A SB Bellefonte, Pa., September 4, 1925. SC NOCTURNE. By Rebecca Pugh Lyon. The sun at length has sunk to rest Beneath the mountain's western crest, And softly on the quiet town The shades of night are stealing down. From gardens fair the perfumed breeze ‘With warm caresses stirs the trees ‘Whose amorous boughs extend and meet In arches high above the street. From curving brow of Nittany far Ascends the moon in silver car. How swift her flight through starry skies While under her in beauty lies Hill and valley, town and stream, Bathed in magic, pale as dream. The hour grows late, the silence sweet Scarce broken is by passing feet. O lovely night, thy beauty rare With faery glamor fills the air And as through dewey, misty veil The moonbeams soft and glowing trail, And clear and slow the town clock’s bell Reluctant tolls the twelve hours knell, I yield my spirit to the sway Of dreaming fancy’s idle play, And, as from stem the petals torn Are scattered far by summer storm, So emotions long repressed With tender power possess my breast. With beating heart I venture in To memory’s corridors so dim, A mirror fair invites my gaze And lo! as through a luminous haze Appears with all their wonted grace The courteous, low-voiced gentle race, Like harmonies that soft and low The sweetest anguish can bestow, Or thrilling, faint ethereal chimes Seem vanished forms of olden times. Ah, fragrant charm of days of yore, Charm that, alas! I see no more. O’er recollections fond I sigh And weep for days long since gone by. The hour has passed, the swelling tide Of feeling must not long abide, Nor dark regret her shadow cast On hallowed memories of the past. So swiftly wings old time his flight That soon Aurora, fresh and bright, Will tint the east with rosy glow And drowsy zephyrs wake to blow From summer hills their greetings fair All scented on the morning air. Farewell dear night, so cool, so still! The birds now wake with sleepy trill And nature’s voice salutes the dawn, Exhaling sweet the breath of morn. THE ROMANCE OF PETROLEUM. I have just written an article for a well-known literary journal in which I make the pertinent inquiry, “Why have writers of modern fiction over- looked the oil industry as a vast store- house of action and romance?” My own conclusion is that the oil industry has never had a press agent. No other industry seems to be so ut- terly steeped in mystery. Ask the or- dinary person who discovered gold in California, and you will receive not only names and places, but exact dates. Inquire who invented the cotton gin, who made the first steamboat, or who constructed the first working model of a telegraph, and you will be assured of a very intelligent answer. But, should you ask who drilled the first oil well, your question will remain un- answered. Yet today the total sum invested in oil industries is more vast than a combination of the capital in the lines of business mentioned above. And the drilling of the first oil well dates only a half-century back. Today this oil industry is almost world-wide, and covers a scope of ter- ritory from Pennsylvania to Califor- nia and from New York to Texas. Russia, Rumania, South America, In- dia, China, Japan and Canada all boast of their oil fields, and are daily ad- ding their quota of products to the commerce of the world. Heat, light, power, and lubrication are necessary to the world and petroleum has given the world all of these. The discovery of crude oil or petro- leum and the subsequent development of it is full of romance and action. In northwestern Pennsylvania there is a stream called Oil Creek, having along its banks many “oil” springs or springs through which a small amount of oil finds its way, by seepage, to the | creek. At times the surface of the Tater is covered with a thin scum of oil. In 1629, Joseph de la Roche d’Allion came down this stream in charge of an exploring expedition sent out from Quebec by the French. He observed the scum of oil on the water, and made a brief note of it in his report to his suparior officers. In 1721, Captain de Joincaire, Lieu- tenant Raoul de Lingry, and a Jesuit priest and party arrived, very much fatigued by forced marching over very rough ground, and with a majority of the soldiers suffering greatly from foot-sores. So serious was the condi- tion of some of the soldiers that Cap- tain de Joincaire announced his inten- tion of resting here a few days to al- low time for his men to recuperate. Along the bank of the creek they met the friendly Seneca Indians, who gave the soldiers vessels filled with oil they had collected on the creek by means of dipping blankets on the surface and wringing them out. On the advice of the Indians the soldiers washed their sores in the oil. Captain de Joincaire records that his men were so marvel- ously cured that they were enabled to start on the march the very next day. In 1750, General Montcalm and a small army made an expedition into this territory with a view to promot- ing friendly relations with the Sene- ca Indians. While they were camped here, the Indians presented him with a very startling spectacle. The waters of the creek were thickly coated with a scum of oil, and one night at a gath- ering of tribes for conference with General Montcalm a lighted torch was thrown into the water. The oil caught fire, and great leaping flames covered the surface of the stream for miles. It must have been a weird and wonderful sight, and itis certain that it impressed the General with great thoughts. On my desk at this moment is a copy of the report of this expedition as given by General Montcalm to the commander of Ft, Duquesne, In this da report the General gives what he in- sists is conclusive evidence that he has found in the Senecas a rival of the fire-worshippers of the East! It was many years before any ef- fort was made to make commercial use of the seepage from these springs or to increase the flow of oil. Many small towns and villages came into being through the untiring efforts of sturdy pioneers. and fearless women hewed out a sem- blance of civilization in the hills. At Tarentum several artesian wells were bored to a depth of four hun- dred feet to a vein of salt water, This water was evaporated; and the pro- duct, a sort of crude commercial salt, found a ready market among the ear- ly settlers. The owners of these wells complained heartily of greasy fluid that sometimes accompanied the flow of water and in the evaporation spoil- ed the flavor of the salt. At times this flow of oil was so great that the owners of the wells moved away in disgust. . : In 1848, Samuel M. Kier, a druggist of Pittsburgh, traveled out to see these wells, and investigated these wells and the oil which came from them. He found the oil to be of the same quality as was found on Oil Creek. Before returning to Pitts- burgh he made a deal with the own- ers of the salt wells, and they joyfuliy agreed to sell for a nominal price all of the oil that they could collect. With the arrival of the first supply Kier caused it to be bottled in half- pint containers, with a label on which was a wood-cut of a derrick used in drilling artesian wells. This label re- sembled a four hundred dollar bill, and laid great stress on the fact that the fluid came from four hundred feet under the surface of the earth. This label appears to have played a leading part in the coming discovery of crude oil by boring a hole to the producing oil sand. This product was peddled as a med- icine under the name of Kier’s petro- leum by men covering the country by driving in large gilded and brightly painted wagons. The circulars de- signed by Kier and widely distribut- ed at this time made great claims for the medicinal value of petroleum, and evidence was presented indicating cures of rheumatism, gout, and sun- dry ills and pains. For some time Kier enjoyed an unusual prosperity due to this; and, being of a very pro- gressive mind, he spent much time and money experimenting with petroleum as a lubricant and illuminant. Lack of knowledge of chemistry seriously handicapped him, and he traveled to Philadelphia to consult a chemist, who advised distillation. By working on this principle a fluid of the color of cider was produced, but it was found that it burned with considerable smoke and a residue of carbon. Kier now devoted months to producing a burner that would use his product, and at last made a crude burner with four prongs and holes for air, which would burn the fluid and make a bright light with no smoke. His new product, called “carbon” oil, produced a white and steady light, and found a ready market, but did not furnish any remarkable monetary returns, as there was a distinct scarcity of the raw product; and Kier died a comparative- ly poor man, not realizing the remark- able influence his product would have in the future. Meantime, New York capitalists had heard of the product, and investigat- ed with a view to investing if the ven- ture was practical. A combination of New York and New Haven capitalists in 1854 became interested in the oil- springs near the village of Titusville on Oil Creek, and after investigations and a considerable period of financing formed a company, operating under the name of the Pennsylvania Rock- Oil company, whose purpose was to market the oil saved from the oil springs on Oil Creek. Plans were made for installing devices for saving us great a proportion of the oil as pos- sible. But even with the improve- ments it was found that the supply was so limited that the investment did not pay. Mr. George H. Bissell, an attorney, of New York city, was president of the concern, and spent much time and reflection on ways and means of in- creasing the flow of oil from the springs. One day in the summer of 1856 he stepped into a Broadway druggist to make a purchase. He no- ticed a bottle of Kier’s petroleum on the counter, and upon invitation of the druggist took it home. Bissell exam- ined the label with the picture of the derrick, and noted the fact that the oil came from four hundred feet un- der the surface of the earth. He be- came convinced that the only practic- al method of increasing the flow of oil in their springs was to bore a hole in the ground. Filled with this idea, Bissell was more than a year in convincing his business associates, and in December of 1857, Edwin L. Drake, of New Ha- ven, was sent to the village of Titus- ville to take charge of operations, and was ordered to bore a well at the site of the largest spring on the Watson farm. Drake was beset from the first with numerous difficulties. He found that it was impossible to secure tools at the few small stores in the village, and he was forced to drive over rough roads a distance of eighteen miles to buy even a shovel or pick. Further to his embarrassment, the company un- derwent a re-organization, and did not deluge him with funds for operating expenses, and further expressed them- selves as frankly skeptical to the out- come of the idea. : Nearly a year was spent in trying to secure a practical borer of wells from the Tarentum salt-fields, but at last Drake succeeded. Work was immediately started, and from the very first it was a hard fight against nature. Machinery came only after long delays, and the erection of the crude derrick was a matter of weeks, A majority of the tools need- ed could not be purchased at any price, but were fashioned at a local forge in the village. Few people in the village believed in the new venture, and the majority scoffed, and treated the whole thing as some sort of swindle. Drake was very often laughed at in those days, but in the face of all ad- versity he maintained a high courage and tenacity of purpose that was re- In time hardy men ' markable under the circumstances. A few feet under the surface of the ground the tools struck a vein of quicksand against which no headway could be as in incerasing the depth of the hole. Work was carried on for some time; and, as no material prog- ress was made, Drake suggested that an iron’ tube be driven through the quicksand to the solid rock. This en- tailed an immense amount of labor, but proved effectual, andisa guiding Seinciple in the drilling of oil wells to- ay. The capitalists in New York, dis- gusted with the slow and expensive progress being made, refused to ad- vance further funds to Drake. Noth- ing daunted, Drake used his own mon- ey until it was exhausted. Now came a very dark period for Drake, for he was entirely without funds; but in some way he managed to convince two merchants of the village of his sincer- ity, and secured their endorsement on his note for money to complete the venture. By the last of August, 1859, the well had reached a depth of only six- ty-nine feet; and on Saturday when the men quit work they were feeling very discouraged, as no trace of oil had been found. On Sunday, August 30, 1859, one of the men employed on the well went there, and discovered that the hole was nearly full of oil. In a very short time the news spread to the village, and great ex- citement was the result. Drake was vindicated; the problem of ages had been solved; and petroleum was launched on its astonishing career, Property values increased; stran- gers came to the village in such num- bers that the place rapidly became a busy and bustling city. Many new and large flowing wells were drilled, and fortunes were made over night. Investors and adventurers came by the thousand to the new El Dorado, and with the constant drilling of new wells the vein was traced over a large tract of territory in Pennsylvania. A large flowing well was struck at Pit- hole, where there were a few poor and struggling farms. In a little more than a month the village became a large city with two railroads, daily papers, hotels, thea- tres, fire department, water works, and all of the advantages and im- provements of a eity in those times. In volume of mail handled, it was the third largest in the State. As is usual in boom towns, vice held the cityinits grasp. For nearly two years the attention of the whole coun- try was directed to this city. One farmer, living near there, sold his oil interests, and, not believing in banks, kept more than a quarter of a million dollars in a small safe. One night this safe was broken into, and nearly the whole sum was taken; and today in police circles the Benning- hoff robbery is spoken of as the larg- est of its kind. The price of oil ranged from fifty cents to thirteen dollars a barrel dur- ing this period; and, as each large well was drilled, a corresponding in- crease in the value of adjacent land became so great that farmers whose land normally was worth only a few dollars an acre could scarcely believe it when they were offered hundreds of thousands of dollars for their land. At the end of two years, coincident with a decided decrease in the produc- tion of oil, the little city was burned down and has never been rebuilt. Today the site of this remarkable village is evident only by the rows of empty cellars that mark where the streets were; the unused grades for the water-works are still there. The only remaining building of the orig- inal town is a church which is still used on occasion by the scant dozen of farmers now living there. The excitement moved to other places, which lived for a brief space in the manner of Pit Hole City and whose names are highly suggestive— Cash Up, Pioneer, Red Hot, Oil City, Sodom, and Enterprise. It was in this manner that the greatest of our national industries was launched on its career. Today there are hundreds of billions of dol- lars invested in oil properties and, were it not for the agency of oil and its products, more than ninety-eight per cent. of the industry of this coun- try would not be able to operate for lack of lubrication, light, heat, and motive power, For more than half a century the site of the original Drake well has never been marked by a monument to show it as a place of great historical interest. A few years ago the chap- ter of the Daughters of the American Revolution of Titusville raised a fund, and erected on the site a large and imposing stone, entirely unmarked by chisel. It is a native stone, and came from the hills near the well, and in its bulk and solidity represents in a sub- tle and suggestive manner the strength and character, untiring en- ergy, and steadfast purpose of the man who took the first steps which led to the discovery to which we owe so much of our present civilization.— Harry Botsford, in Christian Endeav- or World. ete fpf: A Salesman. Thinking to save money a jeweler discharged his regular salesman and hired an inexperienced boy. One day when he returned from lunch he said, “Well, Frank, did you sell anything while I was out?” Yes, sir. I sold five plain band rings. Fine, my boy, fine! said the jeweler enthusiastically. We’ll make a sales- man out of you one of these days. You got the regular price for them, of course ? Oh, yes, sir. The price stamped on the insde was 18c. and the man tock all that were left, sir.—Boston Trans-: script. She Didn’t Think So. My sister is awfully lucky, said one little boy to another. She went to a party last night where they played a game in which the men either had to kiss a girl or pay a forfeit of a box of chocolates. Well, how was your sister lucky ? She came home with 13 boxes of chocolates.—Everybody’s Magazine. —Subscribe for the “Watchman.” ing the winter months for the pur- IMPORTANT GAME LAW CHANG- ES—1925 LEGISLATURE. The 1925 Legislature made compar- atively few changes in the game laws, but some of them strengthen the game code very materially. One of the most important changes, the result of a conference between land-owners and sportsmen, it is believed will make it possible for the Board of Game Com- missioners to reduce game depreda- tions on private property, thereby eliminating a sourcce of much contro- versy in future sessions of the Legis- lature. Another amendment will make possible the creation of many more refuges, particularly for small game; and a third protects “spike” bucks and baby bears. A summary of important changes follows: 1. To relieve game depredations, and place proper game administrative power in the hands of the Board, the Game Commission is given power to demove game, open seasons or extend seasons; or to save game that has suf- fered from severe winters or bad breeding seasons from extermination, the Board may close or reduce sea- : sons as necessary. 2. The law permitting land-own- ers to protect their property from game depredations is clarified and re- quirements clearly stated. Game kili- ed as a protection to property must be sent to a charitable institution, ex- cept where depredations from game become too serious the Board may permit land-owners to retain the car- casses of deer and bears for food. The penalty for failure to comply with the provisions of this law is more specific than heretofore. 3. The fifty-fifty deer-proof fence | law was amended to provide an alter- | nate plan under which the Board may |! furnish the wire and staples, and the land-owner furnish the posts and erect the fence, principally for the protec- tion of the small land-owner. 4. Special licenses to hunt deer in a section where an extra season is de- clared by the Board because deer are too plentiful are reduced from $5.00 to $2.00, and farmers may secure such licenses without charge to hunt on their own lands within territory opened by the Board. 5. Persons killing game or fur- bearing animals by mistake, under certain conditions, may now have re- turned to them one-half instead of one-fourth of the penalty prescribed by law, if reported immediately. 6. No male deer may hereafter be killed with less than two points to one antler; baby bears are absolutely pro- tected during their first year; the bear season opens November 10 in- stead of November 1; and the raccoon season closes January 15. 7. The only bag limit change was a reduction in the season limit on rab- bits from forty to thirty; and the es- tablishment of state bag limits on | wild ducks of fifteen per day and six- | ty per season, and wild geese and brant of five each per day and thirty each per season. 8. The auxiliary game refuge law has been simplified, and with proper | co-operation it should now be possible for the Board to establish many more | | i i | i than two hundred auxiliary game ref- | uges, as contemplated in their pro- |. gram. Refuge agreements may now | be cancelled under certain conditions | within sixty days; the minimum dis- tance between refuges is two miles; ! and any suitable lands may be used | for auxiliary refuge and public hunt- ing ground purposes without interfer- i ence with the operation of such lands | for all other purposes. Pennsylvania | should have considerably more than | two hundred of these auxiliary game | refuges. 9. Special protection is accorded | dogs used under permits, which the Board may issue without charge, dur- pose of destroying foxes and wild cats to protect game. BOARD OF GAME COMMISSIONERS, SETH E. GORDON, Executive Secy. Peaches From Africa South Africa has recently been sending peaches to England in rather large quantities, and a few are find- ing their way to this country by way of novelty. It is no doubt &ue to the facility of raising the peach from the stone that it has spread to so many countries, and to such a num- ber of varieties. Wherever it has gone it has taken a foremost place in popularity, especially among epi- cureans, such as the Romans, who, it may Le gathered from Pliny, in- troduced it from Persia and assoclat- ed its name with that country—Per- sica. It has been grown in England since the middle of the Sixteenth cen- tury, but climatic conditions are gen- erally against it for outdoor culture, and has forced growers to resort to glass. Wedding Rings That Lie Jewelers in many towns in the United States report that wedding rings are losing their significance; that is tc say, a wedding ring on the finger of a girl is ceasing to be a sure sign that she 1% married. Hundreds of girls are buying cheap wedding rings, according te the jew- elers, some because they believe the ring will make them more attractive to men, and others because they be- lieve wedding rings offer girls protec- tion against men. Engagement rings also are selling in great numbers, presumably owing to a desire on the part of girls to prove they are sought after by one man at least. Sprinkle Lawn to Music | Musical lawn sprinklers are becom- ing popular in Boston suburbs. House: holders hitch sleighbells and similar chimes to the whirligiz which spins the water. Experimenters have en- joyed considerable rivalry in their tonal effects and have amused the children with a brand new toy. Inci- dentally, claim the inventors of the bell stunt, Ms jingle reminds them not to go away or to bed with the water unintentionally left running. Early Ship Lanterns Valued by Collectors One of the phases of the present vogue for collecting anything connect- ed with the old-time ships is that of earnestly seeking their lanterns or lamps, and very interesting and decora- tive, with the right surroundings, many of them are. Numerous lamps are traded as ship's lanterns which never went to sea, says Capt. E. A. McCann in the Antiquarian, New York. If, however, it is a good- looking lamp and the owner is pleased with it, its history is perhaps not so very important, but if one wishes to be sure of the right nautical flavor, some recaution is necessary, Ar intimate knowledge of ships and their ways is the best method of dis- criminating; but as a general index it may be stated that, to circumvent the uneasy motion of a vessel at sea, every ship lamp is built, either to swing from a handle or ring, or to se curely fasten by the back, or, occasion: ally, by the base; within these limits there are many types. The very earliest ship lanterns were metal cages erected in some prominent part of the ship, as a rule over the stern, into which some combustible, such as tow and resin, could be ignited to give warning to another ship and avert cuilision. This, in fact, is the only purpose, for exterior lights to this day, and they are carefully screened 80 as not to shine aboard, because any , light on the deck is only a nuisance; so far as navigation is concerned, and even on the brilliantly lit modern | steamship it may be noticed that all lights are screened from the bridge. The frigates and ships-of-the-line which followed in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth centuries had very similar. ly designed lanterns, only more elab- orate in their ornamentation and care- ful in construction. Any of these are, however, almost impossible to obtain, and are more suited to museums than to domestic use. Those vessels would also use cabin, gun-deck and other hand-lan- terns, which again are extremely rare, though very desirable, Italy’s New Air Service it is announced semi-officially that within the coming months Italy is to have its first regular civilian air traf- fic. Four lines are now decided upon —from Rome to Barcelona, Turin to Trieste, Trieste to Venice and Brindisi to Constantinople via Saloniki. It is not announced what subsidy will be supplied by the state, but it is taken for granted that a large subsidy will be necessary. Italy feels she has been backward in civil aviation. The news- paper Epoca says that when the fascist government came into power it found that the mechanical equipment of the aviation department consisted chiefly of typewriters. Now, it feels, Italy | will be able to take her place on a basis of equality with Germany, France and England.. Meanwhile Italy . has consistently rejected offers of foreign companies to extend their air service to Italy. Such international lines will now be permitted, it is stated, but only if Italy retains the predominant part of the traffic. In Buddy’s Family Buddy is a very little boy living in a city in northeastern Indiana. Al- though he is only three years old, his sayings are sometimes very eloquent. Buddy, like many other little boys, is sometimes naughty and he is some- times punished. A few days ago he was visiting a’, the home of one of his little girl playwates. This girl was an only child and aithough she was some- times naughty sh: was not punished very many times. She was, at the time of Buddy’s visit, exceptionally bad and her mother wishing to quiet her said to Buddy, “Marjorie is naughty today, isn’t she Buddy?” “Uh huh; if she was one of my mother’s children she would get a whippin’,” said Buddy knowingly.—Indiznapolis News. $50,000 Radio Story Aere is a prize radio story told te €ric H. Palmer on his visit in connec- tion with his radio exploration tour of the country. According to a San Fran- cisco dealer, he was asked to ship a receiver with full equipment, including a power amplifier and a score of extra tubes, to China. Asking the purchaser how much he expected to hear in China, the dealer was told: “Oh, I don’t expect to get much broadcasting out there, but I've Zot to do something evenings. I've been play- ing poker and mah-jongg and what not and losing $200 to $1,000 nightly and I just can’t stop, but if I get the ‘listening-in’ habit I'll be about $25, 000 to $50,000 ahead in about a year, the way my luck’s going, and I'll be having more fun besides.” Almonds in Demand An indicated increase in the pro duction of almonds in the United States has led to a study by the bu- reau of plant industry of the possible utilization of certain varieties of do- mestic almonds in the manufacture of food products. The domestic crop is at present largely consumed in the un- shelled nut trade, while the large quantity of nuts required for such products as almond bars and almond paste is supplied principally from European sources.—New York Ties. Population Estimate The popalation of the United States is now nearly 114,400,000, according to estimates by the National Bureau of Economic Research. This, accord- ing to the bureau, indicates that our growth in this respect is slowing down. : , ful of salt, ‘and corn cobs. { keeping in the same direction. ER SUGGESTIVE CONTRASTS IN COUNTY TAX COLLECTION COSTS IN PENNSYLVANIA. Philadelphia collects all of her taxes for about $400,000 a year. Based on the population according to the latest census, this means that Philadelphia collects taxes at the rate of $219 for each 1,000 population. Allegheny county’s estimated annu- al cost for collecting all taxes is about $625,000, although, according to the same census, the population is up- wards of 600,000 fewer than Philadel- phia’s. Thus the collection cost in Al- legheny county is $527 per 1,000 of population, according to one compu- tation. It costs Allegheny county, which in- cludes Pittsburgh, more than twice as much in proportion to population to collect taxes in the county as it does in Philadelphia. This big difference exists despite comparatively the same favoratle facilities for easy collec- on. Fayette county’s cost for collecting all taxes, according to reputable bus- ness men of the county, is about $250,000 a year. Thus, although hav- ing only about one-tenth of the popu- lation of Philadelphia county, which is the same as the city of Philadelphia, Fayette’s tax payers have to pay nearly as much in the aggregate for collection as do Philadelphia’s tax- payers. The cost per 1,000 of population in Fayette county is about $1,329. It costs Fayette county six times as much as it does in Philadelphia, in proportion to population. _ Delaware county’s cost of collec- tion, per 1,000 of population and bas- ed on the very lowest possible esti- mate, is more than three times the Philadelphia cost per 1,000 Montgoirery county’s tax payers, likewise, have to pay, per 1,000 of population, at the very least, more than three times the Philadelphia cost per 1,000. Complete surveys would undoubted- ly show that the differences between the Delaware and Montgomery coun- ty costs and the Philadelphia costs are yen greater than are here indi- cated. Luzerne county pays upwards of $337,000 a year to collect taxes. The cost per 1,000 of population, therefore, is at least $862, or about four times the Philadelphia cost per 1,000. There is one township in the State (undoubtedly there are many others), where the cost of collection, per 1,000 of population, is $1,000, or nearly five times the Philadelphia rate. It would be much cheaper to collect in a small, compact township than in a large city. Chester county, according to one es- ‘timate, appears to pay at least three times the Philadelphia cost per 1,000 of population. For the fiscal year 1923-24, it cost tax payers $1,867,129 to collect $104,- 536,327 in school taxes. In addition, tax payers had to pay also for the col- lection of the following local and county taxes: For poor taxes, road taxes, city taxes, county taxes, town- ship taxes and borough taxes. Therefore it is probable that the cost of collecting all these county and local taxes throughout the State is be- tween $4,000,000 and $5,000,000 a year. ; A more efficient plan of collection would save tax payers at least $3,- 000,000 a year in unnecessary over- head. It costs $17 to collect every $1,000 of school taxes in Pennsylvania. Ohio collects all taxes for $4.06 per $1,000 of taxes. : Pennsylvania pays four times as much for collecting school taxes alone as Ohio and a number of other com- parable States pay for collecting all taxes. Steeple “Dressing Up” School Grounds De- lights Eye. Town pride, enthusiasm, and co-op- eration can accomplish wonders in beautifying public grounds. Tanners- ville, in Monroe county, has one of the most beautiful and complete public landscape projects in swing in the whole State. J. R. Bracken, landscape gardening extension specialist of The Pennsylvania State College, is the ° guiding spirit. Behind it all looms real town pride and enthusiasm on the part of the school board, which decid- ed on the beautification in front of the new consolidated school. The school board has torn out brush and part of the foundations of an old tannery, installed pipes for draining the surface water, effected a shade tree and plaza approach to the build- ing, all in natural settings, with wa- ter prominent in the scene. There is a handsome concrete walk, with two curves, at the front of the school. Native rhododendron and other growths will make beautiful much of the large space before the school. The plants will be secured near at hand. Of particularly delightful beauty is the bridge walk, on either side of which there are two small lakes. The water is not dangerously deep in either one. Study will be given to water plants and settings for this part of the scene. A New Political Dodge in Walker Township. A Hublersburg correspondent writes the “Watchman” to the effect that the Republican bosses down that way have a new method of getting their voters home for election day. He writes that “they take a hand- go out on a lawn, walk around a stump or stone three times, Then they place the salt on the stone or stump and hide. When ‘the voter comes home to lick the salt they catch him and give him a sumptuous meal of the goodies from silos, hay loaders After whieh he is ready to do anything he is told.” ——Get the Watchman if you want the local news.