rm Bellefonte, Pa., July 23, 1926. DENNIS SHAY, THE WITNESS. Twas Dennis Shay, the witness, ‘Who stepped upon the stand; And a greener looking mortal Ne're left old Ireland. And the Judge and Jury snickered At everything he'd say, Whilst the lawyers, wise and witty, Kept pumping Dennis Shay. They styled him prince of blockheads! This witness on the stand, And declared such stupid asses, A disgrace to any land. A chap chock full of Blackstone, And impudence as well, Said, ask the fool who made him, And I doubt if he could tell. Whin ye ax such simple questions Its mysilf can answer those! Who made me? Why, said D:annis, T'was Moses I suppose. Ye Gods! t'was Moses made him, Did you hear the critter say? And the court then took a recess, To laugh at Dennis Shay. Then spoke Dennis: Misther Lawyer, Perhaps it might not do If I should ax the question, Whose been afther makin’ you. Oh yes, said he to Dennis, Whilst he blew his legal nose, Then winked at the court and answered, T'was Aaron, I suppose! Be my sowl, thin spoke up Dennis, With a bit of roguish laugh, Its mysilf has heard that Aaron At one time made a calf. But its mighty strange indade, sir, To the likes of Dennis Shay That Misther Aaron’s offspring Should be plading law to-day. — Written for the Watchman in 1873, by ‘J.C. nH.” THE REFORMATION OF NELLIE. Captain McBride, of Ladder Truck Company No. 12, confessed to his own men that Nellie was a coward. He admitted that she was affection- ate, and good-enough-looking; but how does that help if the whole com- pany must keep one shameful secret from the rest of the department? Nellie looked well on the chair in front of the joker stand. She was a squeamish dog who kept her hair clean, and when visitors came into the firehouse Truck No. 12 showed them Nellie even before the silver cup won in last year’s city speed test: The men told solemnly that Nellie tock = hose bath every morning. They whistled her out of her chair and made her spring into the air with her head high, so the muff of white hair Yndey her chin showed advantageous- y. They were silent as to one distress- ing particular. For all her quickness and alert ears, when the joker alarm sounded three taps, then two, then two more—the signal for Truck No. 12—Nellie was that creature most despised on the ladder. She was a ground fireman. Six agonizing months captain and men had tutored her. Not only was she still unable to climb a ladder; she even balked at a step. Captain and men labored, pushed, shouted, coax- ed. Nellie shook her yellow tail and stayed on the ground. That would have been all very well in an engine company, a flying squad- ron, or the insurance patrol, but in a truck company, an aggregation of ladder men, it was the only skeleton in the company closet. Until the night of the fire in the Lake street warehouse. It was raining, and thick weather bad filled the apparatus rcom with the heavy smell of gasoline and oil: The company had gone to bed early, and young Skip Oakley sat drowsily on first watch wondering if 1 o’clock would ever come. Nellie slept on a blanket under the joker stand. The first alarm came at 12:30, from a box at Market and Lake streets. Even before Oakley could tumble for- ward in his chair to press the button the voice of Captain McBride roared above through the darkened sleeping quarters. “It’s a go!” he shouted. “Bunk out!” ’ The lights flashed on, the big bell awakened, rubber boots patter across the upper floor. Nellie lifted her nose from its com- fortable pillow and yawned—a yawn which complained that life in the five department is extremely hard on a dog’s habits. Then she uncurled and trotted to the front side wheels of the truck. The men were up before her, sliding down the brass poles to the apparatus room; like Nellie, grum- bling automatically that any alarm makes a tired man “bunk out” in the middle of the night. Skip Oakley, whose precarious duty was at the front steering wheel, swung into his seat and buckled the strap across his waist. He pressed the starter. Captain McBride sprang up beside him and jerked at the cord that opened the doors: Old Tom Man- nus, the tillerman, climbed to his high seat at the rear end of the ladders, and, spreading his legs far apart, gripped his knotty arms about the tiller wheel. It is a difficult job, be- ing a tillerman. A long ladder truck is cumbersome; its rear wheels must be guided expertly when the driver up front careens hastily around a series of short sharp corners. On the running board Jenkens and Norton held sleepily to the sides of the ladder. The bell jangled and the truck plunged into the street, with Tom Mannus tugging desperately. Nellie stood still, her ears sharp, per- pendicular points, her fat collie tail waving, until the back wheels left the fire house door. Then she barked, as mechanically as the men had grum- bled, and plunged into a heavy run after the swinging red tail light. Laddermen might ride. She was a ground fireman, and chose foot travel. “Smell it?” asked Captain McBride. Skip Oakley sat loosely at the — | wheel. His eyes were straight ahead, his ears open for any sound of ap- proaching apparatus. “Smells like rubber,” he answered, and slowed the motor for a final turn into Lake street: “Like work,” answered the captain. A pair of red and green lights flash- ed around the corner in the rear and pounded up beside Truck No. 12. It was a light, fleet insurance patrol. Its bell clattered and it passed; be- hind it throbbed an engine company. “There’s Boss Corrigan.” Captain McBride dropped the bell rope, and Skip Oakley slacked speed as a small car skidded to a stop just ahead of him. A man in a white helmet leaped out of it. Smoke hung in a light cloud, like fog, around the street lights. Farther down the block a policeman’s whistle screamed insistently. Chief Corrigan, hearing it, stepped back to the footboard of his car, and again it was off. A policeman ran into the path of its headlights, pointing to- ward the left with his nightstick. The chief’s car jerked, and halted at the right. Truck No. 12 slid to the left. Ahead, screened in smoke, Captain McBride made out the outline of the five early engines, already at the fire- plugs. > “Go by easy,” he directed. The heavy truck rolled past the en- gines to the curb of a great black building. Tom Mannus jumped to his feet and tipped his narrow seat on one end by its hinges. He pulled out the tiller wheel and hung it over the seat. Then, thrusting his ax into his belt and picking up a pike pole, he dropped to the ground. : “In front, Engine No. 32!” Chief Corrigan was roaring. “Engine No. 14, take rear! You front, Truck No. 12! Locate! locate!” ; “Come—Mannus, Jenkins!” Captain McBride called sharply . “I'm comin’,” Mannus “But look who’s here.” Nellie sprawled on the ground, muddy and panting. A dirty tail beat its own welcome and she sniffed vociferously at Truck No. 12’s boot- heels. “You're some runner, Nellie,” Man- nus said as he leaped over her. He hurried forward. Captain McBride was rattling the front door of the Lake street ware- house. It was a building almost win- dowless, that reached up seven floors over half a block. “Hit her a wack,” the captain or- dered. “One side,” answered Tom Mannus. He swung his ax. Wood splintered and the door sagged. Thick, black, smarting smoke burst through the opening. “She’s goin’ good somewheres,” said the captain. He stepped back and called “Hey, Chief Corrigan!” “Aye!” came from the white hel- met. “She’s got a good holt somewheres.” “What’s that got to do with it?” the chief bellowed. “In with you—in and ventilate! Use your ax. I'll pull three-eleyen.” answered. to white light. The fresh smoke es- caped, serpent-like, across the side- walks and along the gutters. The i fling squadron had arrived; its men ran forward with oxygen tanks and helmets. Nellie slipped under her own wa- gon. From her assigned place below the ladder she watched Truck No. 12 wade out of sight through the smoky doorway. Engine No- 32 went in after it run ning awkwardly, with long hoops of flapping hose. The insurance patrol followed, bent double under the weight of canvas tarpaulins. There was an interval; smoke filled the door- way; then the men backed out, all of them. Truck No. 12 backed out last. “Can’t make it,” cried some one. “It’s too thick.” “Ready with your ladder, Truck No. 12,” Chief Corrigan ordered. “Up! Top floor! Take a second line off Engine No. 32. Up, and see what you can find: Get the elevator, and drown it down from there!” Nellie sat in the mud. Here was a real fire! She looked up at the men on the running board. Captain Mec- Bride stood on the front seat. Man- nus and Oakley labored at the brass windlass which’ lifts the extension ladder. Slowly the great frame of the ladder tilted into the air. “Easy—easy, now boys—easy!” warned the captain. His own men turned the windlass over and over. Still the ladder lifted, the rear end in the air, the front hing- ed to the truck. “Heads up! Watch them wires! Right a little—steady! Easy Now— up—up—whoa!” The ladder leaned against the build- ing. Oakley and Mannus spiked their windlass with steel pins, to prevent it from slipping. Jenkens and Norton already ground a smaller one. The first extension slid upward, then a second; the cables creaked; Norton and Jenkens twisted their handles, up the ladder moved, farther and farther. “Get the line!” Captain McBride ordered. The four truckmen ran toward En- gine No. 32. Through the spokes of the hind wheel Nellie watched ap- prehensively. The fog of smoke hid them; they were back. Nellie bark- ed her relief. “Keep still, Nellie,” Captain Mec- Bride said sharply. “There’s racket enough.” There was the rattle of an ax as it bounced against the ladder rungs; Captain McBride was climbing. At his heels mounted Oakley, with the brass nozzle over his shoulder, made fast to his belt. Nellie’s ears sharpened: She rub- bed her nose against the wheel and whined. Mannus was climbing now, with a loop of hose around him, and now Norton, and Jenkens. Nellie ran out from cover and raised her muddy front feet recklessly off the ground. She felt experimentally of the sides of the truck. There were her men, going—up there was the bottom rung, eight feet above her. : Falling glass rattled upon the side- walk. She dropped back. “Cap’n’s using his ax,” Jenkens called to Norton. Back in the street flares puffed in- | “Water, No. 32! Charge her!” Captain McBride was dow sill on the the top floor. The line trembled, and the loops whipped out. Black, three-inch hose leaped full with pounding pressure. So Truck No. 12 went where it was | bid, and in the street a sleepy crowd ! ed. coughed in the smoke and cheered. The seventh floor was cut into small, irregular rooms, each one stored high with household goods. A yellow light puffed unsteadily in the center of the building, and smoke was hot against the throat. Captain Mec- i I* 1 ; bling sounded. | Smoke, fire, heat drove them back shouting everywhere. through his hands from a smoky win- | There was a stair. So much they | knew. Where? How to reach it? “Falling wall!” the crowd whisper- The three chiefs said, “Gasoline,” and shook their heads. Battalion Chief Corrigan jumped ‘into action. “No. 32, 18 and 61 engines,” he From within the building a rum- | | ‘lie, through two corridors, around | Jenkens and Norton lay still on the floor, piled across the hose, like dead men. “Beat it, you two,” McBride order- ed. “I'll try to help these fellows.” Mannus and Oakley followed Nel- charred boxes. I A light flashed, whiter than the red flame that licked outside the stair well. It was a flare- Help was com- ing—there were footsteps on hollow wood—voices. + A Lieutenant from Squad No. 10 FARM NOTES. —Nothing detracts more from a "home than an ill-kept lawn. Making | your lawn attractive is one sure way ‘in making your home attractive. Grazed woodlots have fewer trees | and the character of the trees and i their ultimate return to the farmer is poor. The leaves are scattered to | fence rows, roads and ravines, and the watershed value of the woodlot is ' greatly depreciated. . —Picnic time has come. 1 | ! More than | shouted. “Captains, here. Get your plunged out through the smoke. His ever we appreciate the forests which men, find that stairway, and lay the oxygen helmet was strapped to his Bride dropped to his hands and knees | lines up. Truck No. 12’s got to get back, its rubber grip pinched his nose, and led the way. The floor was warm. He felt it cautiously and hesitated. “What's there?” Tom Mannus ask- ed behind him. “Nothing.” Captain McBride hitched ahead. It was all right. Chief Corrigan had promised a three-eleven. Another five minutes and there would be three more ladders. Down in the street a rain-wet crowd watched the few scattered windows. There was smoke, and a ladder prop- ped against the wall. The pumps were pounding. But where was the flame? The crowd waited impatient- ly. It did not know that the danger- ous fire, the one that makes widows of firemen’s wives, is the kind that smokes and is dark and surly. There began to arrive apparatus responding to the three-eleven alarm. Police reserves jumped from their patrol wagons and shouted boisterous commands: Ropes were pulled into place between poles and the crowd was pushed back. And under the truck Nellie stood with her tongue hanging out one side of her mouth, watching an empty win- dow high in the air where the men of her company had entered. “It’s all the way up,” called an officer who had stumbled from the front door, coughing. “Engine No. 6 reports,” broke in a running, panting figure. “Stick your Egan pipe in the front cellar windows and spray,” ordered the chief, calm in spite of the bedlam in the street. “Engine No. shouted. 1 Cech way, cellar,” the chief direct- e 29,” another man “They ain’t no stair.” A third com- plaining pipeman ran from the build- ing: “It’s driving us back.” “Up, now! Look up!” It was the crowd calling. The re- flection of flame blotted pink in a mass of faces. Out through a sixth floor window a red line raced and widened and shot angrily into a flash of fire. A murmur of satisfaction arose from the crowd—this, not smoke, was what it had awaited. Chief Corrigan growled. The flame bore other flames. They scooted up the wall, directly under Truck 12’s ladder. In another minute they would touch it. Nellie whined— they had touched, two rungs were hi Nellie cried again. She ran int the open and lifted her paws venture- somely. Two feet off the ground she found the running board: She trotted its length unsteadily and scrambled over the front mud guard. There was a second step, two feet higher. She sprawled up, clawing at the turntable, where the windlass knobs twist the ladder. “Get that dog out!” Chief Corrigan shouted. He stood by the hood of the truck, roaring. A wet, black hand reached up and yanked Nellie away by the collar. Chief Corrigan had rushed to other duties. Other men in white helmets had arrived, new lines of hose wound, serpentine, through the street. The gutter ran with muddy water. Still the flame leaped. Still Truck No. 12’s window was empty- Nellie ran glong under the truck, barking sharp- y. On the seventh floor Truck No. 12 had found its duty and was hard at it. The fire had climbed the shaft; al- ready it was running through stacked furniture at the top of the building. Captain McBride lay on his face, with his helmet tipped forward and the brass nozzle in his arms. Behind him Skip Oakley crouched with the throb- bing hose against his chest; back of him old Tom Mannus was coughing. The sweeping water spilled chairs, tables, couches, about the floor. Smoke rolled blacker, but still the flame crackled and curled through the stacked furniture and up along the roof beams. Captain McBride slid backward. “You, Jenkens,” he called, “get back front there and ventilate. Find some windows and open ’em!” “Yes, sir,” Jenkens answered. They heard his voice as he depart- ed. “This here floor’s too hot!” “It’s getting ahead,” the captain growled. “Back up a little.” Once more his men retreated, losers in an uneven battle. Then came Jenkens, smoke-dulled, gasping. “Cap,” he whispered, “they’s fire coming all round. We're cut off, regular.” “What you mean, cut off 7” “Ladder’s right in the middle of it. Everywhere I go they’s new fire. It’s coming through the floor any minute.” “Lay off,” McBride ordered. “I'll hold the line. The rest o’ you look for a get away.” Old Tom Mannus was on his knees. He turned at the right and pulled himself into the smoke. Oakley hesi- tated, then followed him. Jenkens and Norton went to the left, between two piles of furniture. They were back immediately. “Too hot,” Norton “Let’s try it this way.” Again the dark took them. There was an interval. Oakley crawled back from the first stack. “Cut off, Cap,” he reported. “Try again.” McBride's voice was husky. The fire crackled closer. In the street three white helmets bent close together in consultation. Truck No. 12 was in a bad way. En- gine No. 32 and two flying ‘squadrons in oxygen masks were groping for a stair. said huskily. | down somehow.” | His command was loud but uncer- | tain. Flame was spitting from the | third floor. Five companies worked {from the street, training the/r white { pillars of water into the broken win- dows. Three other engines pumped i into the rear. men with extra lines labored outside, high up the wall, in a shower of | sparks. Four more groups, with ' Egan cellar pipes, kneeled on the side- | walks and pushed their ungainly noz- izles into the basement windows, where the light was now red, now pink. Under Truck No. 12 Nellie whim- pered. Her tail beat nervously in the puddle of water leaked across the road from the nearest engine. Twice she scouted out among the apparatus and sniffed hopefully at two firemen’s boots. Glass tumbled around her, and she crouched back under the seat. Engine Companies No- 82, 12 and 61 massed before the door. New flares sent reflections on three brass (nozzles. Eighteen men awaited the word. “In with ye!” shouted Chief Coryi- gan. The three groups moved forward, each about its own hose nozzle. The flares fogged in smoke, and the last rubber coat disappeared into the door- way. Nellie ran out from her hiding place. She snuffed at the open door. A policeman lunged toward her, and she snapped back angrily at his night- stick. Within the door smoke stung her wet nostrils and her tongue that lolled from her mouth. She hurried forward, her nose to the floor. Over at the right, through a long, black gas-filled corridor she ran, pant- ing and sneezing: Only darkness— she turned back, past the men who fhod and struggled with their hose ines. A door stood open ahead of her. She smelled cooler air and hurried through it. What was this? Her feet scratched at a step, and she halt- ed, uncertain, trembling. Far above there sounded drumming water, the chatter of fire, falling bodies, tumult. And above it all an outcry, a com- mand, one that she knew. Nellie’s ears stretched into sharp points. A voice, one that belonged to a ladderman! Truck No. 12! Nellie forgot that she was a ground fireman. She forgot her fear of heights. She ran up the stair, stum- bling, falling, fearful. Captain McBride clutched his noz- zle while his four men hunted a way of escape: Tom Mannus came back i and flopped down beside the hose line. “It’s all up,” he said. “They ain’t nc way out.” “Where’s the boys?” asked Captain McBride. “I lost ’em. They’s crazy with smoke, over there somewheres. I lost em.” Oakley returned while Mannus was speaking. “I found a window,” he gasped. “They an’t no fire in it yet. Maybe they can lift a ladder to us there, if we can make ’em hear us.” “We’ll all holler.” Captain Mec- Bride and Mannus followed Oakley along a wet, narrow aisle. “Maybe they'll hear all of us.” But the window faced upon a court- yard. Mannus looked below into the deep well, with its spurting windows. Here was no way out; breaking glass told of a quick-traveling flame. The men shouted hopelessly. The leap- ing fire answered. Captain McBride fumbled his way back to the fallen nozzle. Jenkens and Norton had returned, unsucessful. Norton lay upon the floor, choking for breath. Jenkens sat with the noz- zle in his lap Old Tom Mannus pick- ed it up, and once more the water swept ahead of him. “Give her all y’ got,” he was grunt- ing. “If we got to go, let’s go like fromen, Give her all y’ got. Come on! The fire climbed on, above, at both sides. Furniture toppled, and Mannus swung the nozzle back and forth. The flood shot pink into the firelight and fell against the hot floor, sizzling and steaming. There were whirs of flame a rumble of wall, and then a new cry. It was a yelp, a whimper. Captain McBride staggered to his feet, heedless of the white heat that scorched his face. “Nellie!” he cried. Nellie 7” The whimper came again from be- hind a stack of furniture: Oakley flung himself at the pile and it tum- bled forward. He hurled chairs left “Where you at, and right. Nellie whined once more. “We're comin’, Nellie,” Oakley cried. “Here we are!” Nellie crawled from the dark on blistered paws. Her shaggy coat was singed, her ears lay flat against her head. She crept another length and rubbed her nose against the captain’s glove. Then she turned, the way she had come, crying in her throat and looking back at the company. “Nellie, you clumb!” Captain Mec- Bride shouted. Nellie whined again and limped ahead. McBride stumbled, and she snapped at his rubber coat, tugging weakly. “There’s a stair, men,” McBride said hoarsely: “Nellie’s found a stair, somewheres. Drop your pipe and come.” Mannus floundered to his feet and pulled at Oakley. “Come on,” he whispered. “Hitch along on your ax,” McBride directed. He looked back. Two troops of ladder- : jand he breathed heavily. After him i came two other squad men; then the ‘captain of Engine No. 61, with two pipemen. “Here’s a way out, if you're the lieutenant shouted. hurry!” “The cap’s back there with two of ’em Mannus whispered. Nellie made a hoarse noise in her throat and climbed to her feet. “The dog’ll show us,” the squad lieutenant answered. “She brung us i up- There was a swelling of smoke. The floor sagged. Mannus and Oakley | stumbled down a dozen steps, feeling | their way against the wall, their eyes , closed. i “They’ve got ’em!” cried the pipe- ‘man who had started out with them. i Rubber-coated figures pushed down | behind. Engine Captain No. 61 held | Captain McBride’s arms. Jenkens "and Norton hung over the shoulders quick!” “Snap out, 1 of other men. In the arms of a third | ! Nellie cried and wheezed and pawed i the air spasmodically. i “There’s one hard place,” the cap- | tain of No. 61 said indistinctly. “It’s (down on the third floor We got a | good dose coming up. There’s a cou- ‘ple of lines holding it till we get down again.” Fire burst through the partition. Crouched on the steps below two knots of men swung their nozzles “Run for it!” the captain of No. 61 ordered. “Drop your pipes and run.” The ambulance backed up to the curb. Lung motors throbbed and the police held a curious crowd away from two figures spread out upon the side- walk. A police surgeon turned his flashlight. “You’ve lost your eyebrows, man,” he exclaimed, and lifted Captain Mec- Bride into the wagon. Oakley and Mannus were boosted after him. “Where's Nellie?” McBride asked weakly. “Here.” A pipeman in a rubber coat came forward and set a singed, sprawling body down on its four feet. Nellie hobbled a step: Then her tail sagged and she rolled over, “Put her in,” the surgeon ordered. | “Four patients for the hospital.” The bell rang ,and the ambulance bumped away over lines of charged hose. So when visitors come now into the quarters of Truck Company No. 12, Nellie blinks and lolls her tongue and listens to captain and men tell for the thousandth time of the fire in the Lake street warehouse. “And before that night,” Mannus will say, “she was a ground fireman, | ’fraid to climb a stair. But, say, a ! dog’s got more sense than men, any- how. She smelt every fellow in the ‘ block, tryin’ to find her own folks. And when they wasn’t in sight she hunted up that stair and brung the rest of ’em up. Just two minutes be- derman now, ain’t you, Nellie?” Nellie yawns, for she is bored with a story told too often.—By Karl W. Detzer.—From the Public Ledger. Eagles Mere Bible Conference August 28 to September 5. Popular Bible study combined with vacation recreation is the attractive scheme for the annual Bible confer- ence at Eagles Mere, Pa., August 28th to September 5th, under the auspices of the Moody Bible Institute of Chi- cago. Two distinguished speakers from abroad will appear on the program. Dr. F. B. Meyer, of London, dean of English Bible teachers and religious writers, will be an outstanding fea- ture of the conference. Dr. D. H. Deol- man, of Wansbek, Germany, a native of Holland and head of a special mis- sionary enterprise of the church of England, who was brought to America last year and again this year by the Moody Bible Institute because of his extraordinary helpfulness, will speak daily throughout the conference. The conference will be held under the general direction of Dr. James M. Gray, the president of the Moody Bible Institute, who will be present during the latter half of the period and give Bible studies and popular addresses on the first Epistle of Paul to the Corinthians. Charles L. Hus- ton, prominent layman of Coatesville, Pa., will speak on “A Business Man’s Use of the Bible in Personal Work.” Sessions of the conference will be held forenoons and evenings, the afternoons being left free for rest and the enjoyment of the rare bathing, boating and hiking afforded by beau- tiful Eagles Mere. Special rates have been granted by the six fine hotels of Eagles Mere for the conference. E. B. Buckalew, of Harrisburg, the regional representa- tive of the Moody Bible Institute, has charge of the arrangements and has recently issued an attractive circular of information. Bell System Pays $5.04 Tax on Each Phone in Operation. Each telephone of the Bell system paid a tax of approximately $5.04 for the year ending December 31, 1925. Figures for the year show a total tax of $58,186,816, or forty-two cents a month for each telephone in operation. That includes both main telephones and extensions. The rate shows an increase of 120 per cent, over 1910 when the tax on each instrument was $2.27. —Subsecribe for the “Watchman.’ fore the floors dropped. She’s a lad- : | provide us with a beauty spot for our | gatherings. In picnic time we pay | tribute to the forest and the comfort |it gives us. Protect it and save it for . others, | —Poultry mites are often the cause | of low egg production: They suck | blood from the hens at night and as la result lower the vitality of the flock and decrease the egg yield. | Paint the roosts and dropping boards | with carbolineum to eliminate the | mites. { —A great many heifers on pasture { are looking thin. They should receive | some grain daily to keep them grow- ing throughout the summer. Heifers that go into winter quarters in a thin | condition may be stunted, and it is | more expensive to grow them out. than the heifers that have been kept in a fair condition of flesh through- out the summer. —The brood mare needs liberal feeding while suckling her foal, say horse specialists of the Pennsylvania State College. Encourage the foal to jeat some crushed oats and bran and nice soft legume hay early in life. This will help the mother as well as the colt. If she is working in addi- tion to suckling the colt it is quite a i drain on her system. —In addition to the great damage to foliage in farm woodlots by graz- ing cattle, there are many other ill effects which are pointed out by C. R. Anderson, in charge of forestry ex- tension at the Pennsylvania State College. One of these bad effects is the trampling of the soil in the woodlot, resulting in a compacting which makes it difficult for roots of trees to penetrate the soil, and also the hard- ened soil turns off water instead of admitting it freely, cutting down the moisture content and affecting the growth of trees. —If local poultry raisers find that young chicks are dying off myster- iously, they should look about for yellowish brown bugs, about three- eights of an inch in length, covered with light hairs, and having leathery brown wings. They are rose chafers, also known as rose bugs or rose beetles, and con- tain a poison that causes the death of young chicks within 24 hours. Chicks over four months of age can eat a large number without injurious effect, say poultry specialists at the Pennsylvania State College. The first symptoms are a sluggish disposition, droopy wings a shaking of the body, and later leg weakness sets in. There is no cure, and preventing the birds from eating the chafers is the secret of control. The chafers usually do not appear annually in the same locality. They feed on petals and leaves of rose bushes, daisies, and on grape vines, especially. Poison sprays on the plants are not effective- During May the chafers are in the soil, and come out in June and are found until late July. Daisies on the poultry range should be mowed, and roses and grape vines should not be planted on the range in affected areas. —DMany horses fail to stand up to the work during the summer months as well as they might, owing to the ration fed. It is much like burning the candle from both ends to feed a heavy heating ration internally with the summers burning sun from the exterior, says County Agent, R. C- Blaney. Most successful horse users prefer oats to corn during summer months particularly for the bulk of the grain ration, and rightfully so. Even oats can be materially assisted by the addition of bran to ieyze the concentrated ration even lighter. Then too, the laxative effect of the bran itself is very helpful. Constipa- tion aggravates the horses chances to endure the heat. Good, bright clean hay fed not too liberally assists also. Most men feed too much hay rather than too little. At least half of the total amount of hay fed should be at night, little be- ing necessary during mornings and noons. Salt should always be available. Frequent watering assists the horse as well as the driver. Let him have a drink the last thing before going to bed, as the night is long and hot in many stables: Proper grooming, es- pecially in the evenings, is often over- looked but exceedingly beneficial and is cheap feed. —The asparagus season for 1926 is over in Centre county. Because of too much cool weather and a dry month of May the yield was rather small. The asparagus bed must not be neglected during the summer for if it is neglected the yield next year will be unsatisfactory. State College Garden Extension Specialists give the following comment on summer care of the asparagus bed. The stored up nourishment in the asparagus root is gone; it was used during the cutting season. Keep the ground cultivated or hoed until frost kills the tops; asparagus cannot com- pete with weeds. Feed the asparagus about during July, mulching with manure is fine, a light appligation of chicken manure is also excellent. If manures cannot be obtained use com- mercial fertilizer. A high grade com- plete fertilizer may be used, scatter- ing a small handful around each hill. Nitrate of soda or sulphate of am- monia may be used, one handful to 10 or 12 feet of row, scattering it well. Sheep manure, bone meal or dried blood will also stimulate growth: Do not cut asparagus after July 1st. There must be season enough to grow mature stalks, which means the berries or seed must ripen in the fall. The nourishment stored in the roots for next years cutting is stored be- tween now and fall.