Bese Wald "Bellefonte, Pa., January 19, 1923. WHATEVER YOU ARE. If you can’t be a pine at the top of the hill Be a scrub in the valley—but be ‘The best little scrub at the side of the rill; Ba a bush if you can’t be a tree. If you can’t be a bush be a bit of grass, Some highway to happier make; If you can't be a muskie then just be a bass, But be the liveliest bass in the lake. We can't all be captains, we've got to be crew, There's something for all of us here; There's big work to do and there's lesser to do, And the task we must do is the near. If you can’t be a highway, then just be a trail; If you can’t be the sun be a star, It isn’t by size that you win or you fail—- Be the best of whatever you are. —Selected. “THE MESS.” By Margaret H. Barnett. When cases are tried in court, it frequently happens that testimony of the witnesses on one side is direct- ly contradicted by the witnesses on the other side. It is the province of the jury to weigh the evidence, and deter- mine the facts, in the case, and bring in a verdict in accordance with the facts. Sometimes it is a difficult task. In weighing the evidence in regard to the condition of our State govern- ment, a jury would have an easy task, for there is remarkable agreement among the witnesses, even those of different political parties. There have been investigations, of- ficial and unofficial, and all the inves- tigators agree, substantially, in their findings. During the campaign recently clos- ed, the gubernatorial candidates of the two leading parties, and the candi- dates for other State offices, all had the same story to tell. The campaign speeches of the candidates of one po- litical party sounded like an echo of the speeches of the candidates of the other party. A few years ago, if one political party had made a charge of bad gov- ernment against the other party, the charge would have been resented and denied. But in this last campaign, the charges of the Democrats were the statements of the Republicans. These points are not in dispute: The affairs of the State government ar> in a “mess.” The “mess” is a very bad one. Some one must “clean it up.” The payrolls of the State carry the names of many unnecessary job-hold- ers. The State government must be re- organized. ‘The only difference between the two parties in the recent campaign was as to which party was best fitted to “clean up the mess.” Each party claim- ed that its candidates were the prop- er ones to do the “cleaning up” work. These are some of the high points of the situation in the State: The people of the State are heavily taxed, taxed to the limit. The hand of the tax collector reaches into the cra- dles of babies, and clutches at the aged as they are departing into that “Undiscovered Country,” whence no traveler returns. The State is practically bankrupt. According to a financial plan sug- gested by Senator George W. Wood- ward, chairman of the commission on the reorganization of the State gov- ernment, it will take twelve years to put the State on a sound financial ba- sis. The public schools of the State are crippled for lack of funds. In some parts of the State, the schools were closed part of last year. In some places, the teachers were told, at the end of the term, that they would have to wait for their salaries, as the State appropriation had not been paid, and the school board had already borrow- ed to the limit allowed by law. When the schools opened in the fall, state appropriations due six months before had not been paid. Senator Woodward has listed as “dispensables” a number of persons and things, whose salaries and cost aggregate $584,400. The State has been paying salaries to job-holders who are without jobs. There is a story, which is a favorite one in the capital city, to the effect that two men, who, for convenience, may be called A and B, went to the #Hill” to assume their duties. A said po 8B, “What is your work?” ‘B weplied, “I am to open certain doors at certain times of the day.” And A said, “I am to close those doors at certain times of the day.” This story may not be true in the latter, but it is certainly true in the spirit. This is evidenced by the cam- i. p@ign promises of some of the candi- Qates, that in future, there would be no “overlapping” of employees, and that only as many would be employe as were needed to do the work. As evidence, also, might be mentioned the case of a man who was a deputy sher- iff in one of the counties of the State, under his own name, and an em- ployee on the payrolls of the State, under a different name. Bt time would fail to tell the whole story. : a neylvania has always had its Governor, its Lieutenant Gogernor, its Attorney General, with an abundance of deputies, its Auditor General, and other officials, But we may adapt the language of another writer, and say of ‘the Good Ship Pennsylvania, “Who- ever stood at the wheel, political ex- pediency steered the ship.” Political expediency does not concern with the interests of the people of the State at large. ; b This week a new administration be- gan, The people of the State are nwaiting anxiously to see whether it will be new in fact, or new only in name; whether it will begin a new era grees. in our State government, or whether it will be only the same old kind of government, with a new label. "In a short time the new Legislature will function. For the first time In d | to old age. itself | the history of the State, it is appro- priate to address the Legislature as “ladies and gentlemen.” And so, ladies and gentlemen of the present Legislature, you will as- sume your duties at a time when your State needs your help to free her from the evils from which she is suffering. You will have a great opportunity to do a great work for a great Common- wealth. There are two hundred and fifty-eight of you, and you will, doubt, accomplish much. Our government is divided into three departments, legislative, execu- tive and judicial. Your department is the basis of the other two. You make the laws which the executives execute. You make the laws which the judges interpret. Realizing the importance of your work as Legislators, you will take it more seriously than such work has been taken in the past. When you take your oath of office, you will swear that you will “Support, obey and defend the Constitution of the United States and the Constitu- tion of this Commonwealth.” The puxr- pose and aim of the Federal Consti- tution, as set forth in the preamble, is, in part, “To establish justice, in- sure domestic tranquility, * * ; promote the general welfare.” The preamble of the Constitution of Penn- sylvania is, “We, the people of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, grateful to Almighty God for the blessings of civil and religious liberty, and humbly invoking His guidance, do ordain and establish this Constitu- tion.” These two preambles should give the keynote of all legislative enact- ments,—justice, the general welfare, sought under the guidance of God. You will no doubt make these aims the guiding principle of your career as Legislators. You will take as your motto those words of Lincoln in his second inaugu- ral, “In firmness for the right, as God gives us to see the right,” instead of that which seems to have been the motto heretofore, “For political expe- diency, as the bosses give us to see it.” You will remember that you repre- sent all your constituents, all the men and women of your various districts, not merely a few who have constitut- ed themselves “The Organization.” You will legislate in the interest of your constituents. You will study all bills that come before you carefully, and your vote on a bill will register the result of this careful study. You will handle the peoples’ money as carefully as you would your own. The Legislature of 1921 gave the State the Woner Act, which the North American has pronounced “The most vicious piece of legislation passed in our day.” You will give the State a better enforcement act. You will have the last word on any reorganization plan which the com- mission appointed for the purpose may submit. You will study the mat- ter carefully, and be ready to act on it intelligently. 3 Instead of bending your energies to find “new sources of revenue” for the State, you will endeavor to eliminate old sources of graft. The cost of administering the gov- ernment seems to be represented by X in the State’s problem—at least so it seems to the people of the State. You will ascertain the numerical val- ue of this unknown quantity, a very necessary step, if there is to be a real “cleaning up.” At least, we hope you will. no State Health Laws Enforced. Seven members of a school board in Westmoreland county recently entered pleas of guilty to a charge of violat- ing the vaccination law of Pennsylva- nia, and were sentenced to pay fines of $10.00 each. They permitted the entrance of children to school without a certificate of successful vaccination against smallpox, and paid no atten- tion to orders from the State Health Department that they comply with the law. Col. Wm. J. Crookston, chief of the division of school health, says there are other school directors and teachers who have ignored the vaccination law, and in every instance follow-up work is under way. Where prompt compliance with the law is not forth- coming, prosecutions will be brought. “Twenty-two cases of smallpox in one section of Philadelphia, which, ac- cording to health authorities there, are all traceable to one neglected case, is sufficient warning that strict en- forcement of the State vaccination law must be carried out,” he contin- ued. “To afford proper protection throughout the State, we can permit no violation of the law by school au- thorities anywhere.” — Figures from the census bu- reau show that the average length of life in the United States during the last decade increased several years. Out of the 1,000,000 deaths occurring within the twenty-four States under registration by the bureau containing about 74 per cent. of the country’s population less than 13,000 were due In 1920 the average life was b4 years for females and 56 for males. Kansas leads the list with an average of 59 years for males and 60 for females. Among cities Washing- males and 59 for females, while New York comes low in the list. served that areas having large colored population usually have a high death rate. California Fruit Trees Bud Three Months Early. San Bernardinc, Cal.—Decidious fruit trees and grape vines through- out San Bernardino county are strai- ing to bud three months ahead of na- ture’s schedule. Since December 18th there have been 18 days in which the maximum temperature did not drop helow 70 degrees and for four about the 90 degree mark, including ‘one day of summer weather at 92 de- Growers and vineyardists are uneasy over the situation, fearing that one frosty night would kill next year’s crop. ee ————————— —Read your own “Watchman.” ton leads with an average of 53 for days the thermometer has hovered | FARM NOTES. —The roots of all plants in friable, well-drained soils run far deeper than the casual observer would suppose. Any one who will examine the sides of a newly dug well will not regard five feet in depth as an unreasonable extent of root pasturage for our culti- vated plants, especially top-rooted clo- vers. There are several advantages of a cover crop, among them being the pre- vention of mechanical loss of soil by washing or blowing away, the catch- ing of soluble fertility which might leach from the soil if no plants were present, the addition of humus to the soil, the root solution of inert plant food which is thus made more availa- ble and, providing the legumes are used, another and most important ad- vantage is the fixation of free nitro- gen from the air. —The soil is tilled to eradicate weeds, to conserve moisture and to make available plant food. Probably if it were not for the presence of weeds there would be very little culti- vation done. It does not require a great philosopher to see that a corn- field choked by quack grass and mus- tard would be benefited by the culti- vator. Comparatively few have come into the knowledge that the same treatment makes rain less indispensa- ble, and fewer still have come to see that cultivation makes inert plant food available. There is a great field for growing such crops as rye, rape, crimson clo- ver and the like, which may be ob- the regular crop is harvested. Most long-cultivated soils have deteriorat- ed more owing to bad mechanical con- dition consequent upon the loss of hu- mus than the exhaustion of the plant food. A crop on the ground is a strong safeguard against the loss of manure by leaching, and this rule is at least simple and practicable: Ap- plications of soluble manures are best made to the growing crop or on lands where a crop will soon appear. —~Can the value of a woman on the farm be figured in dollars and cents? Since the time when the first hardy pioneers pushed their way over the un- charted forests of the Alleghenies, praises of the loyal wife and the daughters of the man who wrested his living from the soil have been sung in song and story. The Society of Farm Women of Pennsylvania, at their fourth annual convention to be held in connection with the seventh annual State Farm Products show to be held in Harric- burg the week of January 23, will en- deavor to place the value of the farm woman on the cold basis of dollars and cents. The farm women, whose sessions will be open to all women attending the farm show, have on their program for Wednesday morning, January 24, this subject, “What is the farm wom- an’s value to the farm in dollars and cents?” It will be a round table dis- cussion and the women assigned to discuss it include Mrs. Harry Hagar, Cambria county; Mrs. George G. C. Brubaker, Lancaster county; Miss May Hoover, Somerset county, and Mrs. H. C. Johnson, Warren county. —If all the fertility in the first foot lands which would not grow 100 suec- cessive crops of corn or wheat and many soils would grow several hun- dred. Besides, in addition to the plant food in the layers of soil, the roots of the potential wealth of the soil is practically inexhaustible. But a very small part of this wealth is readily available. Most of it is locked up in very stable combinations. but serious diminution of available plant food is woefully common. Land is made more fertile by (1) the direct addition of plant food, either by means of farm manures or by commercial fertilizer; (2) the me- chanical improvement of the land by culture and drainage, the effect of these operations being both to set free fertility and to allow a more ready penetration of the soil by the roots of the plants; (3) by the use of cover crops and crops for green manuring and the growing of leguminous plants. By the use of this system it is sought to supply humus to the soil to bring up fertility from lower depths, and in a case of leguminous plants te fix the free nitrogen of the air; (4) by the yearly addition of small quantities of nitrogen in the form of ammonia and nitric acid contained in the rain and Snow. —More than 6,000 exhibits of farm products will be entered in the sev- enth annual State Farm Products show to be held at Harrisburg, the week of January 23. This number may even be surpassed, as indicated by the number of entries that have already been received by the Pennsyl- vania Department of Agriculture and the various county farm agents. The corn and apple shows to be held in connection with the Agricul- ture week, will be the largest that have ever been held in the eastern section of the United States. No less than fifteen county exhibits of apples | will be made, or more than three It is ob- | times the number of such exhibits ever entered at a previous show. The 6,000 exhibits of farm products will represent every county in the State, not a single county being with- out an exhibit of some kind. The products will include everything that is grown on the farm and this great number of entries has been secured, not so much on account of the cash | value of the prizes, as the distinction that goes with winning a ribbon at the State show. A State show ribbon is the highest honor that a farmer in Pennsylvania may secure for his prize winning products. With even more space than was available for last year’s show, a num- ber of departments will be cramped for space this year, notably the ap- ple and corn sections. Every indication points to the fact , that this year’s show will establish a ‘new record that will stand for some vears to come. tained at a very small expense after’ Strosnider, Greene county; Mrs. Da- vid Rees, Washington county; Mrs. J. | of soil were avaliable there are few : plants may extend to a depth of sev- eral feet, which is a guarantee that Real soil exhaustion is a misnomer, ! . SOMETIMES DO REAL INJURY. Workers Peculiar in Balking at What is Branded as Philanthropic—In- stances of Gifts that Failed of Pur- pose. B. Rickard Spillane, in the Philadelphia Public Ledge. Money misapplied does little good and sometimes real harm. The record would go to show that the man who knows how to accumu- late a fortune does not always know how to leave it. Jay Gould was immensely rich, a wizard at making money. Practically his whole estate went to his family. Since then every major property he controlled, with one or two exceptions, has known bankruptcy, and his heirs have been in almost continuous litiga- tion. A. T. Stewart, greatest retail mer- chant of his time, whose business was taken over by John Wanamaker, left the bulk of his fortune for a working girls’ hotel in New York and for a Cathedral and other developments at Garden City. Working girls wouldn’t patronize the working girls’ hotel and it was transformed into the Park Av- enue Hotel of today. Stewart, man of wealth, is forgotten, but two immi- grant boys who worked in his store are not. One became a Supreme court justice in New York; the other ranks as one of the greatest living orators. The litigation over Stewart’s will cost millions of dollars. Russell Sage left about $80,000,000. ! Part of it was applied to building a “model” residential community for persons of modest means. A real es- tate company has it now. George Peabody, master merchant in America and later master merchant in England, made many contributions for public benefit, but the largest of all, that for “model” homes for Lon- don’s workers, brought little or no I good. | Workers are peculiar in balking at what is branded as philanthropic. Stephen Girard, richest man in America at the time of his death and one of the wisest men of his period, meant that his fortune should be em- ployed for the good of mankind. The | estate today includes large stretches i of coal lands, many business buildings {in Philadelphia, together with the i Girard development in South Philadel- phia and Girard College. | In the college the estate does excel- | lent work. The dwellings of the Gi- rard “Farm”—nearly 400 in all—are ; admirably built and their rental cost iis based at 4 per cent. net return to | the estate, which furnishes not only ihe heat and light, but other facili- ies. But the estate gets a heavy revenue from its coal lands. The higher the price of coal the more the estate re- ceives. Its income from this source exceeds $2,000,000 a year. And yet Girard never meant to levy such trib- ute on the public, for one provision of his will is for the income from $10,- 000 to be applied each year to the fur- nishing of fuel to the poor of Phila- delphia. We hear much of Girard but little of Robert Richard Randall, yet they were not unlike. Randall was of both ‘land and sea, and, like Girard, knew t how to feather his nest. When, about 125 years ago, he felt he didn’t have much longer to live, he went to Alex- ander Hamilton for advice. The great statesman said, in effect: “Captain, you have been something of a priva- teer. You have some money and you have some land. You are unmarried. Out of ships and sailors you have made what you possess. Why not - show your gratitude and provide a ha- ‘ven, a home for the aged and the broken among those who go down to the sea in ships?” So it is today we have Sailors’ Snug-Harbor—world famed, and just- ly so, the most remarkable institution | of its character in the world. And ! what do you suppose Randall’s farm, , which was worth perhaps $50,000 in - Hamilton's time, is worth today ? Per- haps $50,000,000. It was in that sec- tion around what now is Broadway and Tenth street, New York. D. O. Mills provided for model ten- | ements and Mills hotels, so-called. | The model “tenements” were swamped with clever persons who saw opportunity to get good quarters at low rental. They have done no geod for tenement dwellers. The Mills ho- tels, however, have proved of real { i | | i Andrey Carnegie spent many mil- lions on libraries. i John D. Rockefeller has spent a tre- : mendous sum in solving the problems connected with human ailments. Rockefeller’s work has been better directed than Carnegie’s and is more unselfish. : What generally of the millionaires ' and multi-millionaires of today ? i The crop is not so big as in the war- boom period, but it is greatly in excess ! of that of ten years back and is like- i ly to keep swelling year by year. And two men of today—Henry Ford and Rockefeller-—probably have as much as any ten multi-millionaires had ten year ago. Fortunes are getting big- ger. Their proper handling after the death of those who made them grows more important. It is with apprecia- tion of this fact, no doubt, that Rock- efeller has given earnest attention to the reduction of his wealth by intelli- gent distribution now rather ‘than trusting wholly to courts or executors. The Dilatory Worker. We probably all know people who seem to be, as they express it, “always in a rush,” yet who are always just a little late. They find apparently al- most a pleasurable excitement in put- ting off till the last moment the per- formance of necessary tasks and then executing them under high pressure. No doubt there is something stimulat- ing in having to accomplish certain results within a given time, but a good many persons in allotting their time seem to mistake the harassing for the stimulating. Every teacher knows that, if on a Tuesday he assigns a task to be completed by the following Tues- i BENEFACTIONS MISAPPLIED day, a considerable percentage of the class will begin work upon it on Mon- day evening. He knows too that there is a very small fraction of the class who will set to work upon it immedi- ately. He can soon tell which of his pupils are the forehanded and which the dilatory workers. It may be tha: the forehanded workers will not al- ways do the best work. Some of the dull pupils are suré to be among the forehanded ones; they have found that they have to be, in order-to keep up at all; and often among the dila- tory pupils there are the brightest minds. But if not overcome the hab-' it of dilatoriness will eventually slow up a naturally bright and active mind and the habit of forehandedness, if maintained, will often quicken a dull one.—Ex. —— eee. ——It isn’t too late to send the “Watchman” to that friend of yours. | HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA. The Economy of Hood’s Sarsaparilla Appeals to every family in these days. From no other medicine can you get so much real medicinal effect as from this. It is a highly concentrated extract of several valuable medicinal ingredients, pure and wholesome. The dose is small, only a teaspoonful three times a day. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is a wonderful tonic medicine for the blood, stom- ach, liver and kidneys, prompt in giv- ing relief. It is pleasant to take, agreeable to the stomach, gives a thrill of new life. 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