Belletonte, Pa., August 24, 1917. Sm THE LAND OF “PRETTY SOON.” I know of a land where the streets are paved With the things which we meant to achieve. It is walled with the money we meant to have saved And the pleasures for which we grieve. The kind words unspoken the promises broken And many a coveted boon Are stowed away there in the land some- where— The land of “Pretty Soon.” There are uncut jewels of possible fame Lying about in the dust, And many a noble and lofty aim Covered with mold and rust, And, oh, ‘his place, while it seems so near, Is farther away than the moon. Though our purpose is fair, yet we never : get there The land of ‘Pretty Soon.” The road that leads to that mystic land Is strewn with pitiful wrecks, And the ships that have sailed for its shin- ing strand Bear skeletons on their decks. It is farther at noon than it was at dawn, And farther at night than at noon. Oh, let us beware of that land down there— The land of “Pretty Soon.” WHO'S HOOVER? Strange to say, Herbert Clark Hoo- ver is little known. That is, while the whole world has heard of him, and while a very large part of the world admires, respects, and honors him be- cause of his masterly administration of Belgian relief, comparatively few know anything of the past of the man, or of his struggles and successes in private life. He is a native of West Branch, Ia., in which place his boyhood was spent. He had none of the advantages which the sons of people in easy circumstan- ces may enjoy. His parents were poor Quakers, and the first great fact to present itself to the consciousness of Herbart Hoover was that he must “get out and make his own way.” But he had one possession of which he could not be deprived by poverty or by any other circumstance within the domain of his own effort and control. This was an aspiration to succeed in the world. His bent was toward engineer- ing, an inclination developed by read- ing of the achievements of John Hays Hammond and others who had won eminence and position in the field of mining engineering. He longed, like these, to do big things in many lands, and he realized that the first thing he must do was to get an education, at any cost of perscnal exertion and in- dividual sacrifice. To get an education involved get- ting money, and the gettirg of money involved earning it in any honorable way that might present itself. It is related to his credit that, while study- ing engineering in Leland Stanford Junior University, he worked as a laundry agent and took on other jobs equally menial. All this, however, he had fully discounted. It mattered nothing to him where he worked, or what he had to do, so long as it was toward the attainment of his legiti- mate principal object. As usual in such cases, he made his way through college creditably, and from point onward his progress was only remarkable but exceptional. The sketch of his career which is oftenest consulted is necessarily so compressed and condensed as to be little more than the recital of a string of bene-dry facts punctuated with dates. He is appointed to geological surveys in Arkansas, and in the Sier- ra Nevadas; ae is made assistant manager of the Carlisle mines of New Mexico; he bezones engineer of the Morning Star mine in California; he goes on, holding higher and higher positions, gaining steadily in reputa- tion until we find him filling the post of engineer of the Imperial Bureau of Mines in China. Then the details merge almost into the romantic, for the little barefoot Iowa boy beconies in succession the trusted consulting engineer of mining corporations in different parts oi the world, the au- thorized representative of a hundred millions of capital, director of proper- ties almost beyond price, and the em- ployer of 50,000 men. He is brought to Londen for consultation by the heads of international enterprises. He is recognized, in reality, as a second John Hays Hammond. He is looked up to as a potential Cecil Rhodes. He is accorded distinction as one of the big men of the world. He is consulted by cabinets. He is put at the head of the greatest philanthropic undertak- ing of modern times, if not of all times. One of the circumstances that have escaped the scrutiny of his biogra- phers, or that have been ignored by them as unessential or uninteresting, is the fact, that while engaged in an- alyzing, assaying, and estimating mineral deposits of priceless value, while negotiating with world capital- ists, while managing huge properties; while submerged, as it were. in the material and the practical, in the technical and the scientific, this big, brawny, bustling business man, clos-~ eted with his wife, Lou Henry Hoover, like himself ar A. B. of Stanford, is engaged upon a translation, compila- tion, and .elucidation of “Georgius Agricola De Re Metallica,” founded upon the first Latin edition of 1536, a monumental technical work published by the Mining Magazine, Salisbury House, London, 1912. This is not a performance to be dealt with in pass- ing, but rather as one to be referred to for the purpose of indicating, in some measure, the real stature of the man. Herbert Clark Hoover is a silent man. He allows those who interview him to do most of the talking. One of his visitors says: “You won’t talk comfortably,’either, while he is look- ing at you with his piercing black eyes. His big, broad shoulders and massive chin impress you with the not this —— fact that you are in the presence of a HE ALTH AND H APPINESS : ory of diseases, for up to this time in- masterful man, a man with whom you | can take no liberties and on whom | vou can practice no deception.”— Christian Science Menitor. Ee ——— i France, in Fourth Year of War, Has | 3,000,000 Troops in Battle Zone. | Washington.—France, the nation that suffered the brunt of the war at | the beginning, as 3,000,000 men in the | battle zone today. This is 1,000,000 i more than rushed to the colors when | the Teuton machine surged on toward Belgium. She can maintain this number effec- tively for several years to come. France, although unprepared and in the midst of war, so co-ordinateed her industries that now her production of munitions is almost inexhaustible even by the present employment of unheard of quantities. While doing this for herself, the re- | markable nation has completely re- | equipped and re-armed the Belgian, Serbian and Greek armies. Complete exposition of this won- derful work of France was given to Secretary of War Baker by M, Andre | Tardieu, high commissioner of the | French Republic, and made public re- ! cently. | M. Tardieu’s letter to Secretary Ba- | ker reads: | “Dear Mr. Baker: I brought to your knowledge in a recent talk the surprise I felt in reading so often in American newspapers some utterly in- accurate information regarding the military conditions prevailing in Eu- rope, and especially in the French ar- my. In connection with our conversa- tion, I believe it would be of interest to present to you some figures which, better than any comments, will ex- pose to you the reality. These figures will show you France as she really is, vigorous and powerful in spite of three years of suffering without prec- edent in history. STRENGTH OF MEN. “The strength in men, now present in the zone of the armies alone, shows the maximum figure reached during the war. This figure, which amounts to a little less than 3,000,000 men, ex- ceeds by more than 1,000,000 the num- ber of men actually in the zone at the beginning and one must add to that figure the men in the zone of the in- terior and in the colonies. “We are certain with the resources of our metropolitan and colonial de- pots to be able to maintair that num- ber up to its present level for a long time to come. Our strength in men, by reason of a better command, and of better methods of instruction, has shown since the beginning of the war constantly decreasing definitive cas- ualties (killed, missing and those tak- en prisoners.) “The following figures substantiate this: Battles of Charleroi and of the Marne, 5.41 per cent. casualties (in proportion to the total mobilized strength.) “First six months of 1915, 2.39 per cent. casualties. “Second six months of 1915, 1.68 per cent. casualties. “First six months of 1916, 1.47 per cent. casualties. “Second six months of 1916, 1.28 casualties. FRONT HELD. “For measuring the offensive and defensive quality of the troops whose numerical strength I have indicated above, I can do nothing better than quote some more figures. “The western front has an exten- sion of 739 kilometers. Twenty-seven kilometers are held by the Belgians, 138 by the English, 574 by the French. The French army holds accordingly more than two-thirds of the western front—that is to say, of the front where the enemy has always directed its chief exertion. The German divis- ions in line on the western front were, moreover, in June, 1917, distributed as follows: “Forty-two opposite the English, 81 opposite the French. A German di- vision holds an average front of four kilometers, 4000 meters; a French di- vision an average front of five kilo- meters, 5000 meters—that is to say one-sixth more. ARTILLERY. “We are amply furnished with ‘75s’ since the beginning of the war. The number of these guns was constantly increased; it is adequate to our needs. As for heavy artillery, we had in August, 1914, 300 guns, grouped in regiments. In June, 1917, we had 6,000 of them, mostly modern. Our output of munitions was arranged in August, 1914, for 13,000 shots of “758’ a day. It is now arranged for 250,000 shots of ‘75s’ and 100,000 shots of heavy guns. “To be equal to this enormous pro- duction, invaded France did not hesi- tate in the midst of war to create new industries and to bestow on military industries the best of its productive strength.” M. Tardieu says there were fired on German trenches in one of the last of- fensives for one lineal meter: “Field artillery, 407 kilogrammes; trench artillery, 203 kilogrammes; heavy artillery, 704 kilogrammes, and high power, 123 kilogrammes. “Monthly expenditure of ammuni- tion for the ‘76s’ were: July, 1916, 6,400,000; September, 1916, 7,000,000; October, 1916, 5,500,000. “During the last offensive the ex- penditure was 12,000,000 shots in all caliber. I might add also that we completely re-equipped and rearmed the Belgian, Serbian and Greek ar- mies. The number of heavy guns giv- en by us to the allies exceeds 800.”— By D. M. Edwards. J ust One Fault. Tim Malloy, a Texas farmer, ap- plied for naturalization papers. The judge asked him: “Are you satisfied with the general conditions of the country 7” “Y-yis,” hesitated Tim. “Doesn’t the government suit you ?” Y-yis; bedad, I'd like to see more rain. ———————————— Trench Stuff. “That ’ere Sammy’s an educated toff from ’Arvard,” said Tommy Atkins, leaning on his spade. “I'm jolly well weary of ’is learnin,’ too, that I am. We're ordered to throw up trenches along the Marne. “Mens sana in corpore sano” Number 21. WHAT ARE BACTERIA? An article in last week’s “Watch- man, “The Bacterial Content of Milks Supplied to Bellefonte,” raised the question, “How is the number of bac- teria in milk determined?” It is not possible to describe here, in detail, laboratory apparatus and methods and yet without such a foundation it is difficult to answer the question as sat- isfactorily as could be desired. It is hoped a faint idea at least may be gathered from the rollowing:— HOW THE NUMBER OF BACTERIA IN MILK IS DETERMINED. Preparatory to making the bacter- ial count, glassware and media (food substances) to be used have been pre- pared and sterilized. After the food material has been prepared and ster- ilized tubes and flasks, and is protected from infection by cotton stoppers. One cu- bic centimeter (1. c. c., approximately 15 drops,) of the sample of milk to be tested, is taken in a glass pipette and added to 99 c. c. of sterile water, mak- ing a dilution of 99 parts water to one part milk. Higher dilutions, if required, are made in a similar man- ner. One cubic centimeter of the di- lution is then mixed with melted agar on a sterile, flat, glass plate, quickly covered, and when the agar is solidi- fied, the test plate is placed in the in- cubatcr. Two series of plates are usually made, one series kept at room temperature (70 degrees F., 20 C.) the other at the temperature of the human body (98 degrees F. 37 de- grees C.) At the end of twenty-four to forty-eight hours, the individual bacteria have multiplied into colonies which appear as spots on the surface, or in the depth of the agar and may be easily counted. The number of these colonies, multiplied by the de- gree of dilution used in making the test plate, represents approximately the number- of bacteria that were present in one cubic centimeter of the milk. Colonies are composed of an almost infinite number of individual germs, the result of the continued growth of a single germ or bacteri- um. Agar is a gelatinous product derived from a Japanese sea-weed, has a much higher melting point than gel- atin and can be successfully used with those organisms whose optimum growth point is above the melting point of gelatin. It furnishes a solid surface upon which bacteria will de- velop and the peculiarities of their growth can be studied. As a food or culture medium, it is made up with beef broth, peptone and sometimes a little sugar, preferably lactose; these furnishing suitable food substances for bacterial growth. WHAT ARE BACTERIA? Bacteria are plants—the smallest and simplest forms of plant life known; so small that there may be millions in a single drop of milk. An individual bacterium is visible only under the highest powers of the mi- croscope. “Colonies” or masses of bacteria that develop upon certuin food-substances are apparent with ‘simple lenses or with the naked eye. As a distinct group of organisms they were first distinguished by Hoffman in 1869, since which date the term bacteria, as applying to this special aroup of organisms, has been coming more and more into use. At the be- ginning of the ninth decade of the nineteenth century, bacteria were scarcely heard of outside of scientific circles; today they are almost house- hold words. Their unlimited powers for producing profound changes in Nature make them agents for good and for ill; agents of such importance that ‘ney have become the basis of a new branch of science—Bacteriology. It was Louis Pasteur who first brought bacteria to the front and if any one man can be looked upon as the founder of the science of bacteri- ology, that man is surely Pasteur. Up to the period of his investigations the role played by bacteria in various fa- miliar natural processes, such as pu- trefaction, decay, and fermentation, had been, perhaps vaguely suspected but had not received conclusive dem- onstration. The memorable research- es of Pasteur (1822-1895) upon spon- taneous generation and fermentation imparted to the study of bacteria a broad biclogic importance that it had not hitherto possessed. It was almost entirely through the work of Pasteur that bacteria and their allies took a conspicuous position in natural sci- ence as a group of organisms whose activities and capabilities were full of a far-reaching significance for all mankind. So difficult were the meth- ods of work that for years there were hardly any investigators besides Pas- teur who could successfully handle the subject. The difficulty of obtain- ing any one kind of bacteria, unmix- ed with others (pure cultures) render- ed advance almost impossible. In 1882, Robert Koch devised solid cul- ture-media, by which it became possi- ble to isolate single species of bac- teria and to thus obtain descendants of a single, living cell or germ with- out admixture with other organisms. With this simplification of method im- mediate advance became possible and the rapidity with which the study of bacteria has developed in the last fif- teen years is truly startling. “The present important place accorded kbacteriology among the biologic sci- ences” says a well known writer upon the subject, “is due quite as much to its general scientific significance as to the success of its practical applica- tions. The discoveries of bacteriology have given the human race for the first time in its history a rational the- vo. it is kept in sterilized glass | fectious diseases were not sharply dif- ferentiated frcm one another and the ! most fantastic hypotheses were ad- | vanced to explain their existence: It | has dispelled the myths of spontane- . ous generation and set the processes ‘of decay and kindred phenomena in , their true relation to the great cycle | of living and non-living matter. The new conception of the micro- ‘ scopic underworld which bacteriology . brought into biologic science must be reckored as a conspicuous landmark, | and, in so far as it has changed the at- | titude of man towards the universe, | should be regarded as one of the most important triumphs of natural sci- i ence.” | MICROSCOPIC APPEARANCE OF BAC- TERIA. i cell. Individual cells differ in size, | shape, motility, method of cell divis- { ion, spore formation and the like. | Size.—It is extremely difficult to i convey, even a faint conception of the appearance of bacteria, to one unfa- miliar with the microscopic world, for such minuteness as to be almost be- { yond comprehension. a hundred individual bacteria could be placed side by side, their total thick- sheet of paper. may give a faint idea of their size. As an average diameter, be taken. Different kinds of bacteria vary in size. The average rod meas- ures about 2 microns in length and 0.5 microns in diameter (1 micron equals one twenty-five thousandths of an inch.) The bacillus of typhoid fever ranges from 1 to 3 microns in length. One large spherical bacterium is know to measure 2 microns in diame- ter; others 0.2 microns. The largest bacteria belong, as a rule, to the group of spirally-twisted or screw- shaped forms, one of these has been found to measure as much as 3.5 mi- crons in diameter. The spirillum of relapsing fever may measure up to 40 microns in length. One of the small- est of the pathogenic forms is the in- fluenza bacillus (0.5x0.2 microns.) Other germs, not surely known to be bacteria, are even smaller. The germ of foot-and-mouth disease will pass through the pores of the finest Berke- feld filter and is invisible even under the highest lenses. It is now believed that diseases, the causes of which are at present unknown, will be found due to ultra-microscopic organisms when methods successful in rendering them visible have been devised. a &8 6 2, Fig. 1.—Forms of bacteria (Jordan.) High magnification. a, Staphylococcus (clus- ter coccus;) c¢, streptococcus (chain coc- cus;) b, d, cocci showing cleavage in two planes; e, sarcina (cubical mass or pack- et;) f, bacillus (straight rod;) g, straight rods connected to form filament or chain; h, spirilla (spiral forms;) i, j, bacilli with motile organs. Shape.—The forms of bacteria are simple and comprise only three prin- cipal types—the straight rod, the sphere, and the spiral; well compared to lead pencils, balls and cork screws. To the rod-shaped bacterium is given the name bacillus, plural bacilli; to the sphere, coccus, plural cocci; to the spirally-twisted or screw-shaped form spirillum, plural spirilla. The rods may be long or short, thick or slen- der; may have rounded or square ends; may occur singly, or in filaments or threads. The spheres may be large or small, may occur in groups of two’s, four’s, or cling together like a string of beads, may be in bunches like a cluster of grapes or, again, in packets. The spirals may be loosely or tightly flexed, may have one or two or many coils, may be large or small. More bacilli have been described and enumgrated than cocci, and more coc- ci than spirilla. Motility.—Many species of bacteria have the power of independent motion accomplished by means of delicate, thread-like appendages called flagella and which, by their contractability, propel the bacterium through the wa- ter. Their arrangement on the cell body differs in different species of bacteria; some have a single flagel- lum at one end; others have. a flagel- lum at each end; others have a tuft at one or at both ends, while others have flagella projecting from the entire body of the cell. Owing to their ex- treme delicacy, it requires skilful ma- nipulation and special methods of staining to render these hair-like pro- jections visible. In a.drop of water suspended from a glass cover glass (“hanging drop” preparation) and watched under the microscope, the bacteria are seen as colorless dots or slightly elongated points tumbling end over end, darting rapidly about, or moving slowly across the field of vis- ion—the movement sometimes so slow as to be scarcely perceptible, its ra- pidity depending largely upon the age of the culture. The typhoid bacillus may travel about 2000 times its own length in an hour. Growth and Cell-division.—It is the extraordinary power of multiplication that makes bacteria agents of such importance in Nature. A single bac- terium can increase in size up to a certain point. When this point is reached, the eell divides in the middle into two similar halves, each of which then repeats the process. This meth- od of multiplication by simple division or fission distinguishes the bacteria from the yeasts which multiply by budding. A young bacterial cell at- tains full size and is able to produce in its turn another cell in a remarka- bly short time. Under favorable con- ditions, growth may be so rapid that d ce %5 4 Unlike higher plants and animals, | ! a bacterium consists of but a single | we are here dealing with forms of | To say that if ness would not equal that of a single : one thirty-thousandth of an inch may ! , division—reproduction of a new indi- | vidual—will occur every twenty to | thirty minutes. It has been estimat- | ed that the descendants of each bac- | terium would in two days number ' 281,500,000,000. Checks or hindran- ces to unlimited multiplication, how- ducts commonly formed by bacteria ‘during the breaking down of their food-substances and by other unfavor- able influences such as insufficient food, lack of moisture and unsuitable temperature. i While all bacteria divide by simple fission there are differences in the re- | sults, particularly noticeable among ! the spherical forms or cocci. With these, division may occur only in one plane and the resultant cells remain i attached forming a chain of cells re- sembling a string of beads and called streptococcus (chain coccus;) i division may be in two planes giv- ling rise to irregular masses like a ! cluster of grapes known as staphy- lococcus (grape-like coccus.) If di- vision takes place in three planes at right angles, a cubical mass or packet results called sarcina. While the sci- entific names applied to bacteria may i sound formidable they are thus seen ‘to be significant. There are only a ! few of these names in common use ap- i plying to the ordinary bacteria and it is well to fix them in mind as they are ' constantly appearing in the many | health articles now being published, indeed even in literature of a general class. property of forming spores, oval or rounded masses of protoplasm, capa- ble of resisting adverse conditions which would destroy the vegetative or ordinary bacterial cell. Spore forma- tion is supposed to be adaptation to hard times as it enables the bacteri- um to live through long periods of drying, famine or unsuitable tempera- ture. In the spore-state, bacteria are highly resistant to high tempera- tures, poisons and the like; some spe- cies can withstand the temperature of hours; some are even capable of re- sisting a temperature of 360 degrees F. The vegetative forms, on the oth- er hand, are mostly killed at 130 to 140 degrees F. by ten minutes expos- ure in the presence of moisture. It is the spore forms that resist the ac- tion of heat in pasteurized milk. Few pathogenic bacteria form spores; the bacillus of tetanus or lock- jaw and of anthrax are familiar ex- amples of spore-formirg, pathogenic bacteria. The spores of anthrax will germinate after remaining in a dry condition for at least ten years. That this inability, in the majority of path- ogenic bacteria, to form spores is a fortunate circumstance is readily un- derstood for otherwise the matter of disinfection and treatment of infee- tious diseases would be a more com- plicated and serious matter. Next week—“Environmental Influ- ences Upon Bacteria.” The Original Homes of Popular Plants There are several classes of immi- grants of which no records are kept by the department over which the United States Commissioner of Immi- gration presides; but there are immi- grants that, in their own quiet way, have done much to make the new world more like the old. These are trees and plants; and if the new world has drawn somewhat heavily on the debt in kind, as may be seen hy the following: list Celery originated in Germany. The chestnut came from Italy. The onion originated in Egypt. Tobacco is a native of Virginia. The nettle is a native of Europe. The citron is a native of Greece. Oats originated in North Africa. The poppy originated in the East. Rye came, originally from Siberia. Parsley was first known in Sardinia. The pear and apple are from Eu- rope. : Spinach was first cultivated Arabia. The sunflower was brought from Peru. The mulberry tree originated in Persia. : The gourd is an eastern plant. The walnut and peach came from Persia. The horse-chestnut is a native of Thibet. The cucumber came from the East Indias. The quince came from Crete. The radish is a native of China and Japan. The peas are of Egyptian origin. in Korea Sends Sons to America. Twenty years ago the old. Korean government was so afraid cf new ideas that a Korean student in the Methodist Episcopal School for Boys in Seoul was arrested and put into prison. What was the henious charge? Simply that he had formed a literary society that discussed mat- ters of general interest. But times have changed and Korea now appreciates American ideas. The imprisoned boy named Cynn, came to America to study and later became the efficient principal of his old boys’ school in Seoul. And how the boys discuss current events nowadays! Mr. Cynn has since then distinguished nimself in a general conference by a speech notable for its thought and its English. He is just one of the many Korean youths who have tested Uncle Sam’s tree of knowledge and found it good.—World Outlook. Beats Church all Hollow. Bobbie had been taken by his father to the circus. The youngster came home round-eyed with excitement and flushed with enthusiasm. “Oh, ms,” he exclaimed, “if you go once to the circus with me you'll never want te fool away time going to church again.”—Boston Transcript. —The “Watchman” has all the news ever, are found in the injurious pro- | or boiling water for upward of sixteen | old in this particular, it has paid its | EE TRE FARM NOTES. | —When cabbages are packed in a | pit they are pulled up by the roots ; and laid usually in three rows, direct- i ly on the ground and upside down. On top of these three rows, two rows are laid; then the pile is banked exactly ‘as described for root crops, excepting that the straw is not necessary. And { as the roots of cabbage are fairly : long, these are usually allowed to pro- trude from the earth pile. Mild | freezing improves the flavor of cab- { bage, so it is not necessary to cover | with manure unless in the extreme i north. | —Onions must be both cool and dry, | and an attic that does not freeze is a i good place for them. They will sprout tif too warm and rot if too moist, so { one must be very careful to see that i they have exactly the right conditions. | Like flowering bulbs, they are best kept on slatted trays or in slat bas- | kets which admit free circulation of | air, and if you must have them in a i cellar. hang the basket from the raf- ters rather than allow it to stand on | the floor, and provide at opposite i points of the room small openings in i the walls for cross ventilation. { —DBeginners in poultry-keeping { often wonder why some hens will lay i steadily when eggs are worth but ten . cents a dozen and lay only an occa- i sional egg or loaf continually when eggs are thirty-five cents a dozen. I {used to blame the hen, but now I | know it isn’t her fault. i I have found that the time of year i that the hens lay best is in the spring | when there is pleuty of green feed and { an abundance of exercise. By feeding Spores.—Some bacteria possess the i green products in the winter and com- i pelling them to keep in action I can | best imitate nature and bring spring ! conditions to my hens. The question is, “Does it pay?” It pays me. Cabbage and any of the beet family | are green feeds which I used profita- bly to feed my chickens in the winter. | Green cured alfalfa and clover, which | has been steamed or boiled, sprouted | oats, or pumpkins have also been : profitable green feed for chickens. | —During the past winter. several i 1 | pig-feeding experiments have been | conducted by The Pennsylvania State | College school of agriculture and ex- | periment station, to determine the rel- | ative values of tankage, linseed meal { and chopped alfalfa hay as sources of | protein, and to compare ear corn with i shelled corn and cornmeal (ground | shelled corn) as to cheapness of | grains. | Two lots of seven pigs each, aver- aging about 110 pounds live weight, ! were used. The feeding period cover- i ed 84 days. Pigs fed on ear corn and | tankage made 100 pounds gain at a | cost of $7.85. These figures are based {on corn at 80 cents a bushel and tank- age at $2.75 per 100 pounds. The cost of 100 pounds gain on a ration of cornmeal and tankage was $8.65, at | the price of five cents a bushel for | shelling the corn and five cents a | Justa) for grinding. The cost of 100 pounds of gain with shelled corn and | tankage was $8.45. | The largest gains were made by . pigs receiving cornmeal and tankage, | an important point to consider when : rapid gains are desired. | The experiment indicates that when | corn 1s 80 cents a bushel ground corn "is no a profitable hog-fattener, a con- i clusion contrary to results of previous experiments conducted at the college. Linseed meal, when fed dry, did not prove a satisfactory protein feed for hogs. Chopped alfalfa was unsatis- factory because of the sharpness of i the short portions of the stem. —Choosing Breeds of Swine.—To assist hog raisers and prospective hog raisers in determining the best breed of hogs to keep the United States De- partnient of Agriculture has recently issued a new Farmers’ Bulletin 765, Breeds of Swine. According to this bulletin, there is no best »Hreed of swine. Some breeds are superior to others in certain respects and one breed may be better adapted than another to certain local conditions. The essential point is that after the farmer has once decided upon the kind of hog to raise he should stick to his decision and develop the chosen breed to its highest possible standard. It is not feasible for one individual to raise several different breeds and bring them to perfection. In making his choice, too, the farmer should be guided by the kind of breeds already established in his locality. If he se- lects one of these he is not likely to make a mistake. There are two distinct types of swine, namely, the lard and the bacon types. Swine of the lard type far out- number those of the bacon type in the United States. The lard type is pre- ferred by the people of this country, consequently the majority of feeders produce a rapid fattening, heavy fleshed lard type. The bacon type is not raised extensively in the United States. The production of choice ba- con is more general in those sections where the feed of the hog is more va- ried and where corn is not relied up- on as the principal grain for hogs. The principal breeds of the lard type are the Poland China, Berkshire, Chester White, Duroc Jersey, and Hampshire. The lard type of hog is low set and compact, with a very wide and deep body. The shoulders should Be full although not coarse, with full hind quarters and hams carried out straight to the root of the tail and thickly fleshed down to the hock. The flesh should be thick and evenly dis- tributed throughout the body. . The size and weight are largely de- termined by market conditions. At present pigs weighing from 175 te 250 pounds ordinarily command the nighest prices. The principal breeds of the bacon gre are the Tamworth and large orkshire, both of British origin. The bacon type is very different from the lard type, being longer in leg and body, with less width of back, and lighter in the shoulders and neck. The first impression that this type con- veys is one of leanness and lankness. Much emphasis is laid on the develop- ment of the side, because it is the side of the hog that is used for the produc- tion of bacon. On the other hand, large, heavy hams are not desirable on a bacon hog. Detailed descriptions of the various breeds, with discussions, are contain- ed in the bulletin already mentioned. oy