8 1 PRODUCTION OF THYMOL FROM HORSEMINT ne! mi nulla HEAT FLASHES, TURKEYS ARE MOST VALUABLE SIDE LINE I tt i I i yV WA V4.V- .isC h.1 Bed of Horsemmt Prepared by the United Statos Depart ment ot Agriculture.) The production of thymol from 'Siorsemint mayjbe, under favorable circumstances, a profitable commer cial undertaking, according to a re cent publication of the United States -department of agriculture, Bulletin 372. Thymol, which is extensively ised iri medicine, was formerly im ported from northern Europe where It is manufactured from seed grown in northern India. The European war, however, has reduced the impor tations of this substance from 1S.OO0 pounds in 1014 to a little more than 2,000 in 1015. To make up this deficit It is believed that thymol might be manufactured from improved horse mint plants with which the depart .ment of agriculture has been experi menting for some time. ITorsemint is found wild on light sandy soils over the entire region from southern New York to Florida, and westward to Wisconsin, Kansas and Texas, and it is probable that it will thrive under cultivation over the same area. From 20 to 30 pounds of oil per acre should be obtained from a planting, according to the investiga tions of the department, and a little less than 70 per cent of this oil will "be thymol. "The yield of thymol per Acre of horsemmt, therefore, is esti mated at from a little less than 13 EXPERIMENT NOW AND THEN i .'New Crops and Methods Should Be Given Thorough Trial Try a Little of Anything New. (By EREEZE BOYACK, Colorado Agri cultural College, Fort Collins. Colo.) Why not try a new variety of your main crop? Do not wait for some one to do your experimenting for you. The successful business man is the one who is first in the field. He trios out carefully, new methods or new products. The successful farm- er is first In his field. If you have never raised a forage - crop, try one. If you are growing Defiance spring wheat why not try a macaroni wheat? Perhaps another common variety such as Marquis or lied Fife would do well. Of course, if your community has : settled upon a variety as a commu- Wheat Field in Colorado. nlty enterprise, as is done with peas, potatoes, apples, -alfalfa, etc., it Is not wise to depart from it. Always try just a little of anything new a quurU'r acre, a half acre, or .ven an acre. Give it just average giuml it is better right alongside t lie standard crop. Don't fcuby it. Make it prove its worth, if it has any. The pleasure of trying out for one selt the value of a crop is the best -return. Do not make your whole farm rn exporinier.t farm or you will surely f.all. But a little experiment new aad tiien Is riiished by successful men. Prop- Feed for rifjs. Feed the pig all he can " it without f,uealii)g. This can be done only by , wut'jhing him eat and knowing just 1 iw much he needs. Grown for Seed. pounds from first year plantings to a little less than 20 pounds for subse quent years. The average price of thymol for a number of years prior to the European war was about $2 a pound. The cost of producing the thymol will depend to a great measure upon whether the horsemint is grown in connection with other oil-yielding plants for which a distilling appara tus is maintained. Unless this is done. It is said, it is not probable that the profits will be sufficient to warrant anyone engaging in the in dustry. Excluding such items as land rent, taxes, depreciation, upkeep and interest on the distilling plant, it is estimated that thymol can be pro duced at an approximate cost of $23 per acre the first year, and $10 per acre thereafter. These figures include the growing of the plants, fertiliza tion, cultivation, harvesting and dis tilling. A plantation of horsemint will not have to be replanted oftener than once in five years at the most, and by returning the distilled herb to the soil, a material reduction in cost of fertilization can be made after the first year. Fuller information In regard to methods of cultivation, harvesting and distilling are contained in Bul letin 372 which has already been men tioned. LONG LIFE OF FENCE POSTS Osage Orange Leads With Thirty Years Cement Will Last Forty eight Year3. The average life of fence posts from the following kinds of woods is: Osage orange, 30 years; locust, 23; red cediir, 202 ; mulberry, 17 ; ca talpa, lo1 ; burr oak, 1" 1-3; chestnut, 14; white cedar, 14 1-3; walnut, ll1 ; white oak, 1114 ; pine, 11 ; tam arack, 102 ; cherry, 10 1-3 ; hemlock, 0; sassafras, 8.9; elm, 8; ash, 8V&; red oak, 7; willow, 6. The number of years that n fence post will last should be considered In the price paid for it. Oftentimes f r a few cents ad ditional a much longer-lived post can be secured, making it much cheaper in the long run. If the bark is left on a fence post, It will rot much faster than if It is removed. It is estimated that the average life of a cement post is 48 years and of a steel post 30 years. ENEMIES OF ALFALFA PLAN! Not Worth While for Farmer to Waste Expensive Seed on Sour or Alkaline Soils. Sour soli and alkali are enemies of alfalfa. Most sour soils are sandy soils where the drainage is too good and the lime has been leached out. They can be sweetened by adding ground limestone where this proces? is not too expensive and leaching les sened by incorporating plenty of hu mus in the soil. This can be done bj applying stable manure or plowing un der green manure In the form of grow ing crops, etc. Alkali soils usually are badly drained and can be corrected by supplying thi& factor. It Is not worth while to waste alfalfa seed on sour or alkaline soils. If they cannot be corrected, raise som other crop. ALFALFA AND WHITE GRUBS Excellent Crcp to Alternate With Corr as It Clears Soil of Aphis and Other Insects. It Is claimed that the corn-root aphis, white grubs and .ther Insects which caused so much damage to the corn, will not feed upon alfalfa roots. For this reason alfalfa is consider 1 a very excellent crop to alternate w!4 corn, as It clears the land of corn ene mies. Improvement Possible. Any man who will rei nd work can duuble his milk and butter yield if It is below 150 pounds of butterfa' a year, and it is possible for him t do it in a surprisingly short tlma. i i II 9S UDDER DEVELOPMENT OF COW Sufficient Importance Not Placed on ' Dairy Characteristics by Dairy ; Cattle Owners. Many owners of dairy cattle do not . . i . n - . i ii.. iiiucf euuicitiiit importance un me purely dairy characteristics of the an imalj they keep and breed. One of the points often overlooked Is udder development, although it would "seem that this would be the first thing an intelligent dairyman would look for In the selection of a cow. While an oc casional cow with a small, ill-shaped j udder will give a gaod quantity of milk, such animals are merely the ex ceptions which prove the rule that good dairy cows should show good de velopment of the milk organs. The good udder is large but does not display its size by hanging in a Fine Type of Dairy Cow. low inverted conical shape. Such an udder does not add to the beauty and symmetry of the animal and too often its dangling, swaying motion in travel is a source of irritation. It cannot possibly be expected to give as good results as a blocky compact udder of equal size in each quarter and extend ing well to the front and rear. The teats should be of sufficient size to be grasped firmly while milking. They should be set squarely on the quarter and be of cylindrical rather than conical shape. The cow with a low hanging bag and conical-shaped teats is not a choice atrtmal to milk and it will usually be found that she does not do well at the pall. Parentage has much to do with the conformity of the cow's udder, and while the sire will influence this char acteristic to a certain extent the func tion of the udder is not after his na ture and the dam will have to be de pended upon largely to perpetuate proper form in this regard. Practical experience will prove that a heifer calf will ordinarily have in a marked degree the external milk organ char acteristics of her dam. It is therefore doubly desirable that in the selection of breeding stock close attention be paid to the udder development. VARIETY OF FEEDS FOR CALF When Animal Is Four Weeks Old It Can Get Along Without Milk Gruel Answers Purpose. After a calf is four weeks old it can get along very well on little or no milk if you are short. Make a gruel out of a variety of feeds, say corn meal, oil meal, middlings, bran, ground oats; mix them all together and cook a kettle of it, having about the con sistency of gruel. At first feed a pint of this in three quarts of warm water, increase to a quart of the gruel. In addition, give the calf clover hay and ensilage if you have it; in fact, any roughage you happen to have. Also begin to feed it cornmeal and ground oats as soon as it will eat. SUMMER WORK IN THE DAIRY Nothing More Unpleasant Than When Pastures are Short and the Files are Troublesome. At no time of the year is dairying more unpleasant work than during the time when pastures are short and the flies are troublesome. Now is the time when it pays to have supplemental forage crops and to darken the stables and keep the cows inside during the hottest part of the day. The cold weather during the win ter is less difficult to contend with than the hot sun and flies during the summer. COWS REQUIRE MUCH WATER Animals Should Have Access to Sup ply at Least Twice Dally Well Water Is Best. Milking cows require a much larger quantity of water than is necessary for growing animals. They should have access to a good clean water supply at least twice a day. The best supply is well water pumped Into a tank or trough, failing this a running stream is best. v 1 Feeding Time on a A more profitable sideline than tur keys for the farmer can hardly be found for those who are favorably situ ated for raising them, according to W. A. Lippincott, professor of poultry husbandry in the Kansas state agri cultural college. "Improper feeding, combined with close confinement, has been the cause of many failures in turkey raising," says Professor Lippincott. "Given free range on the average farm, the poults can generally pick up their own living. One light fcil a day for the purpose of inducing them to come in at night is sufficient. "If the mother hen is confined to a coop and the poults are allowed to run in and out, three times a day is often enough to feed and very little should be given at a time. The poults should always be ready to eat If they are given all they will eat several times a day, Indigestion will result. If there is little or no food outside the coop for the poults to pick up, they should be fed five times a day, only a small quantity at a time. "A good feed for the first few days after the brood is hatched . is stale bread soaked in milk ' and then squeezed dry. Corn-bread crumbs and clabbered milk or cottage cheese is often fed with excellent results. Green feed and grit should be on hand at all times. As poults grow older, the ration should gradually be changed to grain." Freedom is the main essential in the care of the adults, says Professor Lip pincott. With plenty of range where the turkeys can find Insects, green vegetation, the seeds of weeds and grasses, and waste grain, the cost of raising them is small while the profits are large. Grain and stock farms in t4ie west ern part of the state are particularly well adapted to turkey raising, and especially is thi3 iioticeable in grass- NEST SATISFACTORY TO HEN To Obtain Best Results It Should Be Flattened and Shallow to Per mit Turning Eggs. Next time you find a nest of eggs which a hen has stolen away, take a lesson in the proper architecture of such a structure. It may save a few broken eggs or a poor hatch the next time you proceed to set a hen in your own clumsy, human fashion. The keynote of the stolen nest is its flattened, shallow design. This is the way nature has demanded it should be constructed to give the best result. How different from the deep, hollowed-out contraption into which so many people pile the eggs they ex pect Biddy to transform into downy chicks. A nest to prove satisfactory should be shallow enough to permit a hen to turn her eggs properly. It should be flat enough' to permit the newly hatched chicks to lie where they are when released from the shell instead of sliding down into the bottom and having the eggs roll on top of them. IDEAL QUARTERS FOR MITES For Rapid and Profitable Gains Poul try Should Be Kept Comfort able and Cheerful. Filth should never be allowed to ac cumulate, because it makes ideal quar ters for lice and mites. All drinking pans and feeding pans should be thor oughly cleaned each day, and the soil in the poultry yard should be purified by drainage and tillage. To make rap id and profitable gains the poultry should at all times be kept comfort able and cheerful. ATTENTION TO BROODY HENS Keep Brooding House Dark and Handle Fowls Carefully, Avoiding Unneces sary Excitement. If the eggs are to be placed under a hen, transfer her at night and keep the brooding house dark for 24 hours. Handle the broody hen carefully. Do not excite her or she may refuse to sit. Keep her nest clean and free from lice and be sure that fresh water is always t hand. Western Turkey Ranch. hopper years. Raising turkeys in confinement is generally unsuccessful, and where it has been tried the re suits have been discouraging. Plenty of range is essential in turkey rais ing. Turkey hens often steal their nests in hidden places. To find these nests proves a long and tedious task. An easy method of finding the nests is to confine the hens early some morning after they have come down from roost and let them out lute in the afternoon. Those that are laying will then head for their nests. Fifteen turkey hens can be mated to a vigorous torn, in the opinion of The Great American Birds. Professor Lippincott. If 25 or 30 hens are kept, two cocks should not be al lowed to run with them at the same time, but one should be confined one day, and the other the next. When two toms are allowed to run together during the mating season, they fight and the stronger does practically all the mating. LIME AND MINERAL MATTER To Prevent Soft-Shelled Eggs Hena Must Have Proper Ingredients Exercise Is Good. Soft-shelled eggs are primarily duo to the improper working of the egg laying organs. This often comes about because the hen is not supplied with sufficient lime and mineral matter fn her ration. Sometimes, too, a large supply of animal food will unduly ex cite the organs, preventing them from their proper function. Overfeeding hens is another cause. When the cause is located, the remedy sug gests itself. For overfeeding or overstimulation, supply 20 to 50, grains of epsom salts as a dose for the adult fowl and regulate the feed ing methods. The medicine may be applied in the drinking water or in the food. Exercise will take away the attention of the hens from the soft shelled eggs. DUCKS REQUIRE MUCH FEED Grows Faster Than Chicken and If Ready for Market Earlier Weight of Pekln Eggs. A young duck eats much more than a chicken of the same age, but it grows much faster and is ready' for market much earlier, bo that it costs no mora to raise a duck than to raise a chicken. After ducks get their growth they can be fed as cheaply as hens and during laying season, when ducks are averaging a pound of eggs a week, do not need any more feed than do the hens. Twelve Pekln duck eggs weigh as much a3 17 hen's eggs a little more than two and one-fourth pounds. PLOWING UP POULTRY YARDS Fowls Get Beneficial Effect of Puri fying Influence of the Freshly Turned Soil. Dy plowing or spading up the poul try yard two or three times during the summer months, the fowls not only get the beneficial effect of the purify ing influence of the freshly-turned soil, but the manure is turned under, and considerable excellent focd Is obtained by the scratching birds. i i fy DIZZY, NERVOUS Mrs. Wynn Tells How Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Helped Her During Change of Life. Richmond, Va. "After taking eeven bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham' Vegetable Com pound I feel like a new woman. I al ways had a headacha during the Change cf Life and was also troubled with other bad feelings com mon at that time dizzy epell3, nervous feelings and heat flashes. Now I am in better health - . v. than I eve? was and recommend your remedies to all my f rknds. " Mrs. Lena Wynn, 2S12 E. O Street, Richmond, Va. While Change of Life is a most crit ical period of a woman's existence, tho annoying symptoms which accompany it may be controlled, and normal health restored by the timely use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Such warning symptoms are a sensa cf suffocation, hot flashes, headaches, backaches, dread of impending evil, timidity, sounds in the ears, palpitation of the heart, sparks before the eyes, irregularities, constipation, variable ap petite, weakness and inquietude, and dizziness. For these abnormal conditions do not fail to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound. Job for Photographer. "I want yer to take a picture' of our Joe here," snid the fond parent to the country photographer. Joseph wns requested to stand In a certain attitude and look towards the photographer. That gentleman's spe cialty was quick developing, and in a short space of time a negative was placed In the mother's hand. She looked at it very uneasily for some time, and then remarked : "I seen a notice in the window there to say you can do photos to custom er's, desire, so I'd be obliged to yer If you could put another face on Joe. You see, It's to be sent with an ad vertisement which said 'they wanted a boy, smart-looking and honest.' " ASTHMA "I have been a sufferer from asthma for thirty-two years," writes Mrs. J. P. Bish op, 744 Fatherland St., Nashville, Tenn. "I got to the place where I could not lie down for months at a time. I tried all kinds of medicine, but got no relief. Lung Vita was recommended. I bought a bottle and can truthfully say that I have not been bothered with asthma since I took the first bottle." Many other testimonials on file showing what Lung-Vita has drne in cne9 of con sumption, asthma, grippe, colds, croup, and whooping couirh. At your dealers or direct. Price $1.75. Free booklet upon request. Nashville Medicine Co., Room 7, Steger Bldg., Nashville, Tenn. Adv. Hid the View. "Do I understand you to say," said the lawyer, looking hard at the princi pal witness, "that upon hearing a noise In the hall you rose quickly, lit a can dle and went to the head of the stairs, that a burglar was at the foot of the stairs, and you did not see him? Are you blind?" ."Must I tell the truth?" stammered the witness, blushing to the roots of his hair. "The whole truth," was the stern reply. "Then," replied the witness, brush ing aside his damp, clinging locks and wiping the perspiration from his clammy brow, "my wife was in front of me." Whenever You Need a General Tonic Take Grove's The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic is equally valuable as a Gen eral Tonic because it contains the well known tonic properties of QUININE and IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Builds up the Whole System. 50 cents. What Bait? "Are you inviting that queer fish, Mr. Jimson?" "Yes, I'm dropping him a line." Boston Evening Transcript. Some people can't stand prosperity, but the majority don't get a chance to try. dAgeandOeai Tour liver is the Sanitary Depart iLent of your body. When it oe wrea your whole system becomes poisoned and your vitality is weakened. Tho best remedy is Dr. Thacher's Liver and Blood Syrup A purely getabl compound, laxative and tonic fn effect. It cleans out your W body, and pots en rgy Into your mind and muscles. W racommend this remedy be cause wa know from many years' xyert ence that it is effective. Keeps bottle In jroor boms. COo snd 1 st your dealer's. TEACHER MEDICINE CO., CHAYTANOOSA, TEN. liil