“Bellefonte, Pa. April 30, 1926. ——————————————————————— THE TRIPLE PLAY. “Crack!” The ball shot downward away from the bat to the ground, six feet in front of the pitcher's box. Then, like a glancing bullet, it bound- ed upward against Jim Conklin’s mouth and nose. It was one of those unfortunate ac- cidents that occasionally occur on the diamond; unfortunate for Jim and his team, for he was West High’s crack pitcher; lucky, perhaps, for the visit- ors from Middletown High School, be- cause, with Jim out of the game, the Middletowners had a much better chance to over-come the seven-run lead that West High had on them. And Jim was out of the game, all right. His cut and bleeding lips de- cided that. His absence now, though, should make little difference in the _outcome, in view of West High’s lead. “Go right home and to bed,” order- ed the doctor, after bandaging Jim’s mouth and nose in the dressing rooms under the grandstand. “You had a pretty stiff crack. Nothing sericus, but it’s better for you to rest.” “Yes, Jim, do that,” Coach Ham- mond put in. “Your uncle is waiting for you in his car just outside the gate. “You've already done your share in winning this game—and in landing the pennant for us. Middletown can’t come up and over-come such a lead in the two innings left to play. Tl put your brother Jack here in the box to finish up. The doctor will see you to the car. “Come on, Jack. We'll get back to the game.” As Jim made for his uncle’s auto- mobile, Coach Hammond and Jack Conkin headed for the diamond and play was quickly resumed. Jim and Jack were not only broth- ers, but also twins, looking as much alike as twins usually do. They were well built, very black of eye and black of hair. The twins were fond of baseball, Ji 1 being looked upon as West High’s st.+ player. He was always steady; so steady that often the other mem- bers of the team spoke of him as «Old Rock” Conklin. When he was in the box every player felt that the whole nine would work in unison. At times Jack played as well as his brother, but on the whole he could not be relied upon. For several in- nings he might play a perfect game, fast and brilliant, then suddenly he would go straight up into the air. When this happened the team usu- ally went to pieces with him. This afternoon, however, Jack felt fit and sure of himself. He would just clean up the Middletown batters in one-two- three order. From the opening of the season there had been intense rivalry be- tween West High and the Middletown teams. Hal/ way through the sea- son it had been a toss-up which of the two would capture the county high-school pennant. And the uncer: tainty had continued up to "the two final games. Now, if West High should prove the victor, there would be no need of crossing bats on the second game. But if the Middletown- ers should, by some freak of fortune during the remaining two innings, pull out in the lead, they would still have a chance for the county high- school flag. But as Jack faced the batter and let his gaze wander on the players’ bench and the packed grandstand, he felt, like Coach Hammond, that the game was safely in the palm of West High’s hand. Winding up, he sent through a straight, fast one. The batter swung at it and missed. Whereupon Jack’s fellow players and the West High rooters yelled their approval. As the catcher tossed the ball back to the box Jack caught it nonchalant- ly. Then, quick as a flash, he turn- ed and made a sudden throw to first, catching the runner so far off base that he was tagged out. Again a yell of approval from the other players and the grandstand. Jack was playing in his best form to- day. Now, with good support, he would give the Middletowners their first shut-out of the season. The team hadn’t been able to score off Jim. “Nor,” said ,Jack to himself, “will they, off me.” And, sure enough in their half of that inning they did not score. Rousing cheers floated to the dia- mond from all sides. With the score standing seven to nothing in favor of West High, it surely looked as if Middletown were slated for second place. And it looked even more so at the end of the eighth inning. For Jack knocked a home run, which also brought in a man who was on first. When the side went out, the spirit of conquerors was in the hearts of the West High players, while gloom hung over the Middletowners. Nine to nothing was a big lead for the latter to overcome. Yet they were fighters, and had no intention of giving up un- til the last ball had been put over. Jack felt cocksure of himself as he walked to the box for the first half of the ninth inning. “Strike one!” shouted the umpire at Jack’s first delivery, and the West Ign rooters broke out in the school yell. “Strike two!” shouted the umpire again, as the ball thudded into the catcher’s mitt. A dancing light was in the young pitcher’s eyes when he served up the next one, a snappy curve. “Crack!” Of a sudden the light died away. The batter; had smashed out a fast grounder toward shortstop Frank Dillon, usually called “Whitey,” on account of his light-colored hair. Ordinarily Whitey gathered in his chances without error. But just then, hard luck! For, al- though he made one of his lightning- like springs off to the right, all he did when his hands shot down was to turn the ball aside as it touched his fingers. i or - By the time the ball was fielded the runner had reached first and another batter was on his way to the plate. “Whitey ought to have got that one,” Jack thought, getting ready to step back into the box. “But it’s all right. Middletown will have to play some ball to make ten runs in one in- ning.” True enough, they would. And that they intended to try was shown by the way the players responded to the school yells and the cheers booming out from the Middletown section of the grandstand. “Kill it, Tucker!” one of the Middle- town players called from the bench. To which Tucker responded by grim- ly raising his club. “Swish!” Tucker had struck under. “Swish!” again. This time over, and the runner was still on first. “pop!” This time he connected, and the ball rolled slowly just inside the third base lines, with the man on first reaching second and Tucker reaching first. Jack fanned the next man and the Middletown rooters looked glum. Still they were not quitters, which was shown by their cheers for the suc- ceeding batter up. In making the next delivery Jack lost control of the ball and struck the batter on the shoulder, thus giv- ing him a base. With all sacks loaded, Jack felt just as confident of victory as he had felt when they were empty. All he had to do was to keep his head. «Strike one!” called the umpire. A minute later he called loudly, “Strike two!” Jack was keeping his head all right. He wound up and let drive a tantaliz- ing curve, thinking as he did so, “Strike three!” But instead—“crack!” The ball, a moderately fast grounder, shot away from the bat well off Jack's right, making straight for Whitey. Jack threw himself sidewise on the ground, his arm outstretched. The ball touched his fingers. He tried to clutch it, but it rolled away from him. Jumping wildly to his feet, he bounded forward and scooped the ball up. And then, instead of throwing home, where he could easily have caught the runner, he heaved the ball with all his might away over the first baseman’s nead, with the result that four runs were made before the ball was fielded. Then and there Jack went to pieces. And, to make matters still worse, the rest of the team did the same. Coach Hammond, doing his best to steady the boys, smiled and waved them encouragement. Yet he felt downhearted, for he had no one to put in Jack's place. West High had three pitchers—Jim, Jack, and George Hoover. But Hoover was out of the game because of a badly sprained wrist. With two injured pitchers, it was Jack or nobody. The result was that Middletown spurred on by chance of victory and by West High’s fumbles, poor team- work, and bone-head plays, came up from behind for a one-run lead over West High. i West High had a chance to capture not only the game but also the pen- nant in their half of the ninth. Still, on account of poor stick work, no one reached first base. It was a gloomy lot of players that filed into the West High dressing room, with the cheers of the Middle- town rooters ringing in their ears. Of course there was a chance of winning the final game. But it was a small chance, if Jack were to pitch. And what else was there for it? Neither Jim Conklin nor George Hoover could play the following day, when the game was scheduled. That evening Coach Hammand dropped around to the Conklin home, where he spent nearly two hours. He found Jim, a bandage over his mouth and nose, feeling fairly well. Yet it did not seem probable that he would be able to play baseball for a week or two. However, when he bade the twins good night and made for the street the coach did not feel so pessimistic over the next day’s game. There yas still a chance of grabbing: the ag. At two o'clock the following after- noon, as loud cheers rolled out from the grandstand, the Middletown play- ers walked confidently onto the field; while the West Highs, the lower half of their younger pitcher's face hid- den by a fresh white bandage, took their place on the bench. “How are you feeling, Jim?” asked Dan Kidder, West High's catcher, turning to look over the bandage into the young pitcher's snappy black eyes. “Good!” was the prompt reply through the folds over mouth and nose that muffled the speaker’s voice. “Good as I ever did. And we're go- ing to win the game to-day. That flag is ours.” “Gee! but it’s fine to hear you talk like that, Jim,” Dan replied eagerly. “If that’s the way you feel we're going to win, all right. All the boys are steady when you are in the box.” One by one the West High bats- man struck out. The Middletown pitcher, as well as the rest of the team, showed conclusively that all hands were on their toes. Then, as the West Highs were mak- ing ready to take their places on the diamond, Coach Hammond called the boys around him and gave them a short talk. “Watch yourselves,” he said. “And don’t lose your heads. “Remember, too, that you've got to back up your pitcher if we're to win this game. Play ball for his sake as well as your own. For when any- one gets a crack in the face like Jim did yesterday it is bound to take a little out of him. Your pitcher, al- though he has a bandage over his nose and mouth, is not shy on brains. So play ball—and the flag is ours.” This short talk gave the players added encouragement. To them, an injured, steady-going Jim was a great deal better than a rattle-headed pitch- er such as Jack had shown himself to be on the preceding afternoon. “If we had Jack in the box,” they all thought, Middletown would get the pennant. But with Jim—well, they'll have to fight for it” Never before had such cheers roar- ed out of the grandstand as to-day. Cheers that were entirely deserved, too; for both teams played exception- ally fine ball. Cheers! Cheers! And still more cheers, the loudest of them for West High's young pitcher. He was the star of the day. He seemed to have perfect control. He had great speed when it was need- ed. But he apparently depended most on a slow, tantalizing curve that seemed easy enough to solve, yet the Ball was rarely knocked out of the in- field. Still, West High was not having easy picking, because Middletown was also playing great ball, For eight innings the score remained nothing to nothing. Then West High’s pitcher clouted out a home run, bringing in a man who was on second. So when the Middletown players walked in for their half they had a two-run lead to overcome. “We've got them, Jim!” said Whitey Dillon, as he passed the pitch- er’s box on his way to the shortstop’s position. “You never played a better game than you have to-day. Out with them! The whole team is be- hind you.” Snappy black eyes showed above the bandages as the pitcher nodded. Then was heard a muffled “Atta boy!” “Qtrike one!” Umpire Franklin yelled when the first ball sped over the plate. “Strike two!” at the next. But not so with the third, for the batter found it. Not, however, for a long drive, but a pop-up fly, which the first baseman muffed on account of the sun shining in his eyes. This brought the Middletown root- ers to their feet yelling. Perhaps at last Middletown’s time had come. Three runs were all that was needed. “Yow! Yow! Yow!” The next batter, after fouling twice, hit toward third. The third baseman should have gathered in the ball with little difficulty. But he fumbled, and by the time the Middletown rooters’ cheers had died away there was a runner on first and another on second. It was then that West High play- ers and rooters alike thought to them- selves: “It’s a good thing that Jim Conklin is in the box instead of his twin brother. Jack would be clear up in the air by this time. But with Jim—it’s just two men on bases; that’s all. And that's where they’ll stay.” Yet very shortly after the next Middletown batter stepped to the plate, he found the ball for a safe single. And the bases were full. Ned Mead, the hardest and surest hitter of Middletown, sauntered to the plate, bat on his shoulder, a smile on his face, and confidence in his stride. What he would do to the pill, if the pitcher would put one over! Just one! Then a homer, and Middletown would have the game cinched by a score of four to two. West High’s twirler looked coolly around. Other pitchers had pitched themselves out of a hole like this, so why couldn’t he? The whole team was with him. They were ready for whatever might come. “Ball one;” sang out Umpire Franklin, while Mead, grinning, yell- ed, “Are you going to give me a walk 7” A minute later he set himself for: a good, solid wallop, for the ball was apparently coming up exactly to his liking. Then, “crack!” He found it. Not, however, for a long line drive, as he had hoped, but for a slow grounder that was traveling toward the right of the pitcher’s box. The pitcher suddenly stooped over, right hand down. He might stop the ball and catch the man at home, or he might fumble. The pill was speeding fast, and was pretty well out of his reach. It was a situation similar to that in which Jack Conklin had lost his head and his game in the ninth inning on the preceding day. Just as quickly as he had stooped over, the young slab artist straight- ened up and let the ball zip on toward Whitey at short. The white-haired shortstop saw the ball rolling toward him and he knew what to do. Down went his hand, and in almost the same sweep he tagged the runner dashing for third. Then Whitey whipped the ball to second. The second baseman relayed to first for a triple play, winning both the game and the pennant. “Head work to that play,” said one rooter to another, as the crowd began surging from the grandstand onto the field. But that’s Jim all over. He always knows what to do. Come on! We'll carry him around the diamond on our shoulders.” “No, fellows, no!” the black-eyed young pitcher objected, as a group of boys prepared to lift him up on the shoulders of the two most stalwart. Then, entirely forgetting his band- aged face, a scuffle began, a scuffle in which the bandage suddenly shot down from the pitcher's nose and mouth to his shoulders. And then— and then the nearest boys gasped. For, instead of seeing the swollen lips and puffed nose of Jim Conklin, they stared at the radiant face of Jack Conklin, no longer a rattle-head- ed player. “It was this way,” Coach Hammond explained to Umpire Franklin a cou- ple of hours later: “We were in a hole for pitchers. Nobody left but Jack, as Jim was in no fix to play.. “So I thought of having Jack put on a bandage and go into the box. Jack is a brilliant player when he keeps his head. Consequently, I figured that if he knew his team- mates believed he was Jim, it might inspire him to play the steady game he knew Jim would play. “You see how it worked out. And let me tell you this: From now on Jack will be just as steady a player as his twin.””—From the Reformatory Record. : —The “Watchman” gives all the news when it is news. Read it. Animals and Insects Prepare for Winter Ants, bees, wasps, flies and many | other insects protect themselves dur- ing the winter by securing food sup plies and constructing retreats. The wonderful work done by ants, bees, wasps, spiders, butterflies and worms has been studied by many nat- uralists and researches have been charmingly described by Lubbock, Fabre, Maeterlinck and other able writers. The underground apartments and terraced homes of the ants, their | domestic life, social organization and thoughtfulness, are among the gres? wonders of nature, : These extraordinarily intelligent in. | sects not only store away an abun- dance of food for winter, but also they provide aphides to be milked and they cultivate fungi gardens and manufac- ture many food substances while pass- ‘ng the winter months underground Genius, individuality and temper- ament in animals enable them to solve all the problems of winter which they may at any time encounter. These vary in individuals of the same spe- cies. Among any group of young ani- mals or birds or insects you may no- tice individuals varying in fear, timid- | ity, curiosity, suspicion, sociability, | aggressiveness and initiative. Hardly | two will be found with simlar charac- | ters and temperaments. They differ as widely as the members of a single | human family. The strong and fear- | less members of any species give the ' leadership and develop the customs which enable them to meet the cond’ | ‘ions of winter. Birds and Mankind | of Long Association The association between certain birds and man is immensely ancient, | says the London Times. As with | sheep and oxen and horses, and even | more with the dog, the attempt to as- sign a date to the origin of our farm- yard birds is foiled by the mists of antiquity. The scanty company of farmyard species has been recruited in very dif- ferent ages. The turkey could not join us until we discovered America, and probably far the oldest is the rock-pigeon. When man learned how to grow grain, the dove found a nev attraction in his company. When man became a builder in stone, he built also for the swallows and doves. The swallow finds a home today in the cowsheds that mimic his ancient caves, while the house-pigeon, like the house-martin, clings to the outside of man’s mimic | rock faces and builds its nests on his triumphal arches and against his ca- thedrals. Gregorian Calendar The present calendar was adopted in ! the Sixteenth century, the Julian or old Roman calendar having become greatly erroneous. Luigi Lilas Ghiraldi, | frequently called Aloysuis Lilues, a physician, of Verone, projected a plan for amending the Julian calendar, which, after his death was presented by his brother to Pope Gregory XIII. To carry it into execution, the Pope assembled a number of prelates and learned men. In 1577 the proposed change was adopted by all the Catholic | princes, and in 1582 Gregory issued a | brief abolishing the Julian calendar in all Catholic countries, and introducing in its stead the one now in use, under the name of the Gregorian or reformed calendar, or the “new style,” as the other was now called the “old style.” The Gregorian calendar was not adopted in England until 1752. Men of Great Strength ft is difficult to compare strong men. Fach has his own special tests, at which he is superior to the rest. A recent newspaper article stated that unquestionably the strongest man of modern times was Louis Cyr of Can- ada, who was considerably stronger than Sandow. Bred®rt, who died in October, 1925, is said to have come nearer emulating Sandow than any of the latter's many imitators. Certain strong men excelled Sandow in specific feats. For instance, Arthur Saxon was the best lifter of weights ever produced. Steinbach, Inch, Ashton, Travig, Rolandow and Lurich each had some unusual performance to his credit. Forces That Control The tone of society is the result, not so much of the deliberate attempt of the members of it to influence each other, as of the unconscious action and reaction of their characters. Nor can anyone easily measure how great his own contribution has been to the good or evil spirit that prevails around him, or how, h:y casual deeds or actions, or even looks, he may have influenced the lives of others. We do not carry on our warfare at our own charges, but the whole weight of the evil that ig In our society is dragging us down, and the whole force of the good that is in it is helping us up.—Edward Caird. Lace-Making Old Art Lace-making, embroidery and fins ascdlework in general are credited to tbe Greeks, and its antiquity goes back to mythology almost. Minerva tg seid to have originated the art of pictorial needlework. Many books on lace-making and embroidery have been traced back to the Middle Ages. The Greeks are thought to have breaght it from Egypt, and the Chal- deans, whose civilization was earlier than that of the Egyptians, had de- veloped it to a fine degree also. France gave it wide popularity after the (Christian era. { HEAR African Chief Gave Name to Zulu Tribe The name “Zulu,” Which means “gky,” was, not further back than a hundred years, confined to a small and insignificant tribe, occupying that part of the White Umfolozi valley which falls between the Mahlabatina mag- istracy on the north and that of Mel- moth on the south, according to Ad- venture Magazine. Zulu, son of a cer- tain Malandela, flourished in Zululand probably during the Sixteenth century. This son is said to have quarreled with his elder brother Qwabe, who took exception to the former being * presented by his mother with a cer- tain white ox, with the result that Zulu left with his followers to oc- . cupy the White Umfolozi valley, while Qwabe went to live nearer the coast on the south side of the Umhlatuze river and in what is known as Eshowe ' district. It was with the help of the chief of the Mtetwa tribe that Tshaka, who was not the proper heir, became chief of the Zulu tribe. No sooner did he become chief than he began to build up an extraordinary military organiza- tion, and to attempt what had never been attempted before, namely, to fuse the various tribes into a nation. | Lesson to Humanity Found in Bee Hives It is more than sweets and fruits and many a lovely flower that would fail us, lacking bees. We would lack books—a few books. In fact, more books have been written about bees than about any other domestic ani- mal. We should also lack something of sympathy and history. Beekeeping is the oldest craft in the world. As a beekeeper I am continuing an an- clent line; joining the oldest of hu- man guilds; speaking a language known of all lands; supporting and practicing an art beloved of all peo- ples; subscribing to a simple faith, wider than any creed or color or the folds of any flag. The bees are a good first step in an ali-world broth- erhood, and could well be included in any world-peace plans. The symbol of that plan might be the hive for its universality, its unbroken continuity as a peaceful occupation, no less than for its social significance—its practice of sacrifice for the common good.— Dallas Lore Sharp, in “The Spirit of the Hive.” Curse Trademark Fakers .n the latter part of October each sear the English city of Sheffield cele- brates its Cutlers’ feast, a civie func- tion that has been held annually since 1648, when the first of the city’s mas- ter cutlers was elected. The banquet is attended by captains of industry from ‘all over the empire, and by at least one minister of the crown. Two “toasts that are always‘drunk with en- thusiasm are: “Eternal destruction to all false marks on Sheffield goods” and “success to the Hallamshire Whittells.” This quaint wording is explained by the fact that the park of Yorkshire where Sheflield is situated was once known as Hallamshire, while “whit- tell” is an old name for a knife. There is no public office more highly esteemed than this. As head of the ancient Cutlers’ guild the master takes precedence next to the lord mayor of ! ' Sheffield. Prodigious Memory One of the sources of the late Rene viviani’s eloquence was his profound knowledge of French literature. He knew by heart thousands of verses and could recite entire acts of the classic tragedies without an error. He demonstrated this at the time . of his baccalaureate, when he agree- | ably surprised the examiner by his accurate analysis of the Cid. “Can you recite a few verses ot 1t?” the examiner asked. »Certainly,” sald Viviani, and had recited the whole of the first act be- fore he was halted. On another oeca- sion he recited the whole of Horatius and Phedre from beginning to end.— Bulgarie, Sofia. An Expert “Julia, do you know what love it?” The young man put the question in an intense voice. “Yes,” replied the girl, firmly. “But do you really know?” he asked again. “Have you ever been the ob- ject of a love as undying as the sun, as all-pervading as the air, as wonder- ful as the stars? Have you ever loved and been loved like that, Julia?” In an agony of suspense he waited for her reply. “Have I?” she murmured. “If you will come up into our boxroom, I can show you a trunk full of letters, and three albums full of photographs, and in my jewel-case are seven engage- ment rings!” Transmitting Light Rays The bureau of standards says tha: the transmission factor of smooth, clear glass is about 92 per cent in per- pendicularly incident light, the loss being that reflected at the two sur- faces. The amount of light transmit- ted varies with the angle of incidence and the refractive index of the glass. The reflector will absorb from 10 to 40 per cent of the light incident upon it, depending upon its surface Victor in Life’s Race Life is a test of fitness. In running ais race a man should be able to pass the winning post with head up, heart light, eye clear, and conscience at peace. If he can do so he is not “one who alse ran,” but the captain of als own destiny. —Grit : FARM NOTES. — Perennials require dividing every few years. Especially is this true of peonies and iris. Simply lift the large clumps and cut into three or four parts with a sharp spade. —Japanese barberry is an orna- mental shrub and not the host plant for wheat stem rust. The common barberry is the one that serves as the host for the rust organism and should be destroyed. —How is your seed corn supply? It will soon be planting time and the assurance that the seed corn put in planter-box will grow is a comforting one. A test in time will save possible disappointment and insure a better crop prospect. —Hotbeds may be used for the growing of melon and cucumber plants in paper bands or pots after the tomatoes have been removed, say vegetable gardening specialists of the Pennsylvania State College. Such crops also may be planted directly in the hotbed, a hill to each sash, and allowed to mature there. —The lightning rod, when proper- ly installed, is an efficient protection against damage from this cause. This does not include installations constructed of poor waterials and as- sembled in a haphazard fashion. The chief function of a lightning con- ductor is to provide a path over the building itself and cause fire. —Be sure the cabbage plants are well hardened before setting them in the field. They should have that red- dish tinge that indicates a well-hard- ened plant. A few gardeners treat their plants with nitrate a few days before planting “to give them a good green color,” as some say. But such treatment stimulates the growth of tender tissue and makes the plants less hardy to frost. —Plan your garden for this year. Use as a basis the amount of vege- tables needed by your family for a healthful diet. Plan for the great- est quantity of the vegetables your family particularly likes. Make the location and size of plet fit the garden you want, when ever possible, rather than plan the garden to fit a space that may be too cramped or in- conveniently located. —The ewes that are to lamb soon should be separated from the rest of the flock and, if it can be convenient- ly done, each ewe should be kept in a small pen by herself. After the lambs are a few days old the ewes wit small lambs may be allowed to run together.. The ewes should be given a small allowance of grain, which may be increased up to about a pound | apiece a day after the lambs become large enough to consume the milk. —Alfalfa is a valuable dairy feed. ' Many farmers who have alfalfa and their own corn and oats are only pay- ing about $35 a ton for grain mix- tures. Alfalfa not only makes it pos- sible to have a cheap grain mixture but helps cows give more milk than any other roughage will. If alfalfa is not already grown on the farm, get in touch with the county agent and have your soil tested for lime re- quirements; also obtain sources of good seed and inoculation. —Better sires for Pennsylvania dairy herds continues to be a popular movement. Four new bull associa- tions have just been organized. Two are in Centre county, one in Franklin county, and another in Bedford coun- ty. The latter will use Guernsey sires while the other three are composed of Holsteins. There are now 43 bull associations “in the State. This number puts Penn- | sylvania well out in the lead in this i phase of progressive dairying. Each association has three or more blocks , with a sire in each block. S. J. ‘ Brownell, of the Pennsylvania State College dairy extension staff, is in | charge of the bull association activi- ties. | —Mice and rabbits took an enorm- “ous toll among unprotected fruit trees of the State during the past winter, ‘early observations reveal. Two hundred trees were girdled in a single orchard near Pittsburgh, Paul Thayer, fruit extension special- ist of the Pennsylvania State College, reports. In one group of trees more than one-third of the stand was ru- ined by the rodents. The owner is busy bridge-grafting. In addition, he ‘has 500 poison bait traps, of the type approved by State College and United States Department of Agri- culture specialists, set for the orch- ard destroyers. Reports from other fruit growing sections add to the tales of destruc- tion by mice and rabbits, most of which could have been prevented by proper precautionary measures, Thay- er declares. —Farmers who intrust the sale of their products to commission men in distant cities are urged by the Penn- sylvania Department of Agriculture to be extremely careful about the type of dealer selected. The farmer who consigns products only a few times a year is the one who is most likely to be careless about the reliability of the commission man to whom consignments are made. Crook- ed commission men make a special effort to secure the patronage of such occasional shippers. They promise unusual returns, but when final set- tlement is made, if made at all, the price is likely to be very unsatisfact- ory. Complaints of such treatment are received by the Department of Agriculture from farmers in many other States as well as Pennsylvania. The best way to deal with the dis- honest commission agent, is not to deal with him at all. There are too many honest men willing to handle the farmer's shipments, to warrant taking any chances with crooks. Farmers who are not experienced in desling with commission men and are confronted with the problem of knowing what commission agency to consign shipments to, are urged to seek the advice of their county agents and local bankers or make inquiry to the Bureau of Markets at Harrisburg. It is always best to establish the re- liability of a commission man who is handling the farmer’s business for the first time.