r. .-..,-, ',3ffSi&-tZ$l The Commoner YOL. 15, NO. 9 26 . & k r l! I- ,. ' i , , - In the Field of Agriculture BEYQND THE CITIES advanced with leaps and bounds in 'string, double string, corn tree, After tlio cities have hold you, After their glamor and gleam Have palled you and spoiled you and ' spoiled you, It is then for tho country dream The faith of tho good green country, ' farmer is informc Its peace and power to sustain When tho shops and temples havo fallen A"nd tho lure of the lights is vain. After tho cities have worn you, After their thunder and strife Have crushed you and rent you and torn you, Oh, then for tho country life J Tho green of the quiet meadows, Tho peace of the mighty hills; Tho volco of tho birds mid the shad ows. Tho runes pf the rippling rills. ' After tho cities havo fed you On passion and fury and pride; After the dreamB of their splendor Havo sickened your spirit and died It is then for the beautiful valleys, Tho far-flung summits, the glen, That heal us of hovels and alleys With the beauty God fashioned for men. Baltimoro Sun. tho la3t decade, and much of this im provement is due to the good work accomplished at tho experiment sta tions. There modern methods aro tried out and when they aro profitable the Many old farm- WAYS YOUR EXPERIMENT STA TION MAY KELP YOU ing ideas have been proven to be of little value by the work carried on at tho experiment station. The state spends money annually to further tha interests of the farmer and it is up to him to take advant age of the wor!: carried on for his benefit. WHY AND HOW TO SECURE GOOD SEED CORN Mr. Farmer, are you taking ad vantage of the experiment station in your state? If not you are losing valuable information which is com piled for your benefit; says Drovers' Journal. -Practical farm work is being done continually at the various experiment stations of the country -and the re sults are recorded,- an bulletins on these experiments' ar,e to be had free. Even tho oldest farmer is certain to encounter some puzzling problems, and by writing to the experiment station he may have them solved for him. ' Tho state carries on experiments for the benefit of the farmers and those in charge of tho work are only top willing to give out any informa tion that Is wanted. A trip to the experiment station Will be "well worth your while, as you The first requisite fpr a good crop of corn is good seed secured from a crop that was grown in your locality. Too often we depend upon imported seed which invariably brings disap pointing results for several years, says John Klinka, agricultural represent ative of University of Wisconsin Ex periment station. Seed corn should be selected, as far as is possible and practicable in the district in which it is to be grown, and about a week before the first killing frost is expected. In northern Wisconsin this time usually falls between tho 10th and 15th of September. Some where between these two dates the careful corn grower will go through his cornfield and select his seed corn. If the corn is fairly well matured a light, frost will not hurt the iusk covered ears but they should be picked, husked and put to fire drying the day fol lowing the frost. The first test to apply to seed corn is maturity. In tha northern part of Wisconsin where every day must be utilized for ripening a crop the aues- tion of getting seed that has matured in our latitude is of prime import ance. We want a corn that will ma ture nine years out of every ten and this corn can only be secured from our own cornfields by selecting the best matured ea.j one week before the usual time for the killing frost. We want to raise large corn and get big yields per acre, but maturity must not be sacrificed for size. "Having made our selection of about double tho amount of corn we frame covered with chicken wire and boards into which finishing nails have been driven. In the last meth od the seed ears are jabbed onto the nails. This device has the advant ages over the others. It is inex pensive and easily made. When the corn is tested in spring the ears can be numbered very easily by writing the figures on the boards below the ears. The curing of seed corn Is depend ent upon two conditions a free circulation of air and a temperature above freezing until tho corn is thoroughly dried These conditions can best be secured by fire drying. Open the windows in the room in which the corn is stored and build a firo every day until tho corn is thoroughly dried. After it has been thoroughly dried freezing will not in jure its vitality and if it is kept in a dry placo where it will not. absorb moisture it will make the best seed corn that you can secure for your farm. "BACK TO THE FARM" MENT MOVE- "Will have a chance to see the vast and valuable work carried on there expect to plant, our task is by no and come to realize what can be ac coinplished. ' Not only crop raising Is carried on, but experinu-its in feeding live stock are being made from time to time and tho results of these ex periments may be interesting. The successful farmer is willing to learn',' and he can find no better place than the agricultural college to- get-the .desired information. Farming 4s a business which has means completed. The ears, if left only over night when the weather is damp, will become covered with molds which will germinate and produce more spores or mold seeds which will become parasites and feed upon the young plants when the seed germinates the following spring. As s.,on as the seed corn is picked it must be cured. Many devices have been used for drying seed corn. The most common of these aro single r t n- SOUTHERN! IDAHO IRRIGATED LANDS No drouths. No floods. No crop failures. Mild winters Cool summers. Good water rights. Land very fertile and pro- ductive. Price $45.00 per acre up for fully paid up water right For farther information write W. B. MILLSON rome, Idaho, Box 26fi For some years past we have heard a good deal about the "back to the farm movement." Every speaker and every member of an agricultural col lege faculty who discussed the farm needs would tell about the ways and means to head the urban population toward the country, says "Connelly" in Mankato (Kas.) Advocate. It is barely possible that conditions will force these matters aright. A trip to any one of the cities these days will show that the city has too many people who are trying to eke out an existence by standing aside the streams of humanity and plucking therefrom enough driftwood to live upon. Go to a "town like Colorado Springs, where the tourist furnishes the fleck to be fleeced and you will find five rooming houses where there is need for One. The result is that people complain that their business is poor. Colby has half a dozen gen eral storey; what it the' same busk ness should be divided up between three times as many business houses, me mercnants, not realizing the real trouble, would stand around and blame the tariff and the financial conditions. , Every one thinks they. couiq see tne false conditions, but our idea is that pretty soon the av erage fellow will find that it is much more profitable to be in the country on the farm than it i3 to bo in. the town standing beside the stream watching for the driftwood that had Deen nsnea out a few miles above the point where they have taken up their station. This will serve more than one purpose. It will add to the production of the world and it may have a tendency to reduce the cost of living. It will relieve the conges tions of the cities where only dire poverty is known, and it will come nearer bringing real relief to society than will a number of the Utopian dreams that never come true. ment station, -of thirty-one miioh cows, mostly grade Holsteins, jer seys, Guernseys, Ayrshires, fed both home grown ana purchased feeds thn calculations of cost, of production be ing based both on tho actual cost of growing the crops fed and on tho market prices of the products used Tho feeds used included soilinc crops of different kinds, corn silage mixed hay, oat and pea hav. jiif.nifo bay, corn, stover, beet pulp, distill- oiq 6"""D wuctti man ana oil meal The average cost of feed per cow a year (based on actual cost of produc ing the crops used) was $95.7.3 or 2 4 cents per quart of milk produced placing the market valuation upon tho home-grown products, the cost of feed per , cow per year was $121. GO or 3.04 cents per quart. Tho esti mated average cost of labor (but not supervision) and incidental expenses was $70.22 per cow per year, or 1.7G cents per quart. Tho incidental ex penses include bedding, stabling ($5 per cow) , interest, on investment in animals, depreciation in value of cows, keep of bull, etc., but not inter est on land, buildings, and dairy equipment. Based on actual cost of growing and harvesting products consumed and of labor, the total cost of feed, labor, etc., for the year was per cow, $165.95; based on market valuation of feed consumed, $191.82. The yield of thirty-one cows averaging 8,661 pounds of 3.96 per cent milk, the total cost per quart of milk will be in the first case 4.16 cents, and in tho second case 4.8 cents. No credit, however, is given the cow for the manure voided or the calf pro duced, neither is the farmer's time charged for. Calculating the manure worth, $.20 per cow, and tho. grade calves $6 each at five days old, the cost of producing 4 per cent milK even with the high yields reported, and not including cost of supervision, was approximately 4. cents per quart. WHEN TO MAKE HAY COST OF PRODUCING MILK " 0Th In1creas cost of feed and the rise in the price of good cows with a corresponding increase in the price of milk gives special significance to any accurate data bearing upon the actual cost of milk production Such data is furnished by records given in a report of. the New Jersey experi- According to the North Dakota Experiment station there is a "best time" for cutting the crop to seouro the best results. Alfalfa, for instance, should be cut when it is coming into blossom, or better yet, watch for the new shoots coming up from the crowns. These are the new crop coming on, and 'the alfalfa should be cut before these shoots are long enough to bo cut off by the mower. Crover should be cut when in full bloom, or when the first blossoms are beginning to turn brown. Cut timothy when blooming or soon af ter. Rye or wheat grass needs to be cut early, a little before blooming, as otherwise it becomes woody. Brome grass can be cut at blooming. -It is often left until the seed is ripe. Cut it high for the seed as the seed stems extend above the leafy part, and then cut the rest in the usual way for hay. This does not make as sat isfactory hay as when cut earlier. The point to remember in general in making hay is that at the time of blooming the nutrients are distrib uted through the whole plant, and as soon as the blossoming is over these nutrients are transferred to the seed, and the plants become woody. While there is a gain of nutrients in the seed, there is a loss in the amount in the other parts of the plant and the digestibility also decreases. Corn develops a little different. BotA the nutrients and the digestibility in it increases up to the douc'-i stage. USE THE HARROW PROMPTLY In preparing a good seed bed, or securing tliorough pulverization oi the soil, there is no more important rtntnt tlion fltof no annrt n.B tllO lallU is broken or plowed it should be im mediately, .harrowed,, .says .Progreso-, vV. O ,, d' n