Bellefonte, Pa., November 23, 1917. a— THE KAISER TO UNCLE SAM. I would not be your enemy, I love you far too well, My deep affection, verily, No human tongue can tell, And I have shown my tenderness; Such was our family’s plan Since Vater Fritz was wont to slay The raging Austrian. I longed to be a friend to you, True to my latest breath, And so I scattered bombs which blew Your working men to death. And so I drowned your citizens Found on an ocean ship. Twas to your country’s denizens A mild and friendly tip. Benevolent were all my plans * Toward folk within your gates, And so I urged the Mexicans To capture several States, Lest ye might loll in idleness Beneath your cloudless blue, I tried to find—I must confess— Some work for you to do. I would not be your enemy, I love you much too well The starry banner of the free Adorns your every dell. I pledge you, offer you my hand, Your friend till Judgment Day,’ And hope that you will understand My courteous little way. —Toronto Daily News. “FINE FEATHERS.” (Concluded from last week). “Miss Brown!” The face she turned up to Robert Faulkner's gaze was not the face of the San Francisco man’s peach, but the stars were still alight in its eyes, and the man who had crossed the room and was standing beside her for- got what he had intended to say to Miss Brown. He looked at her with his mind full of new thoughts. A most disconcerting girl, a girl of surprises. Her eyes did not belong to her face—or maybe they did; for, slowly, under his steady, puzzled scrutiny, a faint color was creeping into the pale cheeks, a tremulous smile was touching the lips, a shy happiness was flooding the whole face. This was an evening of strange changes and discoveries. Why, what queer things happened when you gave them half a chance, when you open- ed your eyes! This was not the San Francisco man’s peach; but neither was it Rob- ert Faulkner's plain and efficient book-keeper, Mary Brown. This was a girl who was young and sweet and brave and pathetic, a girl who was very tired, a girl in need of tender- ness. Oh, a most disconcerting girl. “Miss Brown,” he began again, but stopped to wonder what her other name was. Had her parents named her for the Peach, or for the Book- keeper, or for the little girl who was so shy and sweet and tired. Oh, yes, that was it. She was tired. He had started to tell her that she must put away her books and go home. “It’s almost nine o’clock,” he said gently. “You mustn't go to work again.” “I'm out of balance.” “Hang the balance.” It was not his usual style of con- versation with employees; but this was not a usual evening: Things were different. He was different him- self. For some unknown reason he felt oddly young and boyish, tired of the tyranny of business. Over at the Waldorf, Jenkins was probably wait- ing to figure on those brocades with him. Hang Jenkins! Hang the brocades! So far as he was concerned, the Amer- ican woman,could wear plain satins. “What is your first name?” he asked. It was altogether irrelevant, but it did not seem so to the girl. Nothing could surprise her now. One so soon becomes accustomed to thrills. “Mary!’ she murmured. “Mary!” Of course. Mary was the name for her. J “Well, you are too tired to work,” the man said, quite as though her name had settled the matter. “And you've had no dinner, I suppose? No? Neither have I. Put on your things, and we’ll go out and have some.” Her coat was as worn and cheap as her frock, and her hat had cost her $2.98, on Fourteenth Street; but he did not notice them and she forgot them: In the shop on the corner he bought her violets, and she pinned them to the worn coat as contentedly as though she had been pinning them to the ermine of her earlier apothesis. . “I’ve always been crazy for a bunch,” she admitted, sniffling at the purple sweetness. “You don’t mean to say that they are the first you've ever had?” She nodded. “Mother has always been sick, you know, and there’s Jim- my. It takes close figuring.” “Oh! I see.” Faulkner had sup- posed all girls wore violets by divine right. He took her to a restaurant where the food was beyond reproach but evening clothes were not the rule, and he ordered a dinner most of whose items were as new to her as the vio- lets. She was as frankly delighted with the dinner as with the flowers, and he watched her with a growing warmth about his heart. Women had always bored him, but he had never known a woman to whom he could show a new heaven and a new earth. - It seemed incredible that there should be a girl to whom the things of girl- hood were shining new. And it was a relief, too, to find one who was so refreshing as not to think it necessa- ry to pretend they were not new to her. He liked neither pretense nor sophistication. “Why didn’t the men give you vio- lets?” he asked, his thoughts swing- ing round in a circle to that first amazing revelation. _ She wrenched her attention from the famous actress who was eating lobster at the next table. “There weren't any men. Men never know I'm there.” She was frank about it and distinctly regret- ful. “I don’t know why,” she explain- ed. “It’s just that way. I’ve always ‘ been so busy, and I’ve never had pret- | ty clothes. Perhaps, if they'd ever found out I was there—but they didn’t.” “Fools!” ed profound contempt, Brown was more tolerant. “Oh, no. It just happened so. | had dressed differently—" { “Men aren't like that,” protested. “Qh, yes they are. I was there.” It was true. He couldn’t deny it. “But I found out,” he urged. saw me in a pink and silver evening frock.” He looked at her sharply but she was not cynical. stating explanatory facts and enjoy- ing a fruit salad. er you before.” ble. “I'm much except business; came in the way of business at you carefully, and you put on that pink and silver affair—” She had saved the maraschino cher- ries in the salad until the last. Now she ate them, one by one, giving her whole attention to them, but when the to conversation. “Wasn’t it a lovely frock!” Her eyes dreamed of it. “I’m glad I wore it even for five minutes. I'll never feel so discouraged about myself again. When I’m looking frightfully plain and uninteresting, Ill say to myself, ‘Yes, you do look hopeless; but you aren’t really hopeless. If you had on a pink and silver evening frock and pink satin slippers, now—" She was half laughing, half wist- ful, wholly sweet. One sould see she would love to have a pretty gown, and he knew now just how delightful she could look in one. ‘But his eyes at last were open. He could see the beauty of her in serge. He felt glad and thankful. He felt as if he had some- how grown. Faulkner leaned toward her across the table. For the moment his face seemed as young as hers. “You don’t need the pink and silver frock,” he said softly. “I like you better this way, little girl. for pink satin?” Neither of them noticed the mascu- line egotism of it. He liked her as she was, and they were both content. Across what was left of her lob- ster, the actress watched them appre- ciatively and with a twinge of envy. She was with her husband. She had been in love before and she would be in love again, but she would never again be in love for the first time. There was something about these two now that made her quickly look away. They were unaware of their surround- ings. “I must go.” Mary Brown was sud- denly, breathlessly convinced of the necessity for going. “Mother will worry. I'm always home by nine.” Faulkner did not protest. He liked her having a mother who worried, and the world would not end tonight. The world had only just begun. “If you’ll please put me on a cross- town car. She was entirely serious about it, and something tightened painfully in the man’s throat, a wave of tender- ness swept from his heart up, up to his face; and lingered there. Such a little girl, so gentle, so shining-eyed, so unused to considera- tion and comfort. He wanted her to be safe, to be hap- py, wanted to make her safe and hap- py, wanted to take care of her and teach her that life could be gay and glad. And he wanted to tell her that he wanted all these things; but he only called a taxicab, put her into it, and climbed in after her. She demurred at first and there was a catch in her voice as she gave him the address of the tenement house in which she lived on Avenue A; but after that she was mute. She sud- denly did not want to talk. The evening was nearly ended; and tomorrow—tomorrow she would be eighty-three cents out of balance. Whether or not this would ever again be a tragic occurrence would depend upon what happened tomorrow, and the next day. For one dark second she knew what it would be like if there were just this one miracle, and never any more. But that was for only a moment. Something light about her heart knew that, tomorrow and the next day, to be eighty-three cents out of balance would be a thing of the smallest consequence in the world. For Robert Faulkner would be there in the office near her. She would see the back of his head, his kind profile. She would hear him talking to other people—to her. He would come and stand before her, maybe; and, yes, she knew that he would smile. She almost wished that tomorrow—which would be so differ- ent from all the days gone before it —were here now, except that this wonderful evening had not ended yet. She was riding through the brilliant streets, tucked in here away from the world with him, comfortable, cared for, and happy. She allowed her mind to linger softly for just a mo- ment on the thought of what it would be like to have such companionship often—even every day! Always to be protected, admired as one chosen to be cherished,—to be loved. But it was only for a moment that she dared have those thoughts. The man beside her was silent, too; and his thoughts, like hers, were on the tomorrows. . She would be there, in his office, at her desk, and he must give his entire attention to business as he had always given it before tonight, must not make things difficult for her, must be circumspect, careful, until—until— And, all the while, feeling like a boy of twenty. He could never get away with it, never. Everyone would see, would talk. It would not do to wait; and, yet, if he were too impatient, went too fast, perhaps she—she was a shy little thing and so young. Probably she looked upon him as an old gentleman. Perhaps she could never— The cab stopped before a building, dingy and narrow and high, and the two mounted the. steps to the door- way. Then the taxicab snorted away, its driver never dreaming that he was {in a fairy coach made of a pumpkin | Who cares | “I don’t know why I didn’t discov- | and drawn by white rats. There are so many things to be seen when one’s eyes are opened! i “I feel like Cinderella.” Mary Faulkner's tone express- | Brown turned to say good night and but Mary Robert Faulkner took her hand. It was cotton-gloved; but so small that If I it was lost in his, and it trembled a : little. Faulkner The trembling was his undo- ing. “I have had a nice time,” she told She looked at him in mild surprise. him shyly. “But when the clock" You didn’t know ! struck twelve Cinderella had to go home and—and sit by the fire.” | “Tomorrow night, Cinderella,” said | the boy of twenty, “I am coming to | “Yes; but nobody except you and | call on Mary Brown’s mother—and I | that man from San Francisco ever | shall bring your slipper.” The hall ‘door opened hastily and | shut. The Prince was alone on the tenement house steps, but up the dark | She was merely | stairway Cinderella was running, in: shabby shoes but with her thoughts | on crystal slippers. | “He likes me this way. He said he His voice was hum- | liked me this way,” her heart sang; afraid I don’t think of {but when she stopped for a moment but when it | on the top of the stairs to hug her se- | to look | cret in the kindly dusk, she grateful- ly gave credit where credit was due. “He does like me this way,” she: said happily; “but, all the same, my | fairy godmother knew what she was | doing when she put me in pink and | i silver.”—By Eleanor Hoyt Brainard, ! last of them was gone she came back i in Woman’s Home Companion. i What the Women of France are Doing | Maude Radford Warren says in the December Woman's Home Compan- ion: “In a sense, every woman in France is a nurse and a mother to the sol- diers. In Paris the Gare du Nord is the railway station to which the French soldiers come on their fur- loughs, and from which they pass back to the front. Early in the war, Madame Courcol, a brilliant and charming Parisienne who was doing canteen work in the Gare du Nord, re- alized that the Gare had no place where the soldiers could really rest. ‘Figure it, Madame!’ she exclaimed, her great brown eyes flashing; ‘these poor boys enter Paris at all hours of the day and night, some of them hav- ing to wait several hours in the mean- time with no place to go. And so I talked and begged. The railroad au- thorities gave me a large basement room here in the Gare, and my friends did the rest. Seventy-five beds, Mad- ame, and it is rare, indeed, that one is vacant, and only too often the men are sleeping on the table. My enter- prise lives from hand to mouth, from day to day.’ “And who, standing in that dim room, looking at the sleeping men, would not be glad to give? There they lie, those blue figures, with their pale, worn faces, their great pack be- side them, heroes who are saving France—and us. Such weary, brave faces, such sudden smiles when they awake! And Madame Courcol moves among them, dressed in white, hand- some, vigorous, motherly; she puts a hand on this man’s shoulder, pats the cheek of that one, sweeps them smil- ingly wherever she wants them to go —and they adore her. When the long, long train steams out slowly, taking the men back to the front, they lean out of the windows and cheer and wave, brave fellows that they are! There are none of their wives or mothers or sweethearts on ghe plat- form; that would be too hard to be borne. There are a few American girls from the American Fund for French Wounded, with good-by gifts of comfort-bags; and there is Mad- ame Courcol. Many and many a home- sick boy, who can only get to Paris on leave, not to his own far province, carries away the memory of her as the best thing he can take back to the front. Many a man watches that white figure on the platform until it is only a little white dot. As long as any soldier can possibly see her Mad- ame Courcol waves and smiles. When the train is out of sight she weeps.” At 73 Runs 10 Miles in 75 Minutes. The December American Magazine tells about a wonderful old man who believes in running for health. The writer says about him: “Colonel James L. Smith is a vet- eran of the Civil war. He is seventy- three years old; he lives in Detroit and never misses a day from his desk in one of the city’s big automobile plants. Army surgeons have pro- nounced him ‘a physical specimen without a paralel,” because, “He runs, or walks, five miles as a minimum, and ten miles as a maxi- mum, every day. “That is his understanding of the secret of his youth. He doesn’t claim that it is the secret for other people necessarily—but it is the secret for him. “Detroiters no longer turn their heads when they see this white-haired man come running down the streets. At seventy-three, he can run ten miles in seventy-five minutes. At seventy- three, he can sprint faster than the average youth of seventeen or nine- teen. His daily work consists of di- recting the duties of two dozen mes- sengers. These messengers range, in age, from fifteen to twenty years. There isn’t one who would attempt to outsprint the veteran.” : Thanksgiving. Thanksgiving day is the only dis- tinctly religious festival observed in the United States at the instance of the civil authorities. By Congression- al and State legislation it has become a legal holiday; in fact it comes closer to being a national holiday than any other. The observance of the day is of Puritan origin. The first observ- ance of Thanksgiving day was in 1621, after the first harvest. Since the adoption of the Constitution the President of the United States has recommended a Thanksgiving festi- val, but in 1863 President Lincoln be- gan the custom of proclaiming an au- tumnal thanksgiving annually, and each succeeding President has contin- ued the practice. The Governors of the respective States, who alone have legal authority to proclaim holidays in their jurisdiction, universally fol- low the Presidential proclamation by one of their own, appointing the same day for the giving of thanks—fourth Thursday in November. New York State began the observance of the day Health and Happiness SERIES of articles on the rela- tion of bacteria to milk now being published in the Watchman : Aug. 17—The Bacterial Content of Milks Supplied to Bellefonte. Aug. 24—How the Number of Bacte- ria in Milk is Determined. What Are Bacteria ? Aug. 31 and Sept. 7—Environmen- tal Influences upon Bacteria. Sept. 28—Sources of Bacteria in Milk. Oct. 5—Influence of Temperature upon the Growth of Bacteria in Milk. Oct. 26.—Effect of Bacteria upon Milk. Nov. 9.—Relation of Disease Bacte- ria to Milk. | conditions for development. in 1817.—Gas Logic. Number 28. SIGNIFICANCE OF THE BAC- TERIAL COUNT. It has been shown (No. 24, Sept. 28) how milk becomes contaminated with various kinds of bacteria which find in this medium most favorable sult of this contamination is that the period during which milk has a com- mercial value for food purposes is Th - ee . fection, ! outbreak of septic sore throat in 1911, ! "the above article Dr. Holt (Med. Jour. tJuly 17, 1917) says: . even more strongly that “of the usu- ‘over one million per c. c. are delete- ‘rious to the average infant.” ‘ words, the bacterial count gives val- . cleanliness and staleness of this in- ! dispensable food.” * ‘ria in raw milk can be largely con- cleanliness and cooling. eties, over 1,000,000 bacteria per cu- bic centimeter are certainly deleteri- ous to the average infant.” Ten years after the publication of I still believe, al varieties of bacteria found in milk, Jordan (Text-Book): “In other uable information both as to the * % As al- ready indicated, the number of bacte- trolled by reasonable attention to Even in large cities it is possible to supply clean, fresh milk without appreciable additional cost to the consumer. The sale of milk containing more than 500,000 bacteria per cubic centimeter should not be permitted.” In his recent articie, “The Bacteri- ology of Foods” (Amer. Med. Jour. : April 14, 1917) Dr. Jordan says: ' PRESERVATION OF MILK AND “Evidently the most that can be claimed for the bacterial examination of milk is that it offers indications ! , more or less precise of possibilities of | : danger. i | of considerable economic importance. ! It has been further shown that milk may become infected with pathogenic organisms and so be the means of dis- seminating disease. From these two points of view, therefore, (1) the economic, (2) the hygienic, it is highly important that means should be adopted that will re- sult in improving the keeping quality of milk and at the same time insure freedom from bacteria capable of producing disease. METHODS OF PRESERVATION. An improvement in the condition of milk may be secured, (1) by exclud- ing bacterial life so far as practica- ble at the time the milk is drawn and subsequently holding it at tempera- tures unfavorable to the multiplica- tion of the bacteria that do gain ac- cess; or by removing these bacteria wholly or in part after they have once gained access to the milk. If all are not eliminated, it then be- comes necessary to keep the milk un- der such conditions as to check the growth of those which are not re- moved. Preservation by Exclusion. The first method is followed in many dai- ries that supply high grade milk. The so-called “sanitary,” “hygienic” or “certified” milk is usually a milk that has been handled in such a way as to prevent the introduction of most bacteria that under ordinary condi- tions would find their way into it. “Certified” is a term used in connec- tion with a certification from veteri- nary authorities or boards of health as to the freedom of animals from contagious disease. A numerical bac- terial standard is usually exacted as a pre-requisite to the recommenda- tion of the board of examining phy- sicians. This standard varies for dif- ferent cities; in Philadelphia “certi- fied” milk must have not more than 10,000 bacteria per cubic centimeter; in New York not more than 30,000. There are many first class dairies producing milk with an average of 2,000 to 4,000 bacteria per c. c. or lower—500 to 1,000. Such a standard has its value in the scrupulous clean- liness that must prevail in order to secure these results and is generally regarded as a guarantee of the ab- sence of many bacteria liable to pro- duce disease in children. From a practical point of view, the improve- ment in quality of sanitary milk in comparison with the ordinary product is seen in the enhanced keeping quali- ty. As before stated, such milk has been shipped to Europe arriving in good condition after 15-18 days tran- sit. While there has always existed a difference of opinion as to the rela- tive merits of such sanitary milk compared with pasteurized or steril- ized milk, the fact that the low bacte- rial count in it is secured by elimina- tion rather than by destruction of bacteria is a point in its favor for many people. While to produce milk thus low in bacterial content may necessitate methods of more than average ex- pense, on the other hand, the exces- sive bacterial contamination found in cheaper milks is unnecessary as it can in large part be prevented by at- tention to the simple details of clean- liness. With none of the pre-requi- sites of a sanitary dairy, milk has been produced that gave an average count of from 25,000 to 30,000 bacte- ria per cubic centimeter when exam- ined daily for a period of six months. SIGNIFICANCE OF THE BACTERIAL COUNT. The significance of the bacterial count has been, for years, a matter of discussion among bacteriologists and within the last few months has been more particularly brought to the at- tention of the public through criti- cism of a paper, “The Bacteriology of Foods,” by Dr. Edwin O. Jordan, Professor of Bacteriology, University of Chicago (Amer. Med. Jour. April 14, 1917). The subject can be best presented by quoting directly from Jordan’s Text Book of Bacteriology and from his recent article. “The most conclusive investiga- tions on this point are those of Park and Holt. These observers have found that during hot weather the ef- fect of bacterial contamination on the health of infants was very marked when milk was fed without previous heating. “When milk is taken raw, the fewer the bacteria present the better the results. Of the usual vari- i pected trouble and the degree of dan- ing absolute criteria of wholesome- It cannot often enable us to | declare positively that a particular | lot of milk—I am speaking here! of raw milk—is safe to use. A milk | with a relatively low bacterial con- | tent has been known in more than one ! instance to give rise to epidemic in- | as in the extensive Boston | when the responsible milk gave counts ‘ below 10,000 in fully half th | greatly lessened with resulting losses | Sow i fully lielz the samples, examined. High numbers—Ilet us say | numbers above 200,000—may perhaps |! arouse suspicion as to the general care taken in collecting and handling | the milk; but the source of the sus- | ger to the public health can be arriv- ed at only by the aid of dairy inspec- tion. On the other hand, inspection may uncover sources of danger of which the bacterial examination gives no hint. More important than either dairy inspection or bacterial examina- tion as a means of preventing the dis- semination of infection by milk is the control of the modes of procedure in the milk business. Particularly im- portant as concerns the use of raw milk is the strictness of supervision | exercised over the health of all em- ployees. Prevention of the infection of milk from human sources should be always a primary aim. Yet such precautions are particularly difficult to carry out in practice. In how many certified dairies are all em- ployees examined for the possible presence of typhoid carriers? And what safeguard have we that a healthy milker may not, one time or another, pick up a streptococcus or diphtheria bacillus from some unsus- pected source and become a carrier over night? Such familiar appre- hensions point to the importance of the procedure which thus far has proved more important in checking the spread of milk-borne disease than any oth- er measure—the practice of pasteur- ization. Needing, as it does, to be controlled bacterially and otherwise at every point, it nevertheless cousti- tutes at present one chief reliance in preventing the dissemination of in- fectionby milk, = * * = Bacterial examinations must be ve- garded as primarily useful as guides to proper procedure in the handling and distributing and not as furnish- ness. Even if we are safe in con- demning milks consistently over 200,- 000 or 2,000,000 bacteria, we cannot endorse all milk with less than 10,000 as surely free from all possibility of conveying infection. In point of fact, our interpretation of the significance of numbers varies with our knowl- edge of the conditions. That different constructions must be placed on the numbers of bacteria in raw and in pasteurized milk is universally rec- ognized. * * * * The numbers of bacteria in milk have little meaning unless the sanitary history of the milk is known; when this is the case, they often become useful in controlling procedures and detecting possible sources of danger; they can never be used as absolute and rigid standards for condemnation or approval; they are guides to investigation; they are not, taken alone, a basis for final judgment.” Dec. 7T—“Pasteurization of Milk” Note.—In No. 25, Oct. 5, “The Influence of Temperature Upon the Growth of Bac- teria in Milk,” there was the following er- ror: In the last column of the second ta- ble the number 4,000,000 should be in the first line opposite 24 hrs. instead of in the last line opposite 168 hrs, How Children Can Help in the War. An editorial in the December Wom- an’s Home Companion says: “You ask me: ‘Do you think the children ought to have the same sort of Christmas as usual?’ And I say, ‘No, no, no! Certainly not! I never have believed in this stuffing of chil- dren with Christmas sugarplums and loading them down with so many toys that they could not even find them in- teresting. I’ve done it, I admit! but this is a good year to stop it forever! It isn’t the children’s fault that their Christmas has appealed to their gredy little stomachs rather than to their imaginative, sensitive little souls. Let their Christmas tree this year bear a crop of things to give rather than a crop of things to get. They’ll respond.” Might of Lost Its Collar. Percy being down to recite at the temperance concert, stood up to do or die. He got along all right until he reached the words, “He stood beside the bier!” Then his memory failed him. : “He stood beside the bier!” he re- peated trembling. The evil spirits on the back bench- es murmured one to another. “3e stood beside the bier!” groan- ed Percy, and drew a moist hand across his dripping forehead. “Go on!” yelled a voice from the rear. “It'll get flat while you're wait- ing, you fool!” “What will you have for break- fast?” inquired the waiter. “What's the use of my sitting here and guess- ing. You go ahead and bring me what the law allows for today.”— Washington Star. FARM NOTES. —Sandy soil ought not to be heavi- ly manured at any time, but should re- ceive frequent small applications. —Pennsylvania has imposed as a penalty for conviction for a second offense under the game law, imprison- ment equal to one day for each dollar of the fine and denial of license to hunt for two years. —It takes 50 per cent. more feed to put a pound of ham on a 150-pound pig than to put a pound on one weigh- ing 40 pounds, and 83 per cent. more feed for a 350-pound pig. Keep the pigs gaining while young on pasture and dairy by-products, if available, always supplemented with a grain ration. —“Now that the country’s bumper potato crop is flowing into markets in an ever-increasing stream the wise housewife will take advantage of this cheap source of starchy food and will give the tubers a very important place on the dinner table,” say the home- economics specialists of the United Stator Health Department of Agricul- ure. It is well known that potatoes are a nutritious and healthful food, of which one may eat freely without ill effects. As a matter of fact, say the Department specialists, there is some- thing more which can be said for the potato, for the liberal consumption of them helps to supply the body with alkaline salts which it needs for nor- mal health. Eat more potatoes, for breakfast, lunch, dinner or supper, therefore, while they are abundant, say the specialists, to the advantage ou both your health and your pocket- ook. —The prices received by producers for cattle, sheep and hogs, September 15, and chickens, October 1, have gained 52.7 per cent. in the general average from 1916 to 1917, according to the latest report of the United States Department of Agriculture. The advance for beef cattle per 100 pounds, live weight, was from $6.55 to $8.40, or 28 per cent; for: veal i calves per 100 pounds, from $8.77 to $11.08, or 26 per cent; sheep per 100 pounds, from $6.25 to $10.05, or 61 per cent; lambs per 100 pounds, from $8.22 to $13.06 or 59 per cent; hogs per 100 pounds, from $9.22 to $15.69, or 70 per cent., and chickens from 14.3 to 18.1 cents per pound, or 27 per cent. Sheep, lambs, and hogs have far exceeded beef cattle, veal calves, and chickens in the upward price movement at the point of pro- duction. The highest price at the farm per 100 pounds, live weight, reached dur- ing the year under review, was $8.70 for beef cattle in May, $11.08 for veal calves last September, $10.15 for sheep in May, $13.06 for lambs last September, $15.69 for hogs last Sep- tember, and 18.1 cents per pound for chickens October 1 of this year. The latest farm price reported is the high- est one, of the year for veal calves, lambs, hogs, and chickens; the May price was the highest for beef cattle and sheep. —Winter Care of Bees.—Beekeep- ers lose from one-tenth to one-half of their colonies every winter by failing to feed and protect them properly. That loss is too large, bee specialists of the United States Department of Agriculture believe, and in a state- ment issued recently they declare these losses of important sources of sugar can be reduced to less than one per cent. Wintering bees is a problem of con- serving the energy of the individuals in each colony, the bee specialists say. Three conditions in the hive cause a waste of energy. First, when the temperature of the air surrounding the. bees falls below 57 degrees it is necessary for the bees to expand en- ergy to keep warm. Second, when the temperature of the air is above 60 degrees the bees use energy by flying from the hive, removing the dead that may have accumulated, and in any other activities which the needs of the colony require. Third, an abnormal activity resulting in energy loss is caused by long periods of adverse weather which do not permit the bees * to fly from the hive to void their ex- crement. This last condition may re- sult in the death of many thousands ‘of colonies, the specialists say. Protection of the hive and provid- ing foods of good quality for winter stores will conserve the energy of the bees and enable the colony to pass the winter safely outdoors. If the hive is placed within a box about six inches greater in each dimension than the hive itself, and the space between filled with dry sawdust, leaves, or other insulating material, the neces- sity of heat generation by the bees is reduced to a minimum. A small tun- nel through the packing material will make a passageway for the bees to the entrance of the hive. Care must be taken to see that the hives have proper food stores. Food such as honeydew honey or honeys with a large percentage of gums, which may cause a rapid accumula- tion of excrement in the bees, are un- desirable, but may be corrected by in- serting a frame of honey in the mid- dle of the brood chamber after brood rearing has ceased. Another reme- dy for undesirable stores is to feed about 10 pounds of a syrup made of 2 parts granulated sugar to 1 part of water. In either case when such food is given after brood rearing has ceas- ed it will be placed by the bees in po- sitions most available for immediate use, and the poorest food stores sav- ed until spring, when they may be used safely. As long as the temperature of the air surrounding the bees is maintain- ed at about 57 degrees and no other irritating factor is present, the bees live so slowly that very little food is consumed, the colony being almost in a dormant condition. A normal colo- ny of bees thus protected and fed not only will endure six months or more of confinement but have sufficient vi- tality left to be useful when spring comes. To Prepare Bees for Cold Weather. —1. Unite any weak colonies to make colonies of normal strength. 2. See that every colony has sufficient food stores of good quality to last during the winter—25 to 30 pounds are nec- essary. 3. Provide adequate protec- tion against the wind and pack the hives well, as described in detail above. wt Sa’