K V ' J'K,. V ' u a r. t ' !' nam ss?- ME&DOWBROOK -FARM i-ffiimam&r 'kJ Dees require water. Rotation Improves the soil. Rape is excellent for Bwine. Kafir is harder on land than corn. Do not forget to provide shade for the poultry. The better tho man, tho better the cow. Every time. Cold water is practically useless for removing bacteria. Cover crops must bo used to prevent the loss of plant food. You can't tell by tho looks of a1 dairy cow how honest sho is. An inch of rainfall on an ncro of land weighs more than 10 Otons. Harrow teeth are made to be turn ed, yet how many people do it? A pasture arranged to include a few shade trees is 25 per cent, better. If hens develop tho feather-pulling habit! send them to market at once. Corn and affalfa mako a combination that cannot bo equalled on the dairy fnrm. Liberal feeding of the dairy calves is money put where it will draw big Interest. Don't forget the weeds that are get ting ready to go to, seed along tho roadside. Every farmer should have a small wheel seeder and a small wheel gar den hose. It is a mistake to keep a nonde script bull simply because he cost a little money. Soro sbouldors are tho result of ill-fitting collars, and not always those of this season. Paper may be made to stick to whitewashed walls by an application of vinegar to the walls. Clabbered milk drained and left to oy makes a fine feed for young chicks. Rub it flno before feeding. Second of third crop alfalfa, if properly managed, furnishes a very satisfactory pasture for sheep. All cowb that are hearty eaters are CC 7J igK t" . tint "tifnfWnhln nrrMliinprti. liiiLriH''riroflt. f able .producers are nearly eaters.,. . It Is usually mere guesswork to tell tho ago of a hen by her appearance after she has passed tho pullet stage. Gentleness and patienco are al ways important in tho dairy barn, but doubly so when handling tho young heifer. Instead of feeding wet mashes to chicks try giving cracked grain in small quantities in litter. It's good health insurance. Cultivation hastens tho liberation of plant food by permitting air to per meate the soil and oxidize or burn out the organic matter. Live Btock husbandry will postpono soil depletion for a longer period of time than grain farming, but it will uot prevent depletion. The eggs from matured hens will hatch better and produce stronger chicks than tho eggB of pullets. They are usually larger, too. To avoid sore mouth in pigs, tho little fellows should have their largo front teeth removed as soon after they are farrowed as possible. When the plow horses are brought in at noon the harness should bo re moved and tho shoulders washed and rubbed dry while they aro feeding. The results of tho tillage experi ments with disk and mold-board plows indicate that for deep plowing tho disk is preferable to tho mold board plow. While meat Is an excellent food for egg production, on account of its ni trogenous quality, there aro a num ber of other feeds which also 'are high In nitrogen, among which may bo found linseed meal, malt sprouts and gluten feeds. Cows oro not nearly always to blame for being unprofitable. Beforo selling a cow to the butcher you 'should be able to look squarely at the cow and say honestly that you have done your part to get her to be a profitable creature. Shcop llko rapo. t Scaly leg in very contagious. Feed tho dairy cows a varloty. A sod mulch protects tho orchard.. Evory idle aero Is a tax on every acre in use I The young calves need an abund anco of sunlight. Grooming is as important as feeding for working horses. Tho careful stockman gives his ma nuro Bpreader dally exercise. The United States produces moro corn than oil tho rest of tho world. Cows should not bo kept too long on one ration, no matter how good. The soft maple is a fast growing tree that loves a fairly moist climate. Moro fresh air and less hot air aro what is needed in tho dairy business. It should bo remembered that a horse can do moro than his feet will stand. Whenever hogs are confined to ono feeding place a feeding floor should bo provided. Butter Is eaten more as a relish than for tho actual constituents it contains. The United States is reBponslblo for two-thirds of tho cotton crop of the world. , It is Just as necessary to fit a col-, 1 lar to a horso as it Is to fit a shoe to the foot. DuckB are very fond of dande lions chopped and mixed with ground grain. From the time corn tassels out un til it becomes ripe it increases its dry matter five-fold. A 20-acre poultry farm has been added to the equipment of the Uni-' verslty of Illinois. Speaking of the matter now, sec-, and crop clover added to corn im proves tho ensilage. Tho valuo of corn silage to tho beef( producer is not limited to its use in winter feeding alone. A vessel holding 1,000 pounds of( water will hold about 1,032 pounds pounds of wholo milk. Poultry balance their own rations if they are given a wide variety of feeds to select from. Some farmers aro even so busy In harvest time that they haven't time to stop and do the oiling. Always water first, then a little hay, and follow with grain; this gives the animal a chance to digest. This Is a good time to put a square of tar paper in the bottom of each' nest box for tho benefit of lice. The levelness with which a horso walks Jb one.0f.tho besLevldences. h'al hisT4legslvprirhamohyry y When you get a good team let tho other fellow whistle, but don't put a price on it, and so invite its early sale. Preparo for the colt that's coming by giving tho marc easy work, and' plenty of nourishing food and good water. Penning chickens is the best way to get a fine I flock, for It means that you aro getting eggs from the best hens you have. Keep pigs growing from tho start. Never lot them go short ono week be cause you are busy looking nfter something else. For ft brood sow prefer one of good length and breadth of body and placed on short, strong, ' well-made legs, set wldo apart. When our henB are allowed to be come overf at, a disorder, of the ovi duct is often the result, which causes it to "break down behind." Silos will be built In large numbers this year, as many farmers bad a sad experience keeping their cattlo alive during the long, severe winter. Sour milk is about as good foi growing a young calf as so much fog. Ice-cold milk is but little better, and excessive quantities are even worse. It pleases the cow to bo milked quickly, and gets her In the habit of giving down promptly. It Is often tho slow milkers that make tho strippers. In tho feeding of ducklings, dry grain is unsuitable. They will not eat enough sharp grit to digest it. Whole wheat and cracked corn, boiled together and let stand until cold, will give good results. If you are bothered with rats around the chicken coops, mix corn meal with plaster of parts, and pro vide plenty of drinking water near by. The rats will eat tho piaster and drink greedily. The water and the plaster will unite and solidify, killing the pests. TWO IMPORTANT REQUISITES IN PROFITABLE PEAR ORCHARD Objects to bo Obtained In Prunlnjj and Training aro to Secure Symmetrical, Evenly Balanced Heads Admission of Sunlight and Air and Foliage for Shade. I T4ttWt,- Intermediate or (By G. B. BllACKETT, Pomologls.. Unit ed States Department of Agriculture.) Pruning and training are important requisites in tho successful manage ment of a pear orchard, Tho objects to bo attained aro: (1) Symmetri cal, evenly balanced heads; (2) tho admission of sunlight and free cir culation of air into all parts of the treo tops; and (3) tho maintenance of sufficient follago to protect tho trunks and branches from the intenso heat of the sun's rays, which would otherwise bo likely to scald and injure botli treo and fruit. Pruning should begin as soon as tho trees have been planted by cutting back tho young treo at the time of planting to tho height from the ground it Is proposed to start tho branches to form the head of tho tree, which should not be over 12 to 15 inches, as shown in figure 3. This cutting back will cause several of the upper buds to break and grow, thus starting tho top or head at tho proper height. The starting branches .should bo watched and only such left to grow as aro to form tho main branches. The strongest shoots should bo left at equal distances apart around the stem and should tend obliquely outward so as to spread and make an qpen head. Tho second year these shoots should be shortened back to tho extent of about half of the growth, as shown in figure 4. Tho same Plan should bo continued the third nnd fourth years. In all pruning, to give the desired form to tho head and especially while tho treo is young, tho orchardist should keep clearly fixed in his mind the form of the tree as it Is to be when old; for what may seem to be an open head when the treo is young may prove to be too denso nnd crowded tfheniho tree. Is.qldey.ThoJnches rshourd.'nflt bbtoo .clOBirtogether-'f or .uuuveiutMii't; m, Kuiueriug uiijnui. uuring jaie winter or in eariy spring before tho sap starts, each tree should be carefully looked over Two-year-old pear tree. Tho lines show where to cut back at time of pruning. . and all branches which are likely to interfere with adjoining ones should be cut out and the centers of dense growth thinned out; side branches which are making a stronger growth then the others should be checked by shortening in, so as to maintain an evenly balanced head. Some va rieties havo an upright habit of growth and some make a slender, straggling growth. All need attention each year. In cutting back tho last year's growth ho top bud should be left on tho side of the branch feeing the direction in which tho growth needs to bo diverted. Dy this method there will bo no difficulty in shaping tho treo Into any desired form. All pruning and training possible should bo dono while the treeb are young and tho growth of wood Is tender. At such timo the healing over is more rapid and complete, and the treo suffers less Injury. Old trees that have been neglected ft '" I Natural Form. may be renewed by sevcro pruning cutting buck all tho branches that are not in a healthy condition. This prun ing will cause now, vigorous shoots tc grow. Tho now growth will need tc bo cut back as occasion requires, lly persistent pruning an entlro new top may bo formed in a few years. When tho removal of a largo brand; 1b necessary, tho wound should be cov ered with grafting wax, paint, or some other substance that will prevent evaporation and keep tho wood from checking and consequent decay. The Intermediate form Is probablj the best for training tho pear. It It a compromise between tho vase and the pyramidal forms and Its outlines Vase or Goblet Form pf Top. ttoiiuu nu ,i.uiivt;iiwuuui.. uj t't-V u allowed to grow jhorb in accord with Its natural habit, but ltimust bo check ed moro or less in its growth so as tq conform to tho Ideas of tho planter Different varieties of tho pear varj greatly in their habits of growth Some trees aro upright and somo art of n drooping habit Both of these forms should bo modified. Upright branches are shortened back and in duced to spread out; and the limbs ol the tree inclined to droop are en couraged to grow moro nearly upright RAISING BELGIAN HARES PROFITABLE Care In Selection of Stock XoFlrol Important Consideration in Starting in the Buaineos. Tho so-called Belgian hare 1b a domesticated form of the wild rabbit of Europe, being bred with reference to its valuo as a food animal, and its flesh is now gcnerall considered bet ter for food than that of the ordinary hutch rabbit. Rabbits may bo propagated without costly Investment in land and build ings, and possess the further advan tage that they contribute another ani mal to the farm stock that may bo killed and prepared for the table at short notice. As n rule, the same treatment applies to all forms of rab bits, except tho lop-eared variety, which require heated quarters in win ter. Caro in tho selection of stock is thr first important consideration upon entering upon tho raising of rabbits, and for tho rest of the enterprise only observation and Judgment are essen tial. While not affording largo profits, the raising of rabbits in a small way may bo mado interesting and fairly remunerative, us well ns affording an agreeable cbango in tho family diet where ordinary meats aro high priced or difficult to obtain. Separate Ailing Chick. At the flrat uUjn of drooplness in r chick separate it from the rest of thr flock and it it does not quickly re novcr use the ax and burn the body. WMMf MM WARM BROODER FOR CHICKS Ono 8o Arranged That Little Follow. May Get Their Backs Up Against Cloth-Covered Heater. In describing a chicken broodor, in Invented by W. O. Wltham of Salem, Ore-., tho Scientific Amorlcan says: In this patent tho invention has rof erenco to chlckon brooders, and the object is to provide ono having a Chicken Brooder. heater, curved in cross section, which permits the chicks to get their backs up against tho cloth-covered henter, bo that their bodies may bo warmed In Who natural wny. Another objoct 1b to provldo mcanB for warming the heater, which will uso to tho best advantage tho heat supplied by tho lamp. As warm air from terminals passes through tho openings shown in the top of tho brooder In tho perspective view, "it will tend to draw with it nlr from tho housing chamber, which will in suro a circulation of air. TO DESTROY INJURIOUS LICE Ten Drops of Pennyroyal Added to I lamespooniui or unvo uu win Prove Effective. Grease Is recommqndcd for llco, but chicks abhor it, nnd It should not be used unless It Ib absolutely necessary. Never uso coal oil on young chicks, for it is irritating and likely to scald tho flesh. If tho largo llco aro found on the chicks, sweet oil -will answer tho pur-i pose Just as well, and tho chicks will not mind it as much. Ten drops ol pciinyroyal may bo added to a large tablespoonful of olive oil. With the finger rub o'no or two drops well un der tho wings and down tho head nnd neck of tho chicks. Tho small lice mny bo got rid of easily, but the largo gray ones stick very closo nnd nro hard to get otf. The largo llco will kill tho young chicks, and tho owner never knows what tho trouble is. They are hard to discern, nnd will Buck blood from tho little fellows until their vitality is exhausted, when they die. Watch tho young chickens very closely, and 'do not allow them to bo postered with tho largo lice, nor tho small ones, cither, for they also will do s great doal of hhrm In many ways. FEEDER OPERATED BY HENS California Man Invents Contrivance Worked Automatically by Chick- " niQpotlPHwl8fn? . - - V tfVVl' ft"- V 4'pmP -il rcopio "wno regara cnicKeim u noi having enough sense to get in out oi tho wet will havo to revlso their opin ions. A California man who knows something nbout fowls has designed a feeder which is operated automatically by tho chickens themselves, and if a hen is too dumb sho is apt to starve to death. A hopper containing feed it placed' on a trestle. Tho Valvo from which tho feed is discharged is nor mally kept closed by tho weight on qno side of the swinging fulcrum. To open tho valve, weight must bo ap plied to tho other sltlo of tho fulcrum find this is dono by the chicken Jump- Chicken Feeder. ing upon a projecting arm. When she sees a few kernels of corn sho Jumps down and enta them and then has to spring up again to release some more, thus getting exorciso and an appetite for dinner. Best Land for Turkeys. On farms having high, dry land, which has a light growth of grass, and whero a new breeding gobbler has lately been Introduced, tho largest flocks and tho most thrifty looking turkeys are found. Keep Chicken Separated. N Never allow chicks of all ages to run togothor. Tho stronger and largon ones will got most of tho food, and will fight nnd crowd tho weaker ones till, if they do llvo, will never amount' to anything. Xle Omoo - ' "gr Woll-uli, Mlstnli White Man, I llsaon whut yo say; I lull en tok mnh linbltn on I thr'ow dem nil nwny., Dcy come on nst mo conxln won 1 shoot some crnps ternlght. t tun en holler. "Satan, yo' dess liusslo out mnh xlRhtl" En now doss ev'y niawnln when I nlttln' out o bald , t lookln' fo do luilo dnt yo' Mow btow on mnh haldl ' Whali dnt hnlo fo' tnali linldT "Wlinh dqm wlnRH dnt gwlno ter sprout? t lookln' fo doin nl'nys Hut dey nln' ylt pcepln' out! Umph-ulit MIstali Whlto Man, wlion yo tol' inn nil mnh sins En up en hIiow mo vlu'rotis whnli do lonff, strulRht rond bcglnn, , V'o Rot mo scnlhed o dancln, en yo' fix mo so dnt now Do snucalln' o' a flddlo molt mo want tor run, somehow! I do no doublo-nhufdcs on I cut no plgcon- wlnss Cut I nln' sec no hnlo en dom Bplcndld, yuthch thlnes. Whnh dnt hnlo dnt yo' say Gwlno ter set dess Ink lilt fit? Whnh dem vtnns ter lly nwny? Not a fenthch sprouted ylt! Lnwzy, Mlstnli Whtta Mnn, when yo' tulC mo by d linn' En' 'zohted mo tor npuhn 'cm en ter show mnhseff a mnn, To' conx mo twoll 1 promlso dnt I doan' piny enhds no mo' Dcss when I lun tor tun do Jack fo'' trumps threo tlmcp In fo'! I feels mnhseff bnokslidln', en I's nachrMy lettln no Dnt hnlo dnt yo' tnlk of, hit a!n' novalt. mndo no show, Whnh dat hnlo en dem wings? Mlstoh White Mnn, donn' yo' see Dnt It nln' Rwlno do no kqoA Te bo Rood ce I kin bo? Literary Comment. The November Chnutnuquan pub- night say offhand that' porsplrationi Is tho same tho world over. It may bo that the United States being tho land of liberty perspiration Is manifested moro freoly than in England. However, it is a summer, subject, wo should think. Uncle Sam is usually represented is a slender man. while John Bull is nlwnys pictured fat and rod-fneod. Tho latter typo of man is generally Bupposed to lose flesh moro rapidly be tauso of perspiration. However, tho iklnny man Is sold to suffer moro' from the heat. Wo don't know yet what the problem 1b, but wo Bhould jay that if an Amorican citizen -wantB to Bweat In England ho can appoal to his diplomatic representative if he is forcibly restrained. Wo nro in favor of granting tho same right to an Eng lish subject in our land. Fair play ill around, wo Bay. Thero need bo no problem at all. Let each man be a law unto himself, especially in hot wenther. Maybe tho problem in England 1b to imin Tnn nvAi-ncn British hotel clerk move fast enough to induce perspira tion at all. Knew His Limitations. "Old man," wo say to our friend, it's none of our business, of course, but why did you drink so much wlno and eat nothing at all at tho dinner?" "I know whero I git off," replies our 'rlcnd, whoso lack of refinement 1b off set by his possession of riches. "I enn't figgor out where an' when to uso ill them knives an' forks, but I'm Ihcrp when it comes to usln' tho glass es, Kid." Much Above It. "Yes," they said, "Mr. DIggem 1b; above his occupation." "What," wo asked, "does he do?'' "He," they replied, "is a well-drlll cr." A Hard Problem. First Scientist This is a puzzling case, indeed. Second Scientist I should say so. Why, this would puzzlo on amatour rclentist. id The Futility of Things lt,l m Hf-v1i?.i IVit M fl7'-':rV-'iii'.'.ff iH.wMja n wIllP1 IT ilHIl.HB u 1UUUII1K iiiuuiu xiiu iiuuiuiu cr'rffiiai'Sfiv.frr,i:nio'i-nfttt! Jt. ,-- .II..M m . I a! ml. T).nli1.M i &mmwmm&gm: "Wlttimit ilinnltur Intf flin 'ifrlTeln WO jwmmf -r-r v i If w