Copyright by Doubleday, eS EA WNU Service, * (Continued from last week.) SYNOPSIS ~—Introducing “So Big” in his Infancy. And his DeJong, daughter of eon Peake, gambler and gentleman fortune. er life, to young woman- in Chicago in 1888, has been un- eonventional, somewhat seamy, but BR k Dejons) Seoorally A jorable. fs school her um is Julie Hempel, daughter of Simeon is Sfust Hempel, butcher. filled in a quarrel that is not his own, and Belina, nineteen years old and Practicauy destitute, becomes a school- or. CHAPTER II—Selina secures a posi- tion as teacher at the High Prairie ool, in the outskirts of Chicago, living at the home of a truck farmer. 8 Pool. In Roelf, twelve years 1d, son of Klaas, Selina perceives a adred spirit, a lover of beauty, like ‘herself. CHAPTER IIL.—The monotonous life & country school-teacher at that is Selina’s, brightened somewhat y the companionship ot the sensitive, artistic boy Roelf. CHAPTER IV.—Selina hears gossip Fnceraing the affection of the “Widow aarlenberg,” rich and good-looking. for Pervus DeJong, poor truck farmer, who is insensible to the widow's at- tions. For a community “sociable” elina Frsparen a lunch basket, dainty, ut not of ample proportions, which is ‘auctioned,” according to custom. The smallness of the lunch box excites deri- ion, and in a sense of fun the bidding Pecomes spirited, DeJong finally secur- ng it for §10, & ridiculously high price. Over their lunch basket, whic elina and DeJong share together, the school- teacher arranges to instruct the good- fatured farmer, whose education has en neglected. CHAPTER V.—Propinquity, in their sitions of “teacher” and “pupil,” and elina’s loneliness in her uncongenial , gurroundings, lead to mutual affection. Pervus DeJong wins Selina’'s consent be his wife. CHAPTER VI.—Selina becomes Mrs. eJong, a “farmer's wife,” with all the ardships unavoidable at that time. irk is born. Selina (of Vermont stock, businesslike and shrewd) har plans for building up the farm, which re ridiculed by her husband. Maartje Foor, Klaas’ wife, dies, and after the requisite decent interval Klaas marries the “Widow Paarienberg.” The boy oelf, sixteen years old now, leaves is home, to make his way to France and study, his ambition being to be- @#ome a sculptor. CHAPTER VIL-—Dirk is eight years old when his father dies. Selina, faced ith thé necessity of making a living or her boy and herself, rises to the oocasion, and, with Dirk, takes a truck- { jon of vegetables to the Chicago mar- t. 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 & flat failure, buyers being shy of €ealing with her. To a commission @ealier she sells part of her stock. On the way home she peddles from door to door, with indifferent success. A policeman demands her license. She a8 none, and during the ensuing alter- cation Selina's girlhood chum, Julie flempel, 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 8 paving proposition. Selina grate- fully accepts his help, for Dirk's sake. CHAPTER X.—Selina achieves the success with the farm which she knew was possible, her financial troubles ending. At elghteen Dirk enters Mid- west university. CHAPTER XI—Dirk goes to Corneli university, intending to make architec- ture his life work, and on graduation enters the office of a firm of Chicago architects. Paula Arnold, daughter of Julie, enters his life. He would marry her, but she has a craving for wealth and takes Theodore Storm, millionaire, for her husband. The World war begins. “I used to ride the old nags, bare back, on the farm.” “You'll have to learn. Then I'h have some one to ride witls me. Theo- dore never rides. He never takes any sort of exercise, fat car of his.” They went into the coach house, a great airy white-washed place with glittering harness and spurs and bridles like jewels in glass cases. It gave Dirk a little hopeless feeling, He had never before seen anything like it. Paula laughed up at him, her dark face upturned to his. Something had annoyed him, she saw, Would he wait while she changed to walking things? Or per- haps he’d rather drive In the roadster. They walked up to the house together. Fe wished that she would not consult his wishes so anxiously. It made him sulky, impatient. She put a hand on his arm. “Dirk, are you annoyed at me for what I said last night?” “No.” “What did you think when you went to your room last night? Tell me. What did you think?” “I thought: ‘She's bored with her husband and she’s trying to vamp me. I'll have to be careful.” Paula laughed delightedly. “That's nice and frank . . . What else?” “I thought my coat didn't fit very well and I wished I could afford to have Peel make my next one.” “You can,” said Paula. Chapter XIII As it turned out, Dirk was spsred the necessity of worrying about the fit of his next dinner coat for the fol- lowing year and a half. His coat, dur ing that period, was a neat olive drab Sits in that great, as wi. that of some millions of young men of his age, or thereabouts. Most of that time hie spent at For( Sheridan, first as an officer in training, then as an officer training others to be officers. He was excellent at this job. Infiu- ence put him there and kept him there even after he began to chafe at the re- straint. In the last six months of ir (though ne did not, of course, know that it was to be the last six months) Dirk tried desperately to get to France. lle was suddenly sick of the meat job at home; of the dinners; of the smug routine; of the olive-drah motor car that whisked him wkerever he wanted to go (he had a captaincy): of mak- ing then “snap into it”; of Paula; of us mother, even. Two months before tne war's close he succeeded In getting over; hut Paris was his headquare- i ters. Between Dirk and his mother the first rift had appeared. | te the Noon Within one year he was so successful that you could hardly distinguish him from a hundred other successful young Chicago business and professional men whose clothes were made at Peel's: who lunched at the Noon club on the roof of the First National bank where Chicago’s millionaires ate corned-beef hash whenever that plebeian dish ap- peared on the bill of Far He had had a little thrill out ‘of his first meal at this club wheSe membership was made up of the “big men” of the city’s financial circle. Now he could even feel a little flicker of contempt for them. He had known old Aug Hem- pel, of course, for years, as well as Michael Arnold, and, later, Phillip Em- ery, Theodore Storm, and others. But he had expected these men to be differ- ent. They were not at nll the American Big Business Man of the comic papers | and of fiction—that yellow, nervous, dyspeptic creature who lunches off milk and pie. They were divided. into two definite types. The older men of between fifty and sixty weve great high-colored fellows of full habit. Thelr faces were impassive, their eyes shrewd. hard. Their talk was collogui- al and frequently illiterate. They often said “was” for “were.” “Was you go- ing to see Baldwin about that South American stuff or is he going to ship it through without?” Most of them had known little of play in their youth 2nd now they played ponderously and a little sadly and yet eagerly as does one to whom the gift of leisure had come too late. They ruined their pal- ates und livers with strong cigars, thinkin: cigarette smoking undignified and pires common. Only a few were £0 rich. so assured as to smoke cheap light j.anatellas. Old Aug Hempel was oue of these. Dirk noticed that when he made one of his rare visits club his entrance wus met th a little stir, a deference. He ws nearing seventy-five now; was sti’i | stra‘ent, strong zestful of life; a mag niteent ol huccaneer among the per. | “If I were & man,” Selina sald, *T'4 make up my mind straight about this war and then I'd do one of two things. I'd go into it the way Jan Snip goes at forking the manure pile—a dirty Job that’s got to be cleaned up; or I'd refuse to do it altogether if I didn’t believe in it as a job for me. I'd fight, or I'd be a conscientious objector. There's nothing in between for any one who isn't old or crippled, or sick.” Paula was aghast when she heard this, So was Julie whose wallings had been loud when Eugene had gone into the air service. He was in France now, thoroughly happy. “Do you mean,” demanded Paula, “that you ac- tually want Dirk to go over there and be wounded or killed!” “No. If Dirk were killed my life would stop. I'd go on living, I suppose, but my life would have stopped.” They all were doing some share in the work to be done, : Selina had thought about her own place in this war welter. She had wanted to do canteen work in France but had decided against this as be- ing selfish. “The thing for me to do.” she said, “is to go on raising vege- tables and hogs as fast as I can.” She supplied countless households with free food while their men were gone. She herself worked like a man, tak- ing the place of the able-bodied helper who had been employed on her farm. Paula was lovely in her Red Cross uniform. She persuaded Dirk to go into the Liberty bond selling drive and he was unexpectedly effective in his quiet, serious way; most convine- ing and undeniably thrilling to look at in uniform. Paula’s little air of pos- session had grown until now it en- veloped him. She wasn’t playing now; was deeply and terribly in love with him. When, in 1918, Dirk took off his uni- form he went into the bond depart- ment of the Great Lakes Trust com- pany in which Theodore Storm had a large interest. He said that the war ! had disillusioned him. “What did you think war was going to do?” said Selina, “Purify! It never | has yet.” It was understood, by Selina at | least, that Dirk’s abandoning of his profession was a temporary thing. Quick as she usually was to arrive at conclusions, she did not realize until too late that this son of hers had def- initely deserted building for bonds; that the only structures he would rear were her own castles in Spain. His first two months as a bond salesman netted him more than a year's salary at his old post at Hollis & Sprague’s. When he told this to Selina, in tri- umph, she said, “Yes, but there isn’t much fun in it, is there? This selling things on paper? Now architecture, that must be thrilling. Putting a build- Ing down on paper—little marks here, straight lines there, figures, calcula- tions, blueprints, measurements—and then, suddenly one day. the actual building itself. Steel and stone and brick, with engines throbbing inside it like a heart, and people flowing in and out. Part of a city. A piece of actual beauty conceived by you! Oh, Dirk!” To see her face then must have given him a pang, it was so alive, so eager. He found excuses for himself. “Sell- Ing bonds that make that building pos- sible isn’t so dull, either.” But she waved that aside almost contemptuously. “What nonsense, Dirk. It’s like selling seats at the box office of a theater for the play in- side.” Dirk had made many new friends In the last year and a half. ‘More than that, he had acquired a new manner; an air of quiet authority, of assur- ance. The profession of architecture was put definitely behind him. He did not say fo Selina that he had put the other work from him. But after six monthe in his new position he knew that he would never go back. From the start he was @ success. | - see the time when— tier crew. His had been the direct and brutal method—swish! swash! and his enemies walked the plank, The Younger men eyed him with a certain amusement and respect. These younger men whose ages ranged from twenty-eight to forty-five were disciples of the new system in business. They were graduates of uni- versities. They had known luxury all their lives. They were the sons or grandsons of those bearded, rugged, and rather terrible old boys who, in 1835 or 1840, had come out of County Limerick or County Kilkenny or out of Scotland or the Rhineland to mold this new country in their strong hairy hands. Dirk listened to the talk of the Noon club, looking about him carefully, ap- praisingly. The president of an ad- ¢ vertising firm lunching with a banker; a bond salesman talking to a rare book . collector; a packer seated at a small | | | Well. table with Horatio Craft, the sculptor. Two years and Dirk had learnée to “grab the Century” in order to save an hour or so of time between Chicago and New York. Peel said it was a tapering back, and trousers to his strong sturdy legs.. His color, inher- “They were boy and girl together,” Selina interrupted, feebly. “They’re not any more. silly, Selina. that.” No, she was not as young as that. When Dirk next paid one of his rare visits to the farm she called him into her bedroom—the cool, dim shabby bedroom with the old black walnut bed in which she had lain as Pervus De- Jong’s bride more than thirty years ago. She looked somehow girlish In the dim light, her great soft eyes gaz- ing up at him. “Dirk, sit down here at the side of my bed the way you used to.” “Im dead tired, Mother. Twenty- seven holes of golf before I came out.” “I know. You ache all over—a nice kind of ache. I used to feel like that when I'd worked in the fields all day, pulling vegetables, or planting.” He was silent. She caught his hand. “You' didn’t like that. My saying that. I'm sorry. I didn’t say it to make you feel had. dear.” “IL know you didn’t, Mother.” Don’t be You're not as young as “Dirk, do you know what that wom- | 2a who writes the society news in the Sunday Tribune called you today?” “No.. What? 1 never read it.” “She said you were one of the Jeunesse doree.” Dirk grinned. “Gosh!” at Miss Fister’'s school to know that that means gilded youth.” “Me! That's good! I'm not even spangled.” “Dirk!” her voice was low, vibrant. “Dirk. 1 don’t want you to be a gilded youth. I don’t care how thick the gilding. Dirk, that isn’t what I worked in the san and cold for. I'm not re- proachikg you: I didn’t mind tho work. Fergive me for even mentioning ft. sur, Dirk, I don’t want my son to he known as one of the jeunesse doree, We! Not my son!” “Now, Hsten, Mother. That's fool- ish. If you're going to talk like that. Like a mother in a melodrama whose son’s gone wrong. . . . I work like a dog. You know that. You get the wrong angle on things, stuck out here on this little farm.” She sat up in bed, looking down at the thin end of her braid as she twined it round and round her finger. “Dirk, do you know sometimes I actually think that If you stayed here on the farm—" “Good G—d, Mother! What for!” “Oh, I don’t know. Time to dream. Time to—no, I suppose that isn’t true any more. I suppose the day is past when the genius came from the farm. Machinery has cut into his dreams. Patent binders, plows, reapers—he’s a mechanic. He hasn't time to dream. She lay back, looked up at him, “Dirk, why don’t you marry?” “Why—there’s no one I want to mar- ry.” “No one who's free, you mean?” He stood up. “I mean no one.” He stooped and kissed her lightly. Her | arms went round him close. Her hand i with the thick gold wedding band on pleasure to fit a coat to his broad, flat ited from his red-cheeked Dutch an- ° cestors brought up in the fresh sea- laden air of the Holland flats, was fine and clear. Sometimes Selina, in pure sensuous delight, passed her gnarled, work-worn hand over his shoulders and down his fine, strong, straight back. He had been abroad twice. He learned to call it “running over to Europe | It had all come , for a few days.” about in a scant two years, as is the theatrical way in which life speeds in America. ~ Selina was a little bewildered now at this new Dirk whose life was so full without her. Sometimes she did not see him for two weeks, or three. He sent her gifts which she smoothed and : touched delightedly and put away; fine soft silken things, hand-made— | ! which she could not wear. of years The habit was ‘too strong upon her. Though she had always been a woman of dainty habits and fastidious tastes the grind of her early married life had left its indelible mark. Sun and wind and rain and the cold and heat of the open prairie had wreaked their vengeance on her flouting of them. Her skin was tanned, weather-beaten ; her hair rough and dry. Her eyes, in that frame, startled you by their unexpect- edness, they were go calm, so serene, yet so alive. They were the beautiful eyes of a wise young girl in the face of a middle-aged woman. Life was still so fresh to her. There was about her something arresting, something compelling. You felt it. “I don’t see how you do it!” Julie Arnold complained one day as Selina was paying her one of her rare visits in town. “Your eyes are as bright as a baby’s and mine look like dead oysters.” They were up in Julie's dressing room in the new house on the north side—the new house that was now the old house. Julie was massaging. Her eyes had an absent look. Suddenly: “Listen, Selina. Dirk and Paula are together too much. People are talking.” “Talking?” The smile faded from Selina’s face. “Goodness knows I'm not strait- laced. You can’t be In this day and age. If I had ever thought I'd live to Well, since the war of course anything’s all right, seems. But Paula has no sense. - Ev- erybody knows she’s insane about Dirk. That's all right for Dirk, but how about Paula! She won't go any- where unles; ’s Invited. They're to- gether “gl the time, everywhere. I asked her if she was going to divorce Storm and she sald no, she hadn't enough money of her own and Dirk wasn't earning enough, His salary’s thousands, but she’s used to millions. Well I” it pressed his head to her hard. “So- big!” He was a baby again. “You haven't called me years.” He was laughing. She reverted to the old game they had played when he was a child. “How big is my son! How big?” She was smiling, but her eyes were somber. “So big!” answered Dirk, and meas- that “So Big!” Answered Dirk. ured a very tiny space between thumb and forefinger. “So big.” She faced him, sitting up very straight in bed, the little wool shawl hunched about her shoulders. “Dirk, are you ever going back to architec- ture? The war is history. It's now or never with you. Pretty soon it will be too late. Are you ever going back to architecture? To your profession?” A clean amputation. “No, Mother.” She gave an actual gasp, as though lcy water had been thrown full in her face. She looked suddiuly old, iired. Her shoulders sagged. He stood In the doorway, braced for lier re- proaches. But when she spoke it wus lo reproach herself. “Then I'm a fuii- are.” “Oh, what nonsense, Mother. I'm 2appy. You can’t live somebody else's life. You used to tell me, when I was 1 kid, I remember, that life wasn't just wn adventure, to be taken as it came, with the hope that something glorious was always hidden just around the torner. You sald yoa had lived that way and it hadn't worked. You said—" (Continued next week.) in | FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. DAILY THOUGHT. Hail, Independence, hail! Heaven's next best gift, To that of life and an immortal soul!— Thompson—*“Liberty.” To Make Red, White and Blue Sal- ad.—Mix well together a quart of chopped cold boiled beets, a quart of chopped raw cabbage, a cupful of grated horseradish, two cupfuls of brown sugar, a teaspoonful of salt and a scant teaspoonful of black pepper. Turn into a jar and cover with cold vinegar. - Later remove the beets and cabbage and serve on a white paper . | doily on old blue china. For flag cake take a cupful sugar, one-half cupful of butter, whites of four eggs beaten to a stiff froth, one- half cupful of milk, two cupfuls of flour, two teaspoonfuls of baking pow- er. For frosting a cupful confectioner’s sugar, a teaspoonful melted butter. Flavor with vanilla, cup chopped nuts and decorate with maraschino cher- ries. Stick tiny silk flags in a circle around the edge and in the center place a larger flag. Speaking of weddings, I have just been to one. It took ploce on a lawn where flowers were doing all the ex- ' pected things, and quite converted me dal attendants. to the charm of sports attire for bri- Why should ushers wear anything so solemn as cutaways was : ., | 2nd high hats when they can select ] remaster snongh of fy French fg ts OhcAcor weddings white flan- nel trousers, dark coats and white shoes ? be so set in the ways of tulle, chiffon, taffeta and lace when they can wear crepe sports frocks with gay touches cf color in hats and scarfs and bou- quets? It’s a charming idea for the outdoor summer wedding, and I pass it on to all those who are now watch- ing their Lohengrin step. Now as to the frock which your wedding guest wears this summer, the most interesting note continues to be the tailored guise that persists in these flower-tinted chiffons. quently than not, and these may be either the fitted variety or the flow- ing type. One frock is eloquent of the new current that is bearing down upon us. Two groups of gathers in the direct back conspire with the gathers on either side. Compare this with the absolute straightness of the front sec- tion, and you will see what revisions midsummer has suggested for the sil- houette. Of course, most of us are not going to adopt this back amplitude immediately; but it is the new note and one which will be sounded more firmly by the end of the summer. In color this frock is exquisite, for {it occurs in a pervenche blue chiffon made over matching slip and trimmed ‘ with taffeta ruchings that shade from blue to orchid. This taffeta is repeat- ed in the strips defining the back. There is, too, one more provocation to speed the parting guest—so that -we can see how her frock is really made. It occurs in the row of tiny crystal | buttons extending from neckline to a waistline which is just below the nor- mal mark. These buttons may or may not be repeated at the front of the corsage. The color harmony is com- pleted by a wide-brimmed hair hat in pervenche blue which is decked with chiffon and taffeta flowers repeating the shaded tints of orchid and blue. | Unless A word about the length. you are an extremely young girl, these skirts are too short. The length prescribed by Paris and generally re- spected is fourteen inches above the i ground. The fact of it is that you can add two more inches and not endanger your social reputation. There is a passion this year for the chiffon afternoon frock in solid color, and certainly the colors most worn justify any further attempt at elabo- | ration. Nothing, indeed, was ever lovelier than these various tones of blue—pervenche, ciel, royal, madonna —the poetic die-away greens and yel- lows and the flaming hues of rose, which are now so widely exploited. A mere flower garden is going to have to rustle if it wants to—in Wilde's classic phrase—imitate art. Yet, in spite of the vogue of the plain chiffon, the figured fabric of this silk has not been displaced, and, it seems to me that if you assemble a lovely printed chiffon, a harmonizing hair hat, some charming and individ- ual costume jewelry and all the prop- er accessories, you have done your full duty by any formal summer after- noon. Let it be said right here that the little shoulder cape has renounced none of its former eminence as a cos- tume detail ‘and that it is constantly seen as a feminizing relief to the tail- ored simplicity of both afternoon and evening affairs. The same thing may be said also of the apron and the tiered front that gives the illusion of an apron. Sometimes the apron is a separate entity and sometimes it is merely a continuation of a wide front panel. Taffeta will always retain its ap- peal as bathing suit material for the womai or girl who likes that crisp, fresh appearance. And it looks so well with ruffles about the skirt. In the new purple or in black this would be a smart addition to the wardrobe for the summer vacation. TWO RECIPES FOR THE FOURTH. Honey Blossom Punch.—A bever- age, excellent for large afternoon or evening parties, which has the added merit of originality, is honey blossom punch, as delectable and tempting a concoction as its very delightful name implies. One cupful of honey, one cupful of sugar, two cupfuls of water, and the grated rind and the zest of one orange are boiled together for five minutes. This is allowed to cool, then two cup- fuls of water and the juice of eleven oranges and two lemons are added, and the mixture is stirred well. This is poured over a block of ice in a punch-bowel, and to it are added one grated pineapple and twenty-four strawberries. Just as it is ready to serve, one quart of carbonated water is added. And why should bridesmaids . Long i sleeves are encountered more fre- FARM NOTES. —Do not set out fruit trees hastily before the land for the orchard is thoroughly prepared. It is better to allow them to remain “heeled in” all winter than to attempt to transpiant them to wet or unbroken ground. No amount of attention given a tree in later years will make up for im- proper handling during its early life in thes orchard. —Small streams frequently are neglected sources of power that may be utilized in generating electricity to light buildings and grounds and pos- sibly to operate a number of small machines, says the bureau of public roads, United States Department of Agriculture, in Farmers’ Bulletin 1430, “Power for the Farm From Small Streams,” just published. Electrical equipment on the farm saves time and labor in the household and farm work. To be a sound investment, however, the cost of installation should not be greater than the benefits obtained would justify. In this respect, the bu- reau points out by way of caution, farm water-power electric outfits have their limitations. —A cheap and satisfactory feeder for young pigs can be made from a barrel. A method found satisfactory by many farmers and pig club boys of the State is to knock out heads of a barrel, and then from old boxes build a square platform 18 inches wider than the diameter of the barrel. On the center of this platform a pyr- amid with a square base is built. The base is made just large enough so the barrel can stand over it. Feed ‘is then put into the barrel, the bottom of which must be raised just sufficiently to permit the feed to run out as the pigs eat. This is done by nailing four blocks under its edges. With feed in the barrel the proper height is easily determined. In using this or any other type of self-feeder the owner must be sure that enough feed runs through fast enough so the pigs will never go hun- gry, and yet not so fast that feed will be wasted underfoot. —Hogs cannot make both pork and lice, and the lousy pig can seldom eat enough to make a hog of himself, if ; Le has to continue boarding myriads “of lice. This has been the unvarying experience of good live stock men everywhere. Lice may be destroyed on hogs by dipping, the use of crude oil being highly recommended by those who have experimented widely. Let the | water in the dipping tank be covered {with a layer of crude oil at least an linch thick. The oil may be applied to | the bodies of the hogs with a sprink- {ling pot or a swab, if care is used, but it is not as safe as we would like, "and, in any case, it is a method recom- mended for use only in cold weather, when dipping is out of the question. Also there are a number of other remedies which may be used, such as equal parts kerosene and machine oil, .or one part turpentine to two parts machine oil applied to every part of the body by means of either rag or brush. Be careful in the use of such remedies, of course, or they might be almost as hard on the pig as they are on the lice. Do not lose sight of the good high-grade coal-tar dips, which are certainly valuable when applied according to directions. The oiler, or oiled rubbing post, has a place on every hog farm, or farm where hogs are raised. —We say that life is made up of the little things, yet we are not aware of . the value that many little animals are to us. How many of us ever stop to consider the toad? In most instances he is considered just a little nuisance, put here to be in the way just as other harmful animals are. But the next ‘toad you see hopping along, stop and . watch him perform. By studying the i toad the student will learn that he is of great value to the farmer and or- | chardist, writes J. W. Recknor Jr., in i the Farm and Ranch. i The tongue of the toad is half an :inch long or longer, and he can use it to perfection, too, when it comes to i catching flies. I admit that the toad i seems to be a very lazy creature hop- . ping about, but that is the very time he is doing his duty. The toad hops about, and when a fly comes near “enough, out goes his long tongue in an instant. Mr. fly is caught and his , career, carrying typhoid germs to well people’s dining rooms, is stopped. Mr. Toad is an eater of insects and is valuable to the farmer in his crops. It is estimated that the toad is worth $19 per year to the farmer. If he is worth only half this much, then the toad is a valuable little fellow to us rural people. Toads should be given all the protection possible so their number will increase. Some people allow their children to kill toads, but this should not be. Protect the toad, for he is our good little friend. —A sum of $2,349,000 was author- ized by the 1925 Legislature and ap- proved by Governor Pinchot for pay- ing indemnities resulting from losses suffered by farmers who own cattle infested with serious contagious dis- eases, especially tuberculosis. This is the largest amount by almost five times ever appropriated at one season of the Legislature for this purpose in Pennsylvania. The amount provided by the 1923 Legislature was $535,000 making a total for the past two ses- sions of $2,884,000. In 1921, $192,965 was provided; in 1919, $184,731; in 1917, $120,000 or a total for these three sessions of $497,696. : In referring to the large appropri-- tion just made available, F. P. Willi. +, Secretary of Agriculture says: “ite Department of Agriculture feels this sum to be a liberal amount. The dai- ‘rymen and public of Pennsylvania should appreciate the efforts of Gov- ernor Pinchot and the Legislators for their interest in the tuberculosis erad- ication work. The Governor approv- ed the largest possible amount from available funds. Even a larger amount no doubt would have been ap- proved if the State revenues had per- mitted it.” i The great increase in appropriations for indemnities makes possible the continuation of tuberculosis eradica- tion on a much larger scale than ever before and will permit the work to progress as it has in other leading dairy States.