1186 
<Tbt RURAL. NEW-YORKER 
October 1, 1921 
WOMAN AND HOME 
From Day to Day 
The World Ruler 
Within the workshop of the "world Our 
Lord His earth designed. 
The elements together chimed, accom¬ 
plishing His plan. 
The Master’s hands the mountains raised ; 
His breath awoke the wind. 
Oh, craftsmanlike He finished it and 
gave it all to man ! 
The crystal streams unbridled ran to seek 
the virgin seas; 
The meadows stretched from hill to hill, 
unmarked by welt or scar; 
And wakened by the clamor of the young, 
untainted breeze. 
The tree tops sang magnificats to greet 
the morning star. 
»So man took up the gift He gave, and 
broke it to his will, 
The crippled streams to seaward took 
a stinking, fearful load; 
The meadows, shackled, bore him bread ; 
he tore apart the hill; 
lie filled the placid skies with smoke, . 
where once the clean winds rode. 
He cluttered up. the countryside with 
papers from his food; 
lie left, as 'mark that there he ate. the 
flask and rusting can ; 
By black and barren acres where the for¬ 
est trees once stood 
The tale was told of fires he built and 
how, unleashed, they ran. 
A hundred million trees he slew-, and 
where he placed his feet 
The bramble and the sumac grew to 
mock the fallen pine; 
He found a path where flowers dreamed; 
he made.a swarming street 
And bellowed to the tainted skies: “Be¬ 
hold, the world is mine!” 
Within the "workshop of the worlds, () 
wise and patient Lord, 
Within the forge fires of the sun You 
fused and made our earth. 
Oh, send us Eden’s angel back to stand 
with flaming sword 
To keep Your gift and guard Your gift 
until we learn its worth. 
— F. f. v. in New York Tribune’, 
K: 
The Department of Agriculture has 
issued Bulletin No. 1*70, “Manufacture of 
Cow’s-milk Roquefort Cheese.” The orig¬ 
inal Roquefort cheese, high in retail price, 
is made in France from sheep’s milk, and 
its manufacture has been known for 2,000 
years. It is a white cheese marbled with 
green mold, quite salty, and soft in tex¬ 
ture. The”mold is a special culture grown 
on bread and applied'in powdered form 
to the curd. Anyone interested in cheese 
making would find this bulletin sugges¬ 
tive in its discussion of the processes re¬ 
quired by this special product. 
* 
Some of the pretty one-piece frocks of 
the slip-on type have an elastic at each 
side of the waist, run in a casing under¬ 
neath, thus gathering the dress in, while 
permitting it to slip easily over the head. 
There are narrow ribbon ties that appar¬ 
ently confine the dress, but it is the in¬ 
visible elastic that really holds it in 
place. . 
* 
Anyone who has inherited an old-fash¬ 
ioned crepe de chine shawl with deep 
fringe and embroidery may now bring it 
out. It is the newest wrap from Paris, 
and shawls two yards square, heavily em¬ 
broidered, seen in a famous shop, were 
priced at from $75 to $105. Shawls of 
habutai silk were from $8.50 to $100. 
* 
Women’s three-piece sports suits of 
Scotch tweed consist of coat, skirt and 
knickerbockers. They are plainly tailored 
in mannish style, and were seen for 
$40.50, in excellent quality, gray, heather 
mixture, brown and tan. 
* 
Says a reader in Pennsylvania : 
There is every sign of an early Fall, for 
the crickets commenced to sing here in 
June, and a few weeks ago three beautiful 
green and gold caterpillars came up to our 
door seeking a safe place. We placed one 
on a curious oriole's nest, where he made 
his cocoon; the others found places to 
their liking, one on a window curtain, 
the other in a corner of a screen. They 
are the lovely Luna moth variety, and we 
are looking forward to their resurrection 
another season. . We also have two alli¬ 
gators in the greenhouse, a year old, and 
a fuzz-headed monkey, the long-tailed 
white-eapp- 1 variety, that sings like a 
canary bird; he is very interesting. 
That singing monkey is certainly an 
unusual pet for a farm home, and we 
would like to hear more about it. We 
have included among our greenhouse-pets 
bullfrogs, turtles, toads, wood lizards and 
spotted chameleons, all very tame, but 
t 
GOOD SALT 
"Melts” like a flake of SNOW 
If you want even, yet 
mild flavor, for which you 
use salt, select a pure, 
instantljr dissolving salt. 
No salt is salt, unless it 
does dissolve. 
Other salts are of hard, 
granular crystal or hard, 
flaky texture. Colonial Special 
Farmers Salt is different, be¬ 
cause its tiny flakes are soft 
and porous and dissolve in¬ 
stantly like flakes of snow. 
It penetrates quickly, seasons 
evenly. “Colonial” is all 
pure salt, with all the mois¬ 
ture removed. 
Best for cooking, baking, batter mak¬ 
ing, meat curing, table use and ail 
farm pur- 
Ordinary Salt 
The crystals or flakes 
of ordinary salt are hard 
and slow dissolving. 
poses.Will 
not cake 
or lump as 
or d i nary 
salts do. 
*colonial 
Put op in 
701b bags 
of linen- 
ized ma¬ 
terial, ex¬ 
cellent for 
toweling. 
r 
Sssgn 
0**®* \ 
COLONIAL 
SPECIA L 
FARMER S 
Colonial Salt 
The soft porous flakes 
of “Colonial” dissolve 
instantly. 
SALT 
THE COLONIAL SALT COMPANY — AKRON, OHIO 
Chicago, Ill, Buffalo, N. Y. Boston, Mass. Atlanta, Ga. 
FOR STOCK SALT-USE COLONIAL BLOCK SALT 
SAVE $45 
Genuine $100 Oliver Typewriters now $55. 
Brand new, latest model. Direct from fac¬ 
tory to you. And we ship you an Oliver for 
free trial. No payment down. Keep it or 
return it. If you want to own it, pay us only 
$4 per month. This is the greatest type¬ 
writer bargain on earth. You save $45 Write 
today for full particu¬ 
lars, including our book, 
“The Typewriter on the 
Farm." Then we will 
send you an Oliver for 
free trial. Write now. 
tTW OUVEf? Tforwritir (pmu.a# 
5947 Oliver Tvp.-rlt.r Bldg. 
Chic.go. 111, 
Cheer Up! 
TOWERS FISH BRAND 
REFLEX SUCKERS 
knocks rairy dzy gloom - 
\A\V—irvfo & cocked hat- 
'{OWE#;y 
yj\ A. J. TOWER CO.- 
BOiTON « 
The Farmer His 
Own Builder 
By H. Armstronfl Roberts 
A practical and 
linudy book of all 
kinds of building 
information from 
concrete to carpen¬ 
try. Price $1.50. 
For sale by 
THE 
RURAL NEW-YORKER 
333 W. 30th St.. N. Y. 
T HOUSANDS of new books are printed eacli year. 
Some are good and others worthless. Some books 
seem to be written for the sole purpose of helping 
the reader pass a few idle hours, while others are so dull 
and dry it is an effort to read them. 
“HOPE FARM NOTES” 
Is 
an unusual book 
It contains more than 25 stories of farm life which will 
hold your interest from start to finish. The author knows 
both the dark and bright sides of farm life, and thousands 
of country people have found pleasure, inspiration and 
encouragement from these stories.. 
Every member of your family will enjoy this book and 
it ought to be in every farm home. The price is only 
$1.50, postpaid. 
RURAL NEW-YORKER, 333 West 30th St., New York 
Gentlemen—Enclosed find remittance of $1.50 for which send me 
postpaid a copy of “Hope Farm Notes.” 
Name... 
Town..... 
State.R. F. D. or Street No. 
