’ <8 The Girl a Horse and a Dog FRANCIS LYNDE J Copyright by Oharles Scribners Sons (Continued). “It is; I have a deed from my grand- father.” So much I said, but I didn't go on to explain how the quick wit of a girl who now hated me had saved that deed from being a mere scrap of waste paper. Not that I knew how she had done it—but the tangible fact was safely in my pocket, Fifteen minutes after this break- fast table talk I was bidding a tem- porary good-by to the wreck on the Cinnabar ledge, and was about to take the road to Atropia with Beasley; both of us intent upon catching a way- freight to Angels. Daddy had lent me the piebald pony for the ride to the railroad station—this either with or without Jeanie’s consent; I didn’t know and forbore to ask—and the harlequin-faced dog was ready to trot at the pony’'s heels. But the blue-eyed maiden had shut herself up in her room, and I thought she wasn't geing to come out and see me off. At the final moment, however, after Beasley had already steered his nag across the dump head, and I was about to climb into my saddle, she came to the cabin door, and was both curiously embarrassed and a bit breathless. “Please !—one minute!” she begged; and as I took my foot out of the stir- rup: “Do you know what they have done with—with—" “With Bullerton?’” I helped out. “No, I don’t know; but I suppose they've taken him on to the county seat at Copah with the others.” “Then—then—please let him go! If you refuse to prosecute—" “Make yourself entirely easy,” I broke in, a bit sourly, maybe. “I'll agree not to play the part of the dog in the manger.” “Thank you—so much!” she mur- mured; and then she backed away quickly and went in and on through to the kitchen, leaving me to follow Beasley, which I did, with the sour humor telling me that of all the puz- zling, unaccountable things in a world of enigmas, a woman's vagaries were the least understandable. all was said and done, and after all that had happened and been made to happen, it seemed to be palpably ap- parent that Jeanie Twombly was still in love with the jeet. CHAPTER XIX. Angels, Desert and Urban, Our stop-over in Angels, Friend Beasley's and mine, was of the short- est. Our business with Father Wil- Ham Dubbin was the merest travesty upon a trial at law, and was speedily concluded. Since there would be no passenger train until afternoon, Beasley and 1 resumed our places in the freight’s caboose, and in due time were set down in Brewster, the breezy little metropolis of Timanyoni Park. Here my captor—and friend—ap- peared to be very much at home. He took me to the best hotel, where he was greeted with affectionate cama- raderie by a clerk who wore a dia- mond big enough to serve for a loco- motive headlight, shook hands with, azd introduced me to, a number of gentlemen in the lobby, and presently gave me orders to go up to our rooms and “take a wash,” preparatory to meeting a certain friend of his at luncheon ; the meeting contingent upon his being able to “round up” the friend in time for the feast. It still wanted a half-hour of the appointed luncheon time when I de- scended to the lobby. A little before one o'clock Beasley came in with a middle-aged man who looked as if he might have been the retired manager of a Wild West show ; not long-haired, oi* anything like that, but with the cool eye and bronzed, weather-beaten face of one who lived under house roofs only when circumstances forced him to. A moment later 1 was shak-: ing hands with Mr. William Starbuck, mine owner, ranchman, a director in the Brewster National bank, president of the Brewster Commercial club and the prime mover in a lot of other clvic activities too numerous to mention. I may pass lightly over the events of the three days following; days in which Mr. William Starbuck, who seemed to be known to all the old- timers in Brewster as “Billy,” and to the younger generation as “Uncle Bil- ly,” labored untiringly in my behalf; procured me the necessary working credit at the Brewster National, helped me in the telegraphic ordering of new machinery, helped Beasley to rustle up a small army of mechanics to go ahead of us to the Cinnabar, and last, but not least, made my peace wit a the railroad company in the mat- ter of the stolen and smashed inspec- Aon car; this being a thing which he was easily able to do because he was the brother-in-law, once removed, of the railroad company’s vice president and general manager. On our last day in Brewster, and as a parting favor, I asked Starbuck how J should proceed in regard to quash- For, after’ ing the indictment against Bullerton, | and when I did so he gave me a shrewd look out of the cool gray eyes, with a gentle uplifting of the shaggy | brows. “If you are determined to let Bullerton go, all you have to do is to do nothing. If you don’t appear in Copah to prosecute him and his would- be mine jumpers, the case against! them will be dismissed, as a matter of course. But really, you know, you ought to make an example of them.” “In the circumstances, I can’t.” I returned, so we let it go at that; and an hour later Beasley and I were on our way back to Atropia and Cinna- bar mountain. . CHAPTER XX. Cousin Percy Wires. It was on the evening of the fourth day’s absence that Beasley and I left the train at Atropia and took the mountain trail in reverse for a return to the high bench on Old Cinnabar, Beasley riding a borrowed horse, and I the calico pony, which Daddy Hiram had sent down to the station by one of . the newly imported workmen. | Just as we were leaving the rail- | road station Buddy Fuller, the opera- tor, ran out to hand me a telegram. Since it was too dark to see to read it, and I supposed, naturally, that it was nothing more important than a bid from some machinery firm anxious to supply our needs, I thought it might wait, stuck it into my pocket—and promptly forgot it. Our talk, as we rode together up the now familiar trail, was chiefly of busi- ness; the business of reopening the mine; and it was not until we were nearing our destination that the ex- | marshal said: “Still stickin’ in your craw that you ain’t a-goin’ to pop the whip at Charley ! Bullerton ?” i “It is,” I answered. “Well, now, why not?” “Principally because I have promised somebody that I wouldn't prosecute.” “Not Hi Twombly; he'd never ast you to do anything like that.” “No; not Daddy Hiram.” He didn’t press the matter any further, and we rode on in silence. As | we approached the neighborhood of the mine, evidences of the forthputting ' activities began to manifest them- ! selves, ! Daddy Hiram met us at the door of | his newly repaired cabin across the | dump head and insisted upon taking care of the horses. Beasley and I' washed up at the outdoor, bench-and- | basin lavatory; and when we went in, Jeanie had supper ready for us. She didn’t sit at table with us— from which I argued that she and her father had already eaten—and I thought she purposely avoided me; avoided meeting my eye, at least. I didn’t wonder at it. Her position, as I had it figured out, was rather awk- wardly anomalous. By this time, I had fully convinced myself that she was in love with Bullerton, and was | probably engaged to be married to him; and that it was only her native honesty that had driven her to take sides against him in the struggle for the Cinnabar, prompting her 10 do the one thing which had knocked his ne- farious scheme on the head-——namely, the recording of my deed. Knowing nothing but hard work, Daddy Hiram was running the deep- ! well pumps himself, or rather, taking | the night shift on them; and about ten | o'clock, just as I had made up my mind | to go to bed and let the repairing ac- | tivities take care of themselves, I saw | Jeanie going over to the boiler shed | with a pot of freshly made coffee for her father. Here was my chance, I “Let's Have It Out, Jeanie,” | Said. thought ; so I waited and cornered her as she came back. “Let's have it out, Jeanie,” I said; which, I confess, was a sort of brutal | way to begin on the woman I loved, and yet the only way if I was to go on remembering that she belonged to an- other man. “We can at least be good | friends, can’t we?” “No,” she returned, with a queer lit- tle twist of her pretty lips and a flash | of the blue eyes, “I'm afraid we can't even be that—or those—any more, Mr, | Broughton.” It was awkward for both of us, standing there before the open cabin door, and I pointed to the bench where Daddy Hiram was wont to smoke his evening pipe in good weather. “Won't you sit down until we can sort of flail it out?” I begged. | “It’s no use, whatever,” she object- { ed; nevertheless, she did sit down and let me sit beside her. “I know just how distressed you must be,” I began, “and perhaps I can lift a bit of the lead from your shoul- ders. There will be no legal steps taken against your—against Charles Bullerton.” “Thank you,” she said; just as short as that. “And that isn’t all,” I went on. “Aft- er we get into the ore and have some real money to show for it, I'm going to make over a share in the Cinnabar to your father and put him in a posi- tion to do the right thing by you when you marry. And he'll do it; you know he'll do it.” “How kind!” she murmured, look- ing straight out in front of her. “It isn’t kindness; its bare justice. Between you, you two have saved my legacy for me.” . “I wish, now, it hadn’t been saved!” she exclaimed, as vindictively as you please. Truly, I thought, the ways of women are past finding out; or at least the way of a maid with a man is. “Can’t I say anything at all without putting my foot into it?” I asked in despair. “You break a man’s back with a load of obligation one day, and tess him lightly out of your young life the next! I haven't done anything to earn your—to earn the back of your hand. Jeanie; or if I have, 1 don't know what it is.” “You have committed the unparden- | able sin,” she accused coolly. ‘I don't wonder that Miss Randle took ycur ring off.” I wasn’t going to let the talk shift to Lisette; not if I knew it, and couid help it. “What is the unpardonable sin?’ 1 asked. son capable of a thing when a person is not; to—just take it for granted ! train and met Mr. “To misunderstand: to think a per- | pen just as they were starting up the that a person is guilty—oh”—with a little stamp of her foot—*I can’t bear ! to talk about it!” I guess it’s a part of a man’s equip- ment to be dense and sort of stupid— |! in his dealings with women, I mean. Slowly, so slowly that I thought the | catch would never snap and hold, my fool mind crept back along the line, | searching blindly for the point at which all ¢his fiery indignation towara me had begun; back and still back to that moment of our deliverance— Daddy’s and mine—at the shafthouse door, with this dear girl untwisting her arms from her father’s neck, and with me saying, “I'm not hurt, either. Wei- come home, Miss Twombly—or should I say. Mrs. Bullerton?” “Jeanie!” I gasped; “do you mean that you're not going to marry Charles Bullerton 2—that you never meant to?" | “Of course, I'm not!” she retorted. with a savage little out-thrust of the | adorable chin. “But you thought so small of me that you. simply took*it , for granted!” I wagged my head in deepest hu- mility. “I'm as the dust under your pretty feet, Jeanie; please don’t trample me | too hard. Bullerton—that is—er—we ! had a scrap the next morning after you went away, you know, and I well, he rather got the worst of it. And when I had him down and was trying to make him tell us where you were—even your father thought you’ gone off with him—he said you’G planned to go with him to get mar- ried, but that you had failed to show up at Atropia in time for the train.” “He told a lie. because that is the way he is made and he couldn't help it,” she said simply. still as cool as a cucumber. “He sid we were going to Angels to get married, and I—I | didn’t say we weren't; I just let him { talk and didn’t say anything at all.” “Won't you tell me a bit more?” I begged. “You don’t deserve it the least lit tle bit, but I will. It began with the deed; your deed to the mine. One day, when you were over at the shaft. house, and had left your coat here in the cabin, I saw him take the deed from your pocket when he didn’t know I was looking. He read it and put it . back quickly when he heard me stir {| ring in the other room. | hadn’t been recorded; you and Daddy I knew, it had both spoken of that. I felt sure he'd take it again, and perhaps de- stroy it. At first, T thought I'd tell vou or Daddy, or both of youu But ¥ i knew that would mean trouble.” “We were never very far from the fighting edge in those days,” I admit- ted. “Bullerton had shown me the gun he always carried under his arm, and had told me what to expect in case T were foolish enough to lose my temper.” “T know,” she nodded. “He Kkille¢ a man once; it was when I was a little girl and we were living in Crip- ple Creek. He was acquitted on the plea of self-defense. So I didn’t dare say anything to you or to Daddy. What I did was to steal your deed myself, when I had a chance. Daddy has some blank forms just like it, and I sat up one night in my room and made a copy. It wasn’t a very good | copy—your grandfather's handwriting was awfully hard to imitate. Besides, I didn’t have any notarial seal. But I thought it might do for—for some- thing to be stolen. Then I hid the real deed and put the copy back ir the envelope in your pocket.” “And Bullerton finally stole it, just as you thought he would,” I put in. “He did. You are dreadfully care less with your things; you are al. | ways leaving your coat around. just where you happen to take it off. I knew then that the next thing to be done was to get your deed recorded quickly. He—he was urging me every day to run away with him, and I was afraid to tell him how much I despised him; afraid he'd take it out on you "and Daddy. So I just let him go or and talk and believe what he pleased, Of course, he wanted to ride with me the morning we went away, but after we got down the road a piece, I made an excuse to go o1 ahead by another trail.” “That much of what he told your father and me—when we were having the scrap—was trme. He sald yor went on ahead.” “T didn’t go to Atropia, as he ex- pected me to,” she continued calmly “I took the old Haversack trail across the mountain to Greaser siding. T knew that the Copah train would stop there on the side-track. When I got as far as the Haversack I thought I heard somebody following me. I was scared and didn’t know what to do. I was afraid my copying of the deed had been discovered and that the originei would he taken away from me, so I hurried to hide the real deed. The old Haversack tunnel seemed to be & good place, but while I was in there Barney began to bark, and I looked out and saw that the noise I had heard had been made hy a stray cow froia one of the foothill ranches. So I re- mounted snd rode on to catch the train to Copah. At Greaser siding 1 tried to make Barney lead the pon; home, and Barney tried his best to de it. But Winkie wanted to graze, and 1 had to go off and leave them when the train came, except that T had to wait two days al my cousin's in Copah before IT could get the deed back from the record- er’s ofiice. They were awfully slow | about it.” “It isn't quite all.” 1 amended. “You haven't told me how yeu happened to come back with Beasley and his posse.” “That was just a coincidence, I reached Atropia on the early moruing Beasley and his mountain. Cousin Buddy Fuller bad told me how he had telegraphed to Angels for Mr. Beasley, and I was scared to death, of course, because I knew what it meant. So I borrowed the Haggertys’ pony and came along with the posse.” There was silence for a little time; such silence as the clattering and hammering of the carpenters and steam-fitters permitted. Then I said: “And when you got here, the fist thing I did was to call you ‘Mrs. Bul- lerton’. I don’t blame you for not he- catchings between the words. “I owed myself that much, don’t you think? Ir I didn't deceive him outright, I'm afraid I did let him deceive himself. So that made me responsible, in a way, and I couldn’t let you send him to jaii, could I?” “But what about me? Are you go- ing to send me to a worse place than any jail?—for that is what the whole wide world is going to be to me with- out you, Jeanie, dear.” Her answer was ‘ust like her: She turned and put up her face to me ana said, “Kiss me again, Stannie.” Anu though all the cam 2nters on the joi were looking on, as I suppose they were, by this time, I took her in my arms, It was a short spasm; it sort of had to be in the public circumstances, When it was over, I folded Percy's telegram, took out wy pencil, and wiin the dear girl looking on, printed wy reply on what was left of the message blank. This is what I said: “The same to you. Have found the G., the H. and the D., and Miss Jeanie Twombly and I are to be married us soon as we can find a minister. Tuci- dentally, 1 have learned how to work. Hope it will be a comfort to you. to Grandfather Jasper—if he is where he can hear of it—and to all concerned. “STANNIE.” {THE END. That’s all, 1 think, ; cm cet see A eines | THANKSGIVING DAY ; FOR WORLD URGED. clergymen, | Bishops, professional ‘men and politicians are indorsing a: ' movement for the observance of an annual Thanksgiving day for the ‘ world. i Events have moved so rapidly in the ‘last few years and the progress made : by the Conference on Limitation of . Armament appears to be so encourag- ‘ing, that these leaders are urging an | international day of thanksgiving, in which the nation express their appre- ‘ ciation to the Almighty of the bless- i ings conferred on mankind. | The American Thanksgiving day, of ! New England origin, dealing with | thanks for preservation against cold | and hunger and Indians, has been out- i grown, leader of the new movement | contend. They say the time has come i for a Thanksgiving day in which all ' the world can participate. | Governor Sproul, Mayor Moore, the i Rev, Dr. Russell H. Conwell, Bishop ‘ Joseph D. Berry, Dr. W. W. Keen and | the Rev. Dr. Emory W. Hunt, presi- | FARM NOTES. —How about getting a little of your favorite harness dressing and | by applying it extend the life of the harness. : : : —Freezing not only injures milk but makes it difficult to get an actu- al sample for testing. Protect your- self and do not injure nature’s best food by letting it freeze. —Male birds should be with the flock at least two weeks before eggs are saved for hatching. It is time to | be sure that you have your male birds | for this season’s breeding. —Watersprouts and the surplus limbs take too much water from the trees in time of drought; prune out those which are not needed on the tree and save the water for the fruit. —Buttermilk is equal to skimmed milk for feeding hogs, while whey is half as valuable. Whey, being low in protein, is not well suited for young pigs and should be fed to older ani- mals. —For tree wounds paint is a good dressing. Mix white lead and raw linseed oil and have it rather thick. ! A bit of raw sienna will give the paint | very nearly the color of the bark of the tree. —The quality of the eggs marketed is what determines the price. When eggs of all kinds are mixed together, remember that you get just as little for the good eggs as is paid for the poor ones. —Not every one knows that the first Pennsylvanian to appreciate the value of forests was William Penn himself. In 1861 he provided that for every five acres cleared in Pennsylvania one acre should be left in woods. —Cabbage and lettuce seed to be started in green houses or in small quantities in the garden for an early ‘crop should be on hand. In southern | Pennsylvania seed may be sown now. ; In the northern part of the State a week or two later. —If a heavy load of snow or ice ' comes on the berry bushes and shrub- | bery, go around and knock off all pos- i sible with a pole. It may save their i breaking down. The careful fruit | culturist keeps a watchful eye on his i plants and bushes all the time. —When the roughage for dairy cows is clover or alfalfa hay, the ' grain rations may be 200 pounds corn ! and cob meal, 100 pounds ground oats and 100 pounds gluten feed; or 250 ! pounds corn and cob meal, 100 pounds hit bran and 100 pounds gluten | feed. —Prune grapes after severe winter ing able to forgive me, Jeanie, girl; dent of Bucknell University, indorse weather is over and before the vines honestly, I don’t.” “It was. worse than a crime.” she averred solemnly; “it was a blunder. What made you do it?” fool; but mostly because I was sore and sorry and disappointed. I thought Bullerton had beaten me to it.” “No,” she said quite soberiy; “it was Miss Randle who beat you to it.” I gasped. There were tremendous possibilities in that cool answer of hers; prodigious possibilities, “But say!” 1 burst out; “didn’t I tell you that Lisette had pushed me overboard long ago?” “I know. She was sensible enough to see that you and she couldn't live on nothing a year. But now that you are rich, or are going to be . .. I'm sure you are not going to be less gen- erous than she was. What if she did take your ring off in a moment of dis- | couragement, and knowing that you couldn’t buy her hats? You can he very sure she put it on again as soon as your buck was turned.” There we were; no sooner over one hurdle before another and a higher one must jump up. I groaned and thrust my hands into my pockets. A paper rustled and I drew it out. It was the telegram Buddy Fuller had handed me, still unread. I opened it half absently, holding it down so that the glow of the nearest flare fell upon the writing. Then I gave a little yelp, swallowed hard two or three times and nearly choked doing it, and read the thing again. After all of which T said, as calmly as I could: “But, in spite of all that I had told you about Lisette, you asked me once to kiss you.” “Is—is it quite nice of you to re- mind me of it?” she inquired reproach- fully. “It wouldn't be—in ordinary cir- cumstances; it would be beastly. But, ' listen, Jeanie; haven't you been mad | clear through, sometimes, in reading | a story, to have a coincidence rung ‘in on you when you knew perfectly well that the thing couldn’t possibly have happened so pat in the nick of time?” “I suppose I have; yes.” “Well, don’t ever let it disturb you again. Because the real thing is a lot more wonderful and unbelievable, you know. Listen to this: it's a wire from my cousin, Percy; the one who sent me out into the wide, wide world to look for a girl, a horse and a dog, and who is the only human being outside of Colorado who knows where I am likely to be reached by telegraph. He is in Boston, and this is what he says: ‘Recalled home when we reached Honolulu, out-bound. Lisette and 1 were married today. Congratulate us.! ” For a minute there was a breathless sort of pause, and I broke it. “Jeanie, dear, was it just common honesty and good faith that made yon take all these chances, with the deed, and with Bullerton?” “Yes, I'm commonly honest,” said the small voice at my shoulder, “Bullerton is a shrewd, smart fel- low,” I went on. “I'll venture to say that he never made such a bonehead break as I did the morning you came back. You must think something of him or you wouldn't have asked me not to prosecute him for trying to murder your father and me.” She looked down at her pretty feet, which were crossed. “I think—a little something—of my- J self,” she said, with small breath- i the movement. | “I am in hearty accord with your | wide day of thanksgiving in each Theodore Heysham. Baptist clergy- man, of Norristown, who is promoting the world’s Thanksgiving day move- : “It is so important that we" i ment. should turn aside from our regular ‘toil once a year to give thanks for . the blessings and bounties which we . enjoy, that I can think of nothing | that would be more appropriate than | to have the entire world bow its head . in reverence at the same time. Mayor Moore believes that an inter- | national day of thanksgiving will be | “of great service to the world.” Dr. Emory W. Hunt said: “Thanks- | giving day on the old basis of the ex- perience of the Pilgrims is out of date : now, when a shortage in one section | is immediately rectified by our trans- : portation system.” ' giving day has “been a geat blessing : to the United States and, as a matter i of course, would be a much greater ! blessing to the whole world.” Bishop Berry says: “I am in favor i of all movements that will help inter- ‘ national agreements and promote a spirit of thanksgiving to Almighty God for the blessings to nations of the earth.” Potato Spraying Pays. For the fourth consecutive year, farmers have conclusive evidence that potato spraying pays. ered from fifty-seven counties, where i the local county farm bureau conduct- ‘ed 402 spraying demonstrations last summer on over ten thousand acres, “have just summarized as follows: . in Pennsylvania—1918, 1919, 1920, 1921. No. counties 12..26. 42 57 No. demonstrations 32 224 318 402 No. acres sprayed 314 1787 6192 10140 | Av. yield unsprayed bu 108 126 183.3 150 yield sprayed bu 142 169 258 233 ! Av. Inc. per acre bu . per cent increase 32.3 34. 33.3 46.7 | The average per cent. increase in four years is 86.6 on 34 farms. 80 | acres were sprayed in Centre county in 1921. i els. The outstanding feature for the year’s report lies in the fact that de- spite the extremely dry and hot weather of last summer, there was practically no decrease in the extra yield of sprayed year. In both 1920 and 1921 the in- crease per acre was slightly over T4 bushels, for the State average. When the average cost of spraying an acre of potatoes—$10.66—is taken consideration, it is seen that it is most certainly a paying proposition. sprayed in each of the four years since The Pennsylvania State College agricultural extension division has ad- vocated spraying through field dem- onstrations. This figure has just about doubled, due to the more effi- cient methods and practices adopted as the movement has taken hold with farmers of the State. carried them through the late blight of the previous year. It has been proved beyond question that Bordeaux mixture applied to potato vines acts as a stimulant under all circumstanc- es, according to Prof. E. L. Nixon, extension plant disease specialist at the College. 1 r——— A —————— ——A flat pocketbook and a flat tire are about the worst combination. suggestion for a universal or world- : ear,” Governor Sproul wrote to Dr.’ “Partly because I was a jealous | 3 ’ > Dr. Conwell declares that Thanks-' Figures gath- Four years’ results with potato spraying ; 34.8 429 74.7 74.3 The average increase per | acre for 1920 and 1921 was 75 bush- over unsprayed | vines compared with the previous | into There has been a steady increase in | ' the average yield of sprayed over un-! Spraying last year carried potatoes safely through the dry spell, as it had | | bleed. Sixty buds on the bearing wood ‘of a grape vine are about the maxi- i mum for a strong vine; a less number lis better for vines of weaker growth. Sixty buds should give 150 bunches of grapes. Leave only two buds on each bearing shoot. —The young calf should be fed whole milk for at least three weeks and then gradually changed to skim milk with the addition of grain and hay, say specialists at The Pennsyl- vania State College school of agricul- ture. A dry, airy stall, admitting an abundance of sunlight, provides a fa- | vorable environment for maximum growth. | —In about six or eight years from the time the tree was planted in its permanent place, the apple should be- gin to bear. The pear tree will aver- age about the same age. The peach, under favorable conditions, often bears at three years of age; in any event at four years, unless injured by frost or otherwise. The plum at four to five years. Sour cherries at four and sweet cherries at six or seven. + Raspberries, blackberries and dew- berries, if planted in the spring, should bear a light crop the next year. Strawberries the same. Currants and gooseberries usually bear the third season after planting. Grapes may , bear very lightly the third season, but ‘not much fruit should be expected : earlier than the fourth year. i —Leaving manure in piles in the field is an antiquated method that should never be practiced, for the rea- son that it results in fertilizing the spots where the heaps lie too heavily, giving them fully three times as much of the fertilizing elements as they need, while three times as much ground receives less than it needs, or not enough to make a showing. Where manure is permitted to re- ‘main in heaps on a field for a few weeks or a month, it is an impossibili- ty to spread it so as to get an even distribution of organic matter ard of the elements of fertility. i It is preferable to spread the ma- nure direct from the wagon with a fork. For the most economical re- ' sults, manure should be hauled direct from the barn as soon as it is made and scattered over the fields by means . of a spreader. In this way, and in this way only, | can the full value of manure be saved, provided, of course, enough bedding is used in the barn to nicely absorb all the liquid excrement, the plant food {of which amounts to nearly one-half of the total in the manure and liquid excrement. —There is no more important fac- tor in market gardening than earli- ness. A few days’ or a week’s differ- ence in marketing very often makes . the difference between profit and loss. The prices realized for extra-early | crops stimulates considerable activity {in that line. In this connection an experiment in potatoes some years ago by the Rhode Island Experiment Station is worth recording. The tubers were cut into pieces not smaller than an English walnut (rejecting the two or three eyes nearest the stem end). The piec- es were placed side by side in the bed, skin side upward, and covered about . four inches deep with fine, rich earth. : The growth was controlled by proper regulation of the cold-frame sash. At planting time the tubers, the sprouts of which were just breaking the surface of the soil, were carefully lifted with manure forks, separated by hand and placed in well-fertilized rows in March and entirely covered with soil. | It required 216 square feet of cold- | frame to sprout sufficient potatoes to | plant an acre in 30 to 32-inch rows, 12 inches apart. Eight men transplant- ‘ed an acre in a day.