Bm idan Bellefonte, Pa., September 14, 1923. EE EEE Err — NO ROOM AT PENN STATE. From every part and region Of this great Keystone State, The students came in legion Up to the college gate, They thronged from farm and city, From vales where mountains loom; Their plight should stir your pity,— “The college has no room!” Ambitious youth and maiden The college halls assail; With pleas are letters laden,— Their prayers do not avail. Their wish to learn is thwarted, High hopes consigned to doom; The one dear chance they courted Is lost for lack of room. Youth cannot wait forever; Their need is pressing sore; Their chance is now or never, For on come thousands more. Let civic pride awaken, Let light dispel the gloom, Till generous hands have taken Away the sign, “No room!” —A. H. Espenshade. PENNSYLVANIA COUNTY NAMES TRACED TO THEIR BEGIN- NINGS. Roll Call of the Sixty-Seven is Well Calculated to Stir the Pride of all Who Love the Keystone State. That the names by which we know the sixty-seven counties of Pennsyl- vania were well chosen and fittingly bestowed must be apparent to any one who has given even passing attention to the subject. It is true that these names have been popularized by long usage, and the associations which cluster about them give them a meaning and signif- icance which in some instances they did not originally possess. But leav- ing such considerations aside and ap- praising them at their intrinsic worth, the county names of Pennsylvania are appropriate and have a satisfying sound. Not a few of these names are among the greatest in American his- tory; others hark back to the mother country and helped to make the first settlers feel at home in their new en- vironment; those of Indian origin are pleasant to hear and for the mind to dwell upon, and there is probably not a single one among the sixty-seven that our people would wish to have changed. Arranging the list in alphabetical order, the significance of the county names of Pennsylvania is as follows: Adams county is the namesake of John Adams, second President of the United States. The county was or- ganized in the year 1800, and it is re- corded that about the time its name was to be selected, Adams, with a train of attendants and a military es- cort, traversed the county on his way to the then new seat of government at Washington. It was this incident largely that determined the name of the county. Allegheny is of Indian origin. Ac- cording to the Indian tradition, a tribe known as the Alligewi, a people of gigantic form, inhabited the terri- tory between the Allegheny Moun- tains and the Mississippi river. They were vanquished by the Iroquois and the Lenni Lenape, abandoning the country of their fathers and fleeing to the southward, never to return. Armstrong county is one of a large number that were organized in 1800. It bears the name of Colonel John Armstrong, who commanded the fore- es that defeated the Indians at Fort Kittanning in 1756. He also served in the Revolution under Washington. Beaver was named in honor of a celebrated Indian chief, Tamaque, the equivalent of Beaver in English. Bedford was so named for the Eng- lish Duke of Bedford. Berks county derives its name from the fact that Admiral Penn, the fath- er of the founder of Pennsylvania, owned lands along the Thames in Berkshire, England, and for this rea- son the descendants of William Penn, in 1752, named the new county Berks. Blair county perpetuates the name of Hon. John Blair Jr., an early resi- dent, who was prominent in the af- fairs of Pennsylvania. Bradford county was originally called Ontario. At the suggestion of John Bannister Gibson, who when a young man, served as a judge of the district, the county was given its pres- ent name, in honor of William Brad- ford, who served as Attorney General during the second administration of President Washington. Bucks, one of the three original counties, was in some of the early pa- pers designated as Buckingham, the name of one of the important shires of England. Butler was named for General Richard Butler, of Carlisle, Pa. He won distinction as a soldier under Gates, at Saratoga, Washington at Monmouth, Wayne at Stony Point, and Lafayette at Yorktown. He lost his life while leading a division of General St. Clair’s forces against the Indians in Ohio, in 1791. Cambria county numbered among its early settlers a colony of Welsh, and when the county was formed, they were instrumental in having it called Cambria, the ancient name of Wales, which meant a land of mountains. Cameron county came into being in 1860, when Simon Cameron was a dominant figure in Pennsylvania poli- tics. He was for a short time Secre- tary of War in Lincoln’s cabinet, serv- ed as Ambassador to Russia and was a United States Senator. The county was named for him. Carbon is one of the group of coun- ties in which anthracite coal is found, and this mineral, largely composed of carbon, supplied the name of the county. Centre county derives its name from the fact that it occupies the geograph- ical center of the State. Chester, the town, was first called Upland. When William Penn arriv- ed, he resolved that the name of the place should be changed. One of those who made the voyage across the Atlantic with Penn in the ship Wel- come was a friend named Pearson. Addressing himself to Pearson, Penn ! ty, New Jersey, is’ also named in his is reported to have said: “Providence hath brought us safe here. Thou hast been the companion of my perils. What wilt thou that I should call this place?” “Chester,” said Pearson, in remembrance of the place from which he had come in England. Penn re- plied that it should be called Chester, and that when the land should be di- vided into counties, one of them should be called by the same name. : Clarion county was organized in 1839. According to Day’s Historical Collections of Pennsylvania, the name was applied to the locality from the “Clarion-like echoes from the defeat- ed Indians of the ‘Cornplanter’ tribe at the Battle of Brady’s Bend.” Clearfield is by some held to have received its name from a compara- tively clear field in which the buffa- loes roamed. Others attribute the clearing of the field to the Indians, Clinton derives its name from De- Witt Clinton, the builder of the Erie Canal and a Governor of New York. Columbia is the name for whose or- igin we must go back to Christopher Columbus. Crawford was named for Colonel William Crawford, a soldier of the Revolution. His home was in Berk- ley county, Virginia. At the request of Washington, he led a force of men against the Indians of northern Ohio. Falling into the hands of the enemy at Sandusky, in 1782, he was tortur- ed to death. Cumberland county derived its name from one of the maratime counties of England. ; Dauphin county was organized in 1785, just after the close of the Revo- lution. The eldest sons of the kings of France bore the title of Dauphin, and in view of the help France had given the Colonies in their fight for independence, Dauphin county was named in honor of the heir to the French throne. Delaware county, like the river and bay, commemmorate the name of Lord Dela Warr, who is reputed to have anchored in the Deleware Bay when on his way to Virginia, in 1610. Elk, as applied to the county, is a name that will be easily understood, even by those who are not faunal nat- uralists. Erie is an Indian name which ment panther, or wild cat. There was an ancient tribe on the borders of Lake Erie that were known by this name. They were conquered by the Iroquois. Fayette county was formed in 1783, and it was named for General Lafay- ette. Forest county took its name from the fact that a hundred years after other sections of the State were well populated, the territory of this sec- tion was still a primitive forest. Franklin county, organized in 1784, is one of the numerous namesakes of Benjamin Franklin. Fulton was named for Robert Ful- ton. the inventor of the steamboat, a native of Lancaster county, Pennsyl- vania. Greene perpetuates the name of General Nathaniel Greene, on of the most famous of Rvolutionary soldiers. Huntingdon is a familiar English name. The county ig said to have been christened in honor of the Coun- tess of Huntingdon. Indiana county is a fertile region and was well populated by Indians, from whom the name originated. Jefferson county was formed in 1804, when Thomas Jefferson was President of the United States, and it bears his name. t Juniata is an adaptation of a word of the Iroquois Indians which meant standing stone. The name Juniata, as applied to the river, was made fa- mous about a century ago by the song called “The Blue Juniata.” Lackawanna is also an Indian name, signifying the meeting of twe streams. : Lancaster, the fourth county to be established in the State, later fur- nished the territory out of which were carved a dozen other counties. It is the namesake of an English county. Lawrence was formed in 1849. Many of the men of the county had participated in Perry’s famous battle on Lake Erie. The name of Perry’s flagship, the Lawrence, gave rise to the name of the county. This ship had been named in honor of Captain James Lawrence, the hero of the Chesapeake. ‘Lebanon derived its name from the far-famed Lebanon of the Bible. Lehigh is derived from the Indian word -Lechau, meaning the forks. The name was first applied to the river Lehigh, a branch of the Delaware. Luzerne, one of our most historic counties, is named for Chevalier dela Luzerne, Ambassador from France to the United States. Luzerne forms a part of the territory which in the ear- ly history of Pennsylvania was set- tled and claimed by Connecticut. These “invaders” organized a county which they called Westmoreland and which was attached to Litchfield coun- ty, Connecticut. Lycoming is an Indian name which signified the place of a sandy lick. cKean county was organized in 1804. Thomas McKean, who was born in Chester county, was then Governor of the State, and the county bears his name. Prior to his election to the Governorship, McKean was for twen- ty-two years chief justice of the Su- preme court of Pennsylvania. He was a Scotch-Irishmaan and knew how to behave like one when the occasion de- manded. One of the stories preserv- ed concerning him is thai while he was presiding in court at Harrisburg, a mob outside disturbed him, and he ordered the sheriff to disperse them. The sheriff replied that he was not able to do so. “Then why do you not summon your . posse?” ordered the judge. “I have summoned them, but they are ineffectual,” said the sheriff. “Then why do you not summone me?” asked McKean. “I do summon you,” said the trembling officer. Not wait- ing to discard the robes of his office, the chief justice rushed out, seized a couple of the rioters by the throat, and the rest beat a retreat. Mercer county is named for a Rev- olutionary hero, General Hugh Mer- cer, who was born in Scotland. He was with Braddock in the expedition against: the Indians in Pennsylvania. He commanded -a brigade in the Revo- lution and was mortally wounded at the Battle of Princeton. Mercer coun- honor. Mifflin county also perpetuates the name of a Revolutionary General, Thomas Mifflin, who was of Quaker parentage and was born in Philadel- phia. He was long prominent in the political affairs of Pennsylvania and was the first Governor under the Con- stitution of 1790. Monroe is, of course, named for James Monroe, the fifth President of the United tSates. Montgomery county is claimed by some authorities to have been named for General Richard Montgomery, who died at Quebec. Others assert the county was named for General John Montgomery, who commanded the Pennsylvania militia at Brandy- wine and Germantown. Montour is a name that figures largely in the Indian affairs of Penn- sylvania. One writer of reputation says the county was named for “Mad- am’ Montour, widow of Roland Mon- tour, a Seneca Indian chief. Another version has it that the county bears the name of Andrew Montour, who | was partly of Indian blood. Northampton was named after Nor- thamptonshire, England. Northumberiand also took its name from an English county or shire. Perry county was named in tribute to Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry, the hero of the naval exploit on Lake Erie. ’ Philadelphia is a Bible name, mean- ing “Brotherly Love.” Pike commemmorates the name of General Zebulon Pike, who led var- ious exploring expediticns for the United States government. On one of | these he discovered Pike’s Peak, in the Rocky Mountains. He was killed in the war of 1812. Potter, formerly noted for its for- ests and now gaining recognition for its production of potatoes, is the namesake of General James Potter, who was commended by Washington for his “activity and vigilance.” Schuylkill, noted for its coal and for many other reasons, took its name from the river Schuylkill, which is of Dutch origin, meaning hidden creek or channel. Snyder was so christened in honor of Simon Snyder, who was Governor of Pennsylvania from 1808 to 1817. He was the first of the so-called Pennsylvania Dutch Governors. Somerset comes from the English county of the same name. Sullivan is another county that was named for a Revolutionary hero, Gen- eral John Sullivan, who was born in Maine and who was judge of a United States District Court in New Hamp- shire at the time of his death, which occurred in 1795. Washington com- missioned him to lead the famous ex- pedition against the Indians after the Massacre of Wyoming. Susquehanna is an Indian name, which according to the best authori- ties, meaning a dark or oily river. Tioga is a corruption of the Iro- quois word or name Diahoga, mean- ing the forks of two streams. Union has reference to our Union of States. . Venango derived its name from an ancient Indian village which stood at the junction of French Creek and ithe Allegheny river. Washington ‘was among the first to spell the name as at present. Various explanations have been made as to its meaning. Dr. George Donehoo, the present State Li- brarian, who is an acknowledged au- thority on Indian lore, says the name comes from the Indian Onenge, mean- ing a mink. Warren county was named for Gen- eral Joseph Warren, who was killed at the Battle of Bunker Hill. He was a medical doctor in private life and he took a leading part in the events that led to the Revolution. He died at the age of thirty-four. Washington was named in honor of the “Father of his Country,” who had many early adventures in that section of Pennsylvania, which was then claimed by Virginia. Wayne county was named for Gen- eral Anthony Wayne, of Revolution- ary fame, who was a native of Ches- ter county, Pennsylvania. His cap- ture of Stony Point, where he was wounded, was one of his many ex- ploits. General Wayne commanded a division in the Continental army known as the Pennsylvania Line, which he led in many campaigns. This division was rated as one of the best in the service. It saved the day for Washington at Monmouth. Wayne's last great public service was render- ed in his successful campaign against the Indians in Ohio after two other expeditions under less competent lead- ership had met with disaster. It was at Presque Isle, now Erie, in 1796, that General Wayne, of whom the In- dians said that he never slept, slept at last. His death occurred during his fifty-second year. Westmoreland, part of the territory claimed by Virginia, was organized in 1773. It was christened after the English county of that name. yoming comes from Meechawo- ming, which in the language of the Delawares meant “great plains.” The English poet, Campbell, immortalized the name by his poem “Gertrude of Wyoming.” York county, which formed a part of Lancaster until 1749, is one of our most productive agricultural districts. It was named for the English county of York. There have been no new counties organized in Pennsylvania since 1878, when Lackawanna was carved out of the territory of Luzerne. Several strong efforts have been made, how- ever, to form a new county out of the southern portion of Luzerne and parts of Carbon and Schuylkill. A bill with this intent passed the Legislature dur- ing the governorship of Daniel H. Hastings during the nineties. To fa- cilitate its passage, the proposed coun- ty was called Quay, that gentleman then being the most potent political leader in the State. But to the chagrin of the new coun- ty boosters, Governor Hastings vetoed the measure. He was hanged in effi- gy on the streets of Hazleton, which would have been the seat of justice of the new county if Hastings had ap- proved the bill. FRED BRENCKMAN. —For all the news you should read the “Watchman.” is taken from Assiskuhanna, ! FAMOUS SAYINGS OF AMERICAN PRESIDENTS. A good many of our Presidents have coined expressions that live after them, from Washington's famous dic- tum about foreign alliances to Wil- son’s “Too proud to fight” and “Peace without victory.” But two expressions of our first President are much quoted and these are taken from a speech he made to Congress in 1790, and from his fare- ‘well address. The first is: “In time of peace prepare for war;” the other: ‘“Tis our true policy to steer clear of permanent alliances with any portion of the foreign world.” : The best remembered saying of John Adams is his famous toast, “In- dependence forever,” for the very Fourth of July on which he died. His son, John Quincy, is chiefly associat- ed, as far as sentence-making is con- cerned, with “Westward the star of empire takes its way,” occurring in his oration at Plymouth, in 1802. This was not, however, original with him for he took it with slight altera- j tion from old Bishop Berkeley who had used the phrase in a poem sixty | years before. i “Few die and none resign” heads | Jefferson’s list of deathless phrases, although a close second is: “When a i man assumes a public trust, he should consider himself as public property.” { This latter, perhaps, suggested Cleve- | land’s even more famous: “Public of- fice is a public trust.” That great Democrat, Andrew Jack- son, is remembered more by what is | colloquially termed a “cuss word” than by any high-flown expression. History tells us that he was constant- ly interlarding his speech with, “By the eternal,” but he also said, “Our Federal Union; it must be preserved” —a toast given by “Old Hickory” on the occasion of the Jefferson birth- day celebration, in 1830. So much is constantly quoted from the great speeches of Abraham Lin- coln that one knows not where to be- gin, Take that wise and pithy epi- gram, “No country can survive that is half slave and half free;” and that priceless bit of philosophy expressed in his remarkable Gettysburg speech: “That this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom and that government of the people, by the peo- ple, and for the people, shall not per- ish from the earth.” This never fails to move an audience just as the home- ly wisdom of “It’s not best to swap horses while crossing the stream” al- ways brings a smile and makes a point. This was said regarding the change of Generals during the Civil war, but it has been used again and again by supporters of any office- holder who wants to retain his job. in Grant’s letter accepting the Repub- lican nomination of 1868, is the most often quoted of the few political say- ings connected with the hero of Ap- | pomattox. Grant also is famous for ‘his dispatch from Spottsylvania i Courthouse, “I propose to fight it out on this line, if it takes all summe#;” “Let us have peace,” incorporated FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. DAILY THOUGHT. I know each sinful action, As sure as the night brings shade, Is somewhere, some time punished, Though the hour be long delayed. I know that the soul is aided Sometimes by the heart’s unrest, And to grow means often to suffer— But whatever is—is best. —Ella Wheeler Wilcox. Everything is trimmed with fur— hats, frocks, tunics, evening gowns, cloth suits, overcoats. Velvet and fur are everywhere and most often together. Velvet and cloth coats trimmed with really fine furs will re- place the fur coat, become bourgeois and nouveau riche. They are also much more becoming. These somber, rich-toned velvets with collars, cuffs and borders of sa- ble, astrakan, seal, are at once dis- creet and picturesque, elegant and simple. Their supple line lends grace and flexibility, compared with the bulk and weight of the all-fur coat. The new coat length is three-quar- ters. Almost every coat in the new collections is shown with an accompa- nying dress forming the three-piece which so well deserves a permanent place in our hearts and clothes clos- ets. These three-quarter coats, thous- ands of them, are cut straight, lined often with the material forming or trimming the frock beneath. The coat lining and dress may be of printed silk or even of printed velvet; for elaborate afternoon costumes fine- ly patterned silk and metal blades are so used. These coats are invariably one color. The embroidered coat is seen no more. The three-quarter length coat is for the suit also. It is very straight, forming one line with the skirt. But the shorter hip jacket is also seen in houses like Patou, Chanel, Lanvin and Jenny, where youth and youthful effects are sought. Wraps for evening are often capes, narrow in effect or narrow at the shoulders and flaring below, of the most gorgeous possible materials and colors—velvets of saphire, emerald or crimson lined often with fur or bro- caded blades of gold and silver-lined with velvet. One very ugly note I've seen. It is, indeed, definitely ludicrous, you will agree. On some of the tight, narrow dresses the line is tight as the skin across the hips at the back, and “plunges” below. It is not meant. I think the couturieres must be even more horrified than we are at seeing it. But a tight plain skirt on a plump woman will inevitably take this line. Let us beware! The square decollette is favored for evening, but round and V-shaped necks are almost equally popular. , Dance frocks are still made high in while Rutherford B. Hayes, in his in- { augural address, gave to the world i the inspiring thought: “He serves his party best who serves his country ! fullness is always in front. best.” i Grover Cleveland coined a good | many well-known expressions. His tain inactive laws, employed “Honor lies in honest toil” appeared in his letter accepting the first nomina- tion, and the second important tariff message, in 1887, declared, “It is a condition which confronts us, not a theory.” President Roosevelt’s contributions have been many and forceful. strenuous life” was originally used by him in a speech at Chicago, more than twenty years ago, as the antith- esis of “ignoble ease.” Afterward it became the title of a collection of some of his essays and addresses. The cartoonist is animated almost daily by “Speak oftly but earry a big stick,” that celebrated saying of Roosevelt anent the Monroe Doctrine. A Fourth of July oration of more than a dozen years ago contained: “A man who is good enough to shed his blood for his country is good enough to be given a square deal afterward;” while the the workingman with glee preserves against the corporations and wicked rich those volcanic eruptions, “Male- factors of great wealth,” and “Ana- nias Club.” No one will be likely to forget the announcement of the Roosevelt presi- dential aspirations back in 1912, by the electrical “My hat is in the ring,” nor the “pussyfooting” characteriza- tion of Democratic tendencies during the Hughes-Wilson campaign. But one of the expressions often quoted was originated not by a Pres- ident at all but by a Presidential as- pirant. It was that great southern statesman, Henry Clay, who in 1850 delivered a speech against the com- promise measures, and said: “I youd rather be right than be Presi- ent. Constables to Get Election Fees. All constables will hereafter re- ceive compensation covering the cost of advertising elections, according to the Act of General Assembly, No. 216, approved by Governor Pinchot May 23. Mileage and other expenses are to be paid by the county. The act states that “constables, su- pervisors, or assessors, as the case may be, of any ward, township, in- corporated district, or borough, shall be allowed and paid out of the coun- ty treasury $3 for each polling place, for advertising ward, township, dis- trict and borough elections, but not more than $15 for this pur-ose for any one election; and six cents per mile for each mile necessarily trav- eled in the performance of said du- ties. Said constables shall be allo ed and paid twenty cents for delivering to each township officer a certificate of this election.” ——Betty and her little playmate were having a bitter quarrel. “I don’t love you!” cried the latter, turning away. Betty, who is a minister's child, returned: “Yo dot to love me! You dot to!” “Why've I got to? ‘““Cause my papa says you dot to love those who hate you—and I hate you, doodness knows.”—Stray Stories. “The |! | ' tariff message of 1886, criticising cer- | rejoicing. front and very low in the back. One of the strong notes of the sea- 5 is the tunic worn over a narrow Shn. often edged with fur. and perfectly straight. from the waist to knee. Some are long Others flare Here also The back is plain and tight. | The three-piece suit goes on its way It has assumed the char- ) : that acteristics of the costume known as unique term “innocuous desuetude.” | “the commuter’s delight.” The "skirt hem matches the coat and extends to it. The lining of the coat matches the blouse, which is rarely a blouse—more often it is the upper part of the frock. Women who like a variety of blous- es in a winter suit deepen the hem of the skirt and attach it to a pinafore of matching silk. It’s a simple trick that serves well. The three-quarter coat is establish- ed. It is straight and slender; it flares at the knee-length hem; it has tiers put on its sections. Jeanne Lan- vin sends over a curious coat through a manufacturer. Its cloth is, covered with Spiderweb tracery, which looks like footprints on the sand, as one ex- pert said. The sleeves are arresting. Lanvin must have been looking at the fascinating elbow cushions of Chinese ladies and wmandarins, which a few canny tourists are bringing home from Peking. The lower part of the sleeves are replicas of these cushions when they are stuffed to look like ripe melons. She doesn’t use stiff old brocade with fantastic ribbon to form the sections. | Pity she didn’t. Maybe some Ameri- can dressmaker will. It is said in Paris that beaded em- broidery on frocks is finished, but ex- perience inclines one to believe that America will not let go of it without the use of a wrench. It is possible that the Russian influ- ence has reached the vanishing point. Even the horizontally banded sweat- ers have given way to the checker- board ones, with and without sleeves. The latter fashion is another torment to the eyes by reason of its endless chain at summer resorts. Pity we pound a style to death before it has served its purpose. Russia, however, lifting her finger from garments has placed it on mil- linery. Those tiny turbans that threaten to disfigure the large face and the mid- dle-aged woman have become aston- ishingly like Russian wedding bon- nets, sometimes like tiaras. In the former shape, when reasonably wide of brim, they are apt to be a rival of the helmet. The best dressmakers in Paris make immensely wide skirts of tulle cover- ed with small ruffles. Chanel continues her many-tiered skirt, but Callot and Jean Patou have the courage to offer instep-length skirts six and eight yards wide. It is probable that a sharp distine- tion will be made between evening and street clothes in the silhouette of to skirt. The sleeveless bodices are st’! worn in the sunlight, but France will put in long sleeves as autumn deepens. It is quite possible that the circu- lar skirt will vanish, leaving the field to the cylinder skirt for the sunlight and the Victo~ian one for the electric lights. The tight, fitted bodice rises above the wide ruffled skirt. It is moderately long-waisted. do not give profitable returns. FARM NOTES. —1It is not too late to sow a cover crop in the orchard. Weeds are far better than nothing, but a sowed cov- er crop, especially a leguminous one is to be preferred to a volunteer stand of weeds. —Hogging down rye is unprofitable according to tests made in Ohio. The tsets show that it is generally more profitable to harvest the grain and sell it, or feed the grain to hogs after threshing. —If American foul brood is in your apiary use every precaution to pre- vent spreading it. Remember that one extracting comb from a diseased colony placed on a healthy colony is more than likely to give you another diseased colony. —The old canes should be removed from the berry rows as soon as fruit- ing is over. This assists in the elim- ination of such diseases as cane blight and also permits a better development of the new canes which will produce next season’s crop. At this time, un- healthy looking plants should also be fsmoved for fear they may be dis- eased. . —The beneficial effects of cultivat- ing orchards instead of keeping them in sod, as is so generally practiced in some sections, are attributed to many factors, among the most important of which is said to be the saving in soil moisture which would otherwise be utilized by the sod, and the elimina- tion of the competition between the trees and the sod for the plant food supply of the soil. Insect pests and diseases may be more readily con- trolled in cultivated orchards. —OIld time farmers were opposed to what they termed “book larnin’,” look- ing upon writers as theorists, men who never planted a seed nor hoed a row in their life. They believed that the only schooling in agriculture that was of any worth was the hard knocks received from personal exper- ience. The writer has lived through that age, and he has, likewise, noted the wonderful aid given farmers by sci- ence. Agricultural colleges have worked out, and are still working out, better methods for doing farm work, and the State experiment stations are continually investigating matters that a better understanding may be had. Farming is a business, and, neces- sarily, must be governed by business rules. Science points out the way for better profit, and shows that unprof- itable farming is due to the man in charge, rather than to the land. Painstaking, seasonable operations, and the application of practical knowl- edge, gained by a study of the re- quirements which are known, is what brings zbout success. Science, too, has pointed out that lack of ambition will mean indifferent work; and that taking full advantage of the resources, and following intel- ligent, up to date methods will in time There are dozens of them, very | mean steady, and often very rapid, improvement in yield of crops. In a sense, the resources of a farm vary with locality, but in general there are many identical conditions on very many farms. The farmer who works to establish a_well-set meadow, aims to get the hilly, washable, waste lands set in grass, untilizeg the rocky, rough lands by setting out fruit trees, ditches the low lands and reclaims the swamps, improves the stony fields by picking off the surface stones so that crops will take the places the stones occu- pied, are some of the ways of taking advantage of the resources of a farm. The farmer whose farm rarely ex- ceeds 60 or 70 acres, has crops that average better than the one who is operating a big farm. The large far- mer, with the usual help, is unable to properly look after the entire farm’s resources. Personal inspection, see- ing that work is done in season, that each operation is well attended to, are factors in successful farming. Hasty methods will result in indiffer- ent work. Intensive farming enables the far- mer to husband his resources. Con- centration of effort to a smaller num- ber of acres means more thorough preparation of the soil for all crops, as well as more liberal fertilizing, and more thorough timely tillage. All these contribute to an increasse of yield and an improvement of quality of products. By intensive methods soil fertility is better maintained or increased. The resources of a farm are not fully taken advantage of where the fields are permitted to go wild, even for a season. Another setback is giv- en if no successful effort is made to prevent the waste incident to fields being washed. There is another lack if the barn- yard is so located that the rains reach and carry away the richest of the ma- nurial elements. Too many farmers do not follow rotation of crops. The same crop is annually raised on the same land, with little if any variation, and the land gets very little manurial food which it is in need of. Eventually the land becomes devoid of humus and plant food avaliable for the continual growing of one crop. Rotation gives opposite results. It increases the humus, makes plant food for succeeding crops, and assists to enrich the land. Farmers should make their occupa- tion one of study. Successful men in all other callings studied to become masters of their occupation, leaving nothing to chance. By keeping care- ful accounts they know which branch is profitable and which is not, an by cutting out the losers and giving more time to the winners, expense is les- sened and receipts increased. The wise farmer works along the gag line. He figures on the expense of his crops, and eliminates those coal t is as one writer puts it: One of the main reasons for a good deal of poor farming isthe fact that nature is so generous that “just a tickling of the soil” will often bring seme kind of a crop. There are so-called farmers who appear to have but little ambi- tion above the “tickling” process, and never get beyond “just making a liv- ing thank’ee” stage in farming. Ambition and pride to attain the topmost round in any occupation is al- ways commendable, and farming need not be an exception to this order.