Livermore Journal, Volume 6, Number 8, 7 November 1924 — Page 2

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The Southern California Pure-bred Livestock association's annual convention, at Riyerside, brought out an attendance of almost 100. G. H. Hecke, director of the California department of agriculture, emphasized the value of stock in the maintenance of a well-balanced agriculture for California, and urged the association to continue in its efforts for tuberculosis legislation in order to protect the livestock industry. Touching on the foot and mouth situation, he advised further protection to the livestock interests of the state by the stationing of veterinary inspectors at all California ports. The election of officers of the organization for the coming year resulted in the selection of Ferdinand R. Bain of Los Angeles, as president, his name being proposed by Herman Michel of Ocean Park, the retiring president. Mr. Michel had been president of the pure-bred association since its organization three years ago. W. W. Orcutt of Los Angeles, breeder of Hereford cattle, was elected vice president of the association, and W. W. Van Pelt of Riverside, was re-elected secretary. On the board of directors the following men were named as representatives of the various breeds of live stock: F. F. Peabody, Santa Barbara, Aberdeen Angus cattle Thomas Dibblee, Santa Barbara, Shorthorn cattle W. W. Orcutt, Los Angeles, Hereford cattle E. S. Hass, Downey, Holstein-Friesian cattle Merritt H. Adamson, Los Angeles, Guernsey cattle Harry Cook, Chino, Jersey cattle George Piatt, Los Angeles, Ayrshire cattle W. T. Hoffman, Ventura, horses William Mays, Arlington, Poland China hogs R. A. Condee, Chino, Berkshire hogs Baxter Loveland, Brawley, Duroc Jersey hogs C. G. Vandevier, Santa Barbara, Hampshire hogs L. E. Sheets, Pomona, sheep. Mr. Bain, the new president, is owner of the La Lomita Rancho herd of pure-bred Jersey cattle at Palms, and is- a firm believer that pure-bred live stock will be one of the strongest factors in the future development of a balanced agriculture in California.

Growers who operated extensively

in alfalfa this year have come off considerably better than most others. Their crops alone survived the drought well. This is demonstrated 'in a report of the California crop reporting service. Observers have sent in word upon which an estimate of 50,000 bushels, or 1,500 tons, of alfalfa seed production is deduced for 1924.

There were 12,000 acres in the 1924 a, harvest and 11,000 in that of 1923, but the yield per acre was better this year. Lack of rain not infrequently has the effect of setting more seed with alfalfa than normal moisture.

This year 4.2 bushels an acre were produced, which is 123 per cent of normal. The year's acreage was 110 per cent as compared with 1923, but

.r only 80 per cent as compared to normal. Regarding the value of the crop, E. E. Kaufman, state agricultural statistician, said: "It is reasonable to expect that the normal acreage in seed producing localities may decline as other special field crops are found to be profitable and as dairying expands in alfalfa districts.

Also, the acreage of alfalfa seed harvested from year to year is extremely variable, due to the fact that the pollination of the alfalfa flower is so acutely influenced by climatic and moisture conditions. The grower always has the safe option of making a hay crop if the early seed set does not indicate a profitable seed yield. In the northern mountain valleys of the state where hardy Chilean (common) alfalfa seed is grown extensively there was probably more than three times as much seed produced as in 1923. This was due mainly to the excessive grasshopper damage experienced in 1923, which was much less severe this season. Yields were also good in the southern counties where a part of the seed produced is of the hairy Peruvian variety."

With the end of the grape shipping season, railroad traffic chiefs and prominent vineyardists state that 50,000 carloads have been sent to some 10,000 cities and towns in the United States and in Canada. These cars contained 650,000 tons with a gross value of $52,000,000. Of the total tonnage, it is estimated 480,000 have been used for making wine. This means that 72,000,000 gallons of wine have been made on the basis of 150 gallons per ton. This is the best season the business has ever experienced.

"i There were 775 entries in the rabbit show held by the associated Rabbit Breeders of Southern California in connection with the Los Angeles ......, county fair at Pomona, the largest of its kind ever held on the Pacific coast.

The entries o£ New Zealand Reds made up a third of the total and comprised what is declared to have been the largest New Zealand show ever ......

tne largest J\ew Zealand show ever y"-?' held in the country. American Blues •SS®' Yi to the number of 150 were shown and rtbout a hundred Flemish rabbits were on exhibit. Nearly thirty varieties in. all were on display.

Owing to the fact that the date for ,• the annual farmers conference at Davis was to have been held in January, has been set ahead to some time ,' next June, the California Ayrshire club will hold its annual meeting in

Oakland during the Pacific Slope Dairy show, December 10 to 16, instead of at the university farm as formerly planned.

The shipment of grapes from the Healdsburg section to eastern points has been completed. During the sea-

Sfe1 5D.Q cars were shipped.

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Seventy-five new varieties of apples will be introduced into the plant world by Albert Etter, student of nature, who resides at Ettersburg, Humboldt county. He has been working for more than thirteen years in the propagation of the new apple varieties and claims he will soon be ready to announce the production to the world. Thirty-five years ago Etter started in the Humboldt county woods an orchard on thirteen acres of the 800 experimental farm. There are now enough apple trees for experimental purposes to make a row of trees 100 miles long. By a difficult process of crossing he has established a number of new varieties of strawberries, one being a cross between the wild Cape Mendocino strawberry and the Alpine strawberry imported from Switzr erland.

General endorsement by farmers and sliipers of the recent statement calling upon all persons sending perishable products east to have such products inspected by state and federal officials rather than private agencies was reported by R. C. Butner, federal agent, charged with in- I spection of food products. It was pointed out that when a shipper pays $5 to the state and federal shipping point inspectors, the car of fruit or other produce is considered and certified entirely on its merits. The allegation was made by Butner that private inspection agencies this year have frequently issued certfificates on cars that have not been inspected.

W. A. Johnstone, citrus grower of San Dimas, elected president of the Los Angeles county farm bureau at its annual meeting in Los Angeles, is well known throughout the state because of his work as a member of the state water commission, as well as former member of the California state legislature. His efforts in behalf of water conservation have been continuous in the county. Other officers elected at the meeting are: First vice president, T. L. Lambert, of El Monte secretray, J. C. Hayes of Roscoe. A new assistant secretary, Sidney Anderson, has been hired by the farm bureau to put in full time for the organiztaion in the county.

Berry growers in the San Francisco bay region have just finished their 1924 shipping season—one of the most successful in the history of the business from the. standpoint of monetary returns. The average net price received by the producer for shipments of raspberries to eastern markets during the fall months was approximately $1.48 a crate. Revenues derived from eastern shipments were higher, during the movement of the first crop of California raspberries, averaging $1.70 a crate, net, to the grower, but the supply marketed outside the state in this period was considerably smaller than during the autumn season.

The annual convention of the California Wool Growers" association will be held at the Palace hotel, San Francisco, November 6 and 7. According to present plans the convention will attract wool growers from every sheep-raising district of California. Dr. U. G. Houck, inspector in charge, United States bureau of animal husbandry, also in charge of the hoof and mouth disease control work in California, is expected to be present, with G. H. Hecke, director of the state department of agriculture.

Preparations are being made for the next annual citrus fair of Sonoma county, which is to take place in the Orange City of Cloverdale in February. Committees have been named and an effort will be made to secure a great variety of displays, featuring right down to the minute national and world happenings. An ambitious exhibitor has already selected the Shenandoah as his design and it will be reproduced in oranges and lemons, olives and pomolos and other trimmings.

The problem of labeling milk bottles in California will be taken up in detail at the state dairymen's legislative conference in Oakland, December 13, and plans for law amendments probably will be formulated. Dr. William C. Hassler, San Francisco health officer has been asked to address dairymen on this .particular problem. Attorney General U. S. Webb recently ruled that the present dairy law prohibits the printing of the date of pasteurization on the cap of a milk bottle.

Texas cotton growers speak highly of the Kern County cotton displayed at the Waco, Texas, cotton exposition. The cotton was proclaimed exceptionally strong in body and of choice quality. C. L. Meloy, of the United States department of agriculture, at the exposition, said the cotton was of highest quality and would be in heavy demand by textile manufacturers of the country. The Kern county exhibit is the first ever made by California in any other state..

Don't waste your surplus feeds.

Declared to be the first carload of California naval oranges for this season to be shipped, 462 boxes wtat from Woodlake, Tulare county, to Chicago. The oranges were of good size, flesh texture, color and sugar content.

Ed Gambrel, Ukiah sheep raiser, purchased an Ohio ram for $300. The animal, which won first prize at the Indiana, fair, is two years old. Gambrel bought $1,500 worth of thoroughbred rams this year.

_88aUe* animals go

The University of California Samuel W. Heller memorial flower prize will be awarded by the Pasadena Horticultural association this year, the awarding society being chosen on the basis of reputation in the raising and judging of the particular species of flower selected by the board for the annual competition. This competition will be confined to chrysanthemums, on which the Pasadena horticulturists are considered authorities. The prize, representing the interest on «t $5,000 fund, is given on the basis of points. Five points are allowed on each new variety originated within the state. Last year the prize was captured by J. A. Carbone, Berkeley, for the beBt orchid raised in the state.

The third and fourth heading on the great Florence lake tunnel was "holed through," October 30. The tunnel is the largest in the world of its bore and cost approximately $17,000,000. The remaining sections will "hole through" in February and March and then the waters of the upper San Joaquin river will be diverted over forty miles from their natural course and will flow from Florence lake under the 10,000 foot Kaiser mountain into Huntington lake.

The plan to organize the California state council of retail merchants is meeting with favor throughout the state. The following organizations have pledged their aid: California Development association, California Retail Fuel Dealers association, Retail Dry Goods Merchants association, Los Angeles Retail Dry Goods and Garment association, Oakland Madera Business Men's association, Ukiah chamber of commerce Oceanside chamber of commerce, Pasadena Merchants association, Sacramento Retail Merchants association, San Jose Merchants association, Santa Rosa Credit bureau, Visalla chamber of commerce and Long Beach chamber of commerce.

Approximately 230,000,000 barrels of petroleum will be produced by California oil wells during 1924, according to an estimate forwarded to the California Development association by the petroleum committee of the Pacific coast regional advisory board. The estimate is based on an actual production for the first six months of this year of 118,108,412 barrels. Although the figures represent somewhat less production than for 1923, due to abnormal conditions of that year, they show a material increase over the twelve months of 1922, indicating a steady annual increase in production.

A test suit to determine whether persons shall be permitted to retain wine which has fermented from grape juice they pressed with the permission of the internal revenue department, was filed in the Yuba county superior court and carried to the supreme court for final decision, District Attorney Ray Manwell has announced. Nick Miroyannis was arrested and 125 gallons of wine confiscated by police recently. He pleaded that he had a government permit to make the wine and the case was dismissed. The wine was returned, but later seized and is being held until the matter is settled.

Twenty thousand California school teachers are to be aided by radio in their job of getting 600,000 children to be punctual in attendance at school. A series of weekly programs furnished by the state board of education and broadcast by KGO, are expected to be so interesting that children will want to be at school in time to hear them. Schools throughout the state are reporting great enthusiasm for the new venture.

Cotton growers, agriculturists and orchardists in southern Kern county have appealed to the state fish and game commission for protection from a herd of wild elk which are running that section of the county and destroying crops. The elk are under government protection and cannot be shot. Fences are no obstacle, as the animals leap seven-foot barriers with ease.

Six men are still unaccounted for as the result of the burning of an Associated Oil company tanker, wharf and docks at Martinez. The tank steamer Alden Anderson and the barge Alpine, the latter owned by the Alameda Transportation company, were destroyed. The fire was started when a toredo-eaten wharf collapsed and electric sparks ignited oil.

With the precipitation to October 30, twice that of normal years, all fears of a water famine in California for the coming year are allayed, in the opinion of the weather bureau officials. Three inches of rain has fallen, the reports show. Only five times in the last seventy-five years has such an amount fallen by October 30.

The supervisors of Sonoma county have accepted the eleven-mile stretch of highway from Sebastopol, through Forestville to the top of Poekt hill, constructed by the road improvement district. This is the first unit of paving that will link the great Redwood highway directly with the paved road to the great Russian river playground.

Ruling that an interlocutory decree is not a divorce, and a man's estate, if not exceeding $2,500, rightfully belongs to his widow, the state district court of appeal reversed a' judgment of the superior court.

The 5-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. M. S. Wheeler of Parlier, was fatally burned when the Wheeler home, in which he was locked while his mother was shopping in a nearby town, caught fire. The volunteer fire department battled the flames, unaware that the child was in the house until they had been extinnguished.

The California Palace of Legion of Honor, San Francisco, gift of the late A. B. Spreckels and Mrs. Alma De Bretteville Spreckels, will be dedicated on Armistice day. The exercises will be conducted by the San Francisco park _commission.,

THE LIVERMORE JOURNAL

Santa Rosa is to adopt zoning limits for different .classes of buildings. The new causeway over the Russian river, at Healdsburg, will soon be ready for use.

A tropical garden will feature the fourth annnual Armistice ball of Harding Post No. 161, Antioch.

An outbreak of infantile paralysis has caused the closing of the grammar schools at both Jamestown and Sonora, in Tuolumne county.

Chief of Police August Vollmer of Berkeley, issued an order against airplanes flying at low altitude during games at the Memorial stadium.

The river beds above Pittsburg and Antioch have been'invaded by an army of shrimps, the first in history that have ventured so far up-stream.

Dr. George Aloojlan, author of the theme for the Raisin day pageant, "From the Garden of Eden to the Garden of the Sun," presented at Fresno, in 1923, died in Tucson, Ariz. 1$

Napa chapter Red Cross will start its annual .membership drive on Armistice day and continue it through Thanksgiving. It is expected that more than 1,000 members will be enrolled.

California's bear flag is hereafter to fly with the Stars and Stripes on the flag poles of San Francisco city schools. The board of education will provide each of the school buildings in the city with a bear flag.

A masked robber held up and, after locking County Treasurer H. L. Knowles of Trinity county, in a safe, at Weaverville, escaped with $4,000. Forty-five thousand dollars of county funds, kept in a larger safe, was overlooked.

The Orland Water Users association voted to ask the federal government to finance the building of a second reservoir to furnish additional storage of water for irrigation of the 20,500 acres Included in the present project.

The Associated Women of Stanford university endorsed the drive being waged by men students against liqucr and passed a resolution stating the association would collaborate with the men in stamping out liquor on the campus.

For seven weeks Bud Sweem, Stockton youth, must appear every Saturday night at the county jail at 7 o'clock to be locked up for twentyfour hours. He was arrested on a charges of reckless driving of an automobile ^nd pleaded guilty.

Harry H. Kent, a veteran' of the World war, who was reported killed in action in the Meuse-Argonne drive, has returned to Sacramento. He was in the 363d Infantry, in which he served as a sergeant during the battles of the Ninety-first division.

Two waifs placed aboard the steamship Manchuria in the Panama canal by an unidentified soldier were "adopted" by the party of 100 San Francisco Shriners en route to New York, according to word from New York. The children, 3 and 2 years old, are being held by immigration officials.

The Golden Gate Thoroughbred Breeders association, a pioneer organization promoted for the breeding of fine stock, filed a voluntary petition of dissolution, due to the rapid disappearance of horses and the many deaths of members. The organization is one of the oldest of its kind in the state.

Luther Burbank estimates that during the past summer 200,000 people inspected his three great flaming color plants, which for several months have been the attraction in his gardens at Santa Rosa. Hundreds of motorists every day pulled up alongside the gardens to inspect what scientists agree have never had a rival in color development.

An increased schedule of rates are in effect in the territory served by the Half Moon Bay Water company, following a decision by the railroad commission, that the present charges were inadequate for a fair return. The new rates authorize a minimum charge in the flat rate scale of $1.50 a month. The metered rates for minimum charges also show an increase to $1.50 for five-eights of an inch.

Two thousand people felicitated the Rev. Father John M. Cassin, for thir-ty-four years rector of St. Rose's church, Santa Rosa, on the attainment of his golden jubflee of ordination as a priest. He was a central figure in a great public reception. People of all creeds crowded the building to hear eloquent tributes paid the pastor by Mayor C. O. Dunbar in behalf of the city, and by Congressman Clarence F. Lea and Supreme Justice Emmet Sea-Hanna.

While playing golf at Byron Hot Springs, last April, Joseph Watts, San Francisco jeweler, struck his daughter in the face with a golf club, inflicting painful injuries. Watts holds a golfer's accident insurance policy. He endeavored to collect damages for his daughter. The company demurred. Mrs. Watts was named guardian of the child and filed suit against her husband for $5,000. If Watts loses the suit brought by Mrs. Watts, the insurance company will have to pay the damages.

A diamond jubilee, celebrating the seventy-fifth anniversary of California's admission to the union, which cames next year, is being planned by organizations intent on stimulating greater interest in the state's historic past and steps already are being taken to secure concerted backing from municipalities. The program calls for appropriate markings for spots throughout California where history1 was made, for study of the circumstances surrounding settlement of each community and for research among citizens generally, into the history of the state.

More than twoi hundred bankers, representing the banks of Santa Clara, San Mateo, San Benito, Santa Cruz and Monterey counties, gathered at Del Monte for the fall convention of Group Three of the California Bankers association. Featuring the convention was an extended discussion of the many phases of the water and power act of California and the many problems now affecting the financial world since the acceptance of the Dawes reparation plans, together with a frank discussion of banking in its relation to the promotion of agriculture in this state.

STATE LETTER

Around Capitol and Stats ln«tltutiona

Expenditures of the state government during the past two years in combating crime aggregated $4,635,664.54, or more than the total amount appropriated by the state during the two-year period for the development of agriculture, mining and reclamation projects. During the biennial period the cost of maintaining the two state prisons was $1,960,691.73, exceeding the sums spent for agriculture by $279,600.71, a check of the state figures showed. Mining work during the two years was aided by the state in the amount of $432,449.27, or less than the sum provided to operate either of the two reformatories maintained for wayward boys. The expenditures connected with criminal work were announced by the controller's office, as follows: Corrective, including Whittier state school, Preston school of industry, California school for girls and establishing reformatory, $1,542,820.78 penal, inlcuding bureau of criminal identification, prison directors, advisory pardon board, San Quentln prison, Folsom prison, transportation of prisoners, arrest of criminals without the state and payment of rewards, $3,092,837.76.

Seven conventions of Interest to the agriculturists of California will be held in Sacramento from December 8 to 12, it 'is announced by G. H. Hecke, of the state department of agriculture. The conventions are: California Fruit Growers and Farmers, December 10 to 11 California Development association, December 9 State Association of County Horticultural Commissioners, December 8 California Field Corps Conference, December 11 Regstered Economic Poison Manufacturers and Dealers, December 10 California Apple Growers and Shippers, December 10 Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers Problem committee, December 12.

Every California motorst must present to the state motor vehicle department the pink certificate of ownership for his automobile when he seeks renewal of his license for 1925. Until this year renewals were made on the white certificate of registration. The department now calls upon motorists to assist the state in verification of previous records by forwarding the certificates of registration and ownership with their renewal applicatons. Explaining the new order, Supt. Marsh, announced that his department will begin receiving applications through the mails on December 15.

Expenditures of the power corporations in their campaign against the state water and power act, as reported to the secretary of s£ate, total approximately. $16,0Q0. proponents of the act admitted expenditures aggregating $35,227.51 in a statement filed by Rudolph Spreckels, treasurer of the California State Water and Power league. The accounting by the Pacific Gas and Electric company showed a total outlay by that corporation during the 1924 campaign of $13,855.58, and the Southern California Edison company of Los Angeles, fixed its expenditures at $2,442.72.

Registration figures for the November election showed 1,822,357 voters entitled to cast their ballots for president. This is an increase of nearly 300,000 over two years ago, and close to half a million more than .were registered for the previous presidential election. The registration, according to party affiliations was: Republicans, 1,183,672 Democrats, 397,962 Socialists, 23,899 Prohibitionists, 3,9,596 declining to state party affiliations, 195,192, and miscellaneous, 2,036.

The question whether a man who is arrested for a misdemeanor and escapes from a county ja41 working party can be charged with a felony in connection with that escape will be finally decided when the state supreme court meets in Sacramento on November 24-25. The case in question is that of George Haines, who has been fighting in the courts fot1 months to nullify the felony conviction against him. He was arrested in Shasta county for a misdemeanor and made a break for liberty.

The supreme court will soon pass on cbnstitutionality ,of the non-par value stock law which is now being used for the first time ifl California. Secretary of the State Frank C. Jordan has demanded that legality of this statute be determined and the Del Monte Light and Power company has, accordingly, filed action. The suit is a mandamus proceeding against Jordan to force him to file amended incorporation articles of the company in which part of the stock is changed to no par value.

Governor Richardson has issued extradition papers for the return to California of Raymond R. Remington, wanted on a charge of holding up a bank at Watts, Los Angeles county, last August. Remington, who is said to have secured approximately $6,000 in the holdup, is under arrest at Wray, Colorado.

Armistice day, November 11, is a legal holiday in California, and all public offices will be closed, says a statement issued- by Governor Richardson.

Announcing its determination to push work on the Pacific highway state highway commission bids will be opened, November 24, for the widening, straightening and surfacing with gravel of a unit almost eleven miles long between Dog creek and Halfway creek in Shasta county. The work will be financed from gasoline tax funds.

Joseph M. Kelley, of Oakland, former .legislator and holder of various county offices in Alameda county, was appointed by the governor the board of equalization,

WOMEN NEED SWAMP-ROOT

Thousands of women have kidney and bladder trouble and never suspect It. Women's complaints often prove to be nothing else but kidney trouble, or the result of kidney or bladder disease.

If the kidneys are not in a healthy condition they may cause the other organs to become diseased.

Pain in the Back, headache, loss of ambition, nervousness are oftentimes symptoms of kidney trouble.

Don't delay starting treatment. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, a physician's prescription, obtained at any drug store, -may be just the remedy needed to overcome such conditions.

Get a medium or large rice bottle immediately from any drug store. However, if you wish first to test this great preparation, send ten cents to Dr. KilmeF & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for sample bottle. When writing, be sura and mention this paper.—Advertisement.

Proof of Right

The proof of a thing's being right is that It has power over the heart that It excites us, wins us or helps us. —Ruskin.

Shava With Cutlcura Soap

And donble your razor efficiency as well as promote skin purity, skin comfort and skin health. No mug, no slimy soap, no germs, no waste, no Irritation even when shaved' twice dally. One soap for all nses—shaving, bathing and shampooing.—Advertisement.

The Gentle Hint

He—"May I call you by your first name. Miss Nelson?" She—"Rather by your last name, Mr. Anderson."— Kansas City Star.

Stop the Pain.

The hurt of a burn or a cut stops when Cole's Carbollsalve is applied. It heals quickly without scars. 30c and 60c by all druggists, or send 30c to The J. W. Cole Co., 127 S. Euclid Ave., Oak Park, 111.—Advertisement.

Every time a man doesn't say anything he lessens his chance of being called a fool.

Wright'* Indian Vegetable Pill* correct Indigestion, constipation, liver complaint, biliousness. Costs you nothing to send (or trial box to 872 Pearl St.. N. T. Adv.

A woman never doubts what her husband says when he comes home too late. She knows.

Motherhood!

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A J\ experience the N strength giving and nerve-quiet-ing effect it has on the prospective mother. Nature is wonderfully helped and the tonic effect is seen in the child. I was able to continue my work thru expectancy in comfort"—Mrs. Anna Smith, 3288-8th Are. All dealers.

Tablets or liquid. Send 10c to Dr. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y., for a trial pkg. of any of his remedies.

Thia One Ruahea the Season He—You don't believe In "saying it with flowers," do you? .w

She—Yes—certainly I do. He—Hop right under that mistletoe, then!—Banter.

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Marine Mowing

The water in the Nemasket river at Mlddleboro is being lowered so that the eel grass in the riger between the electric light station and the lake can be mowed. The grass has grown so heavy that but little power is left in the current.—New York World.

Acce£t onl£ "Bayer" package which contains proven directions. ?fnd? "W 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druraista.

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Fragrance in Flower* Fragrance in flowers is determined by laws which are beyond human comprehension. It is not a quality peculiar to a family, but to individuals, or rather varieties in that family. Old varieties of roses were mostly fragrant many of the newer and most beautiful are not. The older peonies were rather -unpleasant in odor, but many of the newer varieties are de- \*V

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