Ii Tfcm Malted States They Like It! That's Why Farmers Stay on the Farm KUTZTOWN, PA.?It was men's night at the Kutztown grange, and each man was asked by Mrs. Howard Baldwin, lec turer, why he became a farmer. There were 17 responses, with 18 men replying that they were born on a farm, liked it, and in ioiuM to fihav ?- ? | Some af the replies, as recorded In the Kutztown Patriot, follow: "I waa raised on a farm," said Henry Rahmolrl "I had 10 years In the city, but was glad to get back to the farm," "You are your own boss," Ray Kulp pointed out. "You're independ ent, and the farm is the ideal place to raise children. Personally, I like livestock, especially the old cows." "At the end of a year you have something to show for your work straw, hay, grain, your cattle," added Thomas Merkel. "I like to see things grow. To the farmer, farming means more than any other occupation can mean to any one else." "1 like the outdoor life," volun teered William Schulz, who spent 30 years in manufacturing. "It means your own roof, plenty of food, and time to look around, watch the sky and the clouds." '1 waa away from It for seven years," said George Schaeffer, "but ?had to get out in the open, so start ed it again." And so it was with all the rest, from the soldier just discharged to the youth still waiting his draft call. As Clarattoe Johnson put it: "The farm is the best place, for it gives you the chance to make something out of it, not only tor yourself but for other people." SEA CAW . . . More arrived than stmtad. Thia picture, taken at Ant jmm, Ralfprnm, thou* a call born mm** kf mother was crossing the At i em tec me mm. American heifers are be ing rem to devastated areas of Europe ky mm Osmrds of the Brethren in order Id provide food for Europeans and roeiock that continent with dairy cat da. Sportsmen Plant Trees to Provide ' Shelter for Came r ? PERKAStE, PA. ? Perkasie Sportsmen's organization haa au thorized Lester Frederick, head of the fmesLiy committee, to purchase (.000 transplants for the club's re forestation program. The agricul tural class of Sell-Park high school, under the direction of D. Ker Ends low, will assist in the planting.. In 103S the club began its refores tation program with an allotment of 3,000 trees, and a similar num ber were planted each year except ha 104*. The planting of 6,000 this year, will balance the annual pro gram. Dies at 102 LIVONIA, N. Y. - Jacob John HaaJer, who would have been 103 years old May 18, died here re cently. A native of Switzerland, ha came to this country when he waa 30 years old. He worked as a gar dener, 0 years for one family and *3 years for another, before he re tired. IM Barter Expiries CANON CITY. COLO. - When a weed burner strapped on his back exploded, anting his clothes on lira, Prank Day, 00 years old, ran two blocks to s watering trough and Jumped la to extinguish the flames. "Soft* Basket for Potatoes A rubber-covered potato basket , to safeguard potatoes against bruis ing haa been developed. The basket, made of steel wire coated with rub ber, holds live-eighths of a bushel sad la tor use in field harvesting. Manure Loader Used to Move Wyoming Snow LUSK, WYO. ? The new me chanical manure loader, de signed to save back-breaking work (or farmers and ranchers, was put to a new use by the town of Lusk recently when snow drifts filled the streets. Councilman Joe Kuhn, also a farm machinery dealer, brought out the mechanical manure load er and set it to work loading snow into trucks to be hauled away. The snow was removed in one-fourth the time ordinarily re quired. State Wishes It Had Bought Land From Ute Indians DENVER, COLO. ? Rangely oil field, in northwestern Colorado, is the most sensational oil find in years but the state of Colorado isn't hap py about It. The Indians had the last laugh after all. "When Colorado became a state, the Ute Indian tribe was given title by the federal government to a large section of land in western Col orado, including most of what today is the Rangely field," State Land Commissioner William Milliken ex plains. ine leaerai government gave 10 the state sections 16 and 36 of each township in the state. But when it came to the Ute lands, it became necessary for the state to put up $1.25 an acre. "The state officials objected and bargained for other sections. As a result, the state was granted addi tional land in Rio Blanco, Garfield and Mesa counties. That's why we own so much land in those counties and none in the Rangely field. "If the state owned the usual sec tions in Rangely, our school finance problems would be solved for years to come." Moreover, another question has come up: Who owns the land under lying the bed of the White river? There are 170 acres of land, poten tially worth millions of dollars, to be considered. Oil men and state officials would like to know who owns it. Black Setter Pulls Master from Creek DAWSON, GA. ? A black setter named Smoky is credited by his master, T. J. Donovan, with saving his life when the car in which they were riding plunged into a rain-swol len stream near Macon. They were returning from a hunt ing trip when the accident occurred. Smoky, riding on the back seat, grabbed Donovan by the neck and swam with him to the bank of the stream. The dog was still on guard over his master and tried to fight oft sMte patrolmen when they ap proached. Examined at an animal hospital, the setter was found unharmed and later had a joyous reunion with his master. GROUNDED . . . Two goldea eaglet, belle red to bo alayen of calves and tquirrelt, were caught la a coyote trap by raaebera liv ing near Paso RoMee, Calif. Sandy Sumner, owner of the Diamond D ranch, has offered the pair to the city or county, if the oOelals feel they want to give a couple of eaglet a good home. 1*1 TEARS OLD SUrtinf en Us second hundred years Is Ellas BiewnSeld, now Dr ill In Glendale, Calif. He still play* Us seeordion. and after leaking hack orer more than a century he says he has only one thing Is re gret, that he'electioneered against Abraham Ltocete. He has no pre scription for longevity. he admits, "hot I Isn't think that tad anything to de with tt." RED CROSS POSTER COMES TO LIFE . . . Pfe. Campbell Gordon Pyle, Lancaster, Calif., the wheel chair patient in the Red Cross 1946 poster, and Peggy Neel, Red Cross hospital worker, examine the winning poster, a photograph made of tbem at New Caledonia daring the war. Peggy Neel is resting at her home in Searcy, Ark., and Private Pyle has re-enlisted in the army. CHURCHILL TALKS WHILE TRUMAN LISTENS . . . Former British prime minister, Winston Churchill, told the audience st Westminster college, Fulton, Mo., that the United States and the British empire should form a military alliance to police the world and to provide ? bulwark against encroachments of Communist ideals and ambitions from the East. He recommended that the atomie bomb be kept secret. RIOTS DURING STRIKES CONTINUE . . . Representative of other strikes, two pickets and a policeman strike the pavement in the action packed scene as they clashed in front of the Western Electric com * pany's Kearney, N. J., plant. The police seem to have the situation well in hand. While some strikes have been settled, others have been announced to start during April. Violence has been reported in various parts of the country. SPRING H)CEKN OF BOVINES* ... As ? featore W the aniqae ?prist eelebratiea held la the eantoa of VtUis. SwiUcrUnd. en l(Mi an hold to Actermlae which awe will he saprcme aad he mob aid the "paeeo of Wrht paces*." Property eryuM battle take* place ' yearly to nark the bi?taala? ef tprtac la BaHaeitoai. NEW NAVY COACH . . . Capt. Thomas James Hamilton, CSN, Columbus, Ohio, wbo had been ap pointed bead football coach at the V. S. navy academy. He win be aided by Edrar E. "Rip" Miller, who wiU serve as assistant coaeh. MAX SUCCEED MANNERHEIM . . . Premier Dr. Joho K. Paasi klwi, who is slated to succeed Field Marshal Carl Gnstav Man nerheim as president of Finland, who recently resigned due to fail ing health. Mannerhelm is 78 and served as wartime commander of all Finnish armed forces. Be has been expected to resign for some time. KEEPS CANDIDATE IN ARMY . . . Lt. Col. Harold G. Hoffman, former governor of New Jersey, and again a candidate, received set-back when army ordered him into hospital for observation. He wants to run as a Republican. AGAIN AND AGAIN . . . This gentleman since 1894 appears in Washington on ever; occasion to voice his opposition to one and all measures before congress. Now he is against loan to Britain. Be is "General" Jacob S. Coxey, leader ot Corey's army in 1894. Be now wants to protest against the United States loaning any money to anyone in Europe. SHARPSHOOTING CO-ED ... A modem Annie Oakley to Eugenia GriStk. Veadon, Philadelphia tabarh, who aa a member of the (irta undefeated rile team at Drexal Inatttnte of techno lory to owl to rotate aa undefeated record. Kathleen Norris Says: American Women Are Different B?li Syndicate.?WNU FiaturM. She never thinks of a family as a great all-embracing institution where an older woman and a very much older man of right belong. By KATHLEEN NORMS WHAT is there in the American make-up that causes us to demand perfection, and be dissatisfied with anything short of it? I don't mean just the domes tic perfection of fine sheets and clean rooms, matching curtains and well-cooked meals. I mean something deep inside that de stroys the peace of mind of 9 of our women out of every 10. Perhaps 99 women out of every 100. Why is it that American women enjoy real happiness only in brief snatches that are interspersed with long stretches of discontent and restlessness, frustration and some times despair? French women, Italian women, women of the Scandinavian coun tries know no such misery. Each one of these accepft her destiny, lives in it and with it contented ly, mixes her good salads, simmers her good soups, mends and washes and airs the same old linens year after year, wears for years her sub stantial dress and warm shawl, chats with her neighbors in the mar ket place, savors to the full all the simple joys of living. Humbly Content. OU xijucxi lur uxc buxuircan wuincii. As for the Orientals, they live on so different a scale that there simply is no comparison. I knew one Chinese Woman who carried with her wherever she went a fur rug and a three-legged iron pot. "With these Chen Ling at home anywhere, Missy," she said. "I put 'em down, I no see 'em again." How old the fur rug was I do not know. The cooking pot was more than 100 years old. Families in Europe live in the homes their ancestors established, often with as many of those ances tors as are living. Chairs and tables and tea-pots last for generations. A deep inner content in family life makes these things sacred. The domestic group shifts, enlarges, changes; it is all good living to the busy, beloved, important woman of the house, whether she is hanging out snowy linens, gathering wind fall apples, welcoming the new baby, robing herself in sepulchural black to follow the coffins of the dead. It is her life, and she likes it, and lives it to the full. Even the English are much less demanding of circumstances and fate than we are. "I've had my husband's mother with me since I was married," said an English woman whose children are almost grown. "Bob had three boys when I married him," said an other, "so although I was only 18 I've never been to a real dance." "Because my mother and father were invalids Joe and I waited 11 years before we could marry," a third said cheerfully. Incidentally, this patient woman has now a very high position, and she and Joe are an example of happy married life. But she had to wait for it! Contrasted with all these women are some in this country who write me letters about conditions that are not only perfectly normal, but tem , porary. Our women seem unable to endure any burdens or inconveni ences at all! Seeking the Unattainable. Many a woman cheats herself out of happiness, dignity, success as a human being by an impatient sense that she must always be struggling for something unattainable. She must get rid of this piece of furni ture and have those others re-cov ered. She must tear down the cur tains and send the dessert plates to the rummage sale. Her dining room is actually repulsive to her because of the old-fashioned light fixtures. She never thinks of a family as a great all - embracing institution, where an older woman and a very much older man of right be long; where two small motherless sisters may find refuge, and visit ing cousins be cared for in a general joyous scramble of made-up cots ' -and extended dinner-table. To be offered the part of a matriarch, in the movies, would seem to her delightful, but to play that part in real life offers her no attractions. So each family splits into sepa rated units; each newly married couple entertains only its own few selected friends; each bride feels that every hour her husband's moth er spends in her house is a distinct concession on her part. She fights her fight alone, cooks the company dinner single-handed, scrambles the children to bed, rushes upstairs to change her gown; the old gracious hospitality, shared by old and young, with grandfather in his own chair, and the children aiming downstairs for dessert, is a thing of the past. Less stress on material things, more cultivation of the spiritual val ues in human relationships, would make for us all a deeper, fuller sort of living, a surer safeguard in home ties, less danger?far less danger, of those constant cure-all trips to Reno, which are the gateway to a more intense unhappiness. Comfort While Ironing Home management yecialists at Cornell U. say there's no rule-of thumb method you can use to select a comfortable ironing boerd height. That's just something you have to work out for yourself. But their study shows youTl be less tired if you do adjust your ironing board to a height that's comfortable for you. And if several members of the family are using the ironing board . . . you need one that can be ad justed to different heights. Adjust able boards are now being made. | skt intm't mm hki utrimfc. COUNT YOUR BLESSINGS This is the richest country in the world. There is more of ev erything here than anywhere else, v Even people considered poor by American standards live on a scale that is the envy of most Europeans, and of all Orientals. Every American knows all this. Yet American women are the most discontent ed in the world. Those who are most favored often seem the most unhappy. In Europe women have be come accustomed to acceptance of their lot. Hardships, pover ty, illness, crowded conditions, governmental oppression ? all this they accept as part of life. They try to make the best of it, and are thankful for any good fortune. They bear up under difficulties that would send an American woman to the insane asylum. Oriental women have almost unbelievable endurance. They are poor beyond our con ception, and must struggle hard for mere survival. Yet they are generally cheerful and uncom plaining.