Washington Sentries Have Many Amusing Encounters ASHINGTON.—Contrary to general belief, ington's military establishments, bridges automatons. They can and do saunter, talk, human beings. But not on duty. But if you can chum up with the chap in khaki at an opportune time, you may 7 3 all about 7 AW the sentries guarding Washe and public buildings are not laugh and otherwise act like be told some funny things strange prowlers seen on the midnight = trick, sinister-seeming contrivances V/ oy discovered under culver’s, officers ’ fs whose identity Is mistaken and other (LS things. dr A few nights since a half-frozen i x \ sentry before the side gate of a big ( J = v military establishment here beheld a le, Si R— solitary and stooping figure creeping along and eying the portal dubiously. This kept up several minutes, and finally the guard thought it time to interfere. He approached the suspect. around here?” he asked after the sad-eyed person swaying slightly. but the ol’ “Wlrat do you want had halted, as directed, “Wanna go on in house, the “suspect.” “That's Uncle Sam's house, had a “stew” and not a spy. “’Sh my house,” insisted the one with the “merry mucilage.” *“C'n tell {t by front gate.” It took ten minutes to persuade him that he was wrong, There is a famous bridge near Washington where several months ago a man leaped down to his death. It is closely guarded, for it carries a big water main. Not long after the tragic occurrence, a night wanderer on the bridge came near losing his liberty when a guard saw him stop and commence search- ing carefully on the sidewalk. “Whaddye want, a good place to jump from or to put a bum?” man in uniform. “I want my fountain pen I dropped; got a match?’ was the answer. The pen was found soon, but remembering tales of explosive pens dis- covered in abandoned German trenches, the guard nearly wrecked the spiller before satisfied it was not full of T. N. T. New Rules for Stenographers in One War Office doesn’t believe in instructions savoring my friend,” replied the sentry, seeing he NE office of the war department ¢ of red tape. So regulations have been evolved for stenographers. increased efficiency is expected to result. Here are the rules to be followed: 1—Conserve air by eliminating some of the unnecessary conversation, 2—Conserve shoe leather by re- maining at your desk; RULES For ~~ ITENOGRAPHERS KEEP YOUR FEET OFF STA DFR > a floorwalker. PON? Fons K 3—If you're hungry, go out and YOUR ast Every get something to eat; don't hang 0 MINUTES around chewing the rag. Dor T TAKE §:- o : 4—We have wheatless and meat- =, xb - AT Ah Nz less days; let's have Keep your feet on the floor, not on your desk. 5—Don’t acquire the saving habit to such an with your pockets full of paper clips every night. Just because you write shorthand, don’t think you have got to be light-fingered. 6—If you feel that you must whistle during office hours, please whistle something German, so that the rest of the office will have an excuse for drop- ping a typewriter on your head. T—Any person or persons having as a part of their lunch cheese will kindly adjourn to the roof until the ordeal is over. strong reason for this. 8—If you feel that you must take home a typewriter now and then, please leave the desk. We can get new typewriters, but desks are hard to get. 9—Just because they are using a lot of ammunition in Europe, don’t think that you have to powder your nose every ten minutes. 10—Make the world safe for democracy; stop throwing milk bottles out of the windows. 11—As Abraham Lincoln said In his famous Gettysburg speech: “Eight Hours a day for the man who works, Seven hours a day for the government clerks.’ 12—Save a loaf a week. Just because you have a crust, don’t say you can loaf around this office, even if you are well bred. Don’t come in here with a bun on, either, feetless There is a ’ Her Darling Boy Was Only a “Mexican Fish Hound” yelping these words, a woman street, made for the latter She had a companion with €¢ H, THERE'S my darling boy!” Fairly standing on Tenth street, just north of F thoroughfare as fast as her feet would carry her. her, and this woman, too, set a hot pace in the direction of the afternoon promenade. When a woman suddenly yells out on a crowded thoroughfare, “Oh, there’s my darling boy,” you sort 0 get interested in the darling one. When the two women got to F street they stepped across the side- walk to the curb. There was an au tomobile standing there, with a young man and a dog on the front seat. The woman in search of her dare ling boy threw her arms around the meck of the dog and said: “Oh, darling thing! You're the prettiest dog in town.” The wecman had a good eye for dogs. “What kind of a dog is he?” asked the woman. The chauffeur winked at the dog and replied calmly: “Mexican fish hound.” Cook Becomes an Ardent Hooverizer N ALL the land no housewife follows more closely the rulings of the Unlted States food administration than does Mrs. Herbert C. Hoover, wife of the The Hoover cook, who has a wide reputation in most exclusive circles of Washington, was one of the first converts to the conser- OH, YOU DARLING Dafters Mrs. Hoover’s administrator. food 1 'SPoSE I'LL re vation of food, and one of the most Pi ive T0 DC ardent. A prominent Washington J AS MISTER woman remarked soon after the HOOVER Hoover household was established in the national capital: “You needn't tell me the Hoovers save food. I know the cook, and she couldn't be induced to economize.” Nevertheless, after a time of sor- row and of stress of wounded profes- sional pride the cook became under the direction and persuasion of Mrs. Hoover, as enthusiastic over producing delicious meals with the least possible outlay of wheat, meat, sugar and fats as the strictest “Hooverite” could wish. Almost every day is meatless day with the Hoovers, poultry, occasionally gaine replacing the beef or other meats that may be shipped across the sea. The servants, of course, have to have meat oftener, but for the family perhaps once a week, generally less frequently, there is a roast for dinner and what is left over is carefully utilized in some form for luncheon the next day. Sometimes a chop is provided at that meal for the ten-year-old son, who Is recovering from a recent illness. Meat is never bought for soups, which are made from vegetables or the parts of poultry not served—the wing tips, feet, neck and gizzard. Not only are Tuesdays and Saturdays porkless days, but the ot her five days of the week as well, despite the confessed fondness of the food admin- istrator for his breakfast bacon. Pork, either as ham, bacon, sausage, lard or in other forms, never enters the big red brick house on Massachusetts ave- nue, where the Heovers are domiciled. For cooking various vegetable oils or other suistitutas are used for lard and butter. SAYS — +33 sea food or ink- | Greatly | A | ly and seriously when it is deficient remember you | i | CCUTE are supposed to be a stenographer, not | 8r¢ secured. whole country | than 1,500 quarts, and this difference 1s woman ish waitin’,”” forlornly replied queried the | MOUNT JOY STAR AND NEWS, MOUNT JOY, PA. | RASPBERRY PLANT REQUIRES MOISTURE TO RIPEN CROP DURING SUMMER SEASON WOODEN SUPPORT TO HOLD CANES UPRIGHT. (Prepared by the United States Depart- ment of Agriculture.) From the time raspberry plants are set, they need an ample supply of mois- ture and they are affected more quick- than most other fruit plants. In the sections where the highest average yields of red raspberries are obtained, often 6,000 quarts of frult per acre The average for the however, is not more | due almost wholly to a difference in extent that you go home |! the moisture supply. In the sections | referred to as giving the highest yields, | ep S shes niform and days. | & deep soll furnishes a u e ample supply of moisture at all times. To secure the best results, therefore, the grower should, by tillage and by supplying humus, maintain a uniform | and ample moisture content in his soil, | not only during the growing and ripen- | tng of the fruit but also while the limburger | canes are developing. Some growers make it a regular practice each year to mulch thelr fields to a depth of sev- eral inches with straw, leaves or green hay. When this practice is followed, the cost is great, but the moisture sup- ply is retained well. In semiarid and arid regions where {rrigation is practiced, the fruiting sea- son is longer than in most humid or nonirrigated sections. The use of Irri- gation in the Eastern states also has extended the picking season and made the plants thriftier. Larger yields of fruit of the Ranere raspberry in the | summer and fall have followed the ir- | to occur, made it st. rigation of that variety and profitable in some sections of the E In the humid sections of the KE: ern states, irrigation should be used chiefly or entirely during the growth and ripening of the frult and will pay only when an ample moisture supply cannot be maintained by tillage. As the raspberry ripens its crop during the summer when droughts are likely some growers have found ir- rigation profitable. Intercropping. In order to reduce the cost of inten- sive cultivation of a raspberry planta- tion during the first year after setting, | other crops that need cultivation dur- | TOWS, you | | potato, ing the spring and early summer months may be grown between the Among the crops best suited to this use are the tomato, cabbage, cauli- flower, bean, pea, summer squash and Grain chops should not be | used, as they are not cultivated and will take moisture and plant food needed by the raspberry plants. The second season no other crop should be grown, as the raspberry roots should occupy all the ground. Tillage. Tillage in raspberry fields should be thorough and regular in order to con- serve moisture. Except in rainy weather, cultivator or harrow should be used at least once each week up to picking time. Some growers consider it profitable to use it as often as twice each week, and this is sometimes nec- essary during periods of extended drought. The cultivation should stir the soll to a depth of two to three inches only, as part of the raspberry roots are shallow. Many growers short- en the cultivator or harrow teeth which run next to the plants, so as to disturb the young feeding roots near the sur- face as little as possible. Later tillage is for the purpose of keeping down weeds and grasses. The | fields should be free of weeds during the winter season, as many kinds start quickly in the spring and are difficult to destroy after the soil is in condition to work. Autumn tillage, however, tends to develop new growth, which is tender and somewhat more subject to svinter injury than the older growth. Autumn tillage, therefore, should be avoided as much as possible where there is danger from severe winters. Maintenance of Fertility. The use of fertilizers in raspberry plantations is governed by the same principles that apply to their use with othe fruits. As soils vary in the quan- | t { tity and availability of the plant food they contain, the fertilizer problem is a local one which each grower must solve for himself. By using varying amounts of the different elements of plant food on different plats and keep- ing a record of the yields, each grower can determine readily what kinds and quantities of fertilizer to apply. Good management, however, will in- sure a large amount of humus in the soil at all times. It is especially de- sirable that the humus supply be ample when the plantation is first set out. It is much easier and cheaper to fur- nish the humus by means of cover crops and stable manure before the plantation is set than afterward when the plants are growing. Moreover, by such extra care before setting it is pos- sible to secure a fair crop of fruit the second season. Because it costs so much to care for a plantation for a vear it will pay well to have the soil in a high state of fertility before the plants are set, so that the plantation may be brought Into bearing a year sooner than would be possible other- wise, Use of Fertilizers. In many sections no fertilizers are used on bearing plantations. In the older raspberry sections, however, some commercial fertilizer and stable manure are used, and it is considered profitable to use them. Stable manure, however, usually has given the best re- sults and experiments have shown that, where obtainable, it furnishes the best means of enriching the soils on which the experiments have been tried. Stable it. | manure not only furnishes some plant st- food but supplies large quantities of humus. If an annual application of about ten tons per acre is made, the humus supply should be maintained, and with proper treatment in other ways the field should be kept at a high state of productiveness. Some soils and some sections will need a larger quantity and some less than ten tons per acre. A heavier application, how- ever, should not be made unless it has | been found by sirable, as it is possible to stimulate the growth of canes and leaves to such an extent as to reduce productiveness. Cover crops may be used to maintain the humus supply. Oats seeded at the rate of three bushels per acre in late summer should give a dense stand of material to turn under before winter, or they may be left to serve as a cov- ering during the winter and plowed un- der in the spring. Cowpeas, veteh, the various clovers, and other crops also may be used in the raspberry plantation. Care must be growing the vetch and clovers, as they live through the winter and it may prove costly to eradicate them. ever, if they are drilled in between the rows come too rank in the spring, little ble should be experjencad, actual trial to be de- | taken in | How- | and turned under before they be- | trou- | CRIBBING Is HARD TO CURE | One Man Succeeded 4 Fastening an | Old Bicycle Tire Along Top of the Manger. Cribbing is a vice with some horses that is hard to cure. One man says he succeeded by running a piece of iron pipe through and fastening this along the top of the manger. The horse didn't like the taste of the rubber and soon forgot | the bad habit. HELP MAKE EGG EGGS AND MEAT Certain Amount of Table Scraps and Kitchen Waste Which Has Feed- ing Value for Fowls. Let the table scraps help make eggs and meat. In every household no mat- ter how economical the housewife, there tain amount of table SCraps Hitchen waste which has iue, but which, if not fed, finds its way into the garbage pall is a and an old bicycle tire | | the maximum amount of food for the | family -————— HOME TOWN CONTROL OF TREES IN CITY Los Angeles Newspaper Advocates Commission Which Should Wield Absolute Power. | What we need, and need badly | right now, is a tree commission have ing absolute control of all street planting. The trees shouid be taken | away from the owners of abutting property. He should neither be held responsible for them nor allowed to | touch them, any further than any other resident of the city. Why has the city taken over street, curb and | sidewalk, and allowed a narrow strip of private property to intervene? Why does the city partially control it? Is a divided interest and responsibility conducive to the best results? A study of our street planting will quick- ly bring an answer. Not one in a hundred is competent to choose the richt tree for a street. The same per- centage will care for them properly, and about the same number will agree on the same tree. No resident of Los Angeles need be told of the outcome of such laxity of control, or, rather such absence of control. The need for a change is great, and the problem cries to high heaven for relief. When will it be solved, and solved aright? How long are we to continue under present conditions? All know a change must come—why delay? Our charter framers may help us out by providing for a tree commission in | full control, with a corps of trained | experts, to give us a city in the near future of which our residents for all time may be proud as the really city beautiful.—Los Angeles Times. PUTTING YARD TO BEST USE Bulletin of Department of Agriculture Gives Some Valuable Information to Those Interested. The best methods to follow and the best crops to grow in order to make a small area like a back yard produce are discussed in a publication of the United States department of agriculture, Farmers’ Bulletin 818, “The Small Vegetable Garden.” In addition to furnishing information in regard to the fundamental principles of gardening, this bulletin describes in detail the culture of all of the common garden plants, and also furnishes a ta- ble showing in a concise form the quantity of seed needed for each kind of vegetable, the proper way and times to plant, and the material required to produce the crop. To make a small produce 2 large amount of food, the bulletin | points out that not only every foot of | | area available space must be utilized, but that late or succession crops must be planted as soon as the earlier plants have been removed. To carry on gar- dening in this intensive way requires careful planning in advance, and it is recommended that a detailed diagram of the garden be drawn up and the va- that it is planned to put each portion to, throughout the grow- ing season, be clearly indicated. On this plan the success or failure of the various enterprises should be noted and the plan itself kept as a guide for the following year. { rious uses Encouragement Counts. In every town there are a few of taste and purpose who will take the helm. To thoroughly arouse public in- | terest is a long and arduous task. | Make a beginning. Results will at- tract attention and gain support. It was Gladstone who said: “One ex- ample is worth a thousand argu- | ments.” Organize, interest the local { press, interest this department, your efforts and progress will cheerfully be given place and encouragement in these columns. Every year of the past decade Mr. Reed written thanks for substantial aid given “Reed and Riverside” in city beautifi- cation. In a very recent letter, in re- viewing the progress of street plant- ing in Riverside, he writes: “I re- member very distinctly the very effi- cient ald I received through the ‘City | Jeautiful’ department of the Times.” Let us hear of your w ;, no matter how humble or how small the com- munity—aid and encouragement will be extended to all alike.—Los Angeles Times. has Landscape Gardening. Landscape gardening has ceived the attention that it We have not studied the kinds of rose |! that thrive best here, nor have we ex- | ercised care in preparin not re- | deserves g the soil for | thrifty growth and blooming. Most people have merely dug holes in the | ground and planted rose bushes with- | | out adding the elements on which ros- es thrive. Then we wonder in the blooming season why they do not pro- duce fine flowers. Novel Street Construction. In one of the larger Michigan cities i they are trying a novel type of street | construction. Pavements 18 feet wide are being laid, confined between head- ers of concrete built as a part of the concrete foundation along the of the street. A strip along each side of the pavement and the curb is built of earth and gravel, as are the shoul- ders of the paved country highway. cents | { | geen you that way.” | ery. This tonlie, | you feel * | Pierce's. | IT know of nothing better | 4 Save 9%c. @ By Buying ow @ Ever Reliable” ( ¥en ‘e, v PoM\© No advance in price for this 20- oid remedy 25¢ for 24 tablets— \ cold tablets now 30c for 21 tablets / Figured on proportionate cost per tablet, you save 9%c when you buy Hill's —~Cures Cold ~~ in 24 hours—grip in 3 days — Money ) back ifit fails. 24 Tablets for 25¢. At any Drug Store ‘Mother Gray's Powders Benefit Many Children Thousands of Moth- ers have found MOTHER GRAY'S SWEET POW- DERS an excellent rem- edy for children com- plaining of Headaches, Colds, Constipation, Feverishness, Stomach Troubles and Bowel Ir- regularities from which children suffer at this season. These powders are easy and pleasant to take and excel- lent results are accomplished by their use. Used by Mothers for 3r years. Sold by Druggists everywhere, 25 cents. TRADE MARE | Trial package FREE. Address, THE MOTHER GRAY CO., Le Roy, N. ¥. Have you RHEUMATISM Lumbago or Gout? Take RHEUMACIDF to remove thecause and drive the polson from the system. “RHEUMACIDR ON THR INSIDE PUTS BHEUNATISM ON THE OUTSIDE” At All Druggists Jas. Baily & Sor, Wholesale Distributors Baltimore, Md. Comfort Baby WithCuticura Soap 25¢. Ointment 25 and 50c. . cu PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM A toilet preparation of merit. Helps to eradicate dandruff. For Restoring Color and i Beauty toGray or Faded 500. and $1.00 at Druggists, Exact Spot. “Did the strike the witness in the heat of “No sir; he struck him prisoner passion?” in the jaw.” be maintained where rfield Tea h cannot »d habit. Ga Good healt there is a comnstipa I overcomes constipation. Adv. Not Certain. r, do you love me still?" tell? I've never yet “My den ‘How can 1 smoke brings tears to reader. A volume of the eves of every handle the guns, and sweep over the enemy trenches, takes strong nerves, good rich blood, a good stomach, liver and kidneys. When th time comes, the man with red blood in his veins “is up and at it.” Ile hasiron To drive a tank, | nerves for hardships—an interest in his | work | feel when you have tak That's the way you en a blood and grips him. nerve tonic, made up of Blood root, Golden Seal root, Stone root, Cherry | bark, and rolled into a sugar-conted tablet and sold in sixty-cent vials by al- { most all druggists for past fifty years Pierce's Golden Medical Discov- in liquid or tablet form, as Dr. fs just what you need this spring to ’ : I = give you vim, vigor and vitality. At the fag end of a hard winter, no wonder run-down,” blue, ont of sorts. “Medienal Discovery” of Di Pon's wait! To-day is the A little “pep,” and you Try this day to begin! i laugh and live. The best means to oil the 11achinery | of the body, put tone into the liver, kidneys 1 circulatory system, is to | first practice a good house- tl is leasant Pellets, and st once a week 10 Cc t ect of intestines. + Ye 1 thus system—expel the poisons well. Now is the th to « 1 Glve yourself fA Spri cl ing Ady GD DON'T LET WORMS EAT YOU R PROFITS them Dit Worm Powder | Frice A BAD ‘COUGH Take it in hand, and is risky to th by promptly taking safeguard