HOME AND FARM MAGAZINE SECTION 13 Will Ak Governor To"Swat Rooster" Kani&i Executive Requested to Demand Doom of Chanticleer on Jane 6. TEE rooster Is to have bis day. It is to be a sad day for the rooster it will be the making of the egg business, say the produce deal ers, in session at the Hotel Baltimore in Kansas City, last week. So the dealers are going to petition Got. Major of Kansas to issue a pro clamation designating June 6 as "rooster day." The purpose is to make an annual event in Missouri poultrydom. June 6 is to be to chanticleer what Thanks giving is to the turkey kind of ex ecution day, a black Friday, On that day produce commission men all over the state are going to ad vertise a premium on all roosters de livered to tbem June 6. This is to make it an object to the farmers to sell off the cocks of the walk. If the general market price of roost ers is 12 cents that day, there will be a premium of 4 cents a pound, mak ing the price 16 cents. All male birds are to be sold off then, except those intended for breeding purposes, accord ing to the plan. Then only non-fertile eggs will be sold throughuot the summer. And non-fertile eggs do not become stale. ' They do not rot. After being kept in a warm room three summer months yolk and white are greatly diminished in bulk. Evaporation causes it The eggs are dried up; but the contents what is left are sweet and wholesome. Thomas E. Quisenberry says if the farmers will dispose of their surplus roosters, and pen up the others during the laying season, it will mean a sav ing to Missouri farmers of (3,000,000 annually. And Mr. Quisenberry knows, because he's director of the Missouri state poultry station at Mountain Grove. Brome Grass in Semi-Arid Regions BBOME grass, botanically known as Bromus Intermis, is a native of Europe. It was introduced into this country from Eussia at a compara tively recent date. It is variously known as Russian brome, smooth brome grass and awnless brome grass. Brome grass is of such recent introduction into this country that its value is not yet well understood. It has proven to be one of the best pasture grasses for the great plains region and the Northwest It thrives best in the north and will be successful in the semi-arid region wher ever grains will grow under irrigation or dry farming methods. It is a good grass for the dry farmer, as its numerous deep root enable it to withstand drought better than any of our other cultivated grasses, which explains its great popularity in the great plains region. . About the first place in this country to import seed from BusBia, was the South Dakota Agricultural Experiment Station. A quantity of seed was re ceived then Bfii a five-acre field plant ed. The result was that (2,000 worth of seed1 was sold from this small field the second year. The plant is not as good for hay as for pasture. It makes a very thick sod, as it spreads by means of root stocks, so gets thicker on the ground for several years after planting. It is not injured by the tramping of stock. Permanent brome grass meadows and pastures will become sod-bound after a few years, but this can be remedied by thorough disk ing every year or two. The method of seeding brome grass is not different from that of seeding tun othy or other grasses. It does better in loam or clay soils than on those of sandy nature. Spring seeding is most commonly practiced, sewing either broadcast or drilling it in. it should be shown as early as possible in the spring to insure plenty of moisture to start it If conditions are favorable, it may be sown in the fall with winter wheat The rate of seeding is from 15 to 20 pounds per acre when sown alone, or if sown in mixture 6 to 10 pounds per acre will be sufficient. The brome is a very palatable grass and is eaten by stock as readily as blue grass. Growth starts very early in the spring and it remains green longer than any of the other grasses in the fall. Brome grass has also been found of value in improving wornout lands, since it produces a large quantity of stems and roots and adds materially to the vegetable matter in the soil. QBACTICAL experience has shewn f that disking alfalfa under certain conditions is beneficial to the crop, yet many farmers will not cultivate their alfalfa plants in any way for fear of killing them. As with other crops, the cultivation of alfalfa must be done with judgment. The main object in cultivating alfalfa plants, which usually consists in disk ing, is to kill summer grasses. The in dividual farmer must know when his particular field must be disked. A writer In a certain section will state that, say, July 1 is the proper time. A man in another section and climate will disk his field at that time and meet with poor success. 'Here is where judg ment counts. Conditions are not the same everywhere. The time to disk alfalfa is just be fore or at the time summer annual grasses begin to grow. , This time may be in July in one section and June in another section. It may be after the first cutting, or after the second cut ting. Each man must know when sum mer grasses begin to grow in his local ity, and set his disk to working accord ingly. There is no danger whatever to well- established alfalfa plants in disking. The plants are deep rooted and will not be pulled out if they are not cut off. Splitting the crowns will do no damage. Some of the best alfalfa growers give their alfalfa fields a severe disking and cross-disking every year. Some claim that it is impossible to injure the plants, no matter bow the implement is set or run. The duk euts up the surface and kills grass without injuring the alfalfa plants. Another object in summer disk ing is to loosen the surface to admit air, and create a surface mulch for holding moisture. Harrowing after disking in dry weather is an advantage. Breed Dairy Cows Once Each Year THERE exist two dangers of allow ing a milch cow to remain open for an indefinite period, writes a correspondent of the Bural Now York er. In the first place she is less apt to conceive when mated, and in the second place she is apt to go dry for a long period after the mating is finally made in ease she does settle. It is cus tomary in large dairies, where the calves are not an important item of value, to permit the cows to freshen once in 15 or 16 months. Ordinarily, however, for dairy farm practices it is much more desirable to mate them so tha1 they will freshen once each year. This practice stim ulates the milk flow, and unless a cow is particularly a good milker she is less apt to give as much milk if irregularly bred and not permitted to freshen at frequent intervals. The animal will keep in good condition physically if not bred. In fact, she is very apt to put on an excessive amount of flesh, and this is one of the reasons why she is less apt to conceive when mated. Instances are frequent where cows have been used for family purposes and not bred for intervals of two years or more, but it is the exception rather than the rule to have such animals give milk enougn to pay adequately for the care involved in their maintenance. If desired to carry a cow over from spring freshening to fall freshening or if nec essary to avoid calving during fly time the practice Is justified. Turpentine Often Is Adulterated AS the result of an investigation by the United States Department of Agriculture, it has been found that the adulteration of turpentine with nun eral oils is so widespread that druggists and manufacturers of pharmaceutical products and grocers' sundries used for medicinal and veterinary - purposes should exercise special caution in pur chasing turpentine. Those who use tur pontine . for this purpose, unless they are careful, run the risk of obtaining an adulterated article and unnecessarily laying themselves open to prosecution under the Food and Drugs act. It has been found, moreover, that the turpentine sold to the country stores especially, as usually put out by dealers and manufacturers of grocers sundries, is often short in volume by as much as 5 or 10 per cent. Dealers, therefore, should also protect themselves through a guarantee from the wholesaler that the bottle contains the full declared volume. The department has found that tur' pontine may be adulterated in the South where it is made and that the further it gets from the "South the more ex tensively and heavily it is adulterated In all cases, druggists, manufacturers and wholesale grocers should satisfy themselves that the turpentine is free from adulteration and is true to marked volume. Sowing cane in gullies and allowing it to reseed itself will, it is said, in a few years stop them and fill them. Disking Alfalfa Is Aid To Crop Food Must Be Well Masticated. The lirst process of digestion is per formed in the admixture of the food substance with a fluid during mastica tion. This first step in the conversion of food into flesh and blood is a most important one, and the pleasures at tending the sense of taste are doubtless given to insure a proper performance of this initiatory process of a transformation. If food is not well masticated the stomach cannot successfully perform the second stage of digestion, and the disastrous effects of mal-assimilation will soon be apparent, affecting in some degree the whole body. Many .dyspeptics and person, suffer ing from nervous conditions are really victims of mal nutrition, due to careless habits of mastication or the inability to properly prepare this food for re ception by the stomach. Dr. Jones, Dentist, 245 Washington St., Portland. Labor In Summer Tillage Pays A writer in the Technical World Magazine figures that there are five hundred million rats in the United States, and that each one, each day, eats or destroys, two cents' worth of prop erty three billion six hundred million dollars' worth a year! That is about forty dollars for each inhabitant. If this loss were saved by the extermina tion of the rats, it would help much to lower the cost of living. Indiana is starting a crusade against the pests that should soon become nation-wide. The dry lands of the West never sour, and there are many others things they seldom do. MUSICIANS! SEND FOB OUR LATEST SECOND-HAND LIST AND CATALOGUE FIL HELD, a successful Logan Coun ty, Colo., upland farmer, says "One of the mistaken ideas about summer tillage is that it is connected with a large amount of extra labor. Of course, the field while under summer tillage requires careful cultivation and in ex ceptional seasons Almost constant watch ing and tending. But for the next three years after summer tillage the ground is in such condition that scarcely any labor is needed. No plowing is done at any time until plowing for the next summer tillage. After the fall wheat is harvested the Held should be disked as soon as possi ble for two reasons: Hirst, to make the top mellow so that it will receive the precipitation rain and snow during the winter. Second, to prevent evapora tion. In the spring the ground is again disked, when corn or some other crop in rows is planted. It requires no great amount of cultivation to keep the corn free from weeds. Perhaps no more than two cultivations will be necessary un less some extra work is done for con servation purposes. After the crops in rows the ground need not be gone over till the next spring, when it is again pulverized and put into spring grains." 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