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About Lake County examiner. (Lakeview, Lake County, Or.) 1880-1915 | View Entire Issue (April 12, 1906)
f" 1 I ' k Sfevfe5 EASTER LILY GROW ING. iSfS 1'vW'fcf TO IMCOMC AN AMIttlGVN INDUS18Y t, . HjJXl TO IM COMC AN AMI ttlGVN INDUS18Y GUV I.HIOTT MITCMILI. The general olloy of the Depart ment of Agriculture has been to en deavor to produce at home such plants as are grown abroad ami shipped Into the United States. This Is Just as true with regard to luxuries as to neces sities, and especially apropos is its reference to the Bermuda or Easter Lily. Kor some years efforts have been made to cultivate successfully the Easter lily In the South-eastern States, but it hns been found that the climate of that section Is not as favorable for the lily bulbs as It is in the Bermudas and Japan. Experiments have demonstrated that bulbs of the Easter lily can be carried over a season in cold storage, with a result that they a.e benefited very materially as it subjects them to a condition approaching that existing In Japan, the native country of the spe cies, where the bull's are heavily cov ered with snow during the resting period. This discovery has opened new possibilities in the cultivation of the lily. Heretofore, bulbs have been planted in some parts of the South early In the fall, with the result that they sprouted considerably before cool weather set in. When severe weather, such as the South gets at some ihtUhIs of the winter, does come, this growth w killed and the plant more or less in jured. During the period before com ing into bloom, the plants rendered sickly during the winter often suffer severely from lack of moisture, result ing In poorly developed bulbs. On the Blue Bermuda Islands. Lily growing on the Bermuda Islands Is an exceedingly profitable industry. Practically all the land available for the production of bulbs Is utilized for this purpose, and while the rotation of crops, togpther with the most ap- plants can be grown which are en tirely free from disease, and most Im portant of all. that the seedlings give an opportunity to select better types than exist at the present time. The very best of these seedlings, some of which will undoubtedly show superiority In several ways over the parents, can be retained for seeds, and by keeping up the system of selection there will develop In a very few years strains from seed which will be proven of great value. George V. Oliver, the plant propa gator of the Department of Agriculture has been working on this particular line for a number of years, with every Indication of success. In some In stances he has obtained blooming plants In from 7 to 9 mouths from germination of the seed, while lu re cent trials, as many as twelve mag nificent blossoms have been cut from a plant within fourteen months after the plant has shown itself above ground. In order to further this class of work, the Department of Agriculture has obtained plots of land In California and Oregon where it is believed the Easter lily can be grown as profitably If not more so, than It is in either Ber muda or Japan. A point greatly in favor of raising the Easter lily from. seed, to constitute the crop of marketable bulbs, is that from one to two years' time is saved in the operation over the wale method The results of the work of the Depart ment of Agriculture in obtaining blooming plants in so short a time after planting the seed would probably seem like a fairy tale to the participants of the lily conference held In Iondon in 1901. One of the papers read at j hat time states that many species of J.U Hum must have from ten to twelve Orchard AWcs. Soon la the time wheu the Apple bor er will emerge from tho trunk of the tree In the shape of a tly and look about for crevices in the tree trunks in which to deposit her eggs. A way often recommended is to take a hoe and hill up each trve a!ut six Inches. This will necessitate- the laying of the eggs on the trunk where they can be easily gotten at and destroyed later. May will bo a gool time to walk rapldiy through the orchard and rub off the new shoots, or water sprouts. on the trunks of the trees. If much priming has been done these will be found In abundance. When soft and green, as they nro during this month, they can be easily removed, pulled out by the roots, as it were, whereas later the will have to be cut Off, causing a liability to sprout again. "J r W Wi it I . - V ,'- - v id - t ' " .'Ajn i ' r-v i i i r 2s iV'MJ -SicVt' : , T w" 1 III This Magnificent Bouquet as Crown Irom Seed in Fourteen Months. If any top grafting has boon done and the grafts have taken, all sprouts below the grafts should be rubbed off clean, allowing tho full vigor to go Into the graft. For tho best results fruit and other trees should be cultivated early and often during the spring and early sum mer. as that Is the timo when most growth is made. When the fruii 1: small there is plenty of sap for vigor oils wood growth, but after the fruit approaches maturity tho wood growth decreases. Curiiig for Transplanted Trees. It is well the first year a large tree is transplanted to put a tile at its base or a square box five or six indies lu diameter, in au upright xjsition. and stimulate the tree by iouriiig down soap suds or other water. Tills furnishes sub-irrigation and allows but Utile of the water to evaporate. Trees should also be dug around from time to time if rapid growth is desired. A tree can grow up In soil and practically stand still or bv t lie use of manure and cultivation it ran be made to grow as fast as desired. The sod method is frequently followed by the man who has no time to spend on the convenience and apiearancc of his place. As the warmth of spring approaches the system craves some fresh acid, and nothing is more grateful than rhubarb. A most satisfactory practice Is to cover a couple of thrifty stools of rhubarb with an old half-barrel, inverted, and pile around it green manure. This will force it into quick growth. Green Manuring. Very sandy soils are mere apt to show a beneficial effect than heavy soils from plowing under green crops as compared with applications of fertil izers or manures, for the reason that in such soils fertilizer or manure leaches quickly away, whereas the humus afforded by the green crop is more entirely retained, itself adding to the body of the soil. Sandy soils, too, are nearly all deflolont In vegetable mold, and preen manure is the easiest and cheapest method of supplying thin factor. TUK VOMLSti FARMIUH', Th Educated Farmer Becoming a Power In State and Nation. The time Is fast romlng , If. Indeed, It Is not already hero, when the In telligent. Industrious ami energetic farmer will occupy a far more promi nent place in the affairs of Slate and Nation that ever before. I ho rapid paco necessarily adopted by those en gaged In professional and mercantile pursuits, in order to succossfully meet tho competition assailing Ihem on every hand, Is not conducive to the mental endowment nf their descend ants, and tho farmboy of rugKcd con stitution ami industrious habits will be lu ever growing demanil to till their depleted ranks. Much has been writ ten In regard to tho prominent part played by such breeding and early country training. In tho successful management of great mercantile enter prises ami tho marvelous discoveries and achievements of great professional lenders and much more will still be written upon tho same subject. The farms of tho country have boon and wilt continue to bo tho nurseries from whence tho degenerating forces of thoso overworked brnlns and shattered nerves will be recruited. More important still. Micro is also a most promising future fur tho farm boy who takes up agriculture ns an occupation. Farming Is no longer mere drudgery and muscular exertion, In which man iK-cuplex about the same placo as the beasts of burden, but It is an industry calling for tho keenest Intelligence and th application of well defined principles. If the farm boy can bo mado to understand that the cultivation of the soil and tho feeding of stock are based upon principles as clearly defined as thoso underlying any mechanical or mercantile pursuit, and that the same skill and energy applied to tho former as to tho latter will yield equally pn fltable returns, ho will be more greatly attraeteil to his homo acres. When to these facts are added tho npHrlunity to participate in public affairs and the assurance that because he becomes a farmer, ho does not surrender an claim to public recognition and re nown, ho will enter uixui tho work of the farm w 1th greater zest and courage and with less foreboding. In order to obtain thoso results. It is ttecessarv that tuo i.irin lad Io ntted for tho work as thoroughly as persons are fitted for other professions. lie must study agriculture as ono who Is to become a physician studies medi cine, or the one who is to bo an at torney st tulles law. He must not only know bow to do all things, but be must also know why the things are d(ie. Ho must know the effect upon the soil of different methods of culture and tho effect upon animals of various systems of feeding He must know a thousand things unknown to his an cestors a generation or two ago, and then ami not till then will he bo In a position to practice farming as Intelli gently and as successfully as the phy sician practices medicine or the at torney practices law. It requires time, hard study and some money to acquire this knowledge, but not so much as Is required to pre pare for other occupations and profes sions yielding good returns. There Is no study necessary for the laborer who uses pick and shovel at a dollar and a half a day, but preparation is necessary for him who earns three or four times that amount In any lino of work. Tbero Is no preparation nec essary for tho farmer who Is content to harvest what the soil produces of its own accord, but preparation Is necessary for the farmer who produces threo or four times the average yield of the soil. The man who manipulates tho soil and directs the elements of nature in an intelligent manner in the production of that crop Is an almost greater factor than tho soil Itself. Father and mothers who desire their )xys to become or remain farmers, should encourage them to make the requisite preparation for their life work and then fiero will be fower abandoned farms and fewer dis couraged and disheartened farmers. SECRETARY W ILSON AND A LILY GUUVl AT Trll DEPARTMENT Of ACRICLLTCRE EROM SI 1 1. proved methods of selection and cul tivation, would undoubtedly be eventu ally a good policy for the growers to pursue, yet, except in the case of the more progressive growers, there is lit tle likelihood of this being done, as it would materially decrease the revenue from lily farming for the time being. This will readily be understood when it is stated that an acre of lilies will bring from $l,o(.n to fJ.OOO. Some growers on the islands who thoroughly appreciate the importance of careful methods are using small bulbs in preference to scales, and are selecting and fertilizing carefully, but they are heavily handicapped by the many ! mall growers who cultivate their crops according to old methods; and in these cases there Is no selection with a view to producing and perpetu ating pood types. J.lttle manure Is used. The methods of propagation are very faulty ar they have not been changed since the beginning of the in dustry in the islands. For instance, in the growing of the bulbs for Amer ican markets the smaller sizes are planted in the fall and harvest Id July, or before the bulbs have thorough ly ripened. In the process of handling, many of the immature scales drop from the bulbs. Tliese are not thrown oway, as they ought to be, hut are carefully saved and planted wdth a view to raising unall bulbs. These bulbs ultimately form a large part of the general crop. As a result of all these conditions the bulbs marketed by Bermuda have become Impregnated with disease, ko that, at the present time it Is almost impossible to secure a bulb or plant which does not enow eome trace of di sease. The American Method. Investigations made by the Depart ment of Agriculture have shown that by the use of seeds instead of scales, larger bulbs can be secured in a much shorter time than can be produced by the scale method. Moreover, it has been demonstrated that la this way years to develop a flowering bulb from the seed. A noted scientist who was believed to be an authority on lily growing, stated that '"In three or four years at most, flowering bulbs will be produced from seed if the young plants are properly treated." While the experiments of the Department of Agriculture have shown that some seed lings are longer than others in coming into bloom, yet when these do flower, they reward all the cultivator's labor by producing a great amount of flow ers instances being known of plants with from ten to fourteen flowers at one time. Hybrid Philippine Lily. The Bureau of Plant Industry of the Department of Agriculture last year took up the problem of shorten ing the time of growing, as any short ening In the time of growth represents so much gain to the cultivator. With this in view the Department imported a species of lily from the Philippines which was known to bear flowers in from two to three months after plant ing of the bulb. This lily has been crossed with the common Easter lily, and the r it has been a hybrid, bearing as many flowers as the old Bermuda lily, with no difference in ap pearance from this plant, except that the hybrid will develop in four or five months, representing a shortening in time of from one to three months. While the experiments of the Depart ment are not yet completed, the re sults attained so far warrant the be lief that the new hybrid Raster Lily can be produced cheaper than the old variety which blooms not less than from six to eight months attar plant ing of the bulb. ilea's Trials. Rpf n ntn nnn nIMr It mv n4 nu can bet your wife'll ask you for It be- iore you get a cnance to tuo lu There are Indian millionaire In la dlan Territory and Oklahoma. If SiTW' If 1 The Juke w us Moss Grown. He raid it in all Innocence. it was at a nice, homelike little party tho other evening, and (Jabley had Just told his time-worn utory. "Ch, strangle it," called out Jonathan Happlegood In his sonorous voice, which made everybody look. "That story is more ancient and rock-ribbed than the hills." Then the three spinster Hill sisters of uncertain ages got up and stalked stiffly out of I ho room with that set, hard expression which Is akin to the "automobile face." THE PHILIPPINE LILY. Planting overgrown nursery stock because it can be secured cheaper than young stock is a serious mistake. In the first place the handling Is much greater, and, again, such trees will never make the sturdy and vigorous growth of the younger ones. To use them at any price la ioor economy. The Eskimo gives his doctor a fee as soon as he comes. If the patient recovers, it is kept; if not, it is returned. The gates of Pekin are closed every evening with elaborate and formal cere mony. The closing of the gates is one of the sights which strangers travel far to see. The beautiful patterns which are used for Cashmere shawls are fre quently copied from the leaf of the begonia. One of the Ranks. "Hello," said tho Pipe to tho Black Cigar. In the Smokers' grand parade, "I see you march with the Cigarettes Instead of your own brigade." Tho Black Cigar moved down the line, Ashamed as he could be, And simply said, with deep-liowed head; "I've Joined the 'ranks,' you see." Courtesy to the Cloth. He was a young and smart-looking Scots clergyman, and was to preach a "trial" sermon In a strange church. Fearing that his hair might be disar ranged or that he might have a smudge on his face, he quietly and slgnifl cantly said to the beadle, there being no mirror in the vestry: "John, could you get me a glass?" John disappeared, and after a few minutes returned with something tin der his coat, which, io the astonish ment of the divine, he produced lu the form of a bottle with a gill of whisky in It, saying: "Ye mauna let on ahoot it, meenlster for I got it as a social favor, and I wadna hae got It. if I hadna told them It was for you." The Man of the Hour. He stood in the hall at midnight, But the clock was not striking the hour, For his careful touch had stilled It, Ere the storm had time to lower. He said, as the stairs be climbed softly, "A hero of labor I'm like For Burely this night I've averted A most disastrous nirlke." mm U the title of Our Naw Catalogue for 1 906 the most brnutk f..l n.l instructive horticultural publication ti the day 184 iafs 700 engravings 7 auperb colorad plate 7 duotone plata of vtgetablea and flowers. 5x Every Empty Envelope r.V. Counts as Cash T'T kaHI ' OMt .ltitltmi ( tn4 , MnM ln Cnl ln lOnpO, will mll IN ilii, wl UMn4 ttm f charf , m limiwi SO-Canl " llandarwin " tulkn llan ml It, i nili nf lt til II i.imi ti.'l . f K, mi.,i . I I, (. .I,n,l4; H'- I.ri.x'l I lln t'h (. m4 U 1 (- 1. 4. ..I jJi'y In ai-nupnnanvrlnpa, "' tB tmpO4 nj KiuintJ. nrd aa a i.Vtanlcaah paymanjaa ir n tnunimi I fl.optnd upoaid. V W f 1 V u IWfaSlllllKtjil!) MiwrnAt ' MID fitii. 'N. VIMIDT Oat Sort Cur. foalllT tad farminrol. Abfolulrlr Pur. $1.00 Packaaacurranny onliitnry innc, $3.00 fataaQecinM- i.irii minify Hcltt wlaMott lrv-i't of pil. AufSta Vwr mil. l.tttrml Irtlim. r Mlaaral Halt Rama Ca 1 1 4in A.a , rittabari, fa. CH1art a Lot cf Worfc) .fiaflLfUTt i.91 ft MBftf H Cn twrrtna Houf Comtorltt Cn Incfuia Your Pfolittl If T'xi r lnitMl In lhiM Ihlnira w V1IU loaMBl fuuwriws buofctaul ELECTRIC ,Trvtt.... ELECTRTc-wrfS0W, v Mora than a niiula and a quarter rtf tii.nt ar tn IM unit iv"rl hurtiltn! tbunt frmra ar thai lhr ar tlx bl lulmm thrr r mail, thay'll aav you m--r ttimii'T, rmtr ir k, tflv b.t tof mmrtU' and grm.lT t Ufa-H n than any nOiar m.Ul bl M.IIriiM Thr'r . Hy arvry inl tin-y ar ! hl NiH.kva unlua to ilia hub. lr Ihry rt lia, yuur nutney bra. l-iot buy b-ia br ui.nl y..u r".l our boufc. II mir m yMi Run? din.i nit II I fna ELEOTRIO WHEEL CO., Baa 263 Qulnay, Ida. ' T T- -v -A. J a Beautiful Flowers FREE 25c In t-ayllia n.mi of r-a, tn,( ,, l4lll, Xtm , I' i"'ilMii,ilii,l,.,l,ii it.a , ..-nr.. , i, ,Mr PIW HOT! I.IM.Ite ra i n,. i.l ..ilrr rrrr u,,l, an. m ',,,, ( l lliil will , mi or I In- Piw.1 fain. l ....,.H.,, ,.j riming mi iuib gltiin iiOal a 23 Pnrkacaaaaad I kl. So.. i., l A.I.I. I -kl.l'.lrll'. . llalMm I I'kl. M lr.1 I . .mil.. I IH. V lr.1 Sr V. I .i. --I tltftiiiiwtl I i-kl. hivl Al..itti, i t'ki. u uiiAiu, . I l. 'Htr.l -....f. I .kt. M ini I ...iilufl. I 'kl. V ,r. I aik..u, I kl. ,r. I-..,.,. I .kt. M.ivl Nlurllotn I plf. Momlfif OTor I I'kl. Mikra Cllh...iax I kt. lH.. l.lrli.lurtB, I'.l. fulfil P'f'I'au . M'li-1 I'lilus- I I'kl. I i'kl. piinni.wfr. , I j.kl. ft, rluriM V I .kl. ii.li..t1 l-u.fc. I .ki. V.ir.l r..iir 1. 1 a I .kl. Mi lr. Mll.ilJ. I .kl. Mllnl rHuiiUk. I .kl. lii-i .Innla. I I kl. ill iJ YM lamia. iimIi,. lwiiiiriii('oii.-iion. arm wiihiMr nl.li-r, in. lu.lliig Hva.'inOia. I uliii. l tiM-ua, 1 uli !.-. iiik.iii.ina, i . tiiiMi, Oiaii. f ymi will avtwl l urn a im in . i ,. aiaiup. A'lillr E. C. MOLty rs.Somervllle.Maae. DR. 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CWI1I lirtng you hy mail a S ai. buz I Vanilla Crystals, Olova, NutunMT, . (iluaral, Koaa or Oluuauiun Oryalala. 1'hn bant Klavorliitf aver made. Ntm-Alcuhullo and Unulianyfabla la Cooking. Huiioriiir to any tie. buole of l.liUld Kltrai.t. Knduriml hy U. H. Fond (Imnnilnlaa rwnu iu ianie tu-aay to iOS. BUTLER CO., 17 BatUry pita, . N. Y. Oily. r afx x f hepeatingT VJ I CD AIR RIFLE Hhoutal IUI UDIM wlthuuL rtjloaulliiap. Iiiirth t.t rltim Hlnalt JuNt tbluif for ftiiiall KatiutM ITrtiauLflvtjf huL. You aaoi L.vai ftliia arS MMllll.af iiaiilatbaaiaud IU buy aaTaral at Moaaiib. Hootbar ourussra In inwrii Landlaa n.u. Za. 1.1 .aA ah.ll Molli k 1 an UWla bruu uiau, and ai all Uia rua. a iiai knarybOdy navaluaiasut Vr Hutiig uiuoay. Jua acud ynur uama and adilruaai aUfa-Uoa euaraiilaad HI.II.HIIICT, miiaiiiu.ui imii. ainrnw lin-n 1 iwihiith aye, I'ppt M yiloa May Bt 0HI01M