The commoner. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-1923, March 01, 1915, Page 26, Image 26

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The Commoner
20
VOL. 35, NO. 3
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the' food lmif : :c?ntains all
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In the Field of Agriculture
WHAT A BOY CAN DO
Roy Ashley of Mize, Mississippi,
gives the following description of his
experience in raising corn:
"I am a farmer boy and have lived
on a farm all my life. I have always
livod in the same community. I am
only 15 years of age. In 1910 the su
perintendent of education of this
county organized a Boy's Corn club.
I joined it, and turned under the turf
in the fall and sowed rye on the land.
Q(HCr POEMS WANTED1-1;
1 ?" You mny write a bl noun hitl Kx
I ir porloncoiinntrnssary. Publication trunr
fK IV nntdod If nccoiitnliln. fiend im.vnrvnni'or
I f molodlf'H todnv. Writ fr trrti viIiiiMa lioollft.
V MAItKH.UOMISJIITU CO., Drpt.KV.1, Wtkblnglon, If.C.
Poultry Catalog FREE
Illustrates nml Klvcs prlceHoMS vnrlotlos
lnnd ntidwntcr fowls audcKRS. This book
should hn in tho linnd8 ol ovcry person
Interested In poultry for profit Address
H. A. lll'MHIL, Hoi 4(1, mUlil'OUT, ILL.
New Wonder-Worker Makes
Butter in 3 to 5 Minutes
Finest jrrnnulur creamery butter, from ewett as
well as sour milk or cream with Just a few
twisui or tno wrist, iry it-at our natt
-you'll bo astounded. Tho Now
KING Ball -Bearing
Separator and Aerator
is tho most uennatlonal dairy Inven
tion In yenra. New scientific princi
ple: entirely diucrcnt from churning.
Gets SO to 33 per cent moro butter;
axira prout soon pays its cose.
Try it 10 Days FREE!
You'll naveracata ate mumy. imcllr.
waiUful, back-breaking churn. Tha
Kins baa aanltanr milk veiaehnowood.
o crscx or corner to noia STeae or
Irt, A 10-ytar-oUl child canoporaU lU
9 iu, o up. oano I or circaior, eic
$150 a Month to Agents
alioaxpanaea. Salary orcomml.ilon.
Everycow-ownerneedsaKlnir.Wrlte
at ones for frt tampU and aalary
- r ipropoiiuon.
DeKbgMfg.Ce.,Dept. X Cfeicgo,IU
fJr
i iwww v.
vl 111 1
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m m m a
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urn
wmm
LmSHi
rjfigs
HLyipaauBjl
Kerosene, Gasoline & Gas
Look at these New Prices!
8 H-P. $139.65: 11 HP. $210.90; 16 H-P, $293.80;
22 U-P, $309.65; PortaWe Engines Proportionally Law.
Direct From Factory to User
WITTE engines. Stationary, Portable, Skld-
J?n-3i &v?e BtyJ have not the quality
Btandard for 27 years. Better today than ever.
Caatlmra of seml-stecl. detachable cylinders,
vertical valves, four-rlnar pistons, automobile
Ijrnltion, yartablespeod, and other merlta,with
out which no engine can now be hlh-ffrade.
Liberal 5Year Guaranty
HOW TO Judeta Enivlnm
owWirnfrSS.S'll'P'fn-rtKn
!S, "election,
W1TTE. Bend me just yc
fine books by return mail.
Ed. H. Wilie. Wif fe Irim UWro rA
1 oont il.li 5 " - av0 VUa
I qui wimmm-c, Kansas City, Me.
u. Act is you now to be aa
oven If you don't nlek
uradareaa.foroneoi
:a
K
these
Taylor Stahot, Water Bottle
S&TA "aSa SYRINGE
Pi?Krb85oSeUr!o!o
I tOaSeedCoupon.axidoopr Park's Floral Blariulne
J"" uv pipaw iiuiuninHUU IB mo WOrlO.
i m w . u. w . i-artu Lai'arJcPa.
lUfcwstia,Doa
In the spring I put out lot manure on
the land and broke it about 8 inches
deep. Tho people around here laughed
at me, and said I would not make five
bushels, but when my corn began to
grow they changed their minds. I
surprised them Q.M the more when I
gathered 78 bushels on my acre,
whilo the average yield in this county
was only 12 or 18 bushels per acre,
this being about all papa made, but
since the corn club started In this
county, papa has tried diversification
of crops and followed the demonstra
tion instructions until now his aver
ago yield is from 60 to 70 bushels per
acre. Every year since I first joined
the corn club I nave continued to
have an acre plot for myself to put
in corn. I can beat papa making corn.
"In tho fall of. 1913 I joined the
corn club again. I began the prepar
ation of my soil. I turned under the
cow pea stubble and broke my land
10 or 18 inches deep. I sowed oats
and rye on the land and harrowed it
with a section harrow.- The oats and
rye came up and I used it for a
pasture for my Jersey calf and two
pigs, and it kept them in good fix all
through the winter and gave them a
better start in the spring. In the
spring I turned the sod under, har
rowed it with the section harrow, and
then bedded the and. I sowed lot
manure in the drills and filled the
furrow with oak leaf compound; then
I rebedded the land, mixing the hu
mus with the soil. I then let the
toil stand untouched until in May
rebedded the land, put 30.0 pounds of
commercial fertilizer in the drill. I
followed this with a spring-tooth har
row and this with the planter. .My
corn came up well, but the spike
worms destroyed much of it. When
my corn was about two weeks old I
harrowed it crosswise with, a section
harrow. I let it stand for about two
weeks, then I harrowed t.hA middinc
.down with a spring-tooth harrow, and
mis put enough dirt to the corn, for
it must be remembered that I planted
in the water furrow. Then I thinned
my corn to an average of about 12 to
16 inches in the drill. Then I let the
corn stand about a week when I har
rowed it again with the spring-tooth
harrow, and from then on until the
1st of June I harrowed it with a
spring-tooth harrow. The land began
to get dry, as it had not rained for
weeks. I went two furrows to the
row with a heel sweep, and every
time I went around my corn it looked
like a shower had fallen. Then on
July 2nd or 3rd I laid my corn by
with a heel sweep, and put out 300
pounds more of commercial fertilizer;
around my corn, and on the following"
day tt rained and my corn looked fine,
but, by tho way, I had forgotten to
say we had a drouth lasting ten
weeks, beginning in May and lasting
until July, and you see a rain was
needed. While the drouth was going
on all corn around me was burning
up while mine was perfectly green
and doing well. In October, when
time came to crathor nnm t f ,,
disinterested men to gather my corn.
I went ahead and picked out the best
grade for first grade seed, and I made
three grades and had it gathered sep
arately so I could have good seed. I
made 106.35 bushels on my acre
while the average yield around me
f al K 15 busliels Per acre. I then
had 35 bushels of first grade seed
Srn, 4? ushels of, second grade, and
17 bushels of third grade and 12
bushels of nubbins.
I have sold all my corn, the first
grade at $2.00 per bushel, second
grade at $1.76, while I sold the third
grade at $1.0.0 per bushel, making
$161.50 plus the nubbins. I could
sell a hundred more bushels if I had
it.
I am going to buy me a full bred
Hereford bull-with my corn money,
and papa is going to give md a heifer.
I have cut my corn stalks, turned
them under, and now I have a good
crop of crimson clover growing on my
acre, and the people around here are
all following the method I used to
raise my corn, and I think the aver
age yield will increase fifty per cent
in two years. Most of thepeople are
going to try rotation crops and not
plant much cotton, and are going to
help make Mississippi a self-sustaining
state. I expect to do better next
year, as I shall have my soil better
prepared. I shall be with you until
tho last.
In the meantime, I beg to remain,
A Corn Club boy,
ROY ASHLEY.
GRADING SEBU CORN
Seed corn may be graded better
before the ears are shelled than
afterward. The United States depart
ment of agriculture specialists in corn
investigations consider it difficult tc
grade shelled corn Satisfactorily.
If the seed ears vary greatly as to,
size of kernel they snould be separ
ated into two or three grades accord
ing to size of kernel. These grades
should be shelled separately, tested
in the corn planter and numbered to
correspond with the number on the
planter plates that are fqund to drop
them most uniformly. These arrange
ments can be completed- before the
rush offspring work begins.
The first operation in properly
shelling seed corn is the removal of
the small kernels from the tips of the
ears and the round', thick kernels
from the butts. The rormer are less
productive than the other kernels of
the ear. The round butt kernels are
as productive as the other kernels of
the ear, but do not plant uniformly in
a planter.
Shelling seed corn carefully by
hand is profitable. The greater the
acreage planted the greater the profit.
Into a shallow pan or box each ear
should be shelled -separately, reject
ing any worm eaten or blemished
kernels. If the supply from the one
ear appears good and contains no
poor kernels' it is poured into the
general supply and another ear shell
ed invthe same way
beast. ' " "ucu uy an or
Give your cows all the t?nn v
they will eat and it pSSiST
s over and straw for the sake of?
riety. If you have time and th ?
tionce. cut some of it fine and molten'
it with hot water and feeding molaS
es to make it more palatable. S
them have all the water they im
drink at Jrast twice a day. Now r
some goo jcorn and oats and grind it
into a finchop. a good proportion
is four parts of corn and two parts
by weighty always, of oats. To this
add two parts of cottonseed meal and
two parts, of linseea meal and mix,
Now give -each cow a generous barn
shovel fuij of the cut feed moistened
with the by? water and molasses, and
on top of nis give her the grain mix-
SKbscriDers JMocrflsina. Dpt.
This department is for the benefit o(
Commoner subscribers, and a special
rate of six cents a word per Insertion
the lowest rate has been made for
them. Address all communications to
Tho Commoner, Lincoln, Nebraska.
ECZEMA SPECIFIC Will absolutely
- cure eczema, salt rheum, barbers
Itch and other slcln diseases. Sent by
mall. $1.50. Send for recommendations.
Almklov's Pharmacy, Cooperstown,
North Dakota.
DROTHER- Accidentally discovered
- root cures tobacco habit and Indi
gestion. Gladly send particulars. J.
W. Stokes, Mohawk, Fla.
PROFITABLE LITTLE FARMS at
1 sHichland Heights In Shenandoah
Valley of Virginia, selected location, 5
and 10 acre tracts, $250 and up, easy
terms. "Good fruit,- vegetable, poultry
and live stock country. Largo list of
other farms. Send for literature now.
F. LaBaume, Agrl. Agt., N. & W. By.,
319 Arcado Bldg., Roanoke, Va4
; .
77ANTED TO HEAR of good farm or
w unimproved Jand for sale, Send
descrlptfon and price. " "Northwestern
Business Agency, Minneapolis. Minn.
STRAWBERRY, Small Fruit and Veg
etable Plants and Seeds of quality.
Catalog free. Bowker Plant Nursery,
Box 20, Kearney, Nebr.
TCSSj
1720 Colorado
Boulovnrd
Denver, Colo.
STJRAWBKRItY PLANTS
Twenty varieties at $2.50 per 100. Descriptive
Cataloguo Freo. Basil Porry, Georgetown. Dei.
Headquarters for Fall Uoarlng Strawberry Planu
PATENTS
Wataoa E. Coleman,
Patent Luwyer.W nalilngUm,
D.O. Advlco and books free.
Uateo reasonable. HIchest references. Bestscrvicw-
DAIRY COW RATIONS
;-. il-;
A medium sized cow "welchine-
mnl X'2 P0Und need a ration
like the following to' keep without
2iS..n& Weighl or Pducing any
milk: Twelve-pounds of timothy hay
and three pounds of wheat bran: or
eight pounds of corn stover, six
pounds of clover hay and three
pounds of corn and cob meal: or
twenty-three pounds of silage, five
pounds of timothy hay and three
5?Uf?SMf heat bn; or ve pounds
of timothy liay, flve.pounds of clover
hay and four pounds -of corn and cob
meal. These are mere sample rations
showing what the cow needs for her
KTn e??' wrItes correspondent in
the National Stockman. Further,
she needs all kinds of building mate
rial to repair the breaking tissues of
her entire body, and, if she Is to make
milk she must have all the elements
Wanted Ideas 0?ISBK!iS
' ' i offered for Inventions, our
four books sont free. Patent gocured or fee rcturnea.
Victor J. ISvans & Co., 123 9th, WashliiBton. .o
BUSINESS MANAGER WANTED
.Reliable-man to represent us In every county. 'f ""Kljiuet
Cood workers. Dnslness establlshefl tony )'"-, 'ot tb
widely known and easy to sell. Unlimited opportunio "
man with Initiative energy. Write for full P"!'"'"!. ("
Monumental Hrons Co, tl Howard Art., HrWfPn "
FARM FENCE
.. ...... rtHf" a I
41 INCHES HICH FORI
Stay only 0 Inches op;
Wires cnnot .&.
Biyics or jrrin, ;".'ti
and Lwa Fencing direct
80-rod spool. Catalog ttof'. i
irrSELKANBEOS. Box2t5 V lB(U
ICEHTS
AW
HEW RUPTURE CURE
m T JjT
O.IQ. Rk-na lu.172
mmmaammmmmtm
Dont Wear Truan
-ri,, AnDllance. Now
discovery. Wonderful.NO
Obnoxious spr InffS
pads. Automatic Aj
toDrovoit. Full inform
ation and booiuevr v
180 State St,Mrsh,,M,c"
ma
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