fads Belletonte, Pa., January 14, 1916. ROAD TO HAPPINESS. This is the road to happiness; Start now, from where you are; “Turn’to the right and keep straight on;”’ And you’llnot find it far. Along the Path of Willing Feet And over Heart’s-ease Hill. Across the field of Sweet Content, The stream of Glad Good Will. Then through the lane of Loving Heart, The gate that’s called To-Day, And down the steps of Little Things Into the Common Way. : And take the cloak of Charity, The staff of Wise Employ, A loaf of Bread of Daily Grace, A flask well filled with joy. A word of cheer, a helping hand Some good to give or share, A bit of song, a high resolve, A hope, a smile, a prayer. And in the Place of Duty Done, Beside the Door of Home, You'll find the House of Happiness— For Happiness does not roam. ONE WOMAN'S FAITH. [By Harold Carter.] * (Copyright, 1415, by W. G. Chapman.) Now that the moment for action had arrived Jim Corrigan felt his courage oozing away. All he had to do was to take the packed suit case that lay un- derneath his desk, go out of the door, jump on a street car, and make his way to any railroad depot. Yet during the three months in which he had lived in princely style at the Repington hotel, and spent his days in the mahogany-furnished of- fices, a sort of attachment to his en- vironment had grown up Somehow he had begun to feel a sense of respectability. He hated to lose the esteem of these good people, who were already thanking him publicly for the good he had done the town, for | | slightest attention, began to rummage | the factory that he was going to start, who had openly broached his name for the mayor’s office. And there was Delia—delicious, sweet, just the bride for a worthy man. Delia, with her inherited hun- dred thousand dollars, which had not |! spoiled her, Delia who unmistakably liked him, and had placed her whole capital in the Red Lion mine. The man felt the sweat start out on his forehead. He opened the door and looked in at the stenographers’ room. At once the young women began hammering hard- er; the bill-folders accentuated their | speed and worked self-consciously. | The eye of their boss was upon them. And all this was to be shattered like | the crystal of a dream. For Jim Cor- rigan would be an outcast Jn twenty minutes. . : He had been tipped off that the fed- eral authorities intended to raid his office that day. Thousands of worth- less shares had been sold in a worth- less gold mine, which was little more than a hole in the ground. And Delia’s - - “ “ © - . - © - - © #] Was Shopping,” Continued the Girl -hundred thousand had gone with the rest. The man felt ashamed and humili ated. “I must have got cold feet!” he jeered, to hearten himself. : A telegraph boy appeared anc placed the yellow envelope upon his desk. Corrigan did not open it. He knew Clancy was to warn him when the police raid was imminent. This must be the warning. He prepared tc go. He stooped for his bag. Then the door opened and on the threshold stood the prettiest of young women. She was simply dressed, bul the furs about her neck were of rich sable, her bearing, a little imperious was softened just now by evident ad miration. Corrigan had given the girl ever} reason to believe he loved her, but he had not asked her to be his wife Delia had waited, a little curious, bul never doubting him. “Why, Delia!” exclaimed the man. “How do you do, Mr. Corrigan!’ said the girl, smiling. “I haven't come to trouble you about my money. Thal is safe, I know. It is as safe as my faith in you.” “Her faith in him.” And Clancy had telegraphed that the state inspec tor in the West was to visit the mine the day before this, and that his dis covery of the fraud would be followed by a visit from the federal authorities Of a sudden panic seized him. He wanted to get away, before the au thorities came down on him. “I was shopping,” continued the girl, “and mother asked me to get you to in him. | i come to dinner tonight. So I just looked in.” “Yes, I'll come,” muttered Corrigan, conscious that he was speaking ab- runt and seeing the surprised look on her face. | busy—" | The girl made a haughty little bow. { “If you are busy, Mr. Corrigan, of course I won’t detain you any longer,” { { 1 “Excuse me—I'm very she said, moving toward the door. Jim Corrigan forgot everything. “yorgive me,” he pleated, caeching her hands in his. “I ¢i®n’t mean thut, Delia. I was tr..ubled--3 was not anle to say that—" Her face sofiened. '‘Busiiess trou- bles?” she queried, poadering. “1 am so sorry 1 misunderstood. very thoughtless of me—" . “No, it was—about you,” Jim blurt- ed out. And something stronger than himself took possession of him. He wanted to tell her everything, includ- ing his love, to ask for forgiveness and to restore what he was able. The girl, seeing his emotion, waited till he could control himself. “Delia—" he began, and a footstep sounded in the passage outside, and the door was opened. The federal officer read his recogni- tion in Jim’s startled look. “You are Mr. Corrigan, I believe?” he asked, though the formality was unnecessary. “And this lady is—?” “One of my customers,” said Jim, “and not connected with this office.” “1 shall have to ask her to wait a while all the same,” said the man. “Don’t be scared, miss; there won't be nothing done to you, and you're to be pitied.” “What does this all mean?” claimed Delia, bewildered. “It means that I am under sus- picion for fraudulent practices,” an- swered Jim bitterly. “The government doesn’t believe there is any gold in | the mine.” | “But of course there is!” exclaimed | the girl indignantly. “Officer, I am | Miss Delia Heming. My father was president of the national bank here. I | ex- can vouch for Mr. Corrigan’s honor.” The officer, without paying the among the papers on Jim’s desk. The | stenographers and other girls in the ‘large room adjoining, having got wind of what has happening, appeared at { the door with frightened faces. | “Mr. Corrigan—Jim, dear, I believe in you to the last!” cried Delia, losing all self-control. | and slipped her hand into his and | stood defiantly beside him. Jim smiled a little wistfully. At | that moment this was the hardest { thing that he had to bear, her trust- | fulness. If only he had gone before | she came! | “What's this?” queried the officer, | picking up the telegram. | Jim had forgotten Clancy’s message. | He groaned as the man deftly opened it.Mancy was always outspoken, an “he "Was no more careful in his dis- | patches. That meant the end of all, of Delia, of what shreds of honor he had i hoped to retain after the investiga- tion. The officer read the telegram and | laid it down. Jim picked it up and read: “Huge gold deposits discovered lin Red Lion mine. State inspector notified. Is coming at once to re-ex amine. Clancy.” The federal officer scratched his head. “My orders are to seal—” he began; and then a second man ap- peared at the door. He took in the situation instantly. “Come off, Louis!” he said. “Mr Corrigan, this is a mistake for which we owe you a good many apologies. We had information which led us to believe that—well, anyway, later news has come which shows us we were wrong. We Lad our orders, sir, and no doubt you'll receive apologies from the proper quarter. We know your company is beyond reproach. And I added. . They were gone. Delia was standing at Jim’s side and they had just ex- changed their first kiss. “As if you could be dishonest, dear!” she said softly. Jim looked at the packed suit case and winced. In another minute that, too, would have been examined. It would have been harder then. He knew that the inner shame he felt must be his punishment for many a year to ccme. But when he looked at Delia he knew that he would be given strength to bear it. Teaching Art of Cookery. The British war office has taken ad: vantage of the vacation season in the city schools to turn several of the buildings into cooking schools, where 1,500 soldiers are learning elemen tary principles of the culinary art There are 100 men billeted in each building, and they must provide their own food on the customary war office allowance of 40 cents a day. If they cannot eat the meals they prepare then they must go without. “To cook rapidly and well is an art which can easily be acquired,” says the war of fice manual, “and it is an art that every soldier should learn. At least . eight men in every company must be taught to cut up meat and operate field kitchens.” The Time is Coming. 0, mother, please, mother, come home with me now; the afternocn’s slipping by fast; you said you were coming right liome from the polls as soon as your ballot was cast. Poor father came home for his din. ner at noon, and not a mouthful to eat could he find; and the words he let out as he slammed the front door, left a strong smell of brimstone behind.—In- dianapolis Star. It was | She came up to him |! wish I had a few shares in it,” he Woman’s Club Declares for ‘‘Prepared- ness’’ The December meeting of the Wo- man’s club, presided over by the presi- ticularly interesting. Miss Margaret Cook’s talk on the mosquito was most instructive and beneficial. The questions and discussions which followed brought out the need in our own town of the ap- plication of her suggestions for the de- struction of this insect pest. Several places should be filled up or drained to destroy the breeding places of this germ-bearing agent. | Mrs. Mitchell’s suggestion that the | club endorse the work of the Pennsylva- i nia women’s divison for ‘‘National Pre- | paredness” met with hearty approval. The purpose is to organize women to be ready in time of calamity; in time of national] preparedness and for work in those fields in which women can most effectively aid. The field includes: Care] of soldier’s and sailor’s families; nursing; provision of surgical supplies; convalescent homes and hospitals; mes- senger and communication service; day service in hospitals; feeding troops and the needy; general service of clerical, sewing, knitting, etc. This division of women is affiliated with the emergency | aid committee which is doing such mag- nificent}fwork to relieve the suffering abroad. Mrs. Mitchell called attention to the outlines committee work. The Drama : League is making elaborate plans for a nation-wide celebration throughout the i year 1906 of the Shakespeare Ter-cen- tenial. League experts are preparing | three seperate study courses on Shakes- | peare. A Shakespeare masque, a more elaborate festival, a simple community celebration and a simple little masque for children to perform representing the Shakespeare flowers. A feature of i the work is the planting in each town of a Shakespeare garden. Packages of seeds for such a garden can be secured at from 25 cents to $5.00. HELEN E. C. OVERTON, Publicity Committee Woman’s Club. Under Cultivation. Wonderful results have been achieved { within the past few years in the reclamation of unproductive land. Huge tracts, almost as large as States, have , been redeemed from made to ‘blossom as the rose.” | MAKING DIVISION OF WEALTH | | | Respectable Sum of Money Could Be | 1 dent, Mrs. J. Thomas Mitchell, was par i publication—“The Messenger”— which | ! land-America Allotted to Each Inhabitant of the United States. It all the weath in this country were | seaside resort nestled in an admirable divided among the inhabitants there of, every man, woman and child would get $1,965. Thus the ordinary family | of five would get about $10,000, which would give it several years of quiet, happy living, not counting the divi dends it might yield. But there is a bug in the ointment. If the wealth were all divided, there wouldn’t be anything to live on—na mills, no railroads, no factories, no dry goods stores or groceries, and thus all the avenues of life would be shut against one. There is much said about the distribution of wealth. It is distributed and everybody gets a happy living out of it because®it is so. The property itself is not divided, but the thing for which the property exists is thoroughly distributed. There are cal ico, flour, railroads, schoolhouses for all. Of course, one has to do something to get his share, and this is his good fortune. If it would come to him while he sat doless and thoughtless, he would soon wither away into a trilobite. It is well that we haven’ got all we want; well, probably, that the rich man wants to get richer. Stagnation is the last state of human: ity.—Ohio State Journal. TOYS FOR THE YOUNGSTERS They Pass Through European War Zone and Reach America to Gladden Children. A German invasion of the United States has been effected through the port of New York—a pleasant sort of invasion to come from war-ridden Eu- rope. Thousands of jumping-jacks, popguns and yellow-haired dolls; armies of lead soldiers in very bril- liant paint uniforms and Noah's arks and music boxes—in all, 4,500 cases of toys—were brought in by the Hol- steamer Veenbergen . from Rotterdam. Special grace extended by the Brit- ! ish blockade permitted the arrival of barrenness and How | far the process will be carried and what | | miracles of increase will be brought out ' of the deserts formerly considered hope- | less we can only guess. “Reclamation” is the word. It is also the word of the | soul. There are too many unprofitable | acres in each personal life. | side of us presses up to the very door of | our civilized self. And what is worse, we, like the pioneers, are too often con- | tent to have it so. Why not put lar areas of the soul under cultivation? Why not redeem some of the waste places? Why, for that matter, not try to | get a better crop out of the acres now in ‘use; Reclamation and extensive farm- | ing ought to go together, both for the soil and for the soul. ——Captain John Randall bought a ' farm on Manhattan Island after the Rev- | olution for $12,500, and bequeathed it to | trustees to endow a home tor old salts, known as the Sailors’ Snug Harbor, on . Staten Island. -The city grew up and The desert the cargo of toys to supply the Ameri: can Christmas market. Sir Cecil Spring-Rice, the British ambassador, has informed the state department at Washington of the progress of negotiations looking to- ward the release of similar cargoes of German-made Christmas goods which have been held up for many months in Dutch ports. Fake Extras in Japan. In order to prevent the wanton is- sue of extra editions of newspapers, the metropolitan police of Tokyo, Japan, have issued mmstructions to the newspaper offices which include a warning that the authorities are pre- pared to take stringent steps against those which issue special editions without any real news of special in- terest. Among the offenses which | are to be prosecuted is one which con- over the property, but the trustees didn’t | - sell out and the farm is now worth $18,- 000,000. It occupies ten biocks bounded . by Eighth and Eleventh Streets, Third i Avenue and University Place. Wana- | maker’s and other big buildings stand ‘upon it. The trustees have let | known that no more leases will be grant- it be | ed upon it for saloon property and exist- ling saloon leases will not be renewed. | Liquor dealers must get off this strip of | | earth at least. Another insidious assault { upon personal liberty? Couldn’t Find Massachusetts. “Scotland yard will get you if you don’t watch out” is a truism, and one of the last Americans to realize it is an attache of the American embassy at Berlin. This young man arrived in London a short time ago and registered at the ital. Within a few minutes a Scot: land yard man was shadowing him and next morning early appeared at the American embassy to inquire into the diplomatist’s antecedents. Although he was assured that ‘the visitor was all right, the detective was not satisfied. “Of course,” he said, “if you gentle men declare he is all right, why I've got to accept your statement. But I know there’s something wrong. “Why, when he signed his registra: his destination was Massachusetts. | Now, last night at the yard, we went all over the map of the world, and | there’s no such country as Massachu setts. How do you explain that, gov: ernors?”’ ; Good Listener Paid. A French soldier fighting in the Argonne has just been informed that | he has inherited $40,000 from a re tired army officer of eccentric habits who lived in the same village as the soldier. : The officer’s will ran: “Being with. out family, I leave the whole of my fortune to Paul ——, farmer. I de. sire thus to show my gratitude to him for having for many years list ened patiently and with every air of interest to the story I used to tell of how I lost my right arm in the war of 1870. “] pray and trust that he will be gpared to return to his village after the war, and my only request to him is to come occasionally to my tomb and there relate some of his own war tion slip at the hotel he wrote that | cerns the newsboys. They are re- quired to call out the names of the papers whose extra editions they are selling; if they fail to do so they are to be punished. Publishers and all those concerned will be prosecuted for issuing any news which has once been published before, as people are being cheated in that way. Those who are responsible for such are to be punished for fraud. Fancy these official terrors operating in New York or Chicago, or even in Philadelphia or Boston! “Some” Voice. Here is a story that was told by Congressman John E. Baker of Cali fornia, the other night, when the talk topic in the lobby of a hotel took a musical turn: Some time ago the guests at a re ception were discussing the relative merits of several vocalists, when one ' of the party turned to a man named Ritz hotel as from the kaiser’s cap ' Brown. “By the way, Brown,” said he, “you. are something of a singer, are you not?” “Not on your life!” was the emphat: ic response of Brown. “I never sang a note that somebody didn’t threaten to send in a riot call. You are prob ‘ably thinking of my brother.” “Perhaps I am,” was the thoughtful rejoinder of the other. “Has he a heavy bass voice?” - “Yes,” smiled Brown; “so derned heavy that it makes him bowlegged to | carry it.” Zeppelins Carry Machinery to Turks. German Zeppelins are said to have been employed to relieve the Turk: ish shell shortage by one of the most | novel schemes of the war. One hundred tons of fine machin ery used in the manufacture of shells are reported to have been car- ried from the Austrian frontier across Servia and Bulgaria to Tur key. The Zeppelins traveled by night to escape detection by the Bul- garian border patrols and protests against violation of Bulgarian ter ritory. Each of the dirigibles car ried from three to four tons of ma: chinery for the Turkish ammunition works. If reports are true a dozen of Count Zeppelin’s largest dirigibles were used on the 280-mile flight from the Austrian to the Turkish border. Asking Too Much. While prominent specialists agree that golf is a cure for insanity it is doubtless asking too much at the pres: ent stage of science to expect a cure experiences.” for golf.—Washington Post. . ties in spite of the war. HAD NOT THE SAME RESUL1 Boldiers Saw Great Difference in Re wards Offered by the Two Hospital Nurses. There is on the Breton coast a little setting of rocks and groves anc equipped with a Grand Hotel of the Beach, which has been transformed ir these sadly changed days into a hos pital for wounded soldiers of France For all that there are other peopl on the sands besides the convalescen heroes, and especially any numbel of pretty women, always ready to lenc their help to the doctors in charge Among these a charming dancer from the Theater of Varietes in Paris was particularly lavish with her atten tions to the soldiers. One day wher she was present a big, dark fellow from the South manifested an invin cible repugnance to a bitter dose which, by the doctor’s orders, he was to drink. “If you are a good boy and do what the doctor tells you,” said the dancer “you may kiss me.” Instantly and with one gulp, the big fellow swallowed the stuff, wiped his great mustache, and claimed his re ward. It was all done so prettily that even the head surgeon permitted him self to smile. But the real comedy began when the head nurse, a matron turning fifty, ap peared next morning and announced: “Every one of you who takes his medicine will be allowed to kiss me.” The effect was immediate. Each and every patient made a face and put down on the table beside him the dose which he had been about to swallow. Now the head nurse is goodness itself, and her goodness is well spiced with wit. She was the first to laugh at the result of her invitation. Then she pretended to be angry. RESEARCH STOPPED BY WAR Observations of Wireless Telegraphy . on a Large Scale Had Been Planned by Nations. World-wide co-operative observa: tions in wireless telegraphy were planned by a committee of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, which reported at the Aus- tralian meeting a year ago this sum- mer that the project had been cordial ly embraced throughout the British empire and in other countries. ed three days each week and suitable forms had been distributed on a large scale. The outbreak of the European war, however, wrought havoc with this undertaking, which had promised to throw light on several obscure ques: | tions in radio-telegraphy, and only a few stations in India, Australia, Can ada, the West Indies and the United States are now keeping up the work Private wireless stationg:“throughout the British empire were either dis mantled or taken over by military au thorities, while naval and other official stations stopped all purely scientific observing. Similar conditions pre vailed in the other belligerent coun tries. The same circumstances led tc the complete failure of the extensive scheme of special observations planned in connection with the solar eclipse of August 21, 1914, except for a few ob servations made in Norway and Sweden. Was Not a Roman. ‘While a sergeant of a certain Brit Ish regiment was engaged with a com: pany of the National Reservists a short time ago in physical drill—a drill that demands, to say the least of it, a small amount of agility—a pri vate, who looked as if he had been younger in his day, complained to the non-commissioned officer in charge that he was too old for that sort of practice. “How old are you?’ said the in structor “Fifty-three,” said the private. “Why,” exclaimed the instructor, “the Romans used to do this sort of thing at the age of sixty.” “That may be,” said the private, “but I'm not a Roman; I'm a Wesley: an.” Precious Metals in India. Precious metals continue to accu mulate in India in enormous quanti This is brought out by the figures of the gold and silver imports of the current year, which are now published. These show that after deducting all exportations there has been in three months an ad- dition to the stores in the country of | no less than 158 lakhs worth of gold | and 229 lakhs worth of silver. In the | same period the mints in India have struck off the large sum of 36 lakhs of rupees which has thus also been added to the circulating wealth of the inhabitants, a total value of over $14,000,000. . Scientists Interested in Find. At a recent scientific gathering, Pro fessors Edgeworth, David and Wilson described a completely mineralized hu man skull found near Warwick, in the Darling Downs of Queensland. It probably dates from a period when the great fossil marsupials were still liv: ing, and is earlier than any other hu man remains hitherto found in Aus tralia. Mail Carriers Forest Fire Watchers, A. S. Burleson, postmaster general, kas made the rural mail carriers as siztants to the national and state for estry officers with the special duty of reporting forest fires. The glare of an incipient blaze, or the odor of wood smoke on the breeze will be the signal for the carriers to hasten to the near est telephone to sound the alarm. Ad variety of statistics were to be collect: FARM NOTES. —Very interesting data concerning the cost of wintering brood sows and the cost of growing and fattening pigs are given in Nebraska’s Agricultural Ex- periment Station Bulletin No. 147, which is a report of the North Platte Sub-Sta- tion, —Try and keep up the milk flow dur- ing the winter months. There is where good feeding counts. Feed liberally and with good ensilage, roots, alfalfa or good clover hay. If these feeds are given liberally, very little other expensive foods will be required. —Ground wheat, either soaked or moistened, gives faster gains with less grain for 100 pounds of gain than whole wheat, either soaked or dry. Soaking wheat increased its feeding value only slightly, but grinding the wheat increased its feeding vaiue about one-fifth. —Every sow selected for breeding pur- poses should be docile. An irritable, nervous animal will prove unsatisfactory for breeding. Young pigs do not always betray this peculiarity, even though they possess it in high degree, hence the char- acter of the mother should be noted in this respect. —The Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture has been able to find only 106 abandoned farms in the Keystone State. It is said that these farms are not worn out, but are inaccessible to mar- kets, and their owners are advised that by turning them into grazing lands they can be made profitable. —Unless you buy hairy vetch seed from a reliable dealer, you are apt to get seed that is adulterated with the seed of weed vetches. To know whether or not the seed is pure, crush a handful of it finely. If there are frawn, salmon or reddish orange colored pieces in it, the seed isnot pure. It should be lemon- ' yellow color. —Farming was, in pioneer days, a method of getting a living where one could not obtain it any other way. To- day farming is a business requiring busi- ness men of special adaptation. It is an occupation where intellect counts for much and where industry properly di- rected brings compensation and the best in life as a special reward. : —A 17-year-old five-acre apple orchard, down in Perry county, Pa. where the sod mulch system is practiced, yielded 2400 bushels of fruit with less than three bushels of defective apples in the lot, all grown on 191 trees. The varieties are Baldwin and Smith’s Cider. The fruit was trimmed, one apple to a spur, and the trees were sprayed five times. —Cows will not give a steady, good flow of milk if they are worried by flies. They will get nervous and cause a lot of trouble. Here is a first-rate spray that can be used with great benefit: Fish oil, two quarts; kerosene, one quard; crude carbolic acid, one pint; oil of pennyroyal, one ounce; oil of tar, 10 ounces. Mix thoraughly and apply in a fine spray every two or three days, or as often as the flies begin their attacks. | By usinga large amount of alfafa hay, with a limited amount of grain, the net cost of wintering old brood sows is kept at the low figure of $1.25 each without allowing the sow 10 become too thin for .the best results in raising litters. On a ration containing from one-fourth to one- third alfalfa hay, young brood sows are carried from the pasture fields to the farrowing pens at a small profit and in suitable condition for farrowing and rais- ing fair litters. —It is said that pigs and poultry had much to do with the events which led up to the great war in Europe. Servia has no seaport, it being altogether an in-land country. The leading industry of the Servian people is the production of pigs and poultry, and these are the principal articles exported. Austria, which con- trols the seacoast of the Adriatic, has forced the Servians to pay excessive taxes on swine and poultry shipped through | Austrian ports, and in other ways ham- | pered their trade. This has long been : resented by the Servian people and na- | tion, and finally the Austrian Crown | Prince was assassinated by a Servian. ! Austria declared war on Servia, and soon | the greater part of Europe was drawn : into the conflict, which pigs and poultry 1 ' causes are carefully considered. | —Grapes may be pruned from the | dropping of the leaves in the fall to the i swelling of the buds in the spring. Prun- ing after sap begins to flow is devitaliz- | ing. It is seldom advisable to prune - when vines are frozen, as the brittle | canes are easily broken during handling. ! Summer pruning is far less practiced . now than formerly, with a tendency to do less and less of it. It is used to re- . move surplus shoots and in heading back ' canes to keep them within limits. Very | often shoots grow from weak buds on the fruiting canes to the detriment of the | fruit-bearing shoots. These weaklings ! should be rubbed off. So, too, shoots often break from arms, spurs or even the trunk where they are not wanted. These should be removed. Secondary shoots sometimes appear on fruiting | shoots, especially in the axils of the lat- | ter; these should be rubbed off. Here, for the most part, summer pruning ' should end. —The average number of pigs per lit- ter raised from old sows during a period of four years, was 6.55 at a cost of $2.11 per pig weighing 50 pounds. The aver- age number of pigs raised by young brood sows during a like period was 6-2, at a cost of $1.68 per pig weigning 50 pounds. The fall pig was grown to the weight of 50 pounds as cheaply as the spring pig. receiving 2.5 pounds of grain per 100 hundred pounds of their weight daily have gained 0.75 pounds each day. The rate of gain on alfalfa pasture bore a close relation to the amount of grain fed. The most suitable supplementary feed to corn for fattening hogs seems to de- pend on several variable factors. Oil meal, cold pressed cottonseed cake and tankage rank close together in’ the prof- its secured in nearly all tests. In some tests these by-products give faster gains and more profit than corn and alfalfa, and in other tests the reverse is true. That physical condition of the hogs is influenced by weather and other factors seems to determine whether alfalfa hay or such a by-product as those just men- tioned is the most profitable to feed with corn for fattening hogs. ——They are all good enough, but the WATCHMAN is always the best. | may be said to have started when the When grazing on alfalfa pasture, pigs .
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers