Bellefonte, Pa., May 18, 1928. WHOSE DAY? The note held such a splendid se- cret that Betty North wanted to share it with Norma and her other girl friends at the store. But still it was a bit uncertain, and she decided that not until after the staff meeting, and the doubt became a certainty would she tell anyone except her mother. And the staff meeting was exactly a week away. After Betty had read the note six times she tucked it carefully away in her red leather purse and rearranged her tinware for the ten o’clock sale. On Wednesday mornings, at Wen - dell’s store, there was always a sale of tinware from ten until eleven o'clock. “The sale,” Betty North said laughingly to the floorwalker who passed her table, “if not attended with a rush is always the occasion for a stampede.” There were never any sales in the book department at Wendell’s. Betty smiled with that realization. But there were story hours every after- noon during the week—story hours for children of varying ages. And it was with these story hours and the book department that the note was concerned. A hand tucked suddenly into Bet- ty’s arm made her drop an egg beat- er against a cake pan. The crash was answered by a peal of laughter, Nor- ma Bensinger’s variety. She followed the laugh with some good-natured ad- vice. “Sell all the noisy things today, dear, so there will be nothing for me to crash into when I come back to visit you next time.” Betty strangled a powerful impulse to tell Norma about the note. It would be quite pleasant to say, “I do not think you’ll have to come far to visit me after this week. Mr. War’ has written me one of his famous pro- motion notes. At the staff meeting next week he is going to recommend me for a transfer to the book de- partment. He wants me to help in the story telling.” Instead she smiled an alluring smile and patted Norma’s hand. “You should be glad I'm not in the china department,” she said. “Otherwise we’d be busy paying breakage bills and neither of us could even dream of a picnic next—" “I came to talk about the picnic,” Norma interrupted girlishly. “We leave on the eight o’clock boat, in- stead of the ten o’clock one. Miss Haynes made a mistake in the time. The girls want to visit the cave be- fore lunch and then afterwards to go horseback riding on the famous blacks.” Betty’s black eyes snapped in an- ticipation of the day’s fun. “Oh, I never was so glad of the approach of Decoration Day in my life.” she declared. She watched Norma on her way out of the basement. Afterward she worked harder than ever with the tinware on her table. She did hope there would be a good crowd at this morning’s sale. It would be 3 trag- edy to have her sales slump now after the note had come. On the strength of those sales she had asked Mr. Ward for the transfer. Of course, she was qualified for it. | She had graduated from high school and had two terms in the library school before her mother had discov- | ered the shortage in their bank ac-! count, and the neccessity for Betty’s finding immediate work. The short- age was of such dimensions that she had taken the first place offered—a ' position as sales girl at a salary and | special commission in the tinware de- partment in Wendell’s big store. How large that commission for special sales had grown during her three months in the department! The | first good week had brought Mr. | Ward to her department. He watched her for half an hour before he made any comments. Laconically he had encouraged her. “You are full of pep | and personality,” he had smiled: slightly. “Always insist upon a com- | mission as well as a salary, Miss! North.” This morning he walked through | the tinware department while the sale was on. He nodded encouragement and helped the floor-walker straight- | en out a line of shoppers. Betty told her mother about it at noon when she showed her the note. “Some of the girls resent his coming to the department when a sale is on, but I like it,” she explained. “That shows him whether we handle crowds well.” Mrs. North smoothed the note with loving fingers. “I'm glad, dear,” her smile was radiant, “not so much be- cause it will mean more money for us, but you will be handling your beloved books and having a chance to make good at story telling.” With loving hands Betty rumpled her mother’s hair. “I felt sure from the beginning that I would be given a chance there,” she laughed. “That was one reason I made special friends of the girls in the book department. I wanted them to like me and they do. Mother, I'm the only person out- side their department whom they asked to go on their Decoration Day trip.” “Perhaps they suspected you were going to be put in their department,” Mrs. North began. “No,” Betty’s dusky head gave a shake. “No one except Mr. Ward has a suspicion of it. He will tell the rest of them at the staff meeting but not a day before.” A little later they discussed the ex- cursion—a trip by boat to a large cave which Betty had never visited, There was a log inn near by, at which the excursionists would get dinner. Besides, a farmer and stock raiser in the same neighborhood was a cousin of Miss Dorman, head of the book de- partment. When she had written him of their coming he had written back: “I’ve a whole herd of big black horses, all broken to ride. During the afternoon I want your party to be my guests. I'll give them a horseback ride to the waterfall—one way there both routes is beautiful.” [ i \ and another back. The scenery along On her way to the store that noon, Betty met an old soldier in blue tni- form just a square away from Mem- orial Hall, the building in which the G. A. R. and the Legion, and all sim- ilar organizations held their meet- ings. He was custodian there and Betty often saw him on her way to and from work. But today was the first time he had ever spoken to her. And this noon he was wanting an audience badly. He told Betty about the camp fire they were going to have on the fol- lowing Thursday night. “Right out on the commons in front of our hall,” he added. We want to get people in- terested so they will come to the big Decoration Day parade and exercises next Tuesday.” He walked past his corner with her, on down the street toward Wendell’s store. He was out of patience with the town people, he said. During the war they had beeen very patriotic. But now they had lapsed back into their lethargic state again and for- gotten they even had a country in whose defense millions of men had fought in the big wars. They had for- gotten the men, too. “They don’t donate their cars for us to ride in during the parade,” he ; “Some of the veterans : was scornful. had to walk last year. They don’t come to see us parade,” he repeated. partments morning. to help out during the her work than anything else. A flood of color rushed over Bet- ty’s face. And her heart sank. If she had been going to the picnic she would have straightway turned her back on that excursion to grant Mr. Ward’s request. But she could not turn down the service she had prom- ised to her country—not even for her work. As Mr. Ward walked away Betty wondered whether or not her pro- motion would be affected by her re- fusal to work on Decoration Day. She had told Mr. Ward in a sincere way she was sorry she couldn’t help him. She had made an SHUBEEMAnS she could not break. Then she ended, “I am very sorry.” Very stifly Mr. Ward bowed and walked away. Betty was sure now that he would withdraw his promise to recommend her to the book depart- ment. She was more positive later that’ afternoon when he passed her tables several times, on each occasion star- ! ing at her but not even speaking. “I'm sorry,” she told herself, “quite sorry. He doesn’t understand, but mother will and won’t blame me though I lose the promotion. She’s a soldier's daughter and thinks the veterans should have the service of the people “The women don’t even come to make | one day a year.” wreaths from the flowers we our- selves buy for our comrades’ graves.” | with her. | i That evening Norma walked hoine But even Norma seemed Involuntarily Betty reached out her | changed to her. She didn’t chatter so hand and stroked the old man’s arm. Back in Lindendale, her home tow, the school children, the club women, the business men, and almost every- body marched with the veterans to the cemetery in which the soldiers’ graves were swathed with flowers. | She had marched every year since she could remember, until last year when it had been impossible for her to go back. And here, according to the old man beside her, no one marched ex- cept the veterans themselves. Oh, yes, indeed, she felt sorry for him. “Come to our camp fire,” he invited her at the corner before they reached Wendell’s. “Yes, indeed, I shall, thank you!” | she smiled encouragement. : you'll come to the hall next Tuesday raorning and help work with the fiow- ers,” his voice was full of hope. “You'll be needed. There are so many soldiers’ graves to be decorated and so few to work. You can march in the parade with the D. A. R. women. Will you?” The picnic! With a gasp Betty realized that she could not tell him about that. “It’s a day of duty—not one for pleasure,” he urged much as she usually did, but stared at Betty from time to time and seemed to be in a deep study. At the gate she said, “Your folks were Revolu- tionary fighters with a grim purpose —weren’t they, Betts?” She smiled a little then. made a fighter yourself had you lived then!” The next day the floorwalker ar nounced that directly after the éiss- ing time Mr, Wendell wished to talk to all the employees on the main floor. Such meetings were rare, oc- curring only once or twice a year, and the people around Betty were busy all afternoon guessing what this one would mean. In the large group of more than "two hundred employees, Betty stood The old comrade received it. “Then close to Norma, who still regarded her in a curious way. She smiled He had chosen her because | he knew she was more interested in | “And you would have’ | The Jury’s Acquittal of Harry F. Sinclair. To those who recall the remarkable | Verdict of acquittal rendered by a Washington jury in the cases of Al- | bert B. Fall and Edward L. Doheny, the similar decision as to Harry F. | Sinclair’s guilt or innocence will not be wholly surprising. Nor will it have | any particular influence as effecting , the views of the American people up- i on this point. The authoritative pro- nouncement upon the parts played by I these three men in the leasing of the I naval oil reserves at Teapot Dome i and Elk Hills was given by the Su- ( preme Court of the United States fol- lowing hardly less notable opinions | expressed by Judges of the Circuit | Court of Appeals and District Courts. ‘The language used by these jurists was severe in the extreme in branding the oil leases as fraudulent and begot- i ten in corruption, and the fact that i 12 residents of the District of Colum- bia have expressed a contrary view will not alter the facts in the case, particularly as stated in the pains- taking and lucid expositions of the knavish transactions made by the Su- preme Court. This must forever stand as the most complete and impartial summing up of the whole matter, and the jury’s verdict is simply to be viewed as one of those peculiar men- tal aberrations which make the ad- ministration of justice in this coun- try so uncertain. Apart from this phase of the case it must be remembered that there were certain developments which de- barred the Government from present- ing evidence it possessed as to three important features of the oil lease transactions. These may be summed up as follows: First, the granting of a severance to Fall and the consequent trial of . i Sinclair alone limited the scope of ' the trial by excluding acts of Fall alone, which would have been admis- sible if the two were being tried to- gether. Second, it was admitted that Sin- clair had sent to Fall $233,000 in Lib- erty bonds after procuring the Tea- pot Dome lease, as was related by Fall’s son-in-law. Thereby the de- fense gained two points—it got be- fore the jury the contention that this sum was in payment for a share in Fall’s ranch property, and it caused. FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. DAILY THOUGHT It is not so much what we do as what we are that tells in this world.—Home Chat. Before hanging up the screens, they should be brushed thoroughly and the frames re-painted. All hinges should be oiled thoroughly at the same time. Ice-tea stains can be removed from linen by soaking the satin as soon as possible in Javelle water and then pouring boiling water through it. Triangular, round and octagonal shaped are new pillows. Taffeta and satin scraps make lovely ones. Also glazed chintz in small figured pat- terns. Spicy gingerbread, with raisins and nuts, makes a nice dessert if it is served very hot, with some thick pudding sauce to which a little mint has been added. Forks are always placed at the left of the plate, knives at the right and the spoons to the right of the knives in setting the table. Salad forks should be placed to the left of the dinner forks and oyster forks to the right of the spoons. Butter knives may be placed on the bread and but- ter plates or to the right of th spoons, oyster forks should be placed to the right of the butter knives. Very popular today are glass dish- es. They come in all sorts of gay colors and are so well made that they will stand hot water or may even be used as cooking utensils. One finds, in the stores, glass teakettles and cof- fee pots, and the large assortment of glass baking dishes with which we are familiar. One of the prettiest , breakfast sets which I have seen for Ia long time, was a set of small plates, tea cups, cereal dishes, and all the rest needed to set the table for the ‘first meal of the day, and all a dainty, transparent green, very cool looking for a breakfast in hot weather. | Every woman in the world loves to | clean the old surface. We despise | cleaning brushes. We very frequently | won’t wait for one coat to dry suffi- | ciently before adding another. And . we usually forget to stir the paint. | But if we'd only take the time and ! effort to do it right there’s no deny- | slightly just as Mr. Wendell, the to be excluded as irrelevant the fact |ing the smartness and the charm a stooped gray-haired president of the | that the bonds were derived from the : can of paint can bring into the home. firm began talking. “We're closing the store for Decor- ation Day,” he said. “There will be no invoicing nor repair work done on that day. It is not a holiday,” he said slowly, “for our benefit but a day our country has set aside for the honor of the men who fought for her.” There was a profound silence while every. one remembered that Mr. Wen- And then Betty knew she would not . dell had beer a drummer boy in tell him about the picnic. Instead . the Civil war. “Of course I'm march- she made a half-promise. “I'm coming ing in the parade—have every year to the camp fire, and I'll see what I there has been one,” he smiled, “but can do about Decoration Day.” Thoughtfully she walked the rest of the way to the Wendell store. And | the line of marchers was disgraceful- ly short last year and I wondered—" Mr. Ward finished for him, “If profits of the direputable Continental Trading Company deal. Third, the Court ruled out testi- mony that at about the time of the leases Fall also received $100,000 in, ing a rich, lustrous surface which ' cash from Doheny. Obviously, this incident would have helped the prose- cution’s argument that Fall was cor- rupted in both deals, but the decision | this is especially recommended for: was that it could not be used against Sinclair. In order to get the testi- mony of Doheny’s son, who carried | the money to Fall, the Government nolle prossed a bribery indictment . found against the young man; the | only result, however, was to free him { from the charge, for he was not per- as if planned by fate, she mat Norma most of Wendell’s employees couldn't | Mitted to tell the jury about the “lit- directly inside the rest-room door. Impulsively Betty told her about the old soldier and his scornful speech. | start a reform in this city by march- ing in a body on Decoration Day and helping in the proper celebration of “I didn’t blame him,” she admitted. | the day.” “I deserved everything he said. I He followed with the story of what was only sorry he couldnt tell the ! the custodian of Memorial Hall had whole town exactly what he told me.” | said to one of Wendell’s employees Norma was apprehensive. miss the picnic. The girls would be offended. They really would be hurt and Miss Dorman, too.” Betty shook her head. “Perhaps hurt a iittle, Norma,” she challenged. “But not exactly offended after they {know my reason for missing the pic- i nic. Of course, I shall not tell them she smiled whimsically. 5 “Butand of the camp fire which had been you're not going to go there Decora- | held to arouse interest. | tion Day, Betty,” she implored, “and tioned no names—simply told the He men- story and asked the workers to help the veterans make a success of that ay. To a man they promised. Picnic parties were broken up without a word of regret, excursions ended, and with a zeal which brought a gleam ; of happiness into Mr. Wendell’s face, ‘until afterwards, if I decide to go,” | plans for a sincere Decoration Day “And to be ; were made. Betty stood with scarlet the least fraction patriotic; of course, | cheeks listening. Norma moved close not tell them either, That would sound as if I were preaching.” | i | ! dear, you will respect my wishes and ' to her. “Yes, my lady, you started all this.” she said proudly. “I couldn’t help tell- She was rather sober all the after- | ing Miss Dorman and she promised noon. looked Mrs. Ward, passing her counter, ; to keep it a secret. She would have at her troubled face and asked | done so, too, had not Mr. Ward to her if the sale had tired her more | her of your refusal to invoice on than usual. buy heavily,” she laughed. That evening before she started : and here,” she waved her hand at the home, Betty went to Miss Dorman employees, “you have the result.” She smiled and shook | Decoration Day and asked if you were her head. “I like sales when they going on our excursion. 1 and told her that she could not go | with the book department workers on ' their picnic. Miss Dorman was ex- tremely polite, but Betty felt the touch of coldness in her voice. Still she tried to keep up her courage by thinking that she too would have been hurt were she in Miss Dorman’s place. “Because she doesn’t understand,” she urged. But her smile grew twisted when she walked away and the sparkle left her eyes. She couldn’t even lure it back when she journeyed down to Memorial Hall and told the custodian there that he could count on her as cne of the Tuesday morning workers and one of the Tuesday afternoon marchers. She was in a rather downhearted mood that evening. Still she accom- panied her mother to the camp fire. But the sight of the loyal old men, the sound of their singing and the tenor of their camp stories, stirred her to such enthusiasm that she for- got the nicnic she was to miss and the worry she had felt lest she would not win the girls of the book depart- ment back to her when she became one of their number. “Oh, if only everyone in town would remember that Decoration Day belongs to the soldiers,” she longed. “Just one day, one little day out of every year in return for all the days they gave us. We are too selfish and self-centered to give thm that.” She and her mother talked late into the night, wondering how the town could be interested in the veterans before next Decoration Day came around. “Ill have a chance to inter- est the children,” Betty was smiling again. “Ill tell them stories. That will be one of the beauties of going to the book department, mother.” But the next morning brought doubt. Mr. Ward came to the tin- ware tables with what he termed = request. The store was going to do some special invoicing Tuesday. He told Betty that he was asking one of the girls in each of the basement de- Then she d him the story I had told her “But your part in the affair is a secret to most of them,” Norma of- fered comfort. “Still you should be proud that you started a movement like this one.” Betty’s dusky eyes were brilliant as she hurried out of the store and down toward Memorial Hall. “I must tell the custodian that there will be a she thought. “And he can make an host of workers Tuesday morning, appeal to the school children for flowers for the graves.” Mounting the steps she smiled, re- membering what Mr. Ward had told her when she passed him on her way out of the store. “Report to the book department Monday morning, Miss North,” he had smiled. “Mr. Wendell has already passed on my recommen- dation concerning you and he wants you there next week.” “So that I can begin telling stories to the children right away,” she smiled, “and there will be plenty of paptroitic ones in my repertoire.”— Reformatory Record. State Police Check on 1482 Criminals. The criminal identification bureau of the Pennsylvania State Police co- operating with all police departments received 1482 fingerprints and photo- graphs of persons charged with var- ious crimes during the month of March, 1928. Of this number 11 per cent were identified as having pre- vious criminal records. Pennsylvania stands fourth in the number of licensed air planes in op- eration throughout the country. The Aeronautics Branch of the Depart- ment of Commerce has tabulated the 2,715 plnaes licensed and in the Keystone state, 62 planes have been licensed, 29 identified and awaiting approval of licenses. ——The Watchman gives all the news while it is news, tle black satchel” and its substantial | contents in currency. | "It is charitable to suppose that the legal technicalities here presented had a large part in influencing the jury in its verdict. In the estimation of the American people, however, there will remain no doubt as to the guilt of Harry F. Sinclair in his dealings with { Albert B. Fall.—Phila. Record. | Resoling Worn Shoes. | The village shoemaker in the old days was a substantial citizen of his community, and besides repairing the family shoes he frequently acted as justice of the peace, alderman—and sometimes he put in Sunday at preaching. When the “shoe-machin- ery trust” began turning out women’s shoes with the soles sewed directly to the upper, without an intervening welt, the poor shoemaker around the corner was unable to resole this kind of a shoe. But a new method of re- soling this type of shoe has been de- veloped and more than 140,000 pairs of women’s shoes are being resoled | weekly by the new process which has ! been developed by a well known in- dustrial firm which specializes in the | tanning of sole leather. ! In repairing by this method, a flex- | ible soling particularly adapted to the work is cemented to the shoe with a specially developed waterproof ce - ment by means of a hydraulic press, which molds the sole to the contour of the shoe. This process eliminates nails and stitches and permits the re- pair shop to.resole shoes that hereto- fore have been considered unrepair- able. Shoes repaired by the new meth- od, it is claimed, have none of the old “alf-soled” appearance and, in addi- tion, the solid comfort of a “well- broken-in” shoe is retained. The unusually satisfactory appear- ance of the job is made possible by the fact that, in using cement instead of stitching, the thickness of the sole can be graduated rather than having to meet a certain width to permit stitching. The cement in this process is a waterproof, belting cement adap- tation, developed for this specific pur- pose by a nationally known chemical industry. While the utility of this process is chiefly in the soling of the types of women’s shoes manufactured today, which defy resoling in any other way, it has been found to be also the most satisfactory method of repairing men’s shoes. Hysterical Women Get Blame for Unseating of Prince of Wales. Hysterical women who crowd at the jumps at point-to-point meetings at which the Prince of Wales rides are blamed for many of his recent falls. “The thoughtless and unsporting manner in which these women utter shrill cries of welcome when the Prince is about to take a jump are the chief cause of his recent falls,” said a member of a prominent hunt committee. “Horses are easily frightened, and it is astonishing that the Prince is able to manage his mounts so well in the circumstances.” | The new brushing lacquers are al- | | most magical in their effect and are jone of the best things for the novice |to use. They dry very quickly, giv- { wears like iron. In the very quick | drying preparations excellent results | may be had by using a sprayer, and wicker furniture or other pieces with crevices. pigment settles at the bottom and you lose much of the effect. Use a clean and a good brush, This is very important. Hard brushes make good i work impossible and cheap ones leave | 'a trail of hairs. There is a prepara- : tion which costs 10 cents a box which twill restore old brushes which have ' been neglected. It is a powder to be dissolved in warm water, and one box 1 will restore two brushes. The thin- ‘ners which come with lacquer and special paints will also clean brushes. | The surface should be entirely I clean. All wax and grease and oil ‘should be removed with turpentine. Incidentally, turpentine will remove : most paint spots which you may make on walls or clothing. Most of the thinners will also do this. Rust spots, worn surfaces and old scratches should be removed with sandpaper and a good sandpapering should be applied between coats. Two or more coats are usually necessary over surfaces which have been pre- viously painted. Unfinished woods, plaster and the like must have an un- dercoat, and all indentations and the small holes should be filled with plas- tic wood before painting. The un- | painted furniture which is now so popular needs no preparation, but two coats are necessary for best re- sults. It is said that one coat put on with a good soft brush will cover better than two coats put on with a poor brush. Use the brush full. The panels of a door should be done first. To do | a chair turn it upside down on the table, doing the lower part first, so that you can hold it by the upper part until the last. It is a new ana delightful idea to paint the insides vivid color, such as French blue, jade green or brilliant orange. A well-known firm gives a long list of trimming suggestions. Among them we note: Indian yellow trimmed with black and orange, Chinese red with black and gold, ivory with tur- quoise and gold, sage gray ‘with cin- namon brown and forest green, French gray with rose and Italian blue and rich blue with French gray and orange. Others may be easily obtained. There are also suggestions for obtain- ing unusual shades by mixing, but unless you wish something greatly out of the ordinary it may be pur- chased. Harlequin Marmalade.—Take one large can of pineapple, three oranges, 1% pints of water, four cupfuls of sugar, three tablespoonfuls of blanched almonds. Wash the or- anges and cut into small pieces, re- moving the seeds; let stand in the water over night, cook until tender, then add the pineapple; simmer for twenty minutes if the pineapple is fresh, add the sugar, and cook half an hour, adding the nuts ten minutes Deters it has cooked the required ime. Spiced Prune Marmalade.— Take one-half pound each of dried prunes, peaches and apricots. Soak and sim- mer until very tender; then put through a sieve. Grate the peel from an orange, add the juice and one-half pound of seeded raisins, one and one- fourth pounds of sugar and one-quar- ter cupful of nutmeats. Chop or cut fine the nutmeats and simmer all to- gether until rich and thick. The mix- ture may be cooked for ten minutés before adding the sugar. Cook care- fully as it burns very easily. Always stir your paint well, as the of drawers and cupboards in some a... FARM NOTES. Treat sheep for stomach worms. Forest fires cost $2,000,000 annu~ ally in timber lost. Limestone, sweet clover and short rotations are making sandy soil prof- 1table. Onions, parsnips and parsley seed | cannot be depended on to retain vi- | tality more than a year. ! The daily feed of a 1,600-pound horse at hard work should consist of {20 to 24 pounds grain in three feeds ‘and the same amount of high quality timothy or mixed hay divided into two feeds. It is well known by nurserymen and orchardists that most fruits do not re- produce varieties from seed; that budding or some other form of vege- tative propagation must therefore be: used to multiply a given variety. For the man who is in need of a legume hay, but finds it impossible to drain and sweeten his soil sufficiently to grow alfalfa or ordinary clover the alsike variety is most dependable. Al- sike clover will make a substantial growth on lands that are too wet and sour for most other legumes. In cer- | tain sections it is reported to produce | almost as well as red clover, and bet-- ter than crimson or white. In the: same amount of feed it contains more protein than does red clover. 1 Nearly every farmer raises enough: . popcorn for home use, but many | seem to have difficulty in curing the | finished product, and usually consid- | er it a matter of luck. But if the: ! right procedure is taken, the curing: is a simple process. | Popcorn, unlike other corn, should be allowed to remain on the stalks in i the field until thoroughly ripe and { hard. It should then be cut and put iin small shocks and a {wine tied , around each shock near the top to. i make it cone shaped; this will help. shed the water and prevent molding. | After about two weeks it should be: -husked out and placed in an attic on: a piece of chicken netting or screen: : suspended from the roof so that rats: "and mice will not have access to it. Later in the season when cold: weather comes and the corn has dried thoroughly it should be removed to a cold place if the attic is not very cold. This step has a very import- ant bearing on the popping quality of ' the corn. Ornamental trees damaged in the recent storm should be attended to now if the work has not been done already. All injured and broken i branches should be removed com- pletely with a clean cut close to the: trunk of the tree. Where the sym- metry of the tree is destroyed by loss: of injured limbs other parts also can be taken out to restore the propor- tions. i When gathering cut flowers for the home it is well to place the stems in: water as soon as cut. This will in- crease the lasting qualities of the flowers. There is no need for a farmer to keep dairy cows without knowing the value of each as a milk producer. Membership in a cow testing associa~ tion costs less than the feed eaten by a number of “boarder” cows which: never pay their board. Have you planted an abundant sup- ply of leafy vegetables? Many of these crops can be planted in May. New Zealand spinach should be in every home garden for the summer supply of greens. Ut should be. plant- ed by June 1. It is not too late to: sow Swiss chard. Plantings of let- tuce, kohl rabi, carrots, beets, and radishes can be made this menth. for summer use. Witloof chicory or French endive should be planted: about June 1. This crop will come in: handy next winter when no othe salad crops are available, say State College vegetable gardeners. Remove the roosters from the: lay- ing flock as soon as the season for producing hatching eggs is past, for infertile eggs will keep longer and, therefore, are more desirable in warm. weather. During the course of twelve months: a high-laying hen will produce from: 18 to 25 or more pounds of eggs—or , from four to seven or more times her- own body weight, depending upon the weight of the hen. And.it.is a.well- known {act that eggs are high in per- centage of protein. Logically, there- fore, it follows that. laying hens must. be fed a ration which is rich in pro- tein if they are to turn out this amount of protein-rich product and still maintain the muscle, sinew and’ : blood in their own. bodies. Home-grown grains, such as wheat,. oats, barley and. corn, while they all’ contain a certain proportion of pro- tein, all rank as -carbohydrate-rich feeds, necessary to maintain body flesh and provide heat and energy, but. lacking in sufficient proportion of pro- tein to meet the requirements of the heavy production. Millfeeds, such as. bran and shorts, contain proportion-- ately more protein than do whole grains, but they, likewise, fail to sup- ply the needed amount. If the ration fed to laying hens contains these. feeds only, without the addition of some protein-rich supplement, the feeder cannot. expect high egg pro- duction; the hen simply cannot pro- duce eggs, but can only turn the car- bohydrates into surplus body fat. Care used in the mating of poultry and in. the. selection of hatching eggs: will in a short time develop a flock that produces practically no inferior eggs, says L. M. Black, extension spe- cialist in poultry husbandry, at the college of agriculture of Rutgers uni- versity. Experiment has shown that certain characters are transmitted to future: layers through the egg. The pullet. that is hatched from any particular egg tends to lay the same type egg as that from which she came. Success- ful poultrymen take advantage of this fact and! select. only typical, large, uniformly. colored eggs when setting the incubator. Since sires, too, exert: an influence upon the type of egg laid by the pullets, males selected for the breeding pens are from ancestors that were noted for their heavy production: of large, uniformly colored and. shaped: eggs.