Bellefonte, Pa., April 30, 1920. msn DID YOU! Did you give him a lift? of man, And bearing about all the burden he can. Did you give him a smile? He was down- cast and blue, And the smile would have helped him to battle it through. Did you give him your hand ? He was slip- ping down hill, And the world, so I fancied, him ill Did you give him a word? him the road, Or did you just let load? Did you help him along? like you, 2 But the grasp of your hand might have carried him through. Did you bid him good cheer? Just a word and a smile Were what he most needed that last wea- ry mile. He's a brother was using Did you show him go on with his He's a sinner Do you know what he bore in that burden of cares @ That is every man’s load and that sympa- thy shares? Did you try to find out what he needed from you, Or did you just through? leave him to battle it Do you know what it means to be losing the fight, 3 When a lift in time might set everything right? Do you know what it clasp of a hand, 4 man’s borne about all a man ought to stand? means—just the ‘When Did you ask what it was—why the quiv- ering lip, , And the glistening tears down the pale cheek that slip? Were you a brother of his when the time came to be? ; Did you offer to help him, or didn’t you see ? Don’t you know it's the part of a brother of man To find what the grief js and help when you can? Did you stop when he asked you to give him a lift, Or were you so busy you left him to shift? Oh, I know what you say may be true But the test of your manhood is: What did you do? Did you reach out a hand? him the road, Or did you just let him go by with his load? Did you find —J. W. Foley. THE PLAIN KIND. There was no question about it, Martha Bain was not beautiful. Freckles are not necessarily rocks on the road of romance. I pug nose nor stringy hair of a rusty hue. : all was not given a part in Cupid’s dra- ma. That is, she had no part in it un- til—well, this was the way of it: Neither is a: But Martha had them all, and: the hotel, greeted Harold with an em- i brace and a kiss, and complained be- ! emg the best room already was oc- cupied and she had to put up with the second best. She was a pronounced blond, with a clear, olive complexion and dreamy gray eyes. Harold, and, if anything, slimmer. the lady clerk had all she could do to she meant it so much she broke the point of the pen when she jabbed it into the potato that served as a hold- er. Martha’s feelings toward Elizabeth Ross were not improved by an inci- dent which took place the day after the latter’s arrival. Knight, the ter- rier, liked to be friendly with all the guests, and he tried to be with Miss Ross when the latter ascended the steps to the veranda. Did Miss Ross stoop and pat Knight as he frisked about her? Decidedly she did not. Instead, she kicked him with her dainty foot, and Knight went away with his tail between his legs, surprised and mortified. E Came the day when Harold and his bride-to-be were to leave. Martha had her eyes open for a last glimpse of him, and she finally spied him through a window, coming toward the hotel, in company with Miss Ross. They were talking earnesily—at least, the girl was—and Martha rejoiced that there might be some kind of a dispute. Slowly the sun crept out of sight behind the rim of Walloon lake, leav- ing a streaked blaze of blended red, gold and blue. In a secluded dell, fringed with faintly rustling maples, stood a freckle-faced, pug-nosed girl, one arm against a tree, her gaze fol- lowing a little steamboat that was lazily puffing a path through the pla- cid waters. The girl stooped and patted the head of the white dog, which stopped snapping at a fly long enough to ca- ress the hand with his tongue. ‘“He’s gone, Knight,” she said. “He is on that boat, see?” And she turn- ed the animal’s head toward the ferry, which just then uttered a hoarse blast and glided behind a point that shut it from the view of the watchers. Tears could not be kept from Martha’s eyes, and Knight sniffed as though he were crying, too. told the dog. Something rustled behind them and the dog growled as he sprang toward the sound; but the growl was smoth- ered in his throat and his tail began to wag furiously. Martha looked and her eyes met those of Harold Kingsley, standing with his hands in his coat pockets, a queer little smile curving his mouth. For a moment Martha was too as- tonished for words. “Why—why—I thought you and Miss Ross left on—left on that boat,” she finally managed to stammer. He reached and picked a leaf from a tree, and crumpled it in his hand. “You thought right, partly,” he said. “Miss Ross is on that boat, but we—well, | after she made a show—after she She was nearly as tall as | Watching from behind her desk, keep the tears away when the new-! comer assumed possession of Harold. | “I hate that girl!” said Martha, and “Now, you're my only Knight,” she we had a disagreement | FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. DAILY THOUGHT. Out of the dusk a shadow, Then a spark; Out of the cloud a silence, Then a lark; Out of the heart a rapture, Then a pain; Out of the dead cold ashes, Life again. —John B. Tabb. WATER GLASS BEST EGG PRESERV- i ATIVE. Egg production is not uniform. It never will be uniform, unless per- chance the seasons undergo a miracle and winter weather is eliminated, and unless the nature of the fowl is rad- ically altered. Half of the yearly sup- ply of eggs is produced in three months—from the iniddle of March until the middle of June. Spring is | the natural period for laying. Condi- tions are all favorable. Anything that resembles a fowl lays at this time. Spring is the season of over-pro- duction, in that more eggs are laid than we manage to consume. During the remainder of the year production is slight; in the fall and winter months it is almost nil, except for the specialty poultry plants, where the hens are cajoled by more or less arti- ficial means into making a fair show- ing. Such plants, however, do not represent one-tenth of the poultry in- dustry The backbone of the industry vidually, but impressively large col- lectively. The consumption of eggs is virtu- ally uniform throughout the year. And the only thing that makes this possible is the fact that we are far- sighted enough to store the surplus production against the time when there is an underproduction. The same idea holds true of most food- stuffs—cereals, vegetables, fruits and the like. Except for the storage of food we would have very slim diet for six months of each year. PRESERVING EGGS IS SIMPLE TASK. Preserving eggs is not so well known as canning and preserving fruits and vegetables, though it is just as reliable and a lot simpler. It is unfortunate, perhaps, that it has not been given more prominence, be- cause just as much of a saving can be made by preserving eggs as was ever ig by canning fruits and vegeta- es. Strictly speaking, the whole idea of preserving eggs consists of precau- tions, because the actual task is as simple as placing pickles in a vat of brine. It is nothing more than that, anyway, only a different preserving liquid is substituted for the brine. The precautions consist of provid- ing clean containers for the eggs, storing these containers in a clean, fairly cool place, such as a cellar, and, most important of all, to see that the eggs are strictly fresh to start. No difficulty attaches to the latter re- | quirement if the eggs are produced | by the home flock. In order fully to appreciate the need for these precautions a little ! should be known of the structure of an egg and its susceptibility to deterior- ation. When an egg is laid it is com- Perched behind the desk in Eagle kicked the little dog, and so things are . paratively free from any bacteria or Heights Hotel Martha watched the summer lads woo the summer lassies, | not—they are different now. You see, ' she’s one of the artificial kind; and 1 ‘life which might cause decomposition. , It spoils quickly under certain circum- and her little heart, which really was | rather prefer girls like—well, the nat- ' stances, such as dampness and dirt. very big, thumped away unnoticed oir Se loetod Perhaps if she had obtained a polished personality at a finishing school she might have made herself interesting to the knights from the big town; father considered a High school edu- cation sufficient for his hotel clerk. specially since people went there in quest of the rustic. Nevertheless, Martha often dreain- ed when she cat at the edge of Wal- loon Lake in the light of the moon, that she had a knight of her own— sometimes two of them. Harold Kingsley came to Eagle Heights for a month’s recreation from his literary labors. When he came along the beach Martha was throwing sticks into the water for a white fox terrier to chase. Harold stopped and watched, standing some distance behind the! girl, so she did not become aware of his presence. “Come on, Knight,” she admonished and the dog emerged from the water holding a jagged stick, which he dropped at the girl’s feet. Then Knight spied Harold and went to him just as a shaking spell seized him. “Oh, I beg your pardon!” Martha exclaimed, when she turned and saw Harold brushing drops of water from his clothes. “That is. Knight begs your pardon.” “Don’t bother about the apologies,” Harold remontrated. “I can dry out again. Besides, this is not my best suit. I have another—honest.” From that time they were friends, the three of them. Nearly every even- ing they were together, walking along the tanbark paths in the woods or seated in a secluded nook on the lake shore. One night Harold grasped Martha's hand and told her: “Martha, somehow, I’ve come to care for you a lot.” “Why?” she wanted to know. “Why do you like me? I know I am not good looking, and I have just loads of freckles.” “Because you are so natural,” he finally said. “You're not the least bit artificial, like most girls I know. You are not tainted from contact with the world. You are just yourself, and you don’t try to be anything else. And do you know, I'm rather fond of freckles, particularly that one on the end of your nose.” The next night—it was nearly a month since his first appearance at Eagle Heights—his manner was en- tirely different. He answered her in monosyllables and appeared wrapped in thought. “Why are you so different to- night?” she asked. They walked on and came to the steps of the hotel ve- randa before he answered: “I'll tell you. Today I received word that Elizabeth Ross, the girl 1 am engaged to marry, is coming here tomorrow. She expects to stay sev- eral days, and then I am to go back with her. I hated to tell you.” Elizabeth Ross took the place by storm. Attired in clothes that were the last word in style, she swept into but Martha's’ | ural, the plain—yes, the freckled , kind.”—By R. Ray Baker. | Beaver for Pennsylvania. More than 150 beaver will be dis- tributed in State game preserves in | Pennsylvania as soon as the weather ! conditions permit them to be shipped and ‘from the province of Ontario, | State Game Commission officials are i now making up the list of places to { which the animals are to be sent. Ex- ‘ periments made in Northern Pennsyl- { vania the last few years have shown ! that it is possible to stock this State ! again with beaver, and it is planned : | to distribute a number of the animals in the Allegheny valley and in north- ' | eastern counties, where conditions i have been declared favorable by per- sons conversant with the hubits of the beaver. Seth E. Gordon, secretary of the State Game Commission, says that the reports he has received from game wardens and sportsmen show that the activities of people in feeding game during the recent snows have saved many birds. In some of the southern counties, where the State distributed wild turkeys, the birds were found close to settlements, and recently have been found very active. dreds of quail have been kept alive by being fed by farmers, arrangements having been made with game officials. rp. Legion Fighting Plague. American Legion posts throughout the country, United States Public Health Service in efforts to locate sanatorium accom- modations for the thousands of for- | mer service men who have returned from the war afflicted with tubercu- I losis. Acting on the suggestion of Surgeon General Rupert Blue, Ameri- can League posts are endeavoring to locate suitable sanatoriums where war ing the wish of the Public Health Service to care for tuberuclar patients in sanatoriums where the patients se desire. The old idea that tuberculosis pa- tients ‘must seek high altitude and a dry climate has been found to be wrong,” said Dr. Rupert Blue. “It is to make a radical removal. A patient gressing disease should never be sent to a distant place.” earar——— etter. Balked His Desire. A gentleman and his wife were ad- miring some college buildings erected by wealthy alumni. Presently they came to a noble hall, over the main entrance of which was a tablet read- ing, “Erected by John C. Black, as a memorial to his beloved wife.” “Ah,” he said with a sigh, “that is what I should like to do for my col- lege.” And for the life of him he couldn’t understand why his wife sud- denly became cold to him. Hun- | now numbering more : than 7500, are co-operating with the ! risk patients can be accommodated at . rates not to exceed $3 per day, it be-' near their homes generally necessary or even desirable with far advanced or rapidly pro- | | WATER GLASS SOLUTION Is BEST. Of the numerous experiments con- i ducted by agricultural colleges, chem- ‘ists and others, with the view to de- | termining which method of preserving ' eggs gave the best results, the water- glass treatment stands at the top, and is to be recommended for all-round use. Water glass, or soluble glass, tech- .nicaliy known as sodium silicate or potassium silicate, comes in two forms —a thick, syrup-like liquid of about the consistency of molasses, and as a powder. Both forms are sold by lead- ing druggists, though the liquid ma- i terial is probably the most popular. It is not expensive if bought direct from the manufacturers. Properly diluted, a gallon of water glass should make sufficient solution to cover and store between sixty and seventy dozen | eggs. Dissolve one part liquid water glass in ten parts water. If the powder is cused a slightly smaller quantity of the chemical may be employed. Only . pure water should be used, and if there is any question as to its purity the water should be boiled for about | twenty minutes. Allow it to cool be- i fore adding the water glass. Stir the | mixture thoroughly, and when the { glass is entirely dissolved the solution | 1s ready for use. The water glass is i heavier than water, and will go to the | bottom unless thoroughly dissolved | and mixed. | Almost any sort of a container will | do for packing the eggs, though large, ! earthenware crocks which have a glazed surface, such as butter crocks, are preferable. Crockery, glass or wooden containers are better than , metal receptacles. 1 i HOW THE EGGS ARE PACKED. If the eggs are carefully placed in the vessel on end and stood close to- gether, more eggs can be stored in a given container and less solution is required to cover them. This is not essential, however, and sometimes, as in the ease with most backyard and farm flocks, it will not be possible to store the eggs in such large quanti- ties. | The eggs can be added, a few at a ‘ time, as they are gathered each day fresh from the nests. Simply place the eggs in the solution and see that they are covered by the liquid to a depth of two inches. If the solution | evaporates, add more; the eggs must be covered by the water glass as long as they are in storage. A good plan | is to cover the containers with lids to | prevent evaporation and keep out I dust. If tight-fitting covers are not | available, secure a layer of tough pa- | per on the top of the vessel. | Store the containers in a cool, well- ventilated, clean cellar. Examine the | containers about once a month to see i that the eggs are submerged. Do not attempt to keep the eggs indefinitely; | no method of preservation will do this. , The eggs should be consumed within | nine months. |. Remove the eggs from the solution as they are desired. Do not keep the eggs out of the preservative for any is the farm flock; a small unit indi- considerable time before they are to | be used—a week is all right. ; When preserved eggs are to be boil- ! ed, stick a needle through the shell in : the large end to prevent the shell from ' breaking. Do not replace the eggs in the solu- i tion once they have been removed. To do so may influence the other eggs. ; BE SURE OF FRESH EGGS. Strictly fresh eggs are necessary to | assure success. Use infertile eggs ! whenever possible. Test the eggs by | the candling process if there is any { question as to their quality. {Scrub and scald the containers to | insure cleanliness. Dirty eggs or eggs which have been washed should not be preserved. Remember, one defect- ive egg may render the entire lot un- fit for food. Do not use any preserving solution more than once. Make a fresh each year. ORIGIN AND FUNCTIONS OF ELECTORAL COLLEGE. What is the Electoral College? The constitution of the United States re- cites that for the purpose of the elec- tion of a President and a Vice Presi- dent of the United States each State shall “appoint,” in such manner as the Legislatures may direct, a num- ber of electors equal to the whole number of Senators and Representa- tives to which the State may be enti- tled in the Congress. The word “col- lege,” not mentioned in the constitu- tion, came into use later, possibly for the first time in 1845, when Congress provided for the filling of vacancies, “which may occur in the college of electors when such ccllege meets to give its electoral vote.” There is no uniformity in the man- ner of nominating electors to be vot- ed for at the ensuing election. Prev- ious to the election of 1912 no few- er than 30 States yet adhered to the old custom of naming them in party conventions. Fifteen States made their nominations, as does Pennsylva- nia, ip primaries by popular vote. Virginia and Wisconsin nominated for the districts in district conventions and for electors-at-large in State con- ventions. Returns of the results of the elec- tions are made to the clerks of the various counties within two days, and these officials must within eight days certify the returns to the Governors of their respective States. The can- didates having the highest number of votes in his district or in the State is. declared to be the elector, no matter to what party he may belong; and it has happened that the electoral vote of a State has been split between can- didates for the two leading parties. If there be a tie vote the Governor of the State must notify the Legislature and that body shall decide the matter, choosing one of the persons involved in the tie. The Governor must notify the persons declared elected and order the preparation of three lists of the electors to be printed and delivered tc them previous to the date appointed for their meeting. : The electors must meet in their re- spective States, at such places as shall be designated by the Legislature, the second Monday of January following their notification of election, and there, as provided by the constitution, “yote by ballot for President and Vice President, one of whom, at least, shall not be an inhabitant of the same State with themselves. They shall name in their ballots the person voted for as President, and in distinct ballots the person voted for Vice President, and they shall make distinct lists of all persons voted for as President, and all persons voted for as Vice President, and of the number of votes for each, which list they shall sign and certify, and transmit sealed to the seat of government of the United States, di- rected to the president of the Senate.” After they have cast their votes the electors must make and sign three certificates of all the votes given by them, each of which certificates must include two distinct lists, one the votes for President and the other the votes for Vice President, and to each of these certificates they must annex one of the lists of the electors given them by the Governor. The certificates are now sealed, have the endorsement that they contain all the votes given by them for President and Vice Presi- dent, and that is the last that will be seen of them by the electors as a body, though all may take a pleasure trip to Washington to witness the cer- emony of the counting of the votes, which will take place the second Wed- nesday of February succeeding the ceremonies of the electors in their re- spective States. On that day at 1 o’clock p. m. the Senate and House of Representatives must meet in joint session, in the hall of the latter, according to act of Con- gress of February 3, 1887, and then occurs one of the impressive formali- ties associated with the choice of a President, though the result has been known by everybody for fully three months. The president of the Senate sits in the chair of the Speaker of the House and the Speaker sits at his left hand. The Senators occupy the section of the hall to the right of the presiding offi- cer, with the members of the House to { the front and left. Two tellers have | been selected by each branch of the | Congress. The President of the Sen- i ate opens the votes as certified by the | electors of the various States and passes them to the tellers to be count- ced in alphabetical order. Objection ‘may be made to the counting of the vote of any of the electors, and in , that case the two bodies must confer | separately in their own halls and in | the event of agreement or the oppo- | site in regard to the challenge the | {vote or votes shall or shall not be ‘counted. Finally the complete vote is “announced to the president of the Sen- | ate by the tellers and that presiding ! officer announces that Mr. Smith, or ‘ Mr. Jones, as the case may be, “ap- | pears by the vote to have been elected President of the United States,” with ! similar solemn words in relation to the Vice President. That ends the grand formality and the statesmen | and visitors who crowd the galleries | scatter. Prior to the act of February 3, 1887, | the president of the Senate opened and counted the votes. That method was virtually ended early in 1877, in the heat of the Hayes-Tilden contro- lot - a versy, which was the gravest political crisis that had occurred since the days of the secession. For years the entire matter of transmitting and counting the electoral vote had been a subject for heated discussion. As to the method of transmission, one of the three certified copies of the vote is sent to the president of the Senate by special messenger and another is sent him by mail. The third is depos- ited with the judge of the District court in the district where the elec- tors assembled. In case the first two certificates disappear a special mes- senger is sent from Washington to re- ceive the certified copy left with the district judge. Dispute of the right of the presi- dent of the Senate to count the votes was argued for political reasons with much heat at the beginning of the Hayes-Tilden ruction. Tilden prepar- ed a brief in which he showed that the | ‘ president of the Senate’s legal duties | ended with his reception and opening of the votes, but that he had no au- , thority for counting them. The law, however, providing for tellers, was not made specific until 1888, with the pre- scription cited above, according with the Tilden view. $300,000 is Demanded for Mark Twain Home. Lovers of Huckleberry Finn and the other creations of Mark Twain, who manifested interest in a movement to preserve the historic home of the writer, literally took the count when the officers of the Hartford Art Soci- ety announced that the present own- ers demand $300,000, while they ac- quired the property a few months ago for $55,000. The owners, Francis Ahern, an un- dertaker, and James J. Wall, a real estate promoter, admit, according to the officers of the art body, that they are not in business for their health or for any sentiment about Mark Twain. Since building is threatened with destruc- tion, offers of financial aid have been received from all parts of the coun- try. “Innocents Abroad” was written in the house, which is one of the oldest residences in New England. The kitchen is on the top floor on the street side so, as the humorist ex- plained, “the servants would see the parades and funerals without running through the house.” All the stair- ways are on the outside. An appeal to the State Park Com- mission to condemn the property for a State park has been suggested. If this were done, officers of the art body say, the present owners would receive only the appraised value of the land and buildings erected thereon. — et Trip to Panama Canal for Penn State Entertainers. Arrangements have just been com- pleted whereby a group of six Penn State student entertainers will be giv- en a trip to the Panama Canal Zone during the next Christmas vacation period. The invitation has come from government officials at Washington, and as a result of the splendid records made by similar parties from Penn State that appeared in the Canal Zone in 1914 and 1915. While the time for the trip is too far distant to select a personnel of the party, it will ‘include a male quartette, a pianist and a reader. They will be accom- panied by C. C. Robinson, head of the college department of music, who is largely responsible for securing this unusual trip. Several members of the present Freshman quartet who have made that organization famous during the present year, are certain to be in- cluded on the trip. Concerts will be given for the benefit of government employees and army men in Panama. State College Students Earn $60,000 in Year. Estimates supplied by the employ- ment bureau of the college Y. M. C. A., indicate that earnings of Penn State students this year will aggre- gate more than $60,000, and for the first time in many years there is a surplus of jobs on hand at the bureau. During the present year there have been 220 applicants for work as against 340 jobs that could be sup- plied those who want to earn a little money towards paying their college expenses. The bureau states that 170 applicants have received work that will bring them an average of $3 per week, or a combined total of $18,560 for the yar. More than 150 men earn | their board through “waiting table” in boarding and fraternity houses, is a total saving to them of $32,400 with board at $6 per week. Scores of other students have regular work in stores, some as sales agents, stenographers and clerks, their com- bined earnings totaling several thous- and dollars in the course of a year. A Stayer. Two Irish business men were chat- ting together when an elderly man passed by. “That’s Brown; he works for me,” said one of the two. “He’s an honest looking chap,” re- marked the other. “Has he any stay- ing power?” “He has that,” replied the first. “He began at the bottom of the ladder in ’76 and he’s stayed there ever since.” The Poor Married Hick. / “Before marriage my husband was so susceptible to flattery.” “Yes? “And now he is susceptible to noth- ing but fresh cold.”—Florida: Times- Union. He Didn’t Mind, Oh, No! Wife—Jim, I've invited one of my old beaux to dinner. Do you mind? Hub—Why, no. I always like to meet lucky people.—Boston Trans- cript. The Heartless Monster! “She accuses the defendant of taunting and teasing her by refusing to buy her only one suit and one pair of shoes a day.”-—Steubenville Ga- zette. it became known that the | FARM NOTES. —Field peas sown at the rate of 2 bushels per acre with 1 bushel of oats are largely used by dairymen. The combination is cut when the peas begin to pod and used as hay. 1t is the cheapest food that can be raised, and means a big increase i il ¢ butter fat. hil ang —You should plan to have a better garden this year than you did last year. Plant on generous lines. Plan that the rows may be straight and long, so as to admit horse cultivation. See that there is nothing in the gar- den but vegetables; fruit trees have no place in the garden; they belong in the orchard. Nothing larger than currant or gooseberry bushes should be allowed a place in the garden, and these shduld be placed in one side of the garden and in long rows. —If there were no bees fruit trees and other plants could not produce any fruit. Apple, plum, cucumber, clover, alsike and alfalfa are fertiliz- ed by bees. Honey is the bait with which the bee is induced to perform this task. The colored, fragrant pet- als of the blossoms are the advertis- Ing signboard, telling the bee where the honey may be found. If the blos- som Js to “set fruit,” the bee, with its fuzzy body, must brush some of the vellow dust called pollen from the male organs or anthers at the bottom of the blossom, and, flying away to another blossom, deposit the pollen on the female organ, called the stigma. The blossoms are so arranged that to get at the honey the bee must first brush, with its pollen-covered body, against the stigma, thus completing the polination. As soon as it has per- formed this duty it may draw a check for the work in the form of a drop of honey at the bottom of the blossom. While drawing this pay the bee is in- voluntarily covered with pollen again and made ready to proceed to the next blossom and repeat the process. .—Soy beans are more than three times as valuable as corn when com- pared in their protein content. The two feeds are hardly comparable on the basis of total digestible nutrients, the one being a nitrogenous feed and the other a carbonaceous. Corn con- tains in each 100 pounds 7.8 pounds of digestible protein, 66.8 pounds of di- gestible carbohydrates and 4.3 pounds of digestible fat. Soy beans contain in each 100 pounds 29.1 pounds of di- gestible protein, 23.3 pounds of diges- tible carbohydrates and 14.6 pounds of digestible fat. Oats contain less car- bohydrates, but about the same amount of protein and fat as corn, and while shorts are higher in protein than corn they contain less than half as much as soy beans. Experiments have shown that soy beans when fed to hogs have a feeding value 10 per i cent. higher than shorts and much su- | perior to oats. They are fed as a sup- plement to corn, and as such are equal lin feeding value to linseed meal. | When properly used in connection | with corn and other feeds one could | well afford to pay $1.50 per bushel for soy beans to feed to hogs. | —The amount of silage which may i be stored in a silo depends upon the depth, the diameter and the amount of water in the silage. A silo 36 feet deep will store nearly five times the amount of feed that one 12 feet deep will. Doubling the diameter increas- 'es the capacity four times. A silo 30 feet 1n diameter will hold more than nine times as much as one 10 feet in diameter and at the same depth. The | late Professor KF. H. King, the author- ity ior the above statements, worked out a table showing the capacity of ‘silos of various sizes. ‘his table . shows that a silo 10 by 28 feet would {hold 42 tons of silage, and it would i require 2.8 acres or corn, producing 15 tons per acre, to fill it. A silo 10 by 40 feet would hold 70 tons and re- quire 4.6 acres of corn to fill it; a si- ilo 14 by 28 feet would hold 83 tons , and require 5.5 acres of corn to fill it; a silo 12 by 40 feet would hold 101 tons and require 7.3 acres of corn to 'fill it. A cubic foot of silage in a si- ilo one foot deep weighs 18.7 pounds. I'ln a silo 20 feet deep, a cubic foot of | silage, taking an average of the whole depth, will weigh 83.3 pounds. A i deep silo will hold more in proportion than a shallow one and the silage will | keep better. The height should be at | least twice the diameter. —The economy of pasturing pigs is shown by the results of thirty-three | forage crop demonstrations conducted iin fourteen counties of this State last | year by the animal husbandry exten- | sion service of The Pennsylvania State College. A summary of these demon- | strations shows that it required 475 { pounds of grain to produce 100 pounds ‘of pork when pigs were fed in the dry ! lot, while 312 pounds of grain produc- , ed the same amount of gain when pigs were on pasture. The saving in grain | bill was 34.3 per cent. There is anoth- ler phase to be considered: Health, {vigor and rapidity of growth are val- {ued by experienced swine raisers as I much as the saving in feed cost. They ‘mean an efficient herd and one in | which disease is not liable to gain a i foothold. | Over 1000 pigs were used in these ! demonstrations, which ran 114 days. : The quality of the animals was that of average feeder hogs found in Penn- | Sylvania farms. At the beginning of | the period they averaged 45 pounds. |The average tinal weight was 134 ' pounds, making a daily gain of .79 pounds. Cost of producing the forage crops was computed from man and horse labor, rent of land, seed, fertil- tizer and fences. This amounted to + $2.43 for each 100 pounds gain in the | herds. Labor in feeding and interest lon investment came to $0.84 per 100 pounds gain, Grain cost is the deter- ‘mining factor, amounting to over 75 i per cent. of the total cost of produc- (tion. Thus a saving in the amount of | grain used goes a long way toward | the efficiency of producing pork. Un- ‘der present conditions it often means ' the difference between profit or loss on the year’s work for the swine grow- ler. Nothing makes a better hog pas- | ture than alfalfa or clover. Rape is {good and may be sown early enough | to make pasture for spring pigs as ' soon as they are ready for it. A suc- | cession of various crops planned to | take care of the herd all summer is | the only way to obtain all the advan- |tages of this method of feeding , swine.