Friday, August 2, 1912. THE ASHEVILLE GAZETTE-NEWS. PAGE TEN HOW TO DEAL WITH QUACK GRASS THIS GRASS IS NOT SO VERY EASY TO DESTROY, BUT PERSEVERANCE AND THE RIGHT KIND OF CULTIVATION WILL DO IT. By W. J. Every farmer knows bow rapid Is the Increase of weeds on the farm. As a rule each farm is annually getting more sorts of weeds and as each farmer is cultivating weeds, these are becoming more freely distributed in every field and along every roadside. The great mass of farmers and gardeners think to kill a weed by Borne royal easy process, such as mow lng in a certain phase of the moon or a certain definite period in the year or by once or twice cultivating. After the cultivator he waits until the leaves are several Inches high before ma'"'ng the next effort. Such persons will . ways have the ccmnany of a wee after its lirst introduction into his field garden. To kill countless thousands of weeds coming from seeds, cultivate the Quack grass. ground weekly during the growing season and do not permit the weeds to go to seed, or, If this is too costly, let the weeds have their own way except during the early growth of cul tivated crops. Frequent cultivation Is necessary to a first class yield. The following concerning quack grass, contains points tjiat will apply to many other weeds. I have long considered quack grass the worst Weed that vexes the tiller of the soil. It Is because it holds Its own well and spreads whenever there Is a chance, and chiefly because the farmer does not recognize it until it Is scat tered far and wide. It is carried by the plow, harrow, and cultivator from one end of the field to the other. To have a farm well seeded to this grass Is a calamity to be avoided. All that Is needed to exterminate a field of quack grass is the right kind of a man who will carefully observe and study the plant, fighting with method and thoroughness. I have killed 100 or more patches and can speak from practical results and success. Plants of this sort can not gain any If the green leaves are not allowed to appear. The nourish ment stored in the white root stocks underground will aid the plant to end up slender leaves and if these remain, the plants gain and recruit, but If the leaves start underground and are cut oft before coming to the HELPING THE SOUTHERN DAIRY MAN. One of the most encouraging lines of work which the U. a Department of Agriculture is carrying on in the South is the Institution of herd records on dairy farms. By this means the unprofitable cow Is detected and can be disposed of for slaughter. The heifer calves from the profitable cows are raised to take the place of the unprofitable animals. In this way the quality of the herd is steadily Im proved. The dally weighing of the milk and the testing for butterfat en able the dairyman to feed the Individ ual animals according to the produc tion and to select such feeds for the ration aa are shown to give the best results. The Department receives many let ters from dairymen of the South bear ing on the value of this work. Mr. J. K. Morrison, a dairyman of Grenada, Mississippi, writes aa follows: "I write to express my great appre ciation of the work done for me by your department. "From the records kept I found two cows that produced over $200 profit. One, 8110.88 the other $108.80. A two-yenr-old heifer made $$7.60. net, profit I began to test with six cows. I have sold two of them as they were unsatisfactory. I have four more that have not finished the year's test but I will probably sell three of them and replace with registered stock. "I built a concrete floor In my dairy barn. Have laid the foundation for a silo; have ordered stanchions and a registered bull. The butter I sell Is put up In paste board cartons and brings $8 cents per pound. I get an average of 28 cants for milk. "I wish lo assure you as the head of the dairy department that I shall help to spread the gospel of better cows, better methods of handling, and more feeding of carbohydrate value. "Bxcesslve use of meal and hulls Is doing much to keep us down In dairy work In the South. Cheap protein should be a help and not a hindrance. I thank you that you arc trying to help the little dairymen. "I shall not ha satisfied until I have a dairy of ten cows producing a net profit of $100 each. 1 should do this aa early data with the aid of the BEAD. light, these white root-stocks are drawn on again to furnish food to start more leaves and thus, in time become exhausted. If convenient, pasture closely for a whole growing season which prevents the production of new thrifty rootstocks. then, if the soo. oe well turned under deep, rolled and harrowed, much of the grass will be killed at once. Ordinarily I plow late In the fall or very early in spring, rain or shine, wet or dry, or even In June, and cultivate with a shovel-toothed cultivator every uiree anys tin tne middle of June, or later if starting- tho n-orir io- Rarely, If the weather be wet and hot, cultivate every two to two and a half days. Keep all green leaves from showing themselves. Do not delay to see green leaves. A harrow that does not cut off the stems below the surface of the ground Is not efficient. The worst luck I ever had In th4s work was In summer-fallowing a piece of quack grass during a dry year. A good deal of It remained dormant and grew the following spring. one year I tried the application of salt on one side of the bank of a brook wnere cultivation was very inconven lent. The strip of grass was about four rods long and the slope about five reet. Whenever seen a little at a time two barrels of salt were freely applied for the whole growing season, and the next spring tho grass started ud in several places ready to continue the fight, which was abandoned on that line. For five years I tried (on the banks of a brook, or where there were only small patches) the following suheme, with great satisfaction During the wet and growing part of a summer I put on tarred building P-iper, taking care to have it overlap and completely exclude iglit. bix weeks to two months is enough, possibly four to five weeks, if the weather Is hot and wet. Very likely the reader will think this method costly and will hesitate and dally along, giving the grass a good chance to extend Its domain. It Is not worth while to plow deep or rake out the rootstocks. It is much better to be thorough in spring during a growing time than during a drouth. I mean that it can be subdued faster In wet weather than In dry. When very dry the underground stems re main dormant. Of course, small patches can be dug over with a hoe. Where one is neat and thorough he may prefer to take two or three years In the extermination, growing two or three crops of corn in succession. The climate of southern Alaska is more moderate than that of Chicago, owing to the Japan current. Zero weather is unknown, except when due to the active gales off the glaciers. The islands of Prince William sound seldom know a temperature lower than 10 degrees above zero. The weal: and vascllating man may likened to "Thompson's colt" who stood between two stacks of hay and starved to death because he could not make up his mind on which one to begin. When dlSDOslnir of some nf thn nirt stock pick out the poor layers. They are -just as good ' for roasting pur poses, and you can not afford to nan with the money-makers. Stormy days should not be idle rtnvn on the farm. Look ubout and see If you cann it find some profitable work. POLLEN CARRIED BY BEES It has been a question in the minds of many experimenters for some time Just how much the wind aids in carry ing pollen from tree to tree. If the wind does aid In distributing pollen, is It distributed In sufficient quantities to Insure the fertilization of the ovules? Since so many of our varieties of apples are known to be self-sterlle. and must depend upon foreign pollen for fertilizing the ovules, this question Is Apiaries should net kept In orchards, as tin bee Is the beat agent for cross IMtlllnallon. of serious consequence. Is It the wind o. our common honey-bee that does the work? From observations mude the past few years It Is evident that bees play a moat Important part In the fVrtlllza llun of the blossoms. To arr.ve at some definite conclusions aa to how Babcock tester, the scales, silo and more grain, which I have to raise this season. I am thoroughly Imbued with the dairying spirit snd hope that 1 ran repay the Department for the aid given me by lie, ping others." At the opening of the second sem ertar of the College year 70$ men and women enrolled In the Missouri Col lege of Agriculture. This represents 87 per cent Increase over last year. The enrollment for last year, the en tire session, was lit. CO-OPERATIVE FRUIT MARKETING. Of all foods, fruit is the most nat ural, wholesome and refined. The appeal It makes Is not alone to appe tite, but to taste, smell, and the sense of beauty aa well. One would Imagine, then, that fruit should be of ail things the easiest to market, and therefore the most profitable to cultivate. That the real conditions should any where be the reverse of this, affords one of the most striking illustrations of the fact that present methods of collecting and distributing the prod ucts of the soil are except In a few Instances of recent improvement altogether askew and out of harmony with common sense. Every year, while in the centres of population fruit of all kinds com mands enormous prices, millions of dollars' worth perish on the farms where grown. But that, by co-operative endeavor, nil difficulties may be overcome, and fruit brought within the reach of con sumers at prices which the multitude ran afford, and yet high enough to yield good returns to the grower. Is being demonstrated hy the successes attending the operations of fruit growers' associations already organ ised. Conspicuous among these Is the California Fruit-Growers' Exchange (formed twenty-three years ago) which now represents 6.000 growers, and which handles 60 per cent of the citrus fruits grown in California, and handles It In such a way that both waste at home and over-stocked mar kets at the points of distribution are alike practically eliminated. Smaller but similar associations handle about 25 per cent more of the Callforlna crop, leaving only 15 per cent to be marketed by Individuals. The establishment of organizations of similar character In the middle west would eliminate much of the waste nnd loss which occurs annually in that section. C. R. Barns. Incubators do not lessen the labor but they increase the profits. Sheep will thrive on pasture In which other animals could not exist. Cool your milk to 5 or 60 degrees as soon as it is drawn If you wish It to keep. FARMERS LEARNING TO CONSERVE LABOR With tlie? latest machinery In hay much as they could under old methods. much pollen Is transmitted through the air by the wind, experiments have been carried on In several states to determine this question. These ex periments demonstrated beyond doubt that plum pollen as well as pollen of s vera! species of apples .xperiniented upon Is not transmitted through the air In sufficient quantities to In sure cross-pollination. Hence, the wind cannot be relied upon us an agency to transfer pollen from tree to tree throughout the orchard. That the honey-bee Is not nttr.ieted to the bloasom by the Inflorescence has also been shown. It Is apparent that the showy petals o! the blossoms aid materially In attracting the bees. The blossom is well supplied with nectar, and the open churtu tef of the nectary makes It accessible to almost all insects. The bees. In trying to reach the nectar, brush against the anthers and carry away with them on their hairy legs and Hllnmen large quantities of pollen. The Inserts In visiting other blossoms transfer some nf the to reign pollen to these pistils. Since the wind aids so little In cross- i n lllnutlnu it i evident that the vurl- uus Insects, especially the bees, are camera of pollen. As the assurance of a crop depend upon Insects as distributors of the pollen. It is necessary that apiaries be rstiDllshed In the different fruit sec tions. With favorable climatic mull Hons and proper planting of varieties the beea would Insure pollination C, L Lewis C. C. Vincent 0UU.M). OOstMCR HRMNI.. Have the cows come fresh In the full. If this practlca were followed generally, there Is little question but Hint at least 60 pounds of butler-fat per year would be added to the ever' age product per row In the Htate. Having cows freshen at Ihia time brings the heaviest milking during the Winter, when one has the eioet ti.no It bring the care of i:. . ulves in the winter; It allows the feeding ef the sklm-mllk to the ralvee In the winter, while they need tt and to the yuung pigs during the early summer, when CANE IN THE PHILIPPINES The growing of sugar-cane In the Philippines received a damaging set back during the progress of the late Insurrection. Prior to that ' time a great deal of good raw material was raised, and only in very late years has the Indus try awakened with both the natives and the government (not to mention U. S. interests) taking an active part, the natives furnishing the land for the government to show them how to do things on a grander and more up-to-date scale. It may be said to the discredit of the Spaniards, lords for so long over the country, that not a single cane- Philippine Sugar Mill, grinding mill or refinery operated by steam could be found in the Islands before our occupation. Then carlboa or water-buffalo fur nished the power for grinding up the juicy stalks. In many instances the mill itself could be loaded on a bull cart and transported anywhere. The machinery was crude, and the product, as a consequence, not of the best. Now, big mills and modern re fineries are going In throughout the rich cane-belts on Luzon and In Fanay. A colossal refinery was lately shipped In from Honolulu, the cost of the Importation being: the largest ever received on one manifest. The plant was valued nt $220,000, and comprised some 1 625 pieces, the largest weighing etKleen tons. With this huge establishment and many others In operation, the natives will have to raise cane In the fullest sense of the term to k,ep the wheels turning. In the Interim, the sugar corporations of this country, and num erous American planters on the ground will help them Out M. Wolley. '. "H-lv.",. and praln fields an ordinary force nf men It means so much to them. Calves dropped In the full are ready for grass as soon as it comes in the spring. Cows freshening in the fall will. If well cared for, give a good flow of milk In the winter; and when the grass comes, a good flow during the early (summer; and most of them will be I dry during harvest and fall work, when there Is plenty to do without a lot of milking. The average nrice of ! butter-fat will also be higher, because I of a larger portion of It being pro duced during the winter, when prices iare IllVRrfuhle hii,h tt,-.,. In Diinin.ur I GOT HIS LETTER MAILED. To Joseph Fleet, of Blandvllle, III. .fire and letter-boxes looked alike. He had written his wife Informing her of hls Intent to leave the strenuous city of"; t'hleiigi) nnd return to his own quieter! territory; the letter he slipped Into the! (Ire-alarm box! To say the least the city was cross with him The mistake only caused a fire-boat to Aeam down the river; swing two Hues of hose ashore; drew five nre-eiiglnen. twa truck companies and Fire ffhlef Key ferllch to tho scene; called, out two fire Insurance auto petrols: stopped work on the pert of the ofa.ee force In five big office buildings, and drew a crowd of 10 ooo people What did Joseph Fleet cost the city? Washington The reran of a year's irusade against gel-rlch-qyick schem ers, who have been lining the United States malls In the consummation of i heir eehemie, lias exposed U the in 'SftectPTs of the pnstoffles eeartmeiSl, end through them lo the public, a distinct line of new -rlnilnala. An Estimate mseV by Postmaster Oeneral Hitchcock shove that the American public has been, wlthm the last year, swindled out of $ I $0,000.00$ through ths Illegitimate husla . of this class of criminals. T' :..': ."T,?5 .t.;-i-.- ...,::! -. . .V.--.-V... - ORGANIZE COLT SHOWS. Nearly every person, whether Irving' In the city, village or country, takes more or less interest in the horse. It lu easy to get an audience when It comes to studying horses, be it at a county fair, farmers' Institute, or live stock meeting of any kind. We all have our favorites among the horses In a community, and are always ready to express our opinion as to the merits and demerits of the individuals. Such interest should be encouraged In every community, and one of the best ways of doing it Is to hold "Colt Shows" during the fall and winter months. In the State of Iowa, a num ber of these shows have been held during the past few years; and they have done much to improve the horses In the State. In planning these shows, the first step is to solicit, among the farmers, stallion-owners and business men, for prizes that are to be awarded. These need not be in the form of money, but may be merchandise, machinery, or live stock of some kind. After the prizes have been assured It will be necessary to advertise the show and appoint a committee, who should i make a personal canvasB of the com munity, to encourage the owners of colts to bring them out for the con test. Proper classification should be made; so that all colts, such as draft ar.d light colts, will not be shown In the same class. Also, have pure-bred and grades shown in separate classes. If possible. It is a good plan to have the colts from each township show In separate classes, and the first-prize winners come together as champions of the show. The Colt-Shows may be held In con nection with local market days, or live-stock meetings of some kind. Out side uninterested parties should be secured to do the judging: and they should In each case give rensons for placing the colts. After the Judging Is done, practical talks on horse-breeding, by local men and those secured to do the Judging, should be given. Colt-Shows of this kind will also do much to advertise the stallions in a community. One of the best ways of Judging the value of a stallion Is by the crop of colts which he has sired. W. H. Tnmhave. Milk sold in bottles is more likely to be clean than that which Is otherwise sold. Nevertheless It Is well to be sure i. Is clean. will accomplish throe times DESTROYING By F, U WASHBURN. Cutworms are the larval forms of moths belonging to the family known ob Owlet Moths. The first name was given this family because they are particularly night-flyers, most of them remaining concealed during the day; and the second name, on account of the fact that their eyes shine at night, in the presence of a light, to which, hy the way, many of the species are attracted. Doth the moths and their larvae are fund nf sweets; and this fact Is made use of both hy collectors In catching the moths and by the farmer and gardener In killing tho "cut-worm" itself. The larvae, when full grown, averages In length about one and one half Inches, and Is as a rule, dull col ored, with or without obscure mark ings. This full-grown larva burrows Into the soil a short distance, and turns Into a brownish or reddish brown or mahogany-colored pupa. These pupae may winter over, when formed late In summer, or give rise to mollis In August and September, which lay their eggs at that time on various mis. of on the ground near their food-plants. The larvae, whluh hatch In lute summer or fall, winter over In r.ome concealed situation, and are ready for business In the spring. While many birds prey upon cut worms and although they are eaten by some other Insects, and are the victims of parasitic forms, to say nothing of dlseusee bacterial or fun gold nevertheless farmers sre often obliged to take active means against them In urder to save their crops. A bait made of bran mash sweet ened with cheap sugar or molasses, and made decidedly green with a lib eral application of Paris green. Is a vary good remedy In a garden. A tablespoonful of this should be put at frequent Intervals among the plants subject to attack; not. however, nearer : - --t -' t ' rii t- r Nowhere should contentment be more conspicuous than In rural com munities, where far from Ignoble strife for riches the residents pursue the even tenor of their way. PHEASANT RAISING INTEREST IN PHEASANT RAISING IS WIDESPREAD THOUSANDS OF THE BIRDS ARE NOW SCAT- ' TERED THROUGHOUT THIS COUNTRY. By W. Ik MfcATEE. Conservation of the fauna Including the game birds of the United States requires the strict enforcement of laws Intended to control the shooting and marketing of wild birds, and necessar ily limits both the period during which they may be hunted and the number available to supply the increasing de mands of those who desire those table luxuries. This lack may be remedied by the product of aviaries, preserves, and private parks, devoted to rearing of domesticated game, the marketing of which under suitable safeguards Is already permitted in several of the States,, Indicating that American mar kets will open more and more to these domesticated substitutes to the fast disappearing wild game. At present there Is no lack of de mand for pheasants for various pur poses. Owners of private preserves, and state game officials pay profitable prices for certain species for stocking their covers, zoological and city parks and owners of private aviaries are ready purchasers of the rarer and more beautiful species, and large numbers of dead pheasants are annu ally imported from Europe to be sold for several times the price they bring in European countries. The demand for pheasants is Increasing. Ulngneck pheasants have long been established in Oregon, Washington, and British Columbia, and are less common in the wild state In Mass -chusetts, New York. Indiana and Kansas. Efforts to acclimatize pheasants In the United States, are of comparatively recent origin, though earlier than is popularly supposed. More than a hundred years ago, Richard Bache, an Knglishman who married the only daughter of Benjamin Franklin, im ported from England both pheasants and partridges, which he liberated on his estate in New Jersey, on the Dela ware River near when the town of Beverly now stands. Uut although ' e provided both shelter and food for them, the birds had all disappeared by the following spring. Other attempts were made later on In New Jersey, New York and Mary la , but while the birds seemed to thrive for a time, the attempt to raise pheasants in the United States proved more or less a failure until about thirty years auo, when a successful effort was made to Introduce the rlnr. neck pheasant into Oregon. Since then ai t limatlzatlon experiments have followed broader lines and have as sumed greater Importance. Severe criticism of pheasants and fulsome praise are about equal In vol ume. The birds, are accused of dtg glt g newly planted and sprouting cor:., oats, barley and beans, and seeds of melons, cucumbers, and squashes. It is claimed thai because f their depre dations it has been eecessary to iv pitvnt whole fields of corn. They are sf.ld to drive chickens away from their food and even to kill y ung poultry. Seme landowners In Ontario County, N. Y., claim that the loss suffered on account of pheasants has been more than twice the amount of their taxes. On the other hand the birds have not proved a nuisance in Oregon and Washington, where they have been numerous for years. Some farmers even value them so highly that they will rot permit hunting on their prop erty. The few pheasant stomachs ex amined indicate that these birds are very fond at grain. Oats and wheat compose about 34 per cen. of the food THE CUTWORM than twelve Inches to the plant; for, in case of rain, the Paris green might be washed against the roots, and would Injure or kill the plant. The Paris green should be mixed with tho bran when the latter Is dry. Thorough cultivation is an aid. Pieces of shingle or board, placed at Intervals over the garden, serve as traps under which the outworma hide toward morning, when they may be found and killed. Fre quently the depredator will be found In the morning, within an Inch or so of the plant cut. buried an Inch under the soli. Young plants like cabbage, cauliflower, etc., when not too numer ous, when first set out In a small gar den, should be protected by paper or tin, or a barrier of some sort, which A cutworm and Its work. should extend Into the ground m Inch or so. and two or three Inches above the surface. This can be removed when the plant becomes so tough as not to Invite attacks from the cut worm. On large acreages, fall plow ing and thorough cultivation afford perhaps the most practical treatment. Cutworms are likely to be especially troublesome the, rext year after sod, for It Is only natural that, whan de 1 1 r i v . nf sod land by farm cultivation, they should attack ths crop Immed iately following. This family nf moths Is an enorm ous one. two hundred and thlrty-flva different species of the group havfng been found In ins state Of this list, something like forty-five species are typl al cutworms. After burning some brush I dashed water on a large bed of ooals. It made fine charcoal. It I surprising how much of It ths hogs will eat. J. R. Zimmerman, Farmlngton, Mo. A NEW INDUSTRY of 12 rlngneck pheasants collected 1 Oregon and Washington, and 82.5 p., cent of the stomach contents of two English phea. .nts from British Co lumbia. But all of these birds were taken In September, October, and De cember; hence It is probable that all of this grain was waste. The next largest Item of food In these stomachs was Insects, consisting entlmiv nf i.. vae of March flies. One stomach oon- talned no fewer than 360 of these lar vae and another 482. The remainder Rlngneck Pheasant. of the food included acrons, pine seeds, browse, peas, rose hips, sno wherries, and seeds nf dandelion, lupine, bur clover, black mustard and chick weed. From 200 to 960 kernels of wheat and oats were taken by various birds; about 200 peas were found in one stomach, but It was evfdent that these were the old and partly decomposed refuse of the harvest. Twenty-three acrons and 200 pine seeds were taken by the birds which ate the largest amount of mast, and abou. 800 cap sules of chlckweed, containing more than 8,000 seeds, were in the stomach of the best weed-seed eater. What is most evident Is that pheas ants are gross feeders; their capabili ties for good or harm are groat. If a number of them attack a crop they are likely to mako short work of It, or If they devote themselves to weed seeds or insect pests they do a great deal of good. It seems therefore that the question of the economic value of pheasants Is peculiarly a local one. Much depends on thu proportion of land under cultivation, the kind of crops raised, and the quantity of wild f- cd available. Apparently the chances are about even that imported pheas ants will or will not become useful economic factors. $20,000,000 Is the approximate sum' si cnt for gum In the United States in one year. A man who has made a decided sue cesi: in BWlne husbandry in a large way said before a recent farmers' in stitute that the man who has plenty of sklm-mllk for his hogs will make a profit if any one can on SO-cent corn. FEEDING MOULTING HENS. During moulting the hens require an extra amount of care and in fact all tho attention which can be given them. In too many Instances moult ing Is considered Just a natural se quence of poultry keeping. The fowl at this time are Just as bad as a child cutting his teeth. It Is not the mere fact of losing feathers or pushing a tooth through as much aa the consti tutional disturbance that Is set up. One symptom of moulting is lethargy. The birds. Instead of being early risers, mope about on their perches and will not venture out In search of food that Is so essential to them at this trying period. Dainty food should be pre pared. Warm meal with a dash of spice In It In the morning and contin ue I change. In regard to grain: Corn, wheat barley, oats and maahed potatoes with meal anything to tempt the appetite two or three rusty nails or a bit of sulphur In the drinking water are great helps. In confined runs meat must be added and In fact, scraps of meat may well be given n any run. Two things are essential: (1) That fairly early each morning the hen house should be clear, d of belate4 risers; (2) the floor eh aid be swept at the same time us a lot of vermin come off with the i Med feathers. Thess sweepings should be tsken right away and not put on the nearest manurs heap. After moulting Is over gitr morning mash of shorts and bran In a crumbly condition and feed plenty of onts. The city forestry department of Kansas Is preparing to fight the bag worms which are Infesting that part of the west. In May, when the worms hatched the city employes of the tats went ov.r all the trees wltn sprayers. The worms do not kill the trees but they eat the verdire ana retard the growth. Oalloway cattle are being raised to Alaska, their hides being consldsred equal to bearakln for beauty and serv ice. Coops containing broods of rbloke should not be moved frequently-