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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (March 8, 1906)
the same and publish the names of p sons selling adulterated seeds. So extensive is the seed business in the United States that many seedmen go to an enormous expense m Pl,bll’ll"'8 each year catalogues giving the maty varieties offered for sale by them. Home Testa of Seeds. The Department of Agriculture in or AMERICAN SEED GROWING der to aid farmers to determine f themselves without much trouble the Cheap Seeds the Most Expensive germinating qualities of seeds Pl,rc’,^'d by them, has issued a number of bulle GUY ELLIOTT MITCHELL ts upon the subject. A,very simple for sprouting seeds is describ lies idle and he curses his luck which abolishes a system whereby the Con apparatus ed in the bulletin. It consists of a shal- has thus shown itself against him, gressmen who wants to keep in touch I low basin or one of granite ware. whereas the fault was his own, and he with his constituents has an opportunity The tin bottom of the basin is covered with was simply penny wise and pound to mail out a little package of garden water and a small flat bottom of porous foolish. seeds to his entire list of voters, he clay is placed inside. The seeds after cheerfully votes against the measure and This can be said of many different having been soaked are laid between instead votes for an appropriation of kinds of seed. a quarter of a million of dollars two layers of moist blotting paper or Or suppose he buys expensive early over a year for free garden and flower seeds. flannel cloth. A pane of glass covers the cabbage or radish seed, it is an easy t If somebody introduce a bill, even dish, which is to be kept in a tempera matter for the unscrupulous dealer to with this big would approi>rlation, but speci ture of about 70 degrees. The atmosphere mix this seed half and half with very fying that the Secretary of Agriculture, of an ordinary living room is suitable it cheap late cabbage or radish seeds, pre- , should :u expend expend me the money money in in prucuimg procuring care is taken to set the apparatus near a •__ 1.. killed 1 :n .1 (so / _ ...... _....... viously that .L they will not distributing only such seeds and] stove at night. Ihe basin may be lett come untrue to name), and unless the and <............. buyer is particularly observant it may never occur to him that he has been buncoed. Broadly speaking, the growing of farm ■nd garden seeds may be considered the ¿most important of agricultural indus tries, for unless the quality of the seed •s maintained, the succeeding crop is greatly diminished in volume and deter iorated in quality, so that if applied to the country as a whole, the loss would be enormous. “The great magnitude of the American ■eed business is little appreciated,” said ■ prominent seed dealer in describing the car-loads of field and garden seeds which he handles each spring. “The producing capacity of the seeds quickly deteriorates, in most instances, and the most successful farmers buy large quan tities of seeds. The farmer is a some Tricks of Some Dealers. what cautious individual, and although he buys, on an average, double the Another method of defrauding the amount of seeds he did ten years ago, seed buyer, practiced by cheap seedsmen he has not, in every instance, reached who never expect to do business a sec the poin- where he recognizes that the ond time with the customer, is to sell greatest economy lies in getting the best him outright the cheap seeds of some and patronizing only those houses whose plant such as a muskmelon, for instance, reputation forbids them to sell poor and under a label of some new or high- adulterated seeds.” priced variety. He puts in a hard sea son’s work trying to raise good musk Seeds Apt to Retrograde. The deterioration in many seeds is melons, and at the end he finds he has very marked, and large seedmen go to a heterogeneous collection of inferior great lengths to produce the best pos sorts. Still another practice which the sible seed and to have various establish reputable seedsmen will not counten ments in different parts of the country ance is to sell seeds which may be true where the conditions arc the best for to name and which will also germinate, production. It is not possible that the but which are weak and poor. An ex best results can be attained in produc ample of this was noticed by the writer ing a great number of seeds on any one in the Colorado muskmelon fields. The farm or in any one locality, however Rocky Ford cantaloupes had for some I favored. The soil and climate which years attained a country-wide fame1 may bi the best adapted for producing through their sweetness and fine flavor. 1 one kind of seed may result only in a They were shipped all over the United I Very inferior seed from some other kind States. Then came a great demand for EVERYTHING for the GARDEi \ is the title of Our New Catalogue for 1906-the most beat*] ul and instructive horticultural publication of the day, 186 pages —700 engravings —7 superb colored olatu.! 7 duotone plates of vegetables and flowers. , IttE PETER HENDERSON & CO WANT r SEED LETTUCE AND ONIONS IN HEAD partly open from time to time to admit the exchange of air and gases, using a good-sized dish with small saucers and renewing the water occasionally. Sev eral kinds of seed may be tested at once at a trifling cost. The Department cau tions the far., r against extremes of temperature and excessive moisture dur ing the experiments. In some of the larger and more reliable seed houses of this country there is a well-equipped and appointed incubator room in which tests are made by the seedmen In order to ascertain whether or not the seeds will really grow. This is done with every lot of seed that comes in the warehouse and before distribu- tion through the country. Results of Patent Egg Separa tor. Every Heuse- lioid, Hotel, Restau rant, Bakery, Drug Store, in fact any place where eggs are used ueeds oue or more. Instantly separates yolk and white, not a particle of the latter remaining in the Separator. Does not break yolk. Made from solid piece of metal. Always bright and ready for use. Sample 10 cents. KANCY SUPPLY CO., Box 215, Wasblo|tOB,ll| Agent» wanted for these and other god Write for circulars aud terms. a&tdgg Time to Abolish the System. Congressman the free seed farce, and speeches have been made annually de riding the practice, showing that it is unnecessary and unprofitable and a waste of public money; yet when It comes to voting for a measure which Counts as Cash / To every one who will elite where thia »dvertliement waa aeen lad r B enetoaea Ten Cent» (in .tampa), we wilt mail the catalogue, 1«J al.o.eaj Charge, our famous 50-Cent*’ Henderson Collection of aeeda.ceniuw jng one packet ea. a ot Giant Mind Swill Piaif Giant Fanty Pamiri, Grunt nutria alillri, mind; Hind.rl.n'l N.w TirS lill.n; Early Ruh T.ww. ■ trhiti Tippia Starlit RaSiih; In a coupon envelope, which, when empug l ■ and interned, will be accepted aa a 25-cent"*b payment oa any ord» Bww^a amounting to #1.00 and up ward.______________________ ________ As it is now carried out, the free seed distribution should be stopped, and the work of supplying the ordinary farm and garden seeds, the results of which are known to everybody, should be left to the regular seedmen. The seed business of the United States • is one of great magnitude. While there arc, of course, unscrupulous and fake seed houses who do not hesitate to adulterate the seeds they supply, the re putable firms take great care iu seeing that their meds are not only fresh, with good germinating powers, but true to name. The old-fashioned way was for each grower to save his own s-ed, but in many of our principal crops it is found that the seeds grown in certain lo calities produce heavier yields, and while if the planting is done a little out of the original habitat of the plant the first Courtesy A. J. rioters, Department of Agriculture, crop may not appreciably deteriorate the of plant. So that seeds, as they are Rocky Ford seed. At the end of the second year, the crop from that seed handled by the big seedsmen, are gath cantaloupe season various individuals will show a marked falling off in yield. ered in by them from all parts of the could be seen going over the Rocky It is for this reason that some of the country from Maine to California. In Ford cantaloupe patches and disem wisest farmers and planters send regu the latter state some of the vastest seed boweling immature and frosted canta larly considerable distances for seed. Selds of the world are found, where the loupes for their seed. This seed, it is The seed catalogues always carry a eye ranges over unbroken rows, miles in true, was genuine Rocky Ford canta number of pages of novelties and new extent, at least as far as the eye can loupe seed, and it would probably ger varieties which are described in an ex reach. If all this industry should cease minate 95 or 98 per cent., but it is ob tremely attractive form. It is well for a year and the farmer and gardener vious, its sale as first-class seed was an enough to try these novelties, but it is became dependent for the succeeding imposition. Nevertheless thousands ofJ good advice to consider them as such crop on the seeds which he would him packages were annually foisted upon I and have the main crop to fall back self save during the year, the shrinkage seed buyers. uiMin from the standard or well-tried in production throughout the country So if you are going to buy seed, and varieties which have stood the test of would amount to tens of millions of buying seed to a greater or less extent years. is advisable, not to say necessary, it dollars. An examination of many of the seeds becomes a foregone conclusion that it of common vegetable and forage re In the Olden Times. pays to buy good seed and therefore to Of course, in the early days each veals the fact that an immense amount of poor seed is sold to American farm farmer saved his own seed; possibly he know from whom you are buying. The Government Seed Business. ers and gardeners. Farmers as a rule exchanged seeds with one or two neigh The Agricultural Department is busier are responsible for this condition, since, bors or friends. At that time there was little competition iu farming, the produc than usual sending out millions of pack as has been said, many of them buy the tion of the farm was used mainly for ages of free seeds for Congressmen. It cheapest seed in the market and trust the support 0/ the family, and the arm#»nou ild be understood that this free seed entirely to luck for it to produce the en supplied practically all the necessities distribution, while carried out by the tire crop. Such seed is dear at any Secretary of Agriculture, is no scheme price, and is withal one of the principal ■n.l even the luxuries of life. The earliest seed-farm in the United of his, but is a Congressional affair, pure source of the hosts of bad weeds which States is believed to have been started and simple. Tn every session there is are to be seen upon many farms. For the last few years there has been by David I-andreth, the originator of one or more bills introduced abolishing the present big seed house. This was what has been termed by more than one a constantly increasing outcry against before the Revolutionary war. on a »mall farm, now included in the city of Philadelphia. It is estimated that over 250.000 acres, including land in probably every state in the Union, are now devoted solely to growing 'red crops, and some of the largest growers plant annually as high as 2,000 acres. The advantage of aecurfng good ger minating seed I m manifest. Take for instance clover seed which is sown on wheat-stubble in the spring. It is al ways possible to secure it at 50 cents or (1 00 per bushel below the market price quoted by the reputable seedsmen. •What is tbe result of using such seed? It must be considered a foregone con clusion that such seed is poor, worth even less than the reduced price at which it 1» offered. The land has been prepared for pasture or hay, some of the fertilizer used on the wheat crop still remaining in the soil for the use of the elover and timothy, and the grass and elover seed is sown to become the de pendence of the farmer for his hay crop. He buy« cheap seed: 30. 40, 50 or 60 per cent of it is an adulteration of seed which has been kill«! or is old, dead or weak clover seed. The re mainder is good, fresh seed. If he buys this seed, likely putting off purchase until the eleventh hour, and uses it without testing its germinating qual ities. he may be lucky if he gets half a aland. In other words, half his land <U»trtbuUo«. ’• “»k» >h« knowing llbenl K. Every Empty Envelope plants as may be of real value to the farmer in a Congressional district, new and improved varieties, even though only one package could be sent out where now a score or two are sent, the expenditure would be defensible. This 4! Field of Seed would be building up our agriculture, Lettuce. and there would be cases where the entire agricultural output would be Parsnip Growing changed, greatly to the advantage of For Seed. the farm. The Secretary is, in fact, California Scenes. employing this idea, as far as he is left any discretion in the matter of seed distribution. He is allowed by Congress a small appropriation of this free seed money, and where his explorers in the old countries of the world have brought in new plants and seeds which it is be lieved will be an improvement on those already grown by American farmers, he sends these out in sufficient amount to admit of a rational test by a farmer. Get Good Clover Seed. IhU cxtxl.gue 111« !•»<•“ To I HOW TO MAKE SCHOOL GARDENS. By H. D. Hemenway. This suggestive little book is a practical manual of school gardening for boll teacher and pupil, and supplies the first adequate work of the sort in this couatq.l This volume is based on actual experience (the author is an authority and direct»] of the Hartford School of Horticulture). I CONTENTS : Introduction; How to Make a Garden; Twenty-One Less« in Garden Work—May to September; Bibliography; Lessons in Greenhouse Wall Planting Seed, Potting, etc.; Root Grafting; Lessons in Budding. Size, 5x7; pages, 107; binding, cloth; illustrations, 28. By special arrangement with Doubleday, Page & Co., I am able for the pres« to make tbe following SPECIAL OFFER. A HUNDRED ACRE RADISH FIELD these growths are recorded in a book and kept for ready reference in the event of complaints. The busiest times in the American seed warehouse is from November to March, and often April, when enormous quantities of seeds and bulbs pass through the buildings first in large sacks and later in smaller pack ages by mail and express on their way to the progressive American agricul turist. Preserving Strict Silence. In Korea the women, on their wed ding day, will not open their mouths to peak, no matter what the tempta tion or provocation. Sometimes this silence is continued through the first week of married life. Although no such custom exists in the Western world, extraordinary cases ara not wanting. In the early forties ' a New York lady undertook, for a wager of »150, to remain mute during the month ot her married life. Her new-made h-sband, who, natur ally, was not in the secret, was so much incensed at his bride's behavior, that he left her before her tasK was com pleted, only to return later when ap prised of the real reason for this un natural silence. On one anniversary of their wedding day a Brussels couple quarrelled so bitterly that the wife, in a passion, vowefl that her husband should never again hear the sound of her voice. She would there and then have left the I house, but her now penitent husband | implored her not to desert him. To that extent only did his entreaties pre vail, for she kept the letter of her oath | and never in her spouse’s presence did she unloose her tongue. An Austrian woman, whose husband was in hiding from the authorities. In advertently betrayed his whereabouts to a neighbor, who was secretly in the pay of the police. As a result, he was ! taken, and received a term of imprison ment. So much did his wife take to heart this misfortune, which had been brought about by her gossip, that she resolved for the remainder of her life to remain mute. She would not make an exception even in her husband’s favor, for, although she received him on his release with the utmost affec tion. she maintained an obdurate silence till her death, three years later. the seed» sold by unscrupulous dealers Cordial Foreign Relations. and with it a demand for legislation. Mrs. O’Riley—And are yez on spakin' Congress and a few states have passed terms wld Mrs. Zylonski. laws regulating the trade in needs. The Mrs. Murphy—Av course I am She Secretary of Agriculture under an Act| called me a thafe an’ I told her aha of Congress has authority to, and docs. waa another. The new Garden Magarino, 6 months, and How to Make School Gardens, fl.00 edition, postpaid, both for $1.00. . ............................ The GARDEN MAGAZINE is finely illustrated, and is the finest magaiinsti its kind published iu America. To take advantage of this special offer, ork« should be sent at once to H. D. Hemenway, Hartford, Connecticut. Thia offer may be withdrawn at any time. How to Build a Home How to Make a Garden Around It How to Live In It How to Entertain In It How to Enjoy Life In It Some of the regular departments of the magazine are Music in the Home Hints to Homemaker» Health in the Home Home Etiquette Little Folks in the Home Home Cheer Entertaining in the Home AND BEMEMBER It isn’t made with a scissors and a paste pot. There's good “grey matter" goes into every page of it. There’s human sympathy in every line of it, There • originality and genuine good hard common sense all through it. It don't under ta^s to tell you how to bo happy on a million a year, but it does tell you I*0* to be happy on the modest income that so many millions live on wbo dofl have a million a year to spend. And the magazine costs And it’» worth ten dollar» for its good snggeations about life and health an*1 homemaking. Send your dime or five two-cent stamps to MAXWELL’S HOMEMAKER MAGAZINE^ 1409 Fisher Building, CHICAGO.