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RURAL RETREAT TIMES PUBLISHED WEEKLY. Rural Retreat, : : : Virginia gi' ”' —— . - i i i —i - I. l» seems to be tbe open season for the' grizzly bear. Wearing mustard poultices Is a poor way to keep warm There has been a noticeable slump la the demand for sleeping porches. When all is said and done, why should hnybody want to go to RussiaT Missouri Is as proud of her zinc and ! lead mines as she is of her corn fields, j When the weather starts out to break records It makes a nuisance of Itself. Those who refuse to Join the good roads movement Intend no doubt to buy airships. Let us pause to be thankful that the world’s supply of coal has not yet been exhausted. New Yorker cut off his nose while pbaving, but it is not likely that he did It to spite bis face. Tbe drop in eggs is not sufficiently precipitate to knock the bottom out of cold storage corners. After mince pie has been standard ized hash should be, and then the mil lenlum will be close at hand. Aviators tell us that they are losing Interest in the flying game, but eggs •how no signs of coming down. According to Edison's Joyful news tor newlyweds, concrete furniture Is no longer an abstract proposition. An effort is being made to establish • new alphabet. Even at that, it’s as good a way to kill time as playing •olltaire. Some one has enriched the con science fund of the Philadelphia treas ury by 19 cents. Here’s somebody evidently who is bound to have peace •t any price Modern college football is too tame, according to some critics. If the col leges want something lively why not adopt the practice of holding peace conferences? The restaurant oyster pearl fisher les are working on schedule time. A man in a New Jersey town found three pearls, valued at $100 apiece, In his plate of oysters. The greatest panic the country ever knew would follow If women refused to buy new clothes for six months, says a dressmaker In convention. For penic substitute Jubilee Connecticut couple announce that they were wedded during the Civil War and have kept the secret lifty years. And yet some people tell us that a woman cannot keep a secret A Kansas man who was Intoxicated while serving as a Juror was fined $2 and barred from Jury service forever. Now' and then we think a sober and Industrious man gets the worst of it. One hundred high school girls in New York studying domestic science have adopted a real baby for demon stration purposes. That baby will be lucky if it survives its part in the field of science. "Now somebody should submit a list of the world’s greatest hens, since we are going in for the honor lng of philanthropists.” Don’t believe twenty can be found that have laid pn egg In a month. "Boston is lacking in religion," says Dr. Abbot, but why should the Boston ese care as long as they have plenty of tieans and codfish? Germany's 17 dirigible war balloons are simply 17 gasbags sadly out of date. No other country is a bit alarmed by them. The census man informs us that there are 16,502 jackasses in American cities. Evidently the census man has overlooked a few. Crocodile tears are what the coai man would shed to express his grief because people are so extravagant In sunning their furnaces. New Yorker strayed in the pathway of a bullet, but a diary which he had » his pocket stopped the bullet and <aved his life. Another victory for literature. A New York grass widow declares that she can’t possibly provide for her five-year-old son on $5,000 a year, which no doubt explains why she’s a grass widow. The Guekwar of Baroda, recently j prominent, makes way for the Kukuk tu of Urga, Russia’s choice for the “outer” Mongolian monarchy. Old age, according to a scientist, is a germ. The scientist may be right, but we have reason to believe that it Is one of the unswattable kind. A Philadelphia (bachelor, wealthy, killed himself because he was so lone ly. Here was a case of misery not loving company well enough to marry It FACTS IN BEE CULTURE Many People Discouraged on Ac count of Swarming Habit. This Tendency May Be Curtailed to Great Extent by Using Hive of Double Capacity, or One on Top of Other—Begin Slowly. (By MRS. A. JOSEPH, California.) A great many people would be glad to keep a few colonies of bees If they did not everlastingly swarm. This difficulty may be overcome to some extent. Bees swarm because of lack of room. If Instead of using a single hive you use one of double capacity, or one on top of the .other, the swarm ing tendency will be very much cur turn' Simple Bee Hive. tailed; so the best way is to use hives of large size, or those of ordinary size one piled on top of the other; the bees and queens should be given p'lenty of room. At the beginning of the season, one story of a hive will be enough. Just before fruit-blooms open up, another story should be added, containing empty cones or frames of comb foun dation, and as the season advances, more stories added as required A large entrance should be provided at the bottom of each story so as to keep the bees inside the hive, for if the bees cluster out in front they will be sure to swarm; so there should be. enough room to keep the bees Inside the hive and at work. Colonies worked this way may store from 50 to 200 pounds of fine honey. Some colonies handled in this way may swarm, but they will not be very many. In such cases put over the en trance an alley trap. This will allow the worker bees to pass in and out. but when the queen comes Out with a swarm she is trapped because she can not go through the same slot the workers go through. While the swarm is in the air the trap containing the queen is taken off, the old hive is removed and a new one containing frames or combs put in its place. The trap is then placed in front of the new hive, now on the old stand and in 20 minutes or one half hour the swarm In the air will return and go into the new hive. The queen is then released from the trap when she will go into the swarm. The bees will then start house keeping anew. In this way you avoid climbing trees, or cutting their limbs off or making that horrid noise of pounding, the pans. In this manner the attention the bees require could be given by the farmer's wife or the son or daughter and if he will let them have the money made from the bees, they will get so interested in them that they will learn to handle a large number of bees in a short time and will be able to lay aside a little ready money. Of course there is an occasional sea son when bees will hardly make their own living. Then they should be fed to keep them from starving, but there may be only one poor season in four or five. In the good seasons they will more than pay for their keep. A good but simple hive may be con structed easily. There should be two rows of hoies, one six inches above the other, so that when shelter is not provided, and It snows, the lower holes are usually covered with snow or ice, the upper ones remaining open to admit fresh air, which is very Im portant. Then after a long Journey, bees alighting at the upper holes have a shorter distance to travel to reach their store of sweets. The hive is 12x12x15 inches inside measurement and when filled with honey will hold sufficient to keep a large colony of bees during any sea son not fruitful of flowers. For holding the comb, small round sticks are used, the same as in the old hive, the cover is removable and the edges beveled to hold in position a small upper hive or upper stories to be added as needed. Beginners should not purchase large' colonies of bees. Begin moderately and go slow. Colonies placed in an open situa tion and somewhat shaded by trees or vines will be much more conveniently handled than when placed in an ordi nary shed or out-of-door bee-houses. The swarming bag is one of the best things in bee, culture. It is about six feet in length and one foot in diam eter and formed of alternate lengths of calico and mosquito-netting. Each length of about one foot has a ring of wire or hoop to hold the bag distend ed. When the bees are about to swarm and are inclined to come outside the hive, the bag is fastened onto the front of the hive and the other end Swarming-Bag in Position. fastened to a stake. When the queen enters the bag she bounds to the up per end and is quickly surrounded by her followers and the swarm is then captured with ease. Beginners are very often Impatient for increase. If you increase your bees too rapidly you will get less honey unless you have a first-class strain of bees. Even then if the sea son is a poor one or the locality in which you live is overstocked, the amount of honey may not be as large as you would expect. A Profitable Pecos Valley (Texas) Apiary. BIG MONEY IN BY-PRODUCTS Dairy Incidentals Worth as Much as Butter and Cream—Experiments at Kansas Station. How many dairymen know that their supposedly unimportant products around the dairy are worth as much as their butter and cream if properly used? The value of side lines on a dairy farm, such as skimmed milk, calves, and the manure, are equal to the value of the butter or cream sold. This profit, of course, is obtained in directly by using the skimmed milk for feed and the manure as a fertiliz er. More work is added and conse quently more time is needed, but it is as profitably spent as the time spent in producing the main dairy products. George S. Hine, of the extension department at the Kansas Agricultural college, gathered data from an ex periment carried on several years ago concerning the value of skimmed milk in feeding hogs and calves. Skimmed milk on the market sells at about 15 cents for 100 pounds. The experiment showed that where a ra tion of one to three pounds of milk to one pound of grain (corn meal in this case) was fed, the milk was found to be worth from 24 cents to 46 cents a hundred, the value varying according to the price of grain. 3y this method the price of skimmed milk is more than doubled. In the experiment with calves the milk was found to be worth from 19 cents to 43 cents a hundred, depending on the selling price of calves. Then there’s the profit from calves. Veal calves are most profitable when fed skimmed milk with corn as a sub stitute for the butter fat in the cream and shipped to the market rough trussed. Tb*re also is a large de mand for pure bred and high-grade heifers all over the country. These calves bring fancy prices at all times. The heifers may be used at home. Pure-bred male calves may be sold for from three to ten times as much as veal calves. MAKING GOOD PASTURES NOW Step Will Prevent Loss of Money on Poor Acres and Lay Foundation for Live Stock. Let us make good pastures at once. This step will prevent the losing of money on the poorest acres. It will lay the foundation for the raising in future years of large numbers of live stock. Let us make a beginning with improved live stock now. Recollect that the growing of improved stock will be a matter of absolute necessity in a few years. Remember that one can best go into live stock gradually, and that experience gained this year and time gained, and even a few breeding animals collected, will make future success with live stock much more certain than if the beginning is postponed for another year. An Old-Fashioned Rabbit Trap. Make a box with a sliding door to work up and down easily. Run a stringer over the center peg and fasten the trigger, which has a little notch in it, to hook behind the top board and to hold up the trap-door. When the rabbit gnaws at the bait he pushes the trigger back, which slides through the hole and lets the slide-door fall. This can be made out of any strong box by a boy who is handy with tools in half an hour, and it never falls to wo-h. KENTUCKY RAISES MANY FINE HORSES ■-■3 — The Illustration represents full brothers—five and six years old. The pair Is owned by Mr. John Maylor, of Kentucky. This Is a breed which the farmers of Kentucky breed with more profit than any other, as it will adapt itself to pulling the plow on the farm, the loaded wagon or may be driven to the carriage at a three-minute gait with perfect ease to themselves and the driver. Horses like these are generally from the old Morgan breed. CRAWFISH IS SERIOUS MENACE Problem in South Assuming Such Economic Importance That Govern ment Has Been Appealed To. The crawfish problem in the south is assuming such economic impor tance that the federal government has taken hold of it in earnest. Those enterprising crustaceans are devouring the crops, and many ap Nest and Work of Crawfish. peals on the subject have been for warded to Washington from the sec tions most afflicted. In Mississippi and Alabama there is a single tract of more than 1,000 square miles where the raising of cotton and corn is rendered difficult or even unprofitable by crawfish, which devour the young and tender plants. Some notion of their num bers may be gained from the official statement that in badly infested areas there are from 10,000 to 12,000 holes to the acre—each hole being made and occupied by one crawfish. When the matter was first referred to the department of agriculture ad vice was solicited from the fisheries bureau, which suggested that much might be accomplished toward the destruction of the enemy if it wrere realized that crawfish are exceedingly good to eat. Once recognized as a first-class table delicacy, the crusta ceans, which look much like lobsters in miniature and are even more pala table, might be utilized as a food product on such a scale as to wipe them out to a grea,t extent. This idea, however, does not seem to have proved acceptable. It may be that the people of the afflicted sec tions are prejudiced against crawfish as an article of diet, or, possibly, they are too lazy to catch them. At all events, the solution of the problem finally adopted, and which appears to be satisfactory, is systematic poison ing with bisulphide of carbon, two or three drops of which are poured into each crawfish hole. The fumes of the chemical, being heavier than air, de scend into the borrow, and the result, is the prompt and peaceful demise of the occupant. The process described is supple mented by employing men to kill the crawfish when they come out to feed on rainy mornings or evenings. Some means ought to be found for sending them to market, inasmuch as there is a considerable demand for them in those cities of the United States which possess large populations of foreign birth—especially New Or leans and New York. (mAllARM Use a scrub sire and your herd will soon run all to nose and bristles. At the time of shipment the fleeces of sheep or lambs should be dry. Look to your insurance and see that your policy covers all your property. Sheep do not drink much water, but what little they drink must be cle&a. Encourage exercise by placing feed some distance from the sheds on fine days. In order to avoid the usual spring rush it will pay to get in nursery or ders now. The chickens will furnish a living for you if you will furnish a decent living for them. Winter is the season of rest for the farmer but it is not necessarily a sea son for loafing. Be sure that the sheep barn has a tight roof, a dry floor, good ventila tion and no drafts. An occasional culling of the apples and vegetables in the cellar will les sen the loss from rot. Covering the winter onions with coarse manure will make them start earlier in the spring. Sheep are a persistent agency of improvement to the soil of the farms in which they are kept. j CROP OF COTTON IN GEORGIA Ninety-three Days From Planting to Picking Is Remarkable Record Made by Dr. Worsham. Ninety-three days from the day of planting to picking cotton is the re markable record which has been achieved upon the experiment farm in Stewart county, operated under the direction of Dr. E. L. Worsham, state entomologist of Georgia. Dr. Wors ham states that in addition to having this cotton mature in this record breaking time, it is also a resistant to the ravages of the black root dis ease, so common and so costly throughout Georgia. He states this record was made aft er three years of experimenting, and he now feels confident that the de partment has secured a cotton seed which will mature in this short space of time and which will be resistant also Between 400 and 500 pounds of commercial fertilizer to the acre were used in producing this splendid re sult. Dr. Worsham states that through the use of large quantities of commercial fertilizer and attentive cultivation, similar results can be se cured throughout Georgia. In this way both the boll weevil and the black root would be avoided. It has been found that it is the late varie ties of cotton that suffer greatest from the boll weevil. Georgia during the past season in creased the use of commercial fer tilizer over 17 per cent, above any previous year and the indications are that more commercial fertilizer will be used in this state during 1912 than in its history. .The record-breaking crops of cotton, corn, grain and vege tables produced in Georgia in 1911 bear splendid evidence of the fact that fertilizer means more than anything else toward securing successful crops. FOR BUTCHERING MANY HOGS Combination Derrick and Rack Con structed to Facilitate Matters— Saves Much Time. We often butcher several hogs at once on our farm. Some of the neigh bors go in with us and we save con siderable time by doing the work in one day, says a writer In the Farm and Home. We have constructed a combination derrick and rack for the For Handling Many Hogs. carcasses. It is shown in the accom panying illustration. The frame is made heavy enough to hold considerable weight and the derrick is Bimply a round pole, six inches in diameter. To one end of this an old buggy wheel is attached and makes a good handle for operat ing. The carcass is lifted from the ground by the rope shown and the gambrels are slipped over the cross pieces. The carcass can be easily slid from one end to the other if the timbers are greased. The lifting rope is near the center and thus we can have several carcasses on each end of the hanger. FERTILE SOIL IS FOUNDATION Easy to Conduct Successful Farm on Rich Land—Diversify and Ro tate All the Crops. A fertile soil is the foundation ol successful farming. It is easy to make money farming rich land. It is im possible to make money farming very poor land. We can have rich land if we will farm as we ought to farm. I.et us reduce the washing of our land to a minimum, let us diversify and rotate our crops, let us plant cow peas and other leguminous crops, let us break our land a little deeper ev ery time it is broken, let us turn un der all the vegetable matter that there is on the land, let us feed good stock on pea vine hay, cotton seed meal and save the manure and put it on the soil. )HKN CABINET NOW the true value ot time; .■LflL. snatch, seize and enjoy every moment ot It. No laziness, no procrasti nation; never put oft till tomorrow what you can do today. —Earl of Chesterfield. KITCHEN COMFORTS. The kitchen Is often the last room In the house to plan for or equip* when It should be the first considera* tlon, for It is here that the large ma jority of women spend the greatest part of their time. When it is possible to have the things we want, if our tastes are sim ple, a painted wall is good, for it can be cleaned and kept sanitary. A small-sized kitchen is the model these days. We have graduated from the idea of the ancient kitchen, where one walked a day’s journey getting the three meals a day. A kitchen cabinet holding all the necessary cooking materials; a zinc covered table, a good, well-placed sink high enough to wash dishes in without stooping (one may have words with the plumber before you get it high enough if you are an average woman in height, for they seem to have a djiep-seated desire to place all sinks the same height, regardless of the woman who has it to use), and a sink draining board at the end, are all ne cessities. One interesting housewife has a pic ture hung in her kitchen wall that is an inspiration to her. When washing dishes she can enjoy its beauties and its presence is a constant uplift. We have passed the day of back breaking iron kettles and the kitchen utensils may be as artistic in coloring as one’s taste desires. A small rocking chair is a great ad dition to the kitchen comforts, for one may often drop into it for a moment when waiting for a cake to be baked, or while preparing fruit or vegeta bles. Linoleum on a soft wood floor is the easiest on the feet for a floor, and it is so easily kept clean. The floor should harmonize with the wall color, but be darker. When we spend a little more time in planning and furnishing our kitcb* ens and the maid’s bedroom, we will perhaps hive reduced the servant problem a little towards its lowest terms. utterly void of use; or if sterling;, may require good management to make it serve the purposes of sense and happiness. —Shenstone. PAPER BAGS IDEAl. FOR INVALID COOKERY. In Invalid cookery the eye must be appealed to, as a dish that is attrac tive in appearance will be more apt to be tasted; and. tasted, it is up to the cook to make it so savory that not a crumb is left. When preparing food for the inva lid, mote pains can be taken, as one dish may be more quickly prepared than one for a family. Minced Chicken With Toast.—Finly mince the breast of a chicken, add a tablespoonfui of cream, the yolk of an egg and a little salt. Lay in a greased paper bag . with a small piece of toast. Seal and cook six minutes in a hot oven. Serve in the bag Chicken Tea.—Cup up a fowl, treak the bones and add two tablespoonfuls of water, seal and place the bag on the rack in the oven. Allow forty five minutes in a slow oven Strait., and serve. In pa-crei^bag cookery not only is the nffia?i^rflavor of every article of foodljjtes^rved. but ail undesirable flavors jS&Tlfept out. For k|yayd cookery this 1? a grant point in its favor, as the delicate aroma and flavdr of the white meat* and those suitable for diet In conva lescence are so easl’-y dissipated by cooking. It was one of our ancient wise men who said “that which pleases the pal ate nourishes." It is most important that the invalid eat that food which Is best for building up and repairing waste. Filleted Poultry.—Slice a carrot, turnip and an onion; add a little bam, a pinch of sugar and salt, and place in the bottom of a well-buttered bag. Slice the breast of a fowl, lav the slices on the prepared vegetables, sprinkle with melted butter, seal and cook six minutes in a slow oven. Dish the fillets, put the vegetables Into a sieve or fruit press, press light ly Rnd pour the gravy over the fil lets. 7Uau Alcohol Not Stimulating. “Over twenty years’ medical work among seafaring men, largely in the Arctic waters, has absolutely con vinced me that alcohol is not essential as a stimulant or food. It Is far and away the most serious danger the seaman of this day has to contend with."—Dr. Wilfred T. Grenfell. Edison an Abstainer. "1 am a total abstainer from alco holic liquors. I always felt that 1 had a better use for my head.’’—Thom as ' ■