Bw tc. Bellefonte, Pa., November 27, 1914. THE PRICE YOU PAY. You dreamed for the Day, you schemed for the Day, Watch how the Day will go; Slayer of age and youth and prime {Defenseless slain for never a crime,) Thou art steeped in blood as a hog in slime, False friend and cowardly foe. You have sown for the Day, you have grown for the Day; | Yours is the harvest red. Can you hear the groans and the awful cries? Can you see the heap of slain that lies, And sightless turned to the flame-split skies The glassy eyes of the dead? You have wronged for the Day, you have longed for the Day That lit the awful flame; Tis nothing to you that hill and plain Yield sheaves of dead men amid the grain: ‘That widows mourn for their loved ones slain. And mothers curse thy name. But after the Day there’s a price to pay . For the sleepers under the sod, And He you have mocked for many a day— Listen, and hear what He has to say: “Vengeance is mine, I will repay.” What can you say to God? —Henry Chapell, i.« the London Daily Express. | FROM INDIA. By One on Medical Duty mn that Far Eastern | Country. The Beauties of $rinagar and Life Writer. SRINAGAR, SEPTEMBER: 21st, 1913. House-Boat, “Crocodile.” Dear Home Folk: Good afternoon!—A beautiful Sunday, and I want to add a little more to my! letter. From our last stopping point to "this place was a very nice ride, for we | It | lay along the side of the mountains for a | started early and the road is good. short distance and the roar of the river kept us company; but almost before we | mountain beyond while behind, the gar- | den with its great oak trees, flaming with its! knew it the mountains separated and the valley widened and we were in the midst of wide, rolling rice fields alternat- Here and! ing with corn and wheat. there other Indian grain was seen, but rice held the fore-ground. We then came to Baramulla, a place of perhaps eight hundred houses; curious, two-storied affairs with flat roofs cover- ed with mud and planted with flowers, no verandas, but nearly always rather We beautifully decorated with carvings. stopped here to have our horses examin- ed and a certificate of health given for! them. We then entered;ian avenue of poplars,—road perfect—and these mense, high, straight standing trees, not more than three feet apart, for a distance of thirty-three miles. The mountains off in the distance were covered with snow and the soft, purple haze softened the upper outline, while the mist rising from the river at their base made them seem unreal. Unlike the Rockies, they are green and soft in . outline but have no trees on them; at least those we saw along the way. | am told, though, that further on great for- ests of “chenar,” (a species of oak) hem- lock, deodar, spruce and pine are beauti- ~ ful; but I had hoped to see the autumn! tinting that one sees at home, and am to be disappointed. The clouds played bo- peep with a snow-cap and seemed so near that it gave the appearance of a! mountain smoking. We looked and ad- mired all the way and finally came to. this city of canals—this capital of Kash- mir. Srinagar is on the Jhelam river and the Kashmires have built canals all over this flat so that one passes along in boats rather than any other way. It is a most picturesque place and we were brought directly to a tiny house-boat, with five tiny spaces fitted up as rooms, which had been engaged for us some days~ago by a servant so in a short time we were again located and were having tea in our new home. t The river here is wide and either side of the way is lined with house-boats, in which Europeans live, some all the year The mountains surround us | but the city is laid out in a beautiful way | and it is cool and charming. As we came around. along yesterday morning it was cold and I saw natives carrying little earthen : Mrs. R., my compan- | crocks in baskets. ion, told me the crock, or jar, contained coals and was kept under their clothes when sitting, in order that they would keep warm. The national dress for old, young, big, little, man or woman, is the “kurta” (a single piece shirt reaching to! their knee,) legs bare and arms partially so—this garment is wide and big, look- ing exactly like a bag. ing down the back. Just now, as I look across the river, some women are pounding or cleaning rice, which is in a stone receptacle, and they are standing with a six foot long pole, about three inches in diameter. curved in the middle for the hand, and this they raise high above their heads and drive it down into the rice. to be hard work for they are using every muscle of their bodies ‘while working. But everyone works here, so it don’t seem strange. : Today we went to the Dal Lake. We got into a little pointed boat with a top to it and three men picked up their heart- shaped paddles and off we went. First, we went through a rapid rushing portion and then we glided into a beautiful lilly- padded place that surely must be Arca- dia. On each side of uswere tiny islands im- | The women ! wear a “chuda,” a piece of cloth pinned tightly about their heads the ends hang- | It seems | Sl ———E———=——————————————————————————————————————————————————————————— hag —————————————————————— edged with willows whose center was a | little vegetable garden. The lilly was | the lotus variety, with great pink blos- isoms nearly a foot across their | face; reeds tall and straight, the lake i as clear as a mirror and so smooth the | blue of the sky, the white, fleecy clouds ‘ and the green of the mountains were as | plainly seen in its depths as we saw them i above. Through this beauty we were : smoothly pushed and our boatmen called | our attention to the floating gardens— ( little four by ten spaces that man has i made by driving two bambo postsinto the i lake's bed, then putting a netting of rushes ‘ he has piled the rich black soil of the | lake upon it and on this he plants toma- i toes, melons, and various other things, i with most splendid results. i On, on, through the lilly pads we go, | to go under a beauteous little bridge and , | off in front of us a mirror of a lake, a ' a sea of pond lillies, and a beautiful lit- ' tle eastern house greets us. ‘house we are pushed and out we get, to go into one of the most beautiful spots : The great Shah Jehan I have ever seen. ' built this garden, as well as many oth- | ers, ! whose memory he | Taj Mahal. Oh, mother! Your color- | loving soul { From far, far up the hill a big stream of | water came pouring through under a carved screen at the back of a beautiful ing forward dropped down a stone cut : causeway of ten or twelve foot height i and thence into a long basin set with fountains, and this again emptied into four of these while on either side beds full of geraniums, astors, marigolds, dah- | lias, zinnias, petunias, cosmos, verbenas, "all in a riotous mass of bloom that made the green garden one bewildering mass all mountains—I flowers, sparkling water, back-ground of majestic just wanted to stay there, but of course I couldn’t and we got back into the boat and glided away, down the lake through | the lotus flowers—down the most pictur- | "esque little water-ways bordered with | + willows, while interesting but dirty na- | tives worked in the gardens behind the | willows. We passed the native boats— long, narrow, shallow affairs—with the ! boatmen sitting on one end (the front) paddling. We treaded our silent way through all this loveliness seeing children along the water, very much resembling fish; cows | ‘swimming, and even chickens acting nearly like ducks, for two hours, passing under a series of bridges with funny looking houses—two storied and stone behind, and other interesting north In- dian peculiarities, which I have forgot- ten. We finally reached the landing place and back we came to our watery ‘home. And now I think this is really good-bye for this time. For fear you may worry about our safety, I want to tell you that any one could locate us at any time during our . stay in this “Happy Valley.” that we were stopped ot a toll. gate upon i entering Kashmir. There a book was brought out to us and in it we had to | sign our names, distination, occupation and probable length of stay in Kashmir. As we moved from place to place each move was reported to the Tasil-dahr (a "sort of commissioner of that district) | and any queries as to our location were ‘readily answered. This espionage was done without our knowledge, just so at the time our names were signed as going out the Rajah of Kashmir was no longer responsible for our safety. No English stranger can take up a resi- dence in Kashmir without the consent ‘ of the Rajah. They may board at the . hotels or live in a house-boat, thus in- : suring ony a temporary stay. (Continued next week.) The World's Postal Business. According to French statistics, recent- ly compiled, there are at present some 271,000 postoffices in the world, spread over ninety-seven States, and covering an area of over 30,000,000 square miles. , The United States has the greatest number, 63,663; Germany comes second with 49,838 offices, and the United King- dom of Great Britain and Ireland third with 23,738 offices. . Russia has 18,000, ' France 13,000, and Italy and Austria ! have each about 9,500 offices. It seems that the average daily postal business of the world amounts to some + 110,000,000 mail pieces of all sorts, rep- | resenting on the estimated value of the contents of registered letters a sum of $68,600,000. The number of the world’s postal offi- .cials is given in French statistics as 1,394,247, to which Germany furnishes the greatest number, 314,251. There are { said 2 be 767,898 mail boxes in the ; world. | White Animals. In Siam white elephants become the property of the King and are kept at the palace because of the good luck they are supposed to bring with them. A writer i in the Assembly Herald tells of the ar- rival at Bangkok of a young white ele- phant from the north. “At the same time a small white monkey, caught in | northern jungles, was also presented to the King. His Majesty gave the sum of $190 as a gift to the owner of thisstrange life and mischief and is now on exhibi- tion, together with the young elephant, in a beautiful, large pavilion especially built for them.” : bx —TFor high class Job Work come to the WATCHMAN Office. . Up to this! for The Delight of the Harem, in! later erected the would have been satu- | rated with the gorgeousness of it all. i li en house of stone, and sweep- on a House-Boat Vividly Depicted by the ! ittle gard cols » and sweep another lower basin, and so on through ' of color, and at one place a platform was ' placed upon which if you stood you could * see away out across the lake and the’ I told you! little monkey. The little fellow is full of | Pennsplvania Record Smashed by Worst Drought in History. Pennsylvania is now in the throes of the most serious drought in its history, according to United States Weather Fore- caster George S. Bliss. The records of the weather bureau show no such pro- tracted dry spell since the organization of the bureau in 1871. . Reports of serious water famine come from all sections of Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Delaware. Thousands of acres of winter wheat and rye are in danger of being totally ruined because of the ab- sence of rain. Winter forage crops, such as clover and alfalfa, are also suffering severely. Wells are going dry, and many factories .on small streams in Pennsylvania have been obliged to shut down because of dwindling water power. With wells and : streams rapidly drying up, farmers in all parts of Pennsylvania and New Jersey . are facing a serious situation. Already many of them are carting water to their { farms from long distances. The dry weather has made large tracts of timber an easy prey for forest fires. These fires . have been especially prevalent in Bur- lington county, N. J. The drought, according to Bliss, start- “ed August 22, and from that time until | September 23 there was only a total of 37 of an inch of rainfall. The normal rainfall for that period is about 23 inches. On September 24 and 25, the precipita- i tion was £ of an inch. After that there was no ram of any consequence until October 15, 16 and 17, when there was a total of 1.48 inches for the three days. That rain, according to Bliss, would have contributed considerable relief if the pre- cipitation prior to that date had been normal. Another dry spell set in on Oc- tober 18, and from that time the rainfall has been but .10 of an inch. “Since August 22,” said Bliss, “we have had only four days of rainfall, which, I i believe, .is a record drought for this sec- tion for such a long period. The drought is caused by the tendency of the large rain areas to cling to the Mississippi val- ; ley. Out there, there has been an ex- i cess of rainfall. There has also been an excess of rainfall in western Europe. The report that the continuous firing of the large armies battling in Europe is the cause of the drought is ridiculous and absolutly untrue. It is impossible to predict how long the dry spell will con- . tinue, but if we do not get more heavy rains soon, winter crops are bound to suffer severely.” Value in Mine Waste. * In all mining districts quantities of ma- i terial which have been considered almost ithe rack for the glory of the Lord.” - Some of these instruments of torture are ! : worthless have been accumulating for years. Persons of an inquiring mind have in several instances found uses for much of this so-called waste or refuse. In Jasper County, Missouri, there are hundreds of lead and zinc mines. The . comparably more severe than the tor- | ores are strongly allied with lime and . flint, and to remove the metals from the | crude material as cheaply as possible it is necessary to crush this rock formation into small particles: After the lead and iat her in the darkness. 1 zinc have been removed, there remains a i very hard substance known to the work- | men as “chats ”’ For years this was left lying on the Colors of the Seas. The poet sings of ‘deep, blue sea,” but the sea is not always blue by any means. There are any number of colors to be observed in the oceans, and many interesting facts have been gathered with respect to them. The Mediterranean and Caribbean seas present the true blue color. The extra- ordinary blueness of the first named has been assigned to two causes. One is that very few large rivers of fresh water enter it; the other is that the Maediter- ranean, practically landlocked and ex- posed to powerful sunlight, has the great- est evaporation of all seas. By actual test, it has been ascertained that the Mediterranean water is heavier and salt- ier than the water of the Atlantic Ocean, which is an important circumstation of the cause of its color. Aside from blue and green, other colors are to be seen in the world’s seas and oceans. In January, 1909, a river of yel- low water, three miles wide and of enor- mous length, was observed running par- allel with the Gulf Stream. It stretched from Cape Florida to Cape Hatteras, and was undoubtedly caused by some subma- rine upheaval, probably of a volcanic na- ture. [t endured for some weeks. In 1901. off the Californian coast, the sea turned almost black. The whole of Santa Cruz Bay assumed this extraordi- nary inky hue, and fishing came to an end. In this case no definite reason was ascertained for the phenomenon. The dull-reddish tint that is seen in the Red Sea, and which has given that body of water its name, is said to be due to the presence of millions upon millions of microscopic algae. The Yellow Sea, of China, is supposed to owe its color to the floods of muddy water that the great river pours into it, but many scientists are of opinon that the color is to be ascribed to the living organisms that flourish in the waters. Generally speaking, the blueness of sea water is in constant ratio to its salti- ness. In the tropics the tremendous evaporation induced by the blazing sun causes the water to be much more salt than it is in more northern latitudes. : For about thirty degrees both north and south of the equator the waters are of an exquisite azure. Beyond these latitudes the blue fades and the color becomes green. In the Arctic and Antarctic oceans the greens are almost as vivid as the blues in the tropics. In the Tower of London are yet pre- served some of the relics of the past, when men used “the thumb screw and ; dyed deep with the blood of the unfortu- nates who suffered from them, and many of these sufferers were women. We shudder at the thought, and yet women today, are undergoing a slow torture, in- ments of the torture chamber. When the nerves are racked ceaselessly, when | the day is joyless and the night is sleep- less, many a woman sees the gaunt, wild-eyed phantom of insanity clutching Even insanity, when caused by disease of the womanly organs, has been cured by Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. It has cured St. : Vitus’s dance and other forms of nervous ! ground in great piles, and, except for the ° i use of a little in road construction, no ! use was known for it. Finally one of the ! railroads used it for ballast, and then it | was not long until every road in that dis- very best material for that purpose. When concrete paving came, it was It heals ulceration and inflammation, re- i lieves female weakness, soothes pain i trict used it, and it was pronounced the : | tried as a filler, and it was found as good | , as gravel, and owing to its vast quantities | | was much cheaper. It found its way into | concrete blocks, and was used in the con- | ! struction of cement foundations, cul- ~ verts, and bridge piers. Farmers mould- ‘ed it into fence posts with cement as a | retainer. have been experimenting much more { with this waste, and they declare that it ! is one of the very best materials for the | construction of large concrete buildings. Mining waste from other mines has disease. It is a medicine remarkable for | its direct action upon the delicate female organs, and its wonderful healing power. and tones up the nervous system. It. contains no alcohol, and is altogether free from opium, cocaine and other nar- | cotics. | A Friend in Need. This friend was a tame stag that be- | longed to a lady living near Manila, in| the Philippine Islands. He was a great pet and allowed to roam around at his! will. ! During the past few months experts been found to be of more or less value. ! | One use for slag from furnaces is in the | construction of wharfs and filling in of i low water fronts. The Lyre-bird. The Queensland authorities have for some time past expressed great concern about the notable decrease in the lyre- i bird population of that colony. So great has been the destruction wrought upon this beautiful creature that the State has protected the bird until the year 1915. Nevertheless, the bird scarcer and scarcer. is becoming opment of the tail feathers that tempts the hunters and vandals. The contour of the bird, with its long neck and stout feet, is by no means unlike that of a pea- cock, and the wonderful tail, possessed only by the male birds, fulfils a corre- sponding role of vain display. The bird executes a series of antics for a train of female admirers on a raised the year, about January, the lyre-bird loses its characteristic plume and has to rest content with the sober plumage of ite mate. The fully developed male lyre-bird is one of the most handsome and notable of the forms of bird life of Queensland. Parcel Post May Cut Cost. Commission, redoubled because of war- ing problem by recourse to the parcel post, resulted in an appeal being sent to Washington by the Commissioners to have the weight limit on parcels increas- ed to 100 pounds. At present the limit is 50 pounds. The investigations of the Commission- ers have disclosed many obstacles in the way of the direct producer-to-consumer plan, and not the least of these is the stupidity of some rural postmasters, who are charged with permitting perishable products to be sent as “merchandise” and thus doomed to decay or to be crush- ed. Farmers, it is said, must be weaned from the “shoe-box” method of shipment and taught many things about preparing: packages. Horrors of War. “This war in Europe is a terrible thing.” “Sure, but it ought to cut down irri- gation to this country.” ——Subscribe for the WATCHMAN, There is a fine of five pound for its cap- | ture, injury, oi the taking of its eggs. | ' waited to see what would happen. . down under the pony’s nose. Then he ! before him and was making a hearty It is the extraordinary lyre-form devel- i uniform. His recklessness is character- "warns of increasing physical derange- ment. earthen mound. For a short period of" The efforts of the Chicago Market ! time prices, to solve the high cost of liv- | i ‘| solutely foolish.” The ponies did not have the same free- | dom. When they are taken out they | must be tied. One day the man who fed the ponies tied one of them with a very! short rope, and then carelessly put its’ bunch of hay beyond its reach. | The poor little beast strained in vain | at its rope to reach his meal. His own- er, watching from the window, was about to go to his help, when he saw the stag standing by, taking in the situation. She The stag soon found a way out of the difficulty. He bent his proud head, lifted part of the hay on his antlers and put it went back for more; in a few minutes the grateful little pony had his full meal breakfast.—The Outlook. Taking Chances. There is no more reckless fighter than the American soldier. The American soldier is but the American citizen in istic of the man, whether working or fighting. He is always taking chances. The worst feature of this recklessness is the way in which men take chances with their health. Symptom after symptom But they run by all danger signals,—often to collapse in a total wreck. If there is undue fulness after eating, or bad taste in the mouth, spots before the eyes, loss of appetite, or sleep- lessness, heed the warning of nature and put the stomach, blood and liver in a healthy condition. It can be done by the use of Dr. Pierce’s. Goiden Medical Discovery. It cures ninety-eight per cent. of all who give it a fair trial. Steel Plant Fights ‘Booze.’ A campaign to discourage drinking among its 20,000 employes has been launched by the Illinois Steel Company. Electric signs flashing pointed queries as to the effects of drink have been placed over entrances of the company’s plants in South Chicago. They ask: Did booze ever do you any good? Did booze ever get you a better job? Did booze ever contribute anything to the happiness of your family? Milk stations, with icing facilities, have been installed in the plant, and the company is encouraging the use of milk in place of liquor. Lectures and moving pictures are be- ing employed in the campaign. ——“Fear,” said the professor, “is ab- “Yes,” remarked one of the students pleasantly, “it does cover one with goose- a 2 ——The WATCHMAN enjoys the proud distinction of being the best and cleanest county paper published. : “into a pint of soft, cool water. FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN DAILY THOUGHT. In God’s world, for those who are in earnest, there is no failure. No work truly done, no word earnestly spoken, no sacrifice, freely made, was ever made in vain.—F. W. Robertson. The Woman's Home Companion is ap- pealing to American women to wear American-made garments. In the Oc- tober number Ida M. Tarbell wrote such an appeal and in the December number her position is strongly approved by a number of famous people whose letters are published. Among those whose et- ters are published are Mrs. Thomas A. Edison, Gertrude Atherton, James J. Hill, , William C. Redfield, Secretary of Com- merce; Mrs. Senator La Follette, and Margaret Deland. The idea is that in the past American women have preferred foreign goods, but that with the war the opportunity has been opened for American consumers to use domestic goods and to develop a real taste for them which shall continue. Gertrude Atherton’s letter in the De- cember number follows: ; “It is my intention to have my even- ing gowns this winter made of cotton materials—voile, crepe, etc.—and to wear nothing but cotton at evening entertain: ments. I have succeeded in interesting a number of my friends in this idea, as it will be no sacrifice to wear the beautiful transparent materials of delicate colors manufactured by some of our Southern houses. I am sure that if every woman in the United States who can afford to have an evening gown at all would agree to have it of cotton the situation in the South would very soon be relieved, and I certainly shall buy nothing of foreign make whatever until this dreadful crisis is well past.” Teeth are the things which most par- ents are prone to neglect. It is esti- mated that more than 60 per cent of the children in the public schools have at least one tooth which badly needs atten- tion from a dentist. Don’t think that nothing needs to be done for a tooth just because it causes the child no pain. Decayed teeth are . ideal breeding places for germs and make ' a child much more liable to all sorts of infectious diseases. If something is not done for them they may cripple his mouth for life or they may cause the ' glands of his neck to swell up and form abscesses. Then, too, the child with de- cayed or painful teeth cannot masticate his food properly, and so fails to get the , nourishment his growing body demands. Before you deal too severely with your little sons and daughters because they , are irritable or because they do poorly in | their studies, be sure that it’s not some , defect in their physical condition that is : to blame. Perfectly white hair is always very | beautiful, especially if it still grows thick about the brow and temples. The best shampoo is the white of an egg beaten Wet the head and hair first with cold water. Rub in the egg, which will make a soft lather, and finish exactly as for any other sham- poo, except in the last rinsing water, which should be cold, a few drops of best indigo—not the ordinary washing bluing, but indigo that can only be had. at the druggist’s—should be added; bare- ly enough to slightly tinge the water. This acts exactly as does blueing on white goods—leaves the hair a pure white, not in the least tinged with yel- low. A London scalp specialist makes the following assertion: That all women brush their hair entirely too much. This is why, so he says, women of to- day have such poor heads of hair; they have simply brushed until they have loosened the roots, then more brushing has pulled the loosened hair out The wearing of false hair has done little or no damage, for there is no particular reason for keeping the head cool. Neith- ! er has the marcel waving been injurious unlessdone by an inexperienced person who needlessly pulled or burned the | hair. Waving has a tendency to dry the hair, but brilliantine will counteract that. Massaging of the scalp is all wrong, so the London man thinks, and tonics should never be rubbed in. The hair should be parted, the tonic dropped on the scalp and the head gently pressed with the finger tips until the liquid has ‘been absorbed. Before applying a tonic the hair should be carefully combed. After the hair is quite dry again comb any possible tangles out, then part the hair and braid loosely, tying at the ends so it will remain braided during the night, thus avoiding unnecessary tangles in the morning. A wide toothed comb is best and a soft ! brush when one must be used to smooth the hair. hair the more gently it should be hand- led. A comb run over the scalp in the ordinary night and morning combing is ! all the friction any healthy scalp ever require. After an illness of any sort special tonics are advised. Shampooing should be frequent, but must be regulated by the life one leads as well as by the con- stitution. will Instead of giving the bride the usual shower, give her a large common box, and at various times send her useful lit- tie articles to put away in it. She must be told not to open the packages, but to just watch the contents of the box grow, then take it to her home and open it as a surprise when she starts housekeeping. It should contain all sorts of useful household articles. Probably never before have artificial flowers had such a vogue as they have just now. And a small corsage flower is one of the best means of giving color to a dark street {rock or suit. : There are bunches of tiny flowers in brilliant red that are very good. There are bouquets consisting of a rosebud, a! few forget-me-nots and a sprig or two of green that are good. Then there are zinnias, nasturtiums, poppies and many other flowers in their own natural, rich coloring. . b : The placing of the flower is rather im- portant. It can be placed on the left shoulder with good effect. It looks well at the closing of a ruff or a close collar of velvet and fur. Of course, the flower on an evening frock is usually part of the frock. That is to say, it is placed in position when the frock is made. However, a frock that needs a little refreshing can be brightened up with a new flower, and one of the newest places to put it is about half way down the back. The softer the texture of the a ——————— FARM NOTES. —Never ship a chicken to a customer that you would not want sent to you for the same amount of money. —In building up fertility, more depends upon the saving and proper application of the manure irom the stock than upon the class of animal fed. —Careful use of the drag on a road that is already in reasonably good condi- tion will almost entirely prevent trouble from ruts, mud holes or dust, and give good service at a low cost. —Overproduction affects generally the producer who is content with the aver- age crop of the product of medium qual- ity. The best of cereals and the choic- est stock bring remunerative prices. —The older a hog gets, the more it costs to put a pound of meat on him. The State Experiment Stations have estab- lished this truth beyond all argument. Early to market is the way to capitalize this information. —Molasses seeds have usually been ‘ found to contain large quantities of weed . seeds. It is said, however, that now sev- eral of the largest firms kill the weed seed germs by heat, so they will not grow when scattered on the soil. —Indigestion in older calves is usually due to unclean milk or feed, unclean ves- sels, close confinement in dark, unsani- tary stalls and irregular or excessive feeding. In some cases it appears to be due to sheer weakness and inability to digest. —A corn expert of Illinois places em- phasis upon the stalk as well as the ear in choosing seed corn. He prefers the stalks that are of uniform height, with ears that hang over at the proper angle. Interest, he thinks, should be taken in the stalk as much as in the corn. —A calf that has one-half of its moth- er's milk will put on 100 pounds of weight a month, and at three months it is eating and may be weaned. Such a calf at 6 months will weigh nearly as much as a year-old calf that was taken away at once from its mother. —The best time to peel posts is a question which must be determined for each particular case. As a rule, itis good practice to remove the bark as soon as possible after the posts are out, and regulate the rate of seasoning by meth- ods of piling. In this way peeling will be easier, there will be less danger from insects and seasoning will be more rapid. —Cultivating crops, with turning plows and one-horse cultivators is a slow pro- cess, and should not be practiced unless the land is full of roots and stumps. Such a condition is inexcusable, for the reason that we can burn, dig, pull and blow out the stumps in a few years. Spare time can be used to the best ad- vantage in getting out stumps and roots. —When we take into consideration the larger prices received by the Eastern farmer for his produce, his nearness to market, shipping station, school and church and other advantages we are con- vinced that there must be something wrong with the man who sells his farm at a low price and buys new land in the far west. The eastern farm values may go higher, but they will not go lower than they are at the present time, and are therefore safe and sure investments. —Good breeders and farmers with ex- perience have the fixed habit of never allowing a newly-purchased hog to min- gle with the other hogs on their farms until it has been kept in quarantine for several weeks. Every new hog that is bought should be quarantined in a pen widely separated from that which con- tains the other hogs, and kept there for not less than three weeks, or until there is an absolute certainty that it will not develop any disease or carry it to the other animals of the herd. —Concrete Storage for Apples.—~Apples can be kept in cold storage without the use of ice. In a specially constructed | concrete storage cave, built by the horti- cultural department of the Kansas Agri- cultural College last fall, fruit was kept in such perfect condition through the winter that it was not necessary to open . the packages and regrade before selling in the spring. Practically no loss was in- curred by rotting, which causes damage to stored apples only when there is a lack of ventilation and a variation of tempera- ture. The average variation was one or two degrees a week. Such a cave as this one, large enough for 1000 boxes of apples, can be built for $250 to $300, not including the excavat- ting, which should not be expensive. In- side, the cave measures twenty-four feet long, twelve and a half feet wide, and seven feet high. Ventilation was pro- | vided by means of an eight-inch tile laid below ground and coming to the surface three rods from the cave. The air which passed through this Ventilator waswarm- ed in summer and cooled in winter, so . that it was near the temperature of the ! cave when it reached the storage room. | After the fruit had been stored about a month the ventilator was partly closed, | as the fruit during the remainder of the | time required less rapid ventilating. Dur- i ing the picking season when the nights , are quite cold and frosty a low tempera- i ture is obtained in the fall without the | use of ice by opening the cave door late | in the evening and early in the morning. i A temperature of 40 to 50 degrees is low . enough at the start, and little trouble is { experienced in obtaining a lower temper- | ature after the first month. As near 33 | degrees as possible should be maintained | during the winter and spring. | Nearly any fall or winter apples will ' easily keep until after Christmas. Under | proper care the Winesap, Tewksbury, Genet and similar varieties keep almost | perfectly until May or June. i The apples should be taken from the | tree as soon as well colored but before they become very ripe. They should be ! handledr with great care, as a bruised i spot will start to rot within a very short | time. | Any one having several barrels of apples can afford to build a small storage house. This need not be expensive, but should have insulated walls like an ice house. It is better to place the apples in boxes or barrels than to store them in the bulk. If one apple rots in a box it will spoil only that box, while in a pile it would cause all the others to rot. Under no conditions should apples be stored in the cellar, because it is very unsanitary and is likely to cause disease. Also it is impossible to keep an even temperature and good ventilation, the most important factors in the successful storing of apples.—Kansas Industrialist. ' ———Put your ad. in the WATCHMAN.