Bellefonte, Pa., March 1S, 1931. FRAGRANT WORM, Tell you something about Chinese women? Well, I don't know an awful lot, and Id hardly know where to start. Yes, they do look shy, and sweet, and docile, I'll ad- mit; and they can be all of that. But you ought to hear the old ones rave and scream and curse heaven and earth when they're riled—or the young ones, for that matter. Fall in love? Why, certainly—in their own way, of course. As a matter of fact they're just like other women, as far as I've seen, only more so—if you get what I mean. I mean to say they show it more, if that's clear. It's hard to explain. Maybe it's because they're plainer-spoken about some things— 80 plain-spoken sometimes it makes you jump. I never knew but one at all, and perhaps she wasn't a fair sample; for she was an unusual girl, certain- ly. That was the Fragrant Worm that I've often talked about. No? I thought everybody had heard that story. Well, then, I must tell you about the Fragrant Worm. It was up in Shansi that I ran across her, at a littie sty of an inn, with a food stall and tables outside, on a mountain road, It was the year of the last bad flood in the Fen Valley. That was nine or ten Years ago. Ten it was for it was the spring before I was married. Anyway, the roads were jammed with flood refugees moving north- wards toward Taiyuan, like the beggars in the old rhyme—“some in rags, and some in tags, and some in velvet gowns.” A district magistrate had started a cotton mill up there and he had an idea that he wanted to buy oil from us in bulk. I had been up to help the agent with the contract when the flood ISmoyed both all and magistrate. was returning the railhead at Taiyuan in a chair cart when we stopped at this inn to th. feed the mules; and I sat out at a roadside table to drink tea, one of a dozen or so doing the same. While I sat there a refugee fam- ily came along, with the household goods and the lady of the presum- ably missing house balancing each other on opposite sides of a high- wheeled barrow. Paterfamilias was | pushing it, and behind him shuffled a rather pretty young girl with big liquid eyes who looked very tired or very sore with destiny. The barrow was set down for a rest almost in front of me, and the man, a tall, gaunt fellow with an Muilive, red. diag profile and hol- ow eyes, began negotiate a small food purchase. Then he n me and dropped his haggling over frac- tions of a cent to dive into the grimy bundle on his barrow and bring forth a very nice little dark red jar of the sort that we call | ginger jars. “There, excellency,” said he, “is something that you will want. HR the Stamp 2 the bottom, 's Ming. 's real, because it has been in our house for three hundred What will | “I'm not buying,” said I. “In the | first place, I don't understand the values of antiques, so I never buy them. Then if it is, as you say, a family treasure I don't think you ought to sell it.” e fellow stared at me as though he pitied my stupidity. “You speak our language, excel- lency,” said he, “but you don't our country, for you don't understand the position I'm in. How am I to walk the roads without food? And who will give me food unless I have money? Perhaps it's otherwise in your esteemed country, but this is China At a price must sell anything that men will buy—my right hand, or an eye, if there's a price for it.” “The old woman?" asked a hard- faced muleteer in Jest, pointing to woebegone the hedraggled and creature on the barrow, for which he was rewarded by the butt of the joke with a husband's lip curled, and with a short laugh he said, *“1| hear no offer, so rn quote no price.” t about the skinn wench, i shied a fat-faced' Tientsin man in the greasy of a pett mers: ho she for sale?” peels € surly look disappeared and | the girl's eye widened as she stared in unblinking appraisal at the brutal fat face of the merchant. “To know that she would not starve but would be well cared for certainly,” said the father with something like cold dignity, “What will you give?" “Ten dollars,” snapped greasy one. Je “It's too little,” - ®. said the father T can't earls bargain on such “It's enough in this remote coun- | try,” said the greasy one. “There's a fare to Tientsin on the railway. There are clothes to put on her be- fore anyone would look at her; and such bits of merchandise must be fed and fattened to bring money in | Tientsin. At ten dollars there's no vetain Pron: in it. gamble.” e father, to my astonishment | seemed to waver, y ot. “Make it twenty it a deal,” said he approaching a whine. “But this you can't do!” indignantly, “Even in China are laws & man his child to such a—into such Do yeu feel no shame?" i i I cried there cl th 1 Sumy he 8 iquid ones in the face. The father as- sumed his “The destitute,” said he, “ afford shame. But if your heart is don't you take the oh ou "m She looks about eleven to me. the girl until ‘I'm a fool. ‘remain with Here's ten do! | squandering (and thorough! | cold-blooded attit | looking a little neater corridor when I took great sheet of writing ‘ancient and respec daughter could not be given in mar- land also with 1 Taiyuan night before. | chandise, meeti dollars and call | more than with something | selling a fate. | All eyes now turned upon me, in- I tossed but a whipping now and then will improve her.” “I'll give fifteen dollars, and that's the last word!” shouted the greasy one. “Twen'y,” said I on an angry im- pulse. “Twenty-five,” snapped the mer- chant, scowling at me. The father's eyes moved swiftly from one to the other of us. He searched ny face appealingly. “Thirty,” L “Befuddled fool!" exclaimed the greasy one, as he rose red-faced to waddle away; but he turned sudden- ly and addressed the crowd. “Isn't this a disgrace to our broad China?” he demanded. “What hon-. or have we left when a yellow- headed savage can buy our Chinese flesh and blood?” I was after him with a bound, seeing red, but two or three men got in my way while he bolted, tell- ing me not to demean myself by being angry with such scum. “Now, old Liu,” said I, when 1 had settled down n and had learned his name, “I'm going to give vou the thirty dollars because I offered it; but your valuable Chinese flesh and blood, I don't want, I have no wife, I cannot take care of a child, so" “She's no infant,” the parent in- terrupted. “She's sixteen and she'd serve you faithfully. Why not a Chinese wife while you're in China? When you return to your country you can leave her a little money or give her to a friend.” The girl's liquid eyes upon my face. “Now see here!” I shouted ir-| ritably, feeling that I was somehow being enmeshed. “I tell you that I don't want her, sixteen or sisty. ‘'m going to give you thirty dollars to write me a pledge that you will keep you've settled some- where and can find her a husband. It's throwing thirty dollars away, but, anyway, that pig- faced dealer in women doesn't get her. Draft me a document saying were fixed [the girl is mine but that she is to u until she marries. guil Ss as money. | The rest I'll pay you if you bring € paper to the Fu Tai Inn at Taiyuan tonight or tomorrow morn- ing.” And with that Igot up and stalk- ed away, angry with myself for the money when I'd! probably never see the man again, disgusted with his | ude toward the sale of his child. I got in a still worse {humor when I had rumbled away in my cart, for it then dawned on me ‘that the Tientsin merchant | probably reappear and buy the girl would | while the assembled good laugh at the mad foreigner. In thisI the father, how- ever, for he was at the Fu Tai Inn the following morning long before I was up, and with him, somehow and certainly | not so sullen, was the big-eyed “bit | of merchandise.” He left her in the | him into my room, which was a relief, for the unblinking stare was getting on my | nerves. : From his bosom he produced a on flimsy paper, but this lie retained while he | launched into a protest again hav- ing to keep the girl. it not! dawned on me, he wanted to know, that after she became my property | he was entitled to payment for her keep over what t be a long | od? The Liu ily was an ted one. His loafers had a riage to just anyone. So it might be years before he found her 2igut ing Shsband, because men of stand- ng do not marry paupers, In the end I ‘held the and he departed with pressions of document | fervent ex- gratitude and esteem: fifty dollars in good silver. For an hour perhaps, after he had | gone, I sat in my room, checking | ‘over a stack of invoices that our agent had brought me the I then donned my hat to go to the for a confer- ence; but he re open the door and s briskly out, with | what should I collide inthe corridor but the aforesaid small bit of mer- | my astonished eyes with the oresaid unblinking My exclamations were in but Igot around in time to 5 “What are you doing here? What do you want?” I snouted. t "My father sent me back here," she replied in a small, meek voice. “He ordered me to stay and serve the foreign excellency. You have paid him money; he has given me to you; I am yours.” i “But where is this father of yours?" I A i “Gone,” said she, in the same | small voice. “Where, Idon't know.” | I did some more exclaiming in| before I ordered her into! | thet voom and closed the door on a deed bulging gathering throng of inn underlings. “But he promised to keep you until you were married,” Ithen expostu- | lated, “He thought I'd be better off in the foreign excellency’s hands. sides, it’s not in the document,” she hastened to say in a more assured voice. And she was right. I had not tried to read the thing; but now, while she stood at ease by the table, I sat down and plowed painfully through it. i The whole long rigmarole did no | e” of Hsiang whose future T was re- sponsible. “H ! Ch'ung, ” Xl only a baby name, a What is your real name? “I've been given no other,” said she, and then added , ing perience: “If I had a proper name, I couldn't tell you, . According to rich. Give her to your wife as a servant. our customs, it is wrong for a bride |and a day or so later when T Be- | home for lunch I She has a little temper, to tell her man her girlhood name. | The master will per foregin name. I 3 like that. I like foreign " I pulled myself together then for a patient explana- tion. The large eyes left my face to wander over my shoulder to the bed on which my blankets were still with approval. “That's not a small bed,” said she wistfully. “In your country isn't it the custom for man and wife to sigep together 7" “I'll tell you now, and I don't want to have to tell you again.” I cried, “that I have not bought you as a wife. We foreigners do not marry children. I'm nearly old enough to be your father and you're not as big as one of our girls at eleven or twelve. If I wanted to marry I'd marry a grown woman. Talk no more nonsense.” Her head dropped at this and she turned half away, but I saw that her eyes were filling with tears. 1 made some angry exclamation and the child dropped on her knees, raised her wet face, and whimpered: “Please, foreign excellency, don't re- ject me because I'm small and thin. Don't turn me out. Let me be our servant until I grow bigger. t me have just a little food and I'll grow quickly and get fat.” “Gosh!” said I. as I grabbed a hand towel to wipe away the tears, and a layer of grime with them, and that ended it. Our Chinese agent in Taiyuan had no advice to offer that wasn't inline with the Fragrant Worm's own ideas, so I got her to Peking and into my amazed household somehow, without being charged with ab- duction, or slave-dealing, or any of the other crimes of which I felt | ty. The initial assumptions of my house “boy” and the other servants were as irritating as the Sweet In- sect's own aspirations and the Taiyuan agent's advice the girl was installed in a small vacant room across a court from my quarters and far removed from the servants. Clothes were purchased, bathing was enjoined, vermin were expelled, hair oil was tabooed, and the girl was ducted into the ele- mentary mysteries of a oreign household. As soon as my accumulated work permitted, I began to look about for a school—the easy solution that I had had in the back of my mind all along. I encountered snags at once. Sweet Worm knew about three char- acters of her written e. Her place was in the she was sixteen and all but mature, 80 no school had a place for her. Besides, it was late 1 broke the news to her that she was to be useful, and she received it Ll ’ with glee. The He was a grandfather of fifty-odd and he humored her by allotting her tasks that had to do with me—my room, my clothes, and my meals— so she was an apt Fragrant Worm swept and dusted my room, pressed my clothes, and waited at the table; and she did it all with an intelligence and an r interest in my wants. In two months she was major-domo and the boy's nose was out of joint. She elected herself warden of cash and be, in a score The food bill low figure, the a superfluous coolie , 4nd an unheard of tem came into her accounts—an ap- return upon the sale of bottles, empty cans, old clothes, and the like. With this perfect service and de- votion went a manner toward me : and sweetly I was much too simple- fo: Io see omens oT in any ese devel ents. was just fatuously pl even notice that, in keeping with her promise, the young woman was fill- ing out and blooming on unlimited good food. Once or twice she out to explore the town and made an intensive study of the foreign wo- esis saw. ovlc “"w ease, excellency, ” bolding me up one afternoon in the court; “these clothes are now too UL od and saw y, patient “True,” said 1 some new ones. want She mamed a “You'd better get How much do you modest sum, fairly tottered at the vision that the dining-room oy wack worm, exclaimed, . made ursel tivel beautiful!” yo peal y She reddened and the filed and glittered with She had had her hair fluffed up somehow, clothes e eyes e. bobbed and Ch'uag—m ; Worm, or Sweet prneening Sat Insect as you | and white I patted her shoulders as I passed her, which was a mistake, I as |for she looked up at me with ® ths eading look in her eyes that T've pl k , | often seen in a and she whis- pered Ruakily dine, T've grown more than half an " , for } give me a often had guests in for meals and Be guint doings and spread, where they rested ; but by dint of much violent language I had my view of the situation accepted, and infant class, but t peared, looking I did not that she was in- iad itself in want there was no hiding the Fragrant Worm. Indeed, I made a point of ‘telling everyone about her from the start, and one of the persons who got the fullest reports of the Bug's sayings was olly. We weren't actually engaged then, but we were working up to it pretty (fast, so I wanted no misunderstand- ? ing stories of the way the Fragrant Bug looked out for my cash; and she cften said, “The poor child!” when I told her how she was try- ing to improve her clothes and ap- pearance, and how she went about town studying foreign women. She never showed any irritation but once, and that was when I suggested that her father--he's professor of physics in the university, you know —might help me get the girl into a schoo! in the fall. “Bosh!” she cried explosively. “Piffle! School? Really, William Jones, you're not the ingenuous boy that I sometimes think you are. You're a plain, downright simpleton. Children go to school to prepare for life. Are you too blind to see that young lady's whole trouble is that she's overprepared? School! Honest- ly—but what's the use?” It was shortly after that I gave the party. Bachelors eat arounda lot in Peking, and they have to give a few dinners every year to make it look as though they were trying to Square things. I planned to givea dinner at home and then take the mob to one of the hotels to dance. I think there were eighteen invited, Molly's father and mother were to get ticre in their roadster, but I was to go for Molly—early, so that we could be back before the others got to the house and she could have alook atthe table and put her O.K. on it. It was on the way up that night that the question of marriage arose, and we stopped for what seemed a few minutes in a dark place under the Italian Legation wall to reach an agreement and clinch it, as you might say. When we got to the house all the ‘others had, of course, arrived and the hy and the Fr t Worm were ing out cocktails. Molly slipped into the dining room to have 'a look at the table. Then I found an excuse for slip- ping after her. I caught her just around the corner, and I was tight- ening my hold and silencing protests in the only effectual way when who | should barge in, coming from the (living room with a tray full of empty glasses, but the Sweet Bug. She Stopped dead in the open door- way, in view of the whole com- | | pany, from whom Molly and I were concealed, stared at us a second, and | | then tossed the tray, glasses and all, on to the neatly set table and bolted through into the kitchen with a wail | 'that made my back hair rise. Al most instantly the boy Sppeared with | ‘a frightened look on face. , re did she go?" I demanded. “Across the cou to her room,” ' he Raid. Y gave me a vigorous shove. "Quick!" she cried tensely, spring, the end Sos of a term, and all schools were “Where?” I askea upidly. closing. Nothing could be done un. “After her, of course!” she snap- (Hl fall, so the only thing to do was Ped. “You know the Chinese. to keep the youngster busy and I got the idea and past taskle the problem again in the the boy, through the kitchen into | autumn. ‘the court; but he and Molly were close on my heels. The girl's door | | was bolted on the inside and she had | | pushed a table against it, but Chinese | | doors are flimsy and we fairly pull- ‘ed it to pieces, We were just in time. She had looped a rope over one of the low beams and tied the end around her neck. As I rushed forward she kicked the chair away, but I caught | 'her before the rope was taut. There | | Was some screaming and kicking | ‘while the boy undid the knot. i “Now get out and leave me with her,” ordered Molly, with a deter- ‘mined tilt to her jaw. “Tell them | ‘that she was taken suddenly jl.” | Tae Bask de find the guests | standing abou perplexed and uncomfortable; but I got them : tled Senin, and in a very few min- jutes Molly, to my surprise, reap- wise and serene, and ‘We went in to dinner. To my still | greater surprise the Sweet Bug her- | self turned up with the soup, a little ‘pale and red-eyed. The women mur. 'mured their sympathy and those who | | could speak some asked her | how a i replied that it i no - “Justa sudden sharp | in the nether belly,’ she ex- ed glibly. i “How did you do it, darling?” 1 | asked Molly a coupte of hours later ‘When I was driving her to the hotel | Eks for the dance. “And such quick | | work, OD." a | | “I'm surprised that you don't first want to know what was wrong with her,” she declared with what was | ‘meant to be a cyni laugh. “I'm | (glad you don't pretend to be that. ‘dumb, anyway. t you still can't | guess how I got her quiet : i "What?" asked in alarm. | | “Another man,” she replied coolly, | That. ist ttled on | i “ », se yet,” she re- | | plied; “but to go toa foreigner; fail- | ing that, a general, or a banker, or | | successful bandit. She says |and quite rightly, too—that you {owe her nothing less, since you don’t | her yourself and since you {took it upon yourself to rt | her from one mode of life into | ano . You owe her—" i “x wi be- | come of her if Thadn't picked her up | and t her here? She'd have had a us life.” i “Of course she would,” said Molly | in a tone that meant that she was condescending to reason child mind; “but that What would have would have been simply her fate, so now you're responsible for the fulfillment of jt at the new pace you've set for her. That's her argument, and T must say that I think she's right.” “But what am I supposed to do now?” I asked meekly. “Forget it,” she replied. “What- | ever's io be done I've now promised | to do. You. ond. 1 made o bargain| ‘earlier this evening that automa cal- | | passed facing the burly general, la woman to love her man? ly covers this, so Worm now becomes the white wo- man's burden.” And forget it I did. It was three o'clock when I rolled home. Some time in the early morning e voices and a little bustle in the courtyard, but I rolled over and slept again. It was after nine when 1 got around to breakfast, and I was about to ask the boy, who served the meal for the first time in many weeks, what the Fragrant Worm was doing, when the telephone rang, It was Molly. We made plans for the afternoon, and then she sa‘d: “I rang up earlier than I should have, after such a late night, be- ‘cause I was afraid you'd miss Hsiang Ch'ung and be worried. 1 wanted you to know that she's here with me, bag and baggage. She's going to stay here for a while, too. My plans for her? Never mind about that. You bungled your responsi- bility and it's mine now.” We were married late in October, and the worst of the commotion was ever when Molly got me away from the crowd to havea look at the wed- ding presents, which ‘everyone had seen but me. By all odds the showiest thing of tue lot was a huge old French clock of the kind that mandaring used to buy from the early Canton traders to present at court, with pounds of gold and jewels all over it. Propped against it was the card of General Shang Tuelang, the bandit adventurer who had then lately mawe himself satrap of the Suiyuan district and the Mongol frontier. “Why, Molly, how does this high- binder happen to be favoring us?” I asked. “This looks like palace ioot and it's worth a small fortune. “Oh, he's an old friend of the family,” she said lightly. “Ffteen years ago papa happened to en- counter him when his head was bad- ly wanted and hid him away. He functioned as our house coolie for ten months when I was a little girl and then got back to his gang Somehow. He's always - (ing to do us favors, He did me one not so long ago, though he thinks I did him one. Then, his wife hap- pens to be a friend of mine.” “Which one?” I asked. “Number one or number ten?” “To be exact she's number four ‘and the latest,” Molly replied witha mysterious half smile, “and the one who rules the whole roost, I'm told. You'll see her by and by and understand why.” And so I did. At the fag-end of the reception I saw a big car roll up outside, with | six uniformed ruffians on the run- ning board, loaded down with car- tridge belts and Mauser pistols, and out of that bus got a stalwart Chi- nese potentate in gorgeous satins, and a little woman. She wore a sable coat and diamond pendants dangled from her ears. I heard some one say that they were Gen- ral Shang an his wife, but I was called away just then and didn't see their entrance. Their arrival had completely out of my mind, in fact, and I was rummaging for a ‘cigarette for a smokeless guest, when a light hand fell on my arm and a familiar voice said in Wo “Excellency, I have a word to say to you.” I swung around and found myself sta at attention and displaying fine teeth ina genial smile. Between us was the little person of the big dia- mond pendants. I believe I stag- gered and that she clutched my arm to steady me, for I found my- self looking into the still liquid but now very merry and self assured eyes of the tf Worm. 1 mumbled some kind of feeble re- Sponse to the very correct felicita- tions that the amiable big brute was voicing, and was then eaten up with impatience to separate her from him for a moment and put some questions. I thought of the wedding presents and piloted them thither. a Na) while Ba was en- grossed what suppose was a ol rg | judgment o the loot, I got her a little aside. “Are you Py? Do you love him, Sweet ?" 1 asked in a whisper. She laughed shortly at a question which no Chinese would have asked, and then pretended dignation. “What sort of talk is this?" she demanded. “Where are your man- ners? Of course I love him! Didn't Itell you he was my man, and isn’t it the ancient rule in Clima for t honestly,” she went on in a softer whisper, “my fate is ruled by Sood stars, not to mention good ends. He's really a splendid fellow. He's Just like you foreigners, excellency, only better. He can laugh at every- thing as you even himself, wiles, not afraid. He's fierce. en wants something he goes after it in a straight line, just like “But with women, excellency, he's different. He's not so soft and stupid.” —By Rodney Gilbert from Liberty. in- | your people, ~The Mountain Times,” bear- ing the caption “Special Prosperity Edition,” has been revived at How- ard with B. F. Sheetz as editor and publisher and L. F. Sheetz, associate editor and advertising solicitor. The paper came out last Friday, an eight page six column sheet, and contains a number of articles tend- the way, but we are of the o that the publishers will have a hard time convincing the man who hasn't acent in his pocket andno job in sight that such is the case. ———The Detroit News, in its roto- gravure section of Sunday, March 1st, contained a large picture of E. Lloyd Tyson, son of Mr. and Mrs. known by many Centre county peo- W. E. Tyson, of Tyrone, and well ple, who has attained considerable fame as broadcaster from radio sta- tion ‘WWJ, in Detroit. do your job work right. —We your Fragrant nding apply a 4- —Asparagus seed germinates very slowly. It is usually two to from time of planting plants appear above ‘the a result it is often difficult to trol weeds. For this reason and because there is quite a variation sow the seed in a small plot and t the crowns when one year old into the perms tent loca- tion. The seed bed shoul. be worked early in the spring to germinate as many weed seeds as possible, These will be killed in the final prepara- tion of the plot for . . agus germinates very slowly at 68 degrees. -—Do not fail to take good care of your rhubarb plants all season as well as in the spring when you are making use of the tender stems for sauces and pies. After the first few cuttings of rhubarb stems, many gardeners neglect this crop until the following spring. Harvest of the rhubarb crop should be completed in from six to eight weeks’ time. after this per- iod has passed, allow the leaves to remain, Stir the earth around the plants at least once a week in order that the weeds may be controlled, and that the leaves may store plenty of plant food in the routs without weed competition. By so doing, the plants are aided in producing a large crop of tender stems the next year. Keep the seed stalks broken off all sum- mer. If these are allowed to develop, the plant food will go to seed pro- duction rather than into the roots where it is desired. — Disgusted with the number of punctures he was having, Ted Miller, of Portland, Oregon, an apparatus on his car that picked up nails and sharp bits of metal be- fore they damaged his rubber. Electromagnets were attached on either side of the front bumper and connected with the car's generator, He found that when traveling at a Speed of twenty-five miles an hour the magnets picked up objects as large as nails from the car's path. As soon as the motor was s the metal particles would fall off. Green feeds must be provided for the laying hens. During the summer months it is .a comparatively easy matter to furnish succulent feeds from the fields. During the winter greens must also be provided: hence | artificial methods of producing greens must be used. Sprouting oats affords an easy method of providing green feeds to ‘poultry. Mechanical oat sprouters have been developed. —Do not reduce grain feed for cows in the flush of production even though prices paid for milk may be lower, It is better to weed out the poor cows in the herd and continue to feed the good ones up to produc- ‘tion. This practice reduces milk costs. . ——Use the best fertilizer for ' garden soil. For light soils with little manure, use a 4-8-4 mixture; on ‘heavier soils with plenty of manure, 12-4, and for unusually fertile soils with abundant manure, use su, . For on perphosphate e-quarter lof an acre, or about 100 by 100 feet, ‘apply about 300 pounds. ~If you order trees, shrubs, vines, ‘and perennials early froma reliable nurseryman, you can specify date of delivery. Then the suipment will ar- rive exactly when you want to take ‘care of the materials. your ~Early hatching of chicks and propr handling of the pullets will | them into laying condition ‘next fall during the months of ‘priced eggs, say poultrymen of the Pennsylvania State College. Litters farrowed between Jan- uary 1 and June 30 can be nominat- ‘ed for the 1931 Keystone Ton Litter See your county agent about . Ton ' litter meth- ‘ods aid in prod ally. { i 5 ucing pork economic- , —Efficient potato growers have | found it helpful to have a sufficient (supply of lime and blue stone on (hand before the spraying season (opens. Plan to have a surplus in- ‘stead of a shortage. i | -—~Nearly all the forest tree seed- lings grown in the State nurseries have been allotted, according to Penn State foresters. The late ap- | plications for Some Species, includ- ing Scotch pine an orway spruce, will be held over until the of 11832. There still is a small supply of white pine, red pine, pitch pine, ‘and black locust. —~Raise calves from only the ver best cows. It is better to veal calves unless their blood inheritance makes it possible for them to devel- op into good cows. - —Dig large holes for plant ma- | terial. It is a common practice | to make the holes one foot wider ‘and deeper than the roots of the material to be planted. Avoid trouble by carefully reg ing to prove that prosperity is on ulating the temperature and mois- ture | conditions for early plants. | Water only on clear days and in | the morning. Too frequent, light ap- ‘plications of water cause damping ‘off. Extremely high or low tem- peratures are dangerous. —Lime und fertilizer treament on | poor pasture sods should bring in | white clover and the better | thicken the turf, and greatly im- |prove the quantity and quality of | the grazing. Fertilization every five years and liming at longer in- [tervals will maintain satisfactory | production. ——— Come to the Watchman office for your printing jobs.