Bellefonte, Pa., july 28, 1916. : A TRAGIC STORY. There lived a sage in days of yore, And he a handsome pigtail wore; But wondered much, and sorrowed more, Because it hung behind him. He mused upon this curious case, And swore he’d change the pigtail’s place, And have it hanging at his face, ” Not dangling there behind him. Says he, “The mystery I've found,— T’ll turn me round,”—he turned him round; But still it hung behind him. Then round and round, and out and in, All day the puzzled sage did spin; In vain—it mattered not a pin,— The pigtail hung behind him. And right, and left, and round about, And up, and down, and in, and out He turned; but still the pigtail stout Hung steadily behind him. And though his efforts never slack, And though he twist, and twirl, and tack, Alas! still faithful to his back, The pigtail hangs behind him. —William Makepeace Thackeray. The Diamond Fields of Damaraland. The diamond deposits discovered in Damaraland, German Southwest Af- rica, three years ago, lie among great sand dunes hundreds of feet in height, which pass in continual mo- tion across the granite plateau that follows the line of the coast from the Orange River to Walfisch Bay. These deposits are a puzzle to _geologists, since their place of origin is a myste- ry, though there seems to be little doubt that they are carried with the sand by the heavy winds that. blow from the southwest for nineteen hours out of the twenty-four. The dia- monds, which are found mixed _ with garnets, agates, and other semi-pre- cious stones, vary in size from one- fifth to three-quarters of a carat. They are almost perfect octahedrons, and, though small, are of the purest water. An extraordinary feature of this discovery is that the diamonds resemble the brazilian rather that the African stone, although the Orange River, which marks the southern boundary of German Southwest Afri- ca, has its source among the volcanic cones or “diamond pipes” of the rich- est diamond mines in the world in and about Kimberley. There are no fis- sures in the many miles of granite floor of the new diamond country through which these particles of crys- talized carbon might have been forced up from below, and geologists find no suggestion of cones or of what is call- ed “Kimberley formation”—nothing, in fact, that will warrant them in giv- ing an opinion as to the origin of these traveling gems. The general opinion, nevertheless, is that the pre- vailing southwest winds bring the dia- monds from the sea, and scientists do not dispute this theory. The discovery of diamonds in Dam- araland, so far as the white man is concerned, was first made about twen- ty miles south of Luderitzbucht, the principal port of German Southwest Africa, whence the government is building a railroad across to Keet- manshoop, to connect with the propos- ed road in British Bechuanaland that will tap the markets of Kimberley and Johannesburg. Here a native, who had worked in the diamond mines of Kimberley and had been impressed into service by the railroad-builders, on his return home picked up two or three crystals from the sand and took them to a station-master with the in- formation that they were diamonds. The station-master ridiculed the idea, but eventually sent the stones to Cape Town, where experts pronounced them to be gems of the purest water. It may safely be asserted that few contraband gems have left Damara- land since the government assumed control of the fields, though they were probably carried away in great quan- tities before police supervision be- came effective. At Luderitzbucht and Swakopmund, the two ports of depar- ture, all outgoing travelers are sub- jected to systematic search. Not only do the customs authorities require that a passenger’s baggage be sent to the wharf for examination three days before the departure of the boat by which he sails, but a thorough search is made of his person and clothing before he goes on board. So careful are the Germans to pre- vent precious stones being carried away that a photographer, who was recently leaving Luderitzbucht with a five-ounce bottle of salicylate crystals, somewhat resembling diamonds in the rough, which he used in the develop- ing of his plates, was arrested by an ignorant official as a smugler and thrown into jail. Investigation show- ed that his diamonds might be crush- ed by stepping on them, but his ship had sailed before the discovery was made. Many travelers are victims of similar overzealousness at Luderitz- bucht and Swakopmund. Last sum- mer a former mayor of Cape Town, a man of the highest stending in Sowvh Africa, who had been on a visit to the - diamond fields of Damaraland, sailed from Luderitzbucht for his home. His ship was scarcely out of sight of land when the customs officials received in- formation, which was afterward proved to be false, that he had smug- gled diamonds away. The ship was to stop for a couple of days to unload cargo at Prinzeburg, sixty miles south, and a squad of soldiers mount- ed on fast horses were sent along the coast to intercept him there. The ex- mayor was taken off the ship. with his baggage, and everything was search- ed with the utmost minuteness. His clothes were examined with great care, particular attention being paid to linings and the padding of the shoulders of his coats; his shaving- soap was cut into small pieces, which were crushed flat; the soles of his shoes were probed; the lead was taken out of the cartridges of his revolver and the powder inspected. Nothing remotely resembling a diamond was found, but the ex-mayor was, never- theless, taken back to Luderitzbucht and thrown into priscn, whence he was released without an apology a month afterward. Father Will Wear Youthful Clothes. Father is going to cut a dash next year. Just as mother has been dress- ing like Susie, with stilted heels, skirts almost to her knees, transpar- ent sleeves and coquettish hats, so alike that it is next to impossible to tell 36 from 16, so will father emulate John in his apparel next spring and summer. The National Association of Cloth- ing Designers decreed it at the clos- ing session of its annual convention at fhe Royal Palace Hotel, at Atlantic ity. ; The trim effect, which has figura- tively taken years from the shoulders of men of mature years this summer, will remain the vogue next year. The popularity of the pinch-back coat has been tremendous this year. Men of 40 and upward have donned the smart garment and found themselves young again. It would be madness, East agreed with West in the designing world today, to discard a style of such tremendous possibilities, and so it is to stay, with slight modifications. Corpulent men and ultra-conserva- tive men, while acquiescing in nifty small plaits, which make possible a trim waist effect, have balked at the loose belt. Hence the belt next spring and summer will be applied to the garment for those who prefer it so. The most conservative cut in the ready-to-wear market will have a hint of a waist line. Lapels are to contin- ue narrow. Nifty dressers will find a turned-up cuff about two inches in width upon their coat sleeves, open at the under side and finished with button and but- tonhole. Shoulders will continue “natural,” that is to say, with little or no padding. The breast pocket goes. It serves no useful purpose in a sack suit and is a blemish upon an other- wise perfect contour. Trousers will be trim, to coincide with the form-fitting coat, and the cuff is to stay. There was much de- bate upon that point. A utilitarian soul who pointed out that the cuff saves wear and tear and causes trous- ers to hold their shape longer than the uncuffed garment, won the day for the cuff. Vests have become almost a negli- gible quantity as style goes. Many men insist upon having the plainest vests possible. That garment next winter, spring and summer, however, will be trimly cut, like coat and trous- ers, with one permissible fancy touch —either two or three tiny little plaits at either side, extending upward from the low pocket. Pockets are to be tabbed. The double-breasted vest is a dead issue. It was discussed for five minutes and ruled out of the game. Overcoats are to be smart gar- ments this winter. Plenty of box backs will be worn because many men like the looseness and comfort which goes with them. But the real thing in overcoats will look as if it were boned, with plaits and belt in back, either loose or applied to the fabric. It will be short, with a collar some- what wider than that of last winter, with both patch pockets and set in; in fact, a garment that will give the head of the family the figure of a youth in his early 20's. Determined effcrts are to be made, it was announced, to bring back the surtout and the paddock coat because these have the “youthful” effect so much in demand. Few coats will go below the knee line. The pinch-hack garment will be decidedly short. For Girls Who Travel Alone. Stirred by the fact that 50,000 girls are disappearing annually in the United States the “Woman’s Home Companion” has the following advice for girls who travel alone: “What to do: : “l. Before starting to a strange city, write the Travelers’ Aid Society to meet you. “2. If alone or your friends fail to meet you, apply to the Travelers’ Aid representative or a uniformed official at the railrcad station or steamship dock as soon as you arrive. “3. If you need help of any kind, find the authorized Travelers’ Alid agent—a uniformed official at the railroad station or steamship dock will direct you to find her. “4, Aim to arrive at your destina- tion in the daytime. “What not to do: “l. Do not start to a strange city or town, even for a night, withqut pre- vious information about a safe place to stop. “2. Do not leave home without some extra money for en emergency. “3. Do not ask or accept informa- tion, advice, guidance, cor direction ex- cept from the Travelers’ Aid represen- tatives or uniformed officials. “4. Do not trust attentions on the train, ship or elsewhere from men or women, “5. Do not accept offers. of work either in person or through advertise- ments without thorough investigation. “6. Do not go to strange parts of a city or town at night alone, or es- corted by a public porter, or in a cab.” A Potato Race on Horseback. As played by the cowboys of the southwest, the potato race is not the mua affair we are familiar with at evenmg socials. Down there the game is played by eight mounted men, four on each side, and each player has an opportunity to display all his skill in horsemanship. A small square box is set at each goal. In the middle of the field is a third box, filled with po- tatoes. Each rider is provided with a long, sharp-pointed pole, much like the lances carried by the knights in the tournaments of old. At the crack of the gun, the riders dash at the box in the center of the field, each rider trying to spear a potato and carry it to the box back of his goal. At the same time, the guard on each side try to prevent the scoring of their oppo- nents by blocking them, and by knock- ing the tuber off the lance when an opposing player has speared a potato. At the end of eight minutes the game is stopped, and the side having the greater number of potatoes in its goal box, wins.—“Rformatory Record.” ——Read the “Watchman” to get all the news that’s going. IN. G. of The present campaign of national preparedness and the trouble with Megxico which led the President to call out the National Guard throughout the United States naturally creates considerable interest in all things mil- itary. And the additional fact that Bellefonte and Centre county are rep- resented at the front by a Troop of cavalry calls to mind the fact that the sons of the county have always been patriotic. In 1858 or ’59, the old Bellefonte Fencibles were organized and James A. Beaver, then a law student, was made first lientenant. Hardly had the echo of the guns died away after the firing on Fort Sumpter in the spring of 1861 till the Fencibles re- sponded to President Lincoln’s call for volunteers and were sworn into serv- ice on April 21st of that year. Up- ward of 6,000 Centre countians saw service during the Civil war, the county being represented in every bat- tle of any consequence. The same spirit which induced those men to go to the front has prevailed since, and Bellefonte has always figured in the National Guard of the State, as will be seen from the following article published in the “Bellefonte Republi- can” of March 21st, 1912: Bellefonte Fencibles of 32 Years Ago. A good friend of “The Republican” several days ago happened to remark that he had in his possession an old newspaper clipping which recalled the days of “The Bellefonte Fencibles,” and at our earnest solicitation it was furnished us that we might reproduce the article. Many of those who figur- | ed in the old military company have long since responded to the sounding of “taps,” but there are today in Bellefonte and in other places quite a few of the survivors of what was in its day a crack military organization after the close of the Civil war. Before the war there was organized here what was known as the “Belle- fonte Fencibles,” the members of which subsequently performed valiant service on the field of battle. After the war a new command was formed, also known as “The Bellefonte Fenci- bles” and then mustered 'into the Na- tional Guard as B Company, Fifth Regiment Infantry. It was of this or- ganization the article in question was ed on May 21, 1880, or almost thirty- two years ago, and also note mentally the number of participants who have since passed into the Great Beyond: Since our notice a few days ago of the disbandment of “B” company, Fifth Regiment, N. G. of Pa., quite a gratifying change has taken place in Ye spirit of Bellefonte military cir- cles. A number of gentlemen met at the office of Colonel Hastings yesterday and resolved to reorganize the “Belle- fonte Fencibles,” a military organiza- tion of many years’ standing in this At noon yester-' place before the war. day the roll of the Fencibles number- ed thirty-five, the names being as fol- lows: Amos Mullen Wilbur F. Malin H. A. Williams William Burnside Harry S. Hale Harry M. Kephart J. H. Crissman J. L. Spangler J. D. Geissinger Edward Powers E. A. Smith Lewis Sunday W. C. Heinle Geo. W. Eaton Orris L. Hoover Edgar B. Greene Wilbur F. Reeder Theo. A. Boak George L. Potter W. Stewart, Jr. W. A. Sweeny W. A. Lyon R. B. Spangler B. Frank Keller C. Burnside A. J. Cruse W. A. Morrison A. A. Dale Law’nce L. Brown John N. Lane D. F. Fortney K. Williams S. C. Harper E. L. Gray Harry S. Sayres. We learn from Colonel Hastings that only a limited number will be added to the above roll, as the compa- ny will be complete with fifty-two members. . The papers will be forwarded to the proper authorities on Monday next, and an order for the election of com- pany officers will soon follow. The Fencibles will be assigned to duty as Company B in Fifth regiment a. A short time later the same news- ‘division. Since the reorganization of Scores of applications for member- r ship have been refused. The best ma- written. As you read the following, | terial in the State has been called just keep in mind that it was publish- | from the old-time militia companies, |and the young men of the State, untii i the National Guard of Pennsylvania ings was lieutenant colonel. | i | i { paper published the following, telling of the orders being issued for muster- ing the company into the National Guard: | Orders from the Adjutant Gener- al’s office were received at brigade, headquarters on Saturdey last, signi- | fying that the Bellefonte Fencibles | lately recruited from about the best! material in the neighborhood, would be accepted and assigned to duty as part of the National Guard of this State. Accordingly the following or- der was issued: HEADQUARTERS 4TH BRIGADE, 4 N. G. oF Pa, } BELLEFONTE, JUNE 7, 1880. Special Orders, No. 15. An election for officers of the com- | pany lately recruited at Bellefonte, Pa., by Amos Mullen and others, to be known as Company “B” Fifth Regi- ment Infantry, will be held at Belle- ; fonte on Saturday, the 12th day of: June, 1880, and will be conducted by Major George F. Harris, Surgeon Fifth Regiment, who is hereby au- thorized to fix the hour at which the same will open. By order, Brig. Gen. JAs. A. BEAVER. D. S. KELLER, Asst. Adjt. General Major George F. Harris has ad- dressed the following circular letter to members of the Fencibles residing away from Bellefonte: Bellefonte, Pa., June 7, 1880. Sir:—In accordance with special or- ders No. 15, Headquarters 4th Bri- gade N. G. P., the undersigned will hold an election for officers, and com- plete the organization of the “Belle- fonte Fencibles,” a military company to be known as company “B,” 5th Regiment N. G. P., in Bellefonte, at 2 o’clock p. m., on Saturday, June 12, 1880, at which time and place you are requested to be present. Very respectfully, Your obd’t servant, GEORGE F. HARRIS, Major and Surgeon 5th Reg’t. N. G. P. We learn that Col. Burchfield, of the Fifth Regiment, with a number of his staff will be present at the election; and as there may be something of a race for the various elective offices, an interesting time may be expected. ! We congratulate the Fencibles on their success in obtaining a position in the National Guard. They take the last and only vacancy in the entire the Guard, and the passage of recent legislation for its benefit, it has grown to its maximum strength. has become the peer of the citizen- soldiery of any State in the Union. We offer our congratulations to the Bellefonte Fencibles. Those whose names appear in the list in the fist article reproduced were not all who then became mem- bers of the company. For instance, Harry Green, the Bellefonte druggist, was a member, as "was also C. U. Hof- fer, now of Philipshurg. Another was J. Cooper Dare, of Philadelphia, and Walter W. Bayard, now located, we believe, on the Pacific coast. A later member of the company was George ' H. Waite. The late Amos Mullen was elected the first captain of the compa- ny. The late George L. Potter was chosen first lieutenant, and the late Harry S. Hale was elected second lieu- tenant. Judge Beaver was brigadier general of the old Fifth Regiment at the time and the late Governor Hast- Since the above article was publish- ed there have been a number of changes in Bellefonte’s military or- ganization. The old, reliable Fifth regiment, that could always be de- pended upon in any emergency, and which was called for service in the Spanish-American war, was disband- ed and the Bellefonte company at- tached to the Twelfth regiment. And under the reorganization of the guard several years ago it was changed from the infantry to the cavalry and made Troop L, in the First cavalry. William H. Brown was the first cap- tain of the troop and he resigning after being elected Recorder of Centre county H. Laird Curtin was appointed, and he is now in charge of his com- mand on the Texas border. Eleven Thousand Acres Reclaimed From an Eastern Swamp. One of the largest and most scien- tific agricultural enterprises in the eastern part of the United States is a farm in western New York. The “Popular Mechanics Magazine” tells of the scientific methods used on this big farm, which has been in the course of development for the last three years. This farm comprises 11,000 acres, and is two miles long and nine miles wide. A trip of sixty miles is required to pay off all the help. The undertaking is backed by New York financiers and is managed by a eivil engineer, who is also a scientific far- mer. : The land comprising this farm was originally a vast, undrained swamp, and its reclamation was accomplish- ed only by employing a dredge which cut a deep main canal, with many lat- eral branches, through the tract. As the land was drained, lumbermen were put on it to clear off the trees and stumps with axes and dynamite. These workmen were followed by oth- ers with five-gang plows, etc.,, drawn by caterpillar tractors of light con- struction. These light engines have almost wholly supplanted horses on the farm, and are a source of special interest to the boys of the farmers. One tractor has eight times the pull- ing power of a horse. Of the 4000 acres of muck land in the tract, only about 1000 acres have been reclaimed and are now in use. Much of the farm is devoted to truck gardening conducted on a strictly sci- entific basis. A cost sy.tem is main- tained and it is possible to know just what each crop cost. All the produce is prepared for shipment according to factory meth- ods. The crates are made on the farm, a special nailing machine being one of the labor-saving devices used in their construction. The workmen are well provided for with bungalows of modern type and with modern so- cial conveniences, and such improve- ments as telephones, electric lights, etc. An evidence of the success of the enterprise is that much of the land is now valued at $500 per acre. The Gentle Art of Smiling. “A mother had a little girl, her first child, who seemed to have been born with a scowl. Perfectly well, still she had a morose disposition which it seemed as though nothing could altar. When a second child was born, the mother made a rule that no one should look at the baby without a smile, With the imitation of childhood the baby at once began, even in her early weeks, to smile back, and as she grew, and the rule still held in the home, she de- veloped into what everyone who knew her called ‘the smiling baby,’ and grew up with the sunniest disposition, a joy to everyone. Now what that mother did, any mother ean do. A child may actually inherit a serious, even a sullen disposition, yet these may be crowded out while they are undeveloped, by the habit of cheerfui- ness. FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. DAILY THOUGHT And as for me, let what will come, I can receive no damage from it, unless I think it a ealamity ; and it is in my power to think it none, if I so decide.— Marcus Aurelius. One of the best treatments for moles, warts, and other pigmentary or excrescent blemishes is electrolysis. The manner of operation is to run the tiny electric needle just under the top cuticle of the mole and to turn on the ‘ current, thus destroying the discolor- ed surface. A red scar remains for a little while, then gradually whitens and in a very brief time disappears altogether. The use of strong acids for the removal of warts and moles is : very dangerous. Giving the skin a buttermilk bath may be disagreeable to contemplate, but it will not seem so after a trial has been given and the results mani- fested. Buttermilk will make the skin soft and smooth. It is nourishing as well as whitening. When using have at least a quart and lave it on the face and hands just as if using water. Then apply it to the neck and arms with a sponge, letting it dry on. In the morning wash the skin with warm water and a little soap. : No fruit jar that has been standing for weeks is free from germs. Before putting fruit in them they should be thoroughly sterilized by boiling in so- da water. When marking linen handkerchiefs with indellible ink, first starch the handkerchiefs and iron them smooth. Then you can mark them clearly with ease. When making egg custard pies al- ways heat the milk to the boiling point before mixing it with the eggs. If this rule is followed the undercrust | will always be crisp. When you have no one to hold the yvasn while you wind it, place two flat- irons the proper distance apart, on the table, stretch the yarn to them and i wind it conveniently. Short dresses are becoming more popular every day. Those who first frowned on them now admire them and say that they are not only sensi- bles but becoming as well as economiec- al. With a short dress a woman has some liberty. She has her hands for free use. She may look round about her without the fear that while she is doing it somebody will put a foot through her two-dollar-a-yard lace and tramp off with a couple of yards of it. She may get out of the street car without looking back to see if she is clear behind and safe from being dragged along and perhaps maimed for life. She can defy rain and mud. She doesn’t have to go round a wisp. of straw lest she take it up on her fringes. She can cross a street with- out stepping on her dress and falling down in the mud for the nearest po- liceman to pick her up and all the boys to laugh at and watch to see her ‘do it next time. If she has a pretty foot she can show it, and if she has a homely foot everybody knew it before, so there will be nothing lost there. Learn repose. In this you will find a greater power than all the concen- trated nervous tension in the world. The woman who has mastered repose will find that her nerves respond to her bidding—not she to their whims. To learn repose, practice sitting in all kinds of chairs, letting the chair do the work it was intended to do. Few women sit gracefully and “un- consciously.” They sit too far back, too far forward, too straight, or on the middle of their back-bone, and in- stead of relaxing they are taut with the tension of their nerves. Practice lying in bed relaxed and enjoy a restful sleep, instead of fa- tiguing slumber so common to most women of this country. Relax the muscles absolutely when lying "down and do not rest the head on a high pillow. No pillow is best, but in case you feel you must sleep with the head raised the smaller the pillow the bet- ter. Study the sleeping pose of a lit- tle child and try to make yours as natural as the child’s. If you succeed in relaxing the muscles, the mind will cease its activity and wholesome, un- | disturbed sleep will follow. Unnecessary force is used in talk- ing. Repose wili conserve the sur- plus energy wasted in this way. Once the art of speaking quietly is master- ed the entire nervous system will re- lax and settle back into place—like a rubber band that has been stretched and then released. There is a close sympathy between the nervous system and the voice. It is a noticeable fact that under stress of excitement, irri- tability or any strong emotion the voice even of a soft spoken woman will become higher and more tense. If your voice is loud, begin today to practice speaking softly and quietly. You will be surprised to note how quickly your entire system will re- spond in kind. It is a pleasure to be in the company of a soft-voiced wom- an. Tight fitting ankle-height bathing shoes of crinkled rubber are among the seashore novelties this season. The shoes have no opening except: that at the top, and they are pulled on as gloves are. They fit the foot smoothly and close snugly around the ankle. They come in several shades and are trimmed with strips of rubber in contrasting colors. Their advan- tage is that they have no‘ribbons to become untied, or to get so wet that they are difficult to untie upon remov- al of the shoe, and the shoes them- selves are dry within a few seconds after taking them off. The new raim coats are made of oil silk, and are transparent. Bright reds, blues, lavender and green are some of the hues. Centre County Has a Wonderful Record for Citizen Soldiery FARM NOTES. —Oats and barley, or oats, peas and barley, are excellent combinations for dairy forage. —Because the pastures are short in summer it does not warrant us in neg- lecting our pastures. —To get rid of weeds manure the land. Weeds occupy land because grass will not grow on it. —Corn, alfalfa, clover and grass— these four plants furnish 90 per cent. of the coarse food used for animals, —Sore or chapped teats are due to exposure or cold, wet weather and rough handling. Treat with lard or vaseline. —If the farmer is slipshod in his farm methods, it doesn’t make much difference whether he has a high rec- ord cow or a scrub, he is not going to be very successful. —There are many cows in this country capable of producing 400 pounds of butter in a year, but not one of them, so far as we have knowl- edge, came from a scrub sire. —Raise the collars off the horses’ shoulders frequently, and with the hand rub down the shoulders well, This may be done when allowing the horses to stand for a breath of fresh air. It will cool the shoulder, remove the sweat and prevent, to a considera- ble extent, scalding. —Rev. V. B. Mayer, of Casenova, Va., has wintered a flock of milch goats in timber without bought feeds, getting three or four quarts of milk per day. He claims to have saved several babies with goats’ milk, and has demonstrated the freedom of goats from tuberculosis and other diseases. —Spray pumps of many different sizes and types will give good results on the farm. Bucket pumps, knap- sack sprayers and automatic sprayers will be useful in the garden and orch- ard, as well as in the hen house, al- though a longer hose or extension rod will be needed in the orchard. A bar- rel pump or power sprayer may be used with good results if it is already on hand, but is more expensive than the LYerage farm needs for hen house work. —It will be necesaary to plant a succession of pasture crops for your hogs if you do not have sufficient per- manent pasture. Cheap pork cannot be produced in pens; the hogs must have pasture crops that supply plenty of grazing of the right kind. Even where one has but one brood sow cud expects to raise two litters a year some grazing must be had to give the proper gains on the pigs. Make your arrangements for pasture crops for your: hogs. —Don’t be careless about watering the colt. He should be given water just as often and as regularly as any of the other animals in the barn, and must have it if he isto grow as he should. Better arrange it so he can run in the open lot where he can get at the watering trough whenever he feels like it. The more of the better weather he spends in the open the better he will get through his first winter. Of course in bad weather and at night the place for him is in the stall. . —Thorough spraying is essential, especially where the grapes have rot- ted badly, to insure the growth of good fruits. It is the custom of some grape growers to cut off the grape shoots which have developed and formed a dense growth above the grapes to let in the sun. Some authorities, how- ever, claim that observations have shown that grapes will ripen as well or better, even though heavily shaded, than when exposed to the light of the sun.—Philadelphia “Record.” —My best small investment was the sum of 90 cents spent for a pound of Italian onion seed. I planted all of it except about a tablespoonful, on a lit- tle less than a third of an acre, and gathered and sold 10,500 pounds of onions at two cents a pound. Thus my 90-cent investment returned $210. But that was not all. In August of the same year after I had gathered my onions, I planted one third of the same piece of ground in black wax beans, and sold $85 worth of those besides what were consumed at home. So my total returns were $295 from a one-third-acre patch. —A bright, green, smooth lawn about a house is like a neat dress on a pretty girl. She may be a nice girl and not have it, but her niceness is more noticeable if she has. Most lawns which are made by sow- ing the seed are better than those on which sods are placed. Use plenty of seed. Twice as much as is necessary will do no harm. No lawn was ever seen on which the grass grew too thick. Sow on a still day, and sow a sec- ond time, walking at right angles to the first sowing. This will = tend to make the stand even. : After sowing, roll the ground well or beat it flat with a spade. Spring sowing should be made as early as possible: In the northern States say from the middle of March to the first of May. From the middle of August to the middie of Septem- ber is the best time for fall sowing. Nurse crops may be dispensed with unless the sowing is done in hot weather. In’ the latter case a light sowing of rye or oats will protect the young grass from the hot sun. Drain wet spots, but moist spots will grow the best lawn. The bare of the lawn is weeds. They are of two classes—those which will be killed by frequent clipping, and those which will not. Dandelion and plantains are the worst. They may be killed by digging them up, and that is about the best way. Another way which is recommended by some ex- perts is to take a wooden skewer, dip it into sulphuric acid, being careful not to drop any of it on the skin or clothes, and stick it into the heart of the cut-off weed at the surface of the ground. : It doesn’t thicken a lawn to let it ‘run up to seed. Keep it clipped, fer- tilize it, and rake in grass seed to fill up the bare spots. The favorite lawn mixture is Ken- tucky blue grass and white clover. Ng?