Demon lan. cc — Bellefonte, Pa., February 21, 1930. BULGING SHIRT FRONT Celia Agnew paused in the act of applying a feathery pink powder- puff to her already powdery-white neck and turned on the bench before her dressing table to face her twin sister. “For goodness’ look like a wreck!” “I am,” agreed Christine, pulling a felt hat from her tawny bobbed hair, “Played eighteen holes this after- noon with Bobby Tate while Leigh sat on the club veranda and sulked. sake, Chris, you Looked like a thunder cloud every i time we came near. When I slid in the creek trying to rescue my last flogter,” displaying a stained white shoe, “he wouldn't wait until I could dry my foot and we didn’t speak all the way home.” Celia carefully powdered her slen- der white neck. With long white fin- gers she expertly rearranged her ex- quisitely marcelled hair in coils on the back of her head, Christine, from the depths of an easy-chair, a brown muscular hand supporting her head, watched her. ; “Why all the fussing? New man?” Celia shrugged her shoulders. “I am not fussing. Sallie Larkins is having an engineer from Dave’s com- pany up for dinner tonight and ask- ed me to help entertain him. Cannot imagine anything I can do—probably won't speak the same language.” “Sounds interesting to me. I'm just sick of these city society men. If Leigh would put on a pair of ov- eralls and change an automobile tire instead of calling a service wagon— do a man’s work—all dressed up like a Christmas tree, smoking cigarettes in an amber holder! Why in the world he didn’t pick you instead of me on which to lavish his affections and the Chiswell fortune I can’t imagine. You were made for each other, He says golf is a deadly bore, but will play bridge a whole after- noon or sit doing nothing! I like a man’s man.” Celia slipped into a dress of a sea- foam green chiffon with a touch of silver. Her twin looked up at her admiringly. “You'll make the engineer's eyes stick out in that creation, my dear, although he may be accustomed to beautiful scenery. Can you imagine me—in that?” “Really, Chris, I do wish you would try to improve your appearance be- fore Leigh’s mother returns from abroad. Go down to Madame Gen- ey’s and have her take off some of those freckles and tan.” “I will—not! Love me—love my complexion. I know you would like me to be more of a twin, Cele, but I'd die if I led your life. Bridge, teas, operas, beauty parlors—Ooooh! Be- sides, father says there should be a boy in this team and he'd be fright- fully disappointed if I failed to play the part. What's the new man’s name?” “I don’t know, although Sallie mentioned it. All I know is that he has been building some kind of a bridge over a pass in the Rockies the last year and they are sending him to South America in the fall on a | similar job. Sallie mentioned going to the opera this evening. I do hope we won't see the Montgomerys there. Arnold asked me to accompany him and his mother, but I just couldn't disappoint Sallie. “Cele, be yourself,” reproved her sister. “And I suppose you'll be add- ing his name to your notched stick along with Lansing Loomis and the Honorable Richard Eaton and that Major Somebody from Washington, who carried a cane, and Senator Evan’s brother and poor Dick Man- tony-—-that was scandalous, Cele— and Theodore Blaisdell.” “Chris, don’t be ridiculous. Please call Thomas and tell him I want the car at once, Promised Sallie IT would be there at 6 and it is after 10 now.” Celia looked up into brown eyes beneath a shock of unruly brown hair. Then down, to a white expanse of bulging shirtfront! Every time the wearer moved it bulged a bit more and then relaxed into place. When je sat down beside her, it pro- truded to an alarming degree. Cer- tainly Mr. Moore did not wear even- ing clothes very graciously. She compared him with the immaculate Dave Larkins, who leaned against the fireplace; with the elegant Leighton Chiswell, who so openly adored her twin sister; with Lansing Loomis, the Honorable Richard Eaton, poor Dick Manton, the fastidious Arnold Mont- gomery, the notched stick, and then she came back with a start. The man beside her was speaking in a soft drawl, leaning forward with el- bows on his knees, his big brown hands dangling awkwardly from his cuffs. : =“I reckon you have never camped in all your life, Miss Agnew.” “Never!” she responded promptly. “I am afraid I would make a poor camper, Mr. Moore. I hate bugs and being uncomfortable.” Dave Larkins laughed. “I'd like to see Cele in a tent. Christine—that is Miss Agnew’s twin sister, Bart—would make a corking good camper. A regular sport, Chris is. “I'd like to meet your sister,” drawled Bartlett Moore. “I like folks who love the out-of-doors, the feel of the sun and wind.” “Bart was telling us before you came, Cele, how they camped on the job in the Rockies, days when they wouldn't see a soul but the construc- tion gang. Way up on the mountain- side with a trout stream close by, could hear the animals howl through the night. Sounds corking to me.” “It’s living!” declared the guest emphatically. “I actually pity you city people who know nothing but the artificial indoor life. Celia arched her brows and titled her pretty head. Arnold Montgom- ery had threatened to kiss her when she did that. “Oh, T am quite sure, Mr. Moore, that we do not need your sympathy. "» Ee ! things in life. We have music! Art! Physical comforts.” | He laughed tolerantly, displaying unusually white teeth. “Music?” he queried. “What could be more won- ! derful than the music of water com- ring down over mossy rocks in a ' mountain wilderness or the song of the birds at dawn? Did you ever hear a breeze whispering up a can- yon? Or the rustle of trees in a night wind? And art! Is there a greater artist—anywhere—than Na- |[ture? Did ever an artist actually succeed in portraying Nature's true colors on a canvas? Did you ever see the real blue of the sea, the creaminess of the clouds, the golden and scarlet tints of foliage after a frost, the azure colors of the sky at dawn or the tints of a sunset actual- y produced in their real beauty—by man? Why, my dear girl, all down through the generations our great masters have tried to reproduce the songs and sounds of Nature on their instruments; have tried to reproduce her pictures on their canvases, and you say you have art! Music! The finer things in life!” He smiled down at her as he ran his brown fingers through his hair. “And as for physical comforts, there was never a softer bed than balsam | boughs and blankets; that is, if you know how to make it up. I grant you it takes practice. And the smell of coffee and bacon on keen morning air, the taste of mountain trout fried over an open fire.” Sallie clapped her hands. “That is splendid, Mr, Moore. Dave, do get an outdoor job and take me along.” At dinner the two men talked of mileage, dynamiting processes, rock formation, steel girders and quoted figures. Sallie and Celia discussed the last dinner-dance at the country club, the new method of bridge scor- ing, the Rigley divorce, the second Mrs. Darlington and Betty Blaine’s departure for Europe. Every time Mr. Moore bent to meet his fork his short front crack- led—bulged! The next morning Christine came into her sister’s room and curled her- self on the foot of the bed. “Tell me about the engineer, Cele,” she demanded. Celia sat up with her arm about her knees. She had not slept well and was cross. “Just what I expected. Really, I am surprised at Sallie. The men talked engineering jobs all through dinner—we just didn’t exist for them. And, oh, Chris! You should see Mr. Moore’s shirtfront. It bulges! He actually reminded me of that old pouter pigeon we had on grandfath- er's farm when we were small. And that is not all,” she added tragically. “We met the Montgomerys ‘in the foyer of the opera house and Arnold just looked Mr. Moore over and turn- ed to me—and smiled! I was morti- fied to death!” “Huh!” grunted Christine. “And he professes to be a gentleman, A MONTGOMERY! Did the engineer go to sleep during the opera ?” Celia was a bit more condescing. i “No, he didn’t. He knew the score | perfectly. Told me a lot about it I didn’t know, and said Jerbori was at her best. Evidently had heard her many times before.” i “Sounds interesting to me,” said | Christine reflectively. “I'd like to meet him. Did you invite him up?” | Celia yawned and then reached over for an orange-colored robe on the chair beside her bed. “I really had to, Chris. I owe it to | Sallie and Dave, you know. They are coming for dinner on Thursday. We'll (have Leigh, too. Father will enjoy jit. I know. I made it understood (it would be strictly informal. Dave {and Mr. Moore will come up direct | from the office. Sallie and I are go- ing to Marion's bridge-tea that after- jnoon. Besides, to get this man be- i side Leigh in evening clothes.” | “Evening clothes,” said Christine | derisively, “Who cares for clothes? (It's who wears them that counts {with me. Clothes—bah! “Stone walls | do not a prison make—nor do clothes make a man!” Celia sat on the beach in the shade of a big striped unbrella in front of | cottage. Her bathing jsuit was dry, as was Leigh Chis. | well’s, who sprawled in the sand be- {side her. Mr. Agnew drowsed over 12 newspaper on the veranda. Sallie i Larkin had gone to the station to , meet Dave, and out in the lake, near the diving raft, Christine and Bar- lett Moore were enjoying their after- ‘noon swim. | “Chris swims splendidly, doesn’t (She ?” remarked Leigh as he watch- led the scarlet cap disappear and re- |-appear over the blue of the lake. | “Chris does everything well, doesn’t she ?” | Celia nodded abstractedly, burrow- 1 ithe Agnew | sand. | “Did she tell you that I’ i mo Street with Uncle “No! Reall oin, to , Leigh?” ¥.1 going i “Every one should be busy, doing | something worth while, Cele. Chris has ragged me a lot lately about be- (ing idle. Doesn't seem to think that | taking care of mother’s affairs— the estate and all that-—is enough. She i says she likes people who do some. [thing! Td like to go to Europe be- fore I knuckle down to a job, though. | Suggested to Chris last night that | we be married in October and have | three months in Europe. {been over since I was in the army | and would like to see it again. Chris wouldn’t promise, but-—She’s a dy- | namic piece of humanity, and if it will make her happy I'm going to work like the devil. I need Chris. Don’t say anything, Cele, but I'm taking up golf. Play every day with the pro at the club untii T get the | swing of it. She has certainly en- joyed Moore this summer, and he says she plays one of the best games he has ever seen played, Mother has given me the place down on Long Island and I'm going to give Chris a riding horse for her birthday. We'll ride a lot down there. Look at her, Cele! That dive was as good as any STORY NO 3 professional swimmer’s. By George! I'm glad, Leigh, for you. I am sure m going Adam?” work, {We have and appreciate the finer 'you and Chris will be very happy. ing her hand deep into the white | Haven't | “And how about you, Cele?” “Oh, father and I will keep house and travel a bit.” - ih “How about Montgomery ?" ; Celia sat up, her “arms about her knees, * her eyes fixed on the two swimmers, now sitting on the diving raft. They could hear Christine laugh. “Well, I haven't seen much of Ar- nold since we came to the lake. He is so very busy, you know, and his mother demands a great deal of his time. He asked me to accompany them on a coast trip on their yacht this month, but father had asked the Larkins and Mr. Moore up here, and | I couldn't leave all the entertaining for Chris to do. Father is terribly taken with Mr. Moore. Wants him to leave Dave's company and come in with him.” “You can’t help but like Moore, Cele. I don’t blame Chris for enjoy- ing his company. He swims well, too, doesn’t he?” Celia stood up and pulled the bright green cap over her golden hair. She buckled it firmly beneath her chin and turned toward the lake, I'm going out to the raft, Leigh. Won't you come along?” “Thanks, no. The sun is more friendly to me than the cold water. I'll have a swim when Chris comes in, but now. You might tell her that I'm waiting, if you will.” Celia struck out bravely. She went in daily, but did not swim any great distances. But now she wanted to sit on the raft beside Chris and her companion. So Leigh was going to work, to please Chris. To show her he could do something worth while. He was: playing golf, and they would ride horseback. He was going to show Chris how much he loved her by doing the things she liked to do. She looked ahead at the raft. It Seemed very far away. She was get- ting tired. She floated on her back for a moment and then started off again. She was just halfway and she could not turn back. She must go on. She wanted to swim like Chris- tine did, she wanted to sit in the sun on the diving raft, Her arms were rebelling, and then the muscle in her right leg began to stiffen. She caught the flash of Christine’s scarlet cap bobbing above the water. Moore was standing on the edge of the raft ready to dive. Celia called frantical- ly once, twice, she waved her arm. She tried to remember all that had been taught her by the swimming in- structor years before, she called again and there was an answering call; a silver flash of spray as Moore's arm cut through the water. She relaxed, her head against his chest, as he started to swim on his back toward the raft. She had not spoken. “I am sorry—I—troubled you. thought I—could make it.” “You should—never have tried— it! Don’t—be so foolish again!” And then Christine’s eager voice with a sob in it; Christine helping her to the raft; Christine’s brown arms holding her close. “Cele, my beautiful little sister, why did you ever do it? Of all the tomfool stunts, Cele, why! might have never got here. Cele!” “Well, I did get here.” Cele tried to laugh, but her voice trembled. “Yes, thanks to Bart. I didn’t ev- en hear you call. I'm going ashore for a boat to take you in, you old tenderfoot. Cele, don’t you—ever— try such—a stunt again. Promise!” She was sitting on the raft in the sun—alone with Bart Moore. He was beside her, his eyes fixed on Chris- tine, who was swimming rapidly tow- ard the Leighton Chiswell sprawled under a striped umbrella, looked at her companion. “It’s nice to be out here, isn’t it?” “Deucedly hot. I'm afraid you will get sunburned.” “I don’t care if I do. I'm not afraid of tan—and freckles. They go with summer and the out-of-doors.” He turned toward her. “Why did you ever try to swim out here— alone?” he asked abruptly. “Because—I wanted to come. didn’t think it was so far.” “Will you promise you'll never— do it again?” “What difference would it make to—you?” her breath caught on the last word. “It makes a lot of difference, Cele. You are so little and frail, will you promise ?”’ “Wouldn't you like me better, if I did the things Chris does?” Celia could not believe it was her voice saying these words. “I-—couldn’t like you better than I do, honey, but you are so little, I am I lazily Celia afraid, I love you so much, I am go. ing to give up the chance to go to South America if you want me to, Cele.” “I don’t want you to give up the chance to go to South America. IT don’t want you to stay here, I want you to live your life.” “Oh, I thought you cared.” “I care so much that I want to go to South America with you, Bart, To show you I can live your life, be a good sport. I don’t care what we do, so long as I am with you.” A big brown hand closed over hers. ‘Honey, why, I never thought, Oh, I felt like such a big clodhopper, so awkward, when you were around. I never once thought.” “And I felt so weak and petent, and so colorless. Bart, I thought you cared for Chris—until you put your arms around. me—out there in the water.” “And you care enough— She nodded happily. “We'll have a double wedding in October. Leigh and Chris.” “October,” he repeated slowly. “But, honey, if I go to South Ameri- ca, if we go, I mean, we must leave on September 8. We sail on Sep- tember 11.” “September 8-—two weeks away. I can be ready, Bart. I don’t mind not having a big wedding, as Chris and Leigh will have. I think they are rather foolish, don’t you? And Tl ask Chris for all her sports clothes and I will give her my party dresses. She will need them more. than I will, staying here in New York. TI can be ready, dear, on September 8, And we | You | distant beach on which I incom- ! "will watch nature's paintings togeth- ler, hear the symphonies, and we'll feel. sorry for-the people up here who {do not know what real living is.” Celia "Agnew paused ‘in the act of applying ‘a pink powder-puff~to her already powdery white nose and ! turned on the bench before her dress. ‘ing table to face her twin sister. | Christine wore a chiffon frock of cor. jal pink, and Madame Geney had } skillfully covered the summer tan and : freckles for the occasion. “Behold, thy bridesmaid!” she made a low curtsey. “And the bridegroom and the best man—await without! But, oh, Cele! You should see Bart's shirtfront! It bulges!” Celia carefully powdered her slen- der white neck. With deft fingers she rearranged the exquisitely marcelled hair in coils on the back of her head. “Well, what of it, Chris? Clothes! Who cares for clothes? You know, Chris, ‘stone walls do not a prison make,” nor do clothes make a man. It’s the man—Bart Moore—beneath that shirtfront that counts with me.” COLORED LIGHT SIGNALS TO GUIDE PLANES. Flashing lights spelling messages to aviators in the air and comprising a system as complete as the block signal systems used by railroad com- panies, will control all airplanes op- erating from the new Western Air Express Airport on Valley Boule- vard, near Alhambra, Cal. according to an announcement made by C.-C. Cole, superintendent of operators for the company, i The lights are to be operated by electricity from a glass tower atop the passenger depot, which is now nearing completion. From this tow- er, dispatchers equipped with binocu- lars will be able to watch the sur- rounding horizon for fifty miles or more. Every departing plane will be moved to the depot line where it will be halted by a red light. When the ship is loaded and ready to leave the depot a green light will be flashed. The plane will then taxi to the end of the take-off runway where it will again face a red light, and it will re- main stationary until the dispatcher flashes a green light, showing that all is clear. There will also be a direct tele- phone from the end of the runway pilot may talk to the dispatcher if there is any unusual delay. Incoming planes will be controlled by a dot and dash system of flashed signals. These signals will be given from the top of the tower and will be flashed steadily until the pilot has signaled his understanding of them. One push of a button will keep the signals going until the re. ply has been received. If two planes approach the field at the same time, the code signals will designate which ship shall make the first landing and the second plane must remain in the air until it has been signaled that all is clear. The new passenger depot is to be a four-story structure. The lower restaurant, mail postoffice. be devoted to radio operators and the dispatchers. The airport has already been im- proved with a hexagon hangar, with 54,000 square feet of floor space, and a second hangar of 35,000 feet of floor space. For the convenience of passengers, contracts have been let for the erection of two garages, each with 13,500 square feet of floor space. There will also be open air parking space for 300. automobiles. GARAGE DOORS NOW OPEN A pull on a knob on the instru- ment board of your automobile and your garage door opens, Drive Another pull on the little dash board knob and the door swings closed be- hind you. All done by radio. While press dispatches from Switzerland were telling of an in- vention to open and close garage doors by radio, discovery was made at the plant of the Barber-Colman yond the stage of experiment in the ‘United States, the equipment having passed the experimental stage and practical use having already been made of the development. Automatic operation of garage | doorsby radio is possible by a mech- anism within the garage and on ! the dashboard of the automobile. Coded signals make it private. i Those cars which are to control a {given door broadcast a particular | series of impulses—a radio key— j which is recognized by that door i alone. 3 | Thus one may broadcast signals at | his neighbor's garage but the doors | will not move. Substitute the neigh- !bor's car, which sends the correct ' signal and immediately the door will | respond. | The operating mechanism holds . the door open and does not allow the wind to blow it shut. In like manner, i when the door is closed it is secure- ly locked by the mechanism—a lock- ing arrangement which cannot be . picked. The radio control apparatus con- sists of a small transmitter in the car and a receiver in the garage. The transmitter in the car is incon- spicuously mounted that only a small ! knob on the instrument board shows. There is an antenna on the bottom of the car and a receiving antenna buried in the driveway. ' The radio control apparatus is ready for operation at all times. Master-code combinations are made possible so that, for instance the ex- | ecutives of a factory may all open the factory and also open their own garage at home but not each others. The Barber-Colman Co., has been manufacturing textile machinery in Rockville, Tl, Framingham, Mass, and other places and the genius of | its engineers has brought another | product in the radio garage door. —Subscribe for the Watchman. BY RADIO DEVICE IN AUTO | company here that the radio closing | and opening of garage doors was be- | shadows lengthen. Buyers have been to the dispatcher’s office so that the | | | | | | i | | | floor is to house the waiting-room, | the sunburn vogue. baggage-room and air- | ante” The second floor will damsel will wear a tan, of course, offices for operation jbut the fair girl will officials. The two upper floors will be | Pearly complexion even an enclosed tower accommodating the | to take to veils and sunbonnets as | { | 1 | { ow N ix FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. - < Daily Thought. When people get real sin-sick, there is ho need of coaxing them to hold up their hands for prayer. —The American woman has won her revolt against French fashion dictation, and the short skirt will remain. The test of strength resulted in a compromise, with the moral victory going to America. As at London, in the limitation of armaments the delegates are seeking a compromise against French insistence on certain methods, so in the ‘skirt limitation debate of Paris a compromise was effected, but just enough of one to save the French from utter rout. Legs will continue to be shown with the newest Paris gowns, ex- cept in the evening. In the morning and afternoon sun the legs will shine, but not even an inch of stocking must peep from evening dresses. ; Enough dressmakers’ expositions of summer models have now been shown to figure that the average sports dress will be 15 inches from the floor; afternoon and tea gowns from 13 to 14 inches, while evening gowns must brush the instep. One prominent dressmaker solved the problem by showing dresses in six lengths for wearing around the clock, gradually lengthening as the 1 extremely wary, however, recalling | that earlier this winter they went | too far in dress lengths and the American women refused to buy, Thereis no longer any question of | who sways the fashions of the world. | Paris still is undoubtedly the dress- ' maker to the world, but Paris cuts as the American woman dictates. | Knees will be covered, but calves | remain unhampered—and that rep- | resents a purely American victory. | Moreover, dressmakers say they! are buying twice as many mid- | length afternoon gowns as full | length evening gowns, and there | appeared some doubt, except among | the ultra-fashionable, of the extent | to which the average American | woman will cover her legs com- | pletely at night. i Lucien Lelong voiced the revised opinion of French dressmakers when he said: "The dress length and waist line should depend on the type of gown and the physical characteristics of the wearer. I should say 12 inches from the floor would be conserative ' for afteroon wear, 14 to 15 for sport and ankle length for evening. The waist line should be as near normal as possible.” | A hasty resume of collections so far exhibited showed a general agreement to keep dresses short. The following measurements pre- dominated among leading dressmak- ers for day wear: Drecollbeer, 13 inches; Germaine Leconte, 13; Mar- chel Rochas, 13; Lelong, 12. —The powers that direct fashion trends have decreed the death of The 1930 “ele- will be herself. The dark protect her | if she has | her 1830 predecessors did. It is to be a time of much more individuali- ty among women than when all the beaches were crowded with bru- | nettes. | As fashionable colors are naturally | designed to set off fashionable com. plexions, this change of skin vitally affects the 1930 sartorial color chart. Few, if any, crude colors will be used this year. Rather, colors will often be toned with their own com. plementaries; for example, blue and orange will be mixed to produce turquoise and peacock tones with a much more lively effect than the grayed pastels. Blue always accompanies essen- tially feminine fashion epochs—as great painters have chosen it for the mantle of the Madonna as a symbol of purity and spirituality— and it is coming back strongly into the 1930 mode. Navy blue will be one of the leading colors for even- ing as well as for morning and af. ternoon costumes. Then there are violet blues, and grayed-violet blues, and green blues; lapis-lazuli, peacock turquoise and robin’s egg, —The well-coiffured mother and daughter of 1930 were presented at ! the convention of the National Hair- | dressers’ and Cosmetologists’ Asso- | ciation. | Both had bobbed hair, the moth- | er's rather long on the side and close at the back, making it difficult to ascertain from a front view whether the hair was long or short. Daughter’s hair was shoulder- length, soft-waved with ringlets curling here and there and a coil at the nape of the neck caught up in little puffs—one of several styles with which youth can experiment. “Older women are keeping their Hair short in the hope of retaining the illusion of youth,” observed one coiffeur, “but youth is daring and can afford to be picturesque, coy, quaint, or any other mood which it chooses to express.” | This hairdresser said he advised clients against dying hair and pre- dicted wigs will have a real place, on American feminine heads within a few years. “No one is fooled any-' way,” he added | The youthful sleekly bobbed hair of 1930 may be parted any way— diagonally, zig-zag, right or left or middle. | Nut Bread.—One and a half cup- fuls of milk, one egg, one cupful of granulated sugar, three cupfuls of flour, three teaspoonsful of baking powder and one cupful of walnut | meats (chopped.) Mix these ingre- | dients-—-the egg need not be beaten in this instance-—and place ina loaf pan. Allow to stand for half an hour before placing in a slow oven to bake for an hour. nl sie p —If you want reliable news read the Watchman. FARM NOTES. —In buying and storing apples for winter use it is: safe ~to-figire on about 10 ‘applés a day for a family of five. R. J. Barnett, horticulturist of the Kansas station, says that a family supply should amount to about two apples per person each day. One of these could well be eaten fresh and the other cooked. —Experimental work at several stations as well as the practical ex- perience of a large number of poul- try keepers prove that hens do mot need to hunt in the litter for their feed in order to lay well. More and more people are feeding the whole and cracked grain to the poultry in troughs to keep it clean- er, than it would be if scattered in the litter. Litter is highly desirable in a poultry house during the time that the flock is kept confined, but its virtue is in keeping the feed cleaner, the floor drier and more easily cleaned, and the house warmer than when no litter is used, and not to furnish a place to hide the grain feed. Some grain will be dropped in the straw or chaff, or shredded fodder or peat moss, even though troughs are used, and the hens will scratch for it. But deliberately scattering the grain in the litter, unless there is no container avail. able, serves no useful purpose. —A full dinner pail for the dairy cow means a full milk pail for the dairyman. —Cows like salt. Feed one pound of saltto every 100 pounds of grain mixture. —It takes all winter for a good cow to recover from the effects ofa poor. pasture and no grain. —Cows respond to good treat- ment, regularity of milking, careful management, and liberal feeding. —~Children and young calves may contract bovine tuberculosis by drinking the milk from tuberculosis COWS. —The tubercular cow should be removed from the milk supply. Safety cannot always be guaranteed by pasturization. —Cows love water. Next to air, water is the cheapest food known for health. Water also aids diges- tion, manufactures blood, and is used to secrete milk. —Cool the cream after skimming and keep it cool by setting the can in cold water, changed three times daily during summer. Stir the cream at least twice a day and don’t mix warm cream with cold cream. —Silage will be plentiful on most farms although the quality may be poor in many cases, the specialists believe. This is due to the early frosts and the wet weather during the silo-filling season which caused a low quality of corn and some mold in the silage. -—The farm tractor cannot operated economically unless it be is { kept at its optimum load. —Potassium is a plant food that is very abundant in some fields and others are lacking in this element. —To do a job well and to feel that you are a necessary part of the world’s progress—that is success or at least a large share of it. —Farm manure has a consider. able amount of potassium and some of the good efforts of manure may be due to the amount of the ele- ment present. — —It has been found that wet soil does not freeze as easily as dry soil, and it has also heen proven that the roots of plants are much less frost resistant than are the tops. —On wooded hillsides remove the trees gradually if there is danger of erosion. If the trees are all re- moved at once, gullies will be form. ed before the grass has time to get i started. —In hauling eggs to the market, do not expose them to the direct rays of the sun. —Insist that the buyer pay cash for your eggs, and that he buy them on a quality of grade basis. —A standard incubator which will successfully hatch chicken eggs should hatch the turkey eggs with equal success, Many have heen used successfully. —All parts of the incubator should be thoroughly cleaned and disinfected. One per cent formalin can be used. Then level the ma- chine and regulate carefully to the ' desired temperature. —Poultry raisers not being for- tunate to have clover, alfalfa or other green feed ranges; or those wishing to plant green feed for Summer use in their poultry runs, will find sudan grass very good. —Male birds with large combs are most apt to become frosted after they are wet. —A lot of poultrymen confuse lice with mites. Lice stay on the birds all the time, whereas mites attack them only at night and hide in cracks and crevices during the day- time. —Often ducks make a very dis- agreeable puddle around the drink. ing fountain. A good device to pre- , vent ducklings from forming such a puddle, is a wire covered frame. —Proper housing of the poultry flock generally pays dividends ir more eggs and healthier chickens.