0 THE SRMI.WPKKLY TRIBUNE NORTH PLATTE, NEBRASKA. TILIZAT HOMEMADE PORTABLE GRANARY IS USEFUL m OF OY BEAU 0H8P Climatic Adaptations Are About Same as Corn- Is More Drought Resistant. FERTILE SAfiDY LOAMS BEST Furnishes Well Balanced Ration In Combination With Many Systems of Rotation Straw Makes Most Valuable Feed. (Prepared by tho United States Depart ment of Agriculture.) The extensive utilization of the soy bean for forage tind tho Increased use of the beans for oil and for huniau food have resulted In nn enormous m crease In tho acreage of the crop. Tho climatic adaptations of the soy bean are about tho same ns those of corn. It is more drought resistant and less sensitive to an excess of mois ture than cowpeas and corn. The soy bean succeeds best on fertile sandy lonms and clay loams. When sown on land not previously planted to this crop, it Is advisable to inoculute it Ttie best time for planting soy beans Is about that for planting corn. The variety to plant Is of prime Im portance and should bo one adapted to local conditions. About 20 varieties aro now handled by growers and seeds men. Combined in Rotation. Soy beans may be combined In many systems of crop rotations? their cash value being sulllclcnt to encourage the growing of the beans as one of the main crops. In combination with other crops, such as corn, cowpeas, and Sudan grass, tho soy bean furnishes n well balanced ration, n lnrge yield, and a great variety of forage. Tho large yield of seed, the ease of harvesting It, and tho Increasing de mand for tho beans for planting pur poses, for food, and for the produc tion of oil and meal recommend the soy bean for seed production. The feeding value of soy bean seed compares favorably with that of other concentrated feeds. The growing of seed for feeding will produce, at a moderate cost, at least part of the high protein concentrates necessary for stock feeding and milk pro duction. Straw Is Valuable. The straw obtained from thrashing soy beans for seed Is n valuable feed for all kinds of stock. The variety and palatablllty of the forms In which the soy bean can he Bcrved make It a very desirable article of human food, and its use as such is gradually Increasing. The soy bean makes an excellent hay for high feeding value which Is greatly relished by all farm animals. From 1 to 3 tons of hay to the acre, J- Soy Beans Are Well Adapted to Culti vation In Rows. ind occasionally 4 tons, are obtained. As a pasture crop the soy bean can )e used to advantage for all kinds of itook. The most profitable method Is to pasture with hogs, supplementing tho corn ration. Mixed with corn, the soy benn Is excellent for ensilage. No Insect or fungous pest has as mined any great economic Importance In the culture of the crop. The soy bean, however, Is subject to root-knot, i disease caused by an eelworm, or aeniatnde, which occurs In many of the lighter soils of the South. To plant soy beans on such Infested soil Is a dangerous practice. USE OF GROUND LIMESTONE .ncreased Yields of Corn, Oats and Hay as Noted by Test at Ohio Experi ment Station. Corn has been Increased In yield 0 bushels per acre, oats 0 bushels, wheat 24-5 bushels and hay 3,010 pounds by an application of two tons of ground llmestono once In five years on the farm of the Ohio experiment station tit Wooster. A five-year rotation of corn, aats, wheat, clover and timothy Is fol lowed on this land. Tho llmestono Is spread on tho land after the plowing for corn in tho spring. PROMOTING GROWTH OF HOGS Comparative Feeding Trial Conducted by Missouri Station With Soy. Bean Meal. Tho Missouri station In n compara tive feeding trial of soy-bean meal with Unseed meal and tankage showed that these feeds were equally effective In promoting tho growth of young hogs. Handy for Storage Products Other Than Grain Crops. Wooden Structure, 10 by 14 Feet, Has Capacity of C60 Bushcl of Grain Easily Moved From .Ono Place to Another. (Prepared by the United States Depart ment of Agriculture.) Prohibitive prices due to a scarcity of gtrtvnnlzed material have vastly re stricted the farm use of the standard commercial types of portable gran aries. But the division of rural engi neering of the bureau of public roads, United States department of agricul ture, has come to the farmers' relief with work plans, specifications and bills of material of a practicable port able granary which the Individual fanner can build himself or can have Practicable Portable Granary. built by a" local carpenter. These plans will bo sent free on request to any farmer In the United States. This portable wooden granary Is 10 by 14 foot In lloor dimensions and 01 Inches to the eaves, with a capacity for GOO bushels of grain. It is built on skids or runners which permit of mov ing It from place to place by tractor or horse power. It is of such a height that it can bo set near the separator during the thrashing operation, so that tho grain can be deposited directly Into storage. This eliminates tho services of one or two wagons and their crews which otherwise WQuld bo necessary In transferring the grain from the machine to the storage bins. In addi tion, tho portable grnnary Is available for the storage of other farm produce' or supplies when It Is not needed as a grain container. SAVE SUPPLY OF FLAXSEED Wise Policy for Farmer to Resist High Prices and Keep Enough Seed for Next "Year. (Prepared by tho United States Depart- "Jem wi luuiiui G,j Present high nrlces for flaxseed will tempt many fanners to sell all they nave. This will bo esneclallv trim In the sections where last year's drought was severo and crop production small. Now Is tho time, however, to resist tho temptation of fancy prices and to savo enough good seed for next vear. Al ways use the fanning mill, for flaxseed sometimes cnrrles serious llax diseases. and mustard seed left In It will causo a beautiful yellow field, even though nil that's yellow Is not gold. The bright, clean, heavy seed left after thorough tanning will be most free from dlsonso Storo your seed In n dry nlace. for It has mucilage in its overcoat and sticks like gluo if It gets wet. Remember your neighbor when fan nlng llax; for he may need some of your seed. It will help him ns well ns your community If ho gets good seed from you, instend of usIhk the noor seed which he may have to buy If ho waits until seeding time next spring. If you have good seed for sale, toll your county agent and your state ex tension director. Owners of good seed of wllt-reslstnnt strains should try to sell it only for seed purposes, rather then to let It go to the elevator to bo sold for oil making, as farmers hnv not been able durlm: the last two voar to buy enough seed of wllt-reslstnnt strains. OUTLET OF BIG IMPORTANCE Minnesota Expert Urges That It Protected With Concrete Abut ment and Screened. Be (By H. B. Itoo, Assistant Professor In Atr rlcultural Engineering, University Kami, at. i-aui.j The outlet Is of the first Importance In tile drainage. There must be a clear fall away from It. Submerged outlets, so-called, are not outlets. They still leave that land mainlined where the tile lies below the level of the wa ter at the outlet. An outlet right, purchased, through another man's land Is usually worth what It costs. Protect your outlet with a concrete abutment. Screen It against tho entrance of birds nnd an! mals. BOYS GROW MUCH WHEAT Fifteen Thousand Respond to Call to Produce Much Needed Oread Making Crop. (Prepared by tho United States Depart mcnt ot Agriculture.) Reports coming to the states rela tions service of tho United States de partment of agriculture warrant tho estimate considered qulto conserva tive of at least a 15,000 enrollment In hoys' wheat growing clubs In tho 15 southern states. These clubs In tho 1 South took up wheat growing only n year ago, at which time there was an enrollment of only 2,830 members who were growing this crop, DIFFERENCES SEGN IN HENS Individuals of Same Breed Are Not Al ways Equal In Respect to Meat or Egg Production. (Prepared by the United States Depart mcnt of Agriculture.) Among general-purpose fowls nil nrc not equal in respect to either meat ot egg production. The difference Is not due to size, or to the shape of birds In like condition, but lies In those things which keep one fowl In good laying condition when another goes out of condition, that enable one to lay con tinuously through a long period und still keep in good condition, while an other loses liesh, becomes poor nnd thin, and Incapable of further egg pro duction until she hns had a rest aft er a comparatively short period of lay ing. Tho existence of all these, however, Is not enough to Invuro good laying. There must, of course, be reasonably good management, even If the keeper has not special skill. But If with theso qualities which make forcontinual lay. Rhode Island Red Hen. lng, there exists n tendency to put on fat whenever laying Is Interrupted, only unremitting skillful management to keep a hen in good laying condition will mako her n first-class egg pro ducer. The egg type or laying type of hen, in any breed, is the hen that with the qualities that make for good egg pro duction, has no quality which Is an obstacle to continual laying. The meat type Is not the converse of the egg type, even though the hen that Is not a good layer Is lit only for meat. Tho meat type, In all kinds of poul try, Is the type that grows rapidly anil at maturity carries abundant flesh, es pecially where the preferred parts of the meat are produced. The most de sirable meat type Is rather line In bone, with the frame well knit but noi too compact. Under any kind of good management a hen of this type that Is in normal condition will be a good lay er. She may not lay any better than a hen not quite us well fleshed, but she ought to lay Just as well, and when the time comes to make meat of her she makes more and better meat, nnd as a breeder she naturally tends to re produce offspring that, will make more and better meat. Such hens are In reality of the dual purpose typo, no matter what their size or breed. They are equally valu able for eggs and meat. That Is the kind of stock that will contribute most to the big Increase In poultry that. Is wanted. It Is the dual-purpose type ot every breed a typo that exists In every breed, and can easily be made the prevalent typo without detriment to nny breed, and to the benefit of every breed that has suffered from neglect. POULTRY RAISING ON FARMS Little Capital Is Required and Noth ing Equals It as Profitable Side Line. Poultry raising requires very little capital, but there are very few side lines, If Indeed there are any. that aro equal to It for profitable production, Much Is said of the time It requires for raising young fowls. Hut do not forgot that when they aro managed properly tho fowls pay liberally for tho time required to raise them. Farming Is greatly handicapped for lack of cash and when any side lino can be found that requires little money but considerable labor It Is at tractive. Such Is poultry raising on tho farm. FOWLS FOR BREEDING STOCK Voung Hens With Blunt Toenails Are Not Loafers Same Applies to Male Birds. lie sure to looli at tho toenails of tho year-old and two-year-old hens be ing selected to hold over for next sea son's breeding stock. The hen that has worn Iter nails blunt und short has not been a loafer, and If tho other well-known signs ure In her fnvor she Is worth a place In tho breeding pen. The blunt, short tot-nulls ure a ood Indication on the cock birds as well GOOD ROADS FOR MILITARY Smooth Highways Imperative In Prop er Movement of Army Equip ment Along Coasts. It Is generally recognized by gov ernment olllclals, especially those of the army, that ono of the most Im portant phases of real military pre paredness that can possibly be under taken In this country is that which Is going on under the impetus of thn good roads movement. Thu federal aid road act which was signed by President Wilson last summer will probably play an Important part In this same Interest. An appropriation qf $75,000,000 bus been provided for In this act for use In constructing rural post-roads, while tho various states are to co-operate In providing a like fund. It Is planned thus for an expendi ture of $150,000,000 on such roads within the next five years. Although the. roads ure Intended primarily for tho purpose of developing the re sources of the national forests, and In tho Interest of niirlcnlturo and oth er peaceful enterprises, some study is now being made of their practical uso In the Interest of military prepared ness. A good road, well built, well sur faced and well drained may bo, it is pointed out, of Immense value from a military point of view. In tho location of roads, particularly along the shore, special attention to military require ments In the laying out and planning of a highway may prove of Inestimable value at some tlmo In the future when that highway becomes a military road. From an economic standpoint It is estimated that It costs 23 cents to haul a ton a mile on the average country road tinder present conditions, whllo under proper conditions the cost would be hut 13 cents. While these figures measure u direct cost, there Is an even greater Indirect cost to consider with bad roads when tho fanner must plan his operations according to the weather. It Is a matter of special Interest that at the present time roads on the Pacific coast and those In some of tho Important Atlantic states which Traffic on Courthouse Road, Spotsyl vania County, Virginia. would hi' of puitlculnr use for effec tive military purposes In defending our coasts are already in very good condition. There is one trunk road which runs all the way from southern California up through Oregon, with many smaller roads branching from It, that is said to be In the best of condition. Vet It Is a matter of regret that the unsurfneed roa('s of the United States If lidd out In a straight Hue would, ft Is estimated, girdle the earth at thn equator more limn eighty times, while the surface"! roads would reach but one-fourth that distance. However, there has been greatly Increased ex pendlmroii for road building and main tenance in the last decade and then' Is nor a more hopeful outlook with the nvc-.lear construction program provided under the federal aid act. Roads an Indispensable Asset. The time has come when we must consider the roads an asset, indis pensable to the well-lining of the farm er and his family. This being true, Is It not every man's duty to do all ho can to keep the roads In good condi tion? The Individual as well as tho county Is responsible. Advantages of Good Roads. Fnrm life cannot give as many so cial opportunities as the life of townB, for people are not so numerous, hut good roads, by providing easy means of communication, will first help tho people already living on tho land, and second attract more peoplo to tho land thus favored. Neglect Is Poor Economy. To build roads and then permit them to deteriorate Is very poor econ omy and thus a reflection upon tho OcopU Marines, Oldest Branch WASHINGTON The Fourth American brigade was cited tho other day. This brigade comprises tho Fifth und Sixth regiments of marines and the Sixth machine-gun battalloi. These themselves at llourcschos village and Hols do Uelleau, now officially thu Wood of the American Marines the marines themselves call It llollwood. All the world knows about those 12 days at Chateau Thierry how blocked the German advance that rolling on toward Paris six or seven miles a day; how they threw back the crack guard divisions of tho Hun ; how they drove them backward Into the re treat thnt ended only with surrender. "Soldiers and sailors, too;" "leathernecks," always ready; picked shooters and expert riflemen; the first to land nnd tho first to fight tho marines! "What we have, we hold," their motto. Their stereotyped report: "The marines have landed nnd hold the sltuntion well in hand." Their battle cry: "E-o-o-e-o y-a-a-h-h-h yip l" The marines constitute tho oldest branch of the military service of the United States. They aro even older than thu nation Itself, having been estab lished by the Continental congress In November, 1775. Pretty much all the world has seen them slnco ; In their 143 years they havo tnudo history from Tripoli to China, from tho Philippines to Mexico. In '1013 an attempt was made to abolish the marines as no longer a serviceable branch of tho navy. But tho peoplo would not hnvo it. Con gress took measures to strengthen tho corps Instead of disbanding It. When wo entered the war the marines were recruited up to 30,000 and scut to tho front ns land troops. You know tho rest. What Is a Bolshevik? And What Is Bolshevism? fflirilAT Is a bolshevik?" "What Is bolshevlsm?" Theso are questions W which many Americans are asking these days. Probably the word bolshevik was first used In Russia In 1005 after the splitting of the socialist party. It was applied to tho majority Ism as taught by Marx Is the pannceu for all soclul and economic Ills. There fore establish at once a soclullst republic. Abolish nationalism for interna tionalism. Inasmuch ns Marxian socialism prescribes seizure and nationalization of private capital, public utilities and all means of production, everything In sight Is to be taken over by tho socialist state. Theoretically, compensation may be made to escape disorder and violence. Hut Just now compensation Is sentimental and unnecessary, owing to conditions. Bolshevists hold- that the upper and middle classes must submit uncon ditionally or perish ; they are excluded from participation In tho government, which must be entirely In the hands of tho proletariat. If they resist, terror ism Is as Justifiable against them ns against a tyrannlcnl czar. Opposition Is treason to the socialist state. Bolshevism abhors genuinely democratic and free government. Its dicta torship supersedes the dictatorship of the autocrat or tho military despot. Its leaders advocate and practice to tho extent of their power tho merciless suppression of all civil and political lights. Europe Discovers the American Superphysique EritOl'B has discovered from our nnnles In Franco that tho American physique Is superior to any of her own. Amerlcnn mouths show American dentistry and good teetli mean much to a soldier. Americans, except tho llrltlsh, are the only soldiers accus tomed to bathe and medical science ippreclates the bath. American sol diers are bigger, huskier and show more "pep." Pentlstry and bathing aro well In their way. 'Hut the real reason for the American physical superiority is the lilentlfulness of food In tho United States. Europe In our time. never lias had enough to eat. In America we wasle enough to feed the Flench and Italians. In the reign of Henry VIII, Fronde declared, every English family had beef every day. Certainly never since then has every English family had beef onco a week. And Knglund has long been better fed than Europe ever was. .lust now we Americans are eating less and complaining of high prices. We do not know when we ure well' off. This country has had more food and better distribution of supplies than Kurope ever saw, nothwlthstandlng our railroad congestion and faulty methods of transportation. Moreover, hero are better care for the body, more conveniences, more comforts and more mechanical appliances to make life easier. Wo aro farther along the road to material felicity than ever was any country In any period of civilization. The United States is tho nearest approach to Elysium. As the result, the average American Is a better animal, a better intelli gence and probably a better moral person than the average. From an entirely scientific viewpoint, the average American hns doubtless a better endowment, a better chance, a better living and a longer life than tho average European. Europe also discovered In tho American n first-class fighting man. When Johnny Comes Marching Home Again, Hurrah! I7IIKN Johnny Comes Marching Home Again, Hurrah 1" there will be . W great doings. Already the advance guard Is arriving nnd it is easy to get an Idea of what will happen when the soldier and sailor boys return In force. The welcome will bo wnrnt. chunco for tho homo folks to help not only tholr own, but tho boys who have no homo folks. Those who find no Job waiting for them must bo grfcii work. Tho dis abled must bo rehabilitated, trained and mado self-supporting. Thou there's the boy who took n wur brldo und has no homo In the old days, when a pioneer's son tnurrled, his father gave him a piece of land und a liorso or a pair of oxen. The brldo's father gavo her a cow und chickens. The mothers contributed pots, pans und kettles. Tho neigh bors got together mid hud n houso-ralslng. First they knew tho youtfg couple had u neat little cabin with all tho necessary flxln's. Of courso this sort of thing can't be done In tho twentieth century In Just that way. But It seems as if tho same kind of spirit might prevail now as then. Love and co-operation aro not lost virtues. And with lovo acd co operation almost anything may bo done. of Our Military Service, are the 'marines who immortalized men, physically perfect; shnrp- faction, "bolsha" meaning "majority." The socialists split over the "funda mental law" decree. Tho minority, tho menshcvlkl, was composed of tho con servatives who did not favor violence as a method of obtaining reform. Tho bolshevlkl were tho radicals who favor bombing, sabotngo and terrorism as tho means to their end. Whatover bol shevlsm originally meant, today it means something about llko this: Bolshevism proclaims that social- Nothing will bo too good for them. Hut there is more to the home-coming of these boys thun a warm wel come. There are many serious prob lems to be mot and solved. To take care of these men, to seo that thoy aro returned to useful positions In civil life, Is primarily the duty of the fed eral government. Uncle Sam Is a capable person when he gets started. Nevertheless, he has a big Job on his hands and thero will bo. plenty of was YT,4r J W ' (l-r-Jv'.f 1-