EE ————————————————— ee — Bellefonte, Pa., October 5, 1923. HER TOOL SIMPLE, EFFECTIVE Mrs. Dorgan Tells Husband How She Accomplished Various Reforms in the House. Dorgan on his return home sat down to hear the family happenings during his absence, says the Philadelphia Pub- lic Ledger. The wife was laying par- ticular stress upon the reforms she had successfully introduced. “You know,” said she, “that closet that was locked for more than a month? You said it couldn't be opened except by a locksmith, Well, I opened it" “How on earth did you do it?” “With a hairpin. And the furnace door has been sagging around on one hinge for ever so long, you know; but it’s all right now.” “Well, I am glad you had it fixed.” “Had it fixed! I fixed it myself with a hairpin. And there was that pic ture of your mother that stood on the floor for six weeks because you hadn't brought me any picture hooks—" “Well, I intended to, but—" “Oh, it doesn’t make any difference now. [ made a hook myself out of a hairpin.” “No i" “And there’s Tommy. You've been coaxing and bribing kim for a year to break him of the habit of biting his nails, and I broke him in a week.” “With a hairpin?“ inquired Mr. Dor- gan. “No! Don't be a goose! With a hairbrush.” HUGE TREE IN NEW ZEALAND Kauri Is Found That Is Estimated te Be at Least Two Thousand Years Old. One of the largest trees in the world, if not the largest, has been dis- covered in the bush at Walhou, Hoki- anga, New Zealand. It is a huge kauri tree, the vast trunk rising te a height of seventy-five feet before being broken by the first branch, and meas- uring twenty-two feet in diameter and sixty-six feet, or approximately a chain, in girth. A well-known bush expert estimates the tree to contain more than 195.- 000 superficial feet of timber, suffi- cient to build three double-storied hotels of twenty rooms each from floor to ceiling. It is to be hoped that this remark- able tree will be zealously guarded from destruction and preserved to show future generations what the lordly kauri at its best was like. From a marketable point of view it would be impossible to fell it, much less break it down, no mill possessing saws big enough’ to tackle it. The age of the giant is estimated to be at least 2,000 years, and, carefully preserved, it has another thousand years of life before it.—Forestry Jour- nal. Century of Long Trousers. This year marks the hundredth an- aniversary of the official adoption of long trousers as the male garment. Although Beau Brummel had worn them half a dozen years before, and they had become an accepted “fashion” in 1821, it was in 1823 that they re- ceived official sanction, replacing breeches and leggings in the British infantry, The Irish had worn a sort of trousers in the Seventeenth cen- tury, but they bore but little resem- blarce to the modern garment. Even Beau Brummel’s trousers would be counted a curlosity today, for they buttoned at the ankle, Yet they un- doubtedly are the garment from which the modern “long pants” has been evolved, A New Element. The teacher was piloting a class in general science through one of the early lessons in the textbook. “What were the four elements,” she asked, “into which the ancients divid- ed all natural objects? William, you .may answer.” “Earth,” began Willlam slowly. ““Earth—and — and — air — let's see, ~there was earth and air and—water— zand—and—" “Well, well,” said the teacher brisk- ¥ly, ““swvhat causes more accidents than anything else?” “Automobiles,” cried William, grate- ful for the teacher's help.—Youth’s Companion, Eating for a Purpose. The hired man was unhitching his team at noon. “Boss,” said he, “do you want me to pitch or rake this afternoon?” “Oh, rake, I guess,” was the reply. After dinner while getting ready for the field again, the farmer said, “Jake, I guess you'd better pitch this afternoon, after all.” “Can't do it, boss,” returned Jake. “Why not?” “Cause I didn’t fill to pitch.” Cable of Human Hair. in the great Buddhist temple at Kyoto, Japan, is to be seen an im- mense hawser of human hair, This anique rope measures 300 feet in length and three inches in diameter, and is made up of contributions from the heads of millions of Japanese women, Long ago it was used to drag the timbers to the building and to hoisf them into place, and now it is carefully preserved as a sacred relic. HECALL EVENTS OF . = ps ey ee AV Documents Presented to Massachu- setts Historical Society Are of the Highest Interest. One of the important gifts to the Massachusetts Historical society with associations of the anti-siivery period of the last century is from Dr. Vin- cent Y. Bowditch, says the Boston Transcript. It is a large volume con- taining letters, posters, clippings and other pleces relating to the famous case of George Latimer, the first fugi- tive slave seized in Boston, October 21, 1842. With these is a complete file of the Latimer Journal and North Star, in seven numbers, published be- tween November 11, 1842, and May 18, 1843, and edited by Bowditch’s father, Dr. Henry Ingersoll Bowditch, and William Francis Channing and Fred- erick S. Cabot. The seizure caused great excitement in Boston, apd steps were immediately taken to defend Latimer. The ed- itors say at the outset that its great object will be “to give utterance to the alarm and indignation of Massa- chusetts at the encroachment of slav- ery on her soil.” The letter which Latimer, on Octo- ber 22, 1842, sent to the Boston minis- ters asking that prayers for his re- lease might be offered on the follow- ing Sunday, was recently given to the society by Grenville H. Norcross, and is now with this collection. It is in the handwriting of Samuel E. Sewall, and the signature of Latimer (by his mark) is witnessed by him, PRANKS OF THE LODESTONE 3ems Glued to the Ground and Nails Drawn Out of Boots Are Among Stories Told. Swedish sailors tell queer tales about che country near the Aretic circle where lodestones are found. Hunters, they say, have laid their guns down and found them glued to the ground when they came to pick them up again. Men have have had to take off their boots to get home again, when the nails in them | have stuck closely to the ground, says | the Detroit News. There is the tale of the Lodestone mountain in the Arabian Nights, where a vessel was drawn toward it and toward it until, when it approached the fatal shore, all the nails were drawn out and flew toward the mountains and the ship sank to the bottom of the sea. The Viking sailors used a raft as their compass. They put a lodestone on a little raft and it floated always with the one end towards the Lode star. By this fashion they could tell in the daytime as well as at night in what direction they were sailing, pro- vided the water was still enough to let them float their little raft. * "Tennis Ball Scales. Few tennis players know how tennis oalls for the tournaments held under the sanction of the National Lawn Tennis association are tested. It ap- pears that the machine that one ex- pert uses to weigh tennis balls is simi- lar in appearance to an instrument used to find the specific gravity of a liquid. It consists of a long glass tube in which water is placed at 75 degrees Fahrenheit. A second tube, on which fractions of ounces are marked, with a certain weight of buckshot in the base and a holder for the ball on top, floats in the water. A ball must weigh no less than two ounces or more than two and one-six- teenth ounces to be accepted, and when it is placed in the holder the tube reveals the slightest irregularity in its weight. Great in Many Ways. Both Washington and Lincoln were of large build. The former, accord- ing to the letter which he wrote when ordering a suit of clothes from a London tailor, was “six feet high and proportionately made—if anything rather slender than thick for a person of that height.” The “best weight of his best days” was 220 pounds. Lin- coln was four inches taller and weighed 180 pounds, was of narrower chest and less erect. Both lived in youth much the same out-of-door life—Lincoln hav- ing the ruder existence. Both were very muscular, being the champions of sport in their respective days and localities. Both were robust in men- tal qualities as in physical strength and endurance. Both Washington and Lincoln were temperate in all things No Question About That. “Why should I boost your salary any more? I'm paying you a thousand a week now.” The danseuse executed a pirouette. “See that step?” “I see that step,” returned the man- nger, “I invented that step,” insisted the dancer. “1 know you did, cutie,” snorted the manager, shifting his cigar from left to right. “You invented that step and a lot more. But lemme tell you some- pin you need to know.” “What is that?’ she asked. “You didn’t invent dancing.” Chose His Mother's Portrait. When the collection of paintings and other art gems that adorned the St. Paul home of the late James J. Hill came to be divided among the heirs, following the death of the widow of “the empire builder,” lots were drawn to determine who should have the first choice. One of the sons, Walter J. Hill, proved the lucky one, and from the collection of master- pleces of almost fabulous value he psomptly chose the portrait of his mother. »ou we ~8- i ri : —Never hoe beans or cultivate them when the vines are wet, unless you want “rusty” plants. —Celery may be bleached by means of boards, paper or drain-tile. Earth is likely to cause decay if applied Sg ~~ -, ' when the soil or foliage is wet. —The “fore-milk”—the first few streams drawn from the cow at milk- ing time—should be thrown away, and not be allowed in the pail. It is claimed this fore-milk is full of bac- teria. —The total area of land in farms in Pennsylvania has decreased by more than a million acres during the last ten years and the number of farms in the State has fallen from about 220,000 to 200,000 according to the last census report. These facts might indicate that agriculture in Pennsylvania is on the down grade but agriculture economists at State College think differently. “Many of the farms that have been abandoned because they were unprof- itable should never have been clear- ed,” say the economists. “Forest land is all they are good for. The reduc- tion of acreage and number of farms will give to the good land and efficient farmer the returns they deserve. As proof of this statement they cite the fact that in spite of the smaller ; acreage farmed, the total production and yield per acre of the ten princi- pal crops of Pennsylvania has greatly increased during the last decade. This. they point out, is due to better live stock, more efficient machinery, and better methods of farming. “Work the good land and do it well,” is the advice of the experienced farmer. “The loss of low grade land and poor farmers from the agricul- tural industry is a hopeful sign that those who remain will make more profit and be able to live better.” —Land that is in a poor condition and unproductive is, as a rule sour. Soils become sour when the lime is being constantly leached out. In har- vesting crops lime is removed, decom- position of organic matter produces acids, and some fertilizers leave acids in the soil. Unless lime is applied to such conditions, only a few crops will thrive or give full returns for the ma- nure and fertilizer expended. The | New Jersey State College of Agricul- ture says manure, organic matter and animal fertilizers, such as tankage, must be acted on by soil bacteria be- fore their plant food becomes availa- ble. These bacteria, as well as those which supply legumes with the atmos- pheric nitrogen, are unable to work efficiently in a soil that is sour. Most clover failures are due to soil acidity and without clover soda or legume cover crops the nitrogen supply of the soil cannot be economically held under average conditions. When there is sufficient lime in the soil potash and phosphoric acid are more available. Lime lightens a stiff, clayey soil, es- pecially when applied in a caustic form, and makes light land more re- tentive of plant food. Professor Dickey says when a ton of pure limestone or shells (calcium and magnesium carbonate) is burned, about 1100 pounds of actual lime, cal- cium and magnesium oxide is left. gWhen this is slaked or “hydrated,” it takes up water until it weighs about 1350 pounds. When it becomes air- slaked it goes back to the original carbonate form. All lime quickly re- verts to carbonate in the soil so that the kind applied is important chiefly as regards physical condition and con- centration. It makes little difference in which form the lime is applied, but ground limestones or shells have only about three-fifths the strength of burned lime and two-thirds the strength of hydrated lime. Fineness in lime is desirable, but it is not necessary that it be very fine. Limestone that will not pass a 50-mesh screen requires Sms time to become entirely availa- e. The value of any form of lime de- pends on the total percentage of eal- cium and magnesium oxide (total ox- ide) contained. In buying lime it is as important to have the analysis with each shipment as in fertilizer. ; Ground limestone or oyster shell con- j tains about 50 per cent. total oxide. Hydrated lime should contain 70 to 80 per cent., and lump lime or ground burned lime about 90 per cent., of un- A adulterated with core, ashes or slaked material. : By-product limes, so-called ‘agri- cultural limes,” and lime fertilizers, such as wood ashes, should be pur- chased strictly on an analysis basis. The amount of actual lime is often very small, and the price asked is sel- dom economical. It is generally cheaper and better to buy and use lime and fertilizer separately and in standard forms. Potatoes, tomatoes, corn, buck- wheat, berries, red-top grass, carrots and watermelons are usually less de- pendent on lime than are other crops, and will grow on moderately sour soil. Almost all other crops are benefited by lime, but those most responsive are alfalfa, clover, soy beans, oats, wheat, cabbage, cauliflower, celery, beets, cucumbers, lettuce, onions, pep- pers, spinach and sweet potatoes. Ap- ply lime for the crops which will give the greatest response. In general farming the best place to put it is on land prepared for grain, in which clo- ver is to be sown. : Where plants make their tender, early growth lime should be kept in the surface soil, and never plowed un- der, as lime will be washed down, but never up. Spread it evenly, and mix thoroughly with the surface soil by harrowing. This will increase its effi- ciency by direct contact with more soil particles, and prevents caustic or hydrated lime from crusting and ce- menting together on the surface. Avoid waste. of nitrogen and organic matter by keeping lime and manure apart. well before applying lime. Lime will materially help the clovers and desir- able grasses to crowd out the sorrel and weeds which are apt to take pos- session of sour meadows and pastures. Lime promotes the development of potato scab if the disease is present, but moderate applications of hydrated lime to the vines during the season seem safe, help keep off the flea beetle and sweeten the soil for the clover, grain or clover crop to follow. Caldwell & Son BELLEFONTE, PA. By Hot Water Vapor Steam Pipeless Furnaces AND MILL SUPPLIES ALL SIZES OF Terra Cotta Pipe and Fittings Estimates Cheerfully and Promptly Furnished. 66-15-tf CHICHESTER S PILLS Ladies! Ask your Dru, t, for Files! Ak Hf Diamond Been Pills in Red and Gold m ic bores, sealed with Blue Ribbon. a Take no other. Ba Sf, He at. Ask for © S- TERS DIAGN BRAND PILLS, or $5 © years known as Best, Safest, Always Reliable SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE Fine Job Printing o0—A SPECIALTY—o AT THR WATCHMAN OFFICE. There is no atyle of work, from the cheapest “Dodger” to the finest BOOK WORK that we can not do in the most sat- isfactory manner, and at Prices consistent with the class of work. Cali. on or communicate with office. [= LT Chg Se pr received for the advertising space TELEPHONE DIRECTORY ry MABEL av! tnt Sane SNE wveeun. 8 . etsy Mvaranamuey oing to press New listings or changes of present listings should be Bell Telephone Directory before October 15th So if you are planning to move, desire your listing changed or want tory, call the Business Office at once. Place Your Advertising Now THE BELL TELEPHONE CO. OF PENNA. Up-to-date List of Subscribers rons Classified List of Advertisers next issue of the in the new direc- Full Line of Pipe and Fittings Plow down manure or harrow it in| Plumbing and Heating A New Assortment of Silverware Brass, China, Novelties e+. and Parchment Lamp Shades now on display. We invite you to look these over. F. P. Blair & Son, Jewelers and Optometrists . . . Bellefonte, Pa. 64-22-tf (AR A Thity Pel HERE ARE 26,000,000 people in the United States who have saving ac- counts. They have saved and own the vast sum of $17,300,000,000—an aver- age of $655 each. Does this money belong to the rich ? Oh, no; most of these people are in very moderate circumstances. Many of them are poor. But they realize that it is better to practice a little self-denial now, than to suffer and possibly be humiliated later on. You one of These Wise Ones ? JER The First National Bank Bellefonte, Pa. 61-46 Sf SREFSER — od SMa oS] Variety and Value the Watchwords in Fauble’s Opening Display of Fall Merchandise — SSRs = 3 San Sh STEHT Ef SE] S11 {i This store stands on the threshold of a New Season with but One Desire—to be of more service to more men than any other season in our career. CUE Aon SSA Yes—America is prosperous—that’s true. Cl [= Merchants are optimistic—that’s finc. CE But here’s a store that is pessimistic enough to know that all the fine goods in the world will not move unless there’s genuine value behind them. aE Se Rear) Sh This stock of fine, bright, new goods was bought not for ourselves—but for you—and to put them into your homes we have used prices that will make you feel at home and trade at home— here. HE CASAS Sf He SH Le To-day then, please note that instead of saying we are ready to show the goods we prefer to put it—we are here to show not only the new crea- tions in varieties but also a new code in Values. SSA — p— So SASS SASSER SAS The Opening starts today---we invite you and yours, be- lieving that, we can be of service to both. ~~ A.Fauble A Fe a aa a Ee TF Te uch ans DELLS RRR