EE TE SONS: I — Bellefonte, Pa., June 11, 1926. PROGRESS OF INDUSTRIAL RE- FORESTATION. For all present practical purposes the forests of the United States are private forests. The public hears lit- tle of them and much of the public forests, but the former now yield about 97 per cent of our lumber and others forest products. These indus- trial forests are the base of a tower- ing pyramid of industry and com- merce. They represent an investment of $10,000,000,000; they provide em- ployment for 1,300,000 people, ‘and support for 10,000,000. Great cities and imperial regions depend prinepal- ly upon them for their prosperity if ! not their economic existence. The fate their economic existence. The fate of these forests is the destiny of for- estry in America, and the weal or woe of a large sector of our commercial life. They are the major part of our forest problem. “My worst troubles were those that never happened,” said an old lady, re- viewing her life. The mere progress of events has a way of solving many of our personal and social problems that seem beyond voluntary solution. There isn’t a great nation in Christen- dom that hasn't been “ruined” in every generation by some problem or other, but they keep right on, vigor- ous and active, just the same. Twenty years ago one of the great- est forest lovers in America—a lead- er of the conservation movement— predicted the end of the forests as producers by 1927, his only qualifica- tion being that regrowth in the mean- time might extend the producing life of the forests by five years. The “end of the world” for the forests and forest industries is now at hand, ac- cording to the prophecy of 1907, but the forest statisticians of the day tell us that we have almost as much saw timber now as their predecessors fig- ured 20 years ago; and the latest prophet of the end of the forests (sanctioned by the prophet of 1907) now puts that dire event at about 35 years hence. These prophecies of woe have had a certain value, as the sensational headlines of the conservation move- ment. They served to attract atten- tion and thought to a really serious problem; but the time has gone by for their use. The time has come to let the public know that there never will be an end of productive forests in America, and that even at the very lowest possible ebb the lumber and other forest products will still be available in substantial volume. The facts are that great progress has been made, that the turning point from the era of exploitation to the era of reproductive forest use Ras been definitely passed. The private forests of America con- sist almost wholly of farm woodlots and commercial timber holdings. Pre- cise figures are not available but ap- proximately there are 150,000,000 acres of forested land on the farms of the . country and about 235,000,000 acres in the reserves of the forest in- dustries or held for their ultimate ac- quisition. As the entire remaining area of land left to forest growth is put at about 470,000,000 acres, it ap- pears that about 80 per cent of it is privately owned. Obviously, the fu- ture of our supply of forest products rests with private rather than public lands, except as the national and state government may elect to extend their forests. All privately owned land is neces- sarily a commercial problem for its owners, whether it be forest or prai- rie, mountain or plain. The owner will make only such use of it as pays or promises to pay a return on labor and investment. No private owner, except now and then a wealthy park or estate owner or a biological en- thusiast will grow trees, corn, wheat, sheep or cattle on his land if it will pay. If it should happen that grow- ing trees will never pay in America, then it is certain that there will nev- er be any commercial forestry, that virtually all of the land on which trees will grow will revert to the govern- ment, if no other profitable use can be found for it, and that reforestation and forest perpetuation will become solely a public function. The history of forests and forestry in Europe indicates that so much for- | est land is not susceptible of profit- ‘able administration that state own- ership of as much as 50 per cent. is perhaps inevitable in the long run. Inasmuch as forests have certain com- mon values and benefits, partly aris- ing from the nature of their products and partly from the contribution to the general material background of civilization (such as their controi of waterflow, climatic effects, relations to tributary argiculture and their rec- reational and aesthetic values) the public is practically justified in main- taining forests where the indivdiual could not. It is thus seen that primarily the practice of forestry is a purely eco- nomic one from the private point of view. The all too frequent denuncia- tion of land owners for not replacing forests is usually quite as absurd as would be denunciation of farmers for abandoning plowed fields when it ap- pears the part of economy and pru- dence to do so. Whereas, to remove the natural crop of timber may be a paying undertaking, its replacement may be unprofitable. Such has been the general situation in the United States in the past—and that is why there hitherto has been so little man- aged reforestation. There is ‘good reason to believe that the situation is changing so rapidly, or ig so ‘clearly due to change, that reforestation is now commercially justifiable in many parts of the coun- try. Human nature is conservative and men are apt to lag behind the facts in their business habits. Prob- ably the present economic promise of forestry ig greater on the whole than many “forest proprietors, accustomed always to dealing with virgin forests, are willing to admit. On the other bermen are looking ahead 30 to 50 years and are inaugurating reforesta- tion under unpromising present con- ditions. Abstractly, it would appear that, with the output of forest pro- ducts necessarily so restricted that per capita consumption of them is de- clining as population increases, the forest grower for the future would en- joy the advantage of a limited pro- duct and an intensifying demand. He would thus be in a position to obtain a favorable price for his products. Actually, there are some offsets to this pleasant view. As the price of forest - products goes up substitutes tend to come in and check the price or take the market. A profitable market for their products is necessary to the perpetuation of forests. The rapidly growing number of timber owners who are embarking on refor- estation or policies of conservative yields indicate that the forest indus- | tries ‘are convinced that substitutes can never crowd out wood. At the same time the inroads of substitutes are a reminder that forest use is as necessary to forest maintenance as forest planting. Cease to use the for- ests and private owners will cease to protect and decline to replace them. The most dramatic advance in pri- vate forestry was the abrupt whole- sale inauguration of sustained yield practice in the redwood forests of California. Since 1922, about 70 per cent. of the lumber production of the entire region has been under such management, including much arti- ficial planting, as insures the present volume of lumber output for an indef- inite period. That means that the in- dustrial life of the whole region from San Francisco Bay, north along the coast into Oregon, will always be maintained as actively as at present. There will be no dead lumber towns there, as in other forest regions. Among the major redwood lumber companies definitely committed to re- forestation are the Union Lumber company, the Mandocino Lumber com- pany, the Pacific Lumber company, the Hammond Lumber company, the Glen Blair Lumber company, Albion Lumber company, Northern Redwood company, and the Little River Red- wood company. Three of these com- panies have established large nurser- ies for the propagation of seedlings. All the other major redwood opera- tors are considering embarking on “perpetual lumbering.” An interest- ing and significant fact about the red- wood is that while it is the tallest and perhaps the longest lived of Ameri- can commerical trees, it grows very rapidly in its youth. A redwood may be sound at 800 years and vigorous at 2,000, but it is a big saw-tree at 40. The present redwood stand would en- dure 100 years at the present rate of cutting; so there is an ample “factor of safety” in this region’s conserva- tion. The outlook in the California pine regions is really just as promising as in the redwood country, though there has been no such spectacular progress. The qriginal white and sugar pine tinth® ~of - California will last 200 years at the present rate of consump- tion. Many owners have such large reserves and such conservative poli- cies that even without deliberate for- : est management the forests will grow { about as fast as they are cut. This {is especially true, now that protection | against fire is so systematically striv- | en for and becoming a settled feature i of public policy. On some large hold- | ings it is only necessary to keep out (fire to reconcile continuous use and I tive cutting is already beginning on | perpetuity. Selective or conserva- {some tracts, the smaller (and seed) i trees being left, thus maintaining the | forest as a whole; instead of the tra- | ditional clean ‘cutting, which leaves i a period of total denudation. Conser- vation of natural second-growth is now reasonably assured throughout the California pine country, and that, of course, is forest perpetuation. At least two large California pine com- paines—the Michigan-California com- pany and the Fruit Growers Supply company—are making a study of managed reforestation. They are of lumber companies that are co-operat- ing with the forestry research divi- sion of the Western Forestry and Con- servation Association. They and four other pine companies are now avow- edly on a sustained yield basis, they being the Clover Valley, Diamond Match Standard Lumber and W. P. Pickering companies. The Red River Lumber company is the largest tim- ber owner in the State and at its cur- rent rate of production is automatical- ly on a perpetual yield basis. The California White and Sugar Pine As- sociation (comprising the representa- i tive pine lumber companies) has re- | cently set up a Department of Forest | Research with a competent forest en- gineer in charge. It is chiefly in Oregon and Wash- ington, however, that the forestry work of the Western Forestry and Conservation Association is going for- ward. Before taking up the study of reforestation of cut-over lands this organization of timber owners had al- ready achieved distinction as the world’s foremost forest fire fighting body. Of course, the prevention and suppression of forest fires is funda- mental forestry. Nature has always been the great forester, and her chief enemy. has always been the forest fire. The W. F. and 8. A. is a federa- tion of local timber protective bodies that have spent in the aggregate as high as $2,000,000 a year and have had several thousand men on the fire lines in emergencies. Along with the two California com- paines, among the first owners to in- vite the new research bureau to study their lands were the Booth-Kelly Lumber company, and the Hammond company, in the Douglas fir belt of Oregon; the Shevlin-Hixon company, in the Pendosa Pine region of Ore- gon, and the Potlach Lumber company and Boise-Payette Lumber company of the Idaho white pine belt, and the West Fork and Weyerhaeuser, and St,- Paul & Tacoma and Clarke coun- ty companies in Washington, The general trend -of these studies so far indicates’ that it is good business to conserve young growth, protect the hand it is to be noted that some lum- seedlings and fight fires more energet- (ically than ever. In consequence, the Weyerhaeuser company, which is reputed to be the | most extensive timber owner in the world, has organized a forestry com- pany to look after its cut-over lands. The Shevlin-Hixon company is using exceptional care to protect the small trees, limit protective firing after log- ging and keep out accidental fires. No doubt is entertained that all of the co-operating companies will be in- creasingly active in forest fostering. Independently, the Crown-William- ette Paper company, Oregon, has em- ing much planting. More recently the following com- panies of the Gray’s Harbor region of the State of Washington have invoked the good offices of the above research bureau with an earnest view to mak- ling their operations continuous: The i Polson Logging company, Donovan- | Corkery Timber company, Simpson | Logging company, Northwestern { Lumber company, Clemmons Logging company and the Weyerhaeuser Tim- ber company. These companies own 400,000 acres of cut-over land, most ; of which is naturally restocking, and 1 as cutting progresses the area for re- | forestation will be much larger. There iis certain promise that lumbering will be a perpetual industry in this | region. As E. T. Allen, manager of | the Western Forestry and Conserva- | tion Association and forester of the National Lumber Manufacturers As- sociation put it: “There are 500, may- be 1,000 companies, that can show as good results as the National Forests show. God grows trees in spite of the devil if they escape the fire.” The most sensational reforestation advance in the Douglas fir country came last summer with the announce- ment of the Long-Bell company, a re- cent and powerful “invader” from the South; that it would immediately be- gin forestry studies and the inaugu- ation of nurseries with a view to per- petual operation. This company is just beginning its enormous opera- tions at Longview, Wash., and has 30 years’ timber supply ‘on hand. Never- theless it takes up the reforestation problem at the start. President M. B. Nelson has publicly declared that the policy of his company is that of sustained yield of the forests and per- petual operation of the mills—said to be the largest in the world. Reforestation and forestry on the Pacific Coast are especially signifi- cant and encouraging because about 50 per cent. of all the standing saw timber in the country is in California, Oregon and Washington, Oregon lead- ing all the States with about 500,000, 000,000 feet of saw timber. lumber producing region of America, and the present rate of production can be kept up forever if the cut-over lands are adequately cared for. The present stand will last 50 to 70 years, taking the region as a whole. Progress toward sustained forests and forest industries in the South is marked. Until recently, the south n for more than two decades. Includ- ing both hard and soft wood lumber they are still in the lead, though the trans-Rocky Mountain region ‘now leads in softwood. The business out- promising. It has a climate favorable to tree-growing and millions of acres of land whose soil is of indifferent value for agriculture but excellent for timber growing, and it is at the door of the world’s greatest lumber mark- ets. The fact that between 30 to 40 per cent. of all the huge lumber: ouput of the South comes from land that has been logged off at least once is a token of the future of forestry here. Nature went on the reforestation job when the first tree was felled and is still on it. Alone and unaided she is regrowing the southern pine forests at the rate of 7,000,000,000 feet of saw timber a year, which is one-fifth of the entire present lumber produc- tion of the whole country. But now the lumbermen are rallying to her support in large numbers. The Southern Pine Association re- ports that it has information of 85 lumbering operations, mostly large, that are active in maintaining pro- tection against fire—which is a major reforestation step. Fifty-eight large companies are practicing selective cutting (leaving trees below a cer- tain diameter and seed trees) and 39 of them are definitely planning con- tinuous operations. Four other large companies have engaged foresters and are considering forest management. Many others are interested. Large-scale lumbering in the United States originated in the nertheastern States, and to a considerable degree it is fair to say that reforestation is now most advanced in those States. Owing to proximity to markets for structural and industrial lumber even small-tract reforestation is now a paying enterprise in New England. And there are probably hundreds of such small undertakings of many years standing. Second-crop saw timber white pine abounds in this: re- gion. For many years, however, the pulp and paper industry has been the foremost forest industry of the North- east, and it is to it rather than to lum- ber that we must look for extensive commercial reforestation. The U. S. Forest Service calculates that there are 9,000,000 acres of pulp- wood land under management in Maine. A few of the Yeloresting com- panies may be mentioned, thé word reforesting being used in the broad sense of encouraging natural repro- duction. The Brown compahy, Ber- lin, N. H., conducts its pulpwood cut- ting operations on a diameter limit plan. It has a forestry department and is carrying on extensive forestry research work; it owns 750,000 acres. The Great Northern Paper company, Millinocket, Me., owns about one and one-fourth million acres, protects its lands and observes a diameter limit in cutting. The Coe-Pingree Estates, Bangor, Me., amounting to over a million acres, have been administered for 45 years on a diameter limit of cuttings, The Prentiss Estates, owning about 100,000 acres, are similarly managed. The International Paper barked on “timber cropping,” includ- | This re- | gion is now the greatest soft wood . States were the principal = softwabd lumbering region of the United States look for forestry in this region is | 1 ! company, owning somewhere around 1 800,000 acres of land in Maine, pro- tects its land and conserves smaller trees for future production. The New England Box company, which owns 30,000 acres in southern New Hamp- shire and in Massachusetts has done some improvement cutting on its lands and has handled some tracts on a selective cutting basis. Its forester advises tributary farmers about hand- ling their woodlots. The Lincoln ! Pulpwood company, Bangor, Me., not only operates with the State forester in fire prevention work but has its own fire-fighting organization. Like most Maine commercial timber own- ers, it follows diameter-limit cutting. T. C. Luther, Saratoga, N. Y., is planting 50,000,000 trees. From such data as is available it does not appear that much progress has been made in industrial reforesta- tion or forest management in the Lake timber states—Minnesota, Wis- consin and Michigan. tion, however, has gained greatly in these States, and there is an import- ant volume of natural reproduction of the pines and spruce. The North- ern Hemlock and Hardwood Associa- tion, an organization of the lumber- 'men of these States is taking an active interest in reforestation problems, and achieved or contemplated changes in timber taxation laws, will result in rapid progress in the near future. The | Weyerhaeuser interests have been conducting a great forest-realization experimental work at Cloquet, Minn. i and state that simply on the basis of effective fire control a half-dozen for- rest industry plants at Cloquet will be |-able to keep on indefinitely. The un- | | derlying Weyerhaeuser idea is to find | profitable ways of utilizing small and “weed” trees, so that the timber crop- | period may be rendered relatively ' short. The Holt Lumber company "and the Nekoosa-Edwards Paper com- { pany are leaders in Lake States refor- | estation. | There appears awakening of farmers to the value | and possibilities of their woodlots. As they own about one-third of the tim- position to profit greatly from the approaching period of restricted out- put of the commercial forests. The and some care and management may be expected to result in a considerable lots are now the source of supplies for many sawmills and pulp mills, and will have an increasing importance in that respect. In addition they yield fence posts. Fuel, it may be said, is still chargeable with about one-third, by volume, of the annual wood con- sumption of the United States. With the farmers, as with the com- mercial companies, unjust taxation of growing timber is a deterrent to forestry. The public has little ap- | Preciation of the intimate relation be- tween taxation and forests, but it is a question that staggers many lum- bermen who would like to make their ; -operations permanent. An illustration “found in the case of a Mississippi | lumberman whose local property taxes "are $825,000 a year; to ease off his irate of cutting with a view to pro- | longing the life of his forests would be business suicide. The same man undertook to save the smaller trees for the future and then found that the tax assessor assessed culled land as high as the virgin forest. Another lumberman saved the hardwood as he cut out the pine, there being no mar- ket for the former at the time. The assessor rated the land as high as ever; so high that the owner found it profitable to send a crew of men to slash down the hardwood and let it rot, thereby getting the rating of de- nuded land. Local assessments and taxes in some localities are so high ment capital of re-stocking timber- land in 13 years. Forest fires, however, are the chief obstacle to more rapid advance of natural reforestation. Regardless of taxation, forest land not already ster- ilized by fire will grow trees unaided if fires be kept out. They rage at the appalling rate of 50,000 to 100,000 a year, (mostly set by agencies beyond the control of forest owners.) Own- ers may not profit, but forests of a kind will reappear without any man- agement. On the whole the private forestry outlook is encouraging. It is really surprising that so much has been ac- complished already, but the new era is only beginning and will gain mo- mentum from now on. With econom- ic reward in prospect and taxation re- form and forest fire protection com- ing, it may be assumed that owners of timber land suitably situated will come gradually to handle their lands as sources of successive timber crops. trial News Bureau. Cause and Effect. Sweeping his long black hair back with an impressive gesture, the visi- tor faced the proprietor of the film studio. “I have come, sir,” he said, in a deep base voice, “because I desire to secure a permanent position in your moving picture company.” “You are an actor?” asked the oth- er. “Yes,” was the answer. “Have you had any experience act- ing without an audience?” was the next query. A flicker of sadness shone for a moment in the expressive eyes of the actor as he replied: “Acting without audiences is what brought me here, sir,”—London An- swers. Don’t Buck Storm. If caught in a driving rain, while in motor and forced to stop until the worst is over, wetting of the coil and other electrical equipment under the hood can be prevented by turning the back of the car to the wind. This also obviates a lot of annoyance from leakage around the windshield. —Subscribe for the “Watchman.” Fire proteec- | to be a general ber land of the country they are in a | farm woodlots are now yielding about | $400,000,000 a year to their owners | increase of this amount. These wood- | huge quantities of fuel wood and : that they wipe out the original invest- | —From the Manufacturer and Indus- Baton First Used by Conductors in Chu:ch Ludwig Spohr, famous violinist, conductor, and composer, who is known to the general public chiefly by his oratorio, “The Last Judgment,” and his song, “Rose, Softly Bloom- Ing,” was the first to use a baton for conducting a large orchestra in Eng- land. But, like Safonoff, who became fa- mous ten or fifteen years ago as the man who conducted without a baton, he was simply reviving in a more cop-: venient form an older custom. The use of the baton is, in fact, a very ancient one, though the manner of its use has varied. It probably arose from the fact that in the larger churches, and especially on great oc- casions, the director of the choir had a staff . of office something like a bishop’s crozier, but with a different head, This he held in his left hand while directing the singers with the right. Now and then, however, he had to recover the attention of his singers, | when he would stamp on the floor with his staff, doing the same thing also on occasion to keep them te gether. In later times, when boys began to take part in the singing, he used it as a means of chastisement, and grad- ually transferred it entirely to the right hand. We may, therefore, say that both conducting with a baton and conducting without one come from the same ecclesiastical methods. Entirely New Angle to Payment of Bills The smart young man approached .hie hotel proprietor. “Look here,” he said, “I want you to settle a little argument that has arisen between me and my friend here. I said I was coming to you to pay my bill.” “Very glad to hear it,” said the pro- Jdrietor. “But what is wrong with that?” “Well, my friend says I ought to nave said your bill. That’s the point.” “Come to that, I suppose it is my Jill” “But you said it was my bill just .4OW.” : “So it is—your bill and my bill, £00.” HEE “In fact, then, you contend that it’s »ar bill?” “Of course it is!” : “Well, that suits me all right. It ‘ .US our bill, of course, we divide it. Just make out my half, will you? There’s nothing like getting things straight.” Really Deadly Wine The dark fluid in tke sponge on Mount Calvary intended for the lips of “Jesus of Nazareth’ when he was suf- fering on the cross was not ‘vinegar, but morion wine, wvelieves the English biologist, 0. A. Newell. This so-called wine was a powerful, sleep-producing drug in ancient times often given con- demned men when they were being ex- ecuted. During the Roman occupation of Palestine the method of capital punishment was crucifixion, a long process that caused the victim great i agony. The Jewish women, under the sanction of the grand sanhedrin, would administer the death wine to the vie- tims on a sponge, whereby they were put to sleep and their sufferings abated. This wine, says Doctor Newell, was distilled from the root of the mandragora plant. He finds refer- ences to it in ancient teachings with a formula for making {it.—Capper's Weekly. Woman Astronomer How many people, who think that a scientific woman is a Twentieth-cen- tury product, know that Caroline Herschell was, a century and a half ago, assistant astronomer royal? Her brother was the famous astron- omer, but her mother in Hanover would let her have no accomplishment outside household duties, except knit- ting. Her father, however, gave her violin lessons on the sly. Then her brother offered her a home in England, and she came over and be- came a successful singer. Taking up astronomy, she became her brother's assistant, and herself was responsible for the discovery of eight comets. Un- doubtedly a very clever woman, she rejected all praise, thinking it might detract from her brother’s reputation. : Picture Screens Screens have come into their own, and rightfully so, because they are use- ful and bring into a room a charming note of variety. A most attractive screen is one which is covered with wallpaper, plain or having a very tiny pattern, and then decorated with a col- orful picture, mounted on the upper part of each panel of the screen. Pic- tures done in silhouette effect could well be used here. After the picture has been appiied to the background it is advisable to shel- lac it in order to make it appear to be really part of the background. This will give the rich, antique appearance, so much in vogue today. Effective Advertising The traveling salesman was telling the other fellows in the pullman smok- ing compartment the reason why his uncle in Cleveland bad the most pros- perous -shoe-shining stand in a block dotted with footgear polishing em- poriums. “My uncle's advertising got him the business,” he said. “He had a big sign reading, ‘One shoe polished free.’ ” —From the Funny Side Out, by Nellie Reveik FARM NOTES. FED MINERALS WILL MAKE MOST RAPID GAINS. Minerals in the ration for pigs pre- vented lameness and gave the best gains in a series of winter or dry lot tests conducted at the Ohio experi- ment station. The mixture of two parts ground limestone, two parts bone meal, and one part salt, as here- tofore recommended by that station, again proved the best in a long list of mineral mixtures in the swine ra- tion in which soy bean oil meal was fed as the protein feed with yellow corn. This mixture, it was explained to visitors on Live Stock day, supplied not only the necessary salt, but also all the calcium and phosphorus need- ed. The latter are prime essentiajs. Without these elements in the grain ration pigs soon contracted rickets and lameness. Gound limestone was superior to a refined grade of lime or calcium car- bonate, due in part apparently to the small amount of iron carried by the limestone and required by the pigs for proper development. This fact has not been appreciated heretofore, and is evidence of further need of much careful investigation in the feeding of live stock. Barns and sheds used during the lambing season need not be very elab- orate affairs nor is it necessary to provide much extra equipment. There are, however, several precautions which, if observed, will not only in- crease the comfort of both ewes and lambs but will also assist in raising a larger number of lambs. While sheep can withstand cold weather and need ventilation if confined in barns and sheds, drafts should be carefully avoided. PIGS Farmers feeding dairy cows during the spring and summer should be sure to use plenty of properly mixed grain feeds with the legumes or grasses Yo get best and cheapest milk returns, according to the national dairy coun- cil. Leading college dairymen have made a study of this important prob- lem, and agree that dairy cows cannot possibly consume enough grass to maintain milk flow and their body re- quirements, too. “Cows can’t make milk on air and water,” writes Prof. A. R. Merrill, dairy specialist of the Connecticut ex- periment station. “They need some feed. Pasture grass is one of the best forms of succulent green feed that we have, but as a rule there is not enough of it. Cows that are de- pendent on pasture alone cannot get the amount of feed they need. When we stop to consider that the/average cow needs 100 to 150 pounds of pas- ture grass per day for maintenance and production, we can easily see why it is necessary to furnish some additional feed.” “The feeding of grain on pasture is so important,” states Prof. E. L. Savage of Cornell university in Dairy- men’s League News, “That I am go- ing to take the time and space to em- phasize it again. L mixed grain feed containing 17.5 per cent. to 20 per cent protein tld be fed on pas- ture.” g Turkey hens, chicken hens and in- cubators are commonly used to incu- bate turkey eggs. During the early part of the laying season it often hap- pens that one has on hand a number of eggs that should be incubated be- fore any of the turkey hens are through laying their first litter and become “broody.” In such case, and also when it is desired that the tur- key hens lay more than one litter, some of the eggs have to be incubated under chicken hens or in a incubatar. About a week before the poults are due to hatch, turkey hens enough should be allowed to sit to take all the poults hatched. They can be giv- en a few eggs from the incubator or from under the chicken hens and al- lowed to hatch the poults themselves, or at night a newly-hatched poult can be slipped under each turkey hen that is to be given a brood of poults and by morning she will be glad to take them. Lice are a great annoyance to set- ting hens and are one of the worst enemies of young poults. To prevent their getting a foothold, dust the hen thoroughly with some good lice pow- der before she is placed on the nest and once a week thereafter while she is setting. The nesting material should be kept clean, and if the eggs become dirty they should be washed with lukewarm water. If the weather is warm and dry n. shelter is required, as the poults d. better in the open. Should it be rainy however, they need to be protected, for nothing is more injurious than for them to become wet and chilled. The most satisfactory plan is to confine the mother turkey hen to a coop and allow the poults to run in and out whenever rain does not prevent. This coop should be placed in a field where they can run out and find grasshop- pers, green vegetation, and other feed. The coop should be moved to fresh ground every day. Long before she is ready to lay, the turkey hen goes nest hunting. She steps lightly here and there, peering into dark corners, into empty barrels and boxes. When she is ready to lay she goes direct to the nest she has chosen, and settles down. If we want our turkeys to lay in convenient places near by where there can be no ques- tion as to the ownership of the eggs, then convenient nests for turkey hens should be put out, and the hens al- lowed to find them. When the turkey becomes broody, like a chicken hen, she should be al- lowed to sit on the nest for two or three days before she is given her clutch of eggs. While she is on her term of probation, dust her with so- dium fluoride under each wing, around the thigh joint, over the back, under the body and around the vent. Do not give her too many eggs. From fifteen to twenty are enough. Chicken hens are inquisitive crea- tures. If the turkey nest is within reach of their powlings, they will disturb her; if necessary to shut the turkey hen in, she should be released at the same time, preferably in the evening, for food and exercise.