ILLUSTRATIONS BY CLARK AGNEW, Copyright b, Doubs ght BY Ce. WNU Service, (Continued from last week.) SYNOPSIS APTEBR §i2hirogucing “So Big” k DeJong) in his infancy. And his ther, Selina DeJong, daughter of meon Peake, gambler and gentleman $ rune er life, to young woman- in Chicago in 1888, has been un- conventional, somewhat seamy, but generally piloyakis, t school her Chum ie Sulle, Hempe eay hter of 8 empel, mecn is EE tn a quarrel that is not his own, and Selina, nineteen years old and Tactically destitute, becomes a school- ras er. butcher. CHAPTER II—Selina secures a posi- tion as teacher at the High Prairie hool, in the outskirts of Chicago, living at the home of a truck farmer, laas Pool. In Roelf, twelve years 1d, son of Klaas, Selina perceives a j5ares spirit, a lover of beauty, like reelf. CHAPTER II1.—The monotonous life of a country school-teacher at that ime, is Selina’'s, brightened somewhat y the companionship ot the sensitive, artistic boy Roelf. CHAPTER IV.—Selina hears gossip ncerning the affection of the “Widow Be rich and good-looking, for Pervus DeJong, poor truck farmer. who is insensible to the widow's at- ractions. For a community “sociable” elina Jrepares a lunch basket, dainty, ut not of ample proportions, which Is “auctioned,” according to custom. The Soannes f the hineh 23 a: sion, and in a pen un t, n Jecom 8 spir, ted, Fone aig ROE ng it for §10, a ridiculously high price. Over their lunch basket, whic elina and DeJong share together, the schoo]- teacher arranges to instruct the good- patyred farmer, whose education has een neglect OE CHAPTER V.—Propinquity, in thelr eitions of “teacher” and ‘pupil,” and elina’s loneliness in her uncongenial urroundings, lead to mutual affection. ervus DeJong wins Selina's consent to be his wife. CHAPTER VI.—Selina becomes Mrs. Delong, a “farmer's wife,” with all the hardships unavoidable at that time. Dirk is born. Selina (of Vermont stock, businesslike and shrewd) har plans for building up the farm, which are ridiculed by her husband. Maartje Pool, Klaas’ wife, dies, and after the requisite decent interval Klaas marries the “Widow Paarlenberg.” The boy Roelf, sixteen years old now, leaves his home, to make his way to France @nd study, his ambition being to be- oome a sculptor. CHAPTER VIL-—Dirk is eight years old when his father dies. Selina, faced with the necessity of making a living for her boy and herself. rises to the occasion, and, with Dirk, takes a truck- Joad of vegetables to the Chicago mar- ket. A woman selling in the market place is an innovation frowned upon. CHAPTER VIIL.—As a disposer of the vegetables from her truck Selina is a flat failure, buyers being shy of dealing with her. To a commission dealer she sells part of her stock. On the way home she peddles from door to door, with indifferent success. A oliceman demands her license. She as none, and Suring the ensuing alter- cation Selina's girlhood chum, Julie Hempel, now Julie Arnold, recognizes er. CHAPTER IX.—August Hempel, risen to prominence and wealth in the busi- ness world, arranges to assist Selina in making the farm something more of a jayne proposition. Selina grate- fully accepts his help, for Dirk's sake. “You want to drain and tile. Plant high-grade stuff. You got to have a man on the place that knows what's what, not this Rip Van Winkle we saw in the cabbage field. New horses. A wagon. 1 will get you the horses, a bargain, at the yards.” He took out a ‘long flat check book. ‘He began writ- ing in it with a pen that he took from his pocket—some sort of marvelous pen that seemed already filled with Ink and that you unscrewed at the top and then screwed at the bottom. He squinted through his cigar smoke, the check book propped on his knee. He tore off the check with a clean rip. “For a starter,” he said. He held it out to Selina. “There now!” exclaimed Julie, in triumphant satisfaction. That was more like it. Doing something. But Selina did not take the check. She sat very still in her chair, her hands folded. “That isn't the regular way,” she said. August Hempel was screwing the top on his fountain pen again. “Regular way? for what?” “I'm borrowing this money, not tak- ing it. Oh, ges, I am! I couldn't get along without it. I realize that now, after yesterday. Yesterday! But in five years—seven—I’ll pay it back.” Then, at a half-uttered protest from Julie, “That’s the only way I'll take it. It’s for Dirk. But I'm going to earn it —and pay it back. I want a—" she was being enormously businesslike, and unconsciously enjoying it—“a—an I. O. U. A promise to pay you back just as —as soon as I can. That's business, isn’t it? And I'll sign it.” “Sure,” sakd Aug Hempel, and un- screwed his fountain pen again. “Sure that’s business.” Very serious, he scribbled again, busily, on a piece or paper. A year later, when Selina had learned many things, among them that simple and compound interest on money loaned are not mere problems devised to fill Duffy’s arithmetic in her school-teaching days, she went to August Hempel between laughter and tears. “You didn’t say one word about in- terest, that day. Not a word. What a little fool you must have thought me.” “Between friends,” protested August Hempel. ZS oh | - NN Td But—*“No,” Selina insisted. est.” “lI guess I better start me a bank pretty soon if you keep on so business- like.” “Inter- Ten years later he was actually the controlling power in the Yards & Rang- er's bank. And Selina had the origi- nal I. O. U. with its “Paid in Full. Aug Hempel,” carefully tucked away with other keepsakes that she foolishiy treasured—ridiculous scraps that no one but she would have understood or | valued—a small school slate such as | little children use (the one on which she had taught Pervus to figure and parse) ; a dried bunch of trilliums: a bustled and panniered wine-red cash- mere dress, absurdly old-fashioned; a letter telling about the Infanta Eulalie of Spain and signed Julie Hempel Ar- nold; a pair of men's old side-hoots with mud caked on them: a crude sketch, almost obliterated now, done on a torn scrap of brown paper and showing the Haymarket with the wag- ons vegetable-laden and the men gathered beneath the street-flares, and the patient farm horses—Roelf's child- ish sketch. Chapter X If those vague characteristics called (variously) magnetism, manner, grace, distinction, attractiveness, fascination, go to make up that nebulous quality known as charm; and if the possessor of that quality is accounted fortunate in his equipment for that which the class-day orators style the battle of life, then Dirk DeJong was a lucky lad and life lay promisingly before him. Undoubtedly he had it; and undoubt- edly it did. He was not one to talk a great deal. Perhaps that was one of his most charming qualities. He listened so well. was a smart young feller and would make his mark. This, surprisingly Older men especially said he enough, ‘after a conversation to which | he had contributed not a word other than “Yes,” or “No,” or. “Perhaps you're right, sir,” in the proper places. | It was during those careless years of Dirk’s boyhood between nine and fifteen that Selina changed the DeJong ' acres from a worn-out and down-at- heel truck farm whose scant products brought a second-rate price in a sec- ond-rate market to a prosperous and blooming vegetable garden whose out- put was sought a year in advance by the South Water street commission merchants. These six or seven years of relent- less labor had been no showy success with Selina posing grandly as the New Woman in Business. No, it had been a pafurc!, grubbing, heart-Yreaking procest as Is any project that depends on the actual soil for its realization. She drove herself pitilessly. She lit- erally tore a living out of the earth with her two bare hands. Yet there was nothing pitiable about this smali energetic waman of thirty-five or forty with her fine soft dark eyes, her clean- cut jaw-line, her shabby decent clothes that were so likely to be spattered with the mud of the road or fields, her exquisite nose with the funny little wrinkle across the bridge when she laughed. Rather, there was something splendid about her! something rich, prophetic. It was the splendor and richness that achievement imparts. It is doubtful that she ever could have succeeded without the money borrowed from August Hempel; with- out his shrewd counsel. She told him this, sometimes. He denied it. “Easier, yes. But you would have found a way, Selina. Some way. Julie, no. But you, yes. You are like that. Me, too. Say, plenty fellers that was butch- ers with me twenty years ago over on North Clark street are butchers yet, cuiting off a steak or a chop.” Dirk had his tasks on the farm. Se- lira saw to that. But they were not heavy. By the time he returned from school the rough work of the day was overt. His food was always hot, ap- petizing, plentiful. The house was neat, comfortable. #elina had installed a bathroom—one of the two bathrooms in High Prairie. The neighborhood was still rocking with the shock of this when it was informed by Jan that Selina and Dirk ate with candles light- ed on the supper table. High Prairie slapped its thigh and howled with mirth, “Cabbages is beautiful,” said old Klaas Pool when he heard this. “Cab bages is beautiful I betcha.” Selina, during the years of the boy's adolescence, had never urged him to a decision about his future. That, she decided, would come. As the farm prospered and the pressure of neces- sity lifted she tried, in various in- genious ways, to extract from him some unconscious sign of definite preference for this calling, that pro- fession, Until Dirk was sixteen she had been content to let him develop as naturally as possible, and to absorb impressfons uncensciously from the traps shé so guilefuily left about him. There was a shed which he was free to use as a workshop, fitted up with all sorts of tools. He did ngt use it much, after the first few weeks. He was pleasantly and mildly interested in all things; held by none. Selina had thought of Roelf when they were fitting up the workshop. The Fools had heard from Roelf just once since his flight from the farm. A letter had come from France. Selina had never heard from him. But one day years later she had come running to Dirk with an fllus- trated magazine in her hand. “Look!” she cried, and pointed to a picture. He had rarely seen her so ex- cited, so stirred. The Illustration showed a photographic reproduction of a piece of sculpture—a woman's fig- ure. It was called The Seine. A figure sinuous, snake-like, graceful, re- voiting, beautiful, terrible. The face alluring, insatiable, generous, treach- erous, all at once. It was the Seine that fed the fertile valley land; the Seine that claimed a thousand bloated lifeless fioating Things; the red-eyed kag of 1792; the dimpling coquette of 1650. Beneath the illustration a line or two—Roelf Pool. Salon. . . American. future. “It’s Roelf!” Selina had cried. “Roelf. Little Roelf Pool!” Tears in her eyes. Dirk had been politely inter- ested. But then he had never known Lim, really. He had heard his mother speak of him, but— : less. At seventeen Dirk and Selina talked of the year to come. He was going to he i L AL \ At Eighteen It Had Been University for Dirk. Midwest a university. But to what university? And what did he want to study? We-e-l1, hard to say. Kind of a general course, wasn't there? “Oh,” Selina had said. “Yes. Gen- eral. Or course, if a person wanted to pe an architect, why, I suppose Cor- nell would be the place. Or Harvard for law. Or Boston Tech for engineer- ing, or—" Gh, yeh, If a fellow wanted any of those things. Good idea, though, to tzke a kind of general course until you found out exactly what you wanted to do. Languages and literature and that kind of thing. At eighteen. it had been Midwest university for Dirk. High Prairie heard ...et Dirk DeJong wos going away to college. A neighbor's gon sald, “Going to Wisconsin? Agricll- tural course there.” “My gosh, no!” Dirk had answered. He told this to Selina, laughing. But she had not laughed. “I'd like to take that course myself, if you must know. They say it's wou- derful.” She looked at him, suddenly. “Dirk, you wouldn't like to take It, would you? To go to Madison, I mean. Is that what you'd like?” He stared. “Me! No! Un- less you want me to, mother. 'Ihen I would, gladly. I hate your working like this, on the farm, while I go off to school. It makes me feel kind of rotten, having my mother working for me. The other fellows—" “I'm doing the work I'm interested in, for the person I love best in the world. T'd be lost—unhappy—without the farm. If the city creeps up on me here, as they predict it will, I don’t know what I shall do.” “Just you wait till I'm successful. Then there’ll be no more working for you.” “What do you mean by ‘successful,’ Sobig?’ She had not called him that in years. But now the old nickname same to her tongue perhaps because they were speaking of his future, his success. “What do you mean by ‘suc- sessful,’ Sobig?”’ “Rich. Lots of money.” “No, no, Dirk! No! That's not suc- sess. Roelf—the thing Roelf does— that’s success.” “Oh, well, if you have money enough you can buy the things he makes, apd pave 'em. That's almost as good isn’t 3 Dirk commenced his studies at Mid- west university in the autumn of 1909. His first year was none too agreeable, 18 is usually the case in first years. He got on well, though. Before the pnd of the first semester he was popu- lar. He had great natural charm of manner. The men liked him, and the girls, too. He rarely “cut” a class, He would have felt that this was unfair and disloyal to his mother. Some of his fellow students joked about this faithfulness to his classes. “Person would think you were an Unclass}- fied,” they sald, The ‘Unclassifieds were made up, for the most part, of earnest and rather middle-aged - students whose | education was a delayed blooming. ' They usually were not enrolled for a full course, or were taking double work feverishly. The professors found them a shade too eager, perhaps; too inquiring; de- manding too much. They stayed after | class and asked innumerable ques- tions. They bristled with interroga- tion. They were prone to hold forth in the classroom, “Well, I have found it to be the case in my experience that—" But the professor preferred to do the lecturing himself, to be any experience related it should come from the teacher's platform, not the student’s chair. In his first year Dirk made the al- most fatal mistake of being rather friendly with one of these Unclassi- fieds—a female Unclassified, a large, good-humored, plump girl, about thir- ty-eight, with a shiny skin which she vever powdered and thick hair that exuded a disagreeable odor of oil. She was sympathetic and jolly, but her clothes were a fright, the Classi- fieds would have told you, and no mat- ter how cold the day there was al- ways a half-moon of stain showing under her armpits. She had a really fine mind, quick, eager, balanced, al- most judicial. She knew just which references were. valuable, which use- "Her name was Schwengauer— Mattie Schwengauer. Terrible! She and Dirk got in the way of walking out of the classroom together, across the campus. She told him i something of herself. “Your people farmers!” Surprised, she looked at his well-cut clothes, his slim, strong, unmarked hands, his smart shoes and cap. mine. Iowa.” She pronounced it Ioway. “I lived on the farm all my life till I was twenty-seven. I always wanted to go away to school, but we never had the money and I couldn't come to town to earn because I was the oldest, and Ma was sickly after Emma—that’s the youngest—there are nine of us—was born. Ma was anxious I should go and Pa was will- ing, but it couldn't be. No fault of theirs. One year the summer would be so hot, with no rain hardly from spring till fall, and the corn would just dry up on the stalks, like paper. The next year it would be so wet the seed would rot in the ground. Ms died when I was twenty-six. The kids were all pretty well grown up by that time. Pa married again in a year. years ago. I've done all kinds of work, I guess, except digging in a coal mine. had to.” She told him all this ingenuously, simply. Dirk felt drawn toward her,. sorry for her. His was a nature quick to sympathy. He told his mother about her. | Selina was deep®y interested and stirred. “Do you think she’d spend some Saturday and Sunday here with us on the farm? She could come with you on Friday and go back Sunday night if she wanted to. Or stay until Monday morning and go back with vou. There's the spare room, all quiet and cool. She could do as she liked.” Mattie came one Friday night. It was the end of October, and Indian summer, tae most beautiful the year on the Illinois prairie. About the countryside for miles was the look of bounteousness, of plenty, of prophecy fulfilled 2s when a beautiful and fertile weman having borne her children and found them good, now sits gerene-eyed, bosomed, satisfied. Into the face of Mattie Schwengauer there came a certain glory. When she and Selina clasped hands Selina stared at her. rather curiously, as though startled. Afterward she said to Dirk, aside: “But I thought you said she was ugly!” “Well, she is, or—well, isn’t she?” “Look at her!” Mattie Schwengauer was talking to Meena Bras, the houseworker. She was standing with her hands on her ample hips, her fine head thrown back, her eyes alight, her lips smiling so that you saw her strong square teeth. Something had amused Mattie. She laughed. It was the laugh of a young girl, carefree, relaxed, at ease. For two days Mattle did as she pleased, which meant she helped pull vegetables in the garden, milk the cows, saddle the horses; rode them without a saddle in the pasture. “It got so I hated to do all those things on the farm,” she said, laugh- ing a little shamefacedly. “I guess it was because I had to. But now it comes back to me and I enjoy it be- cause it’s natural to me, I suppose. Anyway, I'm having a grand time, Mrs. DeJong. The grandest time I ever had in my life.” Her face was radiant and almost beautiful. “If you want me to believe that,” sald Selina, “you’ll come again.” But Mattie Schwengauer never aid come again, (Continued next week.) ——————— lp e——— Too Much for Mike. Mike, who was advancing rapidly in his work, was stopped by the fore- man one day who said: “Mike, you are doing fine, I am going to raise your wages.” Mike, all excited, said: “No, no, be jabbers no. I lose enough now when I'm off a day.” gracious, ample ——Because they disobeyed school regulations by doffing their neckties, 200 boy students at Gladstone, Mich., High school were expelled. They complained that the girls wouldn’t stop wearing rolled stockings. If there was , “Why, so are ' I came to Chicago about five I'd have done that if I'd time of | - PRECAUTION NEEDED IN VARNISHING IN WINTER. The drying of varnish is retarded by cold weather, extremely hot weath- er and damp, muggy weather. Conse- , quently, it should be applied, for best | results, at an average temperature, if possible, of approximately 70 degrees Fahrenheit. In reality varnish dries by oxida- tion, and consequently plenty of cool, dry air is necessary to make a varnish dry properly. Therefore, after doing inside work open the windows an inch or two top and bottom so as to give the room plenty of ventilation. It’s a mistake to close a room tight after it has been varnished. If varnishing is done in cold weath- er it is advisable to heat the building properly during the work. It is also important that the varnish itself should be near 70 degrees Fahrenheit. | Chilled varnish should never be used. Watch this point carefully, as it is liable to become chilled in a cold shop, or room, or even in carrying it outdoors for a distance in cold weath- er. In this case, it should be warmed up before used. Always be very certain that the un- dercoat of varnish is thoroughly dry before applying the following coat. This is very important, for if anoth- er coat is put on partially dried var- nish, the finished job will be very lia- ble to turn out badly in the following ways: It may crack, as the undercoat will continue to dry, and in so doing pull the finishing coat apart, as all var- nishes contract when drying. It may lose its gloss in places, due to the finishing coat sinking into the soft undercoat. It may form very minute wrinkles in places, giving the appearance of a cross-cut file to the surface. i Never use a cheap or adulterated varnish for an undercoat, as it is lia- ble to cause the finishing coat to crack. Never add linseed oil to varnish, as | it retards and even prevents it from | drying. i Never add turpentine to varnish, as it tends to destroy the gloss of the varnish and make the resulting coat of varnish so thin that it will not wear properly. Always remember that oil , and turpentine in the proper amounts i are added when the ingredients are . boiling hot, and these ingredients be- | come thoroughly amalgamated while i the varnish is cooking and aging. i However, after the varnish has be- { come cold, nothing can be added with- | out materially hurting the qualities of | the varnish. rn ie RUNVILLE. E. R. Hancock and two daughters, t of Philipsburg, visited at the home cf : his parents on Saturday. There will be children’s day serv- ices at this place Sunday evening, June Tth. Mr. and Mrs. Grant Houseman, of Altoona, spent the week-end with Mrs. Annie Lucas. Mrs. Alice Rodgers, son and daugh- ter visited at Osceola Mills and Ty- rone the forepart of last week: Mr. and Mrs. Carl Garbrick and Mrs. Annie Witherite, of Tyrone, spent Saturday with Mrs. Alice Rodgers. | Mr. and Mrs. Carl Poorman and family, of Johnstown, autoed to this place and were the guests of Mr. ! Poorman’s sister, Mrs. Earl Kauff- ‘man. Mr. and Mrs. James Flick and son ! Robert, of Altoona, came down on ‘last Friday and spent the week-end with Mrs. Flick’s parents, Mr. and . Mrs. Austin Walker. { Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Walker and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Toner Furl and daughter, of Williamsport, were entertained over Sunday by Mr. and Mrs. James McClincey. Those who called at the L. J. Hea- i ton home last week were Mrs. Martin Brower, son and daughter, of Philips- | burgs Miles Heaton and Mrs. Ander- son, of Yarnell; Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Lucas, Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Heaton, | Mr. and Mrs. Harold Kauffman and two sons, of Altoona. JACKSONVILLE. Miss Sarah Vonada spent over Sun- day with friends in Eagleville. Miss Louise Gallagher, of Howard, was an over Sunday guest of her friend, Miss Eleanor Lucas. Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Walker and two children, of Howard, were Sun- day visitors at the E. R. Lucas home. Services next Sunday morning in the Reformed church at 10:30. Sun- day School at 9.30. Everybody in- vited. Two dozen guests, including some of their children, grand-children and friends, spent Sunday at the C. M. Harter home. Miss Kathryn Swope, who has been away visiting, returned to her home last Sunday to care for her mother, who has been on the sick list but is improving at this writing. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Daily, of Al- toona; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Yingling, of Roaring Springs; Miss Jeanette Wingleman and friend, of Williams- i port, were over Sunday guests at the George Ertley home. ——A great many people who are not farmers have taken up land in western States. An old-timer rode over to the outfit of one new-comer and asked him what ke had been do- ing before he came west. “I was a wrestler.” “How much land have you declared on?” “One hundred and sixty acres.” “Well, you got something to wres- tle with now, bo,” averred the old- timer as he gave his steed a resound- ing whack. An Error by the Stork. “Mom,” said little Bobby, bursting into the house all out of breath, “there’s going to be the devil to pay down at the grocer’s. His wife has got a baby girl, and he’s had a ‘Boy wanted’ sign in the wigdow for a week.” SA FARM NOTES. —Thorough cleaning of barns and barnyards now will prevent swarms of flies in July and August. —Removing cows from pasture four to seven hours before milking time will eliminate grassy and weedy flavors in milk. The longer period is necessary only in the case of leeks and garlic. —A garden free from weeds not only produces more vegetables but is a sight worth seeing. Straight rows, also improve the appearance of the garden spot and are a definite aid in cultivating. —Markets near the farmstead are often not patronized as they should be because of the poorly arranged and unsightly grounds and buildings near- by. Cleanliness, neatness, well-paint- i: 25d well-labeled markets will draw rade. —Cabbage maggot is a common pest of farm gardens. Use corrosive sublimate at the rate of one ounce to eight or ten gallons of water. Pour a small cupful of the solution about the stem of each plant within a week after the plants are set out. Give a. second treatment ten days later. _—A good mash for growing duck- lings can be made of 2 parts cornmeal, i1 part middlings, 1 part bran. Then | 10 per cent. beef scrap can be added and a liberal sprinkling of green feed. | There is much variation in the care of ducklings, depending on the condition | of their range which may supply very iste or nearly all of their food sup- | Ply. | —Becoming a member in the Key- : stone 400-bushel potato club is not | merely a matter of luck and season. 1 Just about one-third of the 400-bush- el club members in 1924, including five jout of the seven highest, also grew 1 400 bushels or more the previous year. Preparation of soil, seed, fer- tilizer, and spraying are the big four of the 400-bushel club. | —Attractive signs telling what is i to be sold and how far itis to the stand are an important part of the roadside market. Place them far enough on each side of the market so that the motorist may slow down and stop where the fruits, vegetables and eggs are for sale. Sell only products grown on your own farm so that you can vouch for their quality. A satis- fied customer always returns. Insure satisfaction. —Ton litter growers in Centre county last year found that pasture was an important part of the program in producing pork economically. They are profiting by that experience and are again using pasture this year. Under Pennsylvania conditions a num- ber of forage crops can be grown for hog pasture purposes. To have for- age crops throughout the year, how- ever, a rotation of crops must be planted so that they will be ready for pasture at different seasons. Some forage crops run high in protein while others are low. The mineral content also varies considerably. Home- grown grains, such as corn, oats, bar- ley, and rye have a wide nutritive ra- tio, "that is, they contain a small amount of protein in comparison to the carbonhydrates. In addition to having narrow nutri- tive ratio, an ideal forage crop should be adapted to local soil and climate. It should be palatable and succulent. A long season which starts early, withstands the hot, dry summer, and lasts late should be the goal. A good pasture should also endure tramping and grazing well, and stay on the land move than one year where practical. It should also furnish quick pasture at any time during the growing season at a reasonably low cost. Finally a leguminous plant should be grown to insure upkeep of fertility and to sup- ply protein to the ration. —“When is the proper time to cut alfalfa for hay and how many cut- tings shall be made per year?” is a question that troubles many Centre county growers of this popular le- gume. Experiments in Wisconsin carried on several years showed that when alfalfa was cut at the time the new growth started from the crown of the root that the stand was weakened and after two or three years became thinner and less productive than where cutting was delayed until the blossoms were well out. Cutting ear- ly gave three crops per season in the latitude of Wisconsin and cutting at the full bloom age allowed only two. Probably most of the alfalfa in Pennsylvania is grown in a rotation and allowed to stand for only one or two years. Since this is the case maintaining the vigor and longevity of the stand is not an important ques- tion. Where the stand is to be held as long as possible, as where only a lim- ited area on the farm is adapted to the crop, or for any other reason, de- layed cutting and two crops per year would probably help to maintain the vigor and thickness of the stand and would leave a good fall growth on the ground for winter protection. In most cases, however, three or four years is about as long as we can ex- pect a stand of alfalfa to remain thick and productive. Saving in labor and better curing weather for the first and last cuttings have been advanced as arguments for the two crops system. Against these, however, cuttings give better quality, digestibility, higher protein content, and for the first year at least, larger yields from three crops than two, at least in the southern half of the State where the season is long and where even four crops have been cut in :a- vorable years. From a practical standpoint the first crop should generally be cut as soon after the new shoots start as the weather promises to be fair. Delay is apt to result in loss of leaves through dropping and rotting, more stemming, and less digestible and palatable hay. The second and third crops may be al- lowed to stand until partly in bloom if desired, since the quality is apt to deteriorate. Fairly prompt cutting, however, allows for a better full crop for winter covering. If any time the second crop turns yellow or spotted and growth stops it seems best to cut it and allow the next crop to develop. If the yellowed crop is not worth gathering, cut it anyway and leave it on the ground.