Bellefonte, Pa., May 2, 1913. FOR YOU TO MEMORIZE. Do not drop the fruit you're eating, Neighbor mine, On the sidewalk, sewer, grating Neighbor mine; But lest you and I should quarrel Listen to my little moral, Go and toss it in the barrel Neighbor mine, Where'er you drop a paper Neighbor mine In the wind it cuts a caper, Neighbor mine Down the street it madly courses And should fill you with remorses, When you see it scare the horses, Neighbor mine. Paper cans were made for papers, Neighbor mine Let's not have this fact escape us, Neighbor mine And if you will lend a hand Soon our city dear shall stand As the cleanest in the land Neighbor mine. Look! WAKING TIME. As a child, I always delighted in fairy tales. To me the names of Grimm and Anderson were household words. Folk- lore and stories purest imaginative are the rightful heritage of childhood. How my pulses thrilled at the words “Once upon a time"—and even now, after the lapse of years, the magic spell has not lost its old-time attractiveness of its power to hold the attention. Somewhere, sometime, I heard the parable of the maple tree. Where it was found, or who wrote it, I do not know; neither can I recall the story in its origi- nal style and beauty. Since, however, the thought fits the springtime, I have gathered the threads of pi together and have reconstructed the taie. “I should be perfectly happy if I did not know that I must die so soon,” sighed the maple tree that stood at the end of the lane leading into the orchard. This tree was old, so old that it had seen a generation of men and women come and go. Yetit had always lived in fear of death, and each new set of leaves had heard its sighs and complaints. When it was a tiny seed, wrapped in its downy cradle and covered with rough scales to make it more secure, it had trembled lest something terrible should happen. “0 dear Mother Tree, take care of me,” it had cried in its baby voice. “Do not be afraid, little seed,” replied the tree, as she rocked the baby to and fro in its winter cradle, and lulled it to sleep. In the springtime the seed waked from a long nap and, pushing itself out of its nest, looked about. It was still afraid when it saw how big the world was, and it cried to the breeze which was passing overhead. “Dear, good breeze, take care of me.” “Do not be afraid, little seed,” replied the breeze. One of the first discoveries which the seed made about itself was that a pair of wi were growing out of each side. “Il wonder what these curious things are for,” it questioned. The breeze laughed but made no reply. Spring wakened the maple tree to re- newed life. The sap flowed to the small- est leaf, through the tiniest twig to the topmost branch. The heat of summer caused the leaves to droop, and some of them withered and fell to the ground. The maple seed noticed that its wings, which at first had been gteen, had grown dry, and had withered also. It mention- ed this fact to a leaf which grew beside it. Before the leaf could answer, a sud- den puff of wind loosened it from the twig and it blew away. “Ho! ho!” said the seed, “I begin to see what my wings are for!” The breeze laughed softly as it took the maple seed and carried it to the foot of the lane which led to the orchard. There were many times when the little seed thought death was near. Once, when a foot stepped upon it and pressed it into the cold, dark earth, and again when the clouds sent down torrents of rain. This all happened many years ago. The maple seed pushed its way out of its dark prison, and grew from a tiny twig to a sapling, and later to the strong, tree which had withstood the storms of many winters. In the course of time, the maple tree had seen many changes in the old farm- house at the head of the lane. It had grown attached to an old couple who had the occupants of the house for fifty years or more. It had noticed for some Hime Ahiat the old ye looked Jectls, and t her step hardly kept pace t of her husband. One day, late in October, the old man walked down the lane alone. “Alas!” said the maple tree, “death has taken the good wife away, and soon we all must go.” A heavy November gale swept through tree. It the leafless branches of the Shree ie i ed, asa hea 3s " it groaned, asa vy blast bore it broken to the ground. Men came to cut the heavy branches of the tree, and to saw the trunk One large log place and laid thereon. The old man sat in his armchair, his trembling hands stretched out to feel the grateful warmth. “Ah, old tree,” he said, “you too have gone the way of all the earth.” Closing is eyes, he leaned back in his chair. A bright flame shot forth from the blazing log and streamed across the old man’s face. The spirit of the maple tree was in the flame, and a Pad voice cried— “Waken, friend, and listen to the good news. There is no death.” The old man stirred not. ocr” said the flame, “do you know it, There is no death; what seems so is transition. This life of mortal breath Is but a suburb of the life Elysian, Whose portal we call Death. — — ————— : t >Ee1g fi fia a evident] of pusey.wil i U0 are | y as a spring offering to their teachers. My flower- has | responded to the call that waking time has come. The dear little snow-drop is its delicate blossom-stalk. I never see it but that I think of that exquisite poem | “Snow drop Time:"” | “It's rather dark in the earth today,” | Said one little bulb to his brother; “But I thought that I felt a sunbeam ray, We must strive and grow till we find the way,” And they nestled close to each other. Then they struggled and toiled by day and by night, Till two little snowdrops in green and | white ! Rose out of the darkness and into the! light : And kissed one another. By Harriet Woodward Clark, in Suburban Life. Municipal Ownership the Best Way to Preserve Shade Trees. Trees on the streets may be planted either by individual landowners or public officials. The results obtained in cities where the task is left to the property owners have been very unsatisfactory. The trees on the same street bear evi- dence of the diversity of taste of the planters. There are half a dozen or more species on the same street, un- desirable mixed with desirable, of all shapes and sizes, set either too closel or too far apart, says William Solotaroff, shade tree commissioner of East Orange, N. J, in the American City. In some cases the trees are not trimmed at all, and their limbs are so low as to touch the heads of pedestrians; in others they are pruned too high. The trees have been left unprotected by guards, many of them have been bitten by horses, and there is evidence that they have been in- jured by insect pests. It is only when the planting and care of street trees are vested in a special de- partment that all of the principles es- sential to secure the most stately and impressive effects of highway planting can be applied, such as the choice of the proper species, the use of one variety on a street, setting out of specimens at uni- form and proper distances apart and the protection and cultivation of the trees afterward. The task of such a depart- ment is ngt a mean one in the life of the city. ® to date forty-six towns and cities in New Jersey have established shade tree commissions. The Pennsylvania statute has been adopted by eight cities, Briefly the provisions of the acts of New Jersey and Pennsylvania may be summarized as follows: When by resolution of the city council it is decided that the law shall become operative in a city, then from that time all matters pertaining to shade trees are placed in the hands of the respective commissions. All work is carried on in a systematic way, and the trees are planted, pruned, sprayed and removed under the direction of the commission- ers. Wherein these commissioners differ from other similar bodies is that they have the power of initiative in the mat- ter of planting. They decide that a cer- tain street is to be planted and deter- mine the species of tree. An advertise ment of the intention to plant is insert- ed for two weeks in the public news- papers, and all persons interested in the mprovement are given an opportunity to be heard. After the work is done the commis. sioners meet and certify a list to the receiver of taxes on which are given the names of the owners in front of whose property trees were set out and the cost of the work. These assessments are en- tered by the receiver of taxes on the an- as any other legal lien. The cost of pruning, spraying, removing dead trees and repairing old ones is provided for by a general a) riation, f we are to have more trees in our cities there must be a place in which to set them. The provision for the street tree has been a matter with which the city engineer has concerned himself very little. residential streets there should be a continuous ing strip of at least four feet in wid If the width of the street its it these strips may be widened up to ten feet or more. Er ness streets having sidewalks entirely paved trees can be planted and main- tained if sufficiently large excavations are made for the trees, good pred and grills placed around their ses. More trained men are needed as arbor- culturists. It is a new calling of great dignity and importance, for tree warden is the guardian of one of the chief re- beauty of the city. Urges Judicial Action Against Billboards. “Everybody knows that a billboard is a nuisance and an eyesore, and that it dam- es all property in the neighborhood. e fail to see why there should be such hesitancy upon the part of the courts in plainly saying so. No man or tion should be itted to ravage around nual tax bill and are paid the same way | of soil sup- | ti sources for maintaining the health and | givi ter, England. In part, Mr. Goddard wrote: “It is very in to me to find that you select this a model of civic beauty. Natural JHANsI, MAY 12th as : Deawty, indeed, Winchester may claim, | In looking over my work I find just a as it is among its green meads beside a clear, swift river, but we, its citizens, are inclined to curse its dull streets, its idle and disorderly populace short week will intervene before leaving for Simla. I go first to Compore, where I hope to pick up a group of tuberculo- and its incompetent and reactionary city | sis orphan girls; then to Agra and across ‘ council whose sole concern is to keep we have much for proudly boast that we spend less on edu- cation than any town in England, and average of manners and intelligence, ful. Our sanitary services are efficient, our death rate is very low, our lighting, ving and water supply are excellent. tly agitate do not exist here. liboards are few and improve in artistic qualities year by year, though I wish we could emulate Frankfort-on-the- Main and insist that all posters must pass the first to brave ie winds of Maich | thokghithe SBECtS of tS Juicions een send tender green | are n our Yb 2 pais of aves oy Po : we | the Venice, and the most beautiful city have something for which to be thank- | of all India. | | | i | country to Jaipur, and from there to Tohinia, near Ajmere, where there is a to be thankful. Although we | Methodist sanatorium for tuberculosis patients. If the weather does not grow too hot I will go on for a look at Udaipur, called Jaipur is the city where the finest of all inlaid brass work of this | country is done, and is called “the pink | Most of the nuisances against which we and white city,” and, strange as it may seem, is built on the same plan as Chica- go, though hundreds of years old. I meet Miss W.,, a California girl, in Compore, from where we start for Simia an artistic censorship and must be fram- | to spend our vacation in the mountains. ed in brown or grey mounting, stipula- tions which make a boarding there a feast for the eye. Our electric light wires are under by little the telephone and telegraph wires are being transferred to conduits, even along the country roads. Within ten years, when the telephones are ‘nationalized,’ there probably will be hardly an overhead wire visible. “There is no need to suggest that house fronts be adorned with window- boxes as business houses, banks and hotels realize that a blossom-covered front like that of the ‘old bank’ in the very center of this little city is a good advertisement. As for the little corners of waste land that so often serve as places upon which to throw refuse, the council rails them in and plants hardy shrubs or native wild flowers upon them with admirable results. Nor are we quite forgetful of the claims of architec- ture. There is now a kind of tacit agree- ment that the style we call Queen Anne (your Colonial) is most suitable for the city. The barracks, the high school and many private houses are in this style. Their deep red tones with white facings amid the green trees produce a delight- ful effect of harmony and restfulness. “Nor has the ‘grouping’ you advocate been entirely forgotten. Upon Castle Hill stand the chief buildings of the coun- ty government. Two of these, the Coun- ty Hall and the Westgate, are fine thir- teenth century structures of grey flint. The modern buildings, the assize courts, the county council chambers and offices, the armory of the territorial troops, are built te harmonize and grouped around 2 plaza with an admirable effect of con- tinuity and completeness. “So I must thank your delightful pamphlets for illuminating my insular ignorance in supposing that the adminis- ating of the city (which stands gallant- ly in utmost rear of progress) is rath- er relatively than absolutely bad. We've got many of the things for which you strive, though in this backward spot we've got the one thing necessary for the creation of the city beantiful—the municipal ownership of the public utili ties and franchises. And that, I note, you don't advocate, possibly because it might entangle you in party politics.” Health. Few people Wear out before their time. Motsly they Rust out, Worry out, Run out—Spill out. A Machine must have care and its different parts must be ad- justed properly. No Machine has ever SPproscHed the Human Machine. When it is right, it is in Health. Make Confidants of Air and Exercise. No great Battle was ever won with antidated Artillery. Nor is it ble for a Man or Woman to give best that is in them, aided by a weak, ill-cared for, abused Body. For Health puts alert every quality of Soul and makes the Brain and Heart and Nerve stations work in even unison, throbbing out big things in Deeds. Make Confidants of Air and Exercise. Pure Air, wholesome Exercise, a few good “Hobbies” put an edge to a human bei at wi fhe Pills in creation can't In n, by touching up your Face with plenty of 3 Karat Smiles, you have briefly a Home Remedy for Health great and very practicable. Make Eonfidants of Air and Exercise. You have time to eat, you have time to make money, you have time to take to your bed when bing brings on the aches —you will have to take time to die. It is good sense; then, to take time to get Make confidants of Air and Exercise, Everybody is quickened and inspired by the vibrating Health and warm Mag- netism that is felt instantly from the Healthy man. He is the one who does things. He is the man who is a Success. He is the fellow who has time to take on Air and Exercise and Health. Also he is the one who accomplishes twice the work of the weakling and has the MOST me. Make confidants of Air and Exercise. Jk Ine fos neces) youm re get—a vig- orous Body, filled to the brim we Health. Half of Health is in the Mind. The rest is in getting into the Air and ng every TAuSCle 3 fhe body 2d every a good daily stirring up use and rcise. Let this thing radiate from your face and bearing toward every man, woman, or child that you meet: “I am a Happy, Healthy Human Being!” Make Confidants of Air and Exercise. —By George Matthew Adams. "A good tree cannot bring forth evil fruit neither can an evil tree bring forth good fruit.” This is the law of genera- tion. As is the parent shoot, so will be bY | the child. A healthy mother will have healthy children. A weak, nervous moth- er will have weak, nervous children. Dr. “| Pierce's Favorite Prescription is a bless: ing to ve mother. It vd gives and with it confidence and | But before I forget it you must hear of the “kiddie” we have in the hospital e footwalks and little | now. She is just three months old, and is engaged. Each day her fiance, a little boy of eight, comes to carry her about in his arms. There is a wonderful en- gagement “layette,” and much jewelry has already been presented to her. She will be married when three years of age, | but according to the law will not be al- lowed to live with her husband until twelve or fourteen years of age. To read of these things is one thing but to come in actual daily contact with these conditions is quite another. This little babe is a dear and has a most devoted mother and an adoring grandmother, so that just now her life is most carefully guarded, and in fact will be, as she be- longs to the upper caste Mohammed, and their women are all in perda. The superstitions of these poor souls appeal to me more than any other char- acteristic. Think of tieing a raw onion about a babes neck, and blacking circles about his eyes, lest he be too pretty and make the gods jealous and they send the evil one to take the little babe away. Such was the case with one of our four- year-old dispensary babies this morning; not a rag or piece of clothing on him, save the raw onion tied by a string and the awful painted circles about his poor eyes, to make him as hideous as possi- ble. Oh, it is pathetic! The Hindus will not even give their children pretty names for the same awful fear, and it dominates everything. For instance, the beautiful Kashmir embroideries are nev- er quite finished as to coloring and tex- ture; always the pattern or design is in some way left unfinished, or an unsight- ly spot inserted so that the beautiful de- sign could not be judged absolutely per- fect, and thereby incur the jealous wrath of the gods, which occurring, would be visited on the maker or their children. The heat is intense here but one grows s0 accustomed to the furnace-like feeling of the ground that already I have ceased to note the changes in temperature. I have been compelled though, to adopt dark glasses; a protection for the eyes from the intense glare of the sun. You may be interested in a profession- al visit I made yesterday to the best na- | tive house in Jhansi. We drove along | through the narrow streets, which wind | in and out in a most fascinating man- | ner (much like “Sou-la-cap” in Quebec,) ! past crowds of brilliantly gowned native | women buying at the street shops, their money tied up in the end of their “sauri,” as this one article of dress answers for | kerchief, hat, (whichis called “chuda”) : and gown, all in one; past native villages, ' and meeting scores of inhabitants | bringing in vegetables, carried in net | with fresh or curdied milk, at dinner | hampers swung from the ends of a pole laid across their shoulders. Their bodies were dripping with perspiration as they toiled along under the hot sun; on past the temples and red stone gods covered | with offerings of flowers and fruits, and finally drew rein under an immense can- vas swung across the street between the | tops of two very elegant looking houses, and were conducted into the most exclu- sive native house in the entire city of | Jhansi. : First, a low dark room in which two | servants sat guarding the street en- trance; then across an immense court- | yard with tiled floor and covered walk around the four sides, to the steepest | flight of stairs I've ever climbed, which brought us into the second open court, | from which one could easily see all who came and went below, and from where also the arches for the use of the mem- bers of the household lead. In all east- ern homes of this caste one finds a suc- cession of archways, each one the private | room of the ladies of the family, and as expected, in one my patient was at last located. | On my return to the hospital I found | we had just time to “go our rounds,” | then off to a native Tamasca (party) to which our entire staff had been invited some days previous. Our way led through the best section of the town, as we were to be entertained at an upper caste Hindu home, consequently we walked, not wishing to miss any of the ever-changing sights. We had not journeyed far when we were overtaken by two coolies carrying a sort of sedan chair, entirely covered by a curtain. At once we knew the occu- pant to be a bride and asked to be al- lowed to see her. Upon drawing aside the curtains we saw two littleRirls of the age of five and seven years, the younger of which was the bride. She was too shy to allow us more than a passing | glance; she carried in her hand a little cap made of palms which, we were told, . belonged to her husband. After her chair came a bullock cart, and seated near the driver was a boy of perhaps eight years of age, wrapped in a yellow “pugra,” he was the groom and was try- ing his best to look the part. The wed- ding guests, old men and women, rela- tives of the little actors in these awful’ tragedies, followed on foot, all dressed in their oldest apparel, which is quite the opposite custom for most wedding guests. The backs of all the men of the party were covered with yellow hand marks, a sign of high favor at the wedding, and that is one reason for the donning of old instead of new clothes for the celebra- tion. We followed the party until our servant brought us to the street in which our hostess lived then, with many “salaams,” turned aside to our own fes- tivities. [Continued next week.] The Doom of the Billboard. The billboard as a means of advertis- ing will soon be but a memory—a nightmare—if public sentiment against it continues to increase in volume and ef-! fectiveness as it has during the past few months. Never since the American Civ- ic Association opened its campaign for the abatement of the billboard nuisance has there been such an awakening to the fact that “the billboard is an eyesore, a nuisance, and a disgrace, and should be abolished altogether,” as the Washington Herald aptly puts it. From the east to the west, organized effort to eliminate, or late, the bill- board, has been taking nite and ef- fective form Carefully prepared ordi- nances have been passed and others are being drawn for passage. Cincinnati re- cently scored against the billboard by the adoption of a building code contain- ing elaborate provisions regulating out- door advertising. Under that code a large number of sign spreads have been ordered down. Moreover many adver- tising merchants are voluntarily aban- doning the billboards. In the far west, Portland and Seattle are grappling with the problem in an intelligent manner. In Cambridge, Mass., a Woman's Club se- sured the removal of many stands by ap- aling to the advertisers direct. Lynch- urg, Va. has placed a most effective ban on the billboard. The American people believe in adver- tising, they read advertising, they patron- ize advertisers, but they are discriminat- ing; they don't want the kind of adver- tising that mars scenery, that shuts out light, that depreciates adjoining p r- ty, that offers a rendezvous for neighbor- hood juvenile gatherings of dangerous tendencies. If the billboard must exist the day is not far distant when it will be a subject of Municipal, State and Federal regula- tion. It will be regarded as a revenue producing structure, assessed and taxed accordingly; it will not be permitted to exist as a menace to health. The prop- erty rights of the man who does not be- lieve in billboards and refuses to grant space on his own lands for their erec- tion, will be No amount of se- ductive offers of the billboard owners, ' such as free space for laudable work like the exploitation of preventive measures against tuberculosis, as recently made to the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis, will stem the tide of ular disapproval of the billboard. e opposition is strong and it is growing. It is one of the most laud- able Sndertakinge of the American Civic Association which is distinguished for Beautiful America.” Food of Peanuts. In various parts of the world the poor- er classes consume little or no bread. is to Bnew rem ar racial an | on ving he sma and Italy and throughout the cultur- al districts of Roumania. ag} Austrians aver that in the village of Obersteirmark, not far from Vienna, bread is never seen. e staple food is sterz, a kind of made from ground beechnuts, taken at breakfast with milk. This dish is also called hei- der and is substituted for bread not only in the Austrian district mentioned, but in Carinteia and other parts of the Tyrol. orthern Italy offers a substitute for bread in the form of ta, which is a kind of of boiled grain. Polenta is not, however, allowed to gran- ulate like Scotch or the Aus- trian sters, It is Jag boiled iatoa w cut up por- cid piu a string. It is eaten cold as often as it is hot and is in every sense an Italian's daily bread. There is a variation of ta called mamaliga, the favorite food of the poorer classes in Roumania. M re- amaliga sembles polenta, inasmuch as it is made of boiled grain, bate io unlike the former n one respect— ns are not per- mitted to settle into a solid mass, but are kept distinct after the fashion of oatmeal porridge. —Street Cmmissioner Lee, of Dallas, Tex., has announced that as a feature of the clean-up crusade inaugurated by the city authorities Dallas would be divided into districts, and in each aspecial clean- up of premises and alleys made. Special inspectors will patrol these dis- tricts, and*all citizens who do not comply with the “lean-up order” will be brought | before corporation court for such failure. Each citizen is required to re- move at his own cost all manure, ashes, | cinders and kitchen slops. Commis- sioner Lee says that the city cannot re- move this character of refuse because of the great cost which would be entailed. History shows that when an epidemic breaks out it ns in the alleys and hovels, where filth accumulates. It’s so in the body. Foul accumulations are the spa places of disease. To keep the bowels and active is a prerequisite to health. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are at once the simplest and surest means to effect this result. do not gripe. They do not beget the habit. —Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. i ! ! i ' —Clubroot on cabbage and caulifiower has been treated with lime, the amount varying to the acidity of the soi, but "it 1s. safes so puton a of lime at the time of plowing and work it into the soil. —When timothy is used for horses it should be cut after the seeds are formed, but when the hay is to be fed to cattle it should be cut soon after the first blos- soms appear. Horses demand a hay that contains a large amount of dry matter. The amount of dry matter is influenced by the time of harvesting. —An experienced orchardist says tha | when planting an orchard to make mene 25 years from now, plant 35 to 40 feet apart: but to have money soon plant ose. As soon as trees crowd one anoth- er they quit growing and get down to business. If trees are planted 35 feet apart they have nothing to do but grow, and will not bear fruit for 10to 12 years. —When the horse comes in wet with rain, first scrape him, then blanket him and rub his head, neck and loins and legs. If the weather is cold, put on an extra blanket in 20 minutes. Change the wet blanket when the horse dries. Do not wash his legs. Rub them dry, or bandage loosely with thick ba It is far more important to have the legs warm and dry than clean. —According to the Ohio Station, oats are an excellent feed for dairy cows and contain more protein than does corn. In fact, the grain, if fed alone, would make ically a ration from the standpoint of protein and carbohydrates. The yield of nutrients per acre are so much less than in corn that it is usually rather an expensive feed. A bushel of corn contains more than twice as many pounds of digestible nutrients as a bush- el of oats. refore the land which will produce 50 bushels of corn should produce over 100 bushels of oats, if the same amounts of digestible nutrients are obtained. When corn sells for 70 cents per bushel oats are worth 35 cents, and corn worth per ton about one-fourth more than oats. Outside of this. question of cost, oats are an excellent feed for dairy cows and especially for growing calves. —It has been said, and well said at that, that the moment a man purchases a Home with a tract of land 3 Srsached he should plant an , as a per- manent improvement. ft adds to the val. ue of the property. The culture of asparagus is not a diffi- cult task, and it is not a crop adapted to any particular section. It thrives seem- ingly everywhere. The demand for asparagus seems to be annually on the increase. The demand is greater than the supply, and this, too, in face of the fact that each year there are great annual plantings. So long as as- paragus is acknowledged to be one of the greatest health-imparting vegetables of all cullinary delicacies there will be a big call for it in market. It is a crop that Slopes itself to any soil that is kept inag rich condition. The soil should be well drained and porous, a sandy loam being ideal. The ‘writer has a bed on his South Jersey farm, where a sandy loam is prevalent that grows like a weed and yields the choicest quality. ! —For small beds of for home use the owner can well afford to take a little extra [Paine in the prepara- tion of his bed, and it will make very lit- tle difference as to the nature of the soil, provided the trenches for planting are repared with a fork that is thorough. hese should be made about 15 inches deep and 12 inches wide. Cart away the poor subsoil or clay, replacing it with good garden loam, intermixing a liberal quantity of stable manure and sand. In the absence of the manure a good, reli- able brand of commercial fertilizer may be used in the same way. Fill the trenches to within six inches of the top of the ground; then plant the young | roots one foot apart, and cultivate as , its achievements along various lines for above described for field culture. Since the making of a “Better and More such a bed, so p repared, may be expected | to yield a fine product for many years, | the extra labor and expense should not | be considered for the initial Janine | The cutting of asparagus should not be continued too long in the season; it | would finally exhaust the roots; hence it i stop cutting about the | ing roots to grow on, and thus accumu- ! late sufficient strength to produce anoth- er crop of shoots the next season. The | plants, one and two-year-old crowns, are ‘now everywhere obtainable at a very | moderate price, so the raising of these | crowns from seed may safely be left to those making this their special business. —For field culture, place out furrows in well-prepared soil five or six feet apart; make the furrows 10 or 13 inches deep. i Shen run the sbi plow mH e bottom of trench, breaking spon. Thisis and making a porous s Sheration all perma- SOL a Jo 1 ie appears secret of plan nent crops, and the more thoroughly this g £H 83 g g 2
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers