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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (May 31, 1906)
cover the box with a piece of glass, or other tight material, to prevent the evaporation of the water from the cloths, and set the box aside for a few days to await the results of the test. Where only a limited number of ears are to be tested, a similar germ inating apparatus may be made by using cloth between two dinner plates. Ten inch plates will give ample space for the testing of 18 or 20 ears at one time. It is important that the ears be numbered or arranged in the same definite order as the corresponding tests in the germinating box. One of the most satisfactory methods is the use of a rack as is generally used for drying seed corn. This is generally a piece of 2 by 2 inch piece of pine from which extend on all four sides long nails, each of which is numbered. After the kernels from the first ear have been placed In square No. 1 of the germinating box, the ear is shoved on nail No. 1 of the drying rack, and so on. These racks can then be KING CORN. the Farmer Can Double His Great American Crop. THIS BOOK FREE JOURNALISM IN CHINA. samples tested are representative of the present supply of seed corn, the •hi testing of every ear and the subsequent Dialect Newspapers Increase Gulf •7 A V m rejection of poor ears will Increase the Between Provinces. stand 13.7 per cent. This increased United States Consul Anderson, at stand would mean an increased yield of 298,140,695 bushels, with a value of Amoy, has made a report on journal- $100,739,912.91 calculated on the basis ism among the Chinese. He says: “It is rather surprising, in view of the comparatively small population ___ __ in ______ of ___ foreigners China, „ how many large publications there are in foreign BASEBALL languages. The prices they obtain for OUTFIT!! their publications and their w ork probably explain the situation, YOUR EXACT SIZE Shanghai has five daily newspapers, SHIRT, handsome gray broad «houl- three morning and two evening pa flannel.with ders, full at arms, very long, pers; one is French, it has six for- three button front, double shapely and durable. eign weeklies, one German, It also I ■ewed, ’A NTS. Padded or unpaid- ed (as you wish ».double and has four Chinese dallies and a large triple sewed.very strong. Pad- number of Chinese weeklies. “Practically all of the foreign pa pers sell for 4>j cents gold per copy. top, long visor. .... The subscription price Is about $15 piece HELT. New style, «ty'“ brighi- | / !, ----- Las patent ]T^ strong, gold per annum, postage extra. The colored, nickel buckle. Chinese dailies sell for about 14 cent gold per copy. In addition to these BOYS, COMMON DINNER PLATE FOR SEED for only 14 package« of publications there are many religious A ddress (LUINE. toaell forusatlO TESTERS. cents a package. Return our papers, mostly in Chinese, published 12 40 received from the «ale. of the average yield and price for the by the mission authorities. and we will immediately «end this splendid baseball out- “In the south Hong Kong domi I you last ten years. nt.guaranteedtoflt audio give A full description of how to make nates the publication business, and complete satisfaction. Every tests Is found in Farmers Bulletin No. as it is a British colony, English publi '■iirTgl? P u E p a I n EXTRA PREMIUM. Any three letter« you want 253, by J. W. T. Duvel, which can be cations might reasonably be expected made large, of felt, for your «hirt front, «ent free, had from Members of Congress or the to lead, but on the face of the record with the suit if you return our money within today«. the Chinese predominate. There are BLUIM’l MFO. CO., The OU Sellable Arm Secretary of Agriculture. 11:1 Mill St., 4'nni-or.! Junction, Maaa. four English dailies, the Post, the Press, both morning papers, and the WOMAN’S ADVICE TO FARM Telegraph and the Mail, both evening this manilla nnapri FT PEARL SPAR DnAutLEI ERS. papers. from the Phiilippine “There are six Chinese dailies, and, Miss Edith Urmey, an Iowa hospital Islands,, green or in the ease of Shanghai, there are white mountings specialist, states that many of the in as a large number of publications de and heart bangle mates of eastern insane asylums are signed to fill various wants in South Free fornliiog 12 i’nil- linpine Shell Hat Pin«at sons aud daughters of the farmer China, a Portuguese weekly and the 10c each, every lady buy« them — «.'nd no im-nrr — only name and aihlmu, we lru«l you and pioneers. They have been brought up Government Gazette« being among eeadKo<i,hatoocv. Ityouaend us $1.20 within — lOday, we will In nearly every port of im send you in addition to the bracelet a beautiful necklace to lives of idleness nnd luxury or suf them. io match. S.N.CorneauiCo. Uopt49 3a River St. Chicago portance in China there is an English fered from monotony of country sur publication of some sort. will bring to von by mail a roundings. In either case the direct n S 03. box of BUTLER'S FLA- "The publication houses, as a rule, cause for mental derangement is the both L VORING CR VSTAL A super- and con- newspaper concerns Ut i'»r to any 25c bottle of liquid lack of diversified work for body and cerns for general printing only, are extract (unchangeable in cook, mind. The pioneers of the country fairly well equipped for their work. Ing and non-alcoholic). Vanilla, had no time for brooding over imagin Some of them attempt work in the lemon, orange, almond, clove cinnamon, ginger and nutmeg ary troubles and were happy. But line of high grade magazine and book flavors. Indorsed by U. S. com they neglected to map out the proper publishing, anil while it is not always mission at Paris Exposition. courses for their children and in an unmixed success from a technical Your monev back if you want it. Send 10c fo-day to treating them with kindness have typographical standpoint, it demon Butler Co. 1? Bat* cry Place X. F. City Jos. — — paved the way to Insanity. workmen, strates that the Chinese The cities present numerous cases do most of the work under for GOLD Filled Watch S5 of physical and mental wrecks of .who eign supervision, will in ti me ac- 5 Year SOLID Honent Watch at an lloneat Price. young persons brought on by dissipa quire KL. If rfhil Muds of a pint, of solid r>ld overlaying a plate of ixxnpo- considerable merit in this line tion and strenuoslty In the battle for of effort. commercial supremacy. Farmers “It is rather interesting to note warn their sons and daughters of the that China at present seems to be dangers that lie in their paths when passing through much the same pro leaving the farms, but often forget to cess with its newspapers and other correct the evils at home. They give publications that many parts of the their children all the benefits of United States have passed through. schools nnd colleges and leave out the All over the empire native newspap essential fundamental principles of ers are being started in the collo life. Too many are left to remain in quial dialects, and are more or less Only Sure Cure. idleness because they are taught in local in character. Positive and Permanent. Pure. “It is unfortunate in many re RWr-Tjdw. Absolutely $1.00 Package cures any spects that the publication of news ordinary case. papers in the several local dialects $3.00 Pscksge cures anv case or money refunded. has developed so generally. While Sent postpaid on receipt such publications will afford means of price. A gents W ant - of educating the people of the em , — . eld . Liberal term«. pire in some lines, they also furnish Mistral Huve Remedy Co., 414 4th Av.., Pltt«t)«r|,’Pa. the means for deepening the gulfs, dividing the several provinces which Dashboard Line Holder differ in dialects. Each newspaper Quickly adjustable to side or center, If it performs its natural mis top of any dashboard. Keeps sion, will develope its own language Hues from under horse’s feet while standing. Lines secured in its own field to the exclusion of instantly while stepping from a language which might in time be vehicle. Prevents trampled and come common to all China.” soiled lines. Saves trouble, FREE The United | there any corn growers who can not Com planting time! States this year will have over 90,090- produce the equivalent of at least two 000 acreB planted to this king of crops. such ears to every hill? How many For this enormous acreage 15,009,900 grow 80 bushels of shelled corn per acre? bushels of seed will be required. The time required to test individual Probably but little thought Is given by the average farmer to the germin ears for vitality is very small when it ating quality of the seed used, for he is considered that 12 or 15 ears will has so long been accustomed to get furnisli enough seed to plant one acre. ting a “stand", under ordinarily favor Experiments have shown that if a few able conditions, varying from Go to 85 kernels (preferably six) are taken per cent, that many have come to from different parts of an ear of corn think a more complete stand impos and all are found to germinate well— sible. Yet experiments have shown that Is, to produce good healthy sprouts that barring unfavorable u.-atlier at —practically all of tho kernels on that planting time, the work of grubs, wire ear will likewise show strong vitality. worms, and the like, there is no rea On the other hand, if the part of all of son why a stand of corn should be b-.is than 95 per cent Of recent years, how ever. conditions have much improved, and never before has there been Buch a demand for seed corn of high vital ity Some of our best farmers are be ginning to realize t hat one of the great' est factors in profitable corn produc tion is the use of seed which will show a high per contain- of germination. If each corn grower would give a lit tle time during the early spring to the testing of the seed, the vitality of each Individual ear of corn intended for planting could be readily determined. The poor ears could then be discarded, and the millions of bushels of seed corn which fall to grow each spring could lie very profitably converted in to pork and beef. Of the 15,000,000 bushels of seed corn which will be planted this year, it is almost certain that from two to three million bushels, or nearly 20 per cent, of the corn first planted, will fail to grow as a result of the low vitality of the seed. Thou sands of acres will have to be replant ed either in their entirety or In part, and many thousands more will grow WHAT MAKES THE CORN AVERAGE LOW. to maturity with an Imperfect stand. the kernels tested fail to germinate or suspended in some suitable place and show only weak sprouts, the propor there need be no fear of the ears be tion will be the same for all of the ker- ing mixed while the germination test 's on such ears. And the experienced is in progress. corn grower will bo not a little sur 'The kernels in the testing box prised to find many a fine looking ear should begin to germinate freely a- of corn among his selected seed, the bout the third or fourth day, hut the kernels of which will not sprout at all. counting should not be done until the sixth or seventh day, or until most of the shoots or stems are from 1 to 1 % Bettor Now Than Not at All. inches long. This part of the testing Germination tests should be made must be done with considerable care five or six weeks before planting time, and requires good judgment, as ker but even if it is necessary to stop the nels will be found in all stages of de plow In the field, it is far more profi velopment. If the six kernels in any table to have a good stand of corn on one square in the germinating box 19 acres than it is to have a poor stand show six good healthy sprouts, the ear on 20 acres, thereby saving the time and labor necessary to prepare the ground and to plant and cultivate the additional acre. Yet many farmers are every year planting and cultivating 3 or 4 acres in every 20, for which they receive comparatively no returns . In making the tests it is essential that each ear tested should be given a number and all kernels taken there from given a corresponding number so that after the tests the faulty ears may be thrown out. Many kinds of germinating boxes TESTING RACK. and methods for testing seed com have It seems incredible of realization, been described in various publications, time and temper. You need one unless you drive an auto that the average yield of corn in the but the Department of Agriculture has mobile. 20 c^ts postpaid. designed a simple box which is be United States in 1906, when the total BICYCLES ON THE WANE. KANCY SUPPLY CO. production was the largest in our his lieved to combine most of the advan L5 WASHINGTON, D. Ob tory, was only 28.8 bushels of shelled tages, and give good results in the Over Three Time« as Hany Fac corn per acre. It is still more sur hands of almost any operator. The box Can 8ave a Lot of Work! tories In 1900 as at Present. prising to know that the average pro would be about 1% or 2 Inches deep Can Save a Lot of Money! duction per acre is practically the Inside and the length and width such Statistics furnished by the Census Can Increase Your Comfortsl same today us it was forty years ago. as to suit the needs of the individual Bureau at Washington show a marked Can Increase Your Profits! In fact, the average yield per acre for farmer, but it should not bo made wa decrease in the manufacture of bi If you are interested In those things the ten years from 1866 to 1875 was ter-tight. Instead of filling the box with cycles. Since 1900 the business has fal we'd like to send you our new book about I 26.07 bushels as compared with 25.2 sand, soil, or sawdust, as is commonly CAN NOT YOU GROW TWO EARS LIKE •• E ” TO EACH CORNHILL? len off 65 per cent., the number of bushels for the ten years from 1896 to recommended, the seed bod Is made establishments being reduced from 312 ELECTRIC 8TEWheols 1905. While there are several rea- of heavy canton flannel or similar ma- which they represent should be taken schools and at home that manual to 97. •nd th« for seed. There will also be cases in labor is not honorable. There is no Formerly there were 2,034 salaried ELECTRIC H*Waflon which all six kernels have germinated, reason why farm life should become officials and employees of the facto More than a million and a quarter of them are but will be lacking in vigor. While monotonous to any one residing with ries where now there are only 360. The In use and several hundred thousand farmers cay they are the best Investment they ever made. these kernels might produce a good in the boundaries of ordinary civiliza falling off in the number of wage earn that They’ll save you more money, more work, give bet ear of corn, the chances are that they tion. The rural mall carries the daily ers was 81 per cent. The capital in ter service and greater satisfaction than any other will never develop, or else will produce papers and magazines to the farm vested in 1900 was $29.783,659, where metal wheel made—because They're Made Beiler. By every test they are tho best. Spokes united to but a barren stalk. It is only necessary door yard: telephones place the farmer as in 1905 It was $5,847.803. the hub. If they work loose, your money back. to remember that all ears showing in direct communication with the out The production in 1900 amounted to Don ’t buy wheels nor wagon until you read our dead kernels or weak and poorly devel side world; railroads open the channels nearly 32,000,000 bicycles and was re book. It may save you many dollars and it’s free. ELECTRIC WHEEL CO., oped sprouts must be discarded and of trade to every commercial port; duced in the five years to little over Box 263 Qulnoy, His. only those used for seed in which yet there is a life of monotony on 5,000,000. every kernel tested has given a good many farms. Tlie places are not Im In contrast with these figures, the healthy sprout The ears which have proved, the owners follow the fashions motor cycle factories increased from shown a perfect germination are now of their forefathers, they do not 159 to 2,289. ready to be butted and tipped and adopt new methods in any line aud shelled for planting. In order to in their children become discouraged. Now Zealand exports annually $65,- sure further uniformity in planting it 000.000 worth of kauri gum. It 18 is advisable to sort the ears before OLDEN DAYS OF WHALING. used In the manufacture of varnish. planting into two or three grades, ac A SIMPLE GERMINATING VOX. The days of the old-time whaling cording to the size of the kernels eons for thia, the principal reason I h terial, using two or three thicknesses This grading may also be done by fleets when more than two hundred full-rigged ships sailed out of New probably carelessness in the use of of cloth in the bottom of the box and screening, if more convenient. Bedford harbor on three and four- one or two thicknesses of cloth for seed of low vitality. Remarkable Results of Government year voyages to the most distant and covering the kernels after the frame To Test F.ach Corn Ear. dangerous seas, were over more than Tests. has been filled. The cloth at the bot half a century ago. The right of The statement Is made by officials of tom should be marked off Into squares The Department of Agriculture re Greenland whale of the Arctic waters the Department of Agriculture that 2 inches each way, and numbered, each cently made tests of___ ____ _ fur- with his mouth seed corn full of whalebone and i Millions Die Every Year from Mere Ignorance of while corn breeders luive achieved one of which is to be filled with ker nlshed by farmers In the corn produc nels from ears which are given a num -• - marked success in the production of ing States, and of the 3,322 ears tested, his cousin, the sperm whale of tropi I Nature - ’s Laws of Health ber corresponding to the square used. cal waters, bearing in its head the improved types of corn during the last 1.906, or the startling percentage of precious spermaceti, were practically decade, unless the farmers take better Auk yourself the question: ‘ ‘ Is Life Worth Living? more than one-half, were unfit for seed. A Very Simple Test. care of their seed corn and test each And the be your : J ‘‘It Iieailn. depends These samples were taken from ears exterminated by those all-daring, iron- m, . answer ; will ........ uu ” on your health.” Thon whv r»rx4 V»«»»« m •» nerved, keen-eyed Yankee skippers. ear separately^ preparatory to planting, For use, first wet the cloth thorough picked for seed by good, careful far Then why Dot have good health ? If you are sick it fa Their splendid ships, the Annie B.t the chances are that the average yield lv by soaking in water, and then place mers, and are evidently much above because some simple, natural law of health has been violated. of com per acre In the United Slates the half doth, double thickness, which the average. The average germination the Mary Jane, the Blue-Eyed Susan Nature is a Stern and Inexorable Judge, and Will not be materially Ih'creaaed. lias beeu marked lu squares, In the bot- ( of the 1,906 poor ears was only 77.7 great lovers of their wives and sweet Grants No Pardons When Her Laws are Broken hearts, were this race of gentlemen ad In our principal corn growing States, corn Is planted In bills . feet apart venturers—rotted at the wharves or ■ Better Learn Those Laws. each way, giving 3.556 hills per acre. were degraded to service as coastwise In most section, three stalks to the and with them vanished a world of You can’t learn them too soon. hill is considered a perfect stand: In romance and adventure. No men. In ! You can't learn them all at once. some States, two Is the standard. Yet no time, more truly than they, "went I Begin right now, and If each hill would produce hut one down to the sea In ships”. Learn a little every month. medium sized ear. 6 or 7 inches in But when the pennant of the last i length and weighing a trifle more than a dim? ___ nF . five Iwo-cent »tamps to 1405 Fiaher Bnildlnz. Chicago, for one whole old-time whaling ship was hauled down o anbscrlption for Maxwell’« Homemaker Magazine, and rend the Department ‘Health 9 ounces, the yield for each aero would forever, there still proudly swam rear in the Home Health from Nature, by Right Thought and Right Living.” ba 38 8 bushels, the nver.ige yield per Read it every month year in and year out and learn all about Nature’s Law- of the oceans the vast rorqual or racer Health. anti nave Doe torn’ Billa and Drug Bills, and you will enioy many y-JW» of Life and sere in the United States in 1905. whale, greatest of all his mighty kin. good health after you otherwise would have been dead and buried-or 1 ivbe cnmated. A single ear of corn to the hill the To the sailing fleet of the old days, the Whether von arc buried or cremated doesn’t so much matter. It’« the lying part tna’ size shown as A tn the Illustration count« Train “Good Health” as your faithful body-guard to kick old I, Grim Death, rorqual was an almost impossible prize Scythe and all. info the street if he call« ahead of time. Get your M point*» on training would give an average of 28.8 bushels because of its tremendous speed. It from Maxwell s Homemaker Magazine. t to the acre; a single ear shown as II was practically unmolested, and mul would give 30 bushels per aere; tiplied exceedingly in both North At ear such ns C would produce lantic and Pacific waters. bushels per acre: an ear st It was the abundance of this levi as I) would yield 45 bushels per acre; ONE YEAR FOR 10 CENTS athan. measuring ninety feet In length while an ear like E, which weighs a Subscription Price to Chicago and Foreign Addressee 25< Per Year and weighing almost as many tons- trifle less than a pound, would yield 50 c ■ it this «nlwcnp'i.'i» blank, wriu- ram. »nd addrraa on rM b- ow. and send n« bulking larger than a whole herd of el lacrnt.-dlvrr or«am|»i and wf will mail von Maxwell's UoriiuiaXer Mutazine ever, bushels of shelled corn per acre, count month for twelve months. Don't delay, but aerid at once. ephants — which was the inspiration of . ing only one such ear for eaclr of the the modern whaling industry. Nam*----------------------------------------------------------------- 3,556 hills. There are, however, ’ few farmers who raise as much a At least one American hna sue- Box or Street No. bushels of shelled com per acre, eroded In Txindon journalism. Ralph Postoffice---- every corn grower can probably pro From " familng A BUNCH OF FINF SKXD. State.---- POOR, SMUTTY SEED. D. Blumenfeld. late of Milwaukee, Is Enclosed find___________ duce many ears which are larger than .for. the editor of the Ix>ndou Express. that shown as E In the cut. Eliminat tom of the germinating box. The ker- t . while the average germlna- •ubacriber ____________ ing, however, both ears D and K and nels from ear No. 1 are then placed, the good and the poor You can subscribe for on«, two, three nr five year« at 10 cent« for each year. Better granting that every farmer could har germ side up. in square No. 1 and so ears, the both of which would ordin Artificial pumice stone Is now made send 50 cent« aud have five years good reading coming to you. This is the BEST MAGA vest from each hill two such ears as on. When all of the squares have been arily have seeds ZINE, for the money, ever pnbliahed. Address in full from a mixture of sand and clay. ♦ been used for planting, had the one shown as an oar which Is filled, fold the other _____________ end of the ____ cloth Subscription Dept. MAXWELL S HOMEMAKER MAGAZINE, less than 8ij inches tong, and weighs carefully over the kernels. If during not these tests been made, was 86.3 per cent . showing that 13.7 per cent, 1$6 ounces, the yield would be RO the sampling the cloths have become was About one billion feet of timber In 1405 Fisher Building. CHICAGO. III. If you wish to have TTTF. HOMEMAKER MAGAZINE sent to friends, nee a separate gained by discarding ears of low bushels of shelled com per acre Iry. sprinkle them well with water vitality Granting, however, that the the Black Hill forest reserve has been piece of paper for name and address, and enclose 10 cents for each yearly killed by the Black llill« beetle. 10 IDon t Die That Way J X k •» **”'* . ...... aAsftqstfagjsgw ■»*■>*.■