SCHOOL DAYS
SECURE VEGETABLES
FROM SMALL SARDEN
Can Be Made to Yield Through-
out Entire Season.
Tenth ef an Acre Well Planned and
Given Careful Attention Will Pro
'duce as Much as a Full
Acre of Field Crops.
hr-p-rau
hoo-oo -
(Prepared by tbs United States Depart-
ment of Agriculture.)
Many farmers fall to realize that
one-tenth of an acre devoted to a well-
planned and well-tended garden will
In many cases produce as much food
as an acre of field crops.
The garden should be, and can with
a little planning be, made to produce
throughout the entire season Instead
of only during a month or two In the
spring.
Tbrse to five plantings of snap
beans planted at Intervals of two or
three weeks, at least three early and
—
I 4
Drops Every Seed at the
Bottom of the Furrow
Here is the profit maker for the farmer who grows grain of any kind. Famous
Peoria Single Disc Furrow Opener insures even depth planting, uniform
yields. Shoe works independently of the disc, on a pivot, allowing it to
follow disc at all times. No matter what depth the disc cuts, the seed
is always drilled at the very bottom of the furrow. This means all
your grain grows and ripens evenly.
PeoriA Disc Shoe cuts any trash and hardest ground ; double run
force feed; sows all kinds of grain, flax, peas, beans or corn.
No‘seed wasted—none lost to the birds or wind—it is all
covered on the bottom of a packed seed bed.
DONTPUT
I t OFF-INVESTIGATE Now!
Wood Break Pin
(an exclusive PEORIA feature)
When foreignmatter (nuts, bolts, stones or screws), often found In seed, get tato
ordinary grain drill feeds, gears are broken, feed shafts twisted, causing expense and
loss
of time.on
Peoria Drills it simply shears a wood pin that can be quickly replaced
without
expense. An
exclusive feature which makes Peoria Drills worth five to ten
dollars more to the farmer.
(Copyright.)
Rann-dom Reel»
Just Folks
ees.
By EDGAR A. GUEST
By HOWARD L. RANN
THE OLD WOODEN TUB.
I like to get to thinking of the old
days that are gone,
When there were joys that never
more the world will look upon,
The days before Inventors smoothed
the little cares away
And made what seemed but luxu
ries then, the joys of every day ;
When bathrooms were exceptions,
and we got our weekly scrub
By standing in the middle of a lit
tle wooden tub.
THE APE
We bad no rapid heaters, and no
blazing gas to burn,
We boiled the water on the stove,
and each one took his turn.
Sometimes to save expenses we
would use one tub for two.
The water brother Billy used, for me
would also do,
Although an extra kettle I was grant
ed, I admit.
On winter nights to freshen and to
warm it up a bit.
We carried water up the stairs In
buckets and in palls,
And sometimes splashed it on our
legs and rent the air with
walls.
But if the nights were very cold, by
closing every door
We were allowed to take our bath
upon the kitchen floor.
Beside the cheery stove we stood
and gave ourselves a rub
In comfort most luxurious in that
old wooden tub.
modern homes no more go
through that joyous weekly fun,
And through the sitting rooms at
night no haif-drled children run ;
No little flying forms go past, too
swift to see their charms
With shirts und
underwear and
things
tucked
underneath
their arms;
The home's so full of luxury now,
It’s almost like a club
1 sometimes wish we could go back
to that old wooden tub.
HE ape Is a vest-pocket edition
of man which is brought to this
country and exhibited in a cage for
the purposes of comparison with the
real article. After a full-bearded man
with a face which Is a cross between
a spitz dog and a chrysanthemum has
leaned over the railing nt the zoo for
a little while and studied the counte
nance of the naturalized ape, he will
break for the nearest barber shop on
the dead run.
The ape has long, eager toes and
a prehensile tall, with which he is
able to swing pro and con with a pre
occupied look. He also has a coarse
speaking voice, with which he argues
violently with anybody who tries to
pass him a sour peanut. The commer
cial ape Is the kind which earns a liv
ing for some exhausted Italian who
emits hymn tunes from a hand organ.
There Is also the cultivated trick ape,
which smokes a cigarette with much
the same facial expression as his
brethren in pants.
The mandrill is on ornamental form
of ape which Is as highly colored as
a Fourth of July poster. When the
T
But
(Copyright by Edgar A. Guest.)
------------ o------------
deoscccccccccc**ccccc*c0000007
I
ORGANIZATION
osccoc***** rr**cc*c*c*cc*c*c0000
By George Matthew Adams.
Rodait the greatest Law of
Success is Organization. Nothing
so marvelously emphasizes the infinite
Mind of the Creator of this World, as
His wondrous Solar System. Its Or
ganization Is perfect. Organization
means Results—real Triumphs. Before
any Man or Business Is able to get
Results, there must be Organization.
The greater your Organization is,
the greater will your Success be.
Every healthy human being Is fitted
out In the first place with every Factor
and Faculty for a powerful Organiza
tion. There Is your Brain with scores
of Elements ready to act In the Or
ganization. There la every member
and organ of your Body ready—Walt
ing and Willing. To Win— get all these
things Into a sound, workable Organi
zation. For—
The greater your Organization la,
the greater will your Success be.
If you feel yourself in the position
of many a Failure—take Heart. Or
ganise yourself I Write down upon a
piece of paper every useful Quality
you believe yourself gifted with. Plan
out how your different Abilities may
help each other. Then write down the
names of every possible avenue of
Endeavor where your Abilities seem
most adapted. Give every ohe of them
Something to DO. Set them to Work.
Realize what Organization can do.
Realize that—
The greater TOUR Organization la,
the greater will YOUR Success be.
A
Vest-Pocket Edition of Man Ex
hibited in a Cage for the Purposes
of Comparison With ths
Real Article.
mandrill opens his mouth to say some
thing he Is half undressed. The gorilla
Is the nearest approach to the male
sex which science has yet dug out
In Africa. He walks on two feet with
the dignified air of a blase floor walk
er. The late Mr. Darwin discovered
the ancestors of some of his wife's rel
atives, It la said, by studying the goril
la at close range.
The chimpanzee Is a blood relative
of the ape, but comes In a larger pack
age. The chimpanzee Is a haughty and
reserved animal, and has very little
affection for anything except his
meals. It Is not safe to toy with a
chimpanzee unless the toyee Is look
ing for a pleasing form of suicide.
(Copyright)
---------- O----------
-MILITAI
Magic" Yes!
Black Magic, too!
Why SAY—
I only have to
break a-five,
AND GOSH!
IT MELTS
AWAY !!!
NEW
PEORIA
SINGLE
DISC
FURROW
OPENER
4______ —
P eoria D rills ADE
ON DISPLAY HERE
Products From Well-Tended Garden.
one late planting of peas, and frequent
small sowings of lettuce will insure a
continuous supply of these vegetables
during the entire season.
Sweet corn should be planted every
two or three weeks during the early
part of the season, and If the growing
season Is long two plantings should be
made in July or August for autumn
use.
The early garden should also be
planted so that space will be available
when needed for planting full rind win
ter crops, thus making it possible to
have fresh vegetables practically the
entire year.
SAPPERS’, Inc
SPLENDID PLACE FOR BRUSH RAISE MORE PUREBRED COWS
Material Should Ba Hauled Away and
Used for Stopping Washing
of Fertile Soil.
Increase of 249 Per Cent In Bull As-
sociation Herds Shown by Records
for 1919.
Brush and straw piles that will be
In the way next spring should be
hauled away and used to stop soil
washing. Aside from using straw as
bedding for live stock or spreading It
over fields, this Is perhaps the best use
to make of It Everyone has seen
enormous gullies cut In a single season
and years spent in trying to undo the
mischief. The moral Is stop the wash
ing while the ditch Is small.
Small gullies that have just started
In corn fields or wheat fields, or even
in pastures or meadows, may often
be stopped with a little straw. Even
cattle paths in pastures often deepen
so that they need such treatment. In
other places it is necessary to plan to
sow sorghum to stop washing, but if
the gullies are more than a foot deep
and two or three feet wide it Is usu
ally better to use brush, according to
the University of Missouri College of
Agriculture.
The brush dam gives better results
If straw is mixed with the brush to
help hold the dirt. Wherever the fall
Is great enough to make the water cut
seriously It is likely to be necessary
to stake down the brush and straw so
that they will not be washed away.
The less busy winter time should be
used In active work to stop losses
from soil washing nnd In planning,
next season's field work so that the
fields will be planted and cultivated
across the slope or around the hill.
Then the rows will not run straight
down the slope and thereby furnish
the steepest possible channel for the
run-off from rains. Those who have
such winter cover crops as rye to hold
the soll In place are fortunate, but
those who do not should not flatter
themselves that no washing Is going
on even In winter when there Is less
rainfall.
(Prepared by the United States Depart
ment of Agriculture.)
SCALES OF BIG IMPORTANCE
Aa Nearly All of Farmer’s Produce Ie
Sold by Weight He Should
Have Set on Farm.
Nearly all of the farmer’s produce Is
sold by weight, and It is not enough
to stand by and see It weighted on the
buyer’s scales. Tou should have a set
of your own In your yard so that you
may be sure you are getting all that
you are entitled to.
,
FOWLS ARE OFTEN SLIGHTED
Chickens Afford Means of More Cash
and Meat Than Any Other
Stock on Farm.
Chickens are too often discriminated
against when feeding at the bam Is
done. As a rale chickens afford the
family more food and sometimes more
cash for the money and time expended
on them than any other live stock.
Purebred cows In bull association
herds have Increased 249 per cent since
1918, according to the bull association
directory recently complied by the
United States department of agricul-
ture. The records for 1918 show that
the number of cows owned by mem
bers of bull associations was 10,248,
of which 597, or 5.5 per cent, were
purebreds; while the records for 1919
show the total number of cows was
18,244, of which 2,086, or 11.43 per
cent, were purebreds.
Comparing only those associations
which reported in both 1918 and 1919,
it Is found that In 1918 there were 450
purebreds, and in 1919, 1,001 pure
breds, or an increase of 118 per cent.
That the bull association Is proving
• great help to the small breeder Is
evidenced by the fact that the num
ber of associations has increased from
Well-Bred and Profitable Cows Such as
This Result From the Uee of Dairy
Bulls of High Quality.
ture.” suggests the ideal condition for
producing milk and butterfat of the
highest quality and In greatest abun
dance. The dairyman should, therefore,
endeavor to extend all these Ideal
conditions throughout as much of the
year as possible, and will succeed just
as far as he recognizes and applies the
factors which go to make up the ideal
conditions.
RECORDS OF BIG ADVANTAGE
Tell Dairyman Whether He Ie Run
ning Behind With Cows and Where
Profit Ie Being Lost.
Nine times out of ten the man who
Is rare he is running behind In dairy
ing does not know whether he Is or
not—no accounts, no careful reckoning
up of the cost of production. What
shall the man who is In that fix dot
Sell out? Not a bit of It! Turn over
a new leaf. Keep account of every
thing that enters Into the cost of pro
duction. Improve methods of market
ing, and see if you are not really mak
ing good on the dairy end of your
farming operations. The chances are
you will think more of the cows, and
if you do you will take better care of
them and they will do better for you.
War, Execution of Saloons
and Disappearance of Free
Lunch Rooms—Hobo No More.
What has become of the old-time
hobo?
Not that anybody wants him back
again, but bls disappearance is a mys
tery.
To be sure, the war cleaned him
out, but even so, he was a diminish
ing quantity before the bugle called.
Chief Thomas Shaughnessy of Mad-
ison, WIs., like many other police
chiefs, reports that the tramp has
ceased to be a problem for him and
that the hobo is extinct
Despite the war. It is still a puzzle
to Madison’s custodian of the law what
has become of the 2,605 hoboes who
have disappeared from Madison in the
last five years.
In 1914. the total
44 in 1918 to 78 in 1919. The bull as-
sociation guarantees the farmer the
continued use of a good purebred bull
at a coot that Is within his reach, and
the fanner has not been alow to real
ise Ite value. If the present rate of
improvement la maintained it Is cer
tain that the future will show a steady
replacement of the gradee by pure
breds, and that thia will take place
both by natural Increase and by pur
chase until the members of bull asso
ciations will have practically all pure-
bred cows in their herds. Without a
bull association few of these smaller
breeders would have found It possible
to get Into the raising of purebreds.
number or lodgers at the police sta
tion was 2,820, in comparison with 215
In 1919.
The extinction or execution of the
saloon is one contributing factor to
the lack of “’boes” according to Chief
Shaughnessy.
Disappearance of free
lunches and slumbering joints have
set the tramps to working for bread
und butter.
Scarcity of labor during
the war forced » lot of the triflers to
work. And a lot learned how to work
in the army, says the chief.
In 1914, 2,820 lodgers registered at
the police station ; tn 1915, 3,486 ; in
1916, 2,320; in 1917,1,066; in 1918, 156;
and in 1919, 215. The almost steady
decrease in numbers is shown by a
comparison of the lodgers In the
months of December during the five
years which show 313 lodgers at the
police station in 1914; 518 in 1915;
166 in 1916 ; 40 in 1917 ; 15 in 1918, and
only several in 1919.
Azores Once the Object of
Scientific Interest Owing
to the Volcanic Eruptions
The Azores Islands were made the
objects of scientific interest by the
volcanic eruptions and earthquakes
while the former were alive.
Sub-
oceanic eruptions, sometimes piling up
islands which soon disappeared, were
characteristic phenomena.
The Azores comprise three groupe
of islands, their total area being less
than that of Rhode Island.
Their
population is about 300,000, most of
the Inhabitants being Portuguese.
About the middle of the fifteenth cen
tury the Portuguese sent expeditions
to settle on these islands. One island,
Fayal, was presented by Alfonso V
of Portugal, to bls aunt, Isabella,
duchess of Burgundy.
It was upon
her marriage to Philip the Good, duke
of Burgundy, that he founded the
famous knightly order of the Golden
Fleece.
Columbus halted at the Azores on
bls way home after discovering Amer
ica, to offer thanks. On Santa Maria
Is the church where he knelt
"Here we are, in tip-top shape"
—ChesterfieU
Chesterfields always arrive—
PROFITABLE FEED FOR COWS
“June Pasture” Suggests Ideal Condi
tion for Production of Milk
and Butterfat.
The profitable feeding of dairy cows
consists of supplying them with plenty
of well-balanced, palatable feed. In sur-
roundings which afford them health
•nd comfort. Nature gives the dairy-
man a model in feeds in the month of
June and this to recognised to such an
extent that the vers words. "June Das-
1
hesterfield
•
CIGARETTES