A NEW TOMATO CULTURE.
GUY CLUOTT MITCHELL
moisture and sustenance which the
roots collect, Instead * producing ten
or twelve pounds of useless growth
will go largely Into the formation of
fruit Clusters of tomatoes will hang
thickly against the stake; they ””11
secure the full benefit of the sun’s
genial warmth; there will be no rot
ting; the ripe fruit can be seen at a
glance; the tomatoes will be larger,
and there will be few, if any, very
small ones; the yield per vine will be
as heavy or heavier, while if the plant
ing is made with this in view, the
vines can be set considerably closer,
as the moisture requirement will be far
less than under the usual method
the Whole West People Imagined that
the great duek farms of Long Island>
New Jersey and Pennsylvania bad
produced the duck supply of the coun
try The future census will be closely
scanned at its finish for a more care
ful study of these conditions. So far
as can be learned at present, the in
crease in poultry culture through these
states has almost doubled In the last
six years.
The West Is more largely Interested
In the Plymouth Rock and Wyandotte
breeds than in any other. The East
ern States seem to be more given to
the cultivation of Leghorns than are
any of the Western localities. The
eggs having the brown shells seem
best suited to the West. The brown-
shelled eggs stand shipment better,
from the fact that the shells are heav
ier and stronger than those laid by
the Mediterranean breeds.
The Brahma and Langshan fowls
were formerly most popular In these
sections. The Plymouth Rocks and the
W.vandottes being smooth, that is
unfeathered, on the shanks, move
about and forage for their own sus
tenance much better than the feathered
varieties. The original Asiatics—the
Brahams and the Langshans—produce
the eggs having the darkest and
heaviest shells. The Plymouth Rocks
and Wyandottes having a considerable
per cent, of Asiatic blood in their
veins, produce a strong shelled egg,
stronger than the white shells, assur
ing safer carriage a long distance to
market This is the real reason why
so Many of the eggs that are shipped
in from Western parts have the
former kind of shells. There is no
difference whatever in the quality of
the eggs themselves, no matter what
may be the color of the exterior, yet it
is a well-known fact that the white
ones have the preference in New York
City. To produce these, they must be
grown nearer to the Metropolis to les
sen the danger of cracking from long
shipments.
The general purpose fowls, the
Plymouth Rock and the Wyandotte,
have become a blessing to the poultry
growers of the West and Northwest.
They are strong and sturdy, with
great ability to undergo more or less
hardships and yet thrive. There Is
no question but that there are more
Barred Plymouth
Rocks grown
throughout the Western country than
all other kinds of standard-bred poul
try combined. In France, the Houdan
18 the great market fowl; in England,
the Dorking; but throughout the
Great West the Plymouth Rocks seem
to be accepted as the standard of
quality for market poultry. In ad
dition, they are such thoroughly good
egg-producers during the entire year
We tried the scheme and it repaid us
’about the first of June Is the time well.
Since my return to the North I
to stake your torihttocs, speaking gen have
each year followed out this Idea,
erally for the United States. This although
It has been applied simply to
mrtlcle would have been more timely
■had it been printed a month ago, but a garden plot of tomatoes. It is some
even If it can be remembered for next what revolutionary, and whether it Is
year’s operations In tomato growing, practicable or profitable where you are
the writer will feel more than com raising ten or twenty acres of this
pensated, since for at least small
tomato. patches the plan here sug-
Ringlet
gested has been proven by him to have Barred Ply
several advantages.
mouth Roc In.
Some years ago I attempted to grow Prize Win-
«oven acres of tomatoes in Southern nerg at Mad
Florida—Polk County—for the north ison Square
ern winter market. The tomatoes
were pif nted In November. It was the Garden, New
winter of the great freeze, which swept York Poultry
Florida from stem to stern and obliter Show.
ated all “frost lines”—the first oc
curred December 28th, just on top of
n balmy Christmas Eve spent on the
piazza In summer clothes. On that
day, the jtbennometer in this “frost
proof” region descended to 18F. with
a biting northwest wind. Thousands
Of acres of tomatoes and egg-plant
were ent down to the ground. For
tunately for my partner and myself we
Were from the region where Jack-Frost
bolds annual away and we had main
tained a seed bed in spite of the Jeers
of out pclghlmra. By the use of fer
tilizer tacks, all the bed quilts, sheets
and clothing we had, and half a dozen
fires to windward, we managed to
White Wyan-
save some seven or eight thousand
dottes. First
young tomato plants, and thus when
the frost king had passed on his way,
Prize Pen at
we bad a start over our neighbors of
Boston, 1005
from eighteen to twenty-four days in
growth.
A SECOND FREEZE,
We had visions of wealth. Instead
of aeven acres,
___ J
.. _ ___
it _
is ___
true, we
had
plants for only about a single acre
each, but we expected eight, ten or
twelve dollars a crate for our toma
toes, Instead of two or three dollars,
tiecause all Florida had l>een wiped
cut. Unfortunately, in this instance,
the lightning struck twice, and in Feb
ruary, just as our plants were blos vegetable I am not prepared to say— where a great amount of leaf is pro-
soming and beginning to form fruit, pruning and cultivating that % of an duced.
If the ground Is rich and the plant
a second and equally severe freeze acre in Florida kept me hustling as I
struck into our midst, and again the had never hustled before—but as a grows luxuriantly, Its entire strength
entire agricultural section of Florida, garden proposition where you are rais can be thrown into the fruit by pinch
with the exception of a very small ing from fifty to one hundred plants it ing out the top bud after the vine has
acreage on the southmost keys, was has proven Itself an ideal method of reached the height of the stake.
Another advantage of tnls method of
frozen to the roots. However, In this culture. The directions are these,
Instance the Weather Bureau was on simple in the extreme, but requiring culture is that for a couple of weeks
the lookout, and alxiut nine o'clock in rather close attention, as once well after the ordinary tomato crop, even if
the evening we had information that started the tomato is n rapid grower.
By the time the plant forms its first
a severe northwest blizzard was rapid
blossoms, have a slim stake six feet in
ly moving down the State.
length—in Florida we used pine sticks
Necessity, as usual, proved Itself nltout one Inch square—with a crow
the mother of Invention, nnd m.v part bar, or a heavy mallet stake your to
ner, Mr. C. G. Stephenson, of Herndon, mato firmly. Take an ordinary piece
Va., and myself strapped lanterns to of grocers’ soft cotton twine and tie
our left legs, and with a big cotton the stem close to the stake. We ex
hoe each, tramped up and down our perimented with tape and heavy cord,
long rows of tomatoes and with a but found that the ordinary, tlve-cent
single dig and pull, for each plant, cov a Dall, white twine sufficed, and that
ered the blossoming tomatoes with
nearly a square foot of the looso there was no danger of Injuring the
Florida up land sand, lii which the stem of the plant. Then go through
the rows and pull oft every sucker
winter tomato Is grown.
leaving of course the blossom stems.
By two o’clock we had finished tmr In other words simply train the tomato
task, and we thought wo wore some vine to a single stem, and as need be
what tired; but this effort was nothing tie it up close to the stake. During the
to the Job of digging out the plants on senson of growth three or four ties will
the two succeeding days. The small suffice. We tried using a sharp knife
of my back still creaks In remem to cut off the suckers in the belief that
brance of the straightening up periods yanking them off by the fingers would
at the end of each row.
Injure the main stem, but event
Finally, after the two freezes had ually came back to the Crystal Springs
done their worst, nnd the genial sun method, where everything is done by
of Southern Florida began to warm the fingers.
the air. as upon a rare day In June, we
SINGLE STEM PLANTS.
each found ou.'selves with about % of
There
will be strong temptation,
an acre of rather dilapidated but still
SHIPMENT OF CHICAGO PLYMOUTH ROCKS AS RECEIVED
the vines get three, four or
thrifty and little damaged tomatoes, should
AT SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA.
five
days
start,
and
one
of
the
suckers
far advanced over those of the sur or branches becomes almost as big ns
rounding fields.
the main stem, to let it grow. In the tied np In the usual method. Is “laid as to make them prime favorites, and
rilUNING TOMATO VINES.
liellef that It will injure the vine to by,” the gardener with a wheel hoe an excellent selection for all purposes
The tomatoes were beginning to remove It, but such mistakes should lie can pnss through the rows of staked for which fowls are kept upon the
throw out numbers of axillary suckers ruthlessly remedied. Once well started tomatoes, and with his hoe set very farm.
can keep down any weeds
jutrt above each leaf. It was my turn, the tomato is one of the toughest and shallow,
which may rob the plants of their full FITS
»oateornervonrae« after
one day, to drive the white mare to sturdiest growing vegetables—a horse share
rl I O <lr»; day’jww ot Dr. KUne-i Great Nerve lie-
of moisture.
rtorer. Sent for FREE »2 00 trial bottle and troatl»
town nnd get a supply of grub—we can step on one without much damag
Da. K.R K usb . Ltd., W1 Arch St., Philadelphia, RaT61"
Rows
of
tomatoes,
grown
In
this
were camplug. By chance, 1 ran ing it—and there need be no fear manner, present one of tlie most at
acrons an old stager who had drifted nlsmt tearing out even the large suck- tractive
sights imaginable. Rather
You can free a moth-infested closet
down to South Florida from the region ) ers which have developed four or five than a tomato
patch they look like a of the "creatures,” larvae and eggs, by
young orchard, laden with a plethora pouring hot vinegar into a red-hot iron
or tin pan set upon hot bricks in the
of ripening or green fruit.
closet. Shut the door as soon as the
Poultry Growing North and TTcsf. vinegar hisses upon the heated surface
of the pan, and don’t open again that
T. F. MeGREW.
The chief center of poultry growing
upon the farms and by small establish
ments devoted exclusively to the pro
ducing of eggs and poultry for market,
is located in that portion of the coun
try now called the North and West, in
which wo must Include Missouri, Kan
sas and the great Northwest.
It is not usually known that Mis
souri, Iowa nnd Kansas are the great
est producers of poultry of all kinds,
including waterfowl, and that Michi
gan and Wisconsin are becoming the
greatest of all goose-producing sections
of the country.
Upon the vast wheat fields of the
Northwest are grown thousands upon
thousands of young fowls that are
batched and cared for with reference
to having them of the proper size for
ranging over the wheat fields as soon
as the harvest is In, and are later
gathered up by the pur hasers of the
great poultry-killing establishments of
Kansas City and other centers. These
Even an expert cannot distinguish by
young fowls are taken away and
appearance roasted Java from Bri
shipped to the killing t laces prior to its
zilian
Coffee. Then how can you know
the beginning of the cold rigid weather
that
you
get your money's worth when
of the North, only leaving for the care
of the farmers during the winter you buy loose grocery-store coffee on
months a sufficient number to produce loota «nJ the price mark? You don't
know-, and the grocer does not know,
eggs for the next summer's crop.
Wisconsin and Mlchlgnn produce for “cup quality is not visible to the
large numbers of geese, grown for eye, and he cannot show it to you.
their feathers, and then shipped away Refuse loose scoop coffee I You may be
to the Eastern States, where they are sure that afi coffee deteriorates when ex
fattened and sold to the City markets. £sje«l to U h - air, anil is easily contan^
Missouri and Kansas have become
great en produclnircentersof the West. nated by dust and impurities.
Y ou will find it to your advantage tc
It is claimed that more egjs and
more dressed poultry are shipimd from buy from us direct if your grore^Tefuses
some of the gathering stations of Mis to supply Arbuckles’ Ariou Coffee.
TOMATOW TRAINED TO RINGLE STEMS. (After PfcotoKrapb.)
For v-m^rotection to positively in
souri than from any ou.er locality tn
this country. Iowa has for many sure youTilI weight, purity and the best
of Crystal Springs. Mlns. He told me li-aves, and even Incipient blossom years ranked among the foremost coffee value for your money, Arbuckles’
of the methods In that vicinity, by elustera. However, it is of course stall's In the producing of both eggs An-68 Coffee is sold in sealed one
which tomatoes were not only ad better to keep the vines pruned dowu uud market |>oultry of
pound packages only. As the largest
kinds.
vanced In ri|ieulng from five to seven closer.
The last census figures for Iowa are coffee dealers in the world, with a busi 1
days, but iocreuMd in yield. Much ADVANTAGES OF THE METHOD. a surprise to luany of those best in ness exceeding any Jour other coffee
more labor was required, but the re
The result will be that the vine will formed ou poultry matters. More h alers, we can and dogive l>etter coffee
sults ware more than commensurate. grow up to the top of the stake, stocky ducks were reported as being grown tlian
be bought elsewhere for any
ITbe plan consisted simply in slusiug uud strung. The slugle leaves will de and shipped to market out of that thing can
like the same price—in proof of
•Bd pruaia« Mcfi plant.
velop hugely, uud a great amount of State alone than bad been credited to | which the sales oi Ariusa for th years
'
J
■i ’ I
■ ■..
SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMEMT.
opportunities .
For Young Men-Through Intensive
Seeking at we always do. to
Farming.
I give our readers the best of every
The Winona Agricultural Institute 1 b
located at Winona Lake, Ind. It is one
of the most promising signs of the era
of a better agriculture; it was founded
by the Winona Assembly, which is
commonly known as the Western
Chautauqua. The Agricultural Insti
tute, however, is only one of the sev
eral educational institutions that has
been organized by this Assembly.
There is also a Technical or Trade
School at Indianapolis; a Training
School for Bible teachers lu New York;
and the Winona Park School for girls,
all of which are in a flourishing con
dition and the product of the efforts
of benevolent men and women. The
Winona Agricultural Institute differs
from many other institutions of the
kind in that It believes in training the
hand in the pursuit of the practical
work of preparing the soil, plant
ing and raising crops, caring for
animals and the study of the kinds,
and in fact embracing and combining
the practical and scientific towards the
advancement of this important in
dustry. Moreover its object is to
train and prepare young men to gain a
good livelihood from a small tract of
land, placing the value in the boy
rather than in the land. In other
words, the student is trained to get the
most out of a small acreage, as he is
most likely to be forced from circum
stances to start on a small farm, which
may be Increased in Scope or the small
farm exchanged for a larger one.
Thus it will be seen that this plan of
fers a much larger per cent, of success
to the student than if his training was
all based on the obtaining of a farm
consisting of from forty to one hun
dred acres.
The class roomrand practical work
18 in charge of practical men, who
have had exceptional training for this
work. The Dean of the Institute, E.
J. Hollister, is ¿¿soil expert with a
national reputatlon’and his past year's
work at Winona Lake has been most
Interesting. .The^ students realized
from their farmland garden crops on
forty acres of land last_year $1,800.00,
and this work * wasi a Unperformed by
the students themselves wjth the ex
ception of the employment~ofTtwo ex
tra men and the engaging of the ser
vices of eight student's'to’remain and
look after the crops and do .the market
ing during the holiday’season Even
this business was all »carried''on by
the students under the direction of one
of the professors.* That is to say, the
boy» raised the crops, marketed them,
handled the money, and the success of
the venture, both from a financial
standpoint as well as the training the
boys got, is being used as a basis for
enlarged operations this season, all
with the view to bring the students in
closer touch with all the agricultural
processes, supplementing the practical
work with a course of lectures and
studies that will simplify the science
of agriculture.
The Dean has been engaged In ex
pert practical work with soils and
plants, the transporting and marketing
of crops over a wide range of climate
with a variety of soils, embracing
many portions of that area which lies
between the foot hills of the Rocky
Mountains and Long Island In New
York State, and from the central part
of Canada to the Everglades in Flor
ida, and is now in addition to his
work at Winona directing the recla
mation of a large tract of tidal lands
on the Connecticut Coast. He imparts
this and other Important features of
his experience to tl>e students, and is
anxious to prepare young men to take
up this expert work and intensive
farming. lie is a thorough believer iu
the extension of our prosperity and the
increase of the strength of the nation
through the development of our agri
cultural resources, and deals with the
problem from a practical point of
view. He Is anxious to inaugurate a
movement that will begin -'ith the
Improvement of the abandoned farms
in the East, continuing westward even
to taking up those parts of the semi-
arid west where farming is carried on
under Irrigation, training young men
to get a living on a small acreage,
demonstrating that ten acres may be
made to produce a greater Income than
a twelve hundred dollar salary In the
Doni . BE
thing, we are about to offer you in
serial form, the unusual and ah«
sorbing story, entitled
••THE WHITE COMPANY,"
by no less great an author than
Sir A. Conan Doyle, who for the
past twenty years has been one of
the most widely read of modern
writers. His latest efforts, ** The
Adventures of Sherlock Holmes,’*
have been published and read
throughout Europe and America.
In fact, no writer of late years
has received more popular at
tention or merited more praise
than this gifted Englishman. His
style is most pleasing and his im
aginative power far above the
usual.
We have secured from Sir
Conan Doyle’s American publish
ers the right to this novel, and it
is with great pleasure that we are
able to announce its early appear
ance in the “Magazine Section."
Be sure to get the initial chapters,
as it is a stirring tale that will hold
your interest from first to last.
TO THE LAME
1870»
OLD WAY
you
E. L. O'Connor Mfg. Co., 1271 B’wy, N. Y.
F
OR YOUNG MEH
SEEKING OPPORTUNITY.
Investigate the grand
possibilities there are in
agriculture. Trained men
for extension work are
now in great demand. We
can help you make your
own future.
ADDRESS!
Winona Agricultural Institute,
Winona Lake, Indiana.
fflBiA® How to zeleot a good tnrnaoe.
Lwl* Leader Steel Furnace coata»».
nEI*"”J paid. Other al tee. Write. Hees
* Vart'g ¿>.,74« Taeoaaa BMg.,
YOU
$
Bun
■ legt Pt WnriQ
Can Sava a Lot of Moaovl
Can Incre«»« Your Comfort«!
Can lncre««o Your Profit«!
If you are Interested in those thing«
we’d like to «end you ournew book about
,
| ELECTRIC 8TTft..i.
electr T c *-« l -
w More than a million and a quarter of them are
in use and eereral hundred thousand farmers say
that they are the best investment they ever made.
They’ll save you more money, more work, give bst>
ter service and greater satisfaction than any otter
metal wheel made—because They’re Msds Better.
By every test they are the best. Spoke« united to
the bub. If they work loose, your money back.
Don't buy wheels nor wagon until you read our
book. It may save yon many dollar« and it’s free.
ELECTRIC WHEEL
Box 283
SCOOPED”
are greater than the combined sales of
presents before you order the coffee.
al! other packaged coKTV the United
M hat is the use of paying 93 to 86
n hfrever you may be y°u get cents a pound for coffee that may not be
the fuU advantage of our enormous as good as Arbuckles’ Anosa I
facilities. By the original “mother's”
Address our nearest office,
process Patented by this firm the pores
of the coffee bean are hermetically sealed
ARBUCKLE BROTHERS,
after roasting, with a coating of fresh
T1 Water Street, New York City. Dept- A
eggs and sugar, which preserves intact
JOO Michigan A-enne. Clucsgo, ILL. Dept. A
v6iid2i,?i>“JaVOra.nd aroraa due to our
Liberty Are. A Wood St.. Pittsburgh. Ps., Depto
«1 Sooth Seventh Street, St Louis, Mo, DogL
skilled blending and roasting—not to be
compared with crude, primitive methods
on a smaller scale. We drink Arbuckles’
Anosa ourselves every day with the best
coffee tn the world to choose from.
If your grocer refuses to sell ww,
j^YOUR GROCER%
Arbuckles’Anosa Coffee, send us express
¿rs1,1wc-ftsi «• ns
^REFUSES TO
we
£riT”%rei?tetthe
for a»y
Bhlp m the original
«'feature of Arbuckle
Bros, lo lbs—10 signatures—which pn
Bt e you to presents. New b- k ViUi'
colored picture, of »7 present,
‘ ou can write first for the book »„J““
SELlS
f ARBUCKLES 1
ariosa carrffi
\
WE
1