The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, April 26, 1928, Image 2

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    TZH
10
“Well, what the deuce—
lYou’re not doing this yourself,
'Miss Jennejr!" the young man
cried, having the grace to be
•hoeked at the discovery. He
had easily accepted the eleva
tion of the housemaid to the
pom;ion of manager of Cherry
i House, hut he didn’t quite
consider Iter the actual hostess,
nor had Adelaide for a moment
made that concession. When
the uniform had been replaced
bv one of the straight frocks of
white or blue denim which Jo
Wore so successfully, Bradley
“Where'a the lady with the
brogue?" he inquired. “Not
that I care—I /hope she’s no
where around. Hut you ought
not to he doing this."
“Oughtn’t I? I think so
myself, but I’d rather do it
than keep Mrs. O’Grady up so
late."
“I.nto?" Bradley gave his
Watch face a careless glance.
“A quarter to 11! I suppose
that’s considered almost dawn
‘tip here. Where I come from
jthe night’s so young at inid
biight it can’t stay out alone, it
Bias to have lot’s of company."
“It seems to ho having it up
tier* tonight."
“I say—you don’t like mak
ing those sandwiches, do you,
SMins Jenney?”
The corner of her mouth took
jon a hit of a curve, hut it could
(hardly be called n smile. “Not
•a hit, Mr. Sturgis.”
“Then why do you do it!”
. “Not to be too disagree
able.”
“Could you be disagree
able?”
“Very.”
Bradley considered her.
;“No\v, I wouldn’t say disagree
lable,” he argued, “Interost
'ing, stimulating, intriguing,
[provoking, even—fascinating.
•But hardly disagreeable. No,
decidedly not.”
The word fascinating had a
connotation in Jo’s mind which
[made her feel like smiling, hut
she preserved her dignity.
“Would you mind not sitting
so close to the mayonnaise!”
she suggested.
Bradley seized upon the dish.
“Couldn’t I help vou put it
on!”
“No indeed. If you won’t
pet it on yourself, that will be
'ell T eaT ask.”
“Well, anyhow, can’t I
tnix the punch!”
“I’ve no doubt you will—
J.nter. At present I prefer to
<lo it. Then I can at least, eon
jtifine to feel innocent when the
bowl leaves my hands.”
He laughed. “I infer you
don’t approve the oxtrn touch
es of charm it’s likely to ac
quire at, mine!”
She shook her head. “Not in
the proportions you are likely
to use.”
lie eyed her with increasing
Interest. “I’ve been wanting
to strike a spark from you.” lie
asserted, “and now I’m getting
A not ton nf (lift U' il ir in it T
believe it would bp worth while
to give you a real shook, just
to see the sparks fly. All
right, hero goes: Do you know
you’re about the most gorgeous
1hing I’ve seen in a long timet
That profile of yours—it’s sim
ply exquisite. As for your full
face—”
She turned the full face upon
him, amt the look of amused
contempt in it hit him rather
bard. Ho really hadn’t sup
posed she would know how to
give him just that look—the
sort he fully approved even
though it stung. She didn’t
answer a word, but a slap upon
the cheek or a glassful of wa- 1
ter in the face from the kind of
g •! who might he found mak
ing sandwiches in some kitchen
H >t her own couldn’t have end- i
ed his ime of such methods of
a; nroach more quickly.
“I beg your pardon,” he
«»' 1, laughing with chagrin.
” f course 1 didn’t mean that
— though it’s true enough as
•n rvat on. Hut \ mi don’t
A«« and ('un.tbUity.
J^rcm the New York World.
Srcniary of Labor Janna i.
fJavu, told the empke,< » of a great
ttuUniiKCturUig o.uuiuimr.tit that a
Oiaii as a worker it at hta peak at
60 and bi loung and capable aa
ever *t SO.
Per ha pa It la well to make thl*
pis.n. ntough the lirC'natty aeettu
sbaiud it die Ugh: of he record
A very large per ren: of the really
IT eat m* n who »re dr i.g ‘he work
at the world today are i«tl M It
}iw always been true. It la truer
V ay than ever be.tse twtauae ast
r t.id tnprovU rondc on* of llv
lir.| mw added much to the man
gg i. nnaa life. Secretary I>jvta
like it from me, and I don’t
blame you. On my word,
though. Miss Jenney, the aver
age girl of these dava likes com
pliments, the balder the better.
She doesn’t resent ’em. As a
matter of fact, she misses ’em
if she doesn't get ’em. But
you’re not the average girl—I
can see that.”
“You will see a number of
tilings you haven’t seen before,
Mr. Sturgis,” she said evenly,
“if you stay here. You may
take these sandwiches into the
dining room now, please. I’ll
have the puneh ready in a min
ute. Your fripnds may come
and get them there, or the rnen
may take them out to the oth
ers. You may leave everything
on the table when you’re
through, only I’ll ask you to
put out the candles.”
“Oh, see here. You’ll come
out and meet our friends?”
lie didn’t know how he came
to ask it; certainly he knew
that if lie could actually suc
ceed in getting her to go out'
with him there would he the
devil to pay with Adelaide. Rut
he hadn’t reckoned with Jo
Jenney.
“There’s no reason why I
should meet your friends,” she
sail! pleasantly, “if you’ll ex
cuse me.” ,
‘‘They’re an awfully jolly
sort,” he persisted. ‘‘And
you’d make a hit, you know
Just as you arc. If you could
see yourself you’d know that
nobody they’ve got out there
can touch you.”
‘‘I’m quite sure nobody
can,” she replied, and this time
there was a gleam in her eyes
which he didn’t know whether
to consider mischief or malice.
Anyhow, he concluded, she
wns’nt so easy to play with as
he had expected. lie went re
luctantly hack to the group
outside, hut Jo Jenney re
mained in his mind, a clear vis
ion. He said to himself, as he
glanced nppraisinglv from one
to another of the three girls
whom Adelaide had asked to
offset the nine men, that there
really wasn’t one there who
could hold a rose colored can
dle to Miss Jenney. They knew
how to dress—he’d have to
hand that to them. Hut let
somebody dress and make up
Joe as they were dressed and
made up, and—well—they’d all
turn green, his sister Adelaide
greenest of all.
His eyes sparkled as he
thought about it. Rich, deep
yellow—almost ornngc—that
was the color he’d like to see
her in, and a gold band across
her marvelous dark hair! And
instead, she was wearing a
more or less rumpled white lin
en, with a spot of raspberry
juice on the sleeve. He sup
posed she’d put that on to do
this work in. for she’d been
wearing a little thin blue frock
at dinner, with a lovely line at
neck and upper arm. Showed
cliii Irnmir 1. om .1 w.\nn .. f „
. " » no, itm a
all, at least for the country, if
she could look such a duchess
in a thing Adelaide would sniff
at—Adelaide who, at the mo
ment, was sheathed in jade
green with a string of—Ade
laide called them pearls! Brad
ley happened to know they
weren’t.
-To stood at her unlighted
window looking out upon the
revellers and thinking not of
them ‘hut of Mrs, Schuyler
Chase. Tt was time that word
was had from her. with news
of her husband. She was hop
ing with all her heart that it
would he a good word, and that
before long Mrs. Chase would
he returning, with or without
her husband. Just what Jo’s
own position would then be
come she had no idea, hut she
knew it couldn't he asked of
her to nut on the uniform
again. She was very sure that
she would he retained in some
capacity, and that the house
hold would resume its normal
course—sinless the worst should
cites EdUon and George p Baker
as Illustration* of men past BO. who
are achieving greatly. Dunn; the
war an astonishing number wf the
statesmen and generals a # far
beyond M. Htndenbunr. I ’irtng
to. u doing hi* greatest an | most
ednuratte trsr* now, and .a was
'an oldman 14 wear* ago when
Ute war began and with mm a the
ft-Id at the head of a p earful
aitny John tguinry Adam* hteved
his greatest work after he t- .d left
the presidency and ante? • I con*
: great an old man. when it was
written of him that
WhUe aged he is sa Iran of umS
have happened abroad, and
that seemed impossible. She
vividly remembered her one
impression of Schuyler Chase,
on that never-to-be-forgotten
Sunday when she had beard
him preach. He had seemed so
vital, so powerful, so much a
messenger from Heaven, it
couldn’t be that the frame
which housed such beauty and
power could be as mortal as
other flesh!
Next morning, while Brad
lev and Adelaide still slept, Jo
took the wide awake baby
Schuyler out to tumble upon
the grass under the copper
beech in the early coolness, for
the day promised to be hot.
She noted a change in the as
pect of the house next door,
whose windows looked out so
closely upon the domain of
Cherry House. The lower
blinds of the front rooms had
been thrown back, and not only
that, the windows themselves
were open. Could it possible
be that Miss Lucinda—with
whom by now Jo had a nodding
acquaintance, supplemented by
an occasional greeting when
the two found themselves near
by in the adjoining gardens—
could he cleaning that long
closed parlor, and had forgot
ten to shut, the unscreened win
dows? "Why, the flies would
come in, and Miss Lucinda
would suffer acutely! Jo was
thinking that she ought to hail
♦ fncti/limio hnneAwifo mid ac.
quaint her with her error, when
a most unwonted sound sud
denly came from beyond those
open windows—the light run of
skilled fingers over piano keys,
and then a man’s voice sing
ing.
The piano notes were tink
ling ones—as she heard them
Jo could visualize the old fash
ioned square piano from which
they indubitably proceeded.
But the voice rose softly then
mountingly above them, and
hearing that, one could not re
member them at all. It, was a
perfect male voice, a rich ten
or, singing something very un
usual—or so it seemed. Per
haps it was because the spu>n
did tones proceeded from a
place so unlikely to harbor
such a voice, the austere habi
tation of two spinsters with
drawn by circumstances from
almost all contact with the
world outside, even the tiny
world of the small town in
which they lived. Jo listened
intently. The song ended, the
singer strolled to the window,
lighting a cigaret, and flung
the match away upon the grass,
male fashion. The next in
stant his careless glance fell up
on the pair outside, less than
20 feet distant. Jo’s eyes
were upon him, her gaze trans
fixed by his apparition. For
a handsome young man, clothed
in white flannels, smoking a
cigaret at the open window of
Miss Lucinda Hunt’s tomb-like
best parlor—it seemed to Jo
that it must be tomb-like,
though she had never seen it—
was an apparition that might
hold any guze until it became a
stare.
“Good morning!” said the
stranger lightly, with a smile,
as he noted the elder of the two
upon the grass.
“Good morning!” responded
.To, returning the smile, as one
must return anything so at
tractive. • *1
“I suppose you're Mrs.
Chase’s sister,” went on the
agreeable voice. “So, as I’m
the Misses Hunt’s nephew,
we’re already properly intro
duced, comme ca!”
“Not quite properly, since
I’m not Mrs. Chase’s sister.”
“Her guest, then, 1 presume.
No! It doesn’t matter, so that
we tell each other what a glor
ious day this is, before the sun
reduces it to servitude. Did
you agree with my invocation
to it!”
“The day! Yes indeed—if
that was what it was. I could
n’t get all the words.”
“Couldn’t you, indeed!”
The young man threw back his
head and laughed. “There’s a
i blister for mv pride. I thought
; I possessed an enunciation
| equal to that of the best itue
I tionerr in Cher-y Hills, and
None of the youth can cope with
him
It U manifestly absurd for an em
ployer to determine hu attitude to
1 ward his men by their sir Their
work alone should determine and
It la determining more and more.
me——— - »» —i -
A rhue of U«
FTom the Detroit News
Joarpti Chapman plead**', guilty
to a killing in llltnou and after ex
amination by the Judge was sen
tenced to the penitentiary Hi*
lawyer, examining the record, dn
eorered that It fatted to say that
Chapman ha* ‘ persisted in hi*
plea. Fto that re***«e tha .»*)«
could knock down the morning
to any chance listener. As a
matter of fact, the listener
wasn't a chance one, for I
spied you before I began, and
was singing especially with the
idea of making you a custom
er.”
“Dallas Hunt!” exclaimed a
sharp voice behind him in the
room, its horrified intonation
easily reaching Jo’s ears.
“Don’t you know you’re let
ting all the flies in this win
dow 1”
“Why, no, I don’t know it,
Aunt Lucy. I haven’t seen a
fly,” replied her nephew. He
reached back an arm and
pulled Miss Lucinda Hunt into
Jo’s view. With his arm about
her spare, gingham-clad waist,
he added: “I’ve been telling
this charming person outside
that I’m your nephew. Will
you vouch for it!”
“Do you mean to say you’ve
been speaking to her before
you’re introduced?” inquired
Miss Lucinda, with, however,
as Jo could see, less of an air
of shock than of apology to Jo
herself.
“Not at all. I was speaking
to a fellow-worshipper of the
dawn. Ringing to her, as a
matter of fact. And now she
merely responds with a criti
cism of my voice. Just the
same. Aunt Lucy, T\1 like to
know her properly, if only as a
propitiation to the goddesses—
which you and Aunt Olar are
while I stay. Will 3*011 pre
sent. me?"
Miss Lucinda presented him,
after an embarrassed fashion.
She wasn’t used to making in
troductions while a firm male
arm held her from falling off
the window sill, cigaret smoke
rose bluely from forgetful
fingers into her nostrils, and a
ga\* whisper prompted her:
“Make it impressive, Aunt Lu!
Remember I’m 3*our dearest
nephew."
“You’re certainly my most
impudent one,” declared Miss
• Lucinda, rallying. “Now if
3*011 must tnlk to Miss .Tenney,
3*ou shut this window and go
round outside."
“I feel that I must talk to
her," agreed Dallas Hunt.
“Therefore, as you suggest,
I’ll go round outside. Wait for
me, Miss Jennev?"
“Of course, Mr. Hunt, since
this itptlie shadiest spot for the
balyv."
“You see," said Dallas Hunt,
arriving upon the lawn to
stoop and pat the baby’s head,
and to look beyond apprecia
tively at the exquisite texture
of the cheek of the baby’s at
tendant, “I’m doing my best
to ‘look well to this Day!’"
And he sang a phrase of the
song again, softly, effectively,
and almost in Jo’s ear . . .
It was at this moment that
Adelaide Sturgis, rising late as
usual, looked sleepily out of her
windows and saw the group on
the lawn. The sleepiness van
ished as she stared hard. Who
was the handsome man in
flannels, sitting so intimately
upon the rug with Miss Jen
ney and the baby? As she
looked he threw back his head
a M . 1 1 A «1 Aah A . 1 AAV A 4 M M _A _ _ —_A 1_
JUU^UVVI " uu ( m ijt
the greatest enjoyment. . . .
Never had this young woman
made quicker time in dressing,
her bath was omitted; her
face and hair received her only
real care. Stockings and shoes
fairly jumped into place. A
straight silk frock of burnt
orange which needed no fasten
ing was slipped over her head.
A dash of faint perfume from
an atomizer—a gay handker
chief tucked into a breast
pocket—Adelaide ran down the
stairs. Then, after a little
(more reconnoitering, she saun
tered out upon the lawn, a
book in hand, which she read
j as she went, without noting
whither her slow footsteps
were taking her. Tier course,
wandering, finnllv brought her
near the man, the maid, and the
baby. She looked up—aston
ished.
(TO B»1 CONTINUKD)
Q Why Is the Calcutta Sweep
stakes so-called? K. O.
A. It Is so called because It was
organized by the Calcutta club.
, applied tor a wr
ar.d Chapman was release.!.
This t* the sort of thing that '
makes the lavman tired, no matter
what impression It make* on lawyers j
* * The freeing of Chapman Is
not the fault of tite court that ts
i sued the writ. The court had no j
choice. But It Is doubtful If in any
other country In the civilized world j
a eon.'weed criminal would hare
been freed for »uch a reason.
• • -mm
Me kavyy.
4.1111 Don't you think the rlottn*
lets obligato Is very beautiful*
Jim Can t tell Watt Ull she turw |
VNU.
| OF INTEREST TO FARMERS |
PASTURING CALVES
A dairyman once said to the
writer that he believed in letting
his heifer calves “run," by which i
he meant that they should be paa- |
tured as soon as they cared to eat
grass and then be kept out doors
as much as passible. His idea was
that such outdoor life would In
crease hardiness of constitution
which, he thought, was at supreme
importance. We thoroughly agree
with him that constitution is of ;
vital Importance, but there are two |
sides to the pasturing practice as
concerns dairy-type heifer calves,
and they should be kept in mind by
the practice man.
Never shall we forget the woeful
appearance presented by a lot of
fine young Holstein heifer calves
that had been on grass from the
time they were a few weeks old.
It was In the hot. dry weather of
August that we were asked to ex
amine these heifers. Some of them
died; the ones we saw were pot
bellied, scrawny, thin, harsh-coated
and weak. When they were made
to run they immediately began
coughing. The cough was of croupy
character, painful, and was contin
ued until the animal evidently
raised phlegm. No wonder they
coughed in that way, for they were
infested with lung worms. We
opened a calf that had died an hour
or two before our arrival and found
the windpipe literally packed with
threadlike worms iStrcnglyous mic
rurus.) Asked if he had suspected
the presence of these worms, the
owner said he had never heard of
such a thing and that, perhaps,
was tne reason ne naa noi iearea 10
let the calves "run.” Had he
suspected worm he might have
found the eggs or even some of the
worms, by examining the discharged
mucus from the nostrils or mouth
with a low power microscope. It is
well to make such an examination
whenever pastured calves have such
a discharge and especially when
they cough.
It Is almost absolutely certain
that young calves allowed to graze
old grass. In a permanent pasture
or one long used by cows, will con
tract lung worm of that. Inevitably,
means stunting and, perhaps, death.
It is therefore advisable to keep
growing calves off permanent pas
ture, not to let any calf that Is less
than two or four months old graze
grass of any kind and always to
supplement pasture by feeding
skim milk and providing a concen
trated ration. It Is the thriftless
calf that i3 surest to become in
fested with worms and most quickly
suffer ill elects or succumb to the
ravages of the parasities.
Knowing the danger of worm in
festation in old pastures, the wise
dairyman keeps his calves off grass
during the first year of life, lets
them live In a clean, airy roomy
pen, and feeds them a complete
ration that insures maximum
growth and development during the
first year. That is good practice,
but It is unwise to prevent calves
from receiving the beneficial effects
of direct sunlight, out-doors, on all
fine days. They need the good
effect of the ultra-violet or "tan
ning" ray of indirect sunlight and
tit t ray cannot penetrate window
gll *s. Its effect is to cause lime to
deposit in the bones and phos
phorus to form in the blood. It Is,
th>refare a preventive of rickets
anfl to a certain degree, is a remedy
for that disease. Exercise and sun
light are necessary and should be
allowed: but injudicious pasturing
may do harm.
WHITE VS. YELLOW CORN
A corn belt experiment station re
ports the results of an experimental
feeding trial comparing white and
yellow corn for growing and fatten
ing hogs and for brood sows. A sum
mary of the work follows:
It was found that sows raised on
normal rations could be carried
through two gestation and suckling
periods on a ration of white corn,
white corn bran, and tankage with
out evident effect on the number of
pigs farrowed or weaned or upon the
growth of the pigs during the suck
ling period. The continued feeding
of this ration, however, resulted in
serious impairment of the reproduc
tive powers of one sow, her third
and fourth litters being farrowed
dead. With the addition of 1 per
cent, of cod liver oil to the ration
during the fifth gestaCan. this sow
farrowed a litter of normal pigs.
Normal weanling pigs which were
farrowed by sows carried through
their gestation periods on white corn
rations were continued on a ration
of white corn and tankage. They
failed to thrive and ultimately de
veloped pathological symptoms and
died. Pigs farrowed bv sows not on
experiment and raised on normal
rations to 60 or 70 pounds, were
eventually handicapped by white
com feeding although they made
normal gains for several weeks. At
weights of 173 to 200 pounds they
developed characteristic symp
toms of white corn feeding and fin
ished poorly.
Small amounts of alfalfa meal fa
little more than an ounce a head
daily), proved entirely effective In
correcting the deficiencies of a ra
tion of white corn and tankage fed
HOW sil l II DIO YOt GET?
In muutMM to many Inquiries as
to how tog corn borer apjwooriatlon
of SIO.OOKVW will be expended, the
United States Department of Agri
culture states that about half of
this sum will be paid to individual
farmers to reimburse them in part
or entirely for extra work which
they may have done to comply with
the clean-up regulations
GIVE PIJINTY WUIR
Water Is Important, since It con
stitutes M par cent of the bird snd
m par cent of the egg Clear freeh,
reasonably warm water will ball]
conatdecable In the production of
egg* during the wu»»*r.
pigs while growing and fattening
from weights of 60 to 227 pounds.
Apparently It was lack of vitamin
that caused the unfortunate result*
when sows and pigs were continued
on the white corn ration for too long
a time, for when that factor was
supplied by adding small amount*
of alfalfa meal or cod liver oil, the
pigs developed normally and the
sows farrowed normal litters, wntla
white corn may be deficient m vita
min D as well as vitamin A. it i*
considered improbable that such m
deficiency could have affected th*
results, since sunshine apparently
removes the necessity for that vita
min in the feed and all the pigs in
these experiments were confined to
open dry lots, allowing as great ex
posure to direct Sunlight as the
weather would pwmit.
-♦ » ...... ■■
KEEPING UP FERTILITY
With vegetables in full growth the
main object of a gardener should
be to keep them growing at top
speed. There are two ways u> do
it fertilizing and cultivation. Cul
tivation from the start makes the
work easy. It is when the garden
is left until the weeds get a good
start all over it that cultivation be
comes a real task.
The methodical gardener will di
vide the graden into sections and
take them one at a time and stir
the soil. In this manner it is a light
daily task and the vegetables re
spond quickly.
The balanced fertilizers sold by
seed houses are a real boon to the
garderner because they are so easy
to handle. It is a simple matter to
sprinkle the powder along the row*
of plants and tnen genuy noe
or water It in.
Nitrate of soda is a garden stand
by as a stimulant of growth. This
should be watered In. Sprinkle the
nitrate thinly and then turn on
the sprinkler. Many of the bal
anced fertilizers contain chemicals
that need to be watered in for best
results. A good sprinkler that will
give a wide distribution of water
sufficient to start the fertilizer in
to the soil is a very useful garden
adjunct and much simpler than
holding the hose.
Light dressings of commercial
fertilizer two or three weeks apart,
will be much more effective than
heavy ones. The plant can take
only a limited amount of the food
providede for it, and if too heavy
dressings are given it is a waste
of fertilizer. These fertilizers are
devised to add to the food already
in the soil and to make it more
readily available for the plant.
After the commercial fertilizer
has been applied and wet ini^ the
soil, the garden should be gone over
with a hoe or cultivator to stir the
soil again. Hoeing is best done aft
er heavy downpours, which leave
the surface caked and crusted. The
powdering of the soil retains the
moisture.
IIOG NATURALLY HEALTHY
A hog that has been properly
raised and has come from vigorous
stock is not more predisposed to
disease than is any other animal on
the farm. It is a fact, however, the
hog suffers more from disease than
any other farm animals. Generally
speaking, this is due to the indif
ferent care whioh this useful animal
receives on the majority of farms.
On most farms hogs are improperly
fed, especially in the com belt. For
some reason or other many farmers
seem to think that so long as a hog
is given “plenty of good corn and
pure water,” nothing else is needed.
Few people think of feeding a dairy
cow in that manner. She is given
one or two kinds of roughage and,
generally at least a mixture of two
kinds of grain.
against in this manner is rather
strange, unless it is the result of an
early day when the hog found much
of his own living in the woods and
was given what corn he would eat
a few weeks before preparing him
for market. A hog that is brought
up on corn, which is lacking in
muscle forming element and vi
tamins. becomes weak and incap
able of warding off attacks of
disease germs. Such Improperly
i fed hogs are more susceptible ta
I disease than other farm animals.
—-» ■ ■ ■
BREAKING THE COLT
A common method of training of
breaking young homes to work is to
harness the young horse beside an
I older steady home. This is the most
satisfactory way to give the young
horse the preliminary training and
experience that will accustom him
to work so he can take his place In
a team. This training should be
started several weeks before regu
lar field work starts in order to have
the young horse accustomed to his
duties and his muscles somewlia!
! hardened.
_»»
THE EARLY PASTURES
A mixture of oats ai»d rape for
early spring hog pasture Is excellent.
If not pastured too closely. this
mixture will furnish pasture until
midsummer or until dry weather
I stops the growth of the rape.
HIGH QUALITY. HIGH PRICE
The main reason for the varia
tions in the prices of eggs and
dressed poultry, taking the country
over, is the variation in their qual
ity
CLOVERS SOIL BUILDERS
AU varteiiM of biennial sweea
1 clover seem essentially equal for soli
improvement. The yellow makes less
tiay the first fall, and less hay the
second year, but contrary to the
usual opinion, its root growth la
fully equal to tire white. Because of
j its early maturity, the yellow is not
* desirable for pasture. It dies lust
when pasture is most needed, in lata
July and early August The yellow
is much surer than tha white when
sown in the summer and Is recom
mended especially (or soaring In
corn or any other tumater seeding
I for a*I Ur* **e «■■»■>«*>i.