mage, BD ————————————————— Bellefonte, Pa., August 26, 1921. I'LL TELL YOU WHAT'S KEEPING YOU DOWN, JIM. I'll tell you what's keeping you down, Jim, On the sane job year after year— Though your service has been long and faithful And your record is straight and clear; I have thought of your case many times, Jim, And of what I could do for you— I'd be glad of a chance to promote you, But what other work can you do? There is work to be done all around, Jim, That carries more money. And still, Of all the jobs that surround you, Is there one you can fill? True, you've werked many service And you've never been known to shirk, But what time have you spent in prepar- ing? To take up some other man’s work. years in the On the heavy up grade of achievement, Where the footsteps of others have led, It’s the men who are always preparing That are constantly forging ahead. There are places ahead to be filled, Jim. For those who are playing the game; But some won't prepare for promotion. The firm is not always to blame. —=Salesmanship. SPRUCE FOR THE AEROPLANES. After the United States had enter- ed the great war, Mr. Hollinsworth, master of the High school in a small town in Maine, had his four classes assemble every Friday afternoon and read the news of the week. Boys and girls alike took part in the reading. Afterwards they studied the large maps on the school room walls and talked over what they had read; in that way they gained a good idea of the monmentous events that were happening in Europe. One winter afternoon there was an unusually enthusiastic discussion of the plans that the government had just announced for building a large fleet of =roplanes. Four of the sen- iors declared their purpose of going to an aviation school as soon as they were graduated in June. Mr. Hollinsworth had a small model of an aeroplane, and using it to illus- trate his remarks, explained why aeroplanes can fly. Then Clarence Berry read an account of how the frame is built and braced. In the course of the article the writer said that, since lightness and stiffness as well as strength are essential, the wood best adapted for the frame is dry, straight-grained spruce, and that, since Maine is the home of the spruce tree, the supply for the new aero- planes would perhaps be sought in our eastern forests. “Well, now, if spruce is what they want, I know where there are some fine big spruce trees!” Ansel Cum- mings exclaimed. “Behind that old saw mill on Moose Brook, and all round Sheldrake Pond, there’s spruce enough to make ten thousand aero- plane wings!” “That’s so!” cried Herbert Cary, one of the sophomores. “That is where we dug spruce gum last fall. Say, to- morrow is Saturday; let’s go up there and see how many trees we can find. If we discover good ones, we can write to Washington and tell the aero- plane commission what we have got for them here. We'll be doing some- thing to help.” “Let’s do it!” several cried, and Mr. Hollinsworth added, “Good schieme! How many of you have snow shoes?” All of the members of the Snow- shoe Club had them, and four or five others thought they could borrow some. In all twenty-four, including Mr. Hollinsworth, proposed to make the trip. “But it’s eleven miles to that saw- mill,” Melba Dunn observed. “We girls don’t want to walk so far.” “Then we’d better hire Jim Lam- bourne to carry us all up in the old school barge as far as the sawmill, and wait there to take us home,” Bil- ly Elkins proposed. Every one approved the suggestion; and Mr. Hollinsworth, in a final word of instruction, cautioned every one to be on hand promptly at seven o’clock the next morning, since they would need to make an early start. He also advised every one to bring a good- sized luncheon, for appetites were likely to be sharp. By the time the young people had gathered the next morning, and had bundled themselves and their snow- shoes and lunch baskets into the old barge, half past seven had struck on the town clock. Even then it was no more than light, for the day was bleak and cloudy. But nevertheless the spir- its of the young people were high when the barge set off along the coun- try road. Four miles above the village, the barge entered the forest that with HUNTING only a few clearings extends up to the: sawmill on Moose Brook. There were no houses near the mill. The sawmill itself was now deserted, for two years before a severe freshet had carried away the dam that husbanded the wa- ter for the driving wheel. Since the day was too chilly for the team to stand outdoors after the long drive, Mr. Hollinsworth advised Lam- bourne to proceed to a settler’s clear- ing, three or four miles farther on, where he could shelter the horses. He was to return to the sawmill at two o’clock. After some discussion they decided to set their baskets of food inside the eld mill and to postpone eating their luncheon until they got back from their tramp. So, putting on their snow shoes they crossed the brook on the ice and climbed the wooded hills beyond. ith the master and the older pays leading the way, and the girls and the younger boys following bravely after, they made fair time. Chill and som- bre as the day was they were a mer- ry party, and the silent wintry forest resounded with their shouts and laughter. In the course of an hour they reach- ed Sheldrake Pond, and at once set to work counting she large spruce trees and measuring their girth with a tape measure. By means of a simle method of triangulation that Mr. Hollinsworth improvised, they determined how long a log, free of branches and knots, could be cut from each tree. For use in building aeroplanes a tree should furnish such a log forty feet long, but they found only ten trees that met those requirements. Ansel thought that he had seen larger spruces around Club Pond, per- haps two miles away; and accordiugiy he and the master, with four other boys, set out for that place. The rest of the party stayed behind to dig spruce gum. Before Mr. Hollinsworth and the boys had reached Club Pond, snow be- gan to fall. With a gusty sigh the wind began to stir the thick tree tops, and fine icy pellets came sifting dow. Soon the whole forest assumed a be- wildering misty appearance. Decid- ing that it was unwise to delay, they made a very brief survey of the spruce trees there and then hurried back to Sheldrake Pond. By the time they had found the rest of the party, the storm had increased in violence. Telling the boys and girls to keep to- gether, the master at once started to tead them back toward the mill, but the snow was so thick that they soon went astray. When at last they reached the Moose Brook, they were a mile or more above the mill. It was now after three o’clock, and as they plodded wearily along the brook they looked forward eagerly to the baskets of food that awaited them at the saw- mill. But when at last the old build- ing loomed dimly through the driving snow, Mr. Hollinsworth said: “I think we had better start for home at once. We can eat our lunch- eon in the barge. It's getting dark already.” But to their astonishment and dismay, on emerging in frout: of the old sawmill, they saw no barge. For some moments they looked round in the fast-gathering dusk, but could discern no trace of it. “Why, Lambourne ought to have been here more than an hour ago!” Ansel exclaimed. “Could he have gone on without us?” Herbert Cary suggested. “No; something may have happen- ed to delay him,” Mr. Hollinsworth said. “We'd better wait a while. We'll shelter ourselves in the mill and eat our lunch.” The old sawmill, however, did not offer much protection against the storm. The whole front side was opén and the interior was bleak at best. Getting as far back in it as they could, they opened their baskets and hastily devoured the much-needed refresh- ments. Fortunately, the coffee and the cocoa they had brought in vacu- um bottles was still hot. As they ate they listened eagerly for the jingle of the barge bells; but minute after minute passed, an hour dragged by, and still there was no sign of Lambourne. By that time it was dark and the storm was growing even worse. “I don’t believe he will come,” An- sel whispered at last to the master. “Hadn’t Herbert and I better start out for home and get teams?” But Mr. Hollinsworth would not let the two boys start off in the storm and darkness, for there was every chance that they would stray from the road, becgiie bewildered and perish. The temperature was sinking toward zero, and the blasts of wind were icy and cold. He considered setting out for help alone, but decided that he must remain with his charges. “We must do something,” Herbert whispered to the master. “The girls can’t spend the night here. They don’t complain, but they’re shivering. The storm drives in, and it will get awfully cold by midnight.” Meanwhile Billy Elkins, who had been skirmishing about the great pic of slabs and waste at the lower end of the mill, had groped his way round to the back where it stood on wooden piers over the bed of the stream. That side of the building was sheltered from the storm; and, striking matches, Billy peered round underneath. There was a large irregular space under the entire length of the mill, partly fillec with great heaps of yellow sawdust. hs place was not only sheltered but ry. “There's a nice, sheltered nook down under here,” he cried, hurrying back. “Get hold of me, somebody, and string. out a line, one behind another, and Il pilot you down there.” “All right. Show us the way, Bil- ” «Just look round!” Billy cried, striking a match, when they had reached the shelter. “Good, dry spot! Clean sawdust to sit on!” “And what’s to hinder us from hav- ing a fire?” Grant Wright suggested. “There are plenty of slabs out there.” Mi. Hollinsworth thought there would be no danger to the mill if they kindled the fire pretty well out in the bed of the brook, and he, with Her- bert, Ansel and several others, began to carry down armfulls of slabs. In a few minutes they had kindled a crackling blaze, which shone forth in the storm and lighted up the space far back under the mill. “My, doesn’t that warmth feel good to cold fingers!” Melba exclaimed. “I am not sure but that we can get through the night here—if the barge doesn’t come,” Mr. Hollinsworth said as every one gathered round the fire. The boys continued to bring slabs and soon had built so hot a fire that the whole space beneath the old mill was very perceptibly warmed. Out beyond the ruddy blaze the snow still drove down, but it did not come in up- on them. Indeed, the nook under the mill was soon fairly comfortable. When they had burrowed seats for themselves in the sawdust, they over- hauled the lunch baskets again and ate what remained from their hurried re- past. Once they heard a noise in front of the mill; and, thinking that perhaps the barge had come, Billy made his way up; but he discovered nothing. “False alarm,” he announced when he returned a few minutes later. “Do you suppose that Lambourne can have lost his way while comin back here?” Ansel asked; and, indeed, every one felt some anxiety concerns ing the driver. : Sleep was out of the question. To pass the time Mr. Hollinsworth pro- posed that every one should tell a sto- ry. Several excused themselves, but the rest voted that whoever failed to tell a story should have to garry eight armfuls of slabs for the fire. Several of the boys preferred to carry slabs; but Ada Kimball began the story-tell- ing by relating a laughable incident that had occurred at a Red Cross gath- ering for knitting army sweaters, a fortnight before. Ansel’s turn came next. He was in the midst of an evi- | dently manufactured ghost story, when a sudden interruption occurred. There was a scramble in the bank of sawdust behind them, and some species of wild animal, scattering saw- dust right and left, leaped boldly over Melba’s head! Landing in the brook bed, it dashed away before any one had got a clear view of it. All had jumped to their feet, and several of the girls screamed. “What's that?” every one shouted. “A bear!” some one exclaimed. “No, no, it’s not large enough for a bear,” Mr. Hollinsworth said, to calm the panic. “J saw rings on its tail,” Billy El- kins remarked. “Probably a raccoon, then,” the master said, “hibernating under the bank where those logs are cob-housed up to support the front of the mill. That would be a good place for them. Qur fire waked him up.” “At any rate he saved me from fin- ishing my story,” Ansel remarked. “I was getting into a hard spot.” He and Grant crept back over the niles of sawdust and peared into the dark corners, but they could ‘sez noth- ing; and after the excitement had sub- sided, the story-telling began again. it was now Billy’s turn, but he had scarcely begun when amidst another shower of sawdust a second raccoon shot forth. This one leaped clean over the fire! “What a jump!” Grant cried. “Probably a pair of them were win- | tering under the bank,” the master re- marked. “Well, that lets me off,” Billy said. “My thanks to that coon.” The others would not listen to that excuse, and Billy had to resume. Be- fore he had reached his climax, still another coon shot past. Grant and Herbert Cary then got long strips of slabs and, creeping back over the sawdust, began to prod the holes behind the logs. For some time there was no stir; then suddenly a fourth coon dashed out past them, fol- lowed, a moment later, by two more! The startled girls had run in a group to the lower end of the mill. It was astonishing how regardless of the fire those raccoons seemed to be. One of them, in leaping over it, left a dis- tinct odor of burning hair behind him. “What a pity to let so many coon skins get by!” Ansel remarked regret- fully. “Enough have escaped to make a sixty-dollar coon coat!” He and Herbert looked around for clubs, with some notion of stopping the next raccoon that came out. But, though the boys continued to prod for a long while, no more appeared. Eventually the story-telling began again. They went the rounds twice before the first dim light of Sunday morning dawned. On going up in front of the mill the boys found that fully a foot and a half of snow had Sellen and that deep drifts blocked the road. Of course they had long since ceas- ed to look for the barge, and as soon as it had grown light they strapped on their ; snowshoes and ; set off. for home. For breakfast, every one in- dustriously chewed spruce gum. They had gone less than four miles when they espied four sleighs plod- ding laboriously toward them; it proved to be a relief party formed by anxious parents. Climbing into the sleighs, the young spruce hunters reached home without further, inci- dent. Two days passed before the mystery of Lambourne’s defection was solved. | Then the fact came out. While at the settler’s clearing, Lambourne had fall- en in with a “bootlegger,” as an illicit peddler of intoxicants is called; and as a result, when he should have been at the old mill—and for no less than thir- ty-six hours afterwards,—he was ly- ing drunk in the barge at the settler’s arn. Mr. Hollinsworth wrote to the au- thorities at Washington and laid be- fore them the facts that his pupils had gathered about spruce trees in that region. His letter led to the first shipment of spruce for the new air fleet, though later the government got its timber for aeroplanes from the re- gion of Puget Sound.—Youth’s Com- panion. een pee. Predicts Severe Winter Ahead. The coming winter will be a severe one if the predictions of C. H. Cant- ner, a Freeland lumberman with a wide reputation in that section as a forecaster, prove correct. Mr. Cantner bases his predictions on observations of wild life. The wasps he says are building their nests high in the trees, the squirrels are more active this summer than us- ual, apparently storing up food for a hard winter, and some of the varieties of trees have begun to shed their leaves earlier than usual. Money-Value of Education. The United States Bureau of Edu- cation some time ago issued a bulle- tin bearing the title, “The Money-val- ue of Education.” : This bulletin contains three figures. With no schooling at all 31 persons out of five million attained distinc- tion. With elementary schooling 808 out of three million achieved a like level. With High school education 1,245 gmerged out of a group of two mil- ion. And with college education 5,768 ar- rived at this point out of a group of one million. The bulletin also shows that in the New York city bridge department the average salaries for positions demand- ing only reading, writing and arith- metic are $982, while for positions demanding High school and two or three years of college or technical ed- ucation the average salary is $2,400. Another statement is that a large coal and iron company has on its pay- roll more than 17,000 men, and that of this number 300 receive $3,000 a year or more, and that of these three hun- dred 286 are college graduates. Know and believe in yourself and what others think won’t disturb: you. —Exchange. ——Subscribe for the “Watchman.” | USE OF MILK DOUBLED SINCE 1890—NOW 44 GALLONS. : Fourty-four gallons of milk are 'used by each person in the United States annually. This estimate refers to that which is consumed in the form | of whole milk and does not include lice cream, cheese and butter. The ; amount is about twice as much as that | used in 1890, when the per capita con- i sumption was approximately 22 gal- 'lons. The dairy specialists point out | that the increase in the use of milk in {the last 30 years is as great as that in the preceding 280 years. i The present-day consumption of ; milk in the United States, they say, is ! equal to about one pint per day, or as | much as two small glasses. ‘that is | not a great amount when it is known | that it includes not only the milk that is used for drinking, but also that used !in cooking. This 1s a small amount | compared to the per capita consump- i tion in some European countries. In | Sweden and Switzerland, for example, | nearly 70 gallons are used by each | person annually. '" A high value has always been plac- ‘ed on cows in many European coun- tries, and history records a campaign ' conducted by Juiius Caesar in central wurope where ke found German tribes living almost exclusively on milk. 1n oider to provide pastures they forci- ' bly resisted the settlement of any peo- ' ple near them. : in relating the growth of tle dairy ‘industry in this country, the depart- ment specialists say that in pioneer days each family kept its own cow. "The denser the population became the ! more important it was to have a well | regulated and ample commercial sup- i cows increased, and in time a dairy business grew up in various sections. |The development of modern methods 'in the distribution of milk, with eco- ‘nomic and sanitary handling, has been | closely accompanied by the larger use ‘of this food. {Much of the milk now used in cities ' many miles, and recently im- methods have made it possible , comes | proved | to {erator cars. At the National Dairy ' Show in Chicago in 1919, the milk | shipped from the Pacific coast took first prize in the market-milk compe- | tition with the highest score given to { milk in recent years. | Cities have always used a smaller | amount of milk in proportion to the number of people than general farm- ling communities, the statistics show. | For example, Philadelphia reached | the rate of 23 gallons per capita in | 1905, which was 15 years later than i the country at large reached a con- | sumption of 22 gallons. There are, | however, many agricultural and non- | agricultural rural districts where cows are not kept and where modern | methods of milk distribution are not | equal to most cities. The people in | such places have to depend on can- ned milk of various kinds, and this, !the dairymen say, is an exceedingly | valuable means of supplying a need | which 20 or 30 years ago could not have been supplied at all. | CRYSTALLIZING CORN SUGAR. | Commercial production of a sugar | possessing the approximate sweetness lof cane sugar, obtainable from a i source of low-priced raw material, | with the finished product resolving it- | self into a crystallized form, has been ‘the objective toward which chemists ‘have struggled unceasingly for de- | cades, says Popular Mechanics. Now, “thanks to the unremitting research of lan Eastern chemist, sugar is being ! made commercially from corn. i A Baltimore manufacturing estab- | lishment, working two shifts of 12 | hours each, is producing approximate- | ly 79,000 pounds of corn sugar daily, ! chemically known as “intervose.” | The new process involves the pro- { duction of sugar of a group technical- ly known as ketohexoses, or fruit su- gars. The fruit sugars are sweet, the sugar obtained by this process being | 80 per cent as sweet as cane sugar, and possessing other favorable qualities. Corn, containing from 65 to 70 per cent. of starch, was selected for its starch-yielding capacity, and by rea- son of -its well-nigh inexhaustible sup- ply and availability. One bushel of corn will yield 46 pounds of invertose. The method is first to produce an intermediate compound from starch in the material used and then convert this intermediate into fruit sugar by well-known means. The second reac- tion is effected by any of the well- known methods of reduction, such as hydrogenation, or treating with hydro- gen gas, whereupon is formed the | fruit sugar or invertose. Only six hours elapse from the time the ground corn—either cornmeal or flour—is placed in the machine for the formation of the starch until the fin- ‘ished product comes from the evap- | orators in the form of a syrup to be | barreled for shipment. Invertose is ‘not a by-product, but is made direct- | ly from whole corn, with no waste, as | about 16 pounds of wet mash to every | bushel is recovered as cattle food. If | sold in crystallized form, two days are ' required in which to crystallize the product. It is really marketable to confectioners, preserve and fruit pack- !ers, ice cream manufacturers, soft- drink bottlers and for use by the res- taurant trade. WHY WE FEAR SNAKES. If you come upon a small snake dur- ing your country rambles, why do you get “that creepy sensation?” ! Your fear is probably the survival of a saveage instinct, or, going a step farther back, is inherited from some ancestral monkey. Before man devis- ed that useful weapon, the club, he was mortally afraid of snakes; and monkeys are still afraid of them. If we were to put a snake in the monkey cage at the zoo, the inmates would be terrified out of their lives, for mon- keys can not tackle snakes and have never found an effective way of deal- ng with them. ometimes the mere presence of a snake will cause a monkey to drop un- conscious. . Similarly, our dislike of spiders is out of all proportion, and is inherited from jungle days. But for this un- natural inheritance, a colonel would not recently have stated that the only spiders entering his tent! ply ot milk. Gradually the number of ship it for long distances in refrig- | fear he had on active service was of FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. | DAILY THOUGHT. That person who tries to do something and fails is infinitely better than he who tries to do nothing and succeeds.—Lloyc Jones. Pasteurization Keeps Fruit Juice Sweet.—Sweet cider or grape juice can be preserved in a sweet condition in- . dfinitely by the directions furnished by specialists in the bureau of plant in- dustry, United States Departmeat of Agriculture. . As rapidly as the juices are pressed from the fruit place them in clean’ or tubs, vessels. Wooden barrels which have previously been thorough- ly scalded will serve the purpose very well, although earthenware jars, if available, should be used. These are allowed to stand over night, or for not more than 12 to 14 hours, in the cool- est location possible so that much of : ' the solid matter suspended in the juice will settle to the bottom. Glass jars or bottles must be thoroughly steril- | ‘ized to receive the juices, which are : drained off without disturbing the sed- iment. If truit jars are used they should be fitted with sterilized caps and rubbers, and the cap tightened down as far as it can be turned. .If bottles using crown caps are used, the bottles are capped as. they are filled, using caps which have beer steriiized. In case bottles closed with corks are usel, set the previously sterilized corks in place in the bottles and tie them down loose- ly with strong cord so that steam may escape. To relieve the pressure dur- ing sterilization the bottles should be filled only to the neck. A wash boiler or other convenient vessel can be prepared for a “water bath” by fitting it with a wooden rack on which the containers filled with ‘ juice as above indicated, are placed. The bath is filled with cold water and ‘the bottles or jars, if closed, are in- verted or laid on one side so as to wet the inside of the caps thoroughly with ' juice. If bottles closed with corks are used, the bottles must stand upright in the water, which should come up ' to the necks of the bottles. i The heating is then started. A ther- | mometer is hung so that it will dip i for half its length into the water. | which is heated gradually until its | temperature reaches 175 degrees F. ! Allow the bottles or jars to remain in ' the water for 30 minutes if quart or half-gallon jars are used, and from 40 | to 45 minutes if gallon bottles are used. If corked bottles are used, | drive the corks firmly into the necks; | invert each bottle so as to wet the { cork thoroughly with the hot juice; | then complete the sealing by cutting | the cork off smoothly and pouring hot | paraffin over it. | Place the product in a dark, cool, | storage room. Watch it for a period | of a week or more for the beginning i of fermentation, which will be indi- cated by frothing at the surface of the { liquid. If any bottles show signs of | fermenting, return them to the wash + boiler and repeat the process exactly | as before, loosening the. tops, of . course, before heating begins, and ' closing down firmly again before tke I liquid is allowed to cool. When the juice is placed in storage ; the suspended solid matter will grad- ‘ually settle out and sediment will ac- ' cumulate in the bottom and on the | sides of the jars. In the course of two or three months at ordinary tempera- tures, this settling will be completed | and the liquid will be fairly clear. It ‘may be used directly from the bottles | or drawn off into clean bottles, which | should be sterilized before they are | filled and which should be corked and | pasteurized by heating to 170 degrees I. for the same length of time as in the first pasteurization. If rebottling lis necessary or desirable the second { heating should never reach the tem- | perature to which the juice was first heated, otherwise the clarification which is secured by settling will be defeated, as a second process of sedi- mentation will occur. If the tempera- ture be kept at 5 degrees below that reached at the first heating, this re- sult will be avoided. A reliable thermometer is a neces- sity for this work, as it is important that the juice be heated to 175 degrees F. in the first heating, in order to de- stroy the organisms which would oth- erwise cause fermentation. It is equally important that the juice should not be overheated, as this will give it a cooked taste, which is decid- edly unpleasant to many people. If your salad greens are wilted, put spoonful of vinegar or lemon juice has been added. Set in a cold place for a couple of hours. warm water and soda, add a few drops of ammonia to the water and wash them with a well-soaked flannel. Rinse in clean, cold water, dry with a soft piece of linen and polish with a newspaper. Occasionally it happens that a jelly is too stiff or “tough” for the house- keeper to be proud of, for table use. As a confection, cut up in blocks and dipped in the sweet chocolate that tory jelly is more than redeemed, sug- gest home economics specialists of the United States Department of Agricul- ture. Figs, dates, raisins, nuts, and marshmallows can also be dipped in tions for children. Sweets of this kind are especially good as surprises in the monotonous school lunch box. Another quickly made home sweet may be had when berries are in sea- son. Firm berries, such as whole strawberries, blackberries, black rasp- berries, and also pieces of pineapple, or other fairly firm fruit are excellent when dipped in white icing or fond- ant, if they may be served within three or four hours. Here is a sugges- tion for “a little something” to serve with lemonade or grape juice at a club meeting. Pineapple Sherbet.—One pint can of grated pineapple, one pint of sugar, one and one-half pints of water. sugar and water until spgar is thor- oughly dissolved. When cool add grated pineapple and juice of two lem- ons; freeze fast. When partly frozen add beaten whites of two eggs, mix thoroughly, take out dasher, pack good, and let . stand for an hour or | more. Freezing fast makes it light. them in cold water to which a table- To clean glass globes soak them in! comes for the purpose, the unsatisfac- : chocolate to make wholesome confec- | Boil | FARM NOTES. —Try to have the cows well bedded, not only for the cows’ sake but that as much manure can be made as pos- sible. ~ —AIll cows do not like the same kind of food, neither will they do as well as they would on some other kind. Study the wants of the animal. —To do well the cows should be turned dry about six weeks before ' freshening. This will help the calf, rest the cow and develop the udder. —Fresh, warm, separated milk is the very best of feed for growing pigs. It is a good supplementary feed for brood sows and in fact is a good feed for hogs of all kinds and ages. —All hoed crop land for spring ‘ grain should be plowed or cultivated in the fall, and all sod land intended for grain should be shallow plowed immediately after the hay has been taken off, worked thoroughly and plowed again in the fall as deeply as the surface productive soil will allow. —The Missouri Experiment Station has found by investigation that the | red mold in silage is due to a lack of moisture. Very often silage is put away too dry. Molds develop in much greater abundance where the silage is only slightly moist. The station does not think that the mold causes death among stock. —Through the “Farm Calender,” State College specialists recently gave several timely warnings of a serious spread of apple scab in Pennsylvania. The evidence of scab is now here, and is the worst attack of the disease ever experiencd in the State. Before the summer is over foliage on diseased trees will drop and fruit buds for next year’s crop will not set. A thorough application of lime-sulphur spray may yet save many trees. —An extensive fruit grower uses this method of using lime sulphur with arsenate of lead: In one four-gallon bucket dilute the lime sulphur to be used to that extent, four gallons. Next slake three pounds quicklime and di- lute to four gallons. This is poured off into another four gallon bucket ' containing three pounds of arsenate of lead paste worked down to the consist- ency of thin cream. These two buck- ets, the dilute lime-sulphur and arsen- ate of lead and limewater, are then poured into the spray barrel, running together; the spray barrel to contain a full supply of water. The lime used has a tendency to neutralize the burning effect of the water soluble forms of arsenic. —Many acres of marsh land could be used for the permanent production of crops by draining and application of the proper fertilizer. Potash and ; phosphoric acid are the mineral fer- ' tlizing elements which give the best returns, while barnyard manure also causes a large crop increase in most cases. Except on distinctly acid de- posits, lime does not as a rule give good results. Deposits which are not suited to the direct production of crops may be used to reinforce manure either in composting or as a stable lit- ter. In this way the manurial value of the mulch is increased, while the , valuable ingredients of the mixture may be materially enhanced by the ad- dition of the phosphatic material. —If cows are fed at stated intervals, they will not worry for food until the time for feeding arrives. If it is then given to them in proper quantity, they will eat and lie down, chew the cud and sleep or rest contentedly until time for another feed. First give the grain mixture, and milk the cows while they are eating it. This routine is recommended because, with some cows, the milk comes more freely while they are eating that portion of their ration which has the most rel- ish. Cured roughage should be fed after milking because it fills the air in the barn with dust. Succulent feed, like silage and roots should also be fed after milking, because of the odor that it gives. Feeding twice a day will bring better returns than more frequent and wasteful feeding. Give half the concentrates and half the roughage in the morning, and half in the evening. Cows will soon become accustomed to this routine. In the winter they should be allowed to spend the day in the stall, and for ‘two or three hours about mid-day they should not be disturbed. Turn- ing them out into the yard, or giving them access to a straw stack or field of corn stalks, will cause them to shrink in milk, no matter how much or how well they may be fed in the morning and evening. No more feed should be given them than they will eat up. The mangers should be abso- lutely clean and free from any feed, during the day and night. —For Owners of Work Horses.—1. : Do not fail to provide clean, warm quarters in which your cows, ewes, and mares can bring forth their young. Navel ill comes from dirt. 2. It is dangerous to expose young stock, especially foals and colts, to spring rain-storms. A day’s exposure, if not fatal, may stop a month’s growth. 3. It is bad policy to turn the stock | to pasture before the grass has well ' started—bad for the pasture and bad ‘ for the stock. 4. When the pasture season begins, ' turn the stock out at night, instead of in the morning. Then they will feed through the night, and not lie down until the sun has warmed the air and the ground. 5. Get your horses into condition for spring work—the young horses es- pecially. Many a colt has been ruined | by being put to hard work without preparation. It is the same with green horses. |~ 6. In warm weather thorough i grooming is almost as important as | feeding. Without it, dried sweat, dead skin and dirt clog the pores, make the horse uncomfortable, and affect his health. 7. Lobk out for sore shoulders and - backs, especially in plowing, Be sure i that your collars fit. A co lar too big "is as bad as one too small. If the col- lar rides up, use a martingale, or a girth running from trace to trace, ‘ back of the fore legs. 8. When the horses are at work on 'a warm day, lift up the collars now and then to cool their shoulders, and | wipe off the sweat and dirt with a ‘ bunch of grass. Wipe off the harness marks on your horses when you stop work at noon and at night, and clean the in- side of the harness.