BILLIE AND THE KIWI ILLIE BROWNIE citeds He was going to eall upon a hird- creature he had never seen before, JI course he always enjoyed calling on his old friends. He liked to hear more of thelr news. Sometimes he liked to have them tell him the same things about them- selves for then he could tell others who hadn't heard all the news, and he could freshen up his own memory about their ways, But it was an event to eall on a new creature he had never seen at all. He put on his best brown suit and his best brown stocking cap with the brown tassel at the end, and started an his Journey. The new creature upon was to call'was the Kiwi. He didn’t quite know how to pro- nounce the creature's name but he did tils best, in his own guesswork fashion and knew that would do. “One comfort always Is,” Billle Brownie said to himself, “that animals was much ex. whom he “Gracious, No,” Said Billie Brownie. won't glare at you If you don’t pro- nounce their family names correctly.” He followed the directions Mother Nature had given him. And then he came before the Kiwi, “I'm Billle Brownie,” he sald, Intro- ducing himself. “Mother Nature has given me the power to understand her children and the way they speak. “You will find, too, that you can un- dersthind me. Mother Nature attended to that, for, ns she said, a one-sided conversation wouldn't be of much use.” a Kiwi. “It's a fine day,” said Billie Brownie, for the Kiwi didn't seem to be doing any talking, though he looked friendly do understand you,” sald the enough. He didn’t look particularly lively though. “Is 11?" said the Kiwl. ticed.” “Yes,” sald Billle Brownie, “or at least, I think it Is. Some might say it was a bit too windy, or others might say it was a bit too sharp, but to my way of thinking It Is very pleasant.” “What is your way of thinking? asked the Kiwl suddenly. “Well, well,” said Billie Brownlie, “It's just a Brownle's way of think- Ing.” . “Oh,” sald the Kiwl, “then It doesn't mean that only along one certain road or way you ean think? You are able to think anywhere?" : “Dear me, yes, | should hope so,” said Billie Brownie, “I wonder,” he went on after anoth- er. pause, “if you wouldn't tell me something about yourself? “I don’t mind doing that,” sald the Kiwi, “You can see what I look like with your own eyes—for [ notice you have your own or at least 1 suppose they are your own, You didn't borrow them, did you? “Gracious, no,” sald Billie Brownlie. “Then.” said the Kiwl, “you can no. tice with: your own eyes that 1 look something lke a small ostrich and something like a white leghorn hen, “In fact, I'm somewliere between the two In the animal! world. I'm from Australia—a country in which many curious and Interesting animals lve and I'm like a mixture of a small Augs- tralian ostrich and a white leghorn hen, as I sald, and as you ean see, “I have down Instead of feathers. The eggs I lay are not so large as those of a hen. “I can’t fly at all worth mentioning. In fact, I'm just an odd creature. “But I'm odd enough not to mind being odd. That's the only way to be if yon are odd. “If you are odd and are sorry you are odd, It Is a great pity and Is apt to cause you unhappiness, “But if you're odd and don't mind, then no harm is done, and everyone Is more or less satisfied. “You came to see me because I was odd, possibly?” “1 hadn't no- word, hecnuse you were a new creature I'd never seen before, and | wanted to teil my friends about you." “Ah” said the Kiwi, “so the friends of Billle Brownie will know ahout me! That's not so bad, not so bad” the Kiwl ended, looking at Billle Brownlie in rather a foolish way, (Copyright.} How It Started By JEAN NEWTON IT “RINGS TRUE” E SPEAK of a story or an ac- count of something “ringing true” when we mean it bears every semblance of truth and sincerity. Usu- ally it doesn’t “ring” at all. The story may come to us without even the sound of the human voice. We may read of it and yet use the expression “it rings true.” The words however are a survival of a time when It was by literal “ringing” that certain truth or falsity was established. The expression “it rings true” had its origin in the days when a large quantity of counterfeit money was be ing unloaded. in the country and it was a common sight to see people drop « coin they had received in change to the counter in order to hear the ring by which they could distinguish the genuine from the imitation. The term took hold and came into popular ysage in the figurative sense in which it is familiar today. y (Copyright.) {)mmeisenn GABBY GERTIE Why We Do What | We Do by M. K. THOMSON, Ph. D. CPPCC 0C000000P0EDNOOODSD WHY WE GET DOWN IN THE MOUTH I” IS a very unususl person who ean keep sweet and even-tempered un der all circumstances, The great ma- Jority of us have our ups and downs. And perhaps down more often than up. The behavior of a ship on the ocean depends considerably on the weather conditions and the mond of the ocean as well as on the mechanism of the ship itself, Yet there are those who somehow expect to sail the seven seas of life in a perfect calm and under Ideal conditions, In the first place the thing Is impossible and In the sccond place It is undesirable, We ger down in the mouth when we are Jost and cannot see our way out of the fog. The blows of adversity, the stings of failure play havoc with us, There are disappointing experi. ences that dry up the Juices In a man and leave him shrivelled up like a dried prune. It isn't so much the physical blows that floor us as It is the more subtle forces, mental and spiritual, A man can stand a lot of physical punish. ment and pain because he knows what hit him and where It hurts most. But when we deal with disillusionment an outraged sense of Justice and fair play, Jealousy, envy and hate it Is like try- ing to eapture a ghost, Life is a series of adventures, We are constintly meeting up with new problems which necessitate new ad- Justments. If these problems crowd in upon us faster than we are able to meet them we become temporarily dis. organized. unadjusted and consequent. ly, down in the mouth, We get down In the mouth because the mental and spiritugl apparatus that constitutes our particular person. ality is temporarily out of gear and needs to be adjusted. We make the adjustment In time to avert the dis. aster of complete demoralization, (@® by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) sms Consonant Silent Violin Invented A violin that can be heard distinctly by the player but cannot be heard out. side the apartment has been devised by Emilio Colombo, a popular violin. ist In London. He has not revealed the secret of his invention, but says he ean hear every note of his muted instrument clearly, 0000000000000 Alan Birmingham ©O00C000000C00000000000I00 Alan Birmingham has the honor of playing the first dual talkie role in his first Movietone production, “Mas. querade.” Birmingham is a good look. ing chap, six feet tall, weighs 160 pounds, dresses modestly, plays golf, and dabbles in playwriting, He has been an actor since the age of four. teen, O For Meditation 000000 By LEONARD A. BARRETT A MOUNTAIN OF VIEW on one of in the HIS article Is written highest elevations’ Allegheny mountal s, of view three states and seven coun ties are The wast the visible, silence, ture seems to teach valuable She seems to "Come along real and beauty. ter Into the lence with me and I will point the way and You power Fine to cathedral songs of birds and rustle of free tops are notes. My is a grand of progress onward and ward which tuned to major chords” no musie eser L. A. Barrett. the perplexities life which we have while, seem very of every day left behind unimportant. incight because we have been point of view of calm detachment. The beauty of an oll painting Is picture for us. AMlily lifted too near the sun will wither to white ashes, but when allowed to grow in earth's its beauty. into the mountains. best investments one can make. [It pays big dividends in terms of those life values which enable a man to by it, that we need a vacation. Rest Is nae and reserve force, to the mountains! Therefore, get ye Rest is not quitting the busy career Rest Is fitting one’s self to his spheres (®. 1929, Western Newspaper Union.) (® by McClure Newspaper Byndicnte.) { Roman Forts Preserved Four Roman forts and a section of Hadrian's wall were Included in the sale of the Cheaters, a historle Nore thumberiand (England) estate. Much of the property was bought by tenant farmers, The forts and the wall, once outposts of the Roman empire, are well preserved, | Limestone Pays on Sweet Clover Liberal Applications Result in Larger Yields of Bet- ter Quality. To change the yield of sweet clover hay by the use of ground limestone nothing to an average of over Ing result reported hy John W. Artz “Mr. different Haulr, ex- Artz conducted six olina State college. “The results ob tained show conclusively that it is not worth while to attempt the growing of sweet clover unless the land has been limed. Liberal applications of limestone result In Iarger yields of bay than do small applications, Each of the six demonstrations consisted of four one-acre plots.” Applied in Fall, The first plot, in each test, was un- Hmed., Mr. Blair reports. The second plot received at the rate of 1.000 pounds of finely ground limestone per fourth, 3.000 pounds. This limestone was applied in the fall of 1027 at the time the small grain was planted, Sweet clover seed was sown on the grain In March, 1928, The hay was cut and cured In June, 1026, The average result of the six dem onstrations shows that the hay on the wins used, 2.758 pounds of hay was harvested; where 2000 pounds of lime was used, 4017 pounds of hay was secured, and where 3,000 pounds of limestone was used, the yield was 5420 pounds of hay per acre. Mr. Blalr says that this last yleld was about double the amount secured where Of Better Quality, The sweet clover grew to about the much thicker and of better quality where the heavier applications made. Mr. Artz reported that be grown in his county next Is Not Advantageous Although farmers have been tramp Ing down the silage to pack it evenly into their silos for fifty years, recent tests made at several experiment sia that the practice doesn’t help to preserve the feedstuff, report ed the Farm Journal, At the United States dairy burean farm in Mary land, and again st Pennsylvanian State uted silnge, ng the vious years. According to E. J. Delwiche, Intendent of two Wisconsin practice of tramping is He says: tramping results untramped, kept as well closely pre packed silage of super stations, even harmful, “Since and is generally an in many pockets The silo is be arrangement when without tramping the distributor ideal filled fo have witheut walking on the corn. To seal leveled is not should always be carefully when tramping done.” Useful as Silage Crops Clover and alfalfa are not usually In some In in a grod many others they have not proved satisfactory. Professor Eckles, tormerly of the University of Missouri, was success faifa and clover hay by allowing It If the hay becomes overdry, it should bave some water Likely you would be better satis. filed with your clover if you conld put of losing some or all of it in the silo. Mowing Successful in Eradicating Many Weeds Where more than one-fourth of the stand of vegetation in a pasture is comprised of weeds, it usually Indi cntes that the land is either over grazed, prematurely grazed, or a com bination of the two, In planning to improve the pasture, consideration should be given to correcting the causes responsible for the weedy growth, On smooth pastures, most weeds may be successfully eradicated by mowing. If such a method is used. the weeds should be cut about the time they are in flower~before any seed Is matured. Dairy Products Demand To increase the demand for dairy products seems to be one of the most feasible methods of advancing the dairy business, It Is believed by doc. tors and nutrition specialists that, on the average, the American peoplg do not consume more than about 14 the fluid whole milk necessary to the maintenance of the highest degree of health, If organized dairymen could educate the public to the values of the greater quantity of milk In the diet It would open up a large field for dairy expansion, Grow Silage Yearly Ohio Experiment Station Shows Practice Possible, Halling green corn from the fleld to the silo Is an expensive part of the storage of silage, nnd the distance whith the corn must be transported has much to do with the cost of the silage, especially in hilly country. Where only a single field is located near the silo, the question arises ns to whether sliage corn can be grown upon it each year, On the Belmont county experiment farm a block of land near the silo hus been growing xllage corn cintinug- ously since 1917. Walter Mahan, su- perintendent of the farm, and J. 8, Cutler, assistant In agronomy at the Ohlo agricultural experiment station, have reported on results of the prac. tice, Their conclusion is that where si- on one field, the fertility Stomach In the same time It takes a dose of soda to bring a little temporary relief of gas and sour stomach, Philiips Milk of Magnesia has acidity complete sume time maintain the supply of or gnanle matter in the soil. Such a pro gram should include the liheral appli- eation of well-cared-for manure, to- gether with both broadeast and hill or row fertilizer applications for corn nnd the growing of some sort of cover crop on the land over winter, A fertilizer treatment of eight to ten tons of manure and a broadcast appli- “we cation of 200 to 250 pounds per acre row application of 100 or 200 pounds of complete fertilizer with a formula of +108, Is suggested, satisfactory. Fruit Orchard Demands i ! | i i Speaking recently hefore the Quebec Horticultural society in Montreal Prof. J. H. Gourley, chief horticul- attention to mand that orchards make for nitrogen, particularly sod or mulched orchards. In discussing practical fertilizer practices, based on Ohlo Professor Gourley sald: called worry about your diet and experience This pleasant preparation is just as good for children, too. Use it when- ever coated tongue or fetid breath signals need of a sweetener, Physi. cians will tell you that every spoon- ful of Phillips Milk of Magnesia neg- tralizes many times its volume in acid Get the genuine, the name Phillips is important, Imitations do not act the PHILLIPS To Avoid infection Use Hanford's Balsam of Myrrh All dealers are authorized to refund your money for the first bettie {1 not suited A woman isn't ne because she says things each year of a tree's age, so that a outer branches.” He called attention to periments In which nitrogen only. “The evidence In favor of the former.” he sald, “is so meager and unconvincing In most to have led horticulturists to confine nitrogen beneath the trees and to phosphorus between the tree rows for generally As regards quality, which show that “fruit as that treatment.” ns well normal has kept receiving Two Types of Insects tables has been partially destroyed by atlacks of been controlled. Roughly speaking, the Insect enemies unre divided two groups, the juices For the first named, spray which penetrates their hides. Often when both are present a com bination of poison and something that senate gives the best results, ofa lntotatuto tein teteqeleloteleteletotetatetototone Agricultural Notes SOON OOBOOOOOONONOO NOOO ONT To produce economically, a cow must make a large flow of milk, * » * Practically the same methods fol. lowed for Sudan grass will do for millet. * * =» A shelterbelt saves fuel and pre. vents the overworking of a home heat ing plant, * * » Many farmers leave alfalfa too long in the windrow, and the leaves dry and drop off. Some leave it too long in cocks, . » =» It is estimated that the effect of phosphate and potash fertilizers may be seen four or five years after the first application. . * =» In average seasons alfalfa is hetter sown In the fall. Good stands “ih tained in early fall are usually «nfe from winter killing. . "0 The newly-born calf should have the milk for the first few days. This le the colostrum milk. and alds in putting the digestive system of the calf in good working order. . sn Bag storage is a safe method only If the potatoes can he kept dry. One disadvantage of this type of storage is that in the event of any of the po tatoes developing rot it will be neces sary to resack the entire lot to ascer taln the amount of damage present, Be will “wear off.” Why suffer when there's Bayer Aspirin? The millions of men and womea who use it in increasing quantities every year prove that it does relieve such pain. The medical profession pro- nounces it without effect on the heart, so use it as often as it can spare you any pain. Every druggist always has genuine Bayer Aspiria for the prompt relief of a headache, colds, neuralgia, lumbago, etc. Fa- miliarize yourself with the proven directions in every package. SPIRIN Amplrin fe the trade mark of Buyer Manw'sctom of Monosorticacidester of Balicriloacid First requisite in “being somebody™ concede that Tota. ROR, SUR Children Cy for It WOMAN SICK THREE YEARS B E. Pinkham” Helped able » 4 Little Rock, Ark~—"1 was sick for three years after my last baby came. m— —-— Teould hardly oak and could not eat nor asleep as should ot pon pet