n I I 7 A f r VI f xargaut 5 1 I III Ill II I IIM H III II TT tf b a -- s mi nii9Tra kNfiili Ufc a Uu Sy F M KIAIAIELL Largest Circulation in Red WillowCo Entered at postoflice McCook Nebraska as second class matter Published weekly The Pennsylvania railroad since 1886 has paid 31000000 Irom it relief funds There are 100 vacancies in the class to enter the United States military academy at West Point next June With the fiscal year ending June 30 1911 America almost reached the billion dollar mark in her exportations of manufactured goods The new apportionment bill giv es Oklahoma as many congress men as Kansas and two more than Nebraska A remarkable development Oklahoma The senate by a vote of 38 to 2S Tuesday night adopted the conference report on the wool tariff revision bill already adopt ed by the house The bill will now go to 1he White Ilose for the expected veto of President Taft President Taft has vetoed tlio statehood measure drafted to ad mit into the union the states Ar izona and Xew Mexico lie bas es his objection to the bill on its recall of the judiciary provision Is it however a violent assump tion to claim that the power to recall is no greater nor less great than the power to call or create I 100 The Tribune one year GRANT Modrell and Ebert of McCook v i i over in this section buying cattle last week Harry Rath burn of Traer Kan sas was over this section this week with a Yost stock buyer J IT rWseh has purchased a line driving team for which he paid 230 er traction engine They are go ing to grade roads with it on the Omaha Denver auto route John A Hoffman had a fine two-year-old colt badly cut up in a barb wire fence during the elec tric storm one night last week dianola Iowa this week by the serious llness of his sister Hazel McKinney spent Satur day in Mi Cook Relatives from Plattsmouth are a isiting at the Toogood home Word was received this week of the marriage of Viola Sawyer and Willis Orket at Stockville last week The Beatrice ball boys played the Indianola team here Saturday the result being a victory for the Beatrice team I IB L Y Jff JfBt1 THE PEESCRIPTION your doctor writes names the drugs and quantities he deems best for the patient UNLESS THE DRUGGIST fills the prescription exactly as written he is undoing the work of the doctor Bring your prescriptions here where they wall be faithfully filled A McMTLLEN DRUGGIST r LLINb He a LU Corn Well Along Toward Maturi ty Makes Best Ensilage MAY BE GUT ALMOST ANY SIZE By C W Pugsley Professor of Agron omy and Farm Management Ne braska Experiment Station Formerly it was thought that the corn should be quite green when used for ensilage purposes It is now real ized that the best ensilage is made from corn which is well along toward maturity when the ears are glazed and beginning to dent is probably the best time If cut before this period there is not so large a proportion of digebtible nutrients in the plants If cut ery much later some of the di gestible nutrients have been trans formed into crude fiber which is not so digestible The plant has also a certain amount of that substance which gives to ensilage the thing sometimes designated as palatable succulence Succulence is of course one of the chief assets or ensilage and corn should always be cut early enough to insure this condition The silo can be filled with corn which is quite mature In fact at the Nebras ka station one year the corn was past the bot stage by one or two weeks and was quite dry due to late ness of cutting and dry weather A small stream of water was kept run ning in the blower and this gave the dry stalks and ears sufficient moisture to make a very good class of ensilage It nas probably not as valuable as if it had been cut at the proper stage but it was worth a great deal more for feeding than the fodder would have been especially when used for dairy cows The machine used foi filling may be tions of the ensilage such as the ker nels and pieces of the ears will fall closest to the distribution point while the lighter portions husks and stalks will bebcatteied farther away This makes it necessary to fork over the ensilage and with the greatest of care the corn and stalks are not evenly distributed Success in feeding de pends to quite an extent upon the uni formity of the feed used The distrib uter will give an absolutely uniform distribution and will save the labor of one man in the silo In filling it is well to keep the out edges a little higher and to do most of the packing at the outside of the silo In tramping the foot should be placed next to the staves and the en tiro weight of the body thrown on it This will pack the ensilage on the out side in a manner that will prevent the loss of a good many pounds The pack ing is best accomplished by men con stantly tramping Very often it will 1 ay to keep an extra man in the silo for tills purpose although with a dis tributer it is probably not necessary to have more than two One man can do the work better with a distributer than two ran without it The ensilage may be cut in almost any size desired From one fourth to one half an inch isprobably the best size The customary size is about one half an inch If much larger than this it is not quite so palatable and pieces are often left in the mangers especially if the corn is rather mature and the pieces happen to include a joint of the stalk It is well to have everything in readiness for filling the silo by the first of August It is much better to be a month too early than a week too late A drought may come and in or der to save the corn crop it will have to be put in the silo An early frost may also come and if everything is in readiness the ensilage can be made If however it will take several days to prepare after the frost and espe cially if another one follows with some severity the corn will be great ly damaged From the farm manage ment standpoint it is always a great deal better to have things all ready long before they are needed It doesnt take any more time to see that the knives of the cutter are sharpened and that the binder is in good working order at one period of the year than it does at another and it may mean a good many dollars to the farmer No money is saved in filling by attempting to get along with too little help Filling the silo at the hest is rather heavy work and as a rule farmers do not like that part of it which demands the handling of heavy bundles of corn If teams and men enough are on hand to complete the work in a short time les3 trouble will he experienced in getting help One of the heaviest expenses in con nection with filling is the cost of an engine and engineer where one Is illiii ssesh r o H t1 Li a - Ismail amount of corn Last season I gives uie uusi sau5iuuiiun jim yieut advantage of the blower comes in dis tributing the corn in the silo There is a certain foice resulting from the blast of air which nables the silage to be packed to better advantage if a distributer is used it can be pur Wesch brothers are overhauling chased for kom 12 to 25 and in and repainting their 20 horse pow many instances will pay for itself in a single seasons use The distributer is merelj a series of joints of pipe fastened together with snaps in a manner to make it flexible The en silage is thus evenly distributed all over the failo which is not the case when the cut corn merely falls from the top of the silo either with a blow- Jacob Wesch is giving his build r or chain carrier The heavier mgs a new coat ot paint tins week Tom Momshy has a brother here visiting him from the east Edwin Carfield is expected back from Missouri soon lie has been there looking after his timber land INDIANOLA E E Thompson and daughter Mrs Harry LaBaron spent Thurs day in Bartley Several people were poisoned with poism ivy while attending the D of li picnic on Coney Isl and Wednesday Quite a number from McCook cairn down Wednesday to attend the picnic There will be a union Sun day school picnic in Handels grove Thursday Hiram Rankin of Cripple Creel is hre this week on business W A Jl Cool was called to In- hired It Is hard to get a man to come with his engine for less than 8 or 10 por day If the cutter is of large enough capacity to fill a 100 ton silo in a day every effort should be made to do so Very often by the ad dition of one t extra man and team in hauling from the field this can be done Some farmers favor getting a small er cutter and letting the filling period extend over more time In some in stances this is probably an economical arrangement I know of one man in Iowa who uses a small cutter with a chain carrier the type that demands the least power and runs it with his farm gasoline engine He uses the help of the farm with perhaps the ad dition of a few mn and will extend the period of filling a 100 ton silo over a week This of course has the dis advantage very often of allowing a portion of the corn to become too ripe while the portion which was put in first may be a little green especial ly if some bad weather intervenes There is no need of getting a cutter with an extremely large capacity if the purpose is to fill one or two medi um sized silos on ones own farm I have a 12 inch cutter with a traveling feed table and a rated capacity often tons and the boys reported last year that the cutter was plenty large and would take care of the corn as fast as they could get it to the machine I made a trip to the farm at the season of filling and was surprised at the manner in which the cutter would handle the bundles without cutting the bands In no case were the bands cut and the cutter would take the entire bundle I am satisfied myself how ever that if J were purchasing anoth er machine I would get one a little larger to enable the man at the feed table to got along with a little less work and worry The cost of filling will vary a great deal upon different farms The value of a ton of ensilage will depend to quite an extent upon the methods em ployed in growing the corn and in fill ing the silo If a man is a good farm er and raises a large crop of corn and the cost is based on the cost of pro ducing an acre of corn it will be seen that this ensilage will cost a great deal less per ton than the ensilage tirnltinnl lur Vic ti x 1 1 rx r ili k ncc n saw one farm where eight acres filled a 100 ton silo while on another farm not more than three miles distant it took twenty five acres to fill a 100 ton silo The market value of the land was about the same It can thus be seen that estimates on the cost of pro duction will vary greatly probably due more to the amount of ensilage produced per acre than to the cost of filling although that is no small item The variation in estimates will not be so great if it is figured on the basis of the bushels of corn produced per acre at market value Professor Mumfonl of Illinois states that corn yielding fort j -two bushels per acre and worth 35 cents on the market will give ensilage at 275 per ton In my own instance last year where it took eighteen acres to fill silos of 110 tons each and wih an estimate of the corn at sixtv bushels per acre at 35 cents per bushel and with the labor of fill ing extended over a period of four days and costing 110 and allowing the stalks to be worth 1 per acre on the market the cost of ensilage per ton was 259 Mr Rusk of Union county lewa produces ensilage at 249 per ton for a 100 ton silo Pro fessor Haecker of the Nebraska sta tion bases his estimate upon the cost of growing the corn and states that en silage can he grown and put in the silo at 195 per ton Mr Richard son of Srott county Iowa says that it cost him lor growing and fihing 115 per ton I have no doubt but what careful fanners can easily produce ensilage figuiing the cost on the mar ket vahif of the corn if it had been harectod and sold at 250 per ton and at this rate it is one of the cheap est and Ik st foods in connection with alfcKa r r lover hay that can be pro duced p the corn belt 01 o i ETTING THE EFFECT OF DROUGHT Farmers Should Have Plenty of Land in Alfalfa By E A Burnett Director Nebraska Experiment Station The disastrous effects of the pres ent drought can only be checked by rain which must come soon Cultiva tion may help some cornfields Those having a good soil mulch can be but little benefited bv further cultivation except as they are cultivated following a rain like the one of July 9 With the recent rain and others which may follow the corn crop may yet be about the average A large part of the state will probably have enough corn to make good silage even without further rains On most of these farms other forage will be scarce and hard to get Where the farmer can put up a silo ho can over come a good part of this loss by put ting the corn crop into the silo Ev ery farmer who keeps over twenty cows whether for beef or dairy pui poses should investigate the silo and probably should build one Small grain fields are now ready to plow if we get sufficient moisture to permit plowing These fields should be plowed at once Every farmer who does not have plenty of alfalfa should prepare from ten to forty acres for alfalfa and sow the seed between August 15 and September 15 The land should be worked thoroughly to make a good firn seed bed A good mmtnJjjjfiffirA alfalfa field will protect the farmer against next years drought Farmers having plenty of land in alfalfa are not particularly short of forage at this time Good alfalfa hay and silage will make as cheap beef or butter in sum mer as fairly good pasture Every dairyman should have both these kinds of forage The first crop of alfalfa was good this spring over most of the state small second crop has been cut and we have a chance for two good crops 3ret 4 The rain of July 9 and 10 will start a new crop We are almost sure to have sufficient rains to keep the alfalfa growing Alfalfa is one of the crops which is not killed by drought It simply waits for rain and immediately begins work when mois ture is available Get ready now for next year With July and August rains some pasture for hogs sheep and beef cat tle can be got from sowing Dwarf Es sex rape Sow three pounds per acre broadcast on plowed land Harrow the the land thoroughly after sowing Sorghum sown at this time will make a fair to good crop if we get rains immediately This makes fairly good pasture for hogs but is not safe pasture for cattle Sorghum is most valuable as hay in winter If rains come soon a large acreage of winter wheat will be sown in hope of recuperating our losses next year For winter wheat plow as early as possible Do not trust to plowing late in August or September as good stands of wheat are generally found on land which has been plowed early and prepared well Farmers should take a careful In ventory of their live stock and deter mine whether they are paying expen ses Young cattle especially calves made money last winter in the feed lot Many heavy cattle did not Do not sacrifice the young stock Get them ready to go to market fat rather than sacrifice them at this time Feed the dairy cows well no matter how scarce your forage is RED TAILED HAWK NOT FOE TO FARMERS Does Ho Deserve fo Be Under Ban of Poultry Raisers By John T Zimmer Department of Entomology University of Nebraska Among several of the birds of prey which are popularly or unpopularly formed chicken hawk and which RED TAILED HAWKS are therefore shot at every opportun ity is the red tailed hawk It is a rather large bird about two feet in length in color a mixture of blackish brown and fulvous above and below streaked uith dusty brown and with the tail rusty brown crossed by a black subterminal band The young have the tail gray with numerous darker bars and without any of the rusty coloration The hawk is a strong but slow flier and loves to sail around in the air without apparent motion of the wings and will often soar to such heights as to be invisible from the ground Its note is a shrill high keyed whistle which has been likened to the sound of escaDing steam Although supposed on account of its size and occasional depredations to be an active foe of poultry raisers the red tail is quite the opposite Small mammals such as field mice wood chucks squirrels rabbits ground squirrels and even skunks are pre ferred to other kinds of food When these are scare the bird will feed on insects of various kinds reptiles trachians poultry and other birds and sometimes carrion It is very proba ble that most of the poultry and game birds which are eaten are the sick or disabled rndividuals which are unable to elude the pursuer and if such is the case the hawk is conferring a ben efit by reducing the chances for the increase of such stock In any case the amount of this sort of food taken is less than one tenth of the total diet while the harmful rodents comprise about three fourths of that sum and the insects reptiles etc the remain der As may thus be seen the red tailed hawk does not deserve to be under the ban of the farmers and poultry raisers because of the work of a few other species which are true chicken hawks It should therefore be pro tected and not universally condemned if occasionally seen near a poultry yard 125 i THE MODEL SHOE STORE Big Reduction Sale of Low Shoes and Slippers now going ALL NEW AND UP-TO-DATE OH STYLES Phone r E D Perkins Co New Morris Building SPECIAL SALE OF ALL Hart S chart Marx ner suits except blue serges at 30 percent discount THIS MEANS A 3000 suit for - 2100 2500 - 1750 2000 - 1400 1800 - - 1260 1500 - 1050 1200 - - 840 1000 700 During this sale we toil sell all low shoes at same reduction All our straw hats except pana masi are on sale at half price A GALUSHA SON Cut Prices on Coal During the months of July and August on lots of three tons or more we will make following prices Canon Lump 800 per ton Maitland Lump 750 per ton Maitland Nut 700 per ton Maitland Pea 650 per ton Lignite Lump 650 per ton Iowa Lump 650 per ton Pennsylvania Nut 1250 per ton Pennsylvania Stove 1250 per ton Pennsylvania Furnace 1200 per ton ColoradoJNut 12oo per ton These prices areioo less than last winter and will save you some money by putting in your winter coal now Bullard Lumber Co Telephone No 1 M f lMiAjt4lftillSt TheTribune It is Just One Dollar the Year nminmmwfrwtmjsmm S mVTpfi 1