Bemorri apo, Bellefonte, Pa., March 24, 1922. MARTHA SPEAKS. (By Request.) (In reply to “Mary Speaks.”) Mary’s house is gray and dusty. (Mary’s plump and fair). All unchecked the sunbeams chase the Cobwebs everywhere. Mary’s in the orchard, trusting Some one else will do the dusting. I would like to sit with Mary, By the leaping brook, But she left the baby with me, And, with sunny look, Murmured: “Since you're working, dear, I will just leave Johnny here.” How I wish my tired husband Could run out and play, But he’ll have to rake and hoe and Plant, for yesterday Mary’s husband’s chickens’ scratches Left our onion bed in patches. Mary’s husband’s in the meadow, Neath the singing trees. Mary’s husband’s cow is resting On our radishes. So they're all as snug as can be— Mary, husband, cow and baby. In this world of many women Always there will be Marys, who wil let the Marthas Work unstintingly, Knowing they are safe in trusting. Some one’s got to do the dusting! —Vilda Sauvage Owens. CONTRABAND. When John Norcross stepped from the door of his tent to begin the prep- aration of his supper his attention was attracted by a thin column of smoke rising apparently from the distant beach. “Must be a launch ashore in that cove,” he concluded after studying the smoke for a moment. Norcross had ridden south from Monterey for a week’s trout fishing. His camp was pitched in the wildest region of the California coast. South of the Bay of Monterey for a hundred miles extends a district devoid of trails, wagon roads, and inhabitants. None but occasional hunters, or fish- ermen, travel the broken coastline. The region’s innumerable coves and inlets, however, offer shelter and cruising grounds to the fishing fleet from the ports to the north and south. The bulk of this fleet consists of Chi- nese-manned launches, outfitted with divers and air-pumps, engaged in gathering abalones from the shoals. It occurred to Norcross that a sup- per of abalone would be a welcome variation in a fare of bacon and trout. The launch in the cove would no doubt have plenty of shell-fish. The cove was not more than a mile distant; the day was still young. Without further thought he dropped his ax and set out through the chaparrel toward the sea. From no point on the plateau was the cove itself visible. It lay shelter- ed at the foot of a perpendicular cliff forming the seaward boundary of the plain. The descent to the cove from the edge of the plateau, a distance of a hundred feet, was possible only by the way of a ravine. Norcross had traveled scarcely half the mile between his camp and the cove, when, much to his astonishment he discovered that the smoke did not rise from the beach below the bluff. It came instead from the bottom of an arroyo at a point all of a quarter of a mile inland from the edge of the bluff. “Who in the world can be camping down there?” he asked himself. His suspicions were aroused. Nearing the arroyo, he fell upon his hands and knees, and crept through the brush to the brink. Pushing aside a man- zanita bush, he peered down. Thirty feet below him sprawled a dozen Chinamen about a kettle of steaming rice. Norcross understood at a glance. He had stumbled upon the hiding place of a band of illegally- landed Chinese. It is a common story along the Cal- ifornia Coast that a traffic in coolies exists between the Mexican ports and the California China-towns. The Chi- nese fishermen, it is said, run an “un- derground railroad.” It operates thus: Coolies are landed from Mexi- co in out-of-the-way places along the coast, and smuggled by their Ameri- canized countrymen, as opportunities afford, into the interior cities. The region of Monterey Bay is the center of the traffic. Norcross thought of these tales as he studied the group. Three of the Chinamen were plainly Americanized. They wore the west- ern dress from the soles of their American-made boots to the tassels of the knitted fishermen’s caps on their queueless heads. The rest of the gang appeared more foreign. Their heel- less slippers and loose jackets were not made in the United States. All were unconcernedly plying their chop- sticks, smoking and chattering. The surprised youth ran his eyes up and down the arroyo. It showed ev- idence of having been used by more than one party. The sandy floor was strewn with a litter of bottles, boxes and cans. At its lower end, under the overhanging of the sandstone wall, opened the low mouth of a cave. His curiosity at a high pitch, Norcross leaned farther out over the edge of the arroyo, in order better to exam- ine the cave. Then something happened. The loose soil, at the edge of the arroyo, gave way. He tried to throw himself back but failed. Enveloped in a tiny avalanche of sand, he slid, rolled and bumped head foremost down the bank into the midst of the coolies. A bomb dropped from the sky could not have startled them more. With wild, Oriental yells of fright, they sprang to their feet and scatter- ed up and down the arroyo, overturn- ing kettles and pans in their haste. The three in the fHetmens costume, alone held their ground. The intruder lay quiet. The breath had been knocked from his lungs; his eyes, ears and mouth were filled with sand. After a moment he attempted to rise. Then, as if his move had been | his ankles and wrists. a signal, the three fishermen sprang forward yelling, and fell upon him. Norcross fought, twisted, squirmed, striking wildly with his fist and foot, bringing to bear all the strength of his twenty years. But the odds were too greatly against him. The Chinese were powerful men; they bore him to the sand, and flung him upon his back. Two of them held his limbs, while the third brought a stout cord, and bound In less than a minute the trick was done. The cool- ies, jabbering and chattering, now gathered about him. “What you want? What fo’ you come this place?” demanded one of the three, who seemed to be the lead- er, and whose face was hideous with small-pox pits. : “Just happened in to pay you a vis- it! You sabbe visit?” replied Nor- cross a deal more lightly than his real feelings warranted. The Chinaman of the scars turned to his gang, and chattered shrilly. At the moment, the bank above, unstable from the fall, again gave way. The coolies scattered a second time. Plain- ly they feared an attack. Their fright would have been ludicrous to the cap- tive had his plight been less serious. In a moment, no more strangers un- ceremoniously appearing, the coolies gathered courage again. . The leader gave an order to the two in boots and knit caps. They climbed from the ar- royo and disappeared. At another command three Orientals came for- ward; picked up the captive by the shoulders and heels, carried him down the arroyo and into the cave. A doz- en feet inside the entrance they dump- ed him on the sand and retired. When the shuffle of their sandals had died away Norcross made an ef- fort to collect his thoughts. He was somewhat dazed from his fall, and its subsequent ‘happenings. He could scarcely realize the situation. One thought comforted him. He was sure that whatever his captors’ ultimate intentions were, they would leave him alone for the present. He felt certain that the coolies believed him to be one of a posse that had dis- covered their hiding place. Two of them had left the arroyo to reconnoi- ter. They had put him out of the way of giving an alarm. But when they learned the truth, when they discov- ered that he, alone, had stumbled up- on their secret—well, he hardly dared to think of what might then happen. He knew the Chinese character well enough to feel sure the smugglers would hesitate at nothing where their secrets were concerned. E ; He struggled at the cords that bound his wrists until they cut into his flesh. Giving over this folly when he found that he could not release | himself, he set about exploring his prison. In the faint stream of daylight from the entrance the cave appeared to be a narrow, straight-walled tunnel. The roof, as nearly as he could tell, was ten feet above the sandy floor. The tunnel seemed to run back into the bluff in the direction of the sea. In a few trials the captive discover- ed that g could crawl after the fash- ion by digging his hands into the sand ahead and then by dragging his body up to them. Rolling close to the near- est wall he worked awkwardly back into the darkness. The floor of the cave sloped gradu- ally downwards. Now and again its smooth surface was broken by a short pitch of worn rock, ending in a hol- low basin, half filled with gravel. The walls of the tunnel were for the most part, smooth and even. Occasionally, however, he crawled by a jutting point or deep fissure. It flashed into his mind before he had gone many yards, that this cave was nothing more nor less than a sub- terranean stream-bed. This being so —he thrilled at the thought—the drain must have an outlet. He deter- mined to find it. Suddenly be became conscious of a change in the tunnel. The wall had bent abruptly away from him; the place had a feeling of spaciousness. A faint current of air fanned his cheek, bringing to his nostrils the character- istic odor of things Oriental, that in- describable smell which attaches it- self to the Chinese dwellings. His next move brought his hands in con- tact with a wooden chest, heavy, sol- id, and the size of a carpenter’s tool chest. A moment’s fumbling over the box discovered to him a heavy padlock and a lid reinforced with narrow, iron straps. The broken end of one strap had sprung out from the lid. The feel of the metal gave birth to an idea. He bent the iron to an up- right position, placed his wrists over the broken end and began sawing the cords across the dull edge. It was slow work, but in a minute or two the cord frayed and parted. He unwrapped the ends with his teeth; his hands were free. Remembering a bunch of matches in an inside shirt pocket, he struck a light. 1 The tiny flame disclosed a high- ceilinged vault, about the size of an ordinary two-stcry house. Along one wall ran a row of wooden bunks, near- by them, a low table, littered with cooking utensils, and close to the ta- ble a kerosene stove. Scattered about the floor were odds and ends of ship's stores, pieces of bamboo matting, scraps of sailcloth, and ends of rope. “Regular Chinese boarding house!” exclaimed the explorer. “No wonder the place smells queer!” He struck a second match and held the flame to the cord about his ankles. A third and fourth match finished the job. He untwisted the charred ends and stood upon his feet. He felt confident of escaping now. Should he find no other way out, he determined to slip back to the arroyo and watch his opportunity to dash out, and past the coolies. First, however, the cave was to be explored. Several matches enabled him to examine the vault closely. It had not been occupied for some time. Evidently the smugglers used it in bad weather only, or at times when they feared discovery. Norcross peered about the table and shelves for a candle or lantern, but neither was to be found. He was about to turn away when a gleam of metal caught his gaze. From beneath ‘glers held both ends of the tunnel! ‘Norcross shrank back into the fissure. a sheet of dirty matting upon one of the bunks he hauled forth a two-foot bamboo pipe, fitted at one end with an | ivory mouthpiece, and at the other | with a brass knob the size of a door handle. Through the centre of the | knob ran a small hole. “Wouldn't make a bad weapon in a! him. Then a tiny patch of daylight in the roof, a hundred feet to his right, solved the puzzle. The tunnel had turned sharply, almost at right angles. Thrilled with the glimpse of day- ! Bent on playing a prank, he wound his | light he hastened forward again, and . little trunk about one of the chain “An opium pipe!” he exclaimed, a moment later stood at the foot of a i traces and pulled back with all his | weighing the heavy knob in his hand. great pile of debris that completely strength. | blocked the tunnel. In the roof near 1 ! that attracted the Frenchman’s atten- tion was hauling, in her chain harness, | huge tree trunks from the bank of the | river. She had a heavy load, a fact that her off-spring did not realize. Conscious of the suddenly increas- ! scuffle, either,” he added. He slipped | the top of the pile—the result of a ed weight, the mother suddenly stop- | the pipe into his pocket and set about : encircling the vault. landslide—was a small aperture ped and looked around. She saw the { through which the light streamed. As youngster back there, and shook her ! Half way round, a puff of air ex- he hastily scrambled up the pile to head solemnly, but paying no further tinguished his match. But before the the hole, the voices of the pursuing heed to his teasing, bent again to her light vanished it disclosed a strip of Chinese came down the tunnel to his . work. Meanwhile, however, the little matting hanging against the rock. | He groped for the matting and pulled | it aside. ] damp, struck his face; the faint, dis- tant voice of the sea rang in his ears. ! The matting had been hung to cov- er a narrow passage-way. He step- ped through the crevice and was in the tunnel again, a continuation of the subterranean channel by which he had entered the vault. The passage still sloped downwards, but the floor was no longer smooth and even. It was broken into little hillocks of gravel, and treacherous pot-holes. Keeping one outstretched hand lightly against the wall, Nor- cross hastened forward, stumbling now and again in the darkness. His few remaining matches he thought best to save for emergencies. His sense of direction told him that he was traveling toward the ocean and with each step the faint murmur of the breakers seemed to grow louder. Somewhere, not far distant, he felt confident the ancient stream-bed open- ed upon the sea. As nearly as he could tell he had come almost a quar- ter of a mile from the arroyo. The end of the passage should thus bring him out somewhere near the foot of the bluff in the cove. ’ From far down the tunnel came a gleam of light. The opening! He wanted to shout. Then his confidence gave way to doubt. The gleam was not daylight. It was too yellow for that. Moreover it seemed to be mov- ing. He tried to tell himself differ- ently, but in his heart he knew that some one carrying a lantern was ap- proaching. He peered down the tunnel, his nerves on edge. A faint sound of voic- es came to his ears. In a moment he distinguished the sing-song cadences of Chinese tongues. The sound car- ried up to him as through a speaking trumpet. His hopes sank. The smug- But his despair did not last. It oe- curred to him to retreat to the vault, ‘and to hide in some of the nooks and crannies. Then he thought of the coolies in the arroyo. Time was press- ing. They might discover his escape and raise the alarm at any moment. He remembered that a few yards back he had fumbled over a deep per- pendicular fissure running from the floor to a point higher than his head. It was just the place. He would hide in the fissure until the approaching coolies went by. He felt his way back to it. The crevice was large enough and to spare. When he had backed within it, its edges projected several inches beyond his shoulders. He felt that he ‘had a fair chance of escaping discov- ery. He had scarcely settled himself be- fore the shadows thrown by the ap- proaching light flickered and waver- ed upon the opposite wall. He felt his chance of escape grew when from the voices he became certain but two men were approaching. He was confi- dent that even should they discover him that he should get by them. He would not be captured again. He took the pipe from his pocket and held it in position. The tunnel grew brighter. Indeed, it seemed to be growing fearfully bright. He began to regret that he had not followed his first impulse of retreating to the vault. Discovery be- | gan to seem inevitable. But it was too late now to move. | The sound of footsteps in the sand was very close. A lank, stoopshoul- ! dered Chinaman, his eyes upon the ground, shuffled by. Norcross almost gasped. The fel- low was one of the three that had overpowered him in the arroyo—one of the pair who had left immediately | afterwards to reconnoiter. They were returning through the tunnel! Here was proof, indeed, that the cave had an outlet. The second Chinaman carrying the lantern, was but a few feet away. It was now or never. The next instant the fellow shuffled into sight. When directly opposite the fissure he glanc- ed up. He saw the youth. It would have been impossible for him not to. Instantly he stopped and raised his lantern. For a moment the two star- ed into each other’s eyes. Then with a loud yell the Oriental reached a hand to his pocket. In the same in- stant Norcross swung the heavy pipe, smashing the up-raised lantern into showers of glass, and flooding the tun- nel with darkness. It was well for him that the blow went home. Almost simultaneously with it a gun flashed. The powder stung his cheek and the report rang deafeningly in his ears, but the bullet flattened itself out on the rock behind him. Norcross did not wait for a second shot. Springing forward in the dark- ness he knocked the Oriental back- wards against the opposite wall and dashed down the passage. Scarcely had the echo of the shot and the yell of the coolie died away before, to the ears of the fleeing youth, there came a far-away clamor from the tunnel behind. The Chinese in the arroyo had at last discovered his es- cape. They were coming in full cry. He hastened his speed. There was no time now to feel his way. He stum- bled time and again, but this risk had to be taken. He knew that unless he discovered the outlet within a very few minutes his chance of ever escap- ing would be very small. The tunnel seemed endless. Was there no end to it? He knew that he could not possibly be far from the out- let. All at once his path was blocked. He had bumped heavily into a wall of rock. A wild fear that he had stum- bled into a blind alley-way came over ears. He drew himself through the open- | loosened the ring that fastened the ledge at the head of a short gulch running down to the beach. Fifty feet below him a gasoline schooner lay at anchor in the cove, its deck pil- ed high with abolene shells. Beyond the cove lay the open sea, flooded in the colors of sunset. He looked at the schooner a mo- ment; then picked his way down to the beach. His feet were barely on the sand when, with loud yells of disap- pointment and rage, the Orientals poured out of the hole to the ledge above like a swarm of angry bees. A rifle cracked; the bullet spattered in the sand near his feet. He broke into a run for the shelter of the rocks south of the cove. A half dozen bul- lets struck about him before he was out of range. The Chinese gave up. It was getting dark. They made no attempt to hunt him out of the rocks. Several hours later he tramped down the beach, ascended to the pla- teau and circled back to his camp in the moonlight. By sun-up he was in the saddle and bound out to the near- est telephone. Three days later a posse of United States marshals raided the cave and the cove, but secured nothing more than incriminating evidence for their trouble. The Chinese had flown, and they never came back. Norcross treasures as a souvenir of his adventure a bamboo opium-pipe, which hangs above the fireplace in his den.—The Boys’ Magazine. THE AUTO-LOCOMOTIVE. The auto-locomotive has arived. It A current of air, cool and | ing and found himself upon a narrow i traces to | i | ! application of alkalis and this is es- | pecially true of the lighter colored ‘ing near the Mexican border and in is the invention of John F. Kehrman, of Bonne Terre, Mo., and is designed for travel on railroad tracks. It may be built for the purpose, or an ordinary touring car can be made . to serve, with suitable constructional modifications. Inside, it is arranged as a business car or sleeping car. It may take the place of steam locomo- tives on branch lines of steam rail- roads, or may be used fer tours of in- spection. The machine is driven by the rear wheels, the power of the engine being transmitted to the rear axle by the or- dinary drive shaft. At the front is a cowcatcher, and mounted upon and above the latter is a screen of wire net in a rectangular frame to keep grasshoppers and other insects from striking the radiator and obstructing the passage of air. Above the front wheels is a sand-box, pro- vided with a pipe for discharging sand when there shall be occasion. The forward end of the auto-locomotive is carried by a four-wheeled truck whose wheels are attached to a separate frame which is pivotally connected to the frame of the car. further south. This arrange- | ment enables the machine to travel at | high speed around sharp curves, much |," qdish yellow hue, while the other i trees are green, thus making a decid- in the same way as a wagon can turn corners without danger of upsetting. An air-pump, driven by an engine crank-shaft, operates airbrakes, blows the whistle and works the sanding mechanism. Power and foot brakes , can be applied to all the wheels when an emergency calls for a quick stop. The inventor claims that his auto- locomotive, fitted with a high-power automobile engine, will run easily and safely at a speed of seventy-five miles ‘an hour. —— a DISEASE FREE SEED POTATOES. For the third consecutive year the “show them how” class of Pennsylva- nia farmers have demonstrated that there is absolute truth in the use of “potato mentality” with regard to the use of disease-free seed for bumper potato crop production. Figures of comparative potato yields for good seed over the ordinary home grown varieties, on 289 good seed demon- strations in 55 counties, were an- nounced by Professor E. L. Nixon, ex- tention plant disease specialist at The Pennsylvania State College school of agriculture. They represent last fall’s harvest records and are of un- usual merit. The good seed demonstrations show- ed an increase of 45.6 per cent. in yield over check growths of ordinary seed, which is almost double the per cent. increase of the preceding two years. This is attributed to the ex- tremely dry weather of last summer when the plants from disease-free seed showed ability to withstand the heat. The average increase per acre was 69.6 bushels, which at the rate of a dollar a bushel would give quite a little profit to the grower planting at the rate of 15 bushels to the acre. The average acre yield for ordinary seed was 152.6 bushels, and that for dis- ease-free seed 222.2 bushels. Pennsylvania farmers have come to believe in Professor Nixon’s “potato mentality” practice so thoroughly that over 100,000 bushels of disease-free seed have been bought for planting in practically every county in the State. Last year 48,000 bushels were bought and planted, potatoes that the college men or county agents had inspected and approved before shipment. Thous- ands of farmers will adopt this prac- tice of planting the very best seed ob- tainable during the coming spring. Teaching a Baby Elephant Manners. Elephants are surprisingly like hu- man beings in the way they discipline their young. In proof, there may be cited an amusing incident witnessed by a Frenchman in an extensive lum- ber yard in Burma, where elephants are used to handle the heavy loads. While the adult elephants were faithfully at work, the youngsters played about the yard. The elephant lor office, or shop. i higs and are from 10 to 25 feet in cir- rascal with his mischievous trunk had : the load.—Ex. MAHOGANY TREES. The mahogany tree is something of | a recluse—at least, it has a solitary habit of life—and likes to stand rear- ing its head above its lesser neighbors, ! smaller trees and dense undergrowth | of tropic forests. There is no such | thing as a forest of mahogany. It is! not found in groves or clumps, or lit- | tle group of settlements within the’ woods. In the region where it is found at its best there will be, perhaps only one or two trees te the acre. | Two broad classifications are gen- | erally used for this wood in commerce —Spanish mahogany and Honduras | mahogany. From the Island of San- i to Domingo comes the Spanish wood, | richly colored, solid and heavy. It is | famous for these points and the rich | wavy figuring brought out under pol- | ishing, as well as for the high polish | which it will take. Cuban mahogany ! is also classed as Spanish, although | the wood is slightly inferior. It is sol- id to the touch and is distinguished by | the tiny chalk-like white specks in the pores. | Honduras mahogany is lighter, lacking the figuring and the curl of the Spanish wood and is open of grain and rather uniform in color. Little black specks or lines in the grain of the wood mark this variety. Its col- or is often artificially deepened by the | Honduras mahogany. The trees grow- the northern part of the country, are more dense and solid than those found The mahogany tree, as a matter of fact, reaches its maximum dimensions in Mexico. In the upland Provinces it furnishes a timber which is firm, solid and richly figured. The work of the mahogany lumber- ing outfit is thus described by John J. Birch: “The personnel of a mahogany lum- bering outfit is the same in many re- spects as a lumber camp in any Amer- ican forest, save for minor details. ' Belize, in British Honduras, is the chief exporting city for mahogany, and for that reason most of the out- fits are made up from there. “The methods used in harvesting are exceedingly primitive, inefficient ' and relatively expensive. The cutting begins in the Mid-summer, which is the rainy season. The tree hunter, or the one whose duty it is to locate the tree, is by far the most important man | in the outfit. His first move is to pick | out some elevated point and climb the : highest tree and from there locate the | mahogany. | “At this season of the year the leaves of the mahogany have turned | ed contrast, visible for a long distance. After having carefully noted his bear- ings, he proceeds to locate the trees. This is by no means an easy task, for in most places the underbrush is so dense that it is necessary to chop one’s way through. “The trees are large and spreading, with pinnate, shiny leaves. They range anywhere from 50 to 100 feet cumference at the base, depending on their age. It is the custom to build a platform, some 8 or 10 feet high, around the largest of the trees, for the reason that the trunks are greatly en- larged at the ground, but by so doing a great deal of the most valuable wood is lost, for it is here that the most beautiful graining and toughest tim- ber is found. “In felling great care is taken so that the logs will not split or break. The trees are then cut into convenient lengths to be handled and squared, so that they can be more easily stowed away in ships. “By the time the dry season has be- gun, and while a part of the gang are engaged in cutting, others are at work preparing roads and bridges to ena- ble the logs to be transported. The trucks used for hauling are two- wheeled affairs, constructed on the spot, save for the axles and hubs, which are brought in by the lumber- men, “Oxen are used to haul these im- provised wagons. The work is done mostly at night, by the aid of pine torches, for the reason that it is cool- er at that time. The logs are collect- ed on the banks of the rivers and left there until June, when they are cut loose and allowed to float down stream. “When they have arrived at their destination, each owner collects his logs, which are marked by certain marks on the ends. They are then prepared for export by cutting off any battered ends or split portions. The natives tie them together and raft them to the ships, where they are placed on board. This is a dangerous operation, for in rough weather many of the rafts are broken up and tim- bers carried out to sea. ; “The vogue of mahogany, highly prized as it is for cabinet making and for furniture, is of English origin. A carpenter on Sir Walter Raleigh’s ship is credited with having noted first the possibilities of the wood, be- ing attracted by its hardness and du- rability as well as its beautiful color and grain.—Bulletin of the American Forestry Association. : ns ————— AS ———— ——Dark days are possible in every month of the year, particularly in this climate. But they are always endur- able when cheerfulness rules in home, ~ 7 FARM NOTES. —The farmers who are suffering most from the present financial con- ditions are those who have over-spe- cialized. The farmers who had some hogs, dairy cows and poultry weather- ed the storm in pretty good shape. | Those who had a moderate distribu- tion and diversification of crops suf- fered the least. Diversification of crops and livestock is what is needed. It is always good to have some side- lines to take up the slack. The ideal farm is one on which are grown a good variety of crops in regular ro- tation, and on which is found a good balanced assortment of livestock. { Work out a system. - —Many farmers are more prosper- ous than they realize. There are very tew of them in as unsatisfactory con- dition for crops this year as the bus- iness men of the country believe. —Most farmers have more to eat, more feed, better shelter, larger num- ber of marketable products, than they give themselves credit for having. The tarm is more profitable than we be- lieve; it affords a better home than we appreciate; it offers better opportu- nities for comfortable living than we make use of. —Ground feeds are more economic- al as a rule for cows. They eat grain very greedily and do not generally masticate it properly. Thus much of it passes out of the stomach undigest- ed. This is especially noticeable in feeding corn and oats. —A shovelful of wood ashes scat- tered around each currant bush and a handful on the crown, will serve two purposes—fertilize and prevent insects and disease. —The clover or alfalfa plant is the cheapest and most effective subsoiling plow. It runs deeper than a steel plow, is self-propelling, and in pass- ing leaves more fertility than it takes. —The claim that too much manure will burn up the crop is only partly true. It may if it is a very dry sea- son and the manure is not worked well into the soil. But there is little likelihood of injury from a heavy ap- plication, if worked in right. Far more corn has been lost through too little than through too much manure. —Good onions may be raised in any soil that has successfully produced po- tatoes, corn or any vegetable crop. The muck lands, such as will be found throughout Pennsylvania, will give a better yield of onions, and with less labor than any other soil. But before such lands are fit they must be thor- oughly subdued to get clear of weeds. If kept clear of weeds it is a good plan to grow onions annually upon the same ground, as it would then be- | come firmer, and the firmer it becomes the better the crop will be, unless the ground should be allowed to bake. Onions grown after celery are, as a rule, very successful, as the ground ‘ will be free from weeds and there will be less labor in caring for the crop. If the ground was plowed in the fall and leveled down, it can be worked and sown earlier in the spring. There will be a week or two difference in getting in the crop if the plowing has been left to the spring. Onions should be sown as soon as the frost is out of the ground. —The best complete fertilizer should be used, one that is about one to two of nitrogen, seven to eight of acid and eight to ten of potash. This should be varied in quantity accord- ing to the needs of the soil. A full crop cannot be expected when only a small amount of fertilizer is used. From one to one and a half tons per acre is a good rule. Wood ashes are excellent in most soils, but generally they are not suf- ficient to produce the best crop. The fertilizer must be evenly dis- tribuved over the ground or the onions will be spotted. Hand-sowing of the fertilizer is not always satisfactory. From 500 to 800 bushels of onions may be grown on a rich, well-drained loam soil, but heavy clays, hillsides and stony land should be avoided. The attempt to grow onions on weedy or run-down land should never be made. Cultivation should begin immediate- ly as the young plants appear. A wheel hoe is very good for this pur- pose, as it loosens the soil on both sides of the row and throws it slightly away from the plants. Follow by hand-weeding, and, when necessary, thin out. The plants should be about three inches apart in the row, unless the soil is rich, when they will permit crowding. If the soil should not be sufficiently fertile, more fertilizer should be added to mature the crop rather than to thin, unless the plants should be altogether too close. Whenever the weeds appear throughout the growing season, the crop should be hoed. Cultivation should be given every other week un- til the bulbs begin to form, when it may be lessened. The stalks become weak just above the bulbs and topple over on the ground as maturity approaches. As soon as the majority of the tops have died down the crop may be culled, not- withstanding that some of the tops remain green and standing. When harvesting, throw two or more rows together and allow to re- main on the ground for a week or more to cure. It is best not to twist or cut off the tops until ready to store the onions, although it may be done any time before marketing. —A lot of hard labor will be saved if the garden plot is so arranged that a horse and plow may be admitted. Objection is made by some to using the horse in the garden, but if the rows are planted far enough apart to permit proper cultivation, and the proper tools used, the horse will do better work and at less expense. Good, sharp tools must be used. Deep plowing, cutting narrow furrows and cultivating with a good instru- ment drawn by a steady horse is far easier and better to keep the ground stirred and the weeds down than by walking up and down the rows, chop- ping, in the broiling sun. —In 1919, Pennsylvania produced 7,184,096 quarts of strawberries and 851,606 quarts of blackberries and dewberries.