, -, The Commoner y0L. 15, NO. 5 26 i - rtn v. f.H i- J1, i C V- L fc. & P6 X . - i , Hi . In the Field of Agriculture f L i , M ! . i mfmmmm J CHOPS. NOT AFFECTED BY MOON Scientists are now convinced that the moon has no more influence on crops than, it has. upon, the tempera ture or the amount of rain or the winds or any other weather element, says the United States department of agriculture. The growth of plants depends upon the amount of food in the soil and in the air than is avail able for them and upon temperature, light, and moisture. The moon obvi ously does not affect the character of the soil in any way, neither does it affect the composition of the atmos phere. The only remaining way in which it could influence plant growth, therefore is by its light. Re cent experiments, however, show that full daylight is about 600,0.00 times brighter than full moonlight, yet when a plant gets 1-1 00th part of normal daylight it thrives little bet ter than in absolute darkness. If l-100th part of normal daylight is thus too little to stimulate a plant, it seems quite certain that a 600,000th part can not have any effect at all. It is therefore a mere waste of time to think about the moon in connection with the planting of crops. The moon, say the scientists, has' nothing more to do with this than it has to do with the building of fences, the time for killing hogs, or -any other of the in numerable things over -which it was once supposed to exert a strong influence. DISKING AHEAD OF THE PLOW PER MONTH and EXPENSES Salarr or CommlMloa-Introduce h luff oar Klntr llutter SeDarutor. PrndtiMii beat crada of butter from cream or nlllc. Bwoct'orBour, In lees tbau 6 minutes. Retail 5o up. Write tor free sample and salary proposition. Da.Klnff Mfg.CoDapL 290' Chicago, III $150 , 140 a Wit k for Afctats Tht Acem SilfhMlIng Flat ltoa.take wo men by torm they limply can't relU Selllnff almott aa caay aa giving away. Something entirely nw. An entire week1 a Ironing (or a penny, Saves cillta of walk, ins and makes Ironlnjr day a pleasure. Carry it anywhere Iron anywhere, on a porcn unuer mo anaae trees, riomovo neeueu..nvcryooay or women, ou dr. will msVi wait think o( this profit- write ior selling plans and samples. ACORN BRASS NtFQ.OO.D99t(T, GhlCago,lll. Interested. Every home a prospect. Agonlt Makt Monet-men or women, quick, easy, sure. An all rear's business; two sales ikeyouiu insweeKsixsaitsperaayeasy. uont which has been punched with many small holes. If one cares to handle poison, the insects can be got rid of on radishes or turnips by the use of Paris green, using one part Paris green to 10 parts flour or air-slaked lime. Mix thoroughly and.jilaqe'in a. cloth sack. Shake tha sack over the plants during the early morning, while the dew is still on the leaves. WHY MILK AND BUTTER SOMETIMES YELLOW ARE .One application soothes and heals a rough plmplyskin.and.whenrcpeatcd.aulcklycfTccts cure. Eczema. Ervsinelas. Tetter. Ulcers and all Skin diseases yield to its curative properties. auc m vox. n au uruggisis. pesd for f rco sample and book, "Health and Beauty." JOHNSTON, HOLLOWAY & C.. LI728 Spring: Garden St., ' FMIa., Pa. 0 W : ST0PAFTS " " Salesmen Jut Out Brand new Invention splen did seller Light Deflector for Auto Headlights. Puts lights on the road in stead or in other people's eyes. Not a dimmer Iiici-chhcm Urlvlnjg light, .Cuts, out all tho "glare." Needed wanted on pvqry machine. Sample, TSasy to put on. No adjustments no knobs to Uirh lasts as ldng as tho car. Fully Patented. Low in pripo sells like lightning. .LISTEN; you can mako $45.00 to $125.00 Weekly JoUbuoh, Ohio, cleared $22 first day. AlieS, WkhIij, mado $25.60 one afternoon. Illn- kiq, -wine, "Best article I over .sojd." Walker, Khrn. writes, "Double my order And ship C.O.D." Gorman, Iowa, wires, "Ship gross quick, wiling money. Sold 19 today." Profit 930.40. JIurry, gtjt some of this money yourself. Wiley, G., reports 11 sales the first day. Millard, Ohio, (says "Everybody wild over Deflect or." Thlw i your .ckaace t make mosey. Don't hesitate a minute. No charge for territory sales g;warHHtecl you can't help but make money- SEND NO MONVY just write lor run details. Address tho Ulckmyer Deflector Co., 437 8. A II. uiug., Toledo, Mwio. Disking land before plowing is one of the things which all farmers, but particularly those located oh the high-priced corn-belt land, should practice. Some men have found it profitable to disk blue grass sod, but the practice has its greatest advant age when, applied to stalk and stub ble land. The soil will absorb more water when it is disked before, plowing. This has been a very important point in recent years when the soil bias sel dom been soaked with' water. The more water stored in the soil, when the crops are put in, the larger will be the return if the iseason is dry. The thorough mixing of- the stalks, stubble and other surface organic matter with the soil,. -which .results from the disking, is very advanta geous. On stalk land, particularly the weighted disk takes the. place of the stalk .cutter and .this at the same, time thoroughly mixes the organic1 matter with the soil. A disk may also be- used to out up green manure crops before turning them under and brings about- a more thorough .mix ing of this organic matter with the soil. One of the fundamental prin ciples in plowing any land is to thor oughly mix the stalks, -grass or trash with the surface soil, and this is greatly favored by disking in advance of the plow. Land with a pulverized surface can be turned with a plow in such a way as to give a much better seed bod than where the disking is not done. The land plows more easily and the pulverization is at the same time more thorough. The disk harrow is one of the most valuable of farm im plements, and its use in advance of the plow is just as important as Its use following the. plow. Missouri Experiment Station.. The belief that a bright yellow col or in milk means Tichness in quality is not true. Experiments conducted at the college of agriculture of the University of Missouri show that the change from white cream and. butter in winter to yellow cream and butter in spring and summer does not indi cate an increased fat percentage. The very highest colored milk that a cow can give may have the lowest fat per centage. Such a condition is found in the so-called colostrum milk, the first milk that a cow gives after giv ing birth to a calf. The explanation of the wide dif ference, between the results of the ex periments and the popular belief in regard to the relation of color to richness lies in the cause of the na tural yellow color of cream and but ter. It was found that cows were not able to produce the yellow coloring matter for their cream and butter. The coloring 'matter must be derived from the feed. The yellow coloring matter of milk was found to be iden tical with a yellow, coloring matter mm us wiueiy aistriDUtea in plants and fresh grass. This coloring matter is called car otin. It takes its name from the carrot, where it is very abundant, and where 'it was first discovered by scientists more than one hundred years ago. The difference in the color of cream and butter in winter and spring was iouna to oe aue to the fact that the winter feeds contain little or no car otin. No marked increase in the fat percentage accompanies the increase in color when foods rich in carotin are fed. It has been shown that the average cow gives a higher per cent of fat in its milk during the winter than in the spring and summer. worm, larvae of the white butterfi says a writer in the Practical fH' In small patches they are often 52 annoying and destructive, yet Z trolled with comparative eW Z prompt action. They readily submit to the free application of almost any dust-like material, such as inS powder, fresh lime, tobacco dU8t wood ashes, road dust, etc., or of anv poisonous or corrosive spray Z kerosene emulsion, hot water or hot soapsuds, whale oil soap, sprays con taining arsenical poisons, etc. First point of importance is that worm are disposed of before they have had i chance to hide themselves inside of the fold of the- leaves of the young head, especially around and near tho stem or-heaTt. For the home grower or small market gardener, an easy way is to carry a-small (hand) pow der gun loaded with some good in sect powder, buhach being best, and to eo over the patch occasionally, applying a puff or two into the heart of each plant. This quickly disposes of the worms. CUTWORM CONTROL FLEA BEETLES INJURING VEG ETABLES eaal thaac i ' ..! TXrol n inilao nr 4.nl1 fty t v AW14J' "V" vuv.jn.jr M. JUUipilB, I-JO-1JV .. . Many complaints havecome to the college of agriculture of the Univer sity of Nebraska in regard to the flea beetles that are eating the leaves of radish, cabbage, and other vegetables of this family at the present time. Tho beetles that cem to be doing most of the damage are the cabbage flea beetle, a small, shiny, bluish black species, and another kind, known as the striped flea beetlo. which has a small yellow stride on each side of the back. "When the bee tles or the leaves on which they are working are touched, the insects jump away like fleas. They can be driven away from gardens by dust ing with finely sifted ashes or air slaked lime. To each pint of the fine ly sifted ashes or lime add one tea spoonful of kerosene ;or two finely crushed moth balls. Mix thoroughly and dust the mixture on the plants from, .a .coffee an, .the bottom of C - " OBSERVATION TOURS VALUABLE A feature, of the county agent work in Nebraska this year has been the agricultural observation tours taken in the respective counties for the pur pose of focusing attention to some special method or practice of special value to local agricultural conditions, says the United States department of agriculture. Silo excursions were held in five of the counties, and they were followed with very excellent re sults. In western Nebraska, and especially in. Dawes county, the number of silos lm. . -uZ ?n dn5ollowine tuese observation tours. The growing ot sweet clover and the value of alfalfa were also made objects of special excursions. As a result a great deal of sweet Mad?"! be PUt ln 0n sandy soils In JJ52 T C0UntJ' and the mhod ot be followed out in all parts of that county and in other counties. GREEN CABBAGE WORM !n 6n rlPedeS 0f woma are fad ing on cabbairea. mnnf . ., W1U b the .UMVe cabbage Cutworms are the naked, greenish or dusky larvae of a number of spe cies of dusky-winged moths that fly at night for the most part, says the New Mexico college of agriculture. The usual life history is as fol lows: The eggs laid by the moths in. late summer hatch into small cater pillars, or "cutw6rms," which lie concealed just beneath the surface of the ground near -tender parts of plants. They feed mostly at night. Later cold weather and lack of food necessitate hibernation in the soil or under rubbish, weed piles, etc. In the spring, feeding is resumed again. The damage is more noticeable at that time for the cutworms are fair sized, , hungry, and vegetation is .scarce. After a time the caterpillars reach their full size, go Into the soil to pupate, and late. emerge as moths to lay more eggs for later genera tions. Alfalfa fields harbor enor mous numbers of these cutworms. Control: Many moths may be caught at night by placing a light above a tub of water. This will not reduce the number of cutworms much as the females do not fly far before laying the eggs. It will re duce the nuisance of having the moths in such large numbers about the house. Water standing 6 or 8 hours on an irrigated field should If ill many of the cutworms in the soil. A reliable remedy is the poi soned bait made ad follows: Mix 1 pound of P,aris creon with 25 pounds of dry bran. Add 2 or 3 quarts of molasses to 5 or 6 gallons of water and stir the mixture thoroughly into the poisoned bran. Let this stand for several hours before using. In infested fields scatter broadcast, in the evening, piece-J of this bait the size of two or three fingers together. In gardens, stre , the pieces along the bases of the plants being attacked. 9 LARGEST TARMS MOST PROFITABLE Results of the farm survey work Conducted' co-bperatively in Gage qounty, Nebraska, by the United States department of agriculture and the Agricultural Extension service or the Nebraska University farm, show that of the 54 farms having their business analyzed, the .10 most profit able one were almost three times larger than the 10 farms making tne least returns. In' spite of the com mon belief that the small farm is better and there is more opportunity to take care of the crops, secure Hot ter yields, and consequently mw more money, the largest yields anu the largest profits were found in tne largest farms, The average laur income-of-the -beat 10 farms was ii mi . T-Vii TiiiifanftiAjMfVii in i i i iiiiitWMMflBl -