Broad THE NATIVE CHESTNUT 1S COMING BACK. Native chestnuts “are again being | collected in the woods or Pennsyl- vania from young sprouts that have come up since tue chestnut blight swept through the torests of the State, accoraing to information re- ceived from vanous foresters in the Department of Forests and Waters. | This fall John Aughanbaugh, re-| search forester attached to the Pennsylvania Forest Research Insti- | tute at Mont Alto, collected more than a quart of nuts from Snowy Mountain esters consider this unusual because of the difficulty of finding in Franklin county. For- sprouts | large enough to bear nuts. Former- | ly, the young sprouts that came up | were usually killed by the blight before attaining a size sufficient to | Pear nuts. Other chestnut stands are being | combed for sprouts or seedlings that | show indications of blight resisting | qualities inasmuch as pathologists | admit that there is some chance or resistance being developed naturally. Nuts gathered by Aughanbaugh are being carefully planted in various State Forests. The chestnut blight is a bark dis- ease of Asiatic origin brought into this country on nursery stock im- ported from Europe. The disense | 1909 and so rapid was its spread and so complete was the destruction | jt wrought that within the next ten years not a single tree in the entire ‘chestnut stand escaped. The United States Department of Agriculture and the Pennsylvania Forest Research Institute are co-0p- erating in experiments to determine the possibility of again growing chestnut for timber. Seedlings of Chinese chestnuts have been planted 4n various State Forests to study ‘their blight resistance and their hardiness under amatic conditions. Dr. E. A. Zeigler, director of the ‘Pennsylvania Forest Research Insti- tute warns timbermen, woodland owners, and nature lovers generally against too early enthusiasm for the return of the chestnut. Even should | a few individual trees develop blight | resistance, their propagation and in- ‘troduction into forest stands closed | by other species would require many | ars. Similarly, the widespread | planting of an Asiatic chestnut | could only be accomplished over an extensive period of time. Growing | and rotating timber crops is a long | ‘term proposition owing to the many years required for trees to mature, thence even should the experiments | pow heing conducted show that blight resistant species can be devel- oped. at least a generation would be required to restock artificial methods stand of the State. in the timber a N TO RETIRE OLD AND | INEFFICIENT TEACHERS Move to retire inefficient old teach- ers and emplov training school grad- wates was made at the final meeting of the Buwiget Committee of the ‘Board of Education of Pittsburgh. i “It was sugmested that all teachers who have reached 62 mav be reap- pointed annually provided: 1. That the teacher has received “$or the current vear a rating from | the Personnel Department of “good” or better. 2. That the teacher successfully has passed a physical examination bv a board of three phvsicians ap- pointed by the Board of Education. | The committee passed a motion to ecommend the change in retire- ment policy to the board at its No- vember meetine. | The retirement policy of the hoard wives the teacher ahove 62 a pension amounting to one-sightieth of her! averages anlary for the last 10 vears mmultinlied bv her number of years | service. i This means that a teacher earn- ne £2.200 a vear. who has taught for 40 years. mav retire between 62 | and 70 on £1,100 a year pension. | At 70 all muet rotira, | “Tnnficient tencherg or those in had health imnair service to children ea well ag keen wvoune teachers wait- Fne far a rositian, Manv teachers | earning over £2200 a vear are not! wivine ac gonad service ae A new one at £1.200 mioht sive” said Marcus Aaron, president of the beard. CAMF LIMIT FOR DEER NOT CHANGED Althouzh the camp limit for deer :and the regulations concerning it ware the same during the coming sea- :#on as heretofore, a great many “hunters judging from the numerous | Jetters received at the Game Com- | mission, are not quite clear on this point. That all hunters may know the proper requirements concerning | ‘the camp limit, the Game Commis- | sion today outlined the following regulations: It is unlawful for any body of | wen, either camping together or ‘hunting in unison, or in any man- ner co-operating with each other, to 'kill or possess in one season, more ‘than six legal deer. Tt is not legal for hunters to hire ‘a hunting camp or other headquar- ters for the purpose of hunting deer with the assumption that such head- | anavters world be regarded as a phic hoarding house or hotel, and thet each individual hunter residing at euch headnuarters would be per- mitted to kill one deer. A party of men boarding at a private camn, cabin, or other head- qa~ters established for the purpose ‘of Wmtineg and not recoenized as a pric hoarding house or hotel where ‘tra-alers are accommoriated the year peared in Pennsylvania in| Pennsylvania cli- | the chestnut by | | sending the ball back. a=~ nd, mav not lawrullv kill more ‘then afy deer in one season regard- ‘Joe~ of how viany hunters are board- | eA ~t the camp. | i WHY ———— Title of “Dan” Was Given to Cupid “Dan” is an old title of honor equiv- | alent to lord, master or sir. It is re- lated to the Spanish “don” and tiie | that title is probably derived from | Latin “dominus,” lord. “Dan” is now | obsolete except in a few special con- | nections, but formerly it was common- ly applied to distinguished men, nobles, | scholars, poets and even deities, Ed- mund Spenser applied the title to | Geoffrey Chaucer and since then it | has been applied to many poets, In Book IV of the “Faerie Queen” Spen ser wrote: Dan Chaucer, well of English unde fyled, On Fame's eternal headroll worthle te be filed. | In Roman mythology Cupid, the son of Mercury and Venus, is the god of | love and is identified with the Greek | Eros. The name is derived from Latin “cupido,” meaning desire, passion or | love, and Cupid was the personitica- | tion of the amatory passions. He is | generally represented as a beautiful naked boy with wings, carrying a how and arrow and sometimes blindfolded. Among the early English writers, as well as the writers of other countries, | Cupid was given various humorous titles. We find him playfully referred to as “dan Cupido” about 1384. In| Shakespeare's time “Dan Cupid” was | already part of everyday speech. In “Love's Labor's Lost,” Act I11, the poet puts the following words in the mouth | of Biron, one of the lords attending | King Ferdinand of Navarre: This whimpled, whining, purblind, ! wayward boy; This senlor-junior, Cupid, glant-dwarf, Dar —DPathfinder Magazine, nw n— Why Falling Cat Can Always Land in Safety | That the cat always falls up- on its feet is generally known, but th» how and why of it was recently made the subject of a lecture by an English scientist. Pussy scores, as demonstrat ed at a lecture on the physics of sport, by knowing a trick we cannot imitate | —that of turning in the air. The star | performer at the demonstration was | the professor's kitten, which was held | upside down and dropped a few inches | on to a cushion, Always the kitten ar- rived comfortably on its feet. How is it done? The slow-motion cinemato- graph has given away the secret. With | a lightning movement the cat draws | in its front paws and stretches out the hind ones. In this position it is | easy for the front part of the hody to! be rotated, and the other huif follows | suit an Instant later. | Why Coxey’s “March” Mr. Coxey's good roads bill was In | troduced in congress in 1802. Under | this bill the treasury was to issue le- gal tender notes for use in construet- ing good roads. This in turn would make employment for men who were out of work. Two years Inter a sec- | ond and more complicated measure | was introduced providing for non-in- | terest bearing bonds. The army of | the unemployed marched to Washing- | ton “as a living petition in favor of | Coxey's scheme to provide fint in] good roads and work for the workers,” Why Human Hair Differs The contour of the hair is circular, | sval or flattened. Whether a hair is to be curly or straight is largely de- | pendent upon its contour; the more | oval or flattened it is the more it will | be curled. The degree of curliness is | influenced also by the conditions of | the atmosphere; naturally curled hair becomes more curled when the hair is surcharged with moisture, and less #0 in dry weather. Why Honey Is Good Food Honey is one of the best of the high energy-producing foods, says the | United States Department of Agricul- | ture. Because it is composed almost | entirely of simple sugars it can be | assimilated with ease, Most sugars require action by the gastric and in- testinal secretions to break them down | into simple sugars similar to those occurring naturally in honey, | Why Keep Heat From Rubber Hard rubber will last in the weather | much longer than soft rubber, If hard | rubber is not placed in the sun or where the sun can reach it, it will last indefinitely. If it is placed where the direct rays of the sun will reach it, it will last from five to ten years, Why Goatskin for Bags Water is carried, in the Indian army, in leather bags made of goat- skin to accommodate the Mohamme- | dans, who could not drink from a bag | made of pigskin, and the Hindus, who | would be unable to drink from one of | calfskin, Why Ball Bounces A bail bounces because the force with which it strikes the ground fint- tens it on one side. The alr suddenly compressed within resists and the . tened side pushes against the groumd, Why Lath Shadows Show The lines on a ceiling are caused by dust-laden air passing up through the plaster and leaving a deposit over the spaces between the laths. Why “Veterinarians” The word “veterinarian” Is Latin In derivation. Veterinarius means of or pertaining to a beast of burden, | | phernalia Writer Absolves Nero; i i Emperor Fought Flames that “Nero fiddled while Rome burned.” | Poor Nero! He not only did not know how to fiddle but was head of the fire hrigade. According to Mr. Weigall in his and scholarly volume on Nero, this ,. "seq generously while i fine | birds gentleman when the fire broke out was | at his country estate. And that ex- plodes the popular notion that he set the place on fire for the fun of watch | ‘ng it burn. He rushed back to town and spent | pos | Trojan—or like a Roman, it being an- other wrong notion that the Trojans worked harder than anybody else—and six days and nights working like a organizing fire brigades all over Rome | trying to put the fire out. When, however, it got out near his own magnificent home with its great collection of art treasures and he saw it was doomed, he stood on the river bank in front of the house and sang a funeral dirge, for Mr. Weigall states that Nero was one of the greatest sing- ers that ever lived—a tall, robust, red- haired, freckled-faced opera singer, more interested in his music than in fires or in burning Christians. Thus do our notions crumble one oy one before the onslaught of truth! —Albert E. Wiggam in International- Cosmopolitan. Body of Cortes Rests in Mexico City Church The Mexican government announced not long ago that it is in possession , of documents proving definitely that the remains of Hernando Cortes, | Spanish conqueror of Mexico, are In | the central altar of the church of | Jesus Nazareno in Mexico City, says Pathfinder Magazine, For more than a century there has been a mystery? ' as to the final disposition of the re | mains of Cortes. He died near Se ville, Spain, on December 2. 1547, an! his ashes were sent to Mexico ahout 15 years later and placed in the hos pital founded by him in the Mex can capital. When the agitation against everything Spanish was at its height in 1823 the ashes of the eon | querer were removed to the church near the hospital for fear that they might be desecrated. The church, which will he made a Cortes shrine, |is needed for | say State College feeding may cause weak lambs. pound of garbage 115-18 per cent; carbohydrates, 31-69 | per cent; fat, 13-33 per cent; ash, | 16-36 per cent. {s near the hospital which still bene | fits by the will of Cortes, The con- Spanish heroes of the time, was neg- lected * after he returned to Spain. There is a story to the effect that throng around the carriage of Em- peror Charles and mounted the step. Charles demanded who he was. “1 am a man.” Cortes replied. “who has given | you more provinces than your ances | tors left you cities.” ————— Sausages as Tithes In the town of Demen, Germany, it 4eems, the church is entitled to re | queror of Mexico, llke many othe | | hogs ‘had the disease. | he once forced his way through a | hog | should be made so that objection- | ‘able substances will not be put in | | the garbage. |it is not cooked. ceive 130 pounds of a certain kind of | sausage, known as Mettwurst every year from the local tithe-payers. Re- cently the latter refused to supply the ration of sausage. The church in- voked the aid of the law, and the tithe payers had to deliver the customary Mettwurst. But the church was still unsatisfied—the sausage, it was al- leged, was not up to standard—it con- tained too much beef. Mettwurst has always been a source Mecklenburg-Schwerin, ishes the local clergyman was entitled | to so many ells of the sausage from his 1 parishoners. He always got the right length, but if he were unpopular, the Mettwurst was of the smallest possi- | ble thickness, there being nothing In |g. only a the bond regarding its diameter. Castle of Sleeping Beauty The ancestral castle of the counts of Eltz is one of the finest In Germany, | resting high on a precipitous rock, with cloud-piercing tower and rimmed with dark green woods. This is the | castle made famous by Sleeping Beauty, if legend is to be believed. It dates back to the Twelfth century and its gray walls have seen many a battle waged. It might almost be said to be three castles in one, grouped about an inner court, and each of the three has its own entry. It 1s full of the para- sf dream-haunted rooms. heavy iron-bound chests, carved doors, old pewter, massive refectory tables which surely have often trembled he neath their loads of venison, wine and the thunderous merriment of feasters Holyrood Now Obscured The somber walls of Holyrood pal- ice, Edinburgh, have lost remembrance of the grandeur of its former days, yet it holds some of the most glam- orous and the saddest memories of Mary Queen of Scots. Here on the Oth of March, 1566, Lord Darnley mur- dered David Rizzio, an Italian, whom he accused of improper relations with Mary, his wife. Exactly 12 months afterward he himself was murdered by the earl of Bethwell, who married Mary after leas than three months, “Uttering and Publishing” This legal phase is most generally ased In connection with the circulation of counterfeit money, forged notes, ete. Bouvier's Law Dictionary states that “to utter” in criminal law is to offer or to publish; also that “to pub lish” meuns primarily to make known. Webster's dictionary quotes F. Whar | ton that “to utter snd publish a doc | ament is to offer directly or indirectly, hy words or actions, such document as good n | bring from | dozen more trade demands clean eggs, lis one of the reasons why Mr. Wil- lin the forenoon,” said | “We get from of trouble In | our eggs in the in many par- | Whether it is fair | sometimes considered of minor im- FARM NOTES | —A classified advertisement in {1 Arthur Weigall, the historian, has your knocked Into a cocked hat the notion from your local newspaper is a short cut —Jt is unsafe by limiting feed when starts. It seems wiser to feed such | ih he bay A e laying. 0 ! n mash is kept before the pullets. —Much of the dead chestnut for years in the woods is becoming more and more useless for ts or other timber. Unless it is cut and used soon it may as well be left in the woods. The value of such chestnut for poles and mine timber also has decreased. — Comparatively little equipment handling beef cattle, livestock special- | ists. This is especially true of cat- tle being fattened for the open market. A satisfactory shelter for beef cattle is one that furnishes adequate protection from wind, rain, and snow. _Silage is a splendid roughage | for sheep, but it should not be fed when frozen or moldy. Breeding ewes should receive not more than two and one-half pounds daily until after lambing time. Too liberal —A good farm record book ac-| curately kept will enable a farmer really to know his business __ Boxes of leaf mold, rich garden soil, and sand can be placed in the basement now for use next spring when planting seeds in crates and boxes. — Each Monday, Wednesday and Friday from 11:45 to 12:15 special farm and garden programs are broadcast from WPSC, the radio station owned and operated at 1230 kilocycles by the Pennsylvania State College. i Where gurbage is available in: considerable amounts, it can be used as a feed for hogs with some suc- cess. Tests have shown that 20 will produce a! pound of gain in hogs. Analyses of garbage on a dry weight basis | give the following results: Protein, The danger in feeding garbage is in having some injurious substance | present such as glass, paper, soap, | sawdust, etc., or in exposing the to hog cholera through the | presence of rinds from hogs that Hogs fed on gar- immunized against cholera, and some arrangement bage should be The garbage is some- times cooked, to prevent disease, but this makes it difficult for hogs to pick out and leave injurious sub- | stances that they will not eat when All of the eggs from the Dale Willard farm, Vermilion county, ed go to a select trade in Chicago, and | 10 cents to 15 cents a than Mr. Willard could obtain on the local market. This and that | lard keeps his flock in the laying | house until noon. “Hens that are kept up until noon seem to develop the habit of laying Mr. Willard. 75 to 90 per cent of | first half of the day. of rainy the eggs | are clean. If hens have their free- | dom throughout the day they track | mud into the house and nests are so soiled that we would have | clean the eggs before shipping. | “The hen that is permitted free-| part of the day willl out all the time. getting better egg production since we have kept our hens up. They eat more mash and it is mash that makes the eggs.” — Common warts on cattle, though | portance, reduce the value of affect- ed hides from slightly to as much |as 25 per cent—sometimes more. | Moreover the prevalence of warts on | cattle is increasing, according to in- | formation gathered by the United States Department of Agriculture. Leaflet 75-L, just issued by the de- partment, tells how to prevent and | remove these growths. Warty hides when tanned have roughened and weak spots where the warts occur- red on the skin, and the affected are considered worthless, the publication shows. Cattle buyers, therefore, make discounts for warty animals purchased in the markets. Experiments conducted with wart material show that the growths are infectious and under ordinary condi- tions are probably spread when the | infective material comes in contact with the injured skin of healthly cattle. Preventive measures include the removal of all warty cattle from the herd and the cleaning and dis- infecting of exposed pens, rubbing posts, and other equipment. Small warts may be removed by clipping | them off with sterile scissors or ty- | ing a sterile thread tightly around | | the wart near the base. The stumps | | remaining after the warts are re-| moved should be touched with] glacial acetic acid or tincture of | iodine. The removal of large warts requires the attention of a veteri- | nary surgeon. | | Leaflet 75-L, Warts on Cattle, may | | pe obtained free by applying to the | | Office of Information, United States | | Department of Agriculture, Wash- | | ington. —Legume hays of good quality | {are high in protein and calcium. | They sre the best source of calcium | and i home-grown are usually the | cheapest source of protein. i to hold back pultets Jif production HH} In our issue of Sept. 4th we made appeal to 775 of our sub- scribers who were in arrears at that time. Since then 135 have respond- ed, and to them we make grate- ful acknowledgment of their promptness in coming to relief of the financial strain we are under. We are still hoping that the remaining 640 are not going to fail us. By the way: If you have any printing jobs. Anything, large or small in the line of com- mercial printing, we would like to do it for you. There is always one cer- tainty about job printing done at this office. at prices no higher than are It is well done, and often paid for work that is not so good. The Democratic Watchman Ee —————————