ABOUT THE TORTOISE i E ARE lucky,” said Mr. Box WwW Tortoise, “Why?” Inquired toise, . “Just think about it,” said Mr. Box Tortoise, “Il don't lox Tor Mrs. know what to think about it,” said Mrs. Box Tortoise. “Do you mean because we have a nice zoo home? Or because the keeper is kind to us? Because we don't have to wor. ry about getting our food? Or hecause we are always safe, so very safe?” “Now,” said Mr. Box Tortoise, “you have given me many thoughts; ves, indeed, many happy thoughts, [I think we're lucky In many ways, but all along I've really only been thinking of just one way. Now you have given “We Can Draw Our Legs and Heads inside Our Bony Shell, me pleasant and I'l! show my gratitude by giving you some thoughts, “Well, of course you know that we live on the dry lang.” “Isn't the land aly Mrs. Box Tortoise. “Yes,” chuckled as only a box and as only understand, “the land is always dry that except when it is wet, but then it isn't lost in the wet. 1 meant that we didn't live in the water as so many of the turtle family do. They're our neighbors in the zoo I love to watch their ways, “But to continue my story why we are lucky. We can draw our legs and heads inside our bony shell, and can also lock ourselves in.” “I know,” said Mrs. Dox Tortoise. “by means of a tortoise lock which is in the center of our lower shell, That is why we are pamed Box Tortoise.” “Yes Mr. Box “Of course, you krew all about it, but ways dry?” Mr, tortoise Tortoise, Jox can i chuckle, another box tortoise can is, and we Tortoise, agreed I wanted to remind you of it. We can always keep ourselves out of the way of danger by locking our selves in our own little boxes when we are frightened, We do It in the zoo some. times when people come near us who are strangers.” “Ah” said Mrs. Box Tortoise, “it's splendid for the Box Tortoises who have to live In the outside world to have something to keep them safe— and what a wonderful thing it is to be able to carry around one's protee- tion ulways, and to be able t¢ put a lock on it, too, “But we never have to worry, for we are In the and are always safe. Still it's nice to have our own protection always." Now Mrs, Gopher Tortolse was talk- ing nearby. “I've heard of sensible creatures,” she gald to Miss Gopher Tortoise, who wns her daughter, but who was called Miss Gopher, even by her mother, “You mean other gopher tortoises? “Ah, my She Is wise. There Is an you for me, call saving time Of it's not that 1 want to time, but 1 hear people speak of it as something to be done. They rush and run and hurry, they scramble about, and if anyone asks them why, 2.00 child takes after me. compliment for and one That's what 1 course, sive and race and dash are trying to save time possible In a they say they and little time, “So 1 paid a complin the same time" Tortoise, “i wise and tha t it, and 1 to do as much as to hoth of continued Mrs ent us Gopher suid you were was paying you a com nid that yor npliment, have expla I have rence 10 mi r Sensible eren are sensi the ground ind (Ws MIrrow ng! That sl we're sensible and » sand down South wheres we came ing, when 1 think of he tinued Mrs. Gop me glad, indeed. | me” con her Tortoise, “It makes the 200 for good to fast disappear gam In we are supposed to he eat, and our relatives are ing down South—Yes, they are disap pearing «owe peonie's thironis! 1 Just hee Sovind “They are bi but Use thes to eat! are g. and they have th shells, 1 | caught and t! “But our own story . tra ey are CTHE WHY of SUPERSTITIONS By H. IRVING KING How It Started By JEAN NEWTON THE EMPTY HEARSE HE superstition that it is an omen of good luck to meet an empty hearse is one of anthesis, originating from the fact that it is considered an evil omen to meet a funeral procession. This idea that it bodes ill luck to meet a funeral procession is especially prev- alant in the South where the negroes rill frequently turn back if they see a funeral coming toward them. While this fear of meeting a funeral proces sion undoubtedly has its basis in the primitive conception of the “death contagion” yet there is in it certain psychological element—the Idea of death coming toward one-—coming to meet one. Which is shown by the fact that it is not considered a bad omen to follow a funeral procession. This notion, then, of meeting a funeral pro- cession being a death omen, or at least an evil omen, having become firmly implanted in the superstitious world, it at once manifests itself in the super. stitions mind when the owner of the mind sees a hearse coming toward him. But, lo! the hearse Is empty. All that would make its approach an evil omen is wanting: death Is not ap- proaching and a mental reaction takes place which transforms the empty hearse into a good omen, (@ by McClure Newspaper Syndicates.) AN (©, A930, McClure Newsvaver Syndicate.) 0000000000000 0OOVOVVLOCO0K( “SABBATH” ERE is a word dating back to the of the beginning of all things: in fact, so far back tha memory of man run neth not to the contrary.” As everybody knows, after creating the world and everything in it, includ- ing men, in six days, tells us that God rested on seventh day. This day was called by the an cient Hebrews the Sabbath, the word “Sabbath” in Hebrew to beginning language, to » “the the Bible the meaning rest, Orthodox Jews refrain strictly from any manner of labor on the Sabbath, the ancient custom being to spend the entire day in prayer and meditation, We find the word “Sabbath” in its various modifications in almost every language and everywhere it has this meaning derived from its ancient form and usage, expressive of rest, absten tion from labor and thoughts of things material, and therefore by inference If not by Injunction a day for the turn of the mind to matters spiritual, {EE by the Bell Ryndieoate, no} ssl] Possession “Dear Editor: VERY time | go to Boston I'm glad I climbed Bunker Hill monument and the big state house dome when 1 was young and frisky. If 1 had my lifs to live over again I'd do more stunts like that. And read Scott and Dickens and learn duplicate bridge. Time's cheap when you're youny, and it gives you some thing to talk about when you get up In the thirtie® and feel old. But if | were starting life again 1 think I'd do something different with those two weeks | spent trying to learn Esperanto. And 1 sort of regret that afternoon 1 stood up to see n cer tain dctress in a show, But | suppose we all have some time to waste, Fred Barton, (6 by the Dell Syndicate, The.) siesmaimasconimll Foaming Point of Importance It fsn't so much what you say that counts in this age as It is the num. ber of people you ean get to belleve you ~Capper's Weekly, Barbara Stanwyck A Columbia picture star, From Brooklyn to Hollywood, three pictures, then fame, fortune. A cinema star overnight after making “Ladies of Leisure.” She is married to Frank Fay, screen actor. tm t—— CUOOOSD OLN NONNOUONBONOL A | For Meditation |3 000000 By LEONARD A. BARRETT a CONAN DOYLE Wi the passing of Sir Arthm Conan Doyle the world loses the mast noted Fictional To succeed one must writer of detective stories not euny task, possess not or ly t alm writing Is an id imagination bu ession to a very ms 103 Das In se (wo excell requis Conan Doyle farm engure ity Fi writ writl for = i i cannot pared Or L. A. Barrett, classed with poetry, the novel Detective fiction may the highest form of literature, it may not even he regarded ¢ ture, hut as “fetion”™ Doyle and dure thrill reading will en find a relaxation in Conan ©ey men women 8% A stories Like not fle ith preferred be hut to he as an advocate of spiritualism, many i onan [rosle wns his own work He writer forgotten as 2 remembered He is before dead wish revive him again, 1 known to posterity, as ctional the desired quoted as shortly his death, I never to he having said “Rhieriork Holmes i= to wish not the hot as a creator of a 0 pioneer In spiritualism Since | with his who died in war, argument could weaken his faith He ism not as a eritie, or even as a scien tist, but as one who had a very an experience which gave him an unswerving faith In the truth of his convictions had w will #0 AN communicn {ion the late avowsd son, approached the theory of spiritual real experience The arguments he ith his friend, the late Honding, interesting LE inily corresponden © which passed them upon this ject will shortly be given to the publie, Conan Doyle was absolutely sh He played no assimed ever one may of his conclusions he must credit for his transparent At his own request he was hurried the fragrant garden adjoining home, {Es 1930, Wasturn Newspaper Union. ¥ nlways be the hetween wih rere, How. differ with him in some be given sincerity, in his rode GABBY GERTIE “There's not much stirring when a girl refuses to spovn.” : { Fertilizer Types : and Distributors Little Known of Merits of American Machine and Drilling Quality. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) Up to the present no accurate in- formation has been avallable as to the relative merits of the American types of fertilizer distributing machines, Also, little has been known regarding the factors which affect the drilling qualities of fertilizers. To obtain re. lable data the United States Depart- ment of Agriculture undertook an ex. perimental study of fertilizers and dis- tributors the results of which have Just been published In Technical Bul letin 182.7, entitled, “Factors Affect ing the Mechanical Application of Fer- tilizers to the Soil.” Test Atmospheric Conditions. Atmospheric conditions, especially nu marked effect on the drillability of fertilizers, so it was necessary, for the purposes of these experiments struct a room in which the tempera- ture and humidity were fully under the control of the experimenter. This room was lined with Insulating board and the space between this lining and to con- the outside walls was filled with saw- dust, The to the room was through a vestibule equipped with By possible " only entrance means of to desired fer. were Fertil makes three tight fitting doors. thermostats it the air In the room temperature and hm was keep any The the experiments in this distributors of were Installed successively in the room and the fertilizers run through the ma with the air at various the effect of tilizers used In stored In trovs room. lzor various were chines to determine rate of delivery. f vari humidities thie csentative Effect of Weather. rrimenters noted gravity ol between distribution 1 of the depth » hopper, t for, tore the use of agi , and other fac be obtained, while distribution Insts, n application the Office of In formation, United Department Washington, D. C. is bulietin may free to States upply for culture, Ax Is Best Treatment to Give Sick Turkeys bad news for alling turkeys is very much { usual ing prescription, but the di. this case are not to wait nber to give It. Dr. W, A itension yvelerinary special- farm, St. Panl, Minn. ¥ known "turkey talker,” says { treatment for a sick turkey ax. “let's have as few sick an he writes in his news letter mailed to turkey ail the United States, As another Umely hint, Doctor Bil 2% suggests: “When your pouits greens for the first time, not gorge them Direak the good pews to them are bigger than and some may load up rtd die because they are giuttons, If the little fellows are starved for greens they should be handled care fully to prevent such trouble. This to alfalfa, rape or any other leafy plant.” Predictions that this is to be a “good grasrhopper year” hold little promise modern turkey growers, Doctor Billings opines, if the birds are allowed fo roam to eat the hop pers they will likely die off from oth. er causes, He urges keeping the poults ¥ like the fiiversity is the OnLes possible.” ralsers aver eit on ake care they do Felves, ently. Their eyes green, for because away from chickens and at a i Effective Control of Cucumber Beetle Pest One part of arsenate of calcium and twenty parts of land plaster, mixed thoroaghly together and applied In dust form at the mate of thirty to sixty pounds per acre, has heen found by the Ohio experiment station to be an ef. fective measure of control for the cucnmber beetle, The station made a duster by using a half gallon tin can and nailing a three-foot strip on each gide and joining the two strips to- gether at the top with another piece rounded off for convenience and com- fort in handling. Then twenty holes were made in the hottom of the ean with an eight-penny nail, punching from the inside out, Clean Up Grain Bins Before Harvest Time Farmers will find it worth while to repair their eribs and grain bins be fore the harvest season, The job is both more simple and easier at this time of the year because the posts and ‘beams are not loaded. Windows may be added for more light and ven. tilation and greater convenience may be secured by placing the doors where they are needed to save steps In tak. Ing out feed. The outside of the build. ings may be improved by cleaning up and painting. \ Perpetuate Forests / by Careful Logging Trees Less Than Twelve Inches Are Unprofitable, {Prepared by the United Biates Department of Agriculture.) Forests that last indefinitely and sawmills sawing up these forests with- out ever running out of logs are ple. tured by the forest service, United State Department of Agriculture, in re- porting the results of a study of selec. tive logging In the northern hardwoods of the Lake states, The key to perpetual timber produe- tion Is selective logging, the forest service states, which means a partial cutting of the forest Involving judi. clous selection of trees to be felled, 85 as to perpetuate and Improve the for. est and at the same time maintain or increase the profit. Lumbermen in the Lake states with no virgin timber In prospect for cutting after present holdings are exhausted, must choose between going out of business in a comparatively short time or taking steps to put thelr remaining stands on a self-perpetuating Costs of logging termined by the basis, und milling as de study Indicate that In typleal Lake trees less than 12 inches In diameter are un- profitable to convert Into lumber, iy taking only the trees larger than that the lumber: ns a better and nt the same time thrifty state forests slze pan obtal profit mans next leaves ¢ the trees to grow for and region lumber can prob. cutt reseed the bare Investigated In gucecesgive “cron places, is iy be harvested on this basis every 30 years, Technical Bulletin No Northern 166. Selective Hardwoods which gives the re- the of the Lake sults o may p f Acrieul be procured At iCU writing t Washing by nartment o D. C. ure Cod Liver Oil Gives Poultry Fishy Taste oil Is highly ling poultry under ft has a tend he flesh to have a fishy taste from Jenut rec. Sey re should be omitted broilers for at marketing, says 1. Unk 1 to ino 4 prior Dr. F. Yersity Doctor Con poultry specialis Paul, Minn. ites some experiments jue university which should be duet indicate liver oil left 18 dave before ation for about 16 to The amount th of time and the out marketing of cod liver oil and the leng 1 used, the method of evoking temperature of the meat when served, of the fishy fin. ity was fed two per cent cod - i Tected the Intensit vor, One lot i1 in the ration, and after the nued two weeks, liver o oll had been discont no bad taste was apparent while warn ted when allowed received in the ra birds was dete hut a trace to become cold, Another lot four per « 1 liver oil tion. of one of these taste was the lot trace of enough, How removed weeks, only a i had two fla- wis fishy after oil for fishy evident ever, from slight been the vor could be detected, The experiments show no evidence that the omission of cod liver oil for a short period will cause any bad effects upon of marketable chickens size, Feeding Orphan Lambs Quite Important Task In the feeding of orphan lambs, the ts must be kept in mind 1. The milk should be taken from a cow whose milk tests high in fat 2. For the first three or four weeks the milk from this one selected cow only should be fed to the lamb, 8. For the first few days and nights the lamb should be fed every two or three hours, and a small amount (say three tablespoonfuls, with a increase) given It each time, #0 as not to overload its stomach. 4. The milk should be warmed up to 92 degrees, which is about the warmth of sheep's milk. Care must be taken not to let the milk beil. 6, The bottle and nipple should be thoroughly washed each time after use to keep bottles sweet. following pois two or gradual The husker-shredder will corn borers. destroy * = » Silage forms an important part of the ration for fattening lambs, . » » When a team will not pull together cross the Inside traces, hitching each to the inside of the opposite single. tree. LE In order to grow chicks well they must be supplied with an abundance of a suitable ration. At least one hopper four feet long is needed for 100 chicks. As they grow larger they will need more space. . 0» * Dipping the hens in a solution of two ounces of sodium Muoride to each gallon of water helps them to be bet. ter layers by ridding them of body pests. Carbolinium or any of the glock dips Kill mites, .- & 8 A large barrel, buried In a hori zontal position In the side of a bank, makes a convenient place to store small amounts of root crops and cab bage. Soil and straw or leaves are used for covering the barrel, The barrel head makes a convenient door for this storage pit, | -~ \ NN TS Sir Walter speaking. What, Sir Walter Raleigh? The same. Some months ago he offered pipe lovers a free booklet on “How to take care of your pipe.” And the poor chap’s been buried under requests ever since. owever, we ve succeeded in engaging two of Queen Elizabeth's ladies-in-waiting to help the old boy out with his mail—so don’t hesitate to send for your copy. It tells you how to break in a new pipe—how to keep it sweet and mellow — bow to make an old pipe smoke smoother and better— the proper way to clean a pipe —and a lot of worth-while hints on pipe hygiene. If you're a pipe smoker, youll want to read this booklet. It's free. Just write to the Brown & Williamson Tobacco Cor- poration, Louisville, Ky. TUNE IN en “The Raleigh Revae™ every Fridey, 10:00 10 11:00 p. mm. { New York Time), over the WEAF cossrtoconst nerwork of NBC. Sir WALTER RALEIGH Smoking Tobacco it’s milder — I's 15¢ and A Gl Americans Living Abroad Apart fro thw seusona tides of 302.608 American eiti- in permanent greatest number, ac figures by based upon re- is found where ZH 147 of our Europe is next with TIS. Mexico and Central Ameriea total 100614: the Caribbean islands, 18.570: South America, 12.130: Asin, 24.110; while Africa reports 36703, © Speyer and Australasia and Oceania, 2307. tourist remain abroad residence, The to the the State department, poits {rem in Canada, eitizens reside, zens vording compiled S30 consulates, For Efficiency Clerk-—1 can’t help being sleepy in the office. My baby is teething and every five minutes wakes me up. Chief—If that is =0 you had better bring him to the effice.—Berlin Der Wiahre Jakob, Children’s stomachs sour, and need an antiacid. Keep their sys- tems sweet with Phillips Milk of Magnesia ! When tongue or breath tells of acid condition—correct it with a spoonful of Phillips. Most men and women have been comforted by this universal sweetener—more mothers should invoke its aid for their chil- dren. It is a pleasant thing to take, yet neutralizes more acid than the arsher things too often employed for the purpose. No household should ve without It. “hillips is the genuine, prescrip tional product physicians dena for general use; the name is impor tant. “Milk of Magnesia® has been the U. 8 registered trade mark of the Charles H. Phillips Chemical Co. and its predecessor Charles H. Phillips since 1875. of Maghesia ens give opus W. N. U, BALTIMORE, NO. 33.1930. -