Demat “Bellefonte, Pa., September 30, 1921. - r-o a—— FARM NOTES. — How about winter quarters for the pullets? A clean house, fresh lit- ter, mash hoppers and appliances will save a great deal of hurry and worry later on. __If the wheat to be used for seed has been affected by loose smut, it is advisable to use the hot water method of treatment. The county agent will furnish information. — Warm fall days will give trouble with milk souring. Keep the cans covered on the delivery wagon with a piece of canvas thoroughly wet with water enroute to the creamery. — Clover that was seeded in wheat last spring and has made a rank growth since wheat harvest may be pastured lightly where the ground is dry and firm, without injury to next year’s hay crop. If frost catches the cantaloupe crop before the largest of the fruits have been used, a good way to realize a return is to market them for frying purposes. Sliced and fried, green loupes are relished by many people. —The dairy cows will need shelter from bad weather. They are very sen- sitive to cold, and a cold norther will often cause them to fail in their milk. See that the cows are comfortably sheltered and protected and feed them plenty of roughage and concentrates, sufficient to maintain their flesh and to produce milk. —If potatoes have been severely at- tacked by late blight, it is advisable to allowe the vines to dry thoroughly and dig under the driest possible con- ditions. Allow the rot to run its course and keep the potatoes dry, avoiding bin sweating. Do not injure your reputation by selling potatoes that will soon rot. If there has been no frost, an application of Bordeaux will save great loss. — Every boy or girl having poultry naturally wishes to earn as much mon- ey as possible. To do this every hen should be a good layer. All cockerels, except those kept for breeding. pur- poses, as well as pullets that lack vig- or and vitality, should be eaten, can- ned for home use, or sold as soon as they are large enough, says the Unit- ed States Department of Agriculture. Selecting or “weeding out” the hens that are poor layers and picking out for market the cockerels least likely to develop into good breeders is com- monly called “culling,” or culling for eggs and for market. The best time to cull the hens is dur- ing August and September, usually from August 15 to September 15, for at that season it is easier to determine which are the good layers and which are the boarders. At that time of year hens which show signs of laying or are laying and have not molted usual- ly are the ones that have been the bet- ter layers during the entire season, and the hen that lays best during her fast year usually will lay best during her second and third years. She is, therefore, the one to keep. It is not often advisable, however, to keep hens of the heavier breeds, such as Plym- outh Rocks, Rhode Island Reds, and Brahmas, beyond their second year, or the smaller breeds, such as the Leg- horns and Anconas, beyond the third year, as they seldom prove profitable. You can learn all about the various tests necessary to pick out the good and the poor layers by reading Farm- ers’ Bulletin 1112, which can be ob- tained by writing to the Division of Publications, United States Depart- ment of Agriculture, Washington, D. — Three methods of fattening poul- try are used in this country—pen fat- tening, crate fattening, and machine cramming. The first two are the most common; the third is used only where but a few birds are to be fattened. Pen fattening is practiced by many persons who do not have the time and inclination to use other methods. The essentials of pen fattening are quiet, darkness, except at feeding time, and plenty of soft feed given at regular intervals, usually - three times a day. Birds may be kept in flocks of 15. or 20, but the sexes should be separated. In crate fattening a few chickens are kept in crates and fed from a trough. A crate 6 feet long, 18 inches high, and 18 or 20 inches wide is suit- able and is large enough for a dozen birds. Sometimes the crate is divid- ed into twe or three compartments, four to six birds being kept in each compartment. Little room is desira- ble, for the less exercise the birds have the more readily will they fatten. If the crate is to be left outdoors the top should be covered. The sides should be made of slats about 2 inches apart so the birds can eat from the trough which is hung just outside the crate. The bottom of the crate should be of slats about an inch apart, to permit the droppings to fall through, or drop- ping pans may be used and the crates arranged in tiers. In indoor feeding the crates should be put in a well ven- tilated room. Uusally the birds are fed three times a day and are allowed to eat for half an hour at a time, when the uneaten feed is removed. Crate and machine cramming are described in Farmers’ Bulletin 287, is- sued by the United States Department of Agriculture, and it would be advis- able to procure a copy. Crate fattening birds should always have soft feed. As they have no ex- ercise they require a feed that can be digested easily and quickly. This mix- ture is used on a New York poultry form: 100 pounds finely ground bar- ley, 100 pounds finely ground corn, and 100 pounds finely ground oats (with hulls sifted out). Buttermilk or skim milk is used for mixing to the consist- ency of thick cream, the buttermilk being preferred. A little salt some- times is added. In this instance the birds are fed twice a day at intervals of 12 hours and are fattened for about three weeks. It is important that the intervals between the feedings should be as nearly equal as possible. An other ration is: 100 pounds of ground oats, 100 pounds ground corn, 50 pounds low-grade flour, and 4 pounds tallow. VE WAS JEALOUS Kabyles’ Version of Tragedy in the Garden of Eden. Induce Woman to Partake of Forbidden Fruit. The Kabyles of northern Africa are an independent people—as mountain climbers are apt to be. They are not Arabs, and are far superior in hon- esty and integrity to the Arabs of Algeria. Kabyle women go unveiled and en- joy -considerable freedom. The peo- ple as a whole are said to be de- scended from north European races, perhaps reinotely the same from which came the ancestors of our own Pilgrim Fathers. They are white, tresh-skinned folk, often blonde. At one time they were Christians. New, although they are nominally Mohammedans, they still retain many Christian customs, and tHeir legends abound in curious distortions of Bible tales. ! They have a peculiar version as to how Eve came to eat the apple. The serpent asked Eve if she knew the real reason why the fruit of the apple tree had been forbidden her. She was all curiosity at once. “Be- cause,” explained the serpent, “the ‘apples are wanted for Adam’s second wife.” Eve was sure he was lying—for was not she the only woman in the world? “No,” said the serpent, “you are not. Come to the corner of the garden to- morrow sng i will show you another woman.” The next day she came to the place appointed. The serpent held up the world’s first mirror and Eve looked through the bushes into the wiirror and saw what she supposed was another woman. In a rage of jealousy Eve went and ate the apple. Such warped versions of .the Bible are slowly being corrected nowadays ierpent Said to Have Used Mirror to ee eee ' and manner bespoke thrift. by all too few Christian missionaries. | One athletic, cliff-climbing preacher has told the story so constantly that he has been called the “Lord Jesus man”—or “Lord Jesus” for short. In a certain village he has a special Kabyle friend called Moses. So when he visits this particular village, ev- eryone calls to him, “Hello, Lord Jesus, are you going to the house of Moses?” He is a good tooth puller and & fair . physician and combines these arts with his preaching. Although a learned man, he makes himself a friend of the people and will help a man catch an errant goat, or sit down with a family in a cobble- | stone hut and eat with them a meal of cous-cous, acorns and thrushes’ brains as easily as he will lecture be- fore a learned society on the enty- mology of the Berbers.—Willard Price, in the Christian Herald. ee First Phonograph Disk. The first phonographic disk is still in existence, in the Smithsenian in- stitution at Washington. It was | rausenm made in 1887, by Emil Berliner, and | the first song sung on a phonographic disk was “The Sweetest Story Ever old.” The original disk that Berliner ex- perimented with is of glass. A coat of soot was rubbed over the surface. The revolution of the machine caused the needle to scratch the scund into the glass, and thus make lines. Thus tlie voice of a person singing into the horn was recorded. From it a zine disk was then made, and a copper matrix was the next step. From the matrix all records were cast. Thirty- four years ago all finished records ! were of rubber. Today the finished record is made of various chemical compositions, with a good proportion of rubber. There were five steps in casting the first disks, whereas today only three steps are necessary. First, there is the wax disk, which records the voice. Then’ the matrix is cast, and finally the complete record. ees To Increase Goats’ Milk. Milk goat experiments in grading up from native and grade Toggenburg and Saanen does with purbred Swiss bucks, begun in 1911, were continued last year by the United States Depart- ment of Agriculture, at the govern- ment experimental farm at Beltsville, Md. The flock comprises 20 does and eight kids of one-half, three-fourths, seven-eighths and fifteen-sixteen¢hs blood. The average daily milk yield per doe in 1919 was 3.92 pounds, an increase of 2.42 pounds over the yield of the ten selected native does which formed the foundation stock of the herd. The highest milk yield for an individual doe in one day -is 86 pounds. For 1919 the flock showed an average of 3.7 per cent butterfat. ees Never Waste. Caution against wastefulness as practiced by many persons is apt to show itself regardless of time or . place. Pedestrians attempting to round one of the busiest dewntown street corners in Indianapolis recently found their path blocked by a little shawl-clad woman whose very dress She was picking up a pin. owe Crusoe’s Island to Be Park. The island of Juan Fernandez. situ- ated off the coast of Chile and popu- larly supposed to be Robinson Cru- soe’s island. is to be converted into a national park and touvist resort by the, Chilean. government. Improved. Fuel Oil Engine. A Louisiana inventor has succeeded in developing a new fuel oil engine of semi-Diesel design, in which the ex- cessively high compressions of this type are eliminated, says Popular Me- chanics Magazine. Owing to the use of an improved fuel-injection jet and a method of preheating the oil, it is claimed that the power impulses are «smooth expansions rather than abrupt, racking explosions, and that, for this reason, the engine can be built light- er than existing models of heavy oil burners, making it suitable for in- stalldtion in passenger automobiles and motortrucks. Schools and Museun: Co-operate. Natural history study in Cleveland, 0O.. will be enhanced oy affiliation of the public schools. with the museum of natural history to be established in that city. museum director, the superintendent of schools and the staff of each. ten- tative plans were formed by which the resources of the museum may be utilized by the school children. The probably will not be builz for two or three years. Dismisses Women Teachers. Women: teachers are no longer em- ployed in French schools for boys. The authorization to employ them, granted during the war, has been with- drawn, because the return to nortaal life has rendered men teachers avall able. ’ THE UNIVERSAL CAR SEDAN. At consultations of the . GREAT TUN OF HEIDELBERG Constructed in the Middle Ages, Mon. ster Receptacle Held 528 Hogs- i heads of Wine. The construction of the great tun of Heidelberg, in the castle of the Princes Palatine of the Rhine, was begun in 1589 and was not finished until more than two years later. It was composed of beams twenty- seven feet long and had a diameter of eighteen feet. The iron hooping was 1,100 pounds in weight, and the cost, ficured in our mopey, was nearly €12.000. It could hold 528 hogsheads and the value at that time of the wine It contained was in the neighborhood of $10,000. . When the cellarer drew wine out of the cask he ascended several flights of wooden stairs leading to the top; ahout the middle was a bunghole, into which was inserted an instrument made in the form of a spout, with which the wine was drawn up and placed in a vessel provided for the purpose, There was another tun built, evident- ly succeeding the one just described, fn 1751: this was 36 feet long and 24 feet high. with a capacity of 800 hogs- heads. or 283.200 hottles. This cask has not heen in use since the latter part of the Eighteenth century. Intelligent Geese. © Many are the cases on record of geese whose masters or mistresses en- deared themselves to them and as a result were followed about everywhere by the geese just as-they might have been by dogs, and dogs are supposed to be the most intelligent of animals. There is the historical case of the aged hlind woman who was piloted to church on Sundays by her goose. The little old lady would totter along, and when she would be on the point of taking a misstep the silly goose would pluck her by the skirt and guide her in the right direction. In the steps of the church the old woman would be guided to her pew by her neigh- bors, while the goose retired to the near-by cemetery to nip grass. : service was-over the goose would be beside the church steps waiting to guide its mistress home again. MEDICAL. It’s Surprising That So Many Bellefonte People Fail To Recognize Kidney Weakness. Are you a bad back victim ? Suffer twinges; headaches, dizzy spells? Go to bed tired—get up tired? It’s surprising how few suspect the kidneys. It’s surprising how few know what to do. Kidney trouble needs kidney treat- ment. Doan’s Kidney Pills are for the kid- neys only. . Have convinced Bellefonte people of their merit. Here's a Bellefonte case; Bellefonte testimony. Kidney sufferers hereabouts should read it. Mrs. L. A. Hill, E. Bishop St., says: «I am bothered by backache occasion- ally. I keep Doan’s Kidney Pills in the house, however, and the benefit I derive from their use is very gratify- ing.” Price 60c, at all = dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that Mrs. Hill had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. 66-38 —the car of many uses, the car for the whole family. While ele- gance, refinement and comfort are dominant features, the Sedan af- fords sturdy dependability on all roads in all weather. The famous Ford engine provides more than sufficient power for every need, The sturdy, rugged construction of the whole chaasis is a surety of year in and year out endurance and economy. We will round out this service in the car itself by keeping your Sedan in good condition. We sell Genuine Ford parts and our fully equipped repair shop handles repairs promptly and well. Let us come and demonstrate. BEATTY MOTOR CO, Bellefonte, Pa. When | Shoes. Shoes. SNS SN Tar] EEE Le rr = 3, iL 1 3 2] 1 ; fe 5A fo ‘ : i It 1 SL Aid 3 nT oI] hi i ree Free | 2 21 ° °. Ld Li SM Ue A Hard Rubber Self Filling Fountain Pen =f] FREE with each pair of School Shoes. Uc Fil i= IE We made a special effort to purchase the very Lh i : : 4 Uc Le best quality of School Shoes for this fall and winter 2) Ui and we were not only successfull in getting quality, | oe but we have them at prices far below any other ol store. i= a To prove this we will give to every Boy and Fr Girl in Centre county who purchases a pair of shoes Te from us a Fountain Pen that is made of hard rub- Lh Te ber, self filling, and the pen will give the best of sat- 3 Ie isfaction. = i 1 21 Fl =i] I is Fd 4 31] ol Uc " i= gl Lo We want to sell you School Shoes. Io =1 iH : LE f 1 IL : = = oN oh or r= Lie pl i or Lis 5 Uc i id 1 = Yeager's Shoe S B & eager's Shoe Store ga | 4 g THE SHOE STORE FOR THE POOR MAN [ig ; bith Aseade Deillding gv27. BELLEFONTE, PA. 3 DE Aum . E me aR EEE RRR] Rn Come to the “Watchman” office for High Class Job work. rr —— The most interesting news to every man and woman who is in quest of the new, at a reasonable price. Our sales bring you the newest, the best, at absolutely lowest prices. Sweaters We are selling the most beautiful Sweaters, all wool, in La- dies’, Misses’ and Children’s from $2.48 up. Waists and Over Blouses Our line of Waists and Over Blouses is magnificent. Waists in fine cotton voiles beautifully trimmed. Over Blouses in Can- ton, Crepe, Georgettes and Crepe de Chines in all the ‘new colors, Henna, Jade, Taupe and Brown, White, Flesh, Navy and Gypsy Red, at prices attractively low. Ready-to-Wear Our line of Fall and Winter Coats is most complete. Coats in Polo, Velour, Bolivia, Silk Plush, strictly tailored, silk lined and fur trimmed, in all the new shades, Reindeer, Brown, Navy, Taupe, and Black, at prices that will delight the most economical buyer. Coat Suits Women’s and Misses’ Coat Suits. We have never seen these suits equalled at the prices we are selling them. Tricotine, Ve- lours, Serges, Oxford, Heather Mixtures, all the new shades in strictly tailored or embroidered and fur trimmed from $20.00 up. Dresses Our line of silk and wool one-piece dresses will please every Lady and Miss. All colors and beautifully trimmed and embroid- ered, styles up to the minute, prices lowest. Stylish Stouts We are specializing in the Stylish Stout, sizes from 46 to 52. We can fit you in Coats, Waists, Coat Suits and Dresses. We take pleasure in showing the new models. Shoes Save money on Shoes for Men, Women and Children. Buy them from us. a a RTT