ee cm ool, in the outskirts of Chicago, ving at the home of a truck farmer, ILLUSTRATIONS BY CLARK AGNEW, Copyright > Doubleday, Pag "a Co. WNU"Bervioe, the Truck Farmers’ association val- ? (Continued from last week.) . ued her opinion. Her life was full, ! pleasant, prolific. SYNOPSIS | BR rm “So Big” | DeJong) in his infancy. And his | er, Belina DeJong, daughter of eon Peake, gambler and gentleman | Chapter XIV Paula had a scheme for interesting rtune. Her life, to young woman- | a; in bond buying. It was a good in Chicago in 1888, has been un- qokVenticntl Somewha peainy, hut scheme. She suggested it so that Dirk Bere oY tpel. amughier of | thought he bad thought of it. Dirk » Hempel, butcher. Simeon is ed in a quarrel that is not his own, Selina, nineteen years old and Lacticany dectitute, becomes a school- oF. was head now of the bond department in the Great Lakes Trust company’s magnificent new white building on Michigan boulevard north. Its white towers gleamed pink in the lake mists. Dirk said it was a terrible building, badly proportioned, and that it looked like a vast vanilla sundae. His new private domain was niore like a splendid bookless iibrary then a business office. It was finished in rich dull walnut and there were great upholstered chairs, soft rugs. shaded lights. Special attention was paid to women clients. There was a eT A EE tar rocm for their convenience fitted with who is insensible to the widow's at- | 10W restful chairs and couches, lamps, er For a community orogiable” | writing desks, in mauve and rose. CHAPTER J1—S8Selina secures & posi- gion as teacher at the High Prairie s Pool. In Roelf, twelve years , son of Klaas, Belina perceives a Rares spirit, a lover of beauty, like elf. CHAPTER II1.—The monotonous life a country school-teacher at that e, is Selina’s, brightened somewhat ‘the companionship ot the sensitive, artistic boy Roelf. CHAPTER IV.—Selina hears gossip cerning the affection of the “Widow Fasricnver * rich and good-looking, #line prepares a lundl, hasket, dainty, Paula bad selected the furnishings for this room. Ten years earlier it would have been considered absurd in a suite of business offices. Now it was a routine part of the equipment. Dirk’s private office was almost as ature farmer, difficult of aceess as that of the na- neglected. tlon’s executive. Cards, telephones, CHAPTER S =—propinaunty, in their | office boys, secretaries stood between tions of ‘teacher’ and “pupil,” an > ¥ ; lina's loneliness in her unoonenial fhe, Caller and Dirk DeJong, head of rroundings, lead to mutual affection. | the bond-department. You asked for Forvus De ig wins Selina’s consent e his wife. CHAPTER VI1—Selina becomes Mrs. eJong, a ‘farmer's wife,” with all the rdships unavoidable at that time. irk is born. Selina (of Vermont stock, businesslike and shrewd) han plans for building up the farm, which re ridiculed by her husband. Maartje ool, Klaas’ wife, dies, and after the requisite decent interval Klaas marries he “Widow Paarlenberg.” The boy oelf, sixteen years old now, leaves is home, to make his way to France t not of ample proportions, which is uctioned,” according to custom. The smallness of the lunch box excites deri- fon, and in a sense of fun the bidding psoomes spirited, DeJong finally secur- ng it for $10, a ridiculously high price. Over their lunch basket, which Selina i DeJong share together, the school- her arranges to instruct the good- whose education has him, uttering his name in the ear of the six-foot statuesque detective who, in the guise of usher, stood in the center of the marble rotunda eyeing each visitor with a coldly appraising gaze. This one padded softly ahead of you on rubber heels, only to give you over to the care of a gloritied office boy who tock your name You and study, his ambition being to be- waited. He returned. You w:ited. ome a sculptor. Presently there appeared a young CHAPTER VIL—Dirk is eight years i ivi '8. h old when his father dies. Selina, faced woman with inquiring eyebrows . 3 e with the necessity of making a living conversed with you. She vanished for her boy and herself. rises to the | You waited. Sbe reappeared. You of vegetables to the Chicego mar- i Were ushered into Dirk DeJong’s large and luxurious inner office. And there formality fled. Dirk was glad to see you; quietly, interestedly glad to see you. AS you stated your business he listened atten- tively, as was his charming way. The volume of business done with women fod ot 4 and, with Dirk, takes a truck- ot. 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 Joliceman demands her license. She s none, gud qurin Lhe enening ajrese clients by the Great Lakes Trust com- on Selina's rlhood chum, Julie ; z Hompe, now Tie Arnold, recognizes | PADy Was enormous. Dirk was con or, servative, helpful—and he always got the business. He talked little. He was amazingly effective. Ladies in the modish black of re- cent bereavement made quite a somber procession to his door. His suggestions (often originating with Paula) made the Great Lakes Trust company’s dis- creet advertising rich in results. Neat little pamphlets written for women on the subjects of saving, investments. “You are not dealing with a soulless corporation,” said these brochures. “May we serve you? You need more than friends. Before acting, you should have your judgment vindicated by an organization of investment spe- clalists. You may have relatives and friends, some of whom would gladly advise you on investments. But per- haps you rightly feel that the less they know about your financial affairs, the better. To handle trusts, and to care for the securities of widows and or- phans, is our business.” It was startling to note how this sort of thing mounted into millions. “Women are becoming more and more used to the handling of money,” Paula said, shrewdly. “Pretty soon their patronage is going to be as valu- able as that of men. The average woman doesn’t know about bonds— about bond buying. They think they're something mysterious and risky. Trey ought to be educated up to it. Didn't you say something, Dirk, about classes in finance for women?” “But would the women come?” “0f course they'd come. Women will accept any invitation that’s en- graved on heavy cream paper.” The Great Lakes Trust had a branch in Cleveland now, and one in New York, on Fifth avenue. The drive to interest women in bond buying and to instruct them in finance was io take on almost national proportions. There was to be newspaper and magazine ad- vertising. : The Talks for Women on the Subject of Finance were held every two weeks in the crystal room of the Blackstone and were a great success. Paula was tight. Much of old Aug Hempel's shrewdness and business foresight had jescended to her. The women came —widows with money to invest; busi- tess women who had thriftily saved \ portion of their salaries; moneyed vomen who wanted to manage their ywn property, or who resented a hus- CHAPTER IX.—August Hempel, risen to prommence and wealth in the busi- ess world, arranges to assist Selina n making the farm something more ot a peving 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 eighteen Dirk enters Mid- west university. CHAPTER XI.—Dirk goes to Cornell 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. CHAPTER XIIL—Paula, despite her marriage and motherhood, continues interested in Dirk, their friendship be- inning to cause gossip. She urges irk to give up the profession of archi- tecture and enter business for the Srontey financial reward possible. Dirk esitates, feeling his mother would not approve of the change. CHAPTER XIIL—Dirk enlists in the army, going to the officers’ training camp at Fort Sheridan. He gets to France finally, but sees no actual fight- ing. Selina is vaguely dissatisfied with Dirk's progress, the tension increasing when he tells her he has decided to ive up architecture for business. Se- fina's success with the farm is now ronounced. Paula's fondness for Dirk egins to approach infatuation. Many of the older men knew her, shook hands with her, chatted a mo- ment friendlily. William Talcott, a little more dried up, more wrinkled, his sparse hair quite gray now, still leaned up against the side of his door- way in his shirt sleeves and his neat pepper-and-salt pants and vest, cigar, unlighted, in his mouth, the heavy gold watch chain spanning his middle. “Well, you certainly made good, Mrs. DeJong. Remember the day you come here with your first load?” Oh, yes. She remembered. “That boy of yours has made his mark, too, I see. Doing grand, ain't he? Wa-al, great satisfaction having a son turn out well like that. Yes, girree! Why, look at my da’ter Car'line—" Life at High Prairie had its savor, too. Frequently you saw strange vis- ftors there for a week or ten days at a time—boys and girls whose city pallor gave way to a rich tan; tired-looking women with sagging figures who drank Selina’s cream and ate her abundant vegetables and tender chickens as though they expected these viands to be momentarily snatched from them. Selina picked these up in odd corners of the city. Dirk protested against this, too. Selina was 'a member of the | )and’s interference. Some came out High Prairie school board now. She | if curiosity. Others for lack of any- was on the Good Roads committee and | hing better to do. Others to gaze Y pought-out remarks. mn the well-known banker or lawyer yr business man who was scheduled o address the meeting. Dirk spoke hree or four times during the winter nd was markedly a favorite. The romen, in smart crepe gowns and tail- red sults and small chic hats, twit- ered and murmured about him, even vhile they sensibly digested his well- He looked very \andsome, clean-cut, and distinguished here on the platform in his admirably ailored clothes, a small white flower n his buttonhole. He talked easily, jearly, fluently; answered the ques- jons put to him afterward with just he right mixture of thoughtful hesi- ation and confidence. It was decided that for the national dvertising there must be an illustra- don that would catch the eye of wom- m, and interest them. The person to jo it, Dirk thought, was this Dallas O'Mara whose queer hen-track signa- ure you saw scrawled on half the ad- vertising illustrations that caught your pye. Paula had not been enthusiastic about this idea. “M-m-m, she’s very good,” Paula had said, guardedly, “but aren't there others who are better?’ “She!” Dirk had exclaimed. “Is it a woman? 1 didn’t know. That namie aight be anything.” “Qh, yes, she’s a woman. “She's suid to be very—very attractive.” Dirk sent for Dallas O'Mara. replied, suggesting an appointment two weeks from that date. not to wait, consulted other commer- cial artists, looked at their work, heard their plans outiined, and wus satisfied with none of them. The time was short. Ten days had passed. He had his secretary call Dallas O'Mara on the telephone. Could she come down to see him tbat day at eleven? her studio. Could she come to his office at four- thirty, then? Yes, but wouldn't it be better it ne could see something of the various types of drawings—oils, or black-and- white. or crayons. She was working mostly in crayons now. All this relayed by his secretary at the telephone to Dirk at his desk. The jammed his cigarette end viciously into a tray, blew a final infuriated wraith of smoke, and picked up the telephone connection on hig own desk. “One of those d—d temperamental near-artists trying to be grand,” he muttered. his hand over the mouthpiece. “Here, Miss Rawlings—1’l1 talk to her. Switch her over.” “Hello, Miss—uh—O'Mara. This is Mr. DeJong talking. I much prefer Mhat you come to my office and talk to me.” (Ne mare of this nonsense). Her voice: it. I thought the other would save us both some time. I'll be there at four- thirty.” rounded. ful. “Yery well. Four-thirty,” said Dirk, crisply. Jerked the receiver onto the An admirable voice. hair and a bundle of drawings under their arm. The female of forty with straggling hair and a bundle of drawings under her arm was announced at four-thirty to the dot. Dirk let her wait five minutes in the outer office, being still a little annoyed. At four-thirty-five there entered his private office a‘ tall slim girl in a smart little broadtail jacket, fur-trimmed skirt, and a black hat at ence so daring and so simple that even a man must recognize its French na- tivity. She carried mo portfolio of drawings under her arms. Through the man’s mind flashed a series of unbusinesslike thoughts such as:. “Gosh! . .. . Eyes. . That's way I like to see girl dress. Tired looking. No, guess it's her eyes—sort of fatigued. . Pretty. . . . No, she isn’t. . .yes she. . . . .” Aloud he said, “This is very kind of you, Miss O'Mara.” Then he thought that sounded pompous and said, curtly, “Sit down.” Miss O'Mara sat down. Miss O'Mara looked at him with her tired deep blue eyes. Miss O'Mara said pothing. She regarded him pleasantly, quietly, com- posedly. He waited for her to say that usually she did not come to business offices; that she had only twenty minutes to give him; that the day was warm, or cold; his office handsome; the view over the river magnificent. Miss O’Mara sald nothing, pleasantly. So Dirk began to talk, rather hur- riedly. Now, this was a new experience for Dirk DeJong. Usually women spoke to him first and fluently. Quiet women waxed voluble under his silence; vol- uble women chattered. Paula always spoke a hundred words to his one. But here was a woman more silent than he; not sullenly silent, nor heav- ily silent, but quietly, composedly, rest- fully silent. want, Miss O'Mara.” He told her. When he had finished she probably would burst out with three or four plans. The others had done that. When he had finished she said, “I'll think about it for a couple of days while I'm working on something else. I always do. I'm doing a soap picture now. I can begin work on yours Wednesday.” “But I'd like to see it—that is, I'd like to have an idea of what you're planning to do wiih it.” Did she think he was going to let her go ahead with- out consulting his judgment! “Oh, it will be all right. But drop {nto the studio if you lke. It will take me about a week, I suppose. I'm over on Ontario in that old studio building. You'll know it by the way gidewalk.” She smiled a slow wide “Ve. -~o A —— Ap apr “I'll tell you the sort of thing we most of thre bricks have fallen out of the building and are scattered over the She ! Dirk decided No: she worked until four daiiy at . could come to her studio where be “Certainly, if you prefer Her voice was leisurely, low, Rest- hook. That was the way to handle ‘em. | These females of forty with straggling @ ©'¢ > ‘ thirty-six. | | RE ——— — ——— — smile. Her teeth were good but her mouth was too big, he thought. Nice big warm kind of smile, though. He found himself smiling, too, sociably. Then he became businesslike again. Very businesslike. “How much do you—what is your— what would you expect to get for a drawing such as that?” “Fifteen hundred dollars,” said Miss (Mara. “Nonsense.” He looked at her then. Perhaps that had been humor. But she was not smiling. “You mean fifteen hundred for a single drawing?” “For that sort of thing, yes.” “I'm afraid we can’t pay that, Miss O'Mara.” Miss O’Mara stood up. “That is my price.” She was not at all embar- rassed. He realized that he had never seen such effortless composure. It was he who was fumbling with the objects on his flat-topped desk—a pen, a sheet of paper, a blotter. “Good-by, Mr.— DeJong.” She held out a friendly hand. He took it. Her hair was gold —dull gold, nat bright—and coiled in a single great knot at the back of her head, low. He took her hand. The tired eyes looked up at him. “Well, if that’s your price, Miss O'Mara. I wasn’t prepared to pay any such—but of course 1 suppose you top- notchers do get crazy prices for your | work.” ; ; “Not any crazier than the prices you top-notchers get.” “Still, fifteen hundred dollars is quite a lot of money.” “1 think so, too. But then, I'll ai- ways think anything over nine dollars is quite a lot of money. You see, I used to get twenty-five cents apiece for sketching hats for Gage’s.” She was undeniably attractive. “And now you've arrived. You're success- ful.” “Arrived! started.” Heavens, no! Tve “Who gets more money than you au for a drawing?” “Nobody, I suppose.” “Well, then?” “Well, then, in another minute 1"! be telling you the gtory of my life.” She smiled again her slow wide smile; turned to leave. Dirk decided that while most women's mouths were merely features this girl's was a decor ation. She was gone. Miss Ethelinoa Quinn et al., in the outer office, ar- vraised the costume of Miss Dallas "Mara from her made-to-order foot- gear to her made-in-France millinery and achieved a lightning mental! re construction of thelr own costumes. Dirk DeJong In the inner office real- ized that he had ordered a fifteen-hun- dred-dollar drawing, sight unseen, and that Paula was going to ask questions about it. : “Make a note, Miss Rawlings, to call Miss O’Mara’s studio on Thurs day.” In the next few days he learned that a surprising lot of people knew a sur- “Hello!” Said Dallas O'Mara. “This is 1t. Do You Think You're Going to Like 1t?” will you dump some of those things. This is Mrs. Storm, Mr. DeJong—Gii- da Hernan.” Her secretary, Dirk later learned. The place was disorderly, comfort- eble, shabby. A battered grand piano stood in one corner. A great sky- light formed half the ceiling and sloped down at the north end of the room. A man and a girl sat talking earnestly on the couch in another cor- ner. A swarthy foreign-looking chap, vaguely familiar to Dirk, was playing softly at the piano. The telephone rang. Miss Hanan took the message, transmitted it to Dallas O'Mara, re- celved the answer, repeated it. Perched atop tlie stool, one Sslip- pered foot screwed in a rung, Dallas worked concentratedly, calmly, earn- estly. There was something splendid, something impressive, something mag- nificent about her absorption, her in- difference to appearance, her tnaware- ness of outsiders, her concentration on the work before her. Her nose was shiny. Dirk hadn't seen a giri with a shiny nose in yeare. “How can you work wi:k all this crowd around?” “Oh.” gald Dallas In that deep, rest- ful, leisurely voice of hers, “there are always between twenty and thirty”— . she slapped a quick scarlet line on the prisingly good deal about this Dallas | O'Mara. She hailed from hence the name. She was twenty- eight — twenty-five — thirty-two — She was beautiful. She was ugly. She was an orphan. She had worked her way through art school. She had no sense of the value of money. Two years ago she had achieved sudden success with her drawings. Her ambition was to work in oils. Texas. to Jike the picture?’ She toiled like a galley-slave; ! played like a child; had twenty beaux and no lover; her friends, men and women, were legion and wandered in and out of her studio as though it were a public thoroughfare. She sup- ported an assortment of unlucky broth- ers and spineless sisters in Texas and points West. x Dirk had meade the appointment with her for Thursday at shree. Paula said she’d go with him, and went. She dressed for Dallas O'Mara and the re- | sult was undeniably enchanting. Dal- las sometimes did a crayon portrait, or even attempted ore in oils. It was considered something of an achieve- ment to be asked to pose for her. Paula’s hat had been chosen in defer- ence to hat, hair and profile, and her pearls with an eye to all four. The whole defied competition on the part of Miss Dallas O'Mara. Miss Dallas O'Mara, in her studio, was perched on a high stool before an easel with a targe tray of assorted crayons at her side. She looked a sight and didn’t care at all. She .greeted Dirk and Paula with a cheerful friendliness and went right on work- ing. A model, very smartly gowned, was sitting for her. “Hello!” said Dallas O'Mara. “This #8 it. Do you think you're going to like it?” “Oh,” said Dirk. “Is that it?” It was merely the beginning of a draw- Ing of the smartly gowned model. “Oh, that’s it, is it?” Fifteen hundred dol- ars! : “I hope you didn’t think it was going to be a picture of a woman buying bonds.” She went on working. She had on a fad®ad all-enveloping smock, over which French ink, rubber cement, pencil marks, crayon dust and wash were so impartially distributed that the whole blended and mixed in a rich mellow haze like the Chicago at- mosphere itself. The collar of a white silk blouse, not especially «clean, showed above this. On her feet were goft kid bedroom slippers, scuffed, with pompons on them. Her dull gold hair was carelessly rolled into that great loose knot at the back. Across one cheek was a swipe of black. “Well,” thought Dirk, “she looks a sight.” Dallas O'Mara waved a friendly hand toward some chairs on which were piled hats, odd garments, bris- tol board and (on the broad arm of one) a piece of yellow cake. “Sit down.” She called to the girl who bad opened the door to them: “Gilda, board, rubbed it out at once—'thcu- sand people in and out of here every bour, just about. 1 like it.” “Gosh!” he thought, “she’s—1 doz’ know—she’s—" “Shall we go?’ said Paula. He had forgotten all about “Yes. Yes, I'm ready if you are.” Outside, “Do you think you're going Paula asked. They stepped into her car. “Sure.” “Attractive, isn’t she?” “Think so?” hes So he was going to be on his guard, was he! Paula threw in the cluteh viciously, jerked the lever into second speed. “Her neck was dirty.” “Crayon dust,” said Dirk. “Not necessarily,” replied Paula. Dirk turned sideways to look at her It was as though he saw her for the first time. She looked brittle, hard, artificial—small, somehow. Not ii physique but in personality. The picture was finished and deliv- ered within ten days. In that time Dirk went twice to the studio in On- tario street. Dallas did not seem t¢ mind. Neither did she appear particu- larly interested. She was working hard both times. Once she looked as he had seen her on his first visit. The second time she had on a fresh crisp smock of faded yellow that was glorl- ous with her hair; and high-heeled beige kid slippers, very smart. She was like a little girl who has just been freshly scrubbed and dressed in a clean pinafore, Dirk thought. He thought & good deal about Dal- las O'Mara. He found himself talking about her in what he assumed to be a careless, offhand manner. He liked to talk about her. He told his mother of her. He could let himself go with Selina, and he must have taken ad- vantage of this for she looked at him intently and said: “I'd like to meet her. I've never met a girl like that.” “I'll ask her if she'll let me bring you up to the studio some time when you're in town.” (Continued next week.) Opal Diggers Work Hard for Small Remuneration Of all the rough “outback” joos in Australia, digging for opal is about the worst. Coober Pedy lies in the heart of the Stewart range, 170 miles frem the nearest station on the East- West railway, and its whole popula- tion of between 70 and 80 diggers lives underground in burrows scratched out of the hillside. A tin shanty, in which the diggers keep their tools, is the only sign of life showing above ground. Every morning the diggers come oul of their holes and set out for the opal | fields, to cut patiently through the rock in the hope of finding the bean siful black diamonds lying letween them they have dug many tho: sands of dollars’ worth of opa! in the lust four years, though they have worked only a small area of a field said to be 40 miles long. In normal times opal is worth about $15 an ounce, but now that there is practical ly no demand for the gems the diggers have opal, but no money, beneath: - FARM NOTES. —Pennsylvania’s flow of maple sap this spring has been estimated as be- ing worth $512,500. —Seed bare places on the lawn. Constant seeding keeps the grass thick and the weeds thin. —Keep ahead of the weeds and they will never grow up to be troublesome pests. Clean cultivation means few- er undesirable plants in the fields and gardens in the following years. —One farmer today produces as much as four or five farmers did thir- ty years ago, say farm economists. More and better machinery, with im- proved cultural practices makes pro- duction more efficient. —One hundred and twenty-eight “boarder” cows were forced out of Pennsylvania cow testing associations in April, the monthly report of the dairy extension service of The Penn- sylvania State College shows. —Of the 305 litters in the 1925 ton litter race, 192 are pure bred; 98 are sired by pure bred boars, and 15 are miscellaneous. Watch the perecntage of each that make the ton litter. Good Ploed tells. Listen to its story this all. —When pastures begin to get short do not fail to give the cows supple- mentary feed. Hay, green feed, or grain may be used. An important thing in profitable milk production is liberal feeding at all seasons of the year. —More than three hundred litters have been enrolled and nominated for the 1925 Ton Litter club. Results ob- tained last year show that producing 2 ton of pork with one litter in 180 days is an economical means of filling the pork barrel. This year it will be no different. —Cow testers are much in demand for Keystone associations. A course of training for men to fill the vacan- cies which come in July, August and September will be given at The Penn- sylvania State College, July 20 to 25. Practical instruction fits the young man for actual testing work. —Thirty-seven associations tested 11,944 cows. The Carbon-Lehigh as- sociation led with 503 cows tested. The Westmoreland association and the Cumberland group were tied for first in the number of cows producing 40 pounds of butterfat or more with 81 each, and the Lycoming association led the groups with 236 cows giving over a thousand pounds of milk. There were 1463 cows producing more than forty pounds of milk and 2292 giving over a half ton of milk. —Beekeepers Jhroughout Pennsyl- vania are cautioned to be on the watch for the development of American foul- brood in their hives. A close watch should be kept for dead brood from now until the first of September. The diease attacks larvae causing a brown- ish decay to take place. It is a men- ace in all parts of the State. Control measures include removal of the bees from the infested hive, swarming them into a new hive. In- fection remains in the honey, so the bees must build new combs, Burn or bury the old combs. —Requests for information on how to register a farm name in order to prevent any other farm owner in the State from using the same name are frequently received by the Depart- ment of Agriculture. The procedure is as follows: Write to the Secretary of the Common- wealth, Harrisburg, for the applica- tion blank used in registering trade- marks and trade-names. In this ap- plication, the farmer certifies as to the farm owner, location of residence, the products sold from the faim, the trade-mark or farm name will be used. Two copies of the farm letterhead or other medium carrying the farm name must be sent with the applica- tion. The fee for registration is $5.00. Fear that not enough farmers in the wheat growing counties of the State are giving serious attention to the control of the angoumois grain moth is expressed by H. E. Hodgkiss, extension entomologist at The Penn- sylvania State College. : The weather conditions of last year were unfavorable to the development of the moth and not so much damage was done. But reverse conditions ex- ist this summer and damage that may run into several millions of dollars can be expected, unless growers in the af- fected sections take heed of the situa- tion at once. “Thresh early,” is the warning from State College. Threshing in the field before August 1 is recommended, and the job should be done before Sep- tember 1, by all means, say special- ists. He adds: “The moth is working now in barns where the spring clean-up was neg- lected. This means a re-infestation of the grain in the bins and if the weath- er influences have increased the breed- ing of the moth in the field, we musi be fearful of an outbreak in Septem: ber or early in August.” # —The wild gooseberry and all its currant relatives have been found to spread the blister rust disease of white pine. This European pest came over to this country fifteen or sixteen years ago and has spread so widely over the white pine range that it could not be suppressed. The fungus can- not pass from one pine to another but must come from nearby gooseberries on which it lives during the summer as an orange or reddish rust on the leaves. There ‘is no doubt that t e rust parasite is as unwelcome to tie gooseberry as it is to the white pine tree or to the forest owners, but its guilt in tiis matter cannot be over- looked and wherever white pines are ' growing it must be viewed with alarm. When it comes to a choice ‘between saving the white pine or the humble wild gooseberry the latter should be made the goat every time, states W. A. McCubbin, bureau of plant indus- try, Pennsylvania Department of Ag- riculture. The blister rust disease has yet but a scanty foothold in northern Pennsylvania but is creeping down gradually from New York and the New England States. Everybody can help to stop it from becoming a men- ace to our future pine forests by de- stroying wild gooseberries whenever and wherever found. ieeginsd