Bellefonte, Pa., August 4, 1922, ETC St. FARM NOTES, —There are 202,250 farms in Penn- sylvania and the average size is 87.3 acres. —The urban population of Pennsyl- vania in 1920 was 64.3 per cent. and the rural 35.7 per cent. —The average number of inhabit- ants to the square mile in Pennsylva- nia in 1920 was 194.5, as against 171.0 in 1910. —Lycoming is the largest county in Pennsylvania and has an approximate land area of 780,800 acres. Philadel- phia is the smallest and has a land area of 81,920 acres. —There are 1,567 townships in Pennsylvania. Chester county ranks first with fifty-seven townships and Allegheny second with fifty-six. Cam- eron county has only five townships. —In the entire State on the first of the year there were 862,868 dairy cows and the average value of these cows was $59, making the dairy herds of the State worth $50,946,852. —The new seed bed should be well fertilized before sowing alfalfa. Plow down some manure, if possible, and then harrow in 300 to 500 pounds of acid phosphate, or the same amount of an 0-12-4 mixture. The latter fer- tilizer will insure a better stand to survive the winter. —Do you know that 15 to 20 rose chafers are sufficient to kill a one- week old chick, and that 25 to 45 will put a three-weeks-old bird out of busi- ness? This sprawly bug is found on many of our common bushes and trees during early summer. Keep the chick- ens on mowed fields and away from grape vines and flowering shrubs when the chafers are prevalent. —There is a tendency during the rush season, that all farmers are ex- periencing now, to let the keeping of records and accounts slide along un- til there is more time to give them the attention they require. Farm accounts are most important in the business of farming, and are worth all the bother they necessitate. Get into the habit of observing a regular time each day for this work. —To make cottage cheese, set milk at 70 degrees F. and allow to curdle. After a firm curd has formed, heat the milk to 96 degrees F. and stir as littie as possible in so doing. It will take about 30 minutes to reach this temperature. When the curd sepa- rates in the whey, draw into cheese cloth bags and allow to drain until the proper consistency is reached. Then salt and cream to taste, chill and serve. —It is not necessary to cut down the vines on potato patches that have been blighted. Spraying 8 to 10 days before digging is recommended. To prevent maximum rot the tubers should be dug under the dryest possi- ble conditions. Allow them to lay ex- posed in the trench until perfectly dry. If removed from field bearing any moisture, they should be stored tem- porarily on the barn floor, to a depth not exceeding one foot, and allowed to dry out thoroughly. Spores from blighted vines will multiply so long as moisture is present and cause rot. Prevent “sweating”.in storage bins. —Since the annuoncement of the record of 47 tons of milk produced in a year by five cows on the farm of The Pennsylvania State College, dai- ry men in all parts of the country have sent inquiries to Professor A. A. Borland, head of the college dairy de- partment, in regard to the methods of feeding and caring for the cows. During the past week a Wisconsin banker wrote to the college asking for chemical and bacteriological data in regard to the milk produced on the college farm. A prominent San Fran- cisco man, in asking for information as to how the cows were handled, said that he desired to improve the dairy work done on the Pacific Coast. —OQver 60 per cent. of the students in the school of agriculture at The Pennsylvania State College come from Pennsylvania cities and towns, accord- ing to a study that has just been com- pleted by the college showing that boys reared on the farm constitute but 39 per cent. of the enrollment in the school. About 35 per cent. of the agricultural students are sons of far- mers. Additional figures given out by the college recently show that more than 75 per cent. of the graduates of the agricultural school are now engaged in practical agricultural work. From a combination of these two compila- tions, one might perhaps deduce that a trend back to the country has at last begun. Af least, it is an encouraging sign. —Learning to be practical farmers as well as scientific agriculturists, thirty-six junior students in the de- partment of horticulture of The Penn- sylvania State College have taken over the entire management of the College farm. Supervised by an in- structor, they are running tractors, driving farm wagons, and operating the various machines of a well-equip- ped farm, as well as periorming the manual tasks about the gardens, green houses, nurseries and orchards of the college. Many of the agricultural students come from homes in the city and have had little farm experience before en- tering Penn State. The summer work on the college farm is in the nature of a required practicum to put into use the theoretical part of their training secured during the regular college term. The men work eight hours a day and spend one hour in class-room instruction. For this summer the boys are living in tents because all of the college dor- mitory space is taken up by students at the summer session. The college plans to remedy this condition in another year, however, for prepara- tions are now being made for the rais- ing of a $2,000,000 emergency fund for the construction of Lealth, welfare and residence buildings as a step in the development of the institution in- to the Pennsylvania State University. ADVOCATES VOTING MACHINE. Recent election scandals growing out of the primaries, for which sever- al Pittsburgh men and one woman were indicted for ballot stealing, have brought about a movement seeking to have paper ballots superseded by vot- ing machines in elections. Senator William Flinn, of Pittsburgh, who is heading the movement for the inno- vation in Pennsylvania, describes the voting machine, used in New York and other States, as the only secret method of voting. “The paper ballot,” declared the Senator recently, “does not furnish a secret method of voting. It never did. It never can. When they used to call me a boss” in Pennsylvania politics, I had a hard time getting one thing accomplished—that was keeping the ballot boxes locked. It’s an almost im- possible job. I know that from exper- ience. There are scores of cases where honest young men, sincerely desirous of serving for the good of the people and sure of getting a majority of votes, were ‘counted out’ by unscru- pulous politicians. It is a common saying in Pittsburgh that in the ‘Strip’ districts, they weight the bal- lots instead of counting them. It has been found hard getting evidence in cases like that. Where you get seven men indicted, 2 hundred go free, and continue counting out candidates. “With the proper ballot, it’s easy for district leaders to make sure that the men they have bought up, or the men they have intimidated, ‘deliver the goods.’ The voter who must vote as he is told can make his mark in such a way as to identify his vote. He is permitted by law to write his name in the space provided for vot- ing for persons not nominated and in that way, identify it. He can, by pressing firmly with his pencil, em- boss the ballot so that the mark can be seen or felt on the back of the ballot. Even if he does not wish to disclose his vote, the election officer at the ballot box can often see or feel the back of the ballot how a voter has voted.” The voting machine which Senator Flinn and other prominent Pennsyl- vania men are advocating, is a box curtained on three sides, the voting board forming the fourth side. The curtain completely hides the voter while voting. As mechanical indicators are used, there can be no pencil marks to identify the ballot, and election officers have no opportu- nity to examine the voter’s ballot, to see or feel how he voted. The coun- ter compartment of the machine is locked and sealed from view during the voting, and the counters on the rear of the machine show the totals only, not each ballot separately. “You can’t corrupt a machine,” said Senator Flinn, describing the manner in which the voting machine works. “Each vote which is cast is cast with mechanical certainty, and mechanical secrecy. There can be no slightest attempt at manipulation of the machine without detection. “The voting machine will prevent practically every voting fraud which 1s so easy to commit under present conditions. It will prevent ballot box stuffing, switched boxes, and the de- liberately planned confusion which po- litical henchmen are ordered to start around polling places sometimes, in order that votes may be stolen while the disorder weighs. You can’t walk away with the big machine as you can with a little ballot box, and even if you could reach the machine, you | couldn’t do anything with it. “There can be no miscalling of votes, because the machine registers each one on the back, just as it is cast. For that reason, there can be no re- verse recording of votes, no jumping of the tallies, no endless chain scheme, no dual ballot and no delayed, substi- tuted or fraudulent returns. In fact, all the odd illegal tricks are check- mated by the machine, for you can’t cheat it. When a voter enters the voting machine, he first closes the curtain. The opening of the curtain when he has finished, automatically registers his vote, leaving the face of the ma- chine in the same condition in which | he found it. The special feature of | the curtain is that it not only makes it possible for the voter to vote secret- | ly, but it compels him to vote secret- | ly, because it is impossible for him to | operate the machine until he has clos- | ed the curtain. fine “The face of the machine is a board | containing an array of the names of | candidates. So ingeniously is the ma- | chine constructed that it is absolutely | fool-proof. A man cannot lose his vote by voting wrongly. The machine | won’t let him. For instance, if he pulls the lever which votes the straight Republican ticket, he thus au- tomatically gives his vote to the whole ticket, without any further movement on his part, and indications above the name of the nominees of other tick- | ets arc mechanically locked, to stay until he opens the curtains and the vote is registered.” “If he wishes to vote separately for each candidate, he simply pulls the little indicators down over the name of each man for whom he wish- es to vote. But the automatic locks which are in constant operation fol- lowing each motion of his, prevent him from voting twice for the same man, and from voting for two men for the same office. The little ebony indicators, once pulled down, stay down, tight locked, until the vote is registered. “Each vote, as it is registered, is merged into the count of the votes that already have been cast. During election, the counter compartment on the back of the machine is locked with two keys of different patterns held by the election officers of different polit- ical parties, thus insuring its privacy unless both officers are present when it is opened. Furthermore, even with both keys, the counter compartment cannot be opened without first locking the machine against voting. Still fur- ther, it can be sealed up during the voting. It is therefore practically im- possible to look at the counter during election. But because the votes are merged into the count automatically, even an examination of the counters either during the election or after, would not disclose how any certain voter voted. It is of course absolute- ly impossible to tamper with the com- partment itself, as all its operating machine is automatic and is sealed be- hind the board on which the figures appear to announce the number of votes for each candidate. “On purely economic grounds, the machine cannot be gainsaid as a sav- er of money. Their reduction in elec- tion costs is important, particularly in Allegheny county, where last year’s primary and general election cost nearly half a million dollars. “The voting machines would lower this at least twenty-five per cent. In the first place, their initial cost is al- most their last cost; only the election officers are needed. Two election offi- cers are sufficient to handle the ma- chine—one from each of two contest- ing parties are enough to assure the .safe locking of the counter compart- ment. There is no returning board to count the votes, because the machine automatically counts as it registers and the machine cannot be inaccurate. There are no paper ballots to be bought, and one machine can vote 999 persons. Buffalo, New York, and oth- er cities have installed the machines, and the bettered conditions in these cities testify to the fact that the ma- chine permits no tampering with the votes of the plain people. The paper ballots cannot help but be humanly fallible, and the men who count them are only human, too. The machine is ' not. The only persons who could pos- sibly be opposed to the machine are those who have profited in the past by illegal elections, and desire to so prof- it in the future. We hope to have the machines approved by the new Legis- lature, and to see them all over Penn- sylvania. Hints Wasted on Him. Gladys O’Weary had looked at the clock several times and at last Percy Vehere observed her glances. “You were looking at the clock?” he said. “Yes,” she answered with a faint smile. Then he got up and went over to the mantlepiece and looked at the clock for fully half a minuie. “I don’t see anything the matter with it,” he said, and returned to his seat. Then he stayed an hour longer. Or a Whippoorwill. The firm was indulging in the lux- ury of a new office boy. “And what’s your name” asked the rather flippant head clerk. “William Wilson Atkinson Simp- son,” was the sibilant reply. “Tut-tut,” said the head clerk, “you will be wasted here. Why don’t you go into the country and get a job as a nightingale 7” PORTLAND CEMENT LEAN, vermin-proof, weather-proof living quarters insure healthy stock, — poultry, cattle, pigs or sheep. Proper concrete construction adds to these qualities—permanence. For over a quarter century Atlas Portland Cement has given satisfacto: results. It is “the Standard by whic all other makes are measured.” Your building material dealer can give you information on any work you plan. Ask his advice and follow it. The Atlas Portland Cement Co. 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