Bellefonte, Pa., September 27, 1929. Deemer] MY DEBTS. I owe a hymn of praise to every sunrise, I owe a cheerful smile to every sunset hour; ! And to the bee that seeks for nectar in my garden I owe a flower. I owe a light to shine in my small corner, I owe a helpful lift to shoulders bowed with care; And to the blinded souls who grope in sin and darkness I owe a prayer. I owe a loyal heart to those who trust me, I owe a gracious manner to the pressing throng; And to the sad broken-hearted all about me I owe a song. I owe myself to do the best that’s in me, I owe my God a soul that’s clean. and free from guile; These are my honest debts and paying daily, I shall Find life worthwhile. meron ens —— THE BOOMERANG GUN. Rick Maynard examined the heavy caliber repeating rifle which a neigh- bor rancher had just returned, a frown on his usually good-natured face. He had never taken ' “Hen” Collins’ pretense of being a gun ex- pert very seriously, and now he thought less of it than before. Hen ought to buy a rifle of his own. - Rick shook his head disgustedly as he crossed to the door and set the rifle down. Then he went out to his job scraping fresh hides from last week's catch. The weather was turn- ing warm, and he mustn't take any chance of softening the furs. He seated himself at the bench behind the cabin and went to work. He was still industriously bending to his task, an hour later, when a shadow fell across the bench and Rick looked suddenly up to see a! young fellow of about his own age but more slenderly built standing be- side him. There was a pallor on the face of the newcomer which gave Rick the feeling that he had just come out of a hospital. His eyes were keen and intent, and there was | an expression in their depths which brought the boy working at the bench slowly to his feet. It might have been an expression of suppress- ed excitement or of fear; and it might have heen something more sinister— a threat. “Good morning,” Rick - said. “I didn’t hear you come—must have | been day dreaming!” The flicker of a smile crossed the stranger’s face, leaving it more som- ber than before. He licked his lips and hesitated. Then he spoke with a plunge. rive “T wonder if I could get something to eat?” he queried. “I walked out from town, and I'm getting so hun- gry I could gnaw the bark off a pine tree!” : Rick turned with alacrity toward the house and led the way to the back door, through which he had re- cently emerged. “It won't take fifteen minutes to get a fire going and fix you some coffee and flapjacks,” he was saying. “It’s a long walk out from town!” But to himself he was thinking. “I wonder why he didn’t get breakfast before he left? And where is he go- ing, over this road at this time of year?” The stranger offered no informa- tion. He sat staring at the floor all the time Rick was cooking breakfast, and when the latter called him he started as if he, too, had been ina brown study—and not a particularly pleasant one. But he ate as if he had not seen food for days; ate and ate, till he looked up to find Rick regarding him quizzically. A slow, unwilling smile spread ov- er his face. “Some breakfast!” he said with somber earnestness. “As a matter of fact, I didn’t eat supper last night; wasn’t hungry then!” He stood up and fumbled in his pocket. Rick shook his head. “You don’t owe me anything,” he explained. “There isn’t anyone in these foothills that wouldn't give you a square meal, or a dozen of them; and the only payment you can make is to pass the kindness on to some- one else, when you have the chance.” The stranger considered this re- mark broodingly. “When I have a chance? Say. that's a good one! When I have a chance. Well, now if you'll just tell me how far it is to Otter Creek, I'll be going.” Rick gave his strange visitor the information he requested, and saw him depart up the road that wound higher into the hills. He was vaguely disturbed by the other's manner, but after all there was nothing Rick could do about it. He shook his head, glanced with a momentary ir- ritation at the rifle beside the door, and then went out into the yard and struck down through the brush of the slope below. He had set a mink trap beside the creek the day before. and this seemed a good time to examine it. There was nothing in the trap, and Rick tramped on down along the bank of the trout stream looking for a better place for a set. It was un- usual for any fur bearing animal to come so close to the house, and the chances were that this was some clever old citizen of the foothills who had made an intensive study of hunt- ers and trappers. He would be hard to capture. Rick found a little mount of bunch grass projecting from the snow some. distance from his first set; inside. it had been hollowed out and pressed down as if for a sleep- ing place. At this time of year, be- fore Mr. Mink went to housekeeping, he was perhaps living in some such makeshift beside the creek; and if not he was certain to investigate it; on the chance of coming stealthily upon a rabbit. The young man re- turned to the place where he had left the unsprung trap, and fifteen minutes later had made the new set. He walked briskly back to the house after that and passed around to the back door. Opening it, he stepped inside to look at the clock. Eleven—he had accomplished very little this morning; he turned back toward the door—and paused. His eyes widened and for a moment he stared incredulously. The rifle which he had left leaning against the wall was gone! = Rick whistled softly and strode out into the back yard. The road from the distant railroad division point, five miles away, looped around on the farther side of the valley and came diagonally up toward the cabin, so that he had a clear view of more then a mile of track in that direction. There was not so much as acyvow in sight. He turned and looked up the road to where it disappeared around the end of ‘the ridge: no one in that direction. For several minutes Rick stood pondering this surprising develop- ment. He didn’t want to be unjust but it certainly looked as if the stranger whom he had fed that morn- ing had sneaked back to the house and had stolen the gun. But what had been his object? And who was he and why was he so obviously run. ning away from the little town in the valley? Rick gave it up for the present, which turned out to be the wisest thing he could do. An hour later, while he was eating dinner, the news which he would have wasted his time trying to figure out from his meager foundation of facts was thrust freely upon him. There came a trampling of hoofs from the direction of the lower road and a stentorian voice called Rick to the door. A dozen men, mounted and most of them armed, were drawn up below the house. As Rick appear- ed on the front porch of the cabin, which was raised six or eight feet above the level of the ground, one of the horsemen called to him. “Seen anything of a fellow going up this road, Rick? Fellow about your age, but mebbe thirty pounds lighter than you be?” Rick deliberately made his way down the steps. Ignoring the ques- tion that had been fired at him, he countered with another. “What did he do?” looking significantly at the rifles of the horsemen and from the guns to i a coil of rope hooked over the pom- . mel of another saddle. The man with the rope, a sinister looking fellow whom Rick had never | before seen, replied gruffly. “He did a plenty. young fellow! He robbed Merken’s store last night, and most likely he killed Mr. Merken and threw his body into the river. Any- how we ain’t been able to find the old man this morning!” ! the body before spring!” another man chimed in. “You better keep your eyes open, Rick—if he comes this way he might take a crack at you just for good luck!” | |” “How did you find out who robbed the store?”. Rick said, regarding the burly man with the rope some- what disapprovingly. : : “Well, bub, I'll tell you,” the lat- ter replied with evident gusto. “This here young man fellow was hanging around all day yesterday, looking into windows but saying nothing to no one. Then this morning when the news got around that the store had been robbed, he up and lit out. We didn’t miss him for a couple of ‘hours—everyone was excited. If Seth Adams hadn’t remembered tell- ing him about the robbery, and see- ing him kind of keel over like it hit him in the stomach we might not have thought nothing about him. But when we looked for him, he was! gone. All right, men—we’'ll get off. If he's on this road we'll overhaul him before he can reach Otter Creek and mebbe get aboard a train!” The cavalcade moved briskly away, leaving Rick looking frowningly af- ter them. He had not answered the question put to him about the stranger, and in their excitement they had not asked it a second time. ‘Probably they had the impression he had answered it. Rick went back into the house and finished his meal. His eyes rest- ed steadily on a point on the wall just level with his nose. He had formed the habit of staring at this particular knot whenever he was trying to solve a problem; and now he had an important problem to solve. dinner dishes, and went over to a trunk in the corner. tilting back the lid, Rick took from the top tray a long barreled, heavy framed revol- ver, together with cartridge belt and holster. For a moment he stared at this outfit. Then he shook his head and put the gun and its fittings back into the trunk. Briskly he crossed to the outer door and went out into the yard. He knew where he would find his man. Trapping teaches applied psychology in .a very practical way; it teaches the trapper to put him. self in the place of his quarry, and to think as the latter thinks. He learns to project his consciousness. Now Rick Maynard had done that very thing. He knew where he would find the man who had appropriated his rifle and who was accused of burglary and murdér—because he knew where he himself would have gone from thé top of the ridge if he had been a stranger in the country and anxious to avoid pursuit. Tt was a long climb to ‘the top of the backbone. A stranger, making this same journey, would have been deceived many times "by ‘jutting elbows which seemed to: terminate’ the ascent. When the climber came’ out upon one of these rises, he found that more steep hillside lay beyond. Rick swung up the slope with the long, easy stride of ome accustomed. to climbing. He was breathin easily when he reached the top, an he paused only an instant before starting the plunge into the great valley beyond. ‘There was still a coating of snow over the ' ground; , and against this dazzling background, i scattered pines and firs stood out black and lowering. Rick gave these he demanded, | “And if he done that, we won't find ! He stood up presently, washed the | single trees scant attention. He was heading for a fir thicket, two miles distant. He crossed the valley and ap- proached the thicket without taking any particular pains to hide his movements. A desperate character hiding here might easily have pick- ed him off as he advanced. Rick seemed hardly to have thought of this, for when he reached the edge of the trees he stood for a moment vanced unhesitatingly toward a shack which he was now able to dis- cern. If he guessed correctly his guest of the morning would have seen the thicket from the ridge and would now be resting in this little building. Rick approached the door. Then he had reached it and was standing looking into the room. He was right—the stranger was sitting slouched forward, his chin in his hands, his elbows on his knees. He raised his head— And then he leaped erect and swung the rifle to his shoulder. It had been leaning against the wall within reach of his hand. “Don’t in here—I won't be that shook and quavered. try to come taken alive !” Rick regarded him calmly. He stepped up into the cabin, whose floor was raised a foot or so he heard the click of the hammer as the rifle was cocked. “I warn you !” the man of the gun cried. “I'm desperate—" Rick’s glance rested unwaveringly on the face of the young fellow op- posite him. said calmly. “What would you gain by it? Better put down the gun!” He took another step forward, and for a moment a light of determina- tion sparkled in the stranger's eyes. His finger trembled on the trigger. Then, as Rick advanced another long stride, he suddenly dropped the gun to the floor and collapsed into the sitting. ; Rick crossed over and picked up the rifle. His hand rested kindly on the shoulder of the young fellow at his side. repeated. “It’s a poor argument, Well, old timer, come on. We'll be moving!” Haggard eyes looked up into his with amazement. “Where do you think I'm going— with you?” the boy in the chair gasped. “Back to my place, of course. Come on!” : Unwillingly, moved it seemed by some force outside of himself, the stranger stood up. He was staring wondeéringly at Rick now, and some- thing very like fear whitened his cheeks: “You mean—you're going to take me back to jail? I'm a prisoner?” “Suppose you tell me what you did ‘as we walk back. It all depends gn The stranger fell into step at Rick's side as they left the cabin and - Presently they were in the open val- ley, journeying toward the distant ‘ ridge. iy | “My name is Norton—Leo Nor- ton,” Rick’s companion began. “I . was in jail—in the state reformatory. 'I used to hang around with a lot of fellows in the city, and we began tak- ‘ing automobiles and going joy riding {in them. At first we didn't get { caught, and we got to thinking we were too smart for the police. Then ,one night they caught me and my i chum. We tried to get away, and the machine we were in smashed in- to a lamp post. The machine was wrecked, and we were thrown out and hurt pretty badly. There had been a lot of trouble with other fel- lows doing the same thing, and the judge down at the juvenile court said we must be taught a lesson. I was eighteeri then. He gave me two years, and I just got out the other day—I wish now I hadn’t!” He paused, and Rick could see an expression of bitterness creeping into his face. He sighed and continued despondently. “T got to thinking about it, before they turned me loose, and it seemed like a good deal of my trouble had ' come from hanging around in the | city with nothing to do but get into mischief. I didn’t have any ties there —my father and mother have been dead since I was ten years old—so I decided to start all over again in the country. I used to have an uncle down in the towr below here, and I | asked the superintendent to send me i there. I thought in the country ev- erything would be fine!” ' Rick smiled sympathetically. “Carbondale is a railroad division i point and a mining town,” he com- mented. “It’s a little "rough. But what happened when you got there?” “Well, first I found that my uncle had been transferred to another divi- sion—he’s an engineer. And then this morning—" He paused, shivering as if with fear. i “I knew they'd suspect me as soon as they heard about the hor- irible thing !” he cried excitedly. | “When a fellow once goes wrong, , they never give him another chance. i ve heard the boys at the reforma- tory say that—there’s no second , chance ! And so when I heard thata crime had been committed, I knew I had to.get out. There was no i train till night, so I started out on foot. An I'd have made it if it hadn't been for you! I'm sorry I ever set eyes on that gun!” Riek shook his head. “You wouldn't have made it. There was a bunch looking for you at my place this noon. ey'd have crossed over into this valley to-mor- | row-—and the fact that you had run away would have seemed to them proof enough of your guilt. You made a mistake in running, Leo. It never pays to run away from old man trouble——he can sprint faster than you can!” They reached the foot of the long slope and started up. The stranger looked sidewise at his companion. iH peering into their shade and then ad- “Stand back !” he cried ina voice “I don’t believe you'll shoot.” he’ rickety chair in which he had been “I didn’t believe you'd shoot” ae! that vo: 5) ‘ headed out of the shelter of the grove. “You don’t think I did it?” he ‘ demanded. dh = : “I know you didn't!” Rick re- plied. “And in any case I wouldn't turn you over to a mob!” The city boy’s checks paled at this ominous word. He seemed to cling closer to his companion. Silently they climbed a spur which diagonal- ed toward the top of the ridge. It was late afternoon before they reached the cabin, and Rick at once set about getting supper. The rifle he placed where it had been when Leo Norton appropriated it. Occa- sionally he saw his companion eye- ing it almost longingly. To the young fellow with the menace of mob injustice hanging over him, the weapon undoubtedly represented safety. A tramping of hoofs sounded from the direction of the road, and both young men looked quickly up from their plates. Silence had settled over them, as if they had been ex- pecting just this. Rick stood up and crossed to the front door. He threw it open and stepped out upon the porch. The red light of sunset flooded the valley, turning the rims of snow to a glowing red. It fell, too, upon the somber faces of the mob. The bearded man with the rope looped over his pommel rode to the foot of the steps and glowered up at Rick. Plainly he was not used to horse- back riding, and he slumped wearily in his seat. | “Seen anything of that fellow?” he demanded pessimistically. “I reck- os be didn’t come this way after “He came this way, all right,” Rick replied. “As a matter of fact, he’s in here now !” Silence greeted this announcement. The mounted figures seemed to freeze into statues, and for a long moment not a sound came from any of them. Then the man with the rope threw his leg backward out of his stirrup and leaped to the ground. “Come on, men !” he cried. Rick raised his hand. | “Just a minute,” he requested with ominous gentleness. “He is my guest at Present, Better stay where you are!” i The man with the rope roared his , amusement. | “Better stay where you are!” he yelled. “I see myself-——come on, men!” |” Rick looked steadily down. He ,had stepped back a pace from the ledge of the steps, and now his arms "hung at his sides. “Don’t come up here,” again. “I don’t want you!” | The man with the rope paused at ‘the foot of the short flight of steps. His whiskered jaw gaped and his eyes smouldered with wrath. | “Why, you young whipper-snap- per!” he snarled. “I'll learn you—" “Better not be in a hurry, Hines,” one of his companions suggested un- easily. “If Rick don’t want you up there, mebbe you better talk it over!” The man called “Hines” snarled ‘ pack at them. ! “Come on, you cowards!” he bel- lowed. “Or if you daren’t do that, wait till I bring him out!” He ran up the steps. top he paused for an instant, shifing {the coil of rope from his right hand to his left, and with that big right fist he struck suddenly at Rick. . The latter stepped back with the speed of lightning. He let the awk- ward “haymaker” swing harmlessly past, and next instant leaped in and caught Hines by the collar. Jerking him forward, Rick stooped and thrust an arm back of his antagonist’s knee ‘drawing - him across his shoulders. Then he arched his body forward and hurled the intruder over his head and toward the ground below. + Hines landed in a snow bank. For a moment he lay quite still. Then he i struggled erect and began to claw the ‘snow from his beard. “Now, listen!” Rick said crisply. “I wouldn't turn this young fellow over to you even if he were guilty, because there isn’t an officer among 1 you. You represent nothing but law- lessness. But in addition to that, he is innocent. The best thing for you to do is to go back totown and see (what has happened since you left. i Very likely the thief has been discov- ered!” There was a restless movement in the mob. | “Look here, Rick!” one of the men cried, “how do you know he is inno- cent? Reckon he told you so, hey?” | “Never mind how I,know. You are neither sheriff nor jury. You can neither arrest nor try this man or any other!” Hines was up by this time. shook his fist and snarled. “Go up there and get him. you fellows! Don’t stand here arguing with a kid that ain’t old enough to know nothing—he admits he got our man! Go get him! Here, you Mike —give me your gun! I'll show him fast enough who's boss around here!” “The crowd was ominously silent. Mike held on to his gun, but there was a threat in their very immobility. ‘Then Rick heard steps behind him, and turned swiftly to see young Nor- i He ling hands. “You take it!” Leo pleaded. they're going to use guns—" “They aren't!” “Take that gun back and put it Where you found it. I don’t need it!” A growl partly of ferocity and partly of approval came from the ‘men gathered below the steps. “Why won't you need a gun, Rick?” one of them cried. “We're coming up there and grab that fel- low. ' I reckon you don’t know that he robbed a store and killed a man last night!” Rick shook his head. He had not moved .from his position at the top of the steps, and his eyes rested un- waveringly on the man below. "41 don’t know that, and neither do you! Now listen, you fellows. You go back to town ' and if the thief hasn't been found yet you get the sheriff. Let him appoint a posse if he thinks he needs one to arrest one unarmed boy, and come out here. My guest will be right here!” “If he said Near the: ton at his side, a rifle in his tremb- Rick interrupted. Hines raised his hands in frenzied protest. ; “Yes, he will!” he shouted. “Come on, you fellows—go up them steps and get him. It's your turn!” But something had happened to the mob. They were talking Rick's proposal over in low tones, and pres- ently one of them spoke. “Rick, you give us your word this fellow won't go away till we go into town and look around?” “I give you my word!” “Then come on, men! he’ll keep him here, he'll doit! And if they ain't found anyone else that might have killed old man Merken, ' we’ll have the sheriff come out here. After all, that is the right way to do i 42 Rick smiled down at the speaker. “Now you're talking, Harry,” said he “This is America, remember!” Rick crossed over to the bucket of | If Rick says spring water and took a long drink. ' His face was pale, now that the emergency had passed; and his throat felt drawn and parched. His hand shook a little as he replaced the tin cup beside the pail. “Well old timer,” he said as he turnd toward his companion, “we came through that without lowering our colors! That's fine!” Leo Norton raised haggard eyes. “But I don’t understand!” he whis- pered. “Why wouldn't you take that gun—when they were threatening to use guns.” Rick grinned. “Perhaps I was too much of a cow- ard to take it. Iknow these men. They're pretty rough—they call themselves ‘hard boiled.” If I'd tak- en that gun, I would have been de- fying them to shoot it out with me— and that would have been twelve to one. But as long as I wouldn't even talk gun, without realizing it they felt themselves bound to use the same weapons I was using: Reason. You see, I knew that at heart most of them were he right sort!” He paused a moment, glancing whimsically at his companion. “And there was another reason,” he continued. “It gets back to a question you've overlooked. How did I know that you hadn’t robbed the store and killed old Mr. Merken? | Well, I'll tell you!” Rick turned, crossed to the wall where the rifle was leaning, and picked it up. Throwing down the lever, he thrust a piece of paper in- to the aperture thus formed and twisted this improvised reflector toward the window. “Look down through this barrel!” he commanded. Leo Norton obeyed. “Why. there's something in it—it’s almost plugged shut!” he exclaimed. “Sure! You see, I loaned the gun to a fellow who thought he knew more about ammunition than the ammunition manufacturers do. He had some solid cased bullets, and he wanted to make them into soft points. He filed off the ends of the steel jackets. Now, that might have work- ed with a less powerful gun, but with this 30-06 ammunition the first shot blew the lead center out of the bul- let and left the case in the barrel!” Again Rick paused, and his eyes rested curiously on those of the boy who stood staring at him. “See how it worked out? When you were holding that gun on me today, I knew you couldn't do me any particular damage. If you pull- ed the trigger, the gun would burst. It might hurt you, but it wouldn't be apt to hurt me. But I knew also that if you were guilty—if you had committed a robbery and a murder last night—you would try to shoot me, even when your liberty and per- haps your life seemed to be at stake. So I knew beyond argument that you were innocent!” 3 Leo Norton sagged weakly into his chair. : “And that was the other reason you wouldn't take the gun just now? But you might have bluffed them with it!” “Yes, and I might not!” Rick's white teeth showed in a baffling smile. “My son” he concluded sage- ly, “bluff is a good deal like all other dope. Once you start to use it, you have to increase and increase the dose. The reason those fellows took my word for things just now was that they knew I wasn’t bluffing. They knew I was telling the truth, because I never lied to one of them yet. I reckon this would have been a poor time to start!” It was several days later before the two young fellows in the cabin on the ridge heard that Mr. Merken hadn’t been killed after all. He had been called into the city, and had taken the late train without having a chance to tell anyone. And the robbery of the store was the work of a tramp, who was captured next day with part of his booty still in his possession. But by this time Leo Norton was beginning to lose interest in the af- fair. He had gladly accepted an of- fer Rick Maynard made him to stay at the cabin, trapping during the re- mainder of the winter and working at Rick's mining claims in the open season.—From the Reformatory Rec- ord. : EXPERT SAYS HORSE | IS HODLING OWN. The mystery concerning the dis- appearance of man’s faithful friend from the highways is cleared up by Edward N. Gosselin, American horse shoe king, recently returned from a vacation at Lake Louise in Canadian Rockies. Gosselin says there are 30,000,000 horses and mules in the United States, including 100,000 saddle horses and several thousand Trace horses. Although few of the ani- mals are seen on the highways since the coming of the “gas buggies,” FARM NOTES. —To make a horse life his foot, pinch the wart just above the Knee. : —There appears to be no economy in trying to raise pigs without grain. —Extra time spent with sows when due to farrow will pay big wages. Put in part of the night in the hog barn when necessary. —NLice should never be permitted to remain on the hogs any longer than their presence is known. —Under winter conditions fish meal is worth relatively more in compari- son with tankage than when the pigs are on pasture. Likewise it has a relatively higher feeding value for young pigs than for well-grown shoats. —Coarse straw is generally thought of as the best material to use in mulching strawberries. It is not al- together necessary, however, because any coarse straw-like material can be used, but no matter what the ma- terial is. it should be free from grass, weed, or grain seeds. Marsh hay is sometimes used and is all right if it is of a coarse nature. Some think that leaves can be used, but they mat down too close to the surface of the ground and are aptto smother out the strawberry plants, and unless they are used in connection with something that is very coarse that will keep them from matting, they should not be used. —Any time during the dormant season when men may work com- fortably out of doors, the pruning work may be carried on with profit. With large orchards one of the main problems confronting the grower is the matter of securing labor for the pruning work. The question is not, therefore, so much a problem of when it should be done as it is a. matter of getting the pruning done. It is true, however, that labor may usually be secured with less difficulty during the fall and winter than dur- ing the early spring just as growth is starting. —A special effort should be made at this season to keep the fall litters growing and thrifty. The sows and pigs should be furnished with shelter from the cold rains and the cold nights. Experience has shown pure- bred breeders that they cannot rely on the temperate winters and that shelter will prevent pneumonia, bad colds, and general unthriftiness. A moderate quantity of straw or leaves should be used for bedding—mnot so much but that the pigs will not be able to get out of the sow’s way. When the pigs are old enough to eat feed them in a creep. A little shelled corn or skim milk is a good feed to start them on. Extra feed pays at this time, the animal hus- bandrymen at Clemson college say, because the pigs are making a cheap gain and will be in good condition for weaning. Forage can be supplied at this time by rye and rape. It ises- ' pecially desirable to have enough for- age to carry the sows and pigs un- til freezing weather. If forage Is ' not available, a more liberal use of a the good protein supplement is necessary at this time because the hogs are depending upon the feeder for their supply. Don't feed lice. A little ime and trouble will rid the house and hogs of these parasites. Crude oil or a good coal-tar dip will give re- sults. The sow will get along best if she some exercise and should be fed a mineral preparation consisting of 40 per cent lime, 40 per cent bonemeal or similar material, and 20 per cent common salt. To this may be add. ed .05 to .1 of a pound of sodium or potassium iodine for every 10C pounds of the other ingredients. The sow will get along best if she is not fed the first 24 hours afte: farrowing. Her first feed can well be the bran and shorts which she was getting before she farrowed. — The marketing season for tur keys is fronj about the middle o November to the last of December. - Confining turkeys during the fat tening season has not proved success ful. They will eat heartily for twr or three days, but after this they wil lose their appetite and begin to los: flesh ‘rapidly. Naturally they ar wild birds and thrive only when the; have access to open range. During the summer and fall they find aj abundance of feed on the averag: farm; however, it is advisable to giv: them a small feed at night for th purpose of bringing them home tb roost. Grasshoppers and other in sects, weeds and grass seeds, gree vegetation, berries and grain picke up in the fields and about go to mak up the turkey’s daily ration, an when all These are plentiful they ar in splendid condition when the fat tening season arrives. 3 A satisfactory plan for fattening i to begin by feeding small grain nigh and morning, not enough at a tim but that the birds will walk awa still ‘a little hungry, and graduall increase the quantity, addin some corn, until they are given a they will eat three times a day. Alon at the close of the fattening seaso corn supplemented with fresh sou milk, may constitute the full ratio: New corn may be fed safely provide the turkeys are gradually accuston ed to it, otherwise scours may resul Various kinds of nuts are a natu al fattening feed picked up by tw ‘Keys on the range. In parts of Texas they continue indispensible to milk- men, city trucking concerns and to the farmer for certain types of labor where tractors are impracticable. That “Dobbin” is holding his own in competition with the mechanical monsters that threaten his ‘job. indicated according to Gosselin, b the great amount of horseflesh that jis imported from Canada each year. 1 1 i many growers, properly situated, de pend solely on acorns for fattenin their turkeys, and when the mast : plentiful the birds are marketed i fairly good condition. —Loafing cows in the daily her reduces profits and counteract tk good work of the efficient milk prt ducers. Cow testing associations It cate the boarders so that the own jg can dispose of them before they es y , their heads off. a ——————— A ———————— —We do your job work right.