nd twin er of ebrat- rsary, twins f the reighs la a“ ' sas, I a Do ire —— — pe HESSIAN FLY CONTROL IMPORTANT TO FARMER Farm Agent Dunlap gives the fol lowing advice for the elimination of a destructive pest: The damage done to the wheat field by the Hessian fly is a loss which every farmer in the county has suffered at one time or another. It is a loss which almost haunts him until the crop is in the barn. In Kan- where a definite investigation has been made, they have found that the loss amounts to from five to fifty Per cent. of the crop. In 1908, forty- one of the counties in Kansas report- ed injury and the loss was estimated at 9,676,000 bushels. It is when losses of this extent occur that some de- . finite action should be taken to prev- ent their recurrence. The habits of the Hessian fly have ; been carefully studied and there have been found methods of prevent- ing its laying eggs in the wheat. There are - two egg-laying periods—one in the late summer or early fall and the other in the spring. If the one in the late summer, can be: prevented there will be practically.no adult insects to repeat the process: in the . spring, hence it is the summer NEARBY COUNTIES. Interest centers in a suit instituted in Cambria County last week by J. S. Hershey to recover $37,500 from Jos- eph K. Love. The demand is made man who first promoeed the jitney business in that city is missing. He is wanted by various creditors. The dedication of Cambria County's Soldiers and Sailors’ monument in Ebensburg, will take place on Sept- ember3. The principal address will be delivered by Judge Harry White, of Indiana county. Governor Brum- baugh has been invited but is likely to be out of the state on that date. Cumberland is one of the greatest peach shipping centres of the Ameri- cas. More of this delectable fruit is being handled than Georgia, Calis fornia and Colorado combined. With- in the ' last few days an , average of fifty carloads of export peaches have been sent from Cumberland: alone over the Baltimore and Ohio: Railroad, by fast freight and express trains. These cars have been shipped to fruit men all over the United Stat- es.: ~Deyle W. Howard, the Johnstown upon: an alleged verbal agreement treatment between the plaintiff and defendani. that we are most interested in. These | whereby the plaintiff was to formul- eggs are laid on grass or volunteer weeds and kindred plants, Hence we see that all such plants should be de- stroyed in the wheatfield. : Early plowing is the first step in the preventing measures. This should be followed by thorough cultivation. The cultivation is necessary in order to prevent the growth of volunteer weeds and grass. . The next step where a bad attack 1s expected is to sow a trap crop of wheat or rye. This should be a strip | | of three or four drill breadths along one side of the field. The trap crop should be sown here either in the lat- ter part of August or about the first of September. A little earlier would de perhaps better. This will grow up . and attract the egg-laying females, and most of the eggs will be laid be- fore the regular seeding. The time of seeding however, for the regular crop should be later than is the case in some portions of the county. For this section the maincrop real- ly should not be seeded until Septem, ber 25, or later. September 25 or lat- er. September 25 to October 10 is re- commended as being the best time for seeding here. One or two heavy frosts should precede the sowing of the regular crop. The trap crop above referred to will, of course be plowed under before the main crop is sowed. The eggs will be turned under with it and this will prevent the hatching of the Hessian fly. Before sowing all weeds and trash around the fence should be cleaned up. Of course the fence rows should be cleaned at any rate but in the pre- vention of the Hessian fly it is an important detail. There should be community co-op- eration in getting rid of any pest of this nature. One man in a comunity 't fight a bad weed or insect. very one in the community should join hands. The township advisory mmittee to the farm bureau should be asked to take the matter up. They can take the initiative and plan the campaign for the whole community. i Our Yearning for the Hills. How much of the influence of early environment, of those habituated re- actions which’ comprise for. each one of us the iron Tring Of his destiny, there is in even our deeper attitude to- ward the external’ world—toward what we call Nature! Not long ago 1 spent many weeks in the prairie country of the west, a sense of oppres- sion constantly increasing In weight upon my spirit. Those endless, level plains! Those roads that stretched without a break to infinity? A house, a group of barns, a fruit-orchard, now and then a clump of hardwoods, alone broke the endless, flat monotony of snow-covered fields—no, not fields, but infinitudes where a single furrow could put a girdle about an entire township in my home land! My soul hungered for a hill; my heart craved, with a dull longing, the sight of a nak- ed birch-tree flung aloft against the winter sky. Back through the endless plains of Illinois the train erawled, away from the setting sun. But the next daylight disclosed the gentle roll- ing slopes of the Mohawk valley, and before many hours had passed the Berkshire hills were all about, like familiar things recovered. The camel- hump of Greylock to the north was sapphire-blue and beckoning. The nearer mountains wore their reddish mantles, pricked with green, above the snowy intervals, and laid their up- reared outlines stark .igainst the sky. & NW Shadowy ravines let into their flanks, ' suggestive of roaring brooks and the mystery of the wilderness. The clouds trailed purple shadow-anchors; the sun flashed from the ice on their sa- cred ledges. And a weight seemed suddenly lifted from my spirit. The words of the ancient Psalmist came to my lips unconsciously: “I will lift up mine eyes unto. the hills. From whence cometh my help? My help oometh from God.”-—Walter Prichard Baten in Harper’s Magazine. Our wedding Invitations are up-to- date In form material and type. 1 ‘ i ate the plan for financing the Fort Stanwix Hotel, which he alleges he performed. In return for the service the plaintiff alleges he was to receive $25,000 of the preferred stock of the Company and common stock equal to one-half of the par value of the preferred stock. Some weeks ago, Mr. Hershley attempted to have the hotel company placed in the hands of a re ceiver. Now he avers that the stock of the company is above par. GAME LAWS MADE PLAIN. The last legislature passed a game law, introduced by Representative Phillips, of Clearfleld, which speci- fically forbids the sale of rabbits and squirrels killed in the state, and for- bids the shipping of game except when accompanied by the shipper. The new law prohibits the owner- ship, transfer, sale or transportation of ferrets except under license which will only be granted by the game commission for good reasons. It for- bids the taking of bear in any way except by the use of a rifle or gun shooting only one ball and forbids the trapping of bear in any way. It pre- vents hunting for hire, by making it illegal for any man paid as a guide or in any other way as a hunter to give, sell or present game of any kind to his employer and similarly forbids the employer receiving game from such employe or guide. it fixes the game season as follows: Squirrels of all kinds, grouse, wood- cock, quail, wild turkey, Mongolian or ring-neck or English pheasant, black birds, Hungarian quail—Octob- er 15 to November 30, inclusive. Rabbits and hares—November 1 to November 30. Deer—December 1 to December 15. Bear—October 15 to December 15. Raccoon—October 15 to December 31. Ring-neck pheasants raised strictly in captivity may be killed by their owners.on their own premises during the. open: season without regard to number, { It is made unlawful to shoot at any doe or fawn, the penalty being the same, as that provided if the deer is killed. and similarly the wounding or killing in any manner of female deer and fawns is forbidden. ipa itmrermee fs Vocational Training Enough?’ If man could live by bread ‘alone we might rest! with” vocational’ edtcation. But by that very intellectual unvest that makes for evolution he canmot. Having eaten, he must learn to use the life he has preserved: But while suste- nance is theoretically a very simple problem being only a question of how much you can earn and what vou can buy with it, the use one makes of the vital energy into which Jife transforms Is the most complex and difficult of all questions. Religion, ethies, educa- tion all bear upon it, intersect and blend so that it is almost as difficult to say what teaches one to live as to answer the question of how to live it. self. It is enough to observe that edu- cation has a part here which is not vocational, and which is enormously important. This is the province of liberal edues tion. Its services are indirect, because its effects must be transmitted into the art of living; they are uncertain in the same proportion as all fife is illusory and never to be confined in measures made by man. Neverthe- less, although these services are defi- nite in their breadth, at least we can specify some of them. We know, for example, that the mind must be abla to grasp abstractions; and so we ap- ply mathematics. We know that it must have perspective and back- ground if it is to understand the pass- ing show of brief reality allowed it; and so we instill history. We know that it must be able to interpret char acter, to feel the loftiest eniotion, to perceive be 7 and enjoy it; and so we give it literature and the arts. Man Is to be liberalized. He is to be taught d Henry 8. Canby ————— Get our prices on Joo work. dances, Lover's Tragedy rire tel ieprireleletedeleelede John Pinheadus resides east of the river, The smell from the leather board factory is wafted nightly through the windows of his chamber in the wooden block. The incessant quack of ducks kept him awake. He works daily pulling tacks, four cents a case. Sometimes he is a welt beat- er. Money he has saved, his bank ac- count running into three figures. The glamour of romance had not in- ‘terested’ him at all until the other night. Then he met Mary at the dance ‘in the little hall at the foot of the hill, ‘and his thoughts went back to dear old Poland, now torn with strife and bloodshed. But Peter Flatface basked in the sunlight of her smiles between the ¢ The battle was om, Mary would be his. There were a lot of other girls left for Pete. John played first cornet in the band for the first part of the evening, but when the kegs emitted a hollow sound he was usual- ly the last one, trailing three meas- ures behind. An impression must be made. But there was one thing about John that proved his undoing. He thought as much of a dollar as he did his right arm. He was down town one night and saw a man selling Brazilian dia- monds, a dollar a throw. He was in the front row of the “Step right up, gentlemen, toss your money in the till and take home a gen-u-ine imitation diamond to your wife, mother or sweetheart. Guaranteed against wind and weather. Will not fade or shrink, pale or tarnish.” The next dance night rolled round on leaden wings. The first soft strains of the tango music rang through the hall. John and Mary were the first couple out. Holding his hand so that the glare of the electric lamps illu- minated the cut glass on his finger it looked like a street ear searchlight. Suffice to say that John more than held his own with Peter in the bench warmers’ league that evening. Before they parted for the night the ring nestled on Mary’s finger. Next day she repaired to the store of Lapidus, the jeweler, and learned that it was an excellent imitation, worth about thirty cents on the market. She wend- ed her way home slowly. “A guy that would pass a dame such a phony glim as that,” she soliloquized in her native slang, “is no good. It shows him up as a counterfeit.” The next dance night John sat out about seven numbers and Mary went home with Pete. Yes, the preacher linked them one day last week. The ducks quack, the leather board factory smell is still there and John is still a single man. A Wonderful Baby. Everybody’s baby being the most wonderful kid in the world, one can easily appreciate a story told a few days ago by Senator Paynter of Ken- tucky. A man named Jones and a man named Smith met on the street corner one afternoon, and, after talking poli- ties, ‘suffragettes and the high cost of living, the conversation turned to kids. “How about that baby of yours?” asked Jones. “Is he doing any talking yet?” “No,” replied Smith. “Outside of ‘Da, da,’ his vocabulary is not very ex- tensive. Can yours talk?” “Well, I should say 50,” was the proud rejoinder of Jones. “Talks like a parrot. Has got his mother chirped to a standstill. I suppose yours is able to walk?” “No,” rplied Smith, just a little sad- ly. “He hasn’t taken a step yet.” “Not taken a step,” exclaimed Jones, with a life-size expression of amaze- ment. “Why, he is a good bit older than ‘mine, and niine is, toddling all around.” “I don’t doubt it,” peevishly re- sponded Smith, who was getting a trifle wearied; “and by the way Jones, does he use a safety razor os one of the old fashioned kind?” Dancing Men in Demand “We never knew what to do with grandpa before.” “And now?” “He’ll be a big help to us socially. We're having him taught all the new steps.” . The Opportunist He—1 love the true, the good, the beautiful, the— She—Oh, George, this is so sudden! Two ounces of fresh white hellebore steeped In one gallon of hot water, used as a spray, is the best remedy for currant and gooseberry worms. But it must be used early, when the first worms appear. Entirely Unnec It is probubly true that Satan neve: takes a vacation, put there’s no gooa reascn why he should be always work ing overtime.—Washington Post. To Keep Stoppers From Sticking. A very glyc smea around the glass stoppers of bottles will keep them from sticking for a long time. aL) > Tha ews 0 The n travels much faster than a reduction which may follow.—Atchison Globe YHE THREE POLICIES, Once upon a time there was a bean- tiful princess who was passionately admired and loved by everyone who saw her picture in the leading fashion papers week after week, as she sat on a fence looking at a fooiball game, or was walking with her chow dog in a high wind. One day the princess ordered af proclamation to the following effect sent out: “Here are three insurance policies. The young man in all my kingdom who can interpret any one of them correctly can have my hand in matri- mony.” The news rapidly spread, and the ‘next morning three young men pre- sented themselves for the test. Said the first: “This means that in case your pal ace burns down you get 80 per cent of the difference between what it is ap- praised at, less what the company thinks you ought to have, minus what the last legislative body thought ought to be conceded on account of a bad fire that took place in Constantinople year before. last.” ; Everybody cheered at this, and the first suitor began to make calculations on the back of an envelope as to the RESOURCES ; Loans and Investments... ................... $681,064.41 Ui8. Bonds............. ier 75,000.00 Banking House..............:........... .. 29,300.00 Due from Banks and Reserve Agents. .... coi: . 126,594.25 CaN... rte ii Ba ae vier ART : Jotal.... $986,697.42 LIABILITIES Capital Stock ......s....0.0.. 0.0 0 oy $ 65,000.00 Surplus..... 2th dransererieiin aera... 100.000.00 Udivided Profite..%.. 10 0a init omen Ciretlation... .................... saves eradieiaa 1185:800,00 iDeposites.................... A ee. 732,574.41 Condensed Statement CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK OF MEYERSDALE, PA. At Close of Business June 23rd, 1915. Total.... $986,697.42 cost of a wedding breakfast. Then said the second suitor: “Hem! This is an accident insur ance, covering loss of limb or death or other injury—provided that the de- ceased was in good health at the time, and did not suspect anything. Also, if the moon was in the third quarter, or he was lying under a motor car with the west wind, then everything 1s null and void, in which case the week- ly indemnity, if any, is subject to a fine and possible imprisonment, all common carriers excepted.” The second suitor was also highly applauded, and it really looked as if be mizht get all the gate money, when the third suitor stepped forward. Hea was, as is customrry, mu-h handsom- er than the other two, and very poor and honest, and really needed looking after; but when the princes handed him the third insurance policy he shook his head and refused it. “Your majesty,” he said, “you will have to pardon me, but 1 didn’t know what the test was. I am young and in- nocent, but I know too much, I hope, . to attempt to interpret any insurance policy in these days. Sorry to lose you, but I beg to withdraw.” Then the princess threw herself in his z.-ms, while the grand vizier order ed a couple of underwriters buried alive. “ I knew by the blank Took on your face, darling, that you were a sure winner,” cried the princess.—From Life. Burials Differ. The modes of burial differ widely among various peoples, from the rud- NN NNN INNS, rr mr Not so with our rugs. They are made of durable f-brics, colored expression goes, they usually suffer. W HEN things or people “get under ioot,” as the familiar with dyes that last, and are always subjected to a severe examination before being received by our buyers. We have rugs in all sizes, styles and designs. Examine Our Neto Stock! R. REICH & SON est ceremonies and methods of the wandering tribes to the ornate, im- pressive, reverent services of “the | heir of all ages, in the foremost files of time.” Among some the dead are buried lying, others sitting, as is the case with several of the Indian tribes; and Instances are related where warriors or leaders in the ‘nations have been buried seated upon their favorite war horse, as was done with the famous Blackbird, the chief of the once pow- erful Omahas. But there is a remarkable agree ment of custom for the practice. of Every Farmer with two or more COWS needs a “A DeLAVAL, THE BEST SEPARATOR MADE. < Office 223 Levergood St , J. T. YODER. Johnstown, - Penn’a placing the body e~st and west. Some-; times the body is placed with the head | to the east'and sometimes to the west, ; It is held by certain writers that this ' custom is due to solar symbolism; and the head is placed to the east or to the west according as the dead are’ thought of in connection with the sun- rise, the reputed home of the deity, or the sunset, the reputed home of the: dead. a, ¢ There dre, however, some tribes that lay their dead north and south, and others bury mien with the face to the north and women with the face to the south; while among some of the Afri- can tribes, if one happens to die away from his home, he is buried facing his native village. Disregar¢ of Truth. If Orientals have one fault more than another {it {is a disregard for truth. In the ear'y days of the Eng- BALTIMORE & OHIO SEASHORE EXCU SIONS from MEYERSDALE to : $8.50 Good in Coaches Only, A fl Al | i ¢ ( i fy $10.50 Good in Pullman Cars with Pullman Ticket. CAPE MAY, SEA ISLE CITY, OCEAN CITY, STONE CITY, WILDWOOD JULY 1, 15 ano 29, AUGUST 12 anp 26, SEPTEMBER 9 TICKETS GOOD RETURNING 16 DAYS Secure Illnstrated Booklet Giving Full Details from Ticket Agents BALTIMORE & OHIO RAILROAD. lish occupation of India, the English judges were astounded at the conflict- ing stories told by witnesses, and they soon learned to set them all down as unworthy of credence. In Ameriean courts it is also well known that Chi- nese are very penurious of the truih, and *hat no oath will prevent them from giving witness. In Egypt it is alsa very easy to get native witnesses to swear to anything, true or untrue. For instance: Ahmed, a native of Cairo, had a slave who peeped over a wall into Suleiman’s harem, and the ladies considered themselves insulted. Suleiman wanted revenge but he could not bring his wives into court to tes- tify, so it was agreed that Suleiman should accuse Ahmed’s camel of walk- Ing on Suleiman’s land. A crowd of witnesses came forward and for two days testified about the camel and the land, until the English judge decided in favor of Suleiman. It was not untfl a week afterward that he discovered to his great surprise that Suleiman had no ground and Ahmed no camel. ~ Warm Food, Va -otahleg heen e soggy and unfit for i fod when treated in this manner. { DRESSED AND LIVE o 000000 etatat “ately ates etetets 0 0, soars oe » OOO o OOS arene tetetetantatetetettetetate arate tee ate ets a eels te eta ee ta ete ee ete eee sete es WELL, WE WIN Our real service plumbing is bound to win the customer’s good will when he realizes that long use develops no defects, no poor arrangement of fixtures, no details overlooked and never that continuous neces- sity for repairs which accompanies so called ““cheap’’ plumbing. Our plumbing is not cheap. Itis the best of workmanship, material and “Standard” fixtures installed at a reasonable price. SPRING | BUY GOLD MEDAL FLOUR Warm bread or cake and in fact | CHICKENS AT DONGES' MEAT | YOU WILL ALWAYS HAVE | warm food of any kind should never MARKET. | BREAD. be put away ii a covered tin or dish, | ~~ “on at HABEL & pPMi1L lina ¥ ; %, 1.2 4 ~~ py um m:lies molding certain. | Children Cry -— Fs SAT DIS ne ¢ » FOR FLETCHER'S lt CASTORIA | A IDNG ITS : 3 de