Bellefonte, Pa. November 28, 1924. Ey - Recompense for Age. The world is young today, Forget the gods are old; Forget the years of gold, When all the months were May. A little “flower of Love” Is ours—without a root; Without the end of fruit, Yet take the scent thereof There may be hope above There may be rest beneath; We see them not—but Death Is palpable—and Love. WHAT THE AMERICAN RED CROSS HAS DONE. The American Red Cross, represent- ing the American people, carries out the purposes for which it was organ- ized and chartered by Congress through a group of unified service. * Since the Armistice it has expended $50,000,000 for services to men of the army and navy and world war veter- ans. It is now assisting more than 100,000 disabled veterans, and their families, each month. To 180,000 sol- diers, sailors and marines on active duty it is giving the same help it gave during the war. It has 41,000 nurses enrolled for emergency—war, disas- ter, epidemic. : In the past forty-three years it has expended $33,000,000 for disaster re- lief; it has directed or participated in relief work in 220 disasters the past year. Abroad it represents the American people in works of mercy when great catastrophes cause abnormal suffer- ing. SVithin the year 974 Red Cross pub- lic health nurses have aided in the care of the sick, guarded the health of children and fostered understanding of personal and community hygiene. Sixty-five thousand women and girls have taken courses in home hy- giene and care of the sick; 135,000 children and 10,000 women have been taught the importance of proper use of foods. More than 49,000 men, women and youths have been trained to rescue and revive the drowning; 14,500 com- pleted the course in first aid during the year and 150,000 were reached with demonstrations by the Red Cross first aid car. Volunteer workers have produced in the past year 150,000 garments, 1,- 000,000 surgical dressings and 87,000 pages of Braille; have made 15,000 motor calls and fed 22,000 persons in canteen service. In the Junior Red Cross 5,452,745 enrolled school children are learning the value of service. With the chil- dren of forty other countries they are creating bonds of mutual friendshi and understanding. In 500 communities the Red Cross chapter is the only family welfare agency. This is your Red Cross—these are your services. Give your confidence and support through membership. Trial List for December Court. While the December term of court, which will convene on the 8th, will not be nearly so large nor exciting as the September term, there already is a fair sized list of criminal cases on the docket, as well as the following civil list: H. L. Orr vs. Mrs. Julia Peters and Ed- ward Peters, her husband. Ejectment. Margaret Ellen Baumgardner vs. Cathe- rine Baumgardner with notice to George L. Baumgardner, John S. Baumgardner, C. C. Baumgardner and Alice Herman, terre tenants. Sci fa sur judgment. James H. Cullen vs. Charles H. Row- land. Trespass. ! L. E. Kidder vs. George H. Raines. sumpsit. Samantha A. Resides vs. Johnson War- ner. Trespass. Kassab Bros. vs. H. A. Mark Motor Co. Trespass. P. R. Rupp vs. sit. John Watkins Assumpsit. J. H. Rockefeller and Trustee of the Bird Coal and Iron Co. vs. David Cham- bers. Assumpsit. Anna W. Keichline vs. Thomas J. Deck- er and Colonel G. Decker, trading and do- ing business as Decker Bros. Assumpsit. The Beckley-Ralston Co. vs. the H. A. Mark Motor Co. Assumpsit. John C. Marks vs. The Penn Mutual Fire Ins. Co. Assumpsit. As- J. V. Foster. Assump- vs, James L. Leathers. AARONSBURG. Mrs. Jacob Meyer is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Lee Brooks, near Spring Mills. Mr. and Mrs. Sinie Hoy, of Belle- fonte, spent Wednesday with the for- mer’s mother, Mrs. Hezekiah Hoy, at the Lutheran parsonage. On Tuesday Roland Young and family moved from the “little brick,” on Main street to the house recently vacated by Samuel Roberts. Mrs. Harry Kuhn and = daughter Margaret returned to their home in Williamsport on Sunday, after visit- ing at the Rowe and Kuhn homes. Mr. and Mrs. Francis Gimberling and son Francis, of Selinsgrove, spent the week-end at the Reitz home and, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Henry Reitz, motored to Petersburg on Sun- day. . George Fisher opened the butcher- ing season on Monday by killing six large porkers. Mrs. Ellen Stuart, Miss Margaret Lytle and Mrs, H. B. Shattuck, of State College, and Miss Anna Sweeney were guests at the fine dinner served. ——An earthquake travels at the rate of between 470 and 530 feet per second. ——The “Watchman” gives all the news all. the time... iri, tein i Perfume’s Many Uses 3’hroughout the Ages Perfuine, which we define as a sweet fragrance, was one of the most useful and interesting of ancient commodi- ties. It was used for innumerable things, but mostly for religious and medicinal purposJs. : The queen of Sheba is said to have given to King Solomon an abundance of spices and wood of which perfume was made. These were reported us weing of very high value. In the ruins of Pompeii were found large, costly bottles of perfume. Oriental ladies also used great quan- tities of costly perfume to preserve their personal charm. When the knights came home from the crusades. they brought their sweethearts expen- sive bottles of perfume from the East. During the reign of Charles II the “merry monarch,” hair powder was Iin- troduced and continued to be fashion able for over 200 years. Perfume was so popular during the reign of Louis XV that a different per- fume was used each day in certajr Y“ouseholds. Alcoholic perfumes were first intro- duced during the Fourteenth century when Elizabeth, queen of Hungary, in- vented the celebrated Hungary water. with which she is said to have retained her beauty until she was past seventv vears of age. Perfumes were often used for other than their sweet. fragrant odor. Spicy perfumes were used by the ancient Hebrews for fumigating their beds and embalming dead hodies. People were executed on piles of hurning aromatic wood. In India perfumes were used in the form of incense. They were of- fered as sacrifices in their temples and upon their altars. It was the custom for priests to color their faces witk sintment of saffron. L The use of perfume for medicinal purposes was very widely practiced. Rose water formed the basis for many remedies, while during plagues per- fume was used extensively as a pre ventive. . The savage and barbarous nations, as well as the civilized and refined, used perfume extravagantly. African chiefs anointed their bodies with It— nerhaps as a sunburn protection. : Oldest Known Pen Among the recent discoveries at Kish is a great treasure in the shape of the oldest known pen. Professor Langdon, the director of the Weld- Blundell and Field museum archeologi- cal expedition, who was delighted at finding this bone stylus for writing cuneiform, says that many scholars had vainly tried to reconstruct the in- strument. This styius is a triumph of simplicity. It is a bone, six Inches long, with a triangular. cross section and pared ends. After a little prac- tice Professor Langdon was able to. mgke cuneiform inscriptions on clay with fair rapidity. Professor Lang- don considers that the mound 20 miles southeast of Nippur may be identified as the site of the city of Isin. Isin was the capital of a dynasty which ruled over a great part of Babylonia after that of Ur from about 2280 B. C. to about 2050 B. C. ’ Pant Improves Value of Pelts Going contrariwise to manufacturers of preparations that make human hair lie close and sleekly to the head, a chemical concern which makes a spe- cialty of things for the fur trade has brought out a preparation to make the hair of certain short-haired pelts stand up. It is meant for use particularly on natural muskrat, marmot and Hudson seal. In addition to making the hair stand up, the preparation is said to add to the luster of the pelt without affecting the color. The same concern has brought out a preparation for glossing such furs as Persian lamb. caracul and broadtail. It is claimed for this preparation that it imparts a fine gloss to the pelt without disturb- ing the curl, and also that it dries quickly, ‘Appropriate “What a sublime scene!” rhapsodized 4 feminine tourist from the North. “The frowning grandeur of yonder for- est-clad hills stretching away for miles fills me with reverential awe. For ages that great mount over there has stood indifferent to tempest and sunshine alike. Ah, how weak is man; how mighty nature! But language fails me. Cannot you think of some- thing appropriate to say, Mr. John- son?” “Well, I reckon ‘You bet! ig just about the proper remark, mom,” re- plied Gap Johnson of Rumpus Ridge, who was showing off the region.— Kansas City Star. Oil From Locusts A plague of locusts brought a new dustry to Bocholt, Germany, The insects have been gathered by the ton and oil extracted from thelr bodies. The oil is intended for alrplane mo- tors and is said to be particularly adapted for winter flying because it does not congeal in low temperatures. Good, fat locusts retailed at about one-fourth of a cent for a pound. After the insects passed through’ the oil extraction process the refuse was used for fertilizer. . - Coconut Just Missed My narrowest escape, as far as 1 know, occurred last winter when I was at West Palm Beach, Fla. I was passing under a coconut palm tree, when one of the nuts fell immediately behind me. Coconuts weigh about seven pounds and one falling from a height ‘of 25 feet and striking ome on the top of the head might mean seri- ous intury.—Chicago Journal ARG FLA ay inn SAYS NOTHING CAN. SUPPLANT THE FARM Synthetic F. vods. Not Practi- cable, Chemist Declares Predictions often are made that some day we shall have all our food made in chemical factories, out of air and .water and carbonic-acid gas; that even farming soon is to be a thing of the past, and that chemically prepared food will come to us In tablets that we shall nibble. These notions are mere guesses, un- sound economically. The farm is not to be supplanted by the chemical fac- tory, writes Dr. Ellwood Hendrick, noted chemist, in the Popular Science Monthly, althouga the farm already is beginning to draft the chemical and biological laboratories for its own pur poses. Even if we chemists could make tasty and nutritious foods of inani- mate matter, instead of ¢hings that have been through the process of life, of things that have grown on the farm —and its a fact that we don't know how to do it—there isn’t power enough available to make the food for the world In factories. We should require coal or water power or fuel oil, while the plants and trees use the power of light direct from the sun for their growth. We cannot use light for pow- er. Every green leaf has us beaten ir this respect. Again, our internal organs are so constructed that if we undertook to live on tablets without the necessary rougnage or coarseness of food they would collapse and the whole world soon would come down with an inter- national bowel complaint. Let's keep our feet on the ground. Men of sci- ence have to do so. But don’t be dis- appointed. Science, working along practical lines. already is accomplish- ing amazing things in solving our food problems. It has learned to extract elements necessary to plant growth from the air, from the sewage of cities, from the smoke of factory chimneys. It is conserving our crops through the development of the can- ning industry. It has taugnt the bak- ers to produce better and cheaper bread. It has helped crops by destroy- ing insect pests. It has studied foods in the laboratory and taught us how to balance our diet according to the requirements of our bodies. ' Science does not move ahead with a brass band, with trumpets and drums; its progress results from hard, slow work, with here and there 1 a happy reward. Absent-Mindedness Plus A Beech Grove merchant was laugao: ing over the absent-minded customer, whe recently sent her little girl to the store with instruction to stay there until her mother telephoned an or- der. After the child had been there an hour or so, the mother called and said she had forgotten all about send- ing ner. “It reminds me,” said the merchant, “of the time when I was a boy. We lived about a quarter of a mile from the town. It was our custom to walk to the village in the evening to get the mail and loaf a while at the gen- eral store. One evening dad was very tired and instead of walking, hitched up the old mare and drove into town. About nine o'clock just as I had taken off my shoes to go to bed, dad came whistling up the front walk. . “Why, dad.” I said, “didn’t you drive to town this evening?” : A queer expression came over his (ace and in a tone of great authority he said, ‘Go right down there and get that horse.’ Then I wished I had kept still.”—Indianapolis News. Dust Used as Evidence fhe French police’ are making a microscopic examination of dirt found upon the clothing of suspected crimi- nals. After cross-examination the sus- pects are stripped of their clothing, whose surface dust is first examined under a strong miscroscope. A vacuum cleaner is next applied to draw out other dirt into a pan. In some in- stances heating 1s used to separate foreign matter. From the dirt thus se- cured the detectives determine whether the suspect has been telling the truth. One murderer tried to prove an alibi by saying that he had slept in an open field the night of the crime. Micro- scopic examination of his clothing showed that he had slept in a quarry. A carpenter was connected with a mur- der by means of sawdust found on a plece of overall which the victim had tern from his assailant and which was found at the scene of the crime. The value of the plan has been in breaking down the bravado of criminals, They frequently confess when shown that their first stories were lies. Origin of Paved Roads dur modern dustless concrete roads may be sald to have originated in a dusty limestone highway of England, says Popular Sclence Monthly. Just 100 years ago Joseph Aspdin, a mason of Leeds, England, discovered that If the dust.of limestone roads was mixed | with” clay ‘and burned ‘at a high tem- pérgture the resulting mass when ground would produce 'a material that hardened when mixed with mortar. This substance looked like building stone quarried at Portland, so he called it Portland cement. | ) i Riches for University fhe Tuiversity of Texas may be- come one of the wealthiest institutions of learning in the world asa result of the recent discovery of oll on its lands. . Under- contract “with the oll companies ‘the university will receive ‘a ‘one-eighth royalty. Beginning of Empire in Great Northwest Large looms the Columbia river in the history: of our country. It was the key that unlocked the great Northwest and added three states to the Union— the only portion of the United States acquired by right of discovery, posses- glon and settlement, says the Nation's Business. It was in the mouth of the Columbia that Captain Gray of Boston sailed his ship Columbia in 1792 and raising the Stars and Stripes, took possession of the Northwest in the name of the United States. Here, where the mighty Columbia tumbles its waters into the Pacific, Lewis and Clark, first to carry our flag across the continent, reached their western destinati>n in the winter of 1805-06. Another six years saw the Astor- Hunt expedition, traveling by land and sea, establish at the mouth of the Co- lumbia the first permanent American settlement on the Pacific coast. Then followed the outriders of em- pire—the missionary, the trapper, the adventurer. > Came 1843! Thrilled by the story of the paradise beyond the mountains and fired ‘by the militant cry of “54-40 or fight!” of Senator Thomas Hart Benton, the ox-drawn covered wagon trains started moving westward on the greatest migration of all history, bring- ing within a little more than a decade 200,000 settlers who established homes, schools and churches, founded an em- | pire, and saved the great Northwest ‘or the Union, Key Is One of Oldest of Religious Symbols When you next unlock the door of your home or office, reflect a moment upon the ancient and historic symbol- ism of the key. If you ever have the opportunity to examine the images of the Egyptian deities you will notice in the hands of some of them a cross with a circular handle. It represents the Ankh, or key of life, one of the oldest of all religious symbols, denot- ing the power to open and close the doors of heaven. The key had a magi- cal meaning for the Greeks and Ro- mans. Their gods were often given the title of key-bearer, as, for example, Janus, the god of gates, who was sup- posed to unlock the doors of war and peace. In early Christian history the symbol of the key was associated with St. Peter, with his two keys of gold and iron. In the Middle ages the key was used to assist in the identification of guilty persons. If, for instance, a theft had been committed, a key was laid on the open page of a Bible, when it was supposed to move towards the culprit. Wedding rings had their origin in the key presented to the Ro- ' man bride by her husband, as a sign of her authority in his household. Proof of Smoked Ham That the proof of the smoked ham 18 in the smell is the conclusion reached by the wholesale meat pack- ers, as a result of years of experience, according to a story recently pub- lished. This ham-smelling business, moreover, as might be expected, is of a nature that, to become an expert at it, requires years of training. A map experienced in this line of work, how- ever, is able to test 2,000 or 3,000 hams a day, and in some of the large houses, where many thousands are turned out daily, there may be a regular corps of them employed. Upen the infalli- bility of the judgment of these men, indeed, the reputation of such con- cerns largely depends. Certainly there are more ways of making a living than the average individual realizes!— Christian Science Monitor. The South Sea Bubble Speculation at its wildest was shown in the “South Sea Bubble,” a $50,000, 000 project launched by Robert Hart- ley, earl of Oxford, England, to de- velop trade monopoly with Spain about 1711. When Spain, after the treaty of Utrecht, refused to epen her commerce to England, the privileges which the South Sea boasted of getting became worthless. In spite of that stock rose to $1,000 a share, largely through speculation, until Sir John Blunt, one of the leaders, sold out, and thousands were beggared with the drop of the stock. Fraud was dis- closed and tne company paid emly 33 per cent. Origin of Name “Canada” According to Father Hennepin, the name Canada was derived from a cor- ruption of the Spanish words Capo de Nada, or Cape of Nothing, which the early voyagers gave to the scene of their discoveries when, under a convic- tion of its utter barrenness and inutil- ity, they were about abandoning it in disgust, says the Detroit News. It has been conjectured by late his ¢orians, with greater appearance of probability, that Canada is a modifica- tion of the Spanish werd signifying “a passage” because the Spaniards thought they could find a passage to India through Canada. Explaining Bishop’s Garb That the modern bishep weirs the Zarb he does only because it is the relic of the days long ago when a bishop had to ride about his dio.ese in all manner of weather in order ' make the regular visits to his ver) large flock is a theory advanced- in Englang. The apron is a relic of the riding apron, it is maintained, sud the cords on the hut were once hat cords ‘to protect aghinst high winds, wud the breeches aud leggings are still fatniliar In thé garb of the eqfiestrian Great French Dictator “Typical of His Race | Napoleon's character and personal- ity are still under the microscope. One’ of the best of recent analysis of the great commander is “Napoleon,” by Herbert A. L. Fisher, at one time Brit- ish minister of education. Mr. Fisher has made the French dictator luminous by his phrases. Here, for instance, is a passage on Napoleon as a young man, portraying him as a turbulent example of the people from which he sprang: “The Corsican bore a character for sobriety, courage and hardihood. Hate was for him a virtue, vengeance a duty, pardon ap infamy. He felt the call of the clan like a Highlander, an Albanian or a Zulu, and was full of the pride and self-assurance common to gallant men who have never me* a superior. “Vigilant and astute in his judgment of character, he was a master of dis- simulation save where passion broke in and spoiled the reckoning. : “His standard of honor forbade theft, enjoyed hospitality and tolerated woman as the drudge of the household and field. In general his deportment was noted as grave and social. He was sparing of amusement, would sit at cards without a word and suffer torture without a cry; but when the seal of silence was once broken, lan- guage would stream from him like a torrent, an index of that uneasy, impa- tient, quarrelsome energy which wus * common attribute of the race.” Probably Girl Never Forgot That Lesson - Stories have a way of accumulating about the memory of famous wits, and Dean Swift was no exception to this general rule, according to the San Francisco Argonaut. A hoard of Swift anecdotes recently unearthed in- cludes the illustration of the dean's mania for closed doors. Swift's house- keeper hired his servants, but when they came into his employ he always told them there were only:two rules to observe. One was always to shut the door after entering a room, the other, always to close the door after ‘leaving the room. “On one occasion a maid asked the dean’s permission to attend her sis- ter’s wedding, when he not only gave his permission, but lent her a horse upon which to make the journey, and another servant to accompany her. In the excitement of the moment the un- fortunate girl forgot to close the door after her, and Swift, allowing time for her to get well away upon her journey, sent another servant post- haste to bring her back. In fear and trembling the poor girl presented her- self before the dean, asking him what he wanted her for. ‘Only to shut the door,” was the reply, ‘after which you can resume your journey.'” The Lasso Our word lasso is from the Spanish 1azo, meaning a snare. The lasso is a rope from 60 to 100 feet in length with a slip-noose at one end. It is used in the Spanish and Portuguese parts of America and in the United States and Canadian West for catch- ing wild horses and cattle. When not in use the lasso, called “rope” in the West, is coiled at the right of the sad- dle. in front of the rider. When an animal is to be caught the rider, gal- loping after it, swings the coiled lasso round his head and. casts it straight forward in such a manner that the noose settles over the head or round the legs of the pursued animal, which is speedily brought down. In order to become skillful at throwing the lasso great practice is required, and, if pos- sible, instruction by an expert. Concerning Parrots Of the 20 commonly known va rieties of parrots, the most talkative ones, according to George Bruce Chap- man, head of a London house that has imported and sold the birds for more than a hundred years, are the Brazilian Amazon and the African Gray. The former has bright blue and yellow feathers and red tips to the shoulders and flight wings. The African Gray has a red tail. In Bra- zil natives watch the nesting places and’ when the fledglings are a few days old, the feathers of one of the wings are trimmed. Later these birds are easily captured, placed on perches and taken to the nearest village. Fan- clers say that the birds should be fed twice a day, and with proper care will live 30 years. Silk Worms Weave Dyes A French scientist ‘has succeeded in making silkworms weave dress dyes into their own output. He is re- ported to have injected dyes into the cocoon and the result was colored toreads being spun. Not only the or- dinary shades, but the tones and hues that are made from combining various tints, are produced by the little work- ers receiving treatment by this proe- ess. Silk is usually dyed after it has been wound and twisted into floss. but the new method is expected to grow fit in colors that will not fade. A Conundrum In moving and settling’ down the Dodge family had subsisted on short rations, and one morning Mrs. Dodge found herself facing’ an unknewn defieit. “Mary,” she said to the maid-of-all. ~vork., “what is there in the store- room?” ' “Every blessed thing is given ow out the tea an’ éoffee,” Mary informed her, “an’ ‘sure they avill, if they last long enough.”— Everybody's” Magazine, 1b i ‘ i FARM NOTES. —Delicate experiments by goven ment scientists have shown that frui’ | breathe,” and ‘that cold- storage delay ripening by causing them to breat} more slowly than normally. —There has been so much ridicu attached to the goat, for some w known reason, that people have bee slow to take up the breeding of th valuable animal. In the far wester States they are better understood ar great success is being made in tt milk goat dairy business. —Too great a heat while smokin cured pork will cause it to lose ii color which salt peter imparted j curing. It will also cause a loss i weight and a dull, dark appearance 1 the product. To avoid this, use gree wood, in a fire outside of the smoke house and allow smoke to ent through a pipe. —DMuch old dried fruit will be foun hanging on the trees at this season « the year. This is especially true peach and plum trees. In nearly a orchards almost every tree contair from a dozen to a hundred or more «¢ these fruit “mummies.” They are fu of the spheres of fruit disease germ and will spoil next year’s fruit if n¢ removed this winter. —A sample of white lead paint of tained from a Philadelphia hardwa: company was recently analyzed by th State Bureau of Foods and Chemistr and found to be adulterated with pig ments not lead to the extent of aj proximately 85 per cent. The product from which this samp] was taken, was manufactured by th Senora Paint Works, Long Islan city, New York, and labelled “Stanc ard White Lead Ground in Refine Linseed Oil.” Users of paint shoul be cautious about purchasing an white lead put out by this compan) states Dr. J. W. Kellogg. Any on suspecting adulteration of this prc duct should ask the State Bureau c Foods and Chemistry to have an off cial sample taken by one of its 18 fiel agents. —Food cheaters in Pennsylvani paid the State $2,045 during Octobe for their illegal acts. Director Jame Foust, Bureau of Foods and Chemis try, reports that the heaviest fine came from retailers who sold stal eggs for fresh ones and milk low i butter fat. The prosecutions are th results of vigorous steps taken b food law officials to eradicate cheater and defrauders. At this time of the year, there i great temptation to sell cold storag and stale eggs for strictly fresh ones The State is determined that, whe consumers pay 70 cents a dozen fo fresh eggs, they shall get strietl fresh eggs and not stale ones. ; Forty-nine cases were found dur ing October in Allegheny, Beave: Chester, Delaware and Philadelphi counties where stale eggs were bein; i sold for fresh ones. In every case, th | guilty party was prosecuted. | —Several years of wheat market ling investigation made by the Stat | Department of Agriculture show tha iin some Pennsylvania counties a { much as 90 per cent. of the grain i | discounted in the terminal market | because it contains garlic. During th i past few years approximately one half of Pennsylvania-grown wheat ha graded garlicky which means tha growers do not get ‘as much fron their crop as they would if it did no contain garlic. Dr. E. M. Gress, State botanist, be lieves that November is a good mont! in which to fight garlic on the farm He advises plowing ground late in th fall, preferably after November 1f deep enough to cover completely th: top of the garlic plants. This plow ing destroys the plants which hav grown from the soft bulbs and th aerial bulblets. If the plowing is don late, the strength of the bulbs are i: the plant and the turning of the plan under will destroy both the plant an the bulb. If the plowing is done to: early in the fall, the strength of th: bulb has not yet ascended into th: plant and consequently, the plant ma; continue to grow after the plowing i. done, thus defeating the purpose o fall plowing. : If the tips of the garlic plants ar not completely covered, they may con tinue to grow after the plowing ha: been done which, of course, does no make the eradication effective. Fal plowing is a very essential part, Dr Gress concludes, in a system of garlic eradication and the plowing should be done with special care. . : Crib Corn Carefully.—When crib bing ear corn this fall itis a goo plan to sort out the Boft ears for im mediate feeding. ’ Ventilating by means of tile placed diagonally acros: the crib will also help to keep tht cribbed corn from spoiling. 3 Get Some Soil Now.—Before the ground freezes, tak@ to some protect ed place the soil to be used for plan’ growing flats next spring. Clean uj ‘all refuse in the garden and plow thi: fall if practicable. Mulch Shrubs Later.—Do not make the mistake of mulching shrubs anc perennial borders too early. It is bet ter to allow frost to get into the ground and then mulch during Decem. r. Order Chicks Early.—The poultry man who desires chicks for nex spring delivery should be looking around for a ough breeder who sells chicks of good qu@lity. Many a mar is forced to go without chicks or tc accept later hatched chicks than de sired because he has been too slow ir placing his order... Place your orde: early and you will receive what you want. i pe Feed Hogs Tankage.—Tankage i: not a substitute for corn but shoulc be used to supplement it in hog feed: ing. It replaces a large part of corr and insures satisfactory and econom- ical gains which the farmer with ¢ short ‘crop of corn cannot afford tc neglect. = At the present price of grain, tankage is probably the cheap- est feed considering results obtained Spraying Peas.—Checking up or sprayed and unsprayed potatoes shows the former yielded more and are not affected with late blight rot. These are two points to remember in grow: ing the 1925 potato crops. ena reas fp lim se iret . —Get your job work done here.