Bellefonte, Pa., August 23, 1912. FARM NOTES. —If you have not aiready done so by all means requeen all colonies with young queens, as this will in a large measure prevent swarming next season. —For comb honey a hive a little more shallow in the brood nest than the regular body is preferable, as it forces the up into sections just where it is wan —Ther are some 800,000 beekeepers in the United States. More than 500,000 are farmers who keep bees as a side line, obtaining honey for home use and a small | trade. : | —Onions to keep well must be stored | in a cool and dry place. A little freezing | does not necessarily hurt them if they are not exposed to frequent freezing and | thawing. i —Clean out the chaff and hayseeds on | the barn floor and scatter it over bare | places in the lots and pastures. This | scattered seed represents good money | value, and it should be put to good pur- | pose. —If you want spinach for use in early ! spring, at the time when dandelion greens | are ripe, sow seed in September or Oc- | tober. Frequently it does not winter well, especially it not protected by cover- | ing lightly with litter. { —Whatever form of lime is used, if it is in a fine condition, either as the result of grinding or of slaking, the best meth- od of applying it to the soil is by the use of a iime spreader. The ordinary fertil- izer drill does not spread any of these materials well except the very finely- ground limestone. i —Where practicable the fruit orchards should be planted in autumn. Among | the principal advantages are leisure time, better physical condition of soil and the early establishment and consequent ear- lier growth of trees. Owing to its less | hardy nature the peach is to be excepted | irom the fall planting. i —Not very long ago fifteen tons of | cold-storage butter from Chicago was seized by the federal authorities at Jer- | sey City, New York. It was on its way | to the restaurants of New York, and its rankness was noticeble even to people | i alongside the train. The railroad em- ployees objected to handling it, and the | butter was sent to the dump. | —There is no better time than the lat- i ter part of September for making the colonies strong in bees and stores for | their long winter's sleep, and in this re- Shect “a stitch in time is worth nine.” le there will be little brood reared the last of this month, yet the weaker colonies may be strengthened by giving them frames of sealed brood and bees from the stronger ones, and this can be safely done. —The diversification of crops for the purpose of distributing labor throughout the year needs little if any comment. However, it is doubtful if the full bene- fits of scientific diversification are attain- ed in every instance. We have known men who would put in a large acreage of one variety of oats or one variety of wheat,whereas labor could be used much more advantageously if more than one variety were used, so that harvest time could be extended over a longer period. One reason wily winter wheat i’ increas- ing in popularity is because it ripens ear- ly, thereby enabling the farmer with a given amount of help to harvest a larger crop during the year than would be the case if only spring grains were seeded. —The results of different treatments of hogs came to my notice last spring, when a neighbor sold two average pigs eight weeks old to a man who did not have any other hogs, says a West Virginia correspondent of the American Agricul- turist. He bought the two hogs to make pork the next fall and, of course, wanted to give them a good chance to do their best. were fed wheat middlings, milk and scraps from the table, in addi- tion to the pasture thay gathered. were grade Chester ites, farrowed in April. These two pigs dressed The pigs that had not been sold and out of the Sane lier were allowed to tered at about the same time as the other two they only weighed sixty-five or sev- enty pounds each. There was a differ- ence of nearly 100 between these well fed hogs and r mates not so fed, and it was wholly due to different treat. ments. It is easy to see which was the more economical pork prod well cared for hog or the one which yaough feed to barely live until fatten. ing time. The difference in value was almost $10, as sold at 10 cents pound P05 hork The two well ed 4 5 : i fo i = g i » 1 3 li fig =i: i ih if Z 8 i F 53 £8 i ie it of ge it H & 5 £ g§ g i tT il 1h rf Hi files 553% : i oh i il Bd 2 i £ g : : f : i a3 : iat i i I : WILL MEAN A BIG SAVING Pittsburgh Commission Takes Lead In Showing That Rivers Have a Real Money Value to Pennsyivania—Pow- er Development a Feature. Pittsburgh, Aug. 22.—That the next legislature will take a comprehensive grasp of the water problems of Penn- sylvania wil] be one of the principal results of the work of the Flood Com- mission of Pittsburgh, which recently spent $125,000.00 in finding out how the millions of cubic feet of water that annually cause damage and disaster in the form of floods can be made a financial asset to the state. While the studies of the Flood Commission re- late particularly to the western end of the state, its conclusions are ap- plicable wherever rivers exist which do not keep within tl.eir channel] lines throughout the entire year. The cod Commission has found that floods in the Allegheny, Monon. gahela and the upper part of the Ohio river can be absolutely preventel by the holding back of the flood waters in reservoirs. The prevention of floods alone would warrant the ex- pense of building these reservoirs, but it also has been discovered that the water held back can be made to pro- duce wealth to the state. It also has become evident through studies that what can be done on the western riv- ers can be done on all the rivers and streams in Pennsylvania. If the state takes a firm grasp upon its water resources at the next ses- sion of the legislature the destructive floods will be a thing of the past and the water that formerly did so much | damage will be used to benefit naviga- tion, to develop water power and to improve the quality for domestic and manufacturing purposes. That the Re- publican party in the state realizes the | importance of taking up the water question is evidenced by the follow- | ing plank in the platform adopted at the last Republican state convention: “Particularly do we deem it advis- able for the State of Pennsylvania to take a firm grasp upon its water prob- lems. Transportation, flood preven- tion, reclamation, sewerage, water power and other incidents of water flow are questions of extreme import- ance to the commonwealth. While these quesfions present different as- pects from the national the state and the municipal viewpoints, their solv- tion cannot be adequately and efi- clently effected except by some plan of harmonious and co-operative action. The State of Pennsylvania, standing as it does between the federal govern- ment with multitudinous demands pressing upon it, and the counties and municipalities, with their limited pow- ers, must take the lead in the prepa- ration of a comprehensive plan of de- velopment. We pledge the enactment of laws permitting and providing for joint action and joint contribution of funds for these purposes. We pledge immediate state appropriations for the improvement of the Delaware riv- er and the port of Phliadelphia and for flood prevention in the western part of the state.” The Democratic party also realized the importance of this subject as fol- lows: “We commend the special studies of flood conditions such as that re- cently concluded in the western part of the state and urge the enactment of legislation carrying into effect the recommendations that have been made for the control of floods, for increasing the navigable flow of riv- ers, for the development of water pow- er and for bettering the sanitary conditions of our rivers. We advocate the co-operation of the State of Penn- sylvania with the counties of the state and with the national government in the construction of storage reservoirs and other works to carry the above outlined benefits into effect, believing that these are matters in which the state is vitally interested.” It is expected that this action of the two big political parties in the state which followed shortly after the pub- lication of the report of the Flood Commission will have the effect of passing the necessary laws at the next session of the legislature. The Pennsylvania Floods. . The devastation and ruin wrought by the Pennsylvania floods merely represent the inevitable working of cause and effect. Until the people of the middle states build storage reser- voirs powerful enough to hold the an- nual floods these distressing inunda- tions are certain to occur. The couu- try has been stripped of its protec- tion of forest. The watersheds are a huge sink, collecting the rainfall in one irresistible torrent. The condi- tions will never grow better in that regard until the forests are brought back into existence, and that will take a generation's work and care to ac- complish. Meanwhile nothing can save the denuded sections from these catastrophes until the people build great storage reservoirs to protect the lower valleys from the forty-foot rise —Boston Advertiser. The Only Way. Upton Sinclair, commiserating with f& young poet, argued: “It is exceed. fagly difficult in this commercial age for a poet to make a living by his pen. The only way for him to do so in fact, is to keep pigs.” ¥ NEW NEWS OF YESTERDAY How P. 7. Barnum Came Near Humbugging Himself. Great American Showman Paid Doe tors to Certify to His Sanity When He Wished to Make Wis Will By E. J. EDWARDS. While P. T. Barnum, the great ssow- man, not only humbugged the Ameri- can people, but also openly confessed it, saying that they were fond of be- ing humbugged, there was one Ameri- can citizen whom he was careful nev- er to humbug, and that one was Phin- eas Taylor Barnum. Yet, discreet and cunning though he was as a business man, almost invariably getting the best of every business deal in which he took part, with the result that he accumulated a fortune of some four or five millions of dollars, there was a time when he all but humbugged himself as completely as he ever did the American publie. The late John Platt, who in his day was esteemed one of the ahlest, shrewdest and most honorable lawyers practicing before the New York bar, | was a sort of general counsel for Mr. ! Barnum for years, with satisfactory | financial results to both parties con- | cerned. One day Mr. Barnum, all excitament and enthusiasm, bounded into Mr. Platt's office. He pulled from a pock- et what looked like a legal paper and waved it before the lawyer. “Mr. Platt,” he cried, ‘I've hit upon a plan which will put a stop to any attempt to contest my will in case any one should be disposed to go to law over the way I have left my money.” “What's the occasion of all this pre- caution?” asked Mr. Platt. “Well, you see,” was the reply, “I notice that there are a good many will contests these days. There was one recently down in Connectieut, near where I live. They actually broke the will on the ground that the maker of it was not mentally competent—didn’t know what he was about—when he drew up the will, “Now, when I read of that, I sald to myself, ‘Nobody has ever accused you, P. T. Barnum, of not knowing what you're about while you're alive, but there is no telling what they may say of you after you're dead. You'd better fix it so that they can't cook up any story of that kind nn you when you are in your grave and can't ans- wer back.’ And,” triumphantly tapping the legal-looking document, “I've done it—I've done it, Mr. Plats.” “How have you done it?” inquired the lawyer. “Oh,” rattled on Mr. Barnum, “I went to see two of the best known doctors in New York on medical mat- ters and insanity, and I sald to them, ‘ want you to give me a certificate that I'm all right mentally, perfectly competent to make a will’ So they asked me a few questions, and thumped my head, and said that I was all right, and gave me the certifi- cate, and I defy anybody to break my will when a certificate of that kind is shown.” ‘““Barnum,” sald Mr. Platt, looking up into the glowing countenance of his client, “on that statement I'd break the will for fifty dollars.” “Eh, what! You would? How?" stammered the nonplussed showman. “Why,” retorted Mr. Platt, “all I'd have to do would be tp go into court and show that you were so doubtful of your own mental competency to make a will that you hired two doc- tors to tell you exactly what you wanted to have them tell you; and un- der these circumstances the certificate wouldn't be worth the paper it is writ- ten upon.” For several minutes Mr. Barnum was completely taken Aback and said nothing. “Why,” he exploded at last, “I came pretty near humbugging my- self, didn't I?" Then he tore up the precious certificate, and, I believe, made an entirely new will. (Copyright, 1910, by E. J. Edwards). The Food Faddist's Fix. John D. Rockefeller, Jr., was con- gratulated in his office recently on the fact that he, like the poet Maeterlinck and other famous men, has taken to the motocycle. “And has motocycling benefited your health?” his ceéngratulisor, a journalist, ventured to ask. “I think it has,” Mr. Rockefeller re- plied. “I won't ask you, though, to take note of my clear eye and good color, or I might find myself in the food faddist's fix. “A food faddist was lecturing to a large audience on the marvelous re- sults to be obtained from chewing soup or eating nut butter or some- thing of that kind. He was not a Fine job Printing. FINE JOB PRINTING | o——A SPECIALTY—o0 AT THE WATCHMAN OFFICE. TST Er BOK WORK that we can not do in the communicate with this office. — Insurance. «wit satis. or EARLE C. TUTEN (Successor to D. W. Woodring.) Fire, Life and Automobile None but Reliabie Companies Represented. Surety Bonds of All Descri Insurance ptions. Both Telephones 5627.y BELLEFONTE, PA JOHN F. GRAY (Successor to Grant Hoover) Fire, Life Accident This A Insurance represents the largest Fi panies in the World, = & SON, | | i Insurance. — NO ASSESSMENTS — Do not fail to give us a call before insuring your Life or Property large Nes or aay Office in Crider’s Stone 43-18-1y. as we are in time. BELLEFONTE, PA. position to write Building, The Preferred Accident Insurance THE $5,000 TRAVEL POLICY Fire Insurance a invite Joe attention to my Fire Insur, Copies epaent H. E. FENLON, Agent, Bellefonte, Pa. 50-21. Groceries. AA Al Bi A Br AM AM Bi. lB Bn. BO A. A icctliliis lit incotliditdlisenitl |y CURTIS Y, WAGNER BROCKERHOFF MILLS, BELLEFONTE, PA. Manufacturer, Wholesaler and Retailer of Roller Flour Feed Corn Meal and Grain S ROR Aer ta gs N B. i all the Courts Consatarion i Engliah Gifice in Crider's Exchabgs S. TAYLOR—Attorney and Counsellor Law. ce. § Garman House Hock, Beer vended ot iors; All kinds a J Homes and Counsellor at Law to Office No. 11, Crider's Exchange, .. All kinds of legal business M. KEICHLINE—Att .at- y in all the courts. Ey ja in and . Office Manufactures and has on hand at all times the | = following brands of high grade WHITE STAR OUR BEST HIGH GRADE VICTORY PATENT FANCY PATENT The ont inthe where that . he culls. Place inthe qouny whole wal extsor. SPRAY can be secured. Also International Stock Food UrCand feed of all Kinds. All kinds of Grain bough office Flour exchanged for wise. ght at the OFFICE and STORE—BISHOP STREET, BELLEFONTE, PA. MILL AT ROOPBSURG. Saddlery. will save you some on a set of Single Harness. is u you to make us Io quality at less. money. with a gualantee to be 48 represented or money refunded all freight charges prepaid. A Set of Harness in Nickle or Imi- tation Rubber, at........... $12.85 This harness is equal to any $15 set on the which has no equal for less than $17. To insure st Re Should be mailed upon request, Address all communications to E. N. SCHOFIELD, Mail Order Pa. to which he will his cheerfully give his prompt GUARANTEE—The above goods resented or money Refunded. = James Schofield, Spring Street 55-32 Bellefonte, Pa Groceries. flavor Sech COFFEE The coffee market just now is a pretty hard proposition But we are doing all that it is possible for us to do under present conditions to give our trade good values. We are selling a good sound coffee and of excellent at 25 cents This isa GENUINE BARGAIN. And at 28 c. per pound and 30c. per pound we are giving very high value for the price named. On our en- tire line of Coffee you will always get better value here for the price charged. Give us a fair trial on our coffees and you will find the proof in the goods. er & per pound. Company, 57-1 - Bellefonte Pa, tvwvrveve Lime and Crushed Limestone. Bush House Block, - very imposing person physically, but, swelling out his chest, he slapped it thrice with his palm and cried: “ ‘Friends, two years ago I was a walking skeleton—a haggard, miser- able wreck. Now what do you sup- pose brought about this great change in me? “He paused to let his words sink in, and a voice asked: “‘What change?” — Washington Star. Only the Proper Nouns. “Please, teacher!” “Well, Gwendoline?” . “I told my ma I was in nouns and | sle says I may learn the proper nwuns, but she don’t want me to have anything to do with the common ones." We are the imestone and Lime H-0 Increase Your Crops H:0 Lime is the life of the soil. USE CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA LIME Some Farmers have actually doubled their crops by use of “H. 0.” lime Drill it for quick results. If you are notgetting results use “H. 0.” lime Manufacturers of Lime in Pennsylvania. Ground all purposes. Works at Bellefonte, Frankstown, Spring Mcadows, Tyrone Forger and Union Furnace. Write for literature on lime. - AMERICAN LIME & iv ©. Offices at TYRONE, PA. STONE COMPANY. WwW 5 Site College Dulin: ian and 5 Sites —— — Dentists. R. J. E. WARD, D. D, S., office next door ! A ros dig) oiice nuxt dior te ing teeth Say adgiinistered {or painless extrat wn R. H. W. TATE, Dentist, ih D the Bush rs mreon Deal ba. a, ern electric used. and x ESTAURANT. tau efonte now has a First-Class Res. Meals are Served at All Hours Bf, Reve, Orie ot be had in a Re a ay a Th ad: dition I ha lant prepared Soft in bottles such 2a iif POPS, SODAS, SARSAPARILLA, SELTZER SYPHONS, ETC., fi x fami gener- 1 fails snd ul aver roperly carbonated. the purest syrups and pi C. MOERSCHBACHER, 50-32-1y. High St., Bellefonte, Pa. — Plumbing. J Good Health Good Plumbing GO TOGETHER. ‘When you dri steam pipes, Pn, LS Si ml ou ren ben SANITARY PLUMBING is the kind do. It Sus Bare ode he ot, ind, no better anywhere. Sur Material and Fixtures are the Best Not acheap or inferior article in our entire establishment. And with good finest material, our Worked tie Prices are lower than many who work and the re rane oF Sor: Jnaaniacy try ARCHIBALD ALLISON, Opposite Bush House - Bellefonte, Pa. 56-14-1v. Coal and Wood. EDWARD K. RHOADS Shipping and Commission Merchant, and Dealer in ANTHRACITE aAnp BITUMINOUS COALS CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS and other grains, — BALED HAY AND STRAW Builders’ and Plasterers’ Sand. KINDLING WOOD by the bunch or cord as mav suit purchasers, respectfully solicits the patronage of his friends and the public, at his Coal Yard, near the Pennsylvania Passenger Statiom. 1618 Teleshone Calis: {GSN Hihony Meat Market. Get the Best Meats. of ShSive nothing by Suviod voor, tin! LARGEST AND FATTEST CATTLE RO uns runt Fi Send Fonts” 5 05 See I alwavs have «= DRESSED POULTRY = Game in season, and any kinds of good meats you want. TRY MY SHOP, P. L. BEEZER, ——— High Street. 4334ly. Bellefonte, Pa. TRI TN