was placed in the hands of A. Syd- ney Biddle, of the eminent legal firm of Biddle & Ward, on South Fifth street, Philadelphia. A single move by Coun- sellor Biddle accomplished wonders. A response from Statesman Quay quickly followed. Silas W. Pettit, a lawyer of Philadelphia, was appointed to act for Quay, and fina'ly stock to the value of $10,000 was turned over to Mrs. Ro- berts-Norris through Syndney Biddle. Pettit informed the lawyer that Norris had no claim on the funds for value re- ceived, that Quay had allowed him to come into the transaction es an act of friendship. There is no doubt that the statesman would have done the woman if he dared. Bill Hart, the State Treasurer, madea row over the matter. He was in the deal sufficiently to be fearfully worried lest blame should fall on him, and he worked him- self into a fit of nervousness which end- ed in prostration from which he never recovered. Like ‘‘Square Timber” Noyes and Blake Walters, Hart, so his friends allege, got his death as a re- sult of the unscrupulous dishonesty of the arch-gambler and risk-taker, States- man Quay. I paid a visit to the private residence of Mrs. Roberts-Norris. She occupies a handsome house filled with tasteful furn- iture. In a large upper room, used as a boudoir, stood an open piano and many elegant articles of use and ornament. A little woman, not over 5 feet in height, with a handsome face and a fine, rounded form, clad in a fashionable morning gown, appeared in answer to my card. I soon discovered the secret of her power which caused the old ring of politicians to flock to her former resi- dence. She knows State politics like an adept, despises Statesman Quay and re- solutely refuses to say one word inculpat- ing Norris in the dealings with the for- mer. Womanlike, she says Quay has deeply wronged her, but she will not give him away. That she possesses dam- aging evidence against the statesman there app=ars to be little doubt, but she refused to submit it to me under any circumstances. The friends of Wilson Norris who shared his confidence are not as close-mouthed as his quasi widow. There are other interesting illustrations of Matthew ‘Stanley Quay’s greatness which are next in order. Chinese Medicine. The San Francisco Examiner reporter says the doctor pulled out a drawer from under the counter and exhibited hundreds of mummy grasshoppers. “These are good for little children,” he said. “In China every spring mil- lions of these bugs come in the fields. Pretty soon the grasshopper dies and the meat turns into a fly. The hind legs and little tail drop off and the little fly goes away. Then there is nothing but the shell left. The laborers in the fields gather these and dry them in the sun. I'hev make good medicine in powders. “Chinese babies never die from con- vulsions when teething like white babies. This powder acts on the stomach when the stomach teeth are coming through and makes them good and strong.” A Forestry in Germany. The Germans have been = the pioneers in scientific forestry, as in so many other lines of progress. With a total forest area of onlv 34,346,000 acres, of which 11,234,000 belong to the state, the German empire has no less than nine schools of forestry, and during the three years ending with 1888 it pabiished 177 books on the various branches of the subject. There are also ten periodicals devoted to forestry, and a gencral association of foresters with annual meetings and ten local societies. An April Trip to Washington via Penn - sylvania Railroad. On April 3d the Pennsylvania Rail- road Company will offer a most desir- akle opportunity of visiting Washing- ton. 1t'is a period of the year when the handsome city wears its most attrac- tive nspect, and itis also a time when the Government departments are busi est. Excursion tickets, valid for ten days and bearing stop-over privilege in Baltimore, in either direction, will be sold from Pittsburg at $10, and at cor- respondsngly low rates from the stations mentioned below. A special train of parlor cars and day coaches will leave Pittsburgat 8.00 a.m., but those who prefer to start in the even- ing may take the trains leaving at 7.15 or 8.10 p. m. The following are the rates and sched- ule of specirl trains . Rate Train leaves. Pittshurg../... iin. $0.00 00 a.m. Altoona..... 7 5 H fe Bellefonte Clearfield. Philipsburg. Osceola. Tyrone..... Huntingdo Lewistown J Washington.... ve Those who care to make trips farther South may purchase at Washington reduced rate excursion tickets to Mt. Vernon, Richmond, Pe- tersburg, or Old Point Comfort. Return coupons will be accepted on any train within the limit, except the Pennsylvania Limited. “ “ flying side- Farm Notes. Nine cases out of ten, where a vari- ety of fruit which once flourished in a given soil, has ceased to flourish and perfect fine fruit there, the change is due to the fact that the soil has become destitute of the necessary mineral ma- nure. The amount of solid and liquid ex- crement voided in twenty-four hours by a horse, as found by the Cornell professors, is but a little less than fifty- seven pounds. The horses weighed about 1300 pounds eacki, and were lib- erally fed of oats and hay. A fifteen-mile journey is an average day’s work for a horse. How far does the cow travel in a poor pasture, nip- ping a penny-weight of grass here and there, to get her daily ration ? Then she is expected to pay for it through the milk pail. Fruits and vegetables are perishable, and some attention should be given the time of harvesting and shipping in. or- der that no delay may occur in reach- ing the market. A few hours on a warm day will make quite a difference in the appearance of fruit in market. It is claimed that land plaster is a special fertilizer for cabbages. If this is true there is no reason for neglecting such a crop, as plaster is as cheap as lime. Plaster is excellent for clover and grasses, and its use has always been beneficial compared with its cost. Professor Heury says of feeding cat- tle : “You cannot be too careful about putting your feed and money into young cattle and avoiding old ones.” This is more applicable to hogs than cattle, as the hoz reaches maturity in about one half the time the cattle do. It is yet a long time before any seeds of mellons can be planted ; but the mellon bills, niade up of plenty of ma- nure, will be in excellent condition for growing a crop if the hills are made ready in time to allow the manure to rot in the hills. It is said that a coat of boiled linseed oil and ground charcoal on any kind of post will prevent its rotting. Any good paint willno doubt do just aswell. The mineral paints are very cheap, and a coat of them on the post before it isset in the ground would at least double its life. Professor Sanborn, of Missouri, in more than 100 feeding tests determined that to make a certain amount of gain, pigs weighing 220 poynds required 18 per cent. more food ; pigs weighing 270 pounds require 50 per cent. more food, and pigs weighing 325 pounds require 78 per cent, more food than pigs weighing 70 pounds. Slow germinating seeds,such as pars- ley, carrots and parsnips, should be of the best quality and should be plant- ed early, so as to take advantage of the spring rains in order to have the young plants well advanced in growth before the dry season comes on. The seeds should go in as soon as the ground is warm. It has been suggested that fruit- growers have special marke or labels on their fruit-boxes, that castomers may know who produced the fruit and from whom to buy. In this manner the fruit grower who sends choice fruit to market will not be dependent on the failure off his neichbors to properly as- sort their fruit. Merit and profit shoulp | go where they properly belong. If the fertihty 18 hot 1n your soil, put it in. Apply the iecesssary fertil- 1zers to grow the crop and make the crop pay for them. In other words, manufacture raw materials into a use- ful and marketable crop that will ‘pay all expenses and reward you for your labor. Then you do not make some- thing out of nothing, but something valuable out of something not so val- uable. | On the question of pooling milk, Pro- fessor Robertson, of Canada, appears 4 to be level-headed. He recently deciar- ed in the Ontario Dairvman’s Conven- tion : “I'm not fool enough to pool my 4 per cent. fat milk with my neigh- bor's 3 per cent. stuff.” There are a good many others in the same boat, andit is decidedly against the pooling system, whether of milk or cream. The largest single crops grown on an acre in 1889 were : Corn, 255" bushels of shelled corn, green weight, which shrunk to 239 bushels when kiln dried; potatoes, 738 bushels ; oats, 135 bush- els ; wheat, 80 bushels. These crops are the largest ever secured from one acre under similar circumstances that guaranteed their accuracy, and were ised in competition for the American Dr. Peter Collier says, in the Elmi- ra Husbandman, that the intellectual activity which has been aroused among our agricultural classes during the ‘past ten years has been astounding, and in every direction the people are reaching out for help to enable them to more intelligently conduct their affairs. Nowadays thousands of farm- ers are discussing the problems con- nected with the feeding of their crops and stock in terms which were to them without meaning, an inkuown tongue, less than ten years ago. Answering the question : “Shail we plant the Russian apricot 27 asked at the meeting of the Ohio State Horti- cultural Society, G. T. Trowbridge said that the apricots wenow have would thrive where the peach would grow. The tree was as hardy or har- dier than the peach; but the trouble was its early blooming ; blossoming something earlier than the peach, the crops are nearly always destroyed by the late frosts. If it should be shown that the Russian varieties blossomed as late or later than the peaches. then we could plant them with the hope of growing an occasional crop of apricots. ——The children’s health must nog be neglected. Colds inthe head and snufles bring on catarrh and lung af- fections, Ely’s Cream Balm cures at | once. Tt is perfectly safe and easily ap- plied into the nostrils. It also cures ca- tarrh, the worst cases yielding to it.