Bellefonte, Pa., April 11, 1924. EE ATI MAH JONGG. By Edgar A. Guest. Perhaps its a game; I don’t say that it’s not; For friends I like well seem to play it a let; And they seem to attack with a heathen- ish glee That wall-building game of the heathen Chinee. But I'll swear I grow weary and pallid of brow, Awaiting the tile that permits me to “chow 3 And I don’t see much sport sitting all the night through, Building my hopes on the seven bamboo. “A good game! A great game,” its pa- trons declare; But I've not discovered the thrill that is there, I've played it; I've watched it; I've stud- ied it o’er— Paid East Wind his doubles and doubted the score, Paid West Wind his trifle and South Wind his fee, And never been sure what was coming to me. The Chinese may like it, but I'm no Wung Foo— I can’t sit and wait for the seven bamboo. Pedro and euchre and bridge whist and rhum, Cribbage and hearts I will play as they come; Any old game that you fancy I'll try, But love for the Chinaman’s sport I deny Perhaps I'm too old, or perhaps I'm too young, But I can’t sit all night waiting chances to “pung,” : And I haven’t the patience of Minister Wu. With that tedious wait for the seven bam- boo. BROODERS ADVISED FOR 200 OR MORE CHICKS. With thousands of little chicks hatching out in Centre county during the next month, farmers are busy in preparing suitable housing facilities. oultry authorities are agreed that every man rearing 200 or more chicks should have some kind of a brooder house. It need not be an expensive structure but should be tight, have sufficient sunlight and ventilation, and be free from draughts. Hard coal brooder stoves have giv- en good satisfaction. With such a stove and hover about 50 inches in di- ameter, 300 to, 400 chicks can be kept very comfortable. Poultry men ad- vise running the brooder stove two days or more before the chicks are placed under the hover to determine whether an even temperature is being maintained. The temperature at the outer edge of the hover near the floor should be about 100 degrees. This can be reduced about five degrees each week until 85 degrees is reached. The chicks are a good thermometer. When they are comfortable, they make a neat ring under the outer edge of the hover. If they are a foot or more away from the hover, it is an indica- tion that the temperature is too high. If they are crowding up under the hover the temperature is too low. . To prevent the chicks from wander- ing too far away from the heat the first few days, some men place a wire six to twelve inches high around the hover, moving it out a little each day. After about three days the wire can be removed and the chicks allowed to run over the entire house. It is ad- visable to prevent the chicks from crowding in the corner of the house. A poultry netting nailed at an angle in the corner has proved satisfactory and permits the chicks to get air from below. At the end of the first week many poultrymen allow the flock of little ones to run outside providing a small run surrounded by a fence and covered with burlap or old carpet to ward off the wind from the chicks. Reveals How Nicknames of History Originated. Nicknames arose out of an attempt to stigmatize unpopular parties and so bring ridicule and contempt upon them. The long parliament of the time of Cromwell was called the “Rump” be- cause the leader was a man named Barebones. One of the most historic religious nicknames is that of Huguenot, which was given to the French Protestants of the Sixteenth century. These peo- ple were persecuted, and the nick- name suggests that they were hiders, as no doubt they often had to be. . The Puritans of Queen Elizabeth’s time were given that name in deri- sion, but both Puritan and Huguenot have risen to be names of great his- toric significance. Among other religious nicknames, Quaker and Shaker may be mention- ed. Quaker is a nickname given to a member of the Society of Friends. It had its origin in a famous remark made by the founder of the society, George Fox, who began to preach in 1647. Shakers was the name given to an American sect, because their re- ligious ferver produced a trembling movement. Political nicknames have also be- come historic: Roundhead and cava- lier were nicknames given to the two parties during the Civil war in this country. Such names as whig and tory were given, in the first place, in derision.—London Tit-Bits. Discounting Notes. “Yes, my daughter’s musical ecdu- cation was a profitable venture.” “Really 7” “Yes; 1 managed to buy the houses on either side of my own for about half their value.”—The Passing Show, London. Evening Up. He—Is she progressive or conserva- tive? She—I don’t know. She wears a last year’s hat, drives a this year’s car and lives on next year’s income. —Modern Grocer. | drunken into public places, and the RESPECT THE FLAG. When you see the Stars and Stripes displayed, son, stand up and take off your hat. Somebody may titter: It is in the blood of some to deride all expression of noble sentiment. You may blaspheme in the street, stagger bystanders will not pay much atten- tion to you, but should you get down on your knees to pray to Almighty God or if you should stand barehead- ed while a company of old soldiers pass by with flags flying in the breeze most people will think you are show- ing off. But don’t mind. When Old Glory comes along, salute and let them think what they please. When the band plays the Star Spangled Banner in a restaurant or hotel dining room, get up, even if you rise alone, stand there and don’t be ashamed of it either. Don’t be ashamed when your throat chokes and the tears come when you see the flag flying from the masts of our ships on the great sea or floating from every flag staff in the Republic. ! You will never have a worthier emo- tion. For of all the signs and sym- bols since the world began there is none so full of meaning as the flag of this country. Your flag stands for humanity, for an equal opportunity to all the sons of men. . Of course we have not yet arrived at that goal; injustice still dwells among us; senseless, cruel customs of the past still cling to us, but the flag leads the way to righting the wrongs | of men. Our flag is the symbol of liberty. | That piece of red, white and blue bunting means five thousand years of | struggle upwards. It is the full grown | flower of generations fighting for lib- erty. It is the century plant of hu- man hope in bloom.—Col. Alvin M. ! Owsley, National Commander of the American Legion. Largest Engineering School at Penn State. : One-third of all the engineering graduates of Pennsylvania colleges and universities last year were turned out at the school of engineering at the Pennsylvania State College. In mak- | ing a survey of engineering graduate lists of the larger institutions of the State, W. S. Hoffman, the Penn State registrar, found that they had sent 785 young men into the industrial field, 258 of them from Penn State. Penn State also led other colleges in the number of graduates in elec- trical engineering, in industrial or commercial engineering and in me- chanical engineering. In addition, there are four courses found at Penn State that were not taught at other Pennsylvania institutions, architectur- al engineering, milling engineering and electrochemical engineering. For the year 1922-23 Penn State graduated 258 engineering students; Carnegie Tech ranked second in num- bers with 120; Lehigh University third with 108, closely followed by the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania with 107; the University of Pittsburgh had 91 en- gineering graduates and Bucknell University 62; Lafayette College had 39. Penn State graduated almost as many engineers last year as did Pitt, Penn and Bucknell combined. Spraying Old Orchards Yields Big Returns. The possibilities of the old orchard as an income producer is brought out in the report just issued by H. E. Hodgkiss, extension specialist in in- sect control work at The Pennsylva- nia State College. An old orchard in Lawrence county containing 80 bearing trees has been yielding about 400 bushels of fruit for the past ten years. Only about half of these apples were marketable, the remainder being culls. The average annual income from the orchard has been about $250. Last year this orchard was sprayed under the supervision of the county agent and the college extension de- partment. The trees yielded 700 bush- ' els of apples, 595 of which were good, marketable fruit. The total income was $595 and the cost of spraying was only $152. This left the grower an income of $469. The old orchard yielded an income of $219 above the - average of the ten previous years. By-Product Potash. It appears, from a statement made by an expert in the manufacture of | cement, that potash may be recovered ' as a by-product from that material. It is thought that, under normal con- dition of operation, it may be possi- ble to reduce the rather high cost per ton; therefore it would seem that we have here a source of potash which can compete with the German article under most marked conditions. While the present production of potash from this source is not very great, the po- tential possibilities are enormous, es- pecially when the use of high potash materials for the manufacture of ce- ment is taken into consideration. For some time plants have been installing apparatus for the recovery of by-pro- duct potash.—Washington Star. | | Ships in Canal. Merchant ships to the number of 5,046 passed through the Panama ca- nal during the year 1928. They paid approximately $22,961,000 in tolls. The record in both number of ships and aggregate tolls for the fiscal year, which ended July 1, already had been broken, and new marks now have been set for the calendar year’s traffic. During 1922 the vessels using the wa- terway totaled 2,997 and the tolls ag- gregated $12,573,407. Black and White for the Summer. We will see much black and white for the summer. One of the newest models is a little tailor-made with a white paletot sac in “Grain de Pou- dre” (a sort of poplin), bordered in three rows of black and white check designs, worn over a skirt of the same material and giving a rather amusing effect. Many black dresses have white lingerie collars or ermine trimmings. I expect also to see many black and ! still is ticking away, in Omaha, and _to her oldest surviving male descend- ' were, with the character of the city. . with loose coal dumped around the Clock Built in 1711 Still Runs in Omaha A clock which was 21 years old when George Washington first saw the light of day, and from which the Father of His Country on several occa- sions later took the time, it is said, recording the seconds, minutes and hours, the days of the month, the phases of the moor and the rise and fall of the tides. It is the property of Mrs. Carrie M. Peters. At her death it will descend ant, or in case none survives, to her daughter, Miss Hester H. Peters. The clock, which was built by Felix Owen in Pork, England, in 1711, was purchased by Newton Peters, who seven years later came to America and settled at Jamestown, Va. A few years later, he, with William Byrd, founded the town of Petersburg, Va. At his death in 1725, the clock descended to his son, Absalom, and on his death in 1760 to Zachariah Peters, later an offi- | cer in the American navy. The clock was on exhibition at the |! Centennial exposition at Philadelphia in 1876 as the oldest of the grandfa- ther type, of authentic record, with none to dispute its precedence for age. It was keeping time when Lexington and Concord were fought and within sound of the cannons’ roar when the Revolution closed at Yorktown Octo- | ber, 19, 1781. [It still keeps perfect time.—Omaha Bee. New York Song Birds Now Keep Jazz Hours “In New York even the birds are so- phisticated,” remarked a visitor from out of town, according to the New York Times. “If any one lives here long enough he becomes stamped, as it | “In the hotel where I am stopping one of the dining rooms has a variety of song birds. It is a pretty idea, but see how it works in New York. Up my | way the birds are the first awake in the morning. The poets have had a' lot to say about the habit and a moral lesson has been drawn, something | about getting the first worm. “Now, in my hotel, one of the largest | and most fashionable in town, the | birds sing all night. The music sets the pace. All evening and late into the night you hear their voices. The music and the crowd are there until the small hours of the morning, and sometimes till nearly daylight, and the birds ac- commodate. When the music stops and | the crowd leaves the birds get to sleep. “The dining room is not used until about three in the afternoon and the birds sleep undisturbed. But at the first note of the jazz orchestra they all begin to pipe up. In other words, the early bird has been corrupted in New York so that it sleeps every doy till late afternoon. What kind of a worm does he expect to get at that hour?” Coal Curiosities A block of coal intact, weighing dve and one-half tons, nine feet high and four feet square, was shipped from Eckhart, Md. to Baltimore, whence it goes to Milan, Italy, to be displayed at an industrial exposition. Cutting the coal represented seven days’ work by four men. It was crated sides. | The Chinese lily bulb gayly blos- somed in the window of a coal office. But it was not resting its bulby roots on a few pebbles, in the manner of most Chinese lilies. Instead, it sprang from a bed of coals—small bits of pea coal. And It was fiourishing as smil- ingly as if it had clean white stones - beneath it. A coal mine planted in soil where there has never been coal before will be one of the many wonders of the British Empire exhibition to be held near London this summer. This at-| traction alone will cost half a million dollars. Woman’s Answer Ready When a wife of a London solicitor | was brought into court not long ago | for allowing her auto to obstruct traf- fic in a fashionable shopping thorough- | fare for more than the allotted time, she informed the bench that she did not think the time was unreasonable in view of what she accomplished in that time, for she had bougitt four dresses and three pairs of shoes, and tried all of them on during the period complained of. The chairman of the magistrates laughingly agreed with ! her and made her fine only 20 shillings and costs. People Like Aquariums visitors to the New York aquarium n the last year numbered 2,121,896, a monthly average of 176,825. Boston, Philadelphia, Detroit, Venice, Cal., and San Francisco are the only other American cities that maintain similar institutions. The Steinhart aquarium, lately opened in Golden Gate park, San Francisco, attracted 282,947 persons ir its first month. Strange Coincidence A remarkable case is that of a woman in Paris who has been twice married, and on each occasion het husband has been killed while mo toring home from the church whert the ceremony of marriage was per formed. Saving Bird Lives By equipping a lighthouse witl perches, the British Royal Society for the Protection of Birds has reduced the destruction of birds confused by “the light from nearly a thousand a night to: less than that number a sea: son, white hats. Freak Shadows Appear in Crude Oil Pools In the great oil regions of California pools of crude petroleum are quite commonly seen, says S. Leonard Bas- tin in St. Nicholas. Here the oll is allowed to remain until it is stored away In barrels. One of the curiosities of the district is the freak shadow which these ponds of crude oil pro- duce. If, when the sun is shining brightly, a person stands so that his shadow falls across the surface of the petrcleum, a very remarkable thing happens. Should the individual change his place, strange to say, the first sha- dow remains on the oil, while the per- son casts a second shadow from his new position. The longer the individ- ual has been standing by the oil pond, the longer will the original shadow re- main. The explanation of the mystery Is simple: Under the influence of the hot sun, gas is freely produced in the erude oil. This rises to the surface in the form of millions of bubbles far too minute to be noticed by the human eye. When a shadow Is cast over the , surface of the petroleum the tempera- ture is reduced, and this has the ef- ' fect of checking the production of bub- bles. The result is that the shaded area looks different from the part which is exposed to the sun. | Now, ! when the person moves, the tempera- ' ture of the oil which has been shielded from the sun does not at once get back to its former warmth. time to heat and, until this actually happens, the shadow effect persists, giving the curious appearance which has been described. Chromium’s Great Value As an Alloy of Steel 40 years ago, is now declared to be one of the indispensable elements in mod- ern industry by Clifford B. Bellis in a report on the present uses of the metal published in Chemical and Metallurgi- cal Engineering. Stainless steel and high-speed: steel are two of its many useful applications. For chromium is a sociable sort of element. It is of little value alone, while as an alloy or companion of other metals it does indispensable work. Alloyed with iron it makes a steel that is both hard and tough, and so has made possible the development of many characteristic modern appli- ances. It is estimated that without chrom- | * - “Richest Woman” Lies in an Unmarked Grave The boldest and ablest woman finan- cier of her time, Hetty Green, who died in 1916, stil} remains a unique charac- ter in the annals of the New England village of Bellows Falls, Vt. Curiosity led a correspondent to visit her grave in the churchyard of Imnianuel Episcopal church. A sex- ton’s helper who was working among the graves was glad to point out the desired spot, writes the correspondent. His help was surely needed, for the “richest woman” in the world lies in an unmarked grave! The lot in which there had been five interments, bore in its center one modest granite stone, on which were cut only the names of Ed- ward H. Green, Hetty’s husband, and his father. Between the graves of the two men, “buried north and south,” in acccrdance with the custom of the Quakers, in whose falth Mrs. Green had been reared, lies all that is mortal of the woman whose grasp during her lifetime was upon nearly every large corporation and enterprise of any mag- nitude all over the world. Here in the summer come visitors by the scores. Sometimes there is one from Texas, who claims to be a neigh- bor of “Ned”—Col. Edward H. Green, Mrs. Green's son—sometimes one who, like the New Jersey woman last summer, vents her disappointment in the words, “And have I come Ji ~ miles just to see that?” It takes a little , French Urged to Wash Their Hands Oftener It appears that we do not wash our hands enough. In spite of all modern conveniences—faucets in the kitchen sink, bathrooms and things like that— we are neglecting ourselves. It is real- i lv unpardonable and we deserve the Chromium, a metal almost unknown : solemnity. fum high-speed steel tools, the works of the Ford company at Detroit would have to be seven times their present size, and it is certain that without the use of chrome steel in automobile en- gines the motorcar would be a very heavy and cumbersome contrivance. Airplanes such as we know them would be impossible, Stainless steel is produced by alloy- ing steel with about 15 per cent of : chromium ; and rustproof iron contains about the same proportion, although with a less amount of carbon. Damage by Porcupines Many of the trees on the sample plots in the Coconino National forest which have been studied for a number of years by the Fort Valley forest ex- periment station have been entirely destroyed by porcupines and many ! more are reported injured, announces the forest service, United States De- partment of Agriculture. It is be- lieved that porcupines are making the establishment of Western yellow pine | throughout the forests of the South- west considerably more difficult. Because of the moisture content of the bark, porcupines are very fond of this succulent growth and appear to take great delight in stripping the bark from young trees in their search | for food and moisture. Radio on Delivery Trucsk A Philadelphia bakery haz Installed receiving sets on its delivery trucks. The driver wears his phones at stated intervals and picks up instructions from his manager, and thus makes calls that he otherwise would not be able to make without telephoning and taking extra time. Each truck owned by the company is outfitted with an aerial and receiving set and with a little knowledge of conditions in the city and routes of the various trucks the manager has no difficulty in get- ting into constant touch with his drivers. New Aerial Bomb Powerful Capable of making a crater 150 feet in diameter where it strikes, a new aerial bomb, ten times as large as any used in the World war, has been per- fected by the United States ordnance department and was recently placed on exhibition as showing the aerial war devices used in 1917 and 1918 are already obsolete. It weighs 4,000 pounds and is designed to be carried in a bombing plane. Millions of Coins Defaced Millions of 1-cent and 5-cent pieces are defaced in the United States an- nually, and the number of nickels and pennies returned to be remclited at the Philadelphia mint in five yeors would fill five trains of 56 cars each. holding 50,000 pounds to the car. This esti- mate is made by H. D. Coleman. su- perintendent of melting and refining at this particular mint. Salmon Grow Scarce Three years more; under present conditions, and there will be no more salmon for the canneries. Ruthless competition and piratic methods of canners and fishermen have caused this condition. ills caused by our failure to take hygi- enic precautions. What would we say and what mala. dies would we not suffer if we were without modern comforts? In the Middle Ages the ceremony of washing the hands at midday in the casties was always performed with a touch of It was announced by the blowing of trumpets preceding dinner. A ewer and napkin were presented to the guests hy a maidservant. In those days the fork had not been invented and one ate with one’s fin- gers. And even today we do not think that drumsticks, fried apples, or the like, taste good unless held in the fin- gers. The more reason that the fingers should be clean, Let us wash our hands. The Koran says we should wash them five times a day; and France is the greatest Mo- hammedan power. Let her therefore obey in this particular the precepts of the Koran.—Le Petit Parisien. Chateaus Now City Parks “Many French chateaus, with won- derful old gardens with sun dials, were partially destroyed in the war. Their fire-scarred ruins still stand. In many cases their parks have been taken over, just as they stood, for city gardens, says the Kansas City Star. The artificial water makes the vil- lage pond. The flower beds, without much trouble, have been converted into part of the public gardens. The former owners, dead or dispersed, would hardly know their own houses and grounds if they could see them to- day. This work of transformation is like a sort of object lesson and a very crude one in France. The same proc- ess, more slowly evolving and less ap- parent, is going on elsewhere, too. Great estates are being broken up and sold in Belgium as well as France, and what served for the amusement of a single family is now the part property of perhaps a hundred. Need Water Wagons Water wagons are a real necessity in Asuncion, capital of Paraguay, E. M. Newman told members of the National Geographic society. There is no run- ning water in any of the houses of the 400-year-old town, he declared, and peddlers of water do a thriving busi- ness from door to door. The Indian women of Asuncion smoke not ciga- rettes, but “whackin’ big cheroots,” like their sisters across the world In Burma. The lecture covered a trip to Iguazu falls, the South American Niagara, be- tween Argentina and Brazil, on the upper Parana river. Pictures showed the great volume of water that flows over these cataracts, which are greater than either Niagara or the Victoria falls of Africa.—Detroit News. Few Old-Time Seamen ‘With yards braced sharply to star poard an old-time barkentine lay in the harbor at Baltimore while her skipper scoured the waterfront for old: time seamen capable of handling a ship of her type. younger generation can handle g schooner, but a barkentine is different. Protect Purchases More than 38 per cent of the peopl of the United States are now protect: ed by state supervision in the pur chase and sale of real estate, accord: ing to a survey of real estate license laws made by the National Associa- tion of Real Estate Boards.—American Lumberman. Poisoned Fish The theory by which English chan nel fishermen explain their poor catches, is that the fish have been poisoned by the dumping in the sea of unused munitions. Small quantities of arsenic have been found in oysters on the east and south coast. | | { R.' The seamen of the | SH - FARM NOTES. —Milk is one of the best feeds for baby chicks. . It can be fed in the ' form of whole milk, buttermilk, sour i milk, condensed or powdered milk. | . —Garden specialists recommend do- ing away with the old fashioned gar- | den with beds and paths. Throw it ‘all into one bed. Plant and sow in long rows and use a modern wheel ! hoe to cultivate. This method insures greater returns with less work. | —The blood of new. born calves ‘ contains no immune bodies to protect . against infectious diseases. The first milk of the cow is rich in immune | bodies and should be fed to calves as | soon as possible after birth to afford protection against infectious diseases. —All machines are held together with bolts which wear, break, come : loose and fall out. Keep a supply of extra bolts, nuts, and washers on hand to safeguard your machine equipment against delay. Now is a good time to give the machinery a thorough in- spection. —Are your garden tools in shape? This is the time of the year to repair and sharpen them. Are you using the best labor saving hand tools? You have a large assortment to choose from. There is a tool for every need and good tools make gardening a pleasure. —This is a good time of the year to plan for a supplement of green feed or silage for the pasture when it be- gins to get short and dry in August. Oats and peas, alfalfa, millet, second crop clover, and early corn are some of the crops which can be grown for green feed for these months. . —Lack of humus in the soil is al- ways an indication of poor soil. With- out a liberal amount of humus, crops cannot be grown, no matter how much plant food the soil may contain. It is a waste of time and money to use commercial fertilizers on soil that is deficient in vegetable matter. —When a concrete walk or floor is laid, cover it with dirt or manure and keep it moist several days. This pre- vents rapid evaporation of water and results in a better piece of work. Use a wood float instead of a steel trowel to smooth down the concrete surface. A steel trowel makes the surface too smooth and slippery. —Asparagus is the earliest green vegetable the garden can produce. Every home garden should have an asparagus bed. Fifty roots will pro- vide sufficient for a small family and 100 roots for a large family. A new circular on how to grow asparagus can be secured by writing to W. B. Nissley, vegetable garden specialist at State College. —Farm labor is hard to get and high priced in many localities. Every large and small gardener or truck grower should study closely the field of labor-saving machinery and tools. Profits at the close of this year will largely be determined by the cost of production and not by the markei price alone. Labor saving tools will help to lower the cost of production. —It is estimated that an ordinar dairy cow gives off from her skin anc lungs, ten pounds of wate each day In order that a dairy barn housing 2( cows may not have mcisture condens: ed on its walls, there must be a con tinuous air movement through it t: remove 200 pounds of water daily. 2 ventilating flue 24 inches squai should be large enough for a herd © this size. —For hay, a medium season, larg: growing bean, such as the Wiison Virginia or Ohio 9035, is recommend ed. Early varieties such as Ito Sa: Manchu will not give large yields For the northern half of Pennsylva nia, Elton is a good variety and is : little earlier than the Wilson. Th large, late varieties such as the Mam moth Yellow are too coarse and lat in maturing for best results. —If your birds become thin or los control of their legs, it may be cause by the presence of round worms o tape worms in the intestines. Hold post-mortem examination and if th parasites are present, treat the floc with nicotine sulphate capsules. Trea each bird individually by fitting a cap sule into the end of a piece of rubbe tubing, pushing the tubing down int the bird’s crop, and then ejecting th capsule by means of a wire plunge Follow this treatment the next day b dosing the flock with Epsom salts a Be rate of one pound per hundre irds. ~ —Lack of lime is one of the chie causes of failures with alfalfa an clover. Both require a sweet soi Send a sample of soil from the fiel you intend to seed with alfalfa or cl¢ ver to your county agent for a lim | requirement test. —Have yau arranged to supp! your “porkers” with plenty of forag this summer? For a unit of 20 to ¢ spring pigs, one acre of alfalfa or or acre of clover, with one acre of raj for July and August grazing, or tw one-acre plots of Dwarf Essex rap make a good forage combination. Tl j first rape plot is for early sprin i grazing and plot two gives fresh fo | age after number one gives out. Pl { number one can then be sown aga : for late pasture. —While the lamb crop on mo farms in Pennsylvania is just arri , ing, the “hot-house” lambs produce at The Pennsylvania State College e: perimental station have been sold ar consumed. The last consignment this mutton delicacy has just be: shipped. Sixty five of these winter lam’ were produced by the animal hu bandry department at the college ti: year. The lambs were born betwe: November 14 and January 1st. Fo ty-five of them, weighing about pounds each, were marketed at an a erage price of $12 a head. The 1 maining 20 were kept for breedi stock. The production of lambs at tI rather unusual season is a part of experiment being conducted at t college to determine the best coml nation of breeds to use in hot-hou lamb production. The cross used t! past year was Delaine Merino ew with Southern and Dorset rams. T experiment will be continued for se eral years comparing Dorset: Meri ewes for this specialized type of lax production.