PAGE SIX 20, 1931. \ Letters To The Editor | (Coneinued from Page 2)". years to reach a conclusion and ad- just their see-saw differences while Italy and the unknown revolutionary : Russia now advance to the fore. The : former seems secure under good gov- In a sentence, nothing should be done except “when the moon is right.” . L Darwin wrote that the Gauchos of the Argentine think that “nothing can succeed without it be begun when the moon is on the increase.” Before the Revolution the French government di- rected its foresters to cut timber only ernment but what the future holds in 1 the wane of the moon,” on the store for experimental Russian ‘is un- | theory that wood cut during that phase evident to us all. It remains only too would not rot so quickly. Belief in true that we should not hazard her the moon's influence over such activi- ‘too lightly, what with her human ties dates back thousands of years and millions, her great store of resources, |iS Probably a survival of moon worship natural and otherwise and her fierce, |2M0ng the ancients. Two centuries ‘red enthusiasm. Nor can we with | 280 it was still widely believed that any degree of safety ignore the chil- the lunar orb controlled even human dren of the Orient or the drowning 2ffairs. Scientists sought in vain for masses in the Sea of India. - a relation between the phases of the France and the United States hold Moon and activities on the earth. ‘the world’s gold but fate holds their | AMoon-farming, says the Department destinies and that of all nations so, Of Agriculture, has no support from ' that none may be so bold to say, | 2BY scientific point of view. Repeated “This one shall take that path,” “That €XPeriments indicate that the phases one will falter by the way.” of the earth’s germination of seeds, : A Reader. the warping of shingles, the weight of i Wool, or the shrinkage of pork. Most of the beliefs associated with moon- farming are not based on the assump- tion that direct moon-light is especially potent, but rather that the moon ex- ercises some mysterious and occult power over mundane activities. Even the light and heat from the moon are not sufficient to affect plant growth materially. The moon has no appre- ciable influence on any of the major conditions affecting the growth of plants and consequently does not gov- ern agriculture. Moonlight is merely reflected sunlight. Experiments show that full daylight is about 600,000 times brighter than full moonlight, and plants so shadow- ed that they receive only 1-100th of normal daylight, grow little better than they do in toal darkness. But 1-100th of daylight, already too feeble to stimulate plant activity appreciab- ly, is still 6,000 times brighter than full moonlight. Therefore the stimu- lus of moonlight on plant growth must be negligible. From time to tims some pseudo-scientist revives the the- ory that moonlight, being reflected light, is “polarized” and therefore particularly potent in affecting plants. There is no evidence that such is the case. —_—— SCIENTIST CLAIM MOON USELESS AS FARM GUIDE’ Many rural people practice what is known. as moon farming says “The Pathfinder.” That is, they plant seeds, shear sheep, prune trees, butcher ani- mals, lay shingles and do other farm work according to the phases of the moon. They believe: - Pork from hogs killed in the dark of the moon will shrink when cooked. Animals born during the new moon thrive better. Fleeces sheared in the wane of the moon weigh more. The seeds of corn and other crops that grow above the ground rot when planted in the light of the moon. Crops that grow under the ground like potatoes and beets, grow near the surface and produce a light yield when planted in the dark of the moon. Shingles laid during the new moon curl up and pull the nails out. 2 — When In Luzerne Visit THOMAS apples show injury first. |usually occurs: during early July. | survey in the infested regions shows fac folks Yl “uF oy A * 0% BOOST BETTER BUTTER Kitner, Mehoopany; Gordon Shook, | stunt; George Clark, Beaumont; A. L. By Prof. W. B. Krueck | Major, Centermoreland and E. O. When you go into a restaurant or | Wright, Marsh Creek. barbecue stand today and ask for a | sandwich you are likely to receive al piece of bread—or a roll and a piece i of meat. ’ : | By Prof. H. D. Munroe ‘When we were children at home and Many flocks of early hatched pullets went into our mother’s kitchen and |gre now in a fall molt. This condi- asked for a sandwich we got a Diecs bio was brought about by the very of bread, well buttered, and a piece of ! warm fall weather; by forced produc- meet, There are probably 500,000 restaur- tion caused by using lights; by feeding too heavy with milk and by over-feed- ants and hamburger stands in the } ’ oh f i he pied United States. A great many of these ing.with sorateh feed causing the Ar s to develop a dull appetite for some are getting by witrout putting any buti- | : 3 ter into a sandwich. Do you realize | gramng and finally to lose Weight. as a producer that if you would “de- | To, bring the birds out OF this mol mand a buttered sandwi¢h you would jos soon as possible it is hecessary to encourage the operator to serve all |lnCcrease the laying Mash. consumption, his sandwiches in that way? One Feed 2, Moist laying mash once: .oF pound more butter used per day in | twice each day. For a while decrease each restaurant or hamburger ‘stand | the amount of scratch feed. Feed ex- would increase the demand for butter tra milk in the moist mash or in tne and dairy products. | condensed form. Increase the day to Are you a booster of butter 'don- jahout thirteen hours by use of lights. | Egg mash will develop feathers faster [than any other feed. As the flocks begin to come back to normal production (50 per cent), grad- nally increase the scratch feed until | you are giving them all they will | “clean up” daily. Reduce the amount ‘of moist laying mash fed daily and when production reaches 40 per cent ‘change to a moist fattening mash. Dis- {continue the use of extra milk when production reaches 50 per cent. o Keystone Poultrymen O- FALL MOLTS sumption? If so, why not demand a complete sandwich? 5 —_—0 Apple Maggot. This insect is closely related to the Mediterranean fruit fly. During _the month of July the fly lays its eggs in the fruit but makes no visible open- ing through the skin. The maggot which hatches from the egg matures as the fruit ripens and early sweet The flesh of the apple is tunnelled by the wina- ing burrows of the maggot and these assist in the breakdown of the fruit while in storage. Where infestations A PotineyIvanis poultryman won are heavy, winter varities are often | first prize in a national chick growing attacked. Arsenate of lead is used | contest sponsored by Poultry Tribune, as a poison for control of the fly but , Mount Morris, Illinois. will not harm the maggot in the fruit, | George Baggott, Wryalusing, won For that reason it is necessary to $500 by raising 98.27 per cent of his poison the fly before the eggs 8re 11035 chicks, keeping an excellent re- laid. Spraying is done at the ‘time I cor, and writing a good letter tell- of the emergence of the fly ' which ling of his experience. Al Samuel Roxberry Jr., Slatington | won $5 and honorable mention with his entry. Thirty-five other Pennsyl- where the arsenate sprays were omit- RESTAURANT . \} Y ~ fy 77 MAIN STREET No hi gh hat heat Srey Werte Lym Home Cooking [sary in accurately timing the sprays, 1 ted at this time that severe infesta- tion resulted. Emergence cages, which are neces- | hit TROUT SPAWN IN | MOUNTAIN STREAMS (vania poultrymen . were included | among the prize winners. are being arranged at several loca- Wins Chick Contest Second Thoughs By Meditator the tale, the physician observes none of the conventions of the _ordinar; M.D. Frequently - he interrupts a treatment to .take time to milk his Once he dropped his sy- he ‘I pet cow. fished for his equipment. SMART ADVERTISING It takes a clever person to keep up with the cigarette advertising these days. At an expenditure of severar million dollars, the big cigarette man- ufacturers are copying each arguments. Now, they are all toasted, they have all got cellophane wrappers and they are all helpful to your throat. As we figure it, they've all worked themselves right back to where they started and probably will have to begin all over again taking customers from each other. Person- ally, we've started smoking a pipe. HICKS Trying to pass through a ‘that was gaping at a string of fire l engines racing over 42nd street, New lyons, last Saturday night we were | reminded that the allegedly hard- 1 { boiled New Yorkers are much more crowd | eurious than such countrified persons | jas this correspondent. Certainly all | the people in the mob through which | | we tried to pass were not visitors to town. | {ONE HICK Nevertheless, there are sage indivi- duals who can spot visitors in New Jv in the wink of an eyelash. We Friave had squint-eyed fellows sidle up to us with all sorts of propositions. We try earnestly to put on a metro- politan front but these sour-faced chaps size us up as hicks with little difficulty. AMERICAN BEAUTY As residents of a district in which the representatives of many nations are neighbors, people in this region should find Edna Ferber's new novel, | American Beauty, particularly interes- ting. Miss Ferber has based her story on | the traditions of an old New England | family, from the time of Captain | |ringe in a spittoon in which there was an accumulation of months and the Ay PN long line of patients who invariably world’s goods, But "praise God, They are waiting in his office all day killed gznnot. take away the joy of our Sal- time while the venerable old man took the cuspidor into the back vard and otherm ADVERTISEMENT MOUNT ECHO TABERNACLE Did vou ever read in that most won- derful of all books, the Bible, some- thing about “What shall it profit a man if he shall gain the whole world and lose his soul 2” Some times we may lose the things we have of this vation something that the worle not give nor take Lord for that. In other words, the biggest business on earth is not making money. not gaining material things. It is Keeping men from losing their own soul. The world is in a bad fix. | don’t mean financially. Our spiritual problem. There is lots of wheat, more cotton than we need to clothe the world. Yet, we are going into a win- ter when people will suffer from cold and hunger. .Man has failed. God has done his part. The season has been glorious. The harvest bountiful. Man has got the world in an awful mess. Man cannot put the world right. Our hope is in God. Man is beginning to realize that he has fail- ed, that is the only hopeful sign. This is the day of opportunity for the Christian leaders. So few seem to realize that now is the time to do real revival. That is our only hope. God wants your heart. If he can get your heart he will comb out the kinks in your head. John 14:6 “And I will pray the Father and he shall send business for God. What we need isa you another comforter that he may abide with -you forever.” away What a wonderful sromise. And that promise is fulfilled. You say If a man dies shall he live again? Yes. {for the body falls and the spirit rises to the one who cave it. For death is only a change of residence from this old world to a better '=d above where there is peace, ioy and happi- ness, where the trees are always in bloom and the roses never fade. Deo you want such a home? If you do get on the ship of Zign. Jesus is the captain, he will take vou safely through. asked what she thouaht of death, she said: If | die | ‘will be with Jesus, and if 1 live, Jesus will be with me. Did vou ever hear tell of a better salvation? You know when man came from the hand of God in Creation’s moun he was pronounced every good. But before he cot out of the garden he ran off the track, and dragged the whole human race down with him. And since that time God has made a way that men mizht be redeemed and the only way is through Jesus’ blood. Noah built an ark that saved eight. Jesus built a bridae from earth to heaven, that can save the whole hu- man race. John 3:16—For God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten son that whosoever believ- eth on him should not perish, but have everlasting life. . | Don’t foraet, be sure vour sins will [find vou out, thinas are not now as | It is A scotch woman, while dying, was : Oakes, who settled in Connecticut and {they should be but sooner or later the | tions in the country to capture the flies for ME!" a — ITZY heat contrap- tions may be all right for the fellow who don’t care what his heat costs. Give me coal for real econ- omy and constant winter comfort. Clarence Shupp Center Moreland 50-R-16 CT 1 30s TO NT SATE 3 7 VIER EH 27 te Special Dinners Home Made Pies | Just Like Home | Phil and Letha Will Be § Glad To See You : Phone Kingston 7-9422 Ha Se — a ——— A a SSA Sh gr | I ;mature they will burrow down into ‘barrel to capture the flies as they | (Continued from Page 3) placing about a bushel of infested |!¥» Benjamin Kane, of Susquehanna, apples in a barrel which has had the hooked a mammoth bass. The big fel- bottom removed. As the maggots |10W tipped the scales at five and one- | hait pounds, and is said to have been ione of the largest bass landed in that | as they emerge. These are made by | | | the soil to purpate. Early next sum- Hh : : mer a screen will be placed over the |Vicinity in a long time. emerge. Mr. Dill, Entomologist at | na River has yielded fine catches of ge. Mr. s % | State College at or- | bass and wall-eyed pike this fall, re- | S ge, i chards of N. O. Fassett, placed traps Forkston; | ports indicate. [ Anglers fishing the rivers are find- ing riffle chubs exceptional bait at this! § time of the year. Some of the finest |small mouth bass and wall eyed pike | landed have struck at this active bait. { | Shiners, run chubs, and crawfish also Quick License Service lare favorites with live bait fishermen. | Lake Street | Bait casters are finding spinners and | DALLAS, PA ‘plugs effective lures for pickerel in| y . : | James F. Besecker Notary Public jmany instances. | | | | | TI-O.GA FEED SERVICE THE QUESTION OF COST is probably very much in your mind as the Fall and Winter feeding season approaches: INVESTIGATE TI-O-GA FEED SERVICE before you make a decision. You will be surprised at what savings you will make by using this method as compared with any other. TALK THIS OVER WITH YOUR TIOGA-EM- PIRE DEALER who can give you full details and feeding instructions. DEVENS MILLING CO. DALLAS, PENNA. KUNKLE, PENNA. Feeds Manufactured by TIOGA-EMPIRE FEED MILLS, Inc. WAVERLY, N. Y. make easy work of chore time. You can clean your barn with less work and in less time Jamesway. The Big Jamesway ; Carrier can be lowered to the floor which makes it easy for boys. No more pushing of heavily loaded wheelbarsows or carrying of heavy feed. Jamesway Carriers cut barn work in half, Come in and see these carriers. We are your Jamesway Deal- er and will be glad to show you the James~ way Equipment — carriers — water cups — stalls—stanchions—that cut work, increase milk yield and dairy profits, _ 7 J. R. OLIVER HARDWARE Dallas, Pa INT LLL 31, 7 RE oa Conowingo Lake on the Susquehan- | i | home, which he remembers as an ag- | |FARMERS STATE BANK OF SHICK- established the estate, to his great- grandson, son of aristocrat and im- { migrant, holding tightly and proudly [to the remnants of tradition and pro- i perty. | And old man returns to his boyhoad ricultural section, farmed by goo | New England stock. He finds, in 1930, the section is controlled. by Poles, | whose women work in the fields and | | |wrong will be richted, the wicked shall (fall, the dark will be lizchted up, and the cood will prevail. Death does not ‘end it all, only a starting point, when |you have an opportunity to witness (for Christ tell them there is pardon [through Jesus’s ..blood. ..Salvation | means something saved from the /wrath of God to come. | A snow flake is a tiny thina, it will melt on an infant’s hand. but enough of them piled up on a railroad track will ston a locomotive. And enough neglects of individuals will block a re- vival, or nut a church on a standstill, Jesus has nromised you another com- forter, and he will abide with you whose broken English is a startling | forever, Nellie left home, she told her sound for the old man who was lonely for the clipped accents of the Yan- kees. to decide if the union of races has been | Miss Ferber leaves the reader damaging or beneficial. The book is | thoroughly worth reading. o | Wise Spending Careful ‘and wise spending will help | solve our economic problems and ‘will be of untold benefit to the farmer. Our l troubles are not caused by the spend- | ing of money, but because it was spent i unwisely. | | NOTICE OF LIQUIDATION Notice is hereby given that the un- dersigned is closing up its affairs, and creditors are notified to present claims for payment on or before February 1, 1932. Petition for dissolution will be presented to the Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne Co., on February 1, 1932 at 10 o'clock a. m, SHINNY BY: O. S. GREGORY, PRESIDENT BEACH SHOEMAKER, SECRETARY C. W. Dickson, Attorney, Trust Company Building, Berwick, Pa. October 16, 1931. ° 2-1-32 JOHN T. JETER REGISTERED ENGINEER Surveying Maps Estimating Center Hill Road Phone Dallas 174-R-3 Mother that she wanted to no out into the world, away from home, and she packed up her clothing and went, and after a long time in the world of sin by herself. she said | wonder if Moth- er is still livinz? | believe I will get ready and ago back home, so she star- ted, and after a long journey she reached the old homestead, she took hold of the latch of the nate and opened it. She said the click of the old latch sounded dood to her, if Mother is only livina? It was dark and as ‘she found her way up to the door, ‘she reached for the latch and 1% was hot there, for the door was open. It was a bitter cold winter night, she looked around and saw a dim light burning on the table and she called, “Mother, Oh, Mother are you here. An old grey haired lady started down stairs with a light in her hand and said: “Yes Nellie your Mother is here.” And when she came into the kitchen, Nellie said: Oh, Mother “I have come back” and kissed her. What does all this mean: the door open on a cold winter night like this, Nellie, that door has not been closed day or night since you went away, I thought if vou ever came back, you would find the door open and a wel- come home for you, and if any of you are out in the world of sin, Jesus Is ready to welcome you. For he says any one that will come unto me will in no wise cast out, and if your Mother or Father is living don’t wait until they are gone and then say, “I wish 1 had my life to live over again I would of done better by them. If you want to give them roses, do it while they are living, they can enjoy them then for after they are dead it will not do any good, for they cannot see them, nor can they smell them. I am alad | can say “Praise God if my parents were to live over again, | did the best | could for them while they were living.” Revelation 3:20— Behold | stand at the door and knock, if any man hear my voice and wilt open the door, I will come into him, and sup with him and he with me. H. 8S. LEEK, Shavertown, Pa. Advt. Have you bought your No-Tresspas. sing signs? We are selling lots of them. ; i { { eh 2