emorraiic; atcha, " Belletonte, Pa., May 14, 1915. EE ————————————— NOT MUCH OF A CREED. He didn’t have much of a creed, And his doctrine was not very deep; His faith wasn’t one he could read In volumes expensive or cheap. He helped all who asked, when he could, He comforted all when they grieved, He believed in the right and the good, And he lived up to what he believed. He didn’t have much of a creed, His doctrine was simple and plain, But he seemed to have all that we need ‘To balance life’s pleasure and pain. ¥ He wasn't a fellow to shirk With burdens that could be relieved, + He believed twas his duty to work, And he lived up to what he believed. He put out his hand here and there To succor the weak and distressed, And when he had burdens to bear, He bore them by doing his best. He refused to take profit or gain That was won by another deceived, He believed in a life without stain, And he lived up to what he believed. I reckon when toiling is o’er, And all our struggles are through, When no one needs help any more, And there are no good deeds to do. When the last of life’s dangers is braved, And the judgment of all is begun, Not by what we believed we'll be saved, But by what, through believing, we've done. —E. A. Guest in Detroit Free Press. RETURNING FROM INDIA. By One on Medical Duty in that Far Eastern Country. The First Part of the Homeward Bound Voyage. FEBRUARY 17th, 1914. Some place in the Bay of Bengal. Dear Home Folk: Wonder whether you have gotten al} the letters I have sent you. True, there wouldn't be much lost if they did not reach their destination, but would leave you to guess how I arrived where I am. The sea, so blue that even the sky is jealous and is calling little fleecy white clouds to its aid to enhance its usual beauty, is as calm as a lake while away out on the horizon line a few little white caps are showing. A small steamer sailed into view for a short time this morning, but now, only the endless blue meets your eye. This boat—P. & O. S. S. India—is a fairly decent one, although not unusual- ly elegant, but my ship-mates—they are a most interesting lot of folks. Of course, it is second-class, and all nice English people go first-class, so no doubt there are many nice people beyond the rail. I later learned that our side had by far the most interesting lot of folks. Colombo was indeed a charming place, but hot and damp, and I am sorry to say I was disappointed; my two years in India have made me particular as to what I may rave about. The trip to Kandy was up amongst mountains and it was very new to me to see tropical verdure spread over most beautiful mountain peaks and valleys. The cocoanut plantations, with the fa- mous Ceylon tea growing in between; the coffee and cocoa plants offered varie- ty while over every possible place rubber was growing—not the rubber I knew but plain looking trees with their leaves a bright red, since it is their winter season and they may drop their leaves if they like. They are light-barked, straight- trunked trees and all the larger ones had scars on their sides about two feet from the ground—not a straight scar but a line running down at an angle of forty- five degrees and embracing half the cir- cumferance of the trunk. It is at the lower-most end of this line that a cocoa- nut shell is hung and into this the white rubber drips. This. scar is refreshen- ed each morning, cut just a little wider, the coolies collect the cocoanut’s contents in one vessel; the rubber that has dried at the scar and in the trough is put into another receptacle, for it makes but sec- ond rate product. various processes for the market product. We stopped, after three hours of climb- ing, at Paradenia, to see the Botanical Gardens and one could just wander around indefinitely. True, it is not a bit more beautiful than the gardens at home, but again it’s the tropical trees that fas- cinate. To come up and find one’s self looking at a cinnamon tree, orto pick up a little nut and find it’s off the nut- meg tree, under which you are standing, or to walk along and see a “kitchen gar- den” and see cocaine, camphor, and va- rious other plants that one knows only by their dried remains—it was all so dif- ferent, and then to add to its unusual- ness an immense snake was killed al- | most before our very eyes; only a rat snake, not poisonous, but still a horrid, uncanny thing to meet while jogging around. But the spicy winds were lacking and all I can now recall was the odorif- erous breeze that came to us from the “manure works” just out of Colombo. The tropics are interesting, but oh dear! the dwellers therein are so dirty they spoil the whole thing and indeed are a blot on the landscape. We left Colombo last Saturday even- ing and today is Tuesday. Sunday was a cold, rainy day and reminded me more of the day I sailed from Liverpool than an Indian day; but Monday was beautiful and you began to be glad you were aboard a boat, for it really is not warm while on deck and you can stand the heat in the cabins, knowing that in a short time you will be cool once more. I can’t realize that I am on my way Both must go through | 1 der why I ever came this long way home for I do get homesick for “my ain folk,” ! especially when I can’t carry to you any of the many lovely presents I see in the! stores. I would like to carry home to | you the cream of all the curios find. It is not the common you would like out here, for they are common in-' deed, but you would like some of the choice bits one sees everywhere. | Scotchwoman, a Dutchman, from South Africa; two English folks and myself; ! could you imagine a more diverse com- pany. We are not a brilliant lot and the meal usually proceeds in silence except | for the lapping of the Jap while eating soup or other liquids, and the curious national “thank you” of the English peo- | ple. A phrase I can’t copy, no matter | how hard I have tried to imitate; it is not thankful. But merely this—“r-e-a-l- | l-y now one must be polite, don’t you s-e-e?” It is nearly time to quit. We reach Pinang Thursday morning and I think I'll mail this to you from there; it will no doubt reach you some time. (Continued next week.) Hints To Vacationists. Nature’s siren song is calling the city dweller. It lures to mountain, meadow, lake or camp. all who are free hasten to answer. In selecting a place for a summer home or a brief vacation it is well to observe a few basic precautions and so avoid in- curring illness which may result seri- ously. There are thousands of resorts, cot- tages and camps where the defects in sanitation present a genuine menace. Certain things should be carefully ob- served. The water supply. The disp oral of sewage and garbage. The milk supply, particularly if there are infants or young children. If the water supply comes from a well, be sure that it is not located where it will receive underground or surface drainage from a barn-yard or outhouse. It is essential to boil water taken from surface streams. Clearness it no guar- antee of purity. If springs are the source of supply, care should be taken that they are not surrounded by habitations or other sources of pollution. In small villages or shore places if the water supplies are public, diligent inquiry should be made as to whether the source is free from sewage contamination. If the disposal of sewage and garbage is careless, flies are certain to breed, and unless kitchens and dining rooms are carefully screened there is the possibility of typhoid or diarrheal infection from this source. With young children, particularly in- fants, the question of a clean milk sup- ply is one of vital importance. Fresh milk is of little or no advantage unless it be clean milk. Mosquitoes also may prove a pestifer- ous nuisance. There is the possibility of malarial infection in regions where they abound. Failure to give attention to these es- sential points of sanitation may result in poignant regrets instead of delightful holiday memories. : HARRISBURG, May 12:—You, Mr. City Man and Mr. Man in the Small Town, the Commonwealth expects YOU to do your part on the ‘State-wide Good Roads Day.” Don’t be afraid to take off your coat, roll up your sleeves, pitch in and work. You will get blisters on your hands and sunburn on your face, but don’t be afraid, it won't hurt you; it will do you good. If you have not joined your county as- sociation to aid in making the day set aside by the Governor of the State suc- cessful, hustle around and do it. Do it now. Don’t write, don’t send word by a neighbor that you will be there, but hunt | up the man who is getting the crowd to- gether and tell him you will join it. Call him up on the 'phone. Get busy. Saw Two Torpedoes, Says Capt. Turner. Captain W. T. Turner, commander »f the Lusitania, gave out the follow- Ing statement at Queenstown: “I have heard that the Germans have already begun to spread the story that the Lusitania was sunk by an explo- sion inside. This is absolutely untrue. *“l saw the periscope of the subma- rine and saw the torpedo coming; to- ward us through the sea. I watched its course and followed its bubbling wake until it disappeared beneath our counter. You might say 1 saw the torpedo strike the Lusitania, and the next instant the explosion occurred. “I kept to the middle channel, fol- lowing orders received from the ad- miralty. When 1 saw the torpedo 1 tried to change the ship’s course in time to avoid it. The second torpedo followed almost immediately. The sec- ond struck right over the boilers, crip- pling the engines. For this reason it was impossible to beach the Lusitania. “I did not order the lifeboats out sooner because it was foolish to try to get them into the water before the Lusitania lost all headway. Otherwise they would have been swamped. “All talk of an internal explosion is foolish. Had there been high explo- sives or any amount of ammunition in the hold the liner would have been blown to bits instead of sinking as she did. There had been no reason for running under forced draft. That is why we were not at full speed. “I saw the submarine again. I wasin the water four hours, and while I was swimming I saw the craft rise amid the wreckage and dive again. Others saw it even better than I did.” Endless Chain. “You ought to go to a show and for get your troubles.” “That's right. Maybe I can find a show tonight that home once more and yet at times I won- Our Correspondents’ Opinions. This column is at the service of those of our people who desire to of general or loca in no wa ments. The real name of the author must accom- pany all communications, Jrom publication when the request is made. their views on any subject interest. The ** Watchman’ will The call is universal and | ! towns, our State, and our country need will make me forget the one I saw last pight.”=—Washington Star ix Suffrage and Anti-Suffrage. Their belief in two things divide the Our table is one place you might find Suffragist from the Anti-Suffragist—it is interesting for there is a Jap, a Parsee, a their belief in Democracy and their belief in women. We claim that the individual is the unit of our government, and the Anti-Suffrag- ists claim that the family is the unit. When the latter are confronted with the fact of manhood suffrage they say they do not believe in pure Democracy but in representation. What becomes of representation when the vote of one man who stands for six as the vote of the man who has no wom" en to represent? We have much impure ' Democracy, what we want is a govern- ment founded on justice to all. Below all the arguments of good and bad laws, of good and bad women, of wet and dry States if stories of what he said or what she said, lies the belief, or lack of belief in the rule of the people, and the moral worth of womankind. It comes with poor grace from one who is opposing woman’s ballot to lament over the fact that men do not vote. Our both men and women who are alive to their duty of making our land a better place to live in, a better home, and who should realize that our government has to do with our lives, and should be made clean and as good as we wish our homes to be. Taxation it is true is levied largely on property but every individual helps pay the taxes of our government in the prices paid for food, clothes, and a place to live. There is no reason that women should be more partisan with the ballot than without it, and in questions relating to their interests they have shown them- selves non-partisan in the States where they vote. It was the women of Colorado who elected Judge Lindsay in spite of the opposition of the parties. We Suffragists do not claim that we will make all things good, but we do claim that women have made things bet- ter in all the countries where they vote, and that we should be given the chance in our own State to try. We believe that all work which can be shared honestly by both men and women is better done and more worth doing be- cause of the sharing, and we believe that the ballot in the hands of the women will do much to awaken all the people to our country’s needs. We must arouse a better civic con- science, and no State needs it more than Pennsylvania, there are enough honest men and women in Pennsylvania to make it a white State if they were all awake to their duty. We shall go on working to arouse the women of our land to a sense of their responsibility in our common life, and we hope that the men of Pennsylvania will help us next November in this work. ELIZABETH BLANCHARD BEACH. Chairman Centre Co., Woman's Suffrage Party. Passenger on Canadian Liner Sends Remarkable Wireless Message. A passenger of the Canadian Pacific steamship Missanabie, from Halifax. which passed over the scepe of the Lusitania disaster twenty-four hours later, immediately sent the following remarkable message to the London Times. He was then in ignorance of the truth: “Saturday, 1:30 o'clock, I see floating deck chairs and a boat upon the bow of which I read the word ‘Liverpool.’ Our ship swings her around and on the other side the word ‘Lusitania.’ God, it has happened! “I realize that we are on the scene of a great tragedy. There are other lifeboats about. One contains a pair of boots and a hat. There are collapsi- ble boats awash, some with sides not up. There is a whaleboat keel up- My . ward with a body lyin: over it, the lifebelt slipping off the neck. Yes, a dead man. “Captain Evans, our commander, has 1,000 lives aboard his ship to get fo safety, and up goes our speed, and we are dashing away on a zigzag course. Just now a bald head bobs up in the water not twenty-five feet away from us. It is ghastly in the sunshine. ° “The water is almost motionless. The silence and impressiveness of it all are coupled with the dawning sense of our own danger. It has brought won- derful calm to all. Our women are fine—silent and sad, with full sympa- thy which overrides fear. 4 “We can do naught but race on, but by 6 o'clock tonight our risk will be over. Captain Evans’ calm and digni- ty are fine, yet no man could live his previous twenty-four hours unmoved, and his own thoughts must have flown to his own son in the trenches.” v 108 AMERICANS IN 1,154 DEAD ON LUSITANIA. The following are the figures fur- nished by the Cunard company and United States Consul Frost at Queenstown, Ireland, as to the loss of life on the sunk Lusitania: Total loss of liveS....ceceeeeecees 1,164 Americans among lost..... 108 Passengers drowned or killed. 789 Crew drowned or killed....... 865 Total saved.....ccoeeevvee cessenese 164 Passengers rescued....cccoeeeee 462 Crew rescued..... vessesencane vo S02 Americans among saved..cecee 8&0 Injured among rescued: Passengers 30 Crew .vcceesseves essesesscsscsnces 11 Bodies recovered ....cceseeeecees 144 23 I 1 A Americans identified among FT NRE teceesnsesens be responsible for their ideas or state- but will be withheld ' WOMEN CALM AS THEY FACE DEATH Passengers Had Been Thinking of German Threat, and as Ship Was Struck American Exclaimed, Heavens, They've Done It!” © Oliver P. Barnard, the scenic artist of the Covent Garden Opera, who told of A. G. Vanderbilt's bravery and Froh- man’s stoicism, gave the following ac- : count of the torpedoing of the Lusita- nia: *It was my rare fortune to be one of ; four people who saw the torpedo of ! the German submarine fired at the | Lusitania at a distance of probably i not more than 200 yards. I had just | come up from luncheon and was look- ing across an uncommonly calm and | beautiful sea when 1 saw on the star- board what at first seemed to be the non-committal; and you know they are | women in his family counts for as much i tail of a fish. It was the periscope of ! our assailant. { “The next thing I observed was the fast lengthening track of a newly | launched torpedo, itself a streak of { froth. We had all been thinking, dreaming, sleeping and eating ‘subma- ‘ rines’ from the hour we left New York, "and yet with the dreadful danger about | to descend upon us 1 could hardly be- i lieve the evidence of my own eyes. i “An American lady rushed up to { where 1 stood, exclaiming nonchalant- ly, ‘This isn't a torpedo, is it? “I was too spellbound to answer. felt absolutely sick. Hit With Terrific Impact. “Then we were hit. My impression of the contact of the torpedo was that it was an indescribably terrific impact, though not marked by anything such as the imagination might fancy in the way of a roar. “The torpedo must have penetrated deeply into the side of the vessel and exploded internaly. “The point of contact was about be- neath the grand entrance to tle sa- loon, and the result of the explosion | was that it blew everything in that i immediate vicinity into smithereens. | Then the tremendous water tanks on | the funnel deck burst. releasing their | enormous contents and flooding ev- | erything. “The moment the explosion took | Place the Lusitania simply fell over Just as a house, kept up by underpin- ning, would topple the instant the main props were pulled out. Stunned and Astounded., “Instantly there was a tremendous rush of passengers to the deck from the saloon and tounge. 1 did not think that anybody, not even the women and children, were so much terrified as they were astounded and stunned by the consciousness that the fears, cher- ished half in vidicule for five days previously, had at last been realized and the German bluff had actually come off. ** ‘By heavens, they've done it! ejac- ulated a broad shouldered American whoin | never saw again. 1 “Many people. evidently convinced that made preparations to sit tight and let things take their course. “My own first impulse was to obtain a life belt. Excitement and fright were now everywhere, but there was no panic. erybody’s motto, though there was on all hands a pellmell scurry below to obtain life belts. Every second people reappeared singly. in pairs and in groups armed with belts, uselessly carried out in most cases and inade- | quately strapped on. Others forgot the belts and devoted themselves to ! hunting for their relatives. i Brave Wireless Lad. “The last passenger 1 spoke to was a . young American bride, Mrs. Steward Mason. the daughter of William Linds- | ley, an American manufacturer. \ “ ‘Have you seen my husband? she shrieked at me appealingly. “I crossed over to the starboard side again. and on my way encountered the two Marconi operators in the emergen- ey wireless room. They. too, were cool- ness personified. I learned from them that the explosion had put the main wireless room out of action. put out every electric light in the ship. “Finding that he could do no more a young operator, superbly humored and careless of what looked like sure disaster for us all, took up a kneeling position on the funnel deck in order to make. snapskots of the Lusitania set- tling to its dou. “The ‘snap’ was probably the only one attempted in the whole ship, but it did not come off. A further lurch of the boat upset him und his plans, for the last glimpse I had of him was astride a chair in which he said that he was going to sit down and swim. “The glorious old cry of the sea, ‘Women and children first’ was the unvarying rule on the Lusitania. Some man, whom I assumed to be an alien steerage passenger, was the only per- son to attempt to violate it. “Certainly not more than fifteen min- utes, or eighteen at the outside, ensued after the torpedo impact before the Lusitania was gone.” v Every mother owes her child a good constitution. It is better to be born healthy than rich. With health all things are posstble, fame, riches, success. With- out health riches are only a mockery, opening the way to pleasures which can- not be enjoved. The health of the child depends upon the health of the mother. The health of the mother depends upon herself. Healthy motherhood is enjoyed by those who keep the delicate feminine organs in a healthy condition by the use of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. It nourishes the nerves and so relieves nervousness, it strengthens the body and makes the mind cheerful. It practically does away with the pain associated with the baby’s advent. It makes weak wom- en strong and sick women well. Nothing but Possible Fate After | “By “That was the first universal thought. ‘What shall we do? was the next. the Lusiania was unsinkable, ‘Keep cool’ seemed to be ev- It also | FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN DAILY THOUGHT. i | | When we are happy, we see those we love; in sorrow, we turn to those who love us,—Cecil Raleigh. There is probably no woman who can- not count in her wardrobe at least one waist of the serviceable wash silk. To the business woman wash silk is a boon | that has long been appreciated because of its excellent laundering qualities and | its generally trig and unmussed appear- ance. Until rather lately the wash silks have been confined to the strictly tailor- ' ed shirt waist, but since the shops have : been showing varieties of wash silks in all sorts of weaves and patterns the possibilities of uses for this ever practical ‘ material have become more numerous. The plain China silks and pale-colored crepes de chine have always been con- sidered washable, but they have also been rather expensive. It is possible now to get most gorgeous striped and figured effects in the crepes de chine for the same price as a good quality of the so-called shirting silks. These striped materials lend themselves admirably to the modeling of very attractive waists. Yokes, collar or cuffs made crosswise of the goods, with the rest of the waist made lengthwise, give a self-trimming that is as effective as it is practical for , the wash tub. There is a tendency to , combine plain white silk with the striped materials, either in the vest efféct or in ' the lining of turn-over collar and cuffs. Whole dresses for spring and summer wear are being shown made from the plain or striped wash silks. Can you im- agine anything cooler than a light green - and white striped silk made simply with | full skirt, short bodice and a girdle of “plain green to match the stripe? In this same dress there is an underblouse with full, long sleeves of Georgette crepe, | which, by the way, is a chiffon-like mate- ' rial as washable as the silk. | Nothing betrays lack of daintiness in | personal care more than neglect of the hands and nails. A pretty hand is a ' great beauty asset and one to be desired | by every woman who values her good looks. Of course it is more difficult for , some women to keep their nails clean ‘ and their hands soft and white and free | from blemishes than others. The house- { wife who does her own work, continually ; dipping her hands in soapy dishwater, cannot expect to attain the beauty and fine texture of skin possible to the wom- an whose hands are idle all day. How- ever, she can at least keep her nails and hands clean, and cleanliness is imperative to the woman who longs for the least vestige of beauty. Never wash the hands except when you have time enough to do it thorough- ly. Constantly rinsing them in cold water drives the dirt in and ruins the texture of the skin, making it rough, coarse and red. When exposed to hard usage, as in the daily routine of honse- work, instead of frequently washing the hands in water, rub in a few drops of oil. They should then be dusted over with talcum powder and wiped with a coarse towel. This will cleanse them and pro- tect the flesh from growing callous. Lemon juice will remove stains. When summer days approach leghorn hats, with masses of pink roses and beau- tiful laces will be the choice of the charm- ingly attired woman. Many of these models are turned up in the rear, and their picturesque lines are accentuated | by the streamers of soft silk. Attractive creations are also developed with broad brims of French crepe on which are embroidered dainty flowers in delicately : colored silks. Even the quaint poke and other modes favored by the Empress Eugenie will find expression in the new leghorn models. Foreign fashion experts says that the prompt acceptance of the full skirt by American women has made its success certain. Paris had such models ready | just before the outbreak of the war, but the best London dressmakers did not think the women of England were ready for so novel and radical a change. From the tight skirts of the last few seasons to a skirt six yards around is about as revo- lutionary a change as is possible. Why couldn’t the fashion makers have stopped about half way? The change will be ac- ceptable to manufacturer and merchant, but, as a London costumer points out, it i will fall hard upon many women who, | because of the financial stress of the i war, hoped to make last year’s dresses serve for this spring and summer. Why not do so anyway?—Leslie’s. Dainty handkerchief linen blouses, with a bit of white about them in the collar and vest, are so attractive that they will be sure to be a summer mode. They are simple in cut, with the usual shoulder yoke and hand run series of pleats to arrange the fullness, and long sleeves with cuffs. There is usually the finest of white organdie lawn collars and perhaps a fancy vest front. The colors are not exactly bright—a cloudy light blue, a soft old rose, a corn yellow—all of them so delicate in tone as to go with almost any color wool or linen suit. Even if one wore a white linen suit with this kind of blouse a matching hat, stockings or sunshade, or all three, would be har- monious and jaunty. Tuna Salad—Drain and flake a can of tuna fish; drain and flake and add a cup of chopped celery; also half a dozen chopped olives and half a pimento, also chopped. Mix lightly with a French | dressing and serve on lettuce leaves; | garnish with pieces of pimento. Canned shrimps or salmon may be use in place i of the tuna fish. Bisque—One pint of cream, 3-8 of a cup of pulverized sugar, 13 dozen maca- roons or blanched almonds; whip the cream stiff, roll macaroons and sugar together, stir in slowly; chop nuts, if used; flavor with lemon. Pack in ice and salt and let stand three hours before serving. We seem haunted by transparencies this spring. And the very latest is the long, transparent sleeve made of chiffon and attached to a bolero coatee, or a blouse of taffetas, crepe de chine, or charmeuse. Some of these sleeves are almost leg of mutton in outline. They curve out at the wrists and fall away from the arm when the latter is raised. For tea or dinner gowns such sleeves are charming, but they seem out of place on day dresses. ; FARM NOTES. —Red clover has been justly ranked as the principal fundation of a perma- nent system of agriculture in the north- iern and eastern parts of the United | States, according to the departments office of Forage Crop Investigations. This is due to its high feeding value, its effect upon the soil, and the ease with { which it may be employed in rotations. | Under ordinary conditions red clover is ! a biennial, although special strains are truly perennial. In pastures where it has been kept from seeding, certain plants have been known to live for three or four years. Clover makes an excellent pasture for all kinds of live stock. Care, however, must be exercised not to turn sheep or cattle in a clover meadow when they are hungry or when it is wet with rain or dew, since bloating may occur. If but one crop of hay is cut, considerable pas- ture is furnished during the summer and autumn, but if two crops of hay or one crop of hay and one crop of seed are harvested little pasture will result. Clover will furnish some pasture the fall of the year it is sown, although it should be pastured lightly. Red clover produces satisfactory yields of hay throughout the clover area. Either two crops of hay or one trop of hay and one of seed may be produced the same season. Since mammoth clover produc- es but one crop a season it may be pas- tured until the first part of June. As soon as the stock is removed the mead- ow should be clipped so that the plants will make a more even growth. Clover hay is a very nutritious feed, being rich in protein and for this reason makes an excellent forage for growing animals and milk cows. Red clover makes excellent green feed for milk cows. The average yields of green matter of red clover vary from 6 to 12 tons per acre. The season for soil- ing may commence about 10 days before the plants come into bloom and continue as long as the plants remain green. Bloating does not occur when clover is fed in this manner, but it must not be wet with dew or rain when cut, nor should it be wilted. As a soil-improving crop red clover can not be excelled. By proper utilization in rotations it is possible to maintain the supply of nitrogen and humus in the soil. Yields of grain crops have been in- creased as much as 10 bushels to the acre by turning under clover sod. Red clover is sometimes used as a grezn ma- nure crop. This is to be recommended only where soils are very low in humus and artificial fertilizers are used exclu- sively. Red clover is best adapted to deep, well-drained clay loams and calcareous loams, which are fairly rich in humus. Sandy soils well supplied with humus also produce good crops of clover. Soils poor in lime will rarely produce good crops of clover unless they contain an abundant supply of humus. With the addition of lime, however, most soils con- sidered to be “clover sick” or “acid” can be made to grow clover satisfactorily. As most soils in the clover belt are becom- ing ‘‘acid” it is recommended that all soils be tested for acidity before being planted to clover. The litmus paper test is simple and fairly reliable. Results, however, should be based not on a sin- i gle test but on a number of tests with i soil collected in different parts of the i field. Two to four tons of finely ground limestone or one to two tons of caustic lime should be applied to “acid” soils. Throughout the greater part of the clover belt clover is seeded in the spring on winter wheat or with spring grain. In the southern part of the clover belt seed- ing in corn at the last cultivation has been successful. When red clover is seeded on winter grain it is sown broad- cast early in the spring when the ground is honeycombed by freezing and thaw- ing. If sown later when the ground can be worked it is broadcasted and harrow- ed in or seeded as shallow as possible with a disk drill. In the spring grain sections red clover is sown at the same time the grain is drilled. It is the prac- tice in some locations to attach a grass seeding attachment to the grain drill and drop the clover seed either in front or behind the grain hose. If dropped in front of the grain hose the drill will cov- er it, but if droped behind it should be harrowed in. Care should be taken to see that the seed is covered about one inch in loam soils and one-half inch in clay soils. IL is important that the seed be well covered so that the young plants will have sufficient moisture to become established. Itis recommended on soils which are poor in humus to ap- ply a dressing of straw or manure to the winter wheat. This will help to control washing and packing as well as the loss of moisture. It may be the means of establishing a stand which would other- wise fail. Eight to ten pounds of seed are usually sown to the acre. ’ Red clover should be cut for hay when just past full bloom. At this stage the maximum protein and dry matter is present, the leaves are still intact, and the stems green. The hay should be so handled that it will reach the barn or stack with the least possible exposure to the weather and loss of leaves. It should not be allowed to become too dry in the windrow and should be cured in the shock. The second crop of clover may be cut for hay, pastured, or allowed to mature - for seed. If a seed crop is to be harvested it should be cut when nearly all of the heads have turn- ed brown or black. The mower, self- rake reaper, or binder may be used to cut the crop. When the mower is used - the hay should be raked and bunched while damp to prevent shattering. It should not be tied in bundles when the binder is used. Observations indicate that failure to obtain a successful stand of clover is due to a number of different causes, any one or,any combination of which may react very unfavorably to its growth. The primary causes of clover failure appear to be due to depletion of the humus content of the soil and soil “acidity.” Clover will not succeed on poorly drained soil. Lack of fertility reduces the yield in some sections. In the spring grain sec- tions the nurse crop should be seeded from one-half to two-thirds the usual rate. When a full seeding of the nurse crop is made, and this is especially true of oats, the greater portion of the soil mois- ture is used by the grain. The clover plants thus become weakened and when the grain is cut they are killed by the hot sun before they have time to recov- er. Alsike clover does well on soil which will no longer grow red clover, and where moisture is sufficient it is recommended that alsike be planted. Sweet clover or soy beans are very good soil renovators, and they may replace red clover in rota- tions.