Belletonte, Pa., March 30, 1917. rrr THE BRAVEST BATTLE. BY JOAQUIN MILLER. The bravest battle that ever was fought, Shall I tell you where and when? On the map of the world you will find it not; ; , ‘Twas fought by the mothers of men, Nay, not with a cannon or battle shot, With sword or nobler pen; Nay, not witn eloquent words or thoughts From mouths of wonderful men. But deep in a walled-up woman's heart— Of woman that would not yield, But bravely, silently bore her part Lo! There was the battlefield. No marshaling troops, no bivouac song, No banner to gleam and wave; But, oh, these battles, they last so long, From babyhood to the grave. Yet faithful still, as a bridge of stars, She fights in her walled-up town— Fights on and on in the endless wars, Then silent—unseen—goes down. Oh, ye with banners and battle shot, And soldiers to shout and praise, 1 tell you the kingliest victories fought Were fought in these silent ways. Oh, spotless woman in a world of shame! With a splendid and silent scorn, Go back to God, as white as you came, The kingliest warrior born! —————————————— A BERKSHIRE STORY. It was away up in the Western Massachusetts, just where the famous old post road through the Berkshire hills winds inself into New Ashford. The black vanguard of an approach- ing summer storm crept along the val- ley behind us, and a few stray rain- drops already warned that it was time to seek for shelter. We turned in at the open gate of the first farmyard, and riding up to the vine covered porch of the quaint old house lifted our wheels to protected spots at either side of the paneled door. It may have been presuming upon hospitality as yet unextended, but then no one stops at such conventionality in the Berk- shires, and were we not in the Berk- shires? The storm burst, and we sat on the porch besides our faithful steel steeds, watching the clouds hurry by, _ the tall trees bend in the eddying wind and the cooling water fall to the thirs- ty earth. Somehow the smoke of our cigarettes seemed strangely out of place in that old-fashioned spot, and Harvey observed that he would feel more comfortable with an old brier pipe znd a package of plug cut. quiet half hour slipped away, while the storm increased rather than diminished, and realizing that we were to. be weather bound for a few hours at least the necessity for a luncheon became apparent, and Har- vey arose to the attack. Harvey is an actor in season, and what he has learned in the matter of picking up meals on the western circuit helps him immeasurably in summer vaca- tions. Repeated beating upon the door failed, however, to elicit the slightest response from the inmates, and my anticipatory dreams of a soft eyed, rustic Ganymede went gloomily to pieces. ; “There must be a corpse in the house,” remarked Harvey reassuring- ly, leaning upon his bicycle and turn- ing on me a look of hungry resigna- tion. I was framing in my mind a neat reply more sarcastic than apro- pos when the oaken door suddenly opened inward, and an extremely pret- ty girl with long curly golden hair and big blue eyes confronted us. Sur- prise was mutual, but she seemed the most confused. “Why, why,” she faltered, “I—I thought to find one of the neighbors, but—but”’— “There is no cause for alarm, in- terrupted Harvey in the voice of his most approved stage father. “We are perfect gentlemen, although our ap- pearance is admittedly against us.We took the liberty to use your porch asa shield from the weather and trust that we are not intruding.” “Qh, no—no,” she answered confus- edly. “You will excuse me. Dave is hurt. I must go for the doctor,” and she ran by us and down the steps into the rain, lifting her calico skirt just high enough for us to see that her pretty feet were but thinly covered with light slippers. Harvey was at her side in an instant. “Pardon me,” said he. the doctor live?” “Only a mile, ” “Where does or so,” she replied, without stopping, “up the road.” (She prounced it “rud,” but I am writing this in English.) Harvey caught her arm and pulled her back to the shel- tering porch. “But you must not run a mile or so,” he cautioned, “in such a storm as this, without hat, shawl or shoes. It would kill you. I will go for the doc- tor. My wheel moves faster than - your little feet.” The girl hesitated a moment and then, as Harvey stood ready to start away, thanked him shortly and gave directions for finding the doctor’s house. “All right. Goodby,” he shouted, leaping into the saddle. “You take care of Dave.” “Qh, dear, I hope he’ll hurry!” said the girl turning to me as Harvey shot out on the road and sped away through the mud and rain faster than he ever run from the villain in the play. I thought a reply unnecessary. «Perhaps I might assist you,” I ven- tured. “I am a bit of an amateur phy- sician. May I see Dave?” She led the way into the narrow hallway, up the creaking staircase, wall papered at the sides in imitation of white marble, and into a stuffy lit- tle chamber just under the dripping eaves. A great, deep-chested sun- burned young fellow lay upon a tiny iron bedstead, while one muscular le hung over the edge, shattered an bleeding. An old woman with soft gray hair and the eyes of the girl bent above him and called his name again and again in tones of the most piteous tenderness. As we entered she turned to my pretty guide, and regardless of a st.ange presence, cried: “He is dead, Clemmie, dead! My Dave is dead!” and fell at the side of » A | Prouty I want to the little bed, The girl quickly glided by me, and placing her hand upon the man’s chest said quietly; “He is not dead—only unconscious.” I drew near and saw at once that she was right. The limb had been injured in some farming accident and aun artery broken. I set about to stay the flow of blood. The girl brought me a bit of tape, and jopether we bound it tightly about the leeding limb, but it was not strong enough, and the flow was only decreased. I tore a slip from the counterpane and wound it over the tape, and this was a decided improve- ment. Meanwhile the poor mother had fainted of nervous exhaustion, and the girl busied herself adminis- tering restoratives. I was just begin- ning to wish myself back on Park row when Harvey's familiar veice re- sounded through the house, and in another minute he and the doctor, covered head to foot with mud. were with me. “Brought the doc along on my coasters,” explained Harvey. “His horse was too slow for the case.” The. doctor ordered the girl to re- move her mother, and then with our assistance set the broken bones, bound up the leg and gave the patient a slight injection of morphine, By this time the old lady had recovered and was back again. The doctor reassur- ed her in a few words and cautioned against disturbing the sleeper. “Let him sleep as long as he will,” he said, “and I'll have him about in a fortnight.” «A fortnight!” exclaimed the moth- er. “Why, what will become of the farm? He was getting in the hay when the horse shied, and he went under the rake and was hurt. We cannot do that work. Clemmie can only look after the cows and chickens and the garden, and I'm too frail to help her. Oh, Dave, if we should lose you”—turning to the bed—*“it would be all over with us.” : The alacrity with which Harvey and I offered to remain on the scene and play farmhands until Dave was well was, I thought, only equaled by Clem- mie’s seconding of the proposition and we stayed. Those three weeks—it was three be- fore Dave could walk— were a beau- tiful Arcadian dream—a breath of life we had never known before. It was all a novelty, all interest to us, and Clemmie was most excellent instruct- ress in the gentle art of farming. Every night when we had done milk- ing the cows, feeding and watering the stock and all the hundred and other things that rustics have to do, Harvey would say: «There is no getting around it, you've got to write a pastoral play for me when we get where there are pen and ink. If after this I can’t out Whitcomb Whitcomb and out Prouty know why.” And it seemed like dropping the curtain on the prettiest sort of a play when one sunny August morning we rolled our wheels out and pointed them for Pitts- field. The trio of the old house stood upon the quaint little porch and watched us oil up and make ready. Dave was just able to be about and help himself. There were tears in the old mother’s eyes when she held our hands and said: “Goodby, my sons, and God be with you. You have helped me save my Dave, and he will bless you for it. ‘ve always heard that actors and newspaper men were very bad indeed, but I'll never believe it again. Good- by.” And then Dave, on Clemmie’s arm, hobbled down to the old vine- wound gate, and there we left them standing in the shadow of the great elm and waving a parting that we had promised should not be for long. Neither of us had much to say as we glided along at the foot of the emerald hills, and for my part, tears would have come easier than words. “That was an odd remark of Clem- mie’s this morning,” said Harvey at length, “about losing a ring and mak- ing us all swear to return it when found.” : “J thought so at the time,” 1 an- swered. Just then he dived into his coat pocket, and, producing his cigarette case, opened it with an exclamation of surprise. «What's wrong?” 1 queried, riding alongside. In reply he held out the case, and there on the cigarettes lay Clemmie’s little turquoise ring. “Shall you keep your promise?” I asked. “Of course,” said he, fastening the jewel securely to his watch chain. “Of course 1 will—but, say, you might postpone writing that pastoral play for me until I return the ring. There may be a new suggestion for you.”— George Tuggard in The Journalist. A Good Memory. One of the most valuable qualifica- tions that human beings can possess is a good memory. Occasionally a person is found who is naturally so gifted, but more often it comes as the result of special training. Public men usually possess the faculty to a high degree because they are continually using their minds to retain impres- sions, It is said that Cortez could tell every soldier under him by name. The Same is said of Hannibal and Alexan- er. A New York man recently gave a demonstration in Washington of what a trained memory is capable of. Thir- ty persons, all strangers to him, shouted their names to him in quick succession. Without any hesitancy he repeated the names correctly, pointing to the owner of each name as he spoke. Another accomplishment almost equally as great, one which is essen- tial in order to remember well, is the ability to forget or ignore all that is not worth while. By doing this the mind is free to work on important things which should be remembered. am m—— The First Spat. «Shucks,” said Adam. “You're noth- ing but a spare rib.” “What if I am? retorted Eve “You came right from the sod.”—Baltimore American. . ——The total number of trees in the streets of Paris is 86,000, and of ‘these 26,000 are plane-trees, 16,000 chestnuts and 14,000 elms. = bbing and crying, | Bagdad the Garden Spot of the! Desert. The fall of Bagdad, besides impair- | ing German hopes - of near eastern dominion, based on a Berlin-Bagdad | railway, will reverberate throughout the Mohammedan empires and, it is | believed, will help to rehabilitate ! British prestige in the far east, dam- aged by the Dardanelles campaign | and the loss of Kut-el-Amara. ! Bagdad, the capital of the Caliphs, ! is a city around which gather more of | history and tradition than any other | spot vet involved in the war. With a | known record reaching back 4,000 years, the city has been trod by most of the great conquerors whose names flash across the stories of the orient and has twice fallen from dazzling splendor to almost complete decay. The waxing and waning of the city’s prosperity has depended on the trade flowing between India and Persia and the coast of Asia Minor. Standing in what was almost the only cultivated part of the great valley of the Tigris and Euphrates, the dusty camel cara- vans from Teheran and Samarcand, Ispahan, Kabul and Kandahar drew into it to rest and prepare for the final efforts across the desert to Tyre and Sidon, Lybia and Acre. When the oriental traffic died down after the conquests of Alexander the city died. When the power of Islam rose and safety was re-established it was refounded and flourished again. Finally, when the route to the north along the Caspian was opened Con- stantinople took its place as the great mart of the east, and the city re- lapsed to its present forlorn state— rich only in memories and the venera- tion which is paid its shrines by the Moslem. TOMBS OF PROPHETS. The first of the great historic names connected with the city is that of Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon. He was not the founder of the city, for records have been found dating back to 2000 B. C.—several hundred years before his time—in which the city is mentioned. But the enslaver of the Jews built a quay at the city, which still stands and, though sunken sever- al feet during the 3,500 years since he poured the libations for its corner- stone, can be seen when the water in the Tigris is low. There are many reminders of the captivity of Judah in and around the city. Within a few miles stand the tombs of Joshua, Ezra and Ezekiel, prophets of the exile. Outside the city is the famous well of Daniel, into which the prophet is supposed to have been thrown during one of his con- troversies with the Medean king. From this time to the Christian era the city almost vanishes from the rec- ord. It is mentioned occasionally for a few hundred years and then forgot- ten. The resurrection of the city came in 762 A. D., and it is then that the his- tory which made the name known the world over began to form. Mansur, the founder of the great line of Ab- basid caliphs and the descendant of the prophet, fought his way up from the Arabian desert and chose it as the site for a capital. The city was laid out on a magnificent plan. It was five miles across the city from the north gate to the south. The canals from the river ran everywhere, and mosques and gardens rose together till the palace of the great caliph was embowered in fragrance that was all the more wonderful because of the parching desert just beyond the walls. For a thousand years after Mansur pitched his tent beside the river and traced the lines for the great walls Bagdad remained the wonder city of the east. Its glories spread through- out Islam and were embalmed in the literature of Persia and Arabia. Haroun was the last of the great caliphs. The race degenerated, and the wild Turkish adventurers in the north who had been gathered into the caliph’s bodyguard took the rule of the palace and finally the realm. Their natures, like those of their descend- ants today, cared nothing for art and beauty, and the science and literature which had been patronized by the sons of Mansur languished and died. The caliph remained the spirtual head of Islam, but first the Turk adven- turers and then the Buyids and later the Seljuks—the present rulers of Turkey— held the temporal power. Sheep-Killing Dogs Cost $40,000 a > Year. Harrisburg.—Steps to frame a dog license law for the State which will afford a greater measure of protec- tion for farmers engaged in the sheep-raising industry are being tak- en by the State Department of Agri- culture, the State Game Commission and representatives of State wool in- terests. Havoc among flocks of sheep is re- ported increasing, and damages which counties must pay have been running between $35,000 and $40,000 per year. Objections have been made to the present dog license law by a number of counties, whose officials contend that the requirement that the county have unlicensed animals killed is un- constitutional. One of the suggestions made is that the State adopt in a modified form an English system of requiring dogs to be penned up within yards after sundown. The various ideas are being studied with the object of framing a law satisfactory to all interests. aici —— Teeth Filed by Filipinos for Beauty’s Sake. Among the curious customs of the Philippine Islands one of the most pe- culiar is that of “beautifying” the teeth by filing and blackening them, which prevails among the Bagobos of Mindanao. Both boys and girls of this tribe undergo the filing process before marriage, and this usually oc- curs while they are still very young. The youth who is to be thus decorat- ed sits on the ground beside the na- tive dentist, gripping between his teeth a stick of wood to keep his mouth open. The dentist then files each tooth down to a stump or else he cuts or breaks each to a point, as prefer- red by the beauty-seeking patient. All that is left of the teeth is black- ened by a powder secured from a cer- tian native tree. Here's a Way to Save Doctor Bills. | Physicians Give Free Advice by Which Parents May Profit. It was an association of gentlemen, professionally physicions and chem- ists, all of drug trade, | been connec ho first gave whom were born in the so to speak, and who have ted with it all their lives, to the world Castoria, which as every one knows is a pleas- ant and effective remedy for the ail- ments torious preparation, and of infants and children. It has always been recognized as a meri- its reward has been the greatest popularity ever enjoyed | by any remedy ever put upon the market; ant advertising or rance or vulgar pre) herent merit. attained, not by flamboy- appeals to igno- judice, but by in- All physicians recom- mend it, and many, very many, pre- scribe it. Many parents physician. advantage of them when call in the family Many other parents take what the physician told he was first called in con- sultation. All good family physicians say: Give the children Castoria.” Healthy parents know this remedy of old, for they took it themselves as children. It was more than thirty years ago that for itself in the Castoria made a place household. It bore the signature of Charles H. Fletcher then, as it does today. The signature is its guarantee, which is accepted in thous- ands of homes where there are chil- dren. Much is printed nowadays about big families. Dr. William J. McCrann, of Omaha, Neb., is the father of one of these much-read-about families. Here is what he says: «Ag a father of thirteen children I certainly know something about your great medicine, and aside from my own family years of experience I have, in my practice, found Castoria a popular and efficient remedy in almost every home.” Charles H. Fletcher has received hundreds of letters from prominent physicians who have the same esteem for Castoria that Dr. McCrann has. Not only do these physicians say they use Castoria in their own families, but they prescribe it for their pa- tients. preparation First of all it is a vegetable which assimilates the food and regulates the stomach and bowels. After eating comes sleeping and Castoria looks out It allays feverishness and for that too. prevents loss of sleep, and this absolutely with- out the use of opium, morphine or other baneful narcotic. Medical Journals are reluctant to discuss proprietary medicines. Journal of Health, however, duty is to expose Hall’s says “Our danger and record the means for advancing health. The day for poisoning innocent children through greed or ignorance ought to end. To our knowledge Castoria is a remedy which produces composure and health by regulating the system, not by stupefying it, and our readers are entitled to the information.” ——————————————— Russia Haven of Homeless Hordes. The passage across the Russian frontier of thousands of Rumanians, who have abandoned their houses and property in mans and shadow of a new the Russian Empire. have been pouring face of the invading Ger- Bulgarians, has cast the refugee problem on These refugees into Odessa, Kiev and other Southern Russian cities in a destitute and helpless condition and present a problem more difficult than any confronting 2 belligerent Power since the invasion of Belgium. Russia only partially has succeeded in colonizing and assimilating the mil- lions of homeless Poles, members of other races. worst time Jews and This is the of the year in which to care for refugees and the economic readjustment the present political crisis has emphasized and adds to the difficulty of citizens supporting a new nation. The magnitude of Rus- sia’s economic burden is appreciable when it is considered that the country has received already since the begin- ning of the war a refugee population far exceeding the combined citizen- ship while been taxed of the the resource of the country has Scandinavian countries, to the utmost to provide for the wandering people whose homes have fallen within enemy lines | and whose means of livelihood either are temporarily or permanently for- feited. The condition of the refugees has been improved through committees, which are succeeding in distributing the migratory population throughout the interior, encouraging their colon- ization in fertile agricultural districts and giving them work in making boots, all sorts of clothing and other immediately marketable articles. The American Relief Committee, headed by Thomas Whittemore, work- ing in conjunction with the Tatiana committee, organized by the Empress now is devoting its energies ing the Rumanian problem. to meet- Tempor- ary barracks and food kitchens have been established at centers and Rumanians ior. Thus task has defeated all distributing from these places the will be sent to the inter- far the enormity of the all efforts to ade- quately handle the gigantic migration of people brought about by the war. The refugee ranks have been inevit- ably thinned by disease and many have fallen proper food vietims to cold, lack of and clothing and the un- sanitary conditions which are bound to accompany the sudden unloading of a vast additional population on a country at ord. war.—Reformatory Rec- eo ——— Linseed-0il Treatment for . Dying Trees. A curious method of reviving lan- guishing or recently to Agriculture .dying trees was reported the French Academy of after being tested suc- cessfully in experimental gardens at Autun. The earth was first removed so as to lay bare branches, in which were then wedges. the larger root Aongitudinal slits cut and kept open by These cuts were well rub with linseed oil and after awhile nu- merous small roots appeared, form- ing a sort of fur, and the trees so treated rapidly gained new life and vigor. ed for trial fruit trees. The method was recommend- in the case of languishing FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. DAILY THOUGHT To be 70 years young is sometimes far more cheerful and hopeful than to be 40 years old.— O. W. Holmes. In touring one often wants to take along a good hat for wear when not in the car. A bag that will hold two or three hats may be made by taking two long, straight pieces of heavy linen, to match the car lining, binding them together with tape at the edges, leaving the top open lengthwise and dividing them into three pockets. Then sew on straps at intervals. Fasten these straps on to buttons either in the top of the hood or on the frame- work between the front and back seats, and the hats will be covered and out of the way. A sports dress in gray silk jersey, showing a peplum blouse, in what looked" at first to be a slip. over the head model, but which really was buttoned down the back, had turned back cuffs as a finish at the bottom of the blouse, sleeves and skirt. Edging the turn was a cartridge pleated frill in orange color. We often hear, early in the season, the announcement that tailored suits will not be greatly used, or later we are told that tailored suits have not been worn as much as dresses and coats; but never was there a time when tailored suits did not play a most important part in the wardrobe of the fashionable American woman. It would be a strong-minded designer indeed who could refuse the American woman anything so dear to her heart as the tailored suti.—Vanity Fair. One girl who desired to enter the physiology class was asked to define the functions of the stomach. She re- plied “The functions of the stomach is to hold up the petticoat.” This girl was raised in the country, where pet- ticoats are still worn.— Lansing (Kan) News. Add lemon juice to the water in which doilies and centerpieces are washed and you will find this will bleach them without rotting the ma- terial. : An easy way to put on and remove buttons that are not to be laundered on a washable waist: Sew the thread into the button loosely; use small-siz- ed safety pins to pin them on from the under side; have a couple o stitches where the buttons are to be placed and you will not have to locate them every time. If you have no pastry flour equal results may be obtained by using one quart of corn-starch and seven parts ordinary flour. In millinery the newest develop- ment is the tenaency away from hats that are really only appropriate for sport wear and toward the more prac- tical tailored effects that can be worn with formal or informal street wear. In straws lisere is the foremost of the many kinds employed. Shapes are chiefly small and medium, with height still a factor. Beaded ornaments of jet and steel combined or of coral alone are in great demand.—Dry Goods Economist. : If an artery is cut the blood is a bright red color and. comes in spurts; this is very dangerous; act quickly. Send for a doctor at once, treat as in vein cut, crowding gauze into wound, and hold tight with bandages. Com- press artery by tight bandages near wound, but betyveen heart and wound. Oak and mahogany should never be closely associated unless the latter is darkened to a very deep brown by age. These two woods have a strong antip- athy for each other. The mahogany appears very red and glossy and the oak coarse fibered and heavy. Either oak or mahogany may be combined with willow or reed with chintz or oth- er figured drapery or with painted enameled or lacquered articles. For instance, a mahogany table, willow chairs, a painted chest of drawers and a chintz divan will assume charming relationship, while an oak table, ta- pestry upholstery, reed chairs and a lacquered chest in black are quite as interesting and restful. Pastel colorings are conspicuous, notably in trimmings for lingerie gowns. These consist of insertions o organdy, in white or in a light color, beaded with small porcelain beads in rococo rose design or of organdy or net bands bordered in heavy embroi- dery in colored cotton, with center stripe in beads of wood or’ porclain, in geometrical or floral design. There are so many lovely things that a girl can make from handker- chiefs that she should not despise these offerings when they come as gifts, even if they are the plain, hem- stitched variety. For instance, example of one she might follow the clever girl who ha four hemstitched and embroidered | P handkerchiefs given to her, too pretty for the use for which they were in- tended. She laid them out before her on her bed, making a large square of them, and suddenly the idea occu to her to join them together with strips of lace and edge the whole thing with val edging. This she did, leaving an opening in the square where the sides of two handkerchiefs met and sewing lace on each side instead of joining them to- gether with one piece. Then she threw the pretty thing about her shoulders, never even cutting a neck line, and the cunningest short negli- gee was the result. A few ribbons at the neck and under the arms to hold the jacket on made it prettier still. But the funny part about it was that while she was making this neg- ligee several other ideas for using handkerchiefs came to her. That af- ternoon at a mussed handkerchief sale three plain linen hand- kerchiefs with narrow pink borders— her room was “done” in pink—and at the next table a piece of fine torchon lace which looked almost like cluny. A dressing table scarf was the result. she picked up average two hem. Many others have Skirt widths for spring and one-half yards at the skirts are high waisted, fancy belt arrangements. ——— ____Subscribe for the “Watchman.” f | tention, FARM NOTES. — Properly pasteurized milk .is as digestible and nutritious as raw milk. — Buckwheat is well suited to light, well-drained soils, such as sandy and silt loams. It needs but little lime, where alfalfa and red clover could not succeed. The plant seems unusu- ally active in taking plant food from poor and rocky soils. It needs a larg- er proportion of phosphoric acid and potash than of nitrogen, since large growth of straw is not desired. . — Turkey ranching is a new indus- try born of the decreasing production of turkeys on farms, according to an article in the recently published 1916 Yearbook of the United States De- partment of Agriculture. Exclusive turkey ranching is now found practically only in the unset- tled foothill regions of California and in certain sections of Arizona and other Western States. In these regions a few persons are engaged in raising a thousand or more turkeys a season. The establishments are located where the range is unlimited and the natural food of the turkey, such as grasshop- pers and other insects, green vegeta- tion, and the seeds of various weeds and grasses, is abundant. Advantage also is taken on these ranches of the turkey’s relish for acorns, and where these are plentiful but little grain need be used for fattening in the fall. The large flocks of turkeys are man- aged much like herds of sheep, being taken out to the range early in the morning and brought home to roost at night. They are herded during the day by men either on foot or on horse~ back, and by dogs especially trained for the work. —Contrary to general belief and practice, chicks do not grow or thrive as well during the warm months or hot summer days as they do early ir the spring. Experienced poultrymen realize this fact. The average farmer, however, does not make an effort to hatch early so that the chicks will have the advantage of a longer and more favorable growing season. Early hatching not only insures more rapid gains in the growth of chicks but has a favorable influence on the size of the individuals of the flock. Late- hatched chicks rarely, if ever, attain the size of those hatched early. Early hatching likewise influences early maturity and consequently early egg preduction. Given the same food, care, and at- chicks hatched the 1st of March will weigh more when they are four months old than those hatched a month later, say the poultry spe- cialists of the United States Depart- ment of Agriculture. This likewise holds true with chicks hatched the 1st of April as compared with those hatched May 1. This is due to the fact that the rate of growth of a chick is greater during the first four weeks of its life than at any other time. Consequently, the early-hatched chick, having the advantage of a more fa- vorable growing season, makes great- er gains during the first four weeks of its life than the late-hatched chick. During the early spring months when the temperature is not so varied the growth of chicks is more uniform and constant than it is during the sum- mer. Millions of chicks die every year as a result of being infested with lice which, under average farm conditions, are ofttimes difficult to control. Hen- hatched chicks are not as subject to lice in the early spring as they are during the warmer months when lice are more prevalent. If for no other reason, chicks should be hatched early so their growth will not be interrupt- ed by the presence of lice. Many farmers realize considerable money each spring from the sale of broilers, the price of which is usu- ally governed by their size when sold and the time marketed. Thus it would seem that in order to increase the amount of money from the sale of broilers and fryers early hatching would be employed so as to have a marketable-sized fowl early in the spring when prices are highest. As the time approaches for the hen to become broody or sit, if care is taken to look into the nest, it will be seen that there are a few soft, downy feathers being left there by the hen; also the hen stays longer on the nest when laying at this time, and on be- ing approached will quite likely re- f | main on the nest, making a clucking noise, ruffling her feathers, and peck- ing at the intruder. When it is noted that a hen sits on the nest from two to three nights in succession, and that most of the feathers are gone from her breast, which should feel hot to the hand, she is ready to be transfer- red to a nest which has been prepar for her beforehand, according to the poultry specialists of the United States Department of Agriculture. The normal temperature of a hen is from 106 degrees to 107 degrees PF. Rhich varies slightly during incuba- ion. Dust the hen thoroughly with insect owder, and in applying the powder hold the hen by the feet, the head down, working the powder well into the feathers, given special attention to regions around the vent and under the wings. The powder should also be sprinkled in the nest. The nest should be in out-of-the-way place, where the sit- ting hen will not be disturbed. Move her from the regular laying nest at night and handle her carefully in do- ing so. Put a china egg or two in the nest where she is to sit, and place a board over the opening so that she can not get off. Toward the evening of the second day quietly go in where she is sitting, leave some feed and water, remove the board from the front or top of the nest, and let the hen come off when she is ready. Should she return to the nest after feeding, remove the china egg or eggs and put under those that are to be incubated. If the nests are slightly darkened the hens are less likely to become restless. At hatching time they should be confined and not be disturbed until the hatch is com- pleted, unless they become restless, when it may be best to remove the chicks that are hatched first. In cool weather it is best not to put more than 10 eggs under a hen, while later in the spring one can put 12 or 15, according, to the size of the hen. ———————— ——Subscribe for the “Watchman”. some quiet, ®