whe VARIETIES AND PLANTING. Newer kinds of potatoes are intro- duced every year, and many experi- ments have been conducted at the sey- eral stations with the view of discov. ering remediés for diseases, modes of planting characteristics of and varieties, etc, much valuable sominated every year, Government bulletins is was that the best soil for potatoes rich, saady loam, well drained which abundantly supplied with vegetable matter. Green manures and fertilizers are consequently very suitable for a crop. It better not to grow potatoes on the same land every year but alternate with crops. Fertilizer should to the previous crop, rather than on the potato land. The preparation of the land should be deep and thorough, and the fertilizers consist of nitrate of soda, sup:rphoapbate and sulphate potash Planting depends on the climate, but be done, if pos sible, bring the period when the average rainfall is ample On mellow from three to five inches deep Is best for 1E, ially if the but on eailier crops, or in depth may be fore I ture has given may be cut a ing without inj has iroved superior in section The seed end are e first to ate hence are best for an early The panting bud rally great from the stem butt Expos a4 warm p.ace growth, but if contin form | yield may It into uniform nite numbe indiscriminat or thr for each pilec seed In one of the is is be of should $0 as to sol! p lant dry, that Harrow "He up £8 Dex season is bake, tne be- . ta 2018S well less level cul the best results. Seed plant- gland that oa germin the plants are as days before and New En to eyes ew ary, sead grown the crop sped or than the from gen en er | i ing routed ¥ fore plantin sprout off) which is better ea ave A COMFORTABLE COOP. to provide sul able with brood fous is the colle for enclosing the mother hen half barrel upright wi staves on i it to al to run out and boxes of num : erous Kindas, quarters the hen } Various tion of contrivan Empty th alternate and 8 8 ae one low chicks shaped ops and devices are in use, Sometimes the hea is | find any shelt that can. A coop two feet square two feet high in front, one and one half feet the back with a single pitch roof produces a safe and econ- omical home mother hen asu her little flo the coop has a siatt wit ting A sh be of other she ront of or a frame inch mesh wire hinged at ting and during fastened for door net. top may front bad covered sere i the provided the $01 rote at night weather, may be hading front coop when To. sunshine is too If cats hawks likely to disturd the ci ens a connectin at oae or Coop, high, or jong, wire net and exc 3oth coop and yard- rame should made of light lam- ber 80 as to be readily moved to fresh ground. They must be placed where the chi can Keep dry under foot An excellent plan place coops for hens near togethen, ting the chicks fatermingie from first. —John M. Kester, in The Epit. omist, the coop of the hot or yarc one six feet with bot two en ting ude sides of the foot wide and closed and will keep their enemie three covered the HE in alcks he Ya HS is to gaveral % the ¥ SHALLOW PLOWING The finer the condition of the #ofl the easier facilities allowed the plants for feeding, and the greater the feeding room the of roots, which are essential times of drought and lack to say nothing of the vigorous growth DEEP AND the the i give & the breeders tion to great deal of atten charactepy of the ear and grain, and these are Important points But the breeding of any piant that looks simply to the improvement of a single feature of the plant can never be successful as one that takes the whole plant into consideration In breeding corn one must know what his particular section needs. Ii he in the region of short AORAOT and early frost, he must take earli ness of plant into serious con sideration, as well as {ts productive If ha is in the South where he vari ation and is the Ness ot ¥ of only its produ t corn, he need give ‘ter of the att to tha charac plant WVYeness FIND CALVES NOW People in buying a place will one without a spring to keep their milk in: they make no prep aration for it he winter. It fre Zes not as the strippings hot place re fuse yet int or it happens: and k¢ and churn in a churn for two or three hours ai g<t a white puffy ter. They let the ¢ ing and wonder how I caa } and mil our cow August winter: ep mass they cal hildren do the ive In the first calf in J is good kK all winter. finds and ther then er other reparation he crop horse more thing largely ’ the fills hard soil and iz ann of winter of the poor The gull due to past, The with water and and a nual en large We need dees to enable {it the and prevent rmer FARM NOTES cting a good milker the ud large and capa not only be fleshy broad and reach well belo w anil water for droughts Pre ri crop Tn and gressive Fi ious it for a | 3 should be he extent, and the a very considerable on consequent profitableness of flocks Uusually it is not good economy to turn the lied in the all They will rarely the rest they need from the work during pastures secures son of its greater root surface controversies regarding deep and shal: low plowing would perhaps find an soil and method of plowing were con- sidered in exact relation to each other There ia no feed that is more di gestible than gluton food. but if too is fed it makes soft butter From two to four pounds a day may be fed without fear of this Wait until there is falr bite of grass and then give them two hours a day on pas ture for a few days, with good clover It is better to cut seed potatoes # in ing highly clay soils, were permitted larger quantity of soll for food, also to more easily procure moisture from below as tion of moisture by the soil. highly advantagable especially lishment of a greater mass of roots near the surface while the porocity of the soil and its light nature enable the corn to go downward as easily as may be desired, BREEDING CORN. Much has been sald and written of late In regard to the improvement of corn by selection of seed, and there is mo doubt that by proper breeding the corn can be greatly Increased in- dependently of the improvement of the soll. Rut both should go hand in band. Most of the socalled corn Sa dry. It is also a good plan to ex. few days before Success or failure season depends upon nights now passing Don't forget lime and gravel. Both Are necessary in the poultry yard Be sure of clean water for the chicks and keep their roosting places clean. Feed coops are very necessary to planting. of the poultry the days aad When a polar bear is killed by an Eskimo, #t Is customary to cut off the animal's nose and throw it on the lee. If he failed to do this, it is the popular belief that he would have bad luck. This is the reason why nearly all the skins of polar bears are mutilated at the point about the snout. A Japanese private soldier is paid 70 cents a month; a major general is nald $121 a month. i i 3 i % 1 ! i “Don’t Marry Through Pity.” By Beatrice Fairfax, T has been sald, “Of all the paths that lead to a woman's love, pity's the straightest” This may be true as regards maternal, platonic, or protective but It Is in to the love a woman feels for the man who Is to her the one man of all the world. Pity arouses all love, aot* true respact that is best in woman, tenderness, gentleness sympathy; but I doubt if many women fall in love through »ity. They geaerally fall -in love because they can't he.p themselves—because some force stronger than they compels them To really love a man a woman must every way; when ashe pities him she at : A woman sometimes marries a man through pity; persuade 8 hersell loves him: that he needs her, aad that she can be of service to him The love that many women feal I« their fiusbands is of materna order. and of its kind it iz a very good love; but it is not the highest deep w1 love, the love which glorifies the whole earth simply because two people dwell on it. A certain ment of pity the forerunner. With half fierce protectiveness and w Some women marry through pity and be loved Marriages of this kind are as pi must give as well as take Pity is a beautiful quality, slumber {8 a strange anomaly Of course there are exceptions to every to love, We hear of hospital nurse. falling nursed through serious lliness Their stirred, and they have grown to thelr patients because it has taken and thrived in adverse These is only one thing to marry fo. HE pity for love. Do think because you rey for a marry him and live happily with The very thing that may be the stumbling block to your happiness To pity a person is to acknowledge u certain when the pity wears out it is quite likely that the love thal wear out, too.—New York Journal! - &F &F && Raising Squabs For Market. By K.V.S country that he is st longer than she 12 once assumes the ading part feoal ghe 3 the is the of love, mingles in all love, but it rasuit : love comes a passion of tenderness that is half holly love age thy ¥ LY ETOwWS el not real ity, ais Pi with being and love onous, are in monot 163% skv love Fisyy,. } and the woman in whose breast it does 06s occasion: sn whom rule, and in nity pity love with mi and sympathy have This is apt to circumstan Do not man that garous lead have k love ove es mist You your root the most . ake Can pity % and that 8OTTY ove a0 feo! “8 him from it nt a of fal Brew re amon and will he mast increase woman who 3 nothing 30 good and easy good Biraw box, an salt estimated as they a dozen Western America vs. Eastern Asia. By H. W, fcott. developmen oth in He ICRA ang In «ffecting great toa do a esr est ang y aac i : 31 : an i Sam on the than fifty and Washis i steamers and sails ish Columbia and ports movement. It fuscia 14 on the atest of o by railway acre America’ to from West lo East over the Atlant Everytl favors the growth There is development which, within active ‘hegtre America The except across the Atlantic, Pacific, waich o effe additional factor, in the commerce of 0 = The Necessity for Content in Work. By President Charles W. Eliot. HE winning of satisfaction and content fa dally work is the most fundamental of all objects for an industrial democracy. Unless nt can be habitually won on an immense this satisfaction and cont: scale, the hopes and ideals of democracy cannot be realized Therefore, joy in work should be (he all-pervading subject of the industrial discussion; for it is at once motive, guide, and goal It is only in the less skiifull employments of mankind, which are also the commonest that any question arises concerning the possibility of satisfaction and content ia dally work Ail the nobler employments give much pleasure. Every professional man, every business man, and, indeed every person in whose occupation there is free competitive play for and judgment, takes pleasure, or joy, or satisfaction in his daily work; interest in his work does Pa in wing fleet Bet New Zealand al mmerce betwe eans, b arries also 8 heavy Stat os sete he : ¥ ETY Asia, rails, al only 1 To PY # > 4 border ent VE 3 an commerce to ernaliona; ¢ rival that on 8 now vOrY large mmer mng promise the of proportions Pacific the Atlanti For the Asia and western ore RCATCe at all In communication diy veloping an intercourse over rmation. or at least to become a great the world. —The Century. = % of ¢ on the next half- entury the world's ort eastern two hemispt ETON, roto? # are now rapi large tranafo the : » i% X and his not depend principaily on the amount of pay he receives for it. He gets from it a large satisfaction independent of snd in addition to, its pecuniary returas. Tie rial question, then, is whether the satisfactions of the higher employments can be measurably obtained In the lower. On the right solution of this problem depends the whole future of the induatrial democracy; for there can be no public happiness without content and Satisfaction from t the daily \ work : of the masses of mankind. —World's Work bie i a —— “he Claims of the Individual. A Wonderful Jewel, The most extraordinary pearl—or rather clusters of pearls—known as “The Southern Cross,” ls owned by a syndicate of Australian gentlemen, who value it at $500,000, So far as is known it occupies an absolute po. sition. It consists of nine pearls, na. turally grown together in so regular & manner as to form a perfect Latin cross. The pearl was discovered by a pearlfisher at Roebourne, West Australia. The first owner regarded it with so much superstition that he buried it; but it was discovered in 1874, and five years later waw placed on exhibition a Australia. —~Detrol’ News Tribune, ———————— It 1s one of the confusing elements of madern society that anarchism, so. cialism, science, and free thought are producing heroes and martyrs to set beside those of the definitely relig fous sects. There is apparently no school of thought or ethics with a monopoly of holiness. Bomewhere in the mean of all these conflicting theo- ries lies the germ of truth fitted for mortal understanding, but mean time individualism is unquestionably safe in its assertion that no society, no oragnization, no consolidation what: soever 1s nobler than the Individuals that compose it, and that the devel. opment of the individual, pot by the stunting processes of fear, but by the | Perignon, the butler of a monas strengthening processes of freedom, ' tery near Epernay, in France, is sald is the first duty of man-—Harper's to have first made champagne success Weekly. | tully tn 1643, - i PENNSYLVANIA RR. Philad. & Erie R. R. Division | and Northern Central Ry, Time in ffoct LEAVE Train 64 May 29, MON TANDON, EARTWAKD Week dave for ni #1 deiphiin 1 gaitimore 12.15 pn Ar aiid mse Table 1904 ‘RAINS Sunbury 5K 1, Wasi ier Conc hill wr Dally for Bunbury Harrisburg and int jays for seranton, Ha Shia York Prune tig et "J adel phila, New Through ine pia gins 12 Week for = Hazeit ate a dure Pots inbhur Har arriving » pm glen at 7.15 pm iphiie, RNG jeissel Baltimore an nm Ma, tions in Now LUTE, Us Washi fF barre = § Hur of Harrisbvirg aud interaed al Philadelphia 10.47 Baltimore 9.48 pm ft rel Gils fom, De Passenger of Dally ‘ Ran Hare shurg w in adeliphin pars imturiasg unt from $41 Lg cial in sleepers und ati 7.80 5. 2 WESTWARD M Has Erie h, Niagara Fe -Traing Dally For Can * wid rough pasesng i wid Pario ENTE Week Ad Days § wd : Cave utre Hall Greg i en Hal Omk Hall Lemont Dale Summit Plomsmnt Gap AXemant Bellefonte EE EE i 6 & A - fditional trains leave Leowinin {egy Mo ta doh at 5208 m, 5a m V4 a on i and 7.55p mm. returning leave Monier don i Lewisburg st 780, 00a mm 1008s m4 3H | pomandsfiip m On Sundays trains leave Montandon 9.2% and 1001s m and 4.46 p. on, returning leave Lewis burg 9. 85s. mm. 00s. mand 448 p.m W. WW. ATTERBURY, J. R. WOOD General Manage Pass, Traffic Mgr GEO. W. BOYD, General Pess'ger Agt fn Have Traded Mis. Senator Quay of Pennsylvania was in autographs, Often, though, he naturedly, collectors also good He was showing a reporter his In The young map “This dagger must be very old,” he “Has it a history?’ “It has indeed,” sald Senator Quay is the dagger that Macbeth he saw, descendant of A Senator Quay smiled, “There le “Karr, in one of his stories, had “ ‘Presented to Alphonse Karr—by cmp a wn sp ing Rill Hoe HPRING MILLS, PA. PHILIP DRUMM, Prop. man sid beast fren Excellent Livery stisched. Table bosrd festciams. The best wien at the bar, Cette Hall Hotel CENTRE HALL, P JAMES W. RUNKLE, Prop. Newly equipped. Bar and table supplied with the best Bummer bomders given special | stiention, Hesl by worallty Beautiful sosuery Within three wiles of Poeun Cove, 8 most bosuth ful subterranean cavern; entrance by & boat Well located for hunting sod fishing Heated throughout Free carriage 10 ali trains Oig Fort Hate wh IBAAC SHAWVER, Proprietor. oh. locarion : One mile South of Centre Ball, Acsesmmodations Srelclass. silention for the transient trade, RATES: $1.00 PER DAY. Penn's Valley Banking Company CENTRE HALL, PA. Receives Deposits . Discounts Notes . . . Motel Haag BELLEFONTE, PA. Heated throughout. BATES 21.00 PER DAY. osdons. Regular bosrdes well cared for, ATTORNEYS. I. R.ORVTS C. HM BOWER Qivis. BOWER & ORVIS ATTORNEYS-AT LAW BELLEFONTE, PA. GOT. DAVID ¥ FORTNEY W. HARRISON WALKERS F° JRTREY & WALKER ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW BELLEFONTE Pa Office North of Cour: House ros cL EMENT DaLE ATTORNEY AT-LawW BEL RFONTE PA. Office §. W. corner Diamond, two does from First Natioss: Bank. ree Ww : G RUNKLE ATTORNEY-AT LAW BELLEFOKTR PA. All kinds of legal busines sttended wo promptly fpecial atten ton given 10 colisctions. Ofoe, 3 Boor Crider's Exchange re S D.GETTIG ATTORNEY AT LAW BELLEFONTE PA. Onliections and sl! legal business sttended promptly. Consultations Germans and Eagiish Office in Exchange Building ye R B. SPANGLER ATTORKEY-AT-LAW BELLEFONTE PA. Practioss in all the courts. Consultation ip English sod German. Offices, Crider's Exchange Bui ing ee LIVERY « Special Effort made to Accommodate Com- mercial Travelers... D. A. BOOZER Centre Hall, Pa. Penn’a R. R, s0 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE Traoe Mans &c. Anyone sending » sketch and bom quickly ascertain our opnn free w ber invention is probably patentable. Commmunios. tions strictly sonmdential Handiooh on ea pent free, (dest Patents taken thous “Ay “Munn a wpecial notice, without fific American, A handsomely Mlustraiad faa rom y » euiation of any scientific MU four months, $l HOA 40% 425 ¥ St. Wasbingt EE The readers of this pa per are constantly apon the alert to ascertain where goods can be pun chased at the lowest prices, and if a merchant does not advertise and keep the buyer conver sant with his line o goods, how can he expect to sell them? A Ap ’
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers