“pili Bellefonte, Pa., November 2, 1923. — “ THOU SHALT NOT KILL.” Stokes Anthony Bennett. Shame to the man who kills for sport, And takes what he cannot give; Who, gun in hand, would e’er disport. With only himself to live. : Shame to the man who's quite content With a bird or beast at bay; And who, it seems, is always bent On taking their life away. Shame to the man who has no heart For the creatures that he meets; Who lets destruction play chief part In the things called hunting feats. Shame to the man who cannot go On a stroll through wood or plain, Except he wield a fatal blow, And boast of the creatures slain. Shame to the man who kills for sport, And takes what he cannot give; Whose very thoughts and acts impart That only himself shall live. —OQur Dumb Animals. THE MISSES STEVENSON WRITE OF THEIR TRIP TO JAPAN. Saturday a. m., Sept. 22, 1923. On board the boat somewhere on the Pacific. Dear All! Have just finished breakfast of two fried eggs, French fried potatoes and toast. I will start my letter from the Thursday before we left San Francis- co. We were told about 10 a. m. that we would sail Saturday noon, so you can imagine our excitement. Upon being relieved from duty at noon Sara and I flew down town to the bank to look after some business A ——————— there, then to the photographers to | see if they could rush our pictures through; as we had them taken only the Tuesday before; then to several stores, and home to pack. Friday there were a million things to do, and that evening the girls gave us a farewell dinner. Although they took our trunks Saturday, we were told that we would not sail before Monday, so after dinner Miss Ballard and I went to the hair dressers, where we made an engagement for three o’clock, going on from there to a show. Upon our return to the hair- dressers she met us at the door say- ing, “call the hospital; the boat sails at 4 p. m.” Well, we were so excited we could not think of anything to say over the phone so rushed out and call- ed a taxi to drive us to the docks. In the meantime, ‘before I went down town I put some ointment on Sara’s hair intending to wash it when I got back; consequently, when she was told at 2 o’clock that she would sail at four her hair was to wash and both our bags to pack; but a lot of the girls came in and helped her. One washed her hair, others packed the bags, while others addressed some of the pictures. So she arrived at the boat a half hour before we did. We did not sail until about 8:30 p. m., and one girl was left as she was visiting in Berkley and no one knew her phone number. She, however, will sail today oh the “Thomas,” for the Philippines. We are on the “Somme,” pronounced Psalm; with us are six nurses, eleven medical officers, three or four other officers, forty-one corps men and about one hundred and fifty of a crew. We should have ar- rived tomorrow, Thursday, September 27th. I will try to finish this in the morning to send to a ship that is going to Seattle in a few days, that you may get it earlier than if we mailed it in Japan. We saw land about 10 a. m. and landed last evening about 5:30 o’clock, and I'll say we were happy girls, as I know I vomited everything in me every day but about four; then had to almost put a trap door on my throat to keep it down. We passed two islands with forti- fications, that were all wrecked and mostly under water, and all of the city that we can see from the boat, is wrecked; as we are lying ‘right off Yokahoma. We will work from the ship, expecting to go to Tokio in a few days to help establish a hospital, but as soon as it is finished will turn it over to Jap doctors and nurses. The night before we landed a ty- phoon struck us and at 4 a. m.. we were told to get dressed and get our life belts ready. We were not scared but could scarcely hold up our heads. The ship bobbed like a cork and you could hear the dishes, chairs and everything that happened to be loose falling all over the place. I think we will land in Manila about October 15th, and will be glad to put our feet on land. We have been watching the Japs unload the ships; some have lumber and others boxes of supplies. Numbers of wom- en are working just like the men. How I wish you might have seen the lights from all the ships in the harbor last night, with the moon shin- ing over all. Well, I guess I will close and try to get a little sewing done. Write to Sternberg General Hospital, Manila, P. I. Will write as soon as we land there. With love, BETTY. “Somme,” Sept. 24th, 1928. On board the U. S. A. T. (U. S. Ar- my Transport.) Dear Ones at Home: Betty in her letter tells you the be- ginning ond I am right here to tell you, I'' ° aan haw #iad 49 my apron string until I get back to the States; then you can take care of your own kid, I've had my share. I looked like a Chri~*mas tree when I boarded the boat; "all her thines and mine too, the that long wiv tO see if she would get there—when I saw them step out of a taxi, I was about ready to collapse. Miss Ballard, Betty and I have heen sick pearly all the way. The first morning I crawled out, sat on .the floor and held to the side rail, and I said to Betty, “I believe if I can get to the port-hole for fresh air I'll be all right.” Well, I got to the port- hole, but never saw so many things moving in my life. I then decided it wasn’t fresh air we needed. I called across to Ballard “are you going to breakfast?” and she answered, “no Honey, ah just don’t feel right.” By that time we all three were hard at it. In a few days we were pretty well straightened up when we struck a rain gale and went for three hundred miles through that; consequently we went back to the bowl. Then when we thought all was well a typhoon played with us for about twelve hours. At 4 a. m. we were told to get dress- ed at once and get our life preservers out, but we were so sick already that it made little difference to us whether the ship went up or down. However, today the sea is fine and so are we. Have seen a few ships in the distance and a faint shadow which they say is Japan; we are due at Yokahoma about 6 p. m. Our ship is loaded with enough supplies for our base hospital and twelve field hospitals, but as yet we have no orders as to what we are to do there; think possibly it may be a refugee camp of some sort. The steering wheel and the boilers went bad during the storm, conse- quently we are behind time, but guess we are lucky to be getting in as well as we are. We have with us a newspaper man from the Associated Press, Mr. Peeke; also, Mr. Stone, from some of the New York papers, who puts out a dai- ly paper called “Somme News, copies of which are enclosed. There is with ' us also, a Pathe News man, Mr. Puck- er, who has taken some pictures of the relief squad, so if they run the films in Bellefonte you may see us. We had been hoping this would be a long rest, but when we were so sick, I told Betty there would be nothing left but “a rag, a bone and a hank of hair” by the time we reached Japan. We would swallow a teaspoon of soup and up would come a whole bowl full. Miss Ballard says she is going to buy a hut in Manila and spend the rest of her life there; for the life on the bounding waves isn’t just what we had pictured it. I think if I get a chance to “hide! away beside a babbling brook” Tl take it; for I’ve had enough excite- ment to last for a while. Japan at last! THE GIRLS. ——Vote for Dale for District At- torney. WHAT HAPPENS TO SUGAR. Not more than half the sugar we Americans consume is used in our homes. The rest goes into manufac- tured products. The estimates of the quantities used in manufacture run this way: Our candy makers alone use more than 350,000 tons, and 130,000 tons more go to sweeten chocolates and ice creams. Every year the bakers dip into the national sugar bowl for well over 45, | 000 tons for bread, 55,000 tons for! crackers and 90,000 tons for pies and cakes. A mere 10,000 tons goes every year into frostings and odds and ends in the bakeries. i Fourteen thousand or more soft drink makers hit the nation’s sugar bin for at least 135,000 tons for their concoctions and another 100,000 tons goes into condensed milk. Twenty thousand tons of sugar is chewed up each year in gum; and, less aesthetic jaws worked on anoth- : er 15,000 tons that goes into the na- tion’s “eatin’”’ tobacco. This not in-! cluding about 6,000 tons that goes to smoking tobaccos. i The country’s pill and potion bill disposes of about 6,000 tons of sugar each year, and the druggist uses an unknown quantity in filling what the doctor ordered. Even sticky fly paper and roach, ant and rat killers draw from the su- gar supply to the tune of hundreds of tons. And nobody knows how much has gone in bootleg and home-brew.— The Nation’s Business. The Origin of Postage Stamps. The manner in which the first post- age stamps came into being has a tinge of romance to it. It was about the year 1840, that Rowland Hill, while crossing a dis- trict in the north of England, arrived at the door of an inn where a post- man had stopped to deliver a letter. A young girl came out to receive it; she turned it over in her hand and asked the price of the postage. The postman demanded a shilling, which to the girl was a large sum, as she was poor. She sighed sadly, and said that the letter was from her brother and that she had no money, so she re- turned the letter reluctantly to the postman. Touched with Fw, Mr. Hill paid the postage and gave the letter to the girl, who seemed very much em- barrassed. The postman had scarce- ly gone, when the young innkeeper’s daughter confessed that it was a trick between her brother and her. Some signs on the envelope told her all that she wanted to know, but the letter contained no writing. “We are both so poor,” she said, “that we invented this method of cor- | responding without paying for the! letters.” i Rowland, continuing on his journey, | asked himself if a system giving rise to such frauds was not a vicious one? Before sunset he had planned to or- ganize the postal service on a new ba- sis—with what success is known to the world. ; —Vote for Hoy for Recorder. BSR PRS LIVED LIFE OF LONELINESS Naturalist Isolated Himself That He - Might Have Opportunity to 4 Study Habits of Birds, On a lonely isiand cff the acast of Queensland for twenty-five years, Mr. E. J. Banfield, naturalist and author of “Confessions of a Beachcomber” and other books, has died at the age of seventy. The crew of the steamer In- nisfail, passing the island, saw a wom- an waving on the beach. A boat was landed and Mrs. Banfield was found to be the only inhabitant of the island. Her husband was dQead. The crew made a coffin out of ship’s timber and the chief officer read the burial service. Mrs. Banfield refused to leave the is- land, and the captain called for vol- unteers to stay with her. Every man offered, and the captain selected one to remain. Some twenty-five years ago Mr. Banfield acquired under the land laws of the Queensland govern- ment Dunk island, off the coast of Queensland. This was an islet rather more than three square miles in area, inhabited till then only by the rapidly dwindling remnant of a once consider- able native population, which has since, it would seem, entirely disappeared. There, with his wife, he settled down to live the simplest of lives and in- dulge in his cherished pastime of ol- serving the ways of birds, beasts and fishes, and, while they remained, his black fellow men.—Montreal Family Herald. KNOWN AS ‘ELECTRIC GHOSTS’ Scientist Explains Action of Electrcns Fastest Moving of All Ter- restrial Objects. In an address to electrical engineers in London a distinguished scientist thus defined an electron. An atom is ordinarily associated with a charge, and force is required to separate the charge from the atom. The atomic charge when separated is called an electron. In an electrolyte—i. e, a substance decomposed by an electric current—there is a bodily transfer of atoms with their charges; in a metal lic conductor the charges are handed on as electrons from atom to atom. In the discharge through highly rare fied gases the electric current is in its most simple form, for here there is a flow of electrons, traveling by themselves, of disembodied charges o1 electric ghosts. Electrons, it should be added, are the fastest moving of all known terrestrial objects, their speed being one-tenth that of light, which is 186,300 miles per second.—Washiug: ton Star. Is Separation Right? The French senate has voted tc transfer to the pantheon, France's hall of fame, the remains of Renan, Edgar Quimet and Michelet. This is a high honor from the state. But in 189§ Michelet’s wife opposed the transfer of her husband’s body. She had been the historian’s intimate literary helper— almost a collaborator—and knew all his thoughts. When the proposition was made to her she said: “No! He would not have wished it. He chose his grave himself—in Pere-Lachaise beside his son’s. Let him sleep there in peace.” But there may be no one teday to interpose a veto on the sen ate’'s resolution, if it also passes the carter of deputies. Biggest and Best. The annual meeting and banquet oi the Men’s Social club had not provec successful. The committee in charge of the arrangements, however, wert more hopeful of a better conclusion as the guest of honor was introduce by the chairman, “Gentlemen,” he said in a genial voice, “we have with us tonight on¢ whom you all know very well, Profes sor Piffle, who has promised to tell us some of his biggest and best after dinner stories. Amid tremendous applause from the guests, the professor rose from his seat. “Mr. Chairman and gentlemen,” he¢ said, when he could make his voic¢ heard. “To begin with my bigges story, let me tell you how thoroughly 1 have enjoyed your banquet.” Black Rain. One of the services of science is in destroying superstition, and a notable example of this was afforded not long ago in Ireland. On an October nighi a fall of black rain, leaving inky pools in the roads, occurred in many parts of the island. It was noted at the famous observatory at Birr castle, and an investigation of the meteorological conditions prevailing at the time fol lowed. The result was to show that there had been a movement of the air all over the central part of the British isles such as carry soot fron the manufacturing districts of Eng land over the Irish channel. Exam ination of the black rain showed thal its color was due to the presence of an extraordinary amount of soot. Soya Bean Br:ad in Austria. Austria’s experiments with soya bea: flour in bread-making have proved suc cessful, and this bread has become s popular that, according to the Depart ment of Commerce, the output has in creased to 10,000 loaves dally. Three months ago the first experi ment was made by a Viennese baker who put out a loaf of wheat brea( with a 20 per cent mixture of soy: , consarn moved,” | woman, PLAN TO HARNESS VESUVIUS Italy Would Direct Flow of Lava and Utilize Heat of the Big Volcano. In the future great volcanoes cam throw out molten fire and lava and at- tract no more attention than the pass- Ing of a motor car, if plans now being considered by scientists of Italy are carried out. After the gigantic accomplishments of the engineers in the World war such a scheme does not sound impossible and plans are being seriously consid- ered to tunnel mountains known to be dangerous in such a manner that a sudden voleanic activity will only re sult in the gas and lava being carried i away from settled sections and val- uable property. Especially are such plans being worked out for Etna and Vesuvius, the two most destructive volcanoes. And with the plan goes another pro- viding for harnessing the heat for in- dustrial purposes. Premier Mussolini has been investi- gating the plan and now, it is said, no obstacle remains except the expense. It is hoped that some way may be found whereby Italy will be relieved from dependence upon the outside world for fuel and the power that fuel produces. If experimental boring is tried it will probably be on Etna, because that volcano, being on an island, can do less damage than Versuvius if stirred | to unusual activity by man’s efforts. Cutting tunnels through the moun- tainside would be simple in its earlier stages, and would become complicated only when the heat, on approach to the eternal fires, became unendurable to the workers. Explosives might do the rest. SWEETS FOR THE CHILDREN Moderate Allowances of Sugar, Candy and Ice Cream That Keeps Them Healthy. The following may be regarded as a moderate allowance of sugar or candy for a healthy child of nine or ten years: Of sugar on cereals, one even teaspoonful at breakfast or supper and not more than this amount on fresh or stewed fruit; of candy, one piece with the midday meal ; of ice cream or fruit ices, one good tablespoonful once a week, possibly twice a week in sum- mer; of ice cream sodas, not more than one a week Besides these things a child will get | in his other food, such as gingerbread cookies and plain cake, and in his cus- tard and puddings an additional amount of sugar, so that his total daily allowance will probably be equal to two tablespoonfuls of sugar. So long as this is not exceeded it is not likely tham any bad effect will follow. But when a child is allowed to help himself the constant tendency is that the amount is gradually increased to two or three times the quantities specified, and. even then the child is no better satisfied—often less so. He has ac- quired the sweet habit and food does not taste sweet unless these larger amounts are constantly added.—Dr. L. Emmett Holt in the Delineator. Chapels in Hotels. Many years ago, a group of com- mercial travelers called “The Gideons” organized a movement for placing copies of the Scriptures in the guest rooms of hetels. .It was from the start a very real missionary enterprise, and has been productive of excellent re- sults. One of New York's leading hotel men, the owner of a number of big es- tablishments, announced a few days ago his purpose of going even a step further. Observation during many years of experience has impressed him with the fact that strangers who put up at hotels in our big cities are at a disadvantage as far as church-going is concerned. He has, therefore, decided to erect, in each of his large establish- ments, a chapel as a place where his guests may worship. “If the patron will not go to church,” he urges, “we shall bring the church to him.” All Is Vanity. “Now, just as I was beginning te think that I could become a raving beauty by spreading clay on my face once or twice a week, here comes a writer in a magazine who says the claims for it are absurd, and it does no good at all to the skin,” said a Columbus beauty who likes to keep up with all the fads for improvement. “Oh, well,” said her companion, “there is one comfort: You can save the money you have been spending on clay and buy face creams.”—Columbus Dispatch. A Trusting Nature. She was a countrywoman, and trav- eling by train was something new to her. She sat down on a seat in the station, and after waiting for two hours was approached by the station- master, who inquired where she was going. “But the train’s just gone,” he said when she told him. “Dear, dear! I thought the whole replied tle old Handy Man. An inmate of a certain penal insti- tution recently received a call from the warden, who said: “I understand you got in jail on ac- count of a glowing mining prospec- tus.” a - a ge Js LD “Yes,” admitted the gentlemanly ” | ”» 2 tent | prisoner, “I was quite optimistic. inetd asso . Dm “Well,” continued the warden, “the q | governor wants a report on conditions agreeable, The flour is produced un In this jail. Write it."~-Harpers der a secret process, ? * . FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. DAILY THOUGHT. There are no really good manners without Christian souls.—Spanish Proverb. The new way to do the hair is to eliminate the permanent wave. Shin- gled is the term for short locks. ‘Through the spreading influence of this revived fashion we may be spared the pain of gazing at the uncombed mass of short hair that would be fit for an Abyssinian bride; we may not have to struggle to see the actors on the other side of the footlights through something that looks like a mattress without ticking; we may be free from having that same mass combed into our faces at public plac- es. must be sleek and as short as a boy’s ' at the back, even though it fluff over | ' the temples. It may be parted on the side or in the middle. It must look i wet, an effect obtained by brushing it | with brilliantine. . The school-girl can wear her hair in this manner better than most of our sex. She will find it far more gracious than the frizzed, outstand- ingZ mop of burned locks. If she wants to be very French, she will search for a round comb such as her grandmoth- g2 wore to push back the front of the air. Short curls are good at the temples. They should not be ragged and jag- ged, but smoothly curled, in the Vie- torian manner. The two flat locks, carefully plastered into an interroga- tion above the cheek bones, should be left to older women. It is fashiona- ble to copy this coiffure of a man in a more romantic generation when straps were put on his trousers to keep them snugly fitting over the instep. If American women like the fashion it will be found difficult to adjust it to their faces, but the school-girl should let it alone. | Possibly there is only one costume on which the finger can be put when one searches for girls’ clothes which few, if any, adults can wear. This is the Spanish bolero, the frilled blouse, the pleated skirt in bright plaids. Such as assembling makes one of the smart costumes that leaped into the limelight when school days came over the horizon. . The designers of clothes are turn- ing to Spain for inspiration. Once that country led the world in fashions for women and men. France took the lead away from her in the sixteenth century, but she is returning to the Spanish fashions of the era when Se- ville and Madrid had the first and ; final say in wherewithal we should be ' clothed. She returns to Chinese fash- ions, also, after the manner of her seventeenth century allegiance. The school-girl can adapt many of these ideas to her juvenile costumery. The brilliant shawl is not for her, even in the evening, but the bolero, the hat with a pointed crown, the broad sash about the diaphragm, the sleeveless jacket, the frilled white blouse, the wide skirt, the flounces of old Spain, suit girlishness and youth. There- fore, she has a wide are from which to pick what she likes. The new middy blouse smacks of China. It is somewhat of a tunic, mi- nus the gay embroidery or fanciwul brocade. There’s one of red serge that reaches the knees; it is straight and unbelted; the sleeves are long and tight at wrists, the neck opening is _boat-shaped. Its glory or adornment | lies in the cravat. And such a cra- vat! It is of green ribbon, mind you, i and runs through a large decoration In green embroidery. The skirt be- low the middy is pleated at the sides. _The Chinese tunic is suitable for a girl. It has become an established garment, but it swings around so large a circle in its various forms that it can be anything from a street jack- et to an evening wrap. It is of bro- cade or cloth, of crepe satin or Chi- nese embroidery of the kind one buys for a table cover. It can be shaped like a sandwich, in two panels that cover the back and front to show . brightly colored chiffon or georgette sleeves after the manner of the Mah Jongg gowns invented in Pekin. It can be as sober as a glass of lemonade for contrast, with serge or kasha as the material and red or green buttons down the front for the Chinese touch. 3 Unless a girl is unduly matured, it 1s wiser to choose any of these cos- tumes rather than the severely tail- ored skirt and jacket. The O’Rossen style is the best, if she adopts this kind of costume. It has a short nar- | row skirt and a partly fitted jacket : fastened with one button a trifle high- waisted. It flares a bit from the waist and ends at turn of the hips. The edges are bound with black or gray braid. Step-in corsets that are little more than girdles are made of brocade and elastic entirely without boning. Strap- less brassieres and corset and bras- siere combinations are among the new developments presented to give the figure the necessary support and trimness that new fashion demands. It is predicted that the summer vogue of red hats will extend into the fall and winter season, and this is ev- idenced by the number of hats of this | Solor seen developed in velvet and of elt. Blouses of two colors of georgette, the darker color veiling the lighter color, and richly embroidered in beads, are very lovely to complete a three-piece costume effect. Frequent- ly metal lace on a bright-colored georgette is the foundation for a veil- ing of black or darker colored geor- gette, and this combination is excep- tionally handsome and dignified. ~The trend of fashion toward things Chinese is emphasized in costume jewelry, there being any number of. articles of adornment; bracelets, neck- laces, earrings, buckles, hair and hat ornaments—made of imitation jade and ivory that depict the character of | the nopular Chinese game that seem- ingly has largely replaced social hridee., Tre Minar “rmhale arp traced in gold or silver, and the wear- ing of sets of this jewelry is very ef- fective with a large number of the reason’s modes in apparel. Sheriff, fan A0% ——Vote for Taylor To be smart, says Paris, the hair | ae A ————— | FARM NOTES. —Salty grease and bacon rinds do more harm than good when used on ‘ saw blades. —At the present price of feed, skim : milk is worth about fifty cents a hun- dred to feed pigs as a supplement for the grain feeds. —=Sort the apples as soon as they are picked. Cider apples and canning : factory stock should be disposesd of at once and not be put in the cellar to fill the storage space and contaminate the good fruit. , i —Peach Borer—Don’t forget to re- ‘move the P.D. B. chemical from i around the trees about a month or six weeks after the trees have been treat- ed. It may cause root injury if al- | lowed to remain in the soil. —A large number of pullets are | suffering from an attack of mites. This causes them to become thin and ' extremely white in the legs and beak. | Be sure that your roosts have none | of these insects on them before mov- ing the pullets into winter quarters. —~Shredded corn fodder makes ex- cellent litter for the poultry house. On many farms, this material is wast- ed when it might be used in place of straw in the poultry house. It is clean, does not break up as badly as straw, and makes just as good ma- nure. —Don’t wait until freezing weath- er to pick the seed corn. There is a lot of moisture in the corn this year which must be dried out. Select the good ears and hang them in a dry, well ventilated place. Corn, well dried, will stand a lot of freezing be- fore the germ will be injured. —Get the fall litter eating as soon as possible. Help to satisfy the cu- riosity of the little pigs to know what the mother is eating by supplying a low trough for the old sow. Then provide a creep for them with shelled or coarse cracked corn available. Add Some middlings and tankage a little iater. —It is reported that red ants are doing considerable damage in wood lots and forests. Fill up the open- ings in the ant hills with mud and then pour carbon bisulphide into the hill and seal the opening with mud. A single treatment will not destroy all of the ants but will kill many of em. —Feed grain sparingly to the cow for a few days after freshening and gradually increase the amount as the milk flow increases. When she seems to have reached a full flow of milk and does not respond to increased feed, reduce the amount slightly. This will avoid over-feeding and getting the cow off feed. _—Now is the time the grain wee- vils and small beetles start working in stored wheat. They can be de- stroyed by the same treatment that is used to control the grain moth. Treatment should be made before the temperature gets below 60 degrees F. About three pounds of carbon bi- sulphide will fumigate 100 bushels of grain. —Where potatoes are blighted, it is advisable to dig them at a time when the soil is dry. When potatoes blight, spores wre formed on the leaves which - drop down and mix with the soil. If the spuds are dug in wet weather, the spores are taken into the cellar on the potatoes and are likely to cause rot. A cool, well ventilated cellar will help to prevent rot. —Growers are warned not. to pile apples under the trees after picking. The earth is warm, the pile of apples holds the heat and moisture, and de- cay often results. Apples piled un- der trees for a week will not keep nearly as well as those which have been picked on to a sorting table, sorted and removed the next morn- ing to a cool storage place. —About 45 pounds of honey is re- quired to carry a colony over the win- terand spring. Colonies having less than this amount after the fall honey flow is over should be fed with either sugar syrup or honey from a healthy colony. A mixture of 2% parts of white granulated sugar with one part water, heated until all the sugar is dissolved, makes a satisfactory syr- up. ~ —The raspberry industry of Penn- sylvania is seriously threatened by diseases. Planting disease-free plants and controlling the raspberry aphid are possible remedies. The aphid may be controlled by spraying with one pint of nicotine sulphate in 100 gal- lons of water. Five pounds of lump lime should be slaked and added to the above spray before making the application. ! —Forcing the pullets to lay too ear- ly is like driving a car with the choke pulled out. In cold weather, we pull | the choke out to start the motor; however, if driven too long this way, the motor soon stops. If we feed the | pullets mash with lots of meat scrap or milk in it, they will start laying at between four or five months old but soon stop, molt and take a long rest during the winter months. .—A group of women of Augusta- . ville, in Northumberland county, have ! organized a women’s pig club and are caring for “porkers” according ; 1923 methods. Incidentally, the pigs i will be sold at a round-up and show {and one-half of the proceeds will go | to the emergency buildine fund of the Pennsylvania State College. The club has eight members and each woman was furnished a pure- i bred porker by breeders in the coun- | ty. If friend “hubby” gets jealons and refuses to allow his wife’s pi~ to be rirchased by another man, bidding is likely to be lively. —Coclusive evidence that the cost of | producing wheat is considerably high- ‘er than the present selling »rice is fornd in a survey conducted by the United States Department of Agri- culture and in figures secured by the i State College agricultural extension farm accountant in Lancaster county. Reports from 2000 farms in all parts of the country show that on the average in 1922 it cost £1,23 per bush- el to produce wheat. Figures obtain- od in Lancaster county showed ar av- erage cost of $1.28 per bushel. Thege ! cost records come from 85 farms on , which over 800 acres of wheat were i raised. The cost per bushel varied on oy individual farms from 95 cents to 2.17. 1