; cyclone zone. They tell me there “I believe you are beginning to PENNSYLVANIA CENSUS FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. FARM NOTES. are rattlesnakes there, too, and that pick up Some oad, petuid | ANALYZED IN BULLETIN. DAILY THOUGHT —Government scientists are ex- ers sizzle mw - chair table. ni | — en with oats ar Tre: os | Min Sat a at. | Cuan ioport. Sm 3S1,350 Popula- | 1.00 is brightest when it dawns trom | oth When! 20 use ———————————————=————=—== minute that his mother had taken er might be in a bondage of spirit, tion, Indicates 954 Per Cent Are fears.—Scott. lof these farm products in the man- Bellefonte, Pa., October 9, 1951. |;.otic's words seriously. His sis- a bondage more confining than that White. 169 cent ee ufacture of high quality paper -—— tor's Knowledge of the country he from which he had freed her. Women Work. | ae are lnaty thiilla ior 188 bh BOY 0’ DREAMS Bad come tO i rand- door. “It looks as if this fine | CeBSUS. of 2 ure » the mistake of trying to foist crin- killed before they can go to seed B0Y + Drum mother didn't think of Leotie's weather might break before long. What kind peopl pre hey? olines, bustles or any of the other — Must I leave you where the fountains | Anybody want to go?" How many of them were Boer: | sartorial atrocities of the Victorian Lime put on the soil in the {ul Toss the silver of their streams— It was not until spring was onits “When I get baby to sleep Ym {ad 2ow inany came rm freien era on modern women. 'is best for the crops which follow Witle the trees are € in nite way, with its sunshine and per- going to take a nap myself,” said ands’ they miners > | Fall fashions usually TESS and saves extra labor in the spring And the little broken moon fumed 1 and also with occa- his wife. “I've hardly closed my °F Pro onal men. OF What? Are themselves in terms of street clothes hi BE ? sional high winds and sudden violent (eyes for three nights. Maybe iti Men} WOAH SICKER. S00 0 UP iin the average woman's ‘mind. _oued paper “wrappers help t Like Ge ume of 8 Tune rainstorms that Leotie's words Same | You'd Jui Bim ia bis coach, mother, | ENE 5, not.? How about citles| THEY I A Ye ite Senge Of |piovent storage scale of es, an . | m around a wearing shredded oiled stributec May I take you to the city, es to Dros. other wi little he'd drop off.” yare |and rural Sires? : such | Autumn coat dress or coat, just a5 tnrouch the i TT ea al Where ‘Jour heart will break with pity former's vague forebodings ausers. | Altes Sha hea gone Smo leagteors Sanu al Su by Shout Such Spring J, RyHoRgious with Jonny: ‘good. Proper maturity and promp At the lethargy that seems [ing the dire pehalties visited on room stood doubtfully gaz. ‘Composition and Characteristics of that the next season's street “LoT8Ee at low temperatures DHl3 hal: uies io ives. cg Wo 17300 Gt rls tho! at the ry or standing» Population.” just issued by the Bu- ;iothes will show an era in fur | > ‘oportant. — way facts will ‘bind you Back in the sheltered New Eng- little distance from the house, in [Teas ! ne (ous us. | trimming more lavish, luxurious and —By storing vegetables this fal 'land village where rain fell in gen- the cool shade of a great pine tree. To the fancies of the earth? “It seems so lonesome out there Out of the 9,631,350 living in the, tle drizzies and the force of every , |wind was broken by various obstruc- : us), take Sou, bat FI ep yve, | tions, they had never known storms Where no alien winds shall sweep you, Such as were so common in this In a secret place that gleams vast, open country. With the light of your own laughter— The sky which appeared nearer Yours the vessel, ‘and more immense here, was awe- And we'll brave the storms together, You—the captain of my heart! farmhouse and its puny occupants. Its frown completely destroyed the Helen Whitney in Collier's good woman's morale. So it came about that her guilty fears culmi- THE “TWISTER” ‘nated in one secret dread of that mysterious air monster, the tornado. “Mother, I've told you time and The time came when she never went again that we've never hada ‘twist- to bed without a careful scanning of er’ in this place,” Dan Rushton smil- the heavens, nor slept a night with- ed down on his mother's anxious out getting up to peer a prehensive- face. ly out of her western ow. “But that's not saying that we ~ She began to see the hand of pur- never shall. Leotie says— suing Nemesis in every squall that Her tall son brought his hand threatened. When a burst of thun- down vigorously on the table. der shook the skies or great drops “Leotie!” he exploded, “to hear of rain or hail began to bombard her talk, one would think we hada the windows, she shrank in the tornado out here every week. Can't’ most sheltered corner with a prayer you see that all she wants is to get on her lips. you back east to slave yourself to Had she dared to acknowledge death for those spoiled youngsters of her terror she would have insisted hers?” on taking everyone to the cellar as After this usual outburst Dan the safest place to meet the peril went good-humoredly out to work, she dreaded. She suddered at the leaving his mother still trying to unconcern of the others, who sat read the significance of the omin- casually on the porch or otherwise ous cloud bank forming in the west. exposed themselves. Afterwards Behind her Dan's young wife when the destruction failed to ma- sang as she rocked Dan Junior. The terialize, she was fervently thankful baby's grand-mother marveled that that she had been able to keep from anyone could be indifferent with betraying the full extent of her such a menace boiling up on the weakness. horizon. In the face of such cool- In time she picked up consider- ness she was constrained to hide able information about the dreaded her own anxiety. cyclone. When she heard a conver- Mrs. Rushton could not under- sation begin. “When we had that stand herself. It baffled her that cyclone down in'—she invariably she who as a sturdy young widow drew nearer. She learned the hours had battled alone and fearlessly in of the day when wind storms were bringing up her family, should have most likely to arrive. She tried to come here to find herself a prey to picture the funnel-shaped cloud that unreasoning fears that would not marked them. down. She searched the papers for ac- Her first weeks at Midvale Farm counts of tornadoes elsewhere, and had been filled with sheer delight. when she found one drank in the The modern little home, with meager details with an almost mor- and his mild, quiet-voiced wife and bid thirst. Later she located the one cherub of a baby, had seemed a stricken places on the map. So fair haven after the continual tur- each cyclone carialty that summer moil in her daughter's house. It had an unknown but sympathetic had been pleasant, for a while, to mourner in the grand-mother at sit idly watching Rita's deft hands Midvale Farm. do the work. What comfort was it to her to be But although she was forced to told that the genuine death.breath- admit that she had never been so ing tornado is rare, its swathe com- happily situated, the idea of forced paratively narrow, and the district idleness did not appeal to Mrs. in which they lived considered im- Rushton. The knitting and the mune from its ravages. Her fears tatting she had always longed todo, would not be reasoned away. If, even the pastime of watching baby as Leotie seemed to predict, there began to pall. (was a judgment in store for her, “I never expected to find myself what could reaso avail ? merely sitting around and doing Dan began to fear that his moth- nothing,” she protested at last. er was homesick. “As soon as the “I'm not cut out for it.” roads dry up we'll get the car out “Well, you'll have to get used to and give you a real look at thie it,” the young people had declared. country,” he promised. ‘You have done more than your But keenly as she looked for- share of the work already.” ward to these excursions, the edge Life at Leotie’s, with an expectant of her enjoyment could be dulled by brood of six to be waited on, had the least threat of bad weather. If certainly been strenuous, but when she must die she preferred to die had her life been anything else? indoors. Her own babies, scatterd now, had Gradually, as the long, bright scarcely been off her hands before summer days stole on, she Leotie’s had come to assert their almost unconsciously, to recover her claim, and they had been asserting poise it lustily ever since. . The weather became more settled. Although she did not trust for him. Of course he's safe h. Nothing can get into him and he can't get out of the coach. His mother said she could hear him from the window.” She finally decided to throw her- ‘some enough when it smiled on the Self down in the hammock on the, | porch, meaning to keep the precious sleeper in sight. But the y was ! breathlessly hot, and her nights, too, ‘had been disturbed. The song of the wren in the pine trees, the con- tented chirping from the chicken coops, and the droning of the in- sects, soon became a jumble of confused sound, and without mean- ing to, she fell " She awoke to find a sharp breeze stirring the vines above her head. And the sky, so cloudless a few minutes before—or was it hours— had grown dark and threatening. More from habit than from any conscious plan, she went through the house to the west window, which was her lookout. An inky black curtain, with edges, was slowly closing over that part of the horizon within her range. The branches of the tall trees behind the house had begun to lash one anoth- er violently. The tasseled corn- tops in the near-by field swayed like creamy surf on a cast, green sea. Suddenly a few big drops broke against the screen and splash- ed on the sill. Then she remem- ‘bered the baby. Was he still out- | side alone? A vivid flash starteld her, fol- lowed by a succession of sharp that rattled the windows. Ordi- narily such conditions would have deprived the old lady of all power of motion, but now she slammed back the window and made for the door. She had not a shadow of doubt that the long expected tor- nado had come, and here she was facing it alone. It would take time to wake Rita. Heedless of the bl fury about her, she rushed Bina straight across to the big pine tree. Snatching the drowsy baby from his warm nest, she stumbled back. Her daughter-in-law, who had sprung up with a re- membrance of the baby, met her as, drenched and panting, she reach- ed the door. As it slammed after her, a new, rushing noise above the din, and a formidable jar shook the house. The gloom had increased. The windows, blurred with wavy rivulets, failed to admit what light there was. Rita, completely un- nerved for once, drew her mother- in-law down beside her and held out her hand mechanically for the baby. Mrs. Rushton k her head “What can we do? Shall we go down to the baseemnt? We can't stay here!” moaned the younger woman, in the first short lull. Mrs. Rushton, with amazing calm- ness, alternately soothed mother and ‘baby. “There, there!” she com- 'forted both, “I have an idea the worst will soon be over. The uproar had quieted, though it ‘had not altogether ceased, when Dan, dripping and breathless, burst ‘among them 12.8 per cent who were not born in this country. ‘makes the State 82.6 per cent na- tive white. More than two-thirds of these were born of native par- ents. Naturalization has made citi- zens out of 62 per cent of the for- eign-born white, whose number in the State is 1,223.05]. As to learning, if literacy may be so called: | literacy is decreasing. The per- centage of those of 10 years of age and over who cannot read has les- sened since 1920, the last census time, from 4.6 to 3.1. Concerning working women: In the State, 806,755 of the 4,785,833 fe- males were wo women. In other words, 16.9 per cent of the females have a gainful occupation. Among males, 60.2 per cent of the 4,845,517 in the State have jobs, or at least some occupation by which they get money. It must be re- membered that the other 40 per cent, approximately, does not in- dicate that much unemployment, by any means, for boys under working | age, men too old to work and a number of other classes are includ- ed in the total number of males. The number of babies (under 1 year of age) decreased 14.5 per cent since the last census. The entire group of children under 5 years of | age showed a decrease of 10.9 per ' cent. The city versus the farm: The percentage of the population living in cities is now 67.8. Census Bureau, as a general rule, counts as urban population those living in cities of 2,500 or more population.) A new rule has add- ed a number of townships to what is called the urban group, but this urban pecpulation represents an in- | crease of 6.3 per cent over the num. ber of city dwellers in 1920. Some 3,097,839 persons live outside of the cities, while 6,533,511 are classified ‘as city e. The population of the State as a whole increased 911,333, or 10 per cent, between 1920 and 1930. Now as to the worker and how they are employed. y are indi- (cated as follows: culture. ...........o. ni. 251,443 sstsiatrursiessrsansenrnsivanesse 327,476 Manufacturing ...................... 1,469,468 Transportation ..................... 359,695 THEAE ............cneenerrieieace 562,940 Domestic ........oineenneem.. 322,245 Professional ...................- 247,293 Parenthetically, it might be said that among the miners, ,604, are [thie con VivSioh Ua a ufacturing is composed mostly , iron, steel, clothing and textile industries in this State. OPEN SEASON ON DOE NAMED FOR ENTIRE STATE An open season for the of female deer in Pennsylvania this | year concurrent with the ‘open season on male deer from De- (cember 1 to December 15, was de- jclared in a resolutio by the state , board of game commissioners. State, 95.4 per cent are white, That | (The | | — —French fashions for the younger fry seem to fight shy of the roman- tic Edwardian epoch, bustles, ruffles and what-not, and are all for allow- ing youth all kinds of freedom for the modern life of to-day. i Some of the French designers are ‘showing some lovely new box-coats of fur with tailored collars and revers, big pockets and wide woolly scarves in bright colors. They'll be extremely smart at the foot- ball games this autumn. turia white caracul and poney furs arc used in general. Coats of wool or tricot are fitted slightly at the waist and flaring below, having curved crossed scarves of fur or velvet. Schia; i makes a striking rt with the coat ir ‘rough, ribbed blue woolen with fit- ted-in waist, crossing at the waist- /line and closing double-breasted ef- fect. The simple frock which | comes under it is in dull white silk ' jersey with a ribbed weave. Another suit is of open-striped jersey in lovliest green. The pack- et is fitted and has neither collar nor revers. The one-piece dress has a blouse of stripes made by fagotting and the skirt is slightly flared below the hip-line. Lovely lacey sweater blouses come for wear with youthful jacket cos- tumes. They are short-sleeved and reach tc a few inches below the waistline. A bright red jersey, very heavy, ‘makes a charmingly youthful coat to wear over a dress of black jer- sey, the lower sleeves being in red. —To assume more intelligence, education, elegance than one really ‘has is almost always vulgar. And nothing is so easy of detection. To assume more intelligence, education, elegance, than one really has, to pre- tend to live better than one does, to claim intimate acquaintance with people not as intimate with one as one wishes they were—such false- nesses are soon found out, and the ‘judgment formed of the | practicing them is never flattering. On the other hand, there is a re- straint, a self control to be recom: | mended which holds in check the | opposite extreme of too great frank- , ness. One should not force his ideas or opinions upon those who are unlikely to be interested. Too much zeal, undue vehemence, ram- pant argument, are all out of place in social rings. ‘hall marks of good manners is that ! the possessors of them do not make others uncomfortable and resort to Violent discussions or laying down of e law. —Gradually tasks of house- keeping have left the home, and, in two or three years more of them will be performed by commercial agencies, outside the home, as spin. ning, knitting, bread baking and d are today. In spite of the fact that so many parts of homekeeping have left the persons | One of the to it. perature, good ventilation, size o bins, racks, good drainage, cleanli ‘ness, ease of access to the storage ‘and the condition of the crops stor ed. —-In order to lay well a hen mus have comfortable quarters. Hen may live and lay some eggs eve when kept in a poorly constructe: house, but a flock kept in a goo house and given proper care i much more likely to be profitable. ~—Every dairy farm should have: bull pen. Ease and safety in hand ling are thus assured and the healt i vigor of the bull are benefited. —Efficient management of me and money contributes tn the suc (cess of farmers’ cooperative organ (izations, a State College survey re vealed. Satisfactory service an high quality products should be em phasized The best time to transplant conf fers is in the fall, according to Pennsylvania nursery. —Health and vigor of the stoc are the foundation of success in th | poultry business. —Bermuda onions grown in Flo ida this year were equal in qualit 'to those grown on the island of th same name. —A young queen and young bee in a hive in the fall are good insu ance against weak, unproductiv colonies next spring. —The time to sell the unprofitabj cow is when she is found to be ur profitable; and she should be sol /to the butcher. —A pure bred large white so owned in Lincolnshire, England, i giving birth recently to 21 pigs hs completed the rasing of 50 pigs i her last three litters. ~—~Swine need some salt,, but n« very much. Two-fifths of a pour ‘of salt well mixed with each 1( pounds of grain mixture is enoug The feeding of too much salt whe pigs are not accustomed to it wi be fatal. Salt may be mixed wit wood ashes or with coal slack, abot one part to 20. After pigs har been hand.fed this mixture for time they may be given free acce: Salt may also be fed wit finely ground limestone and stean ed bone meal, limestone, 45 part and salt, 10 parts. —If you are ranging on land th: is to be used for a ne: year, be careful about feedix screenings or wheat that has n ‘been cleaned. will briz in a remarkable collection of wee: which greatly increase the work raising a good garden. If scree |ings are fed to poultry it is pro ably best to feed the grain troughs and then burn any smu seeds that the chickens will not et t ‘into the kitchen. His wife clutch- In taking this action the board home and so many women are em- At first the idea of deserting them, them, the broad blue heavens were of leaving Leotie to manage her not so constantly menacing. She own house and family alone, had never tired of watching the changes seemed preposterous. Dan, who had in the rolling fields. The come East on his first visit in years, ity of the long rows of machine- saw things differently. He stood planted corn fascinated her and she firm in his purpose to take his marveled at the rapid growth of the mother back with him. slender shoots into quivering green “But you do not know how busy blades. Leotie is with outside things. She Perhaps the stimulus of a well-or- is always writing papers for her dered household, together with the club or doing settlement work or long hours on shady porch, were do- speaking at some of the guilds,” the ing their part to foster an inner mother had reasoned. “I know I Sense of calm and security. At any didn’t help much but Leotie cer- rate, Mrs. Rushton began to believe tainly needs someone to look after that her prayers for an increase of ed his soggy sleeve. “O Dan,” she half sobbed, “where were ” He looked round at them all. When he spoke, his voice held an awed note. “I stopped down the ‘road, here, in Patton's barn,” he ‘said. Looks like a little cyclone had ‘gone through here. I see the corn- crib and garage are both down, and the big pine out there has" Rita interrupted with a frighten: (ed gasp. “Did you konw the boy's was left out under that tree? It's of game commissioners Nay the | power given by the recent Legisla- ‘ture 1a amended the game code ‘by permitting the commissioners to ‘declare open seasons on female deer in the entire State or in a portion ‘of the State concurrent with the ‘regular season for male deer and (with the same bag limits. During the coming deer season each hunter will be permitted to | kill one deer, male or female, and leach camp will be limited to six ! deer, regardless of sex. The reso- ‘lution also provides that no antler- the children when she can't be with faith were being answered. ‘crushed as flat as”—He took a stride ewe ar Shall pe OE Which them.’ She might even have succeeded in toward the baby and buried his op. Ro ed. “Now mother,” Dan had cut in, throwing off the ever-present bur- (face in the folds of the child's dress. last in P 1 “you don't want to worry over Leo- den of Leotie's family cares if she “I tell you it took some out ot | he Aopen Sean i enusy)* tie's children not getting all that's had been permitted to help ever so me to go over there and look init,” vaula oF th killing male ser coming to them.” He chuckled at little in Dan's home. But Dan was he said hoarsely, as he raised his was nx , although *® y the recollection of clamorous meal- firm; he was convinced that garden head. | there fo Y Pec To pea time scenes in his sister's home. Work was too heavy for her, al-| He stood up, wiping his forehead. | season on tn oC LT “Yes sir, those youngsters will nev- though she did contrive on the slip “Were you frightened?” he asked. deer season certain er get left; it isn't in them to per- to pull a few weeds now and then. He turned with surprise from the | mit it. I hope your being away She longed to help in the shining white and shaken Rita, to his moth- DRIVE ON ILLEGAL will make Leotie stay home for a kitchen, but there was allowed only er, to prepare the baby's SIGNS NETS 36,907 change. “sitting down jobs,” as she termed food. “Were you frightened, moth. | rns lind So, against her better judgment them scornfully. Even the baby er?” he questioned again. | State highways and adjoining . and to her daughter's consternation, Was too well trained to need much | the little grand-mother found her. care. When his grand-mother was stove, the baby deftly turned un- | self packed up and hustled off to allowed to hold him, as a spec'al der her left arm. There was a tran- | what seemed to her untraveled mind concession, she knew that it was «t qui light, a sort of ecstacy on her | | the Pennsylvania Department of Highways, who pulleg ig Rm v far west. And it was inevit- the risk of spoiling the boy. Once, face. tattered leg a y-day bo that she should have periodsof When he was recovering after a “Frightened?” she repeated al- campaign, Secretary of Highway: remorseful wondering about the quite serious illness, she guiltily | most absently. “A little,” she an- Samuel S. Lewis announced. The grand-children she had deserted; welcomed the chance to keep the sSwered. “Rita was some upset, {1931 drive netted nearly 5,000 more whether Leotie got them off to fretful little fellow on her lap while too. It took her so sudden, you signs than had been pulled down in school in time, who mended Joe's his mother caught up with her see. But I was all right when I | the 1930 drive, Lewis said. torn stockings and who saw that work. | knew baby was safe.” | Instructed by Secretary Lewis, the thin, petulant little Allie drank the “I wonder why it is,” she said to She could not expect these others Department's maintenance crews milk she needed. It was but nat- Dan that day at dinner time, “that to understand her new freedom. scouted each section of roadway. ural that, not recovered in mind this baby seems sweeter than any They could not know that it was Every type of illegal sign was re- and body from the strain of life Of Leotie's ever were? Yet, I was now plain to her why she had been moved and prominent among of- back there her thoughts shouid turn fond enough of them, too.” | mysteriously led to leave Leotie and fenders were numerous imitations of to Leotie's final warnings about the “I guess maybe it's because you come here; that an all-wise Provi- | official markings, such as “slow cyclone menace. ‘have more time to enjoy this little dence had known all along that down” and “stop”, popular with Leotie knew her mother, the un- fellow.” Dan reached down to someone else's baby would have owners of stands. compromising New England con- tweak a bare, pink toe; “I never need of her. The dreaded Nemesis | Several truckloads of cards, boards, science and it was to these that Saw you still long enough to enjoy had come—and spared her. She | cloth and metal legends were re- she made her last appeal. (anything at Leotie’s.” Dan could would never fear it again. | moved from trees and poles along “I should think mother would be not think of his mother’s life at his| She laid her grandson in his crib the right-of-way. Employees asked afraid to fly in the face of Provi- Sister's without a hot wave of in- and began to busy herself about sup- permission of adjacent property own- dence that way,” she would remark |dignation sweeping over him. It per. Rita came silently to help, ers to remove all signs not covered in her mother's hearing, “to ex- gave him increasing satisfaction to her eyes following her mother-in.law | by leases or on which the change a safe, comfortable home for | See her getting the rest she a buried existence on a farm in the | served. change. | were not disturbed. ployed outside, housekeeping em- ~ploys more people than other occu- pation. It is true that the homekeeper of today does not have nearly so many tasks to perform as her oth- er did. But, as the work has left the home, so have the workers. The aunts, daughters, grandmothers, and even the “hired girls” have aban- doned housework. Most of it falls now on “the housewife,” whe is probably as busy as ever, since her former help is engaged outside the ‘home and demands her services asa background. is still (a full-time job—public opinion to the contrary-—and the housekeeper 'is still the t re on the oc- cupational h Bge —G rbread Date Dessert—This is excellent either as a cake or a pudding. If you serve it as a pud- ding, make a hard sauce for it or serve it with slightly sweetened | whipped cream, flavored with a lit- 'tle of juice. | One-third % cu cup shortening, [brown sugar, '% cup sweetened, Housekeeping Mrs. Rushton turned from the scape were swept clear of illegal ad- | strained apple sauce, % cup sour | | vertising by maintenance forces of milk or buttermilk, '%4 cup molas- ind ‘ses, 2 cups flour, 1 teaspoon baking soda, 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon, 1; teaspoon ground nutmeg, 4% teaspoon salt, 1 cup chopped dates. Combine the ingredients in the or- der given, creaming the sugar well with the shortening before adding the apple sauce, and so on. When | you come to the flour, mix it thor- oughly with the soda, cinnamon, | nutmeg and salt before combining |it with the batter. | —Put in envelopes and label the |odd keys from trunks and suitcases | and other locks about the household, and you will not lose them nor have difficulty in telling which belong to | which. —To preserve and brighten the use in the n of salt to | colors in wash dresses, | wash water a tablespoo | rinse water. . —Fertilizing the hay crop wi ! sulphate of ammonia on t farm of John Henderson in Belmo icounty who secured an increase ‘one and one-half tons of hay fro (an expenditure of $3 for the ferti ‘zer applied as a top dressing, a cording to estimates. Part of t ‘field received no fertilizer and he ‘the timothy yielded only 1,500 poun ‘per acre, while on the fertilized pc tion the yield was almost two a ‘one-half tons to the acre.—O} | Farmer. ~The Washington experiment st ‘tion has been conducting expe ments on the relation of leaf ar ‘to fruit. It was found that twe ty to thirty leaves ror each fn are necessary to produce an apj of commercial size under conditic in Washington State, and that for to fifty leaves per fruit are needed {fruit buds are wanted for the ne |season’s crop. The maintenance |a vigorous growth of tree by an avs ‘able amount of organic iaatter, a | sufficient moisture will maintain e leaf area. There have be tions that in the East mo ture is most commonly the ch | limiting factor of these three I: items. It is estimated that average twenty to twenty-five-ye: ‘old apple tree will sixty (one hundred thousand leaves, whi | means that the crop on such a ti should be limited to one thousa: five hundred to two thousand, f hundred fruits, if best commerc size and quality as well as anm | crops are to be obtained. —Experiments at the Pennsyl nia State college show that it quires considerably more feed produce gains on lousy hogs tr lon swine free from lice. Cro ithe hogs in a small shed = |sprinkle crude oil or cranks; |drainings on them with a sprinklL | can or with an old broom dipped | the oil. Leave the pigs in the } leases | each quart of water, and add vine- until they have rubbed against ei de- with a wondering respect. —Ex- had expired. Legally erected signs gar in the same proportion to the other and their bodies are cove | with the oil.