V, i.; GEESE ARE EXCEPTIONALLY GOOD RANGERS Itaifie geese! A few of them will Puy on every furm, in the opinion of N. L. Ilarria, superintendent of the Kansas State Agricultural college poultry farm. "Geese are exceptionally good rang ers and can be raised more economi cally than any other kind of poultry," said Mr. Ilarris. "Waste ground may be inclosed with 24-Inch hog wire and the geese al lowed to feed at will on grass and in jects. If the ground is damp or wet and the supply of tender, green feed is plentiful, the geese grow rapiHly and are ready for market when twelve to sixteen weeks old. "When the geese, are six, weeks of age they get their living from grass, bugs, and worms, and require little if any grain. They may be turned out to forage during the day. "The goose industry has not been developed In the West because the market price is so low. The price, however, is almost twice as high as that paid a few years ago. "While they produce the meat cheap- RAISING GEESE ON COMBINATION FOR HEN:keep flies from chickens Buckwheat and Rye Are Recom mended as Being All Right. Former Supplies Crop of Seed In Fall, While Latter Supplies Green Forag During Winter Sow First of August. "Buckwheat and rye seems a funny combination, but it is all right when :you come to think about it. The buck wheat will not be detrimental to the xye and will give a crop of seed In the fall while the rye will give a crop of green foliage during the winter. Then, If you have bees, you will get another profit from the buckwheat. s Sow your buckwheat and rye togeth er along about the first of August. The buckwheat should be rather thin so it will not shade the rye when it Is Bmall, and one buckwheat plant will spread enough to take up a foot of space. The foliage is not dense and rye will grow beneath It. It Is not necessary to harvest the seeds of buckwheat. It is best, though, to keep the hens off it until the crop Is well set or they will destroy the "latei" bloom In harvesting the first seedsNwhen in the milk. If the first seeds ripen and drop it is no disad vantage, for the hens will gather them all up when they are admitted. The rye gets a better start also from hav ing the hens shut off during the time it Is starting. liens love the small ten der shoots and will keep them eaten close If allowed to do so. They do not need them in the fall, but they will need all the growth the rye will make during winter when there Is no other green. If you will provide a field of rye and buckwheat and will turn the hens Into It just before it gets cold in the fall and let them put themselves in good condition for winter laying, they cannot help but give a good account of themselves. Feed some meat scraps or milk in addition to their regular grain ration and this extra green and seed, and you give them an ideal start. The crop of buckwheat Is worth more than its grain value at this season. .Then It is a splendid feed supplied . without the cost of harvesting, and on ground that would not be used for anything else at this season. Hye will keep green all winter and will carry the hens well into the spring with a succulent green feed so neces sary to secure the best fertility in the ipggs. One of the reasons why early eggs lack In fertility is the lack of green feed at this season. If rye cannot be had, wheat will answer very well in its place, but rye gives a heavier growth. If sown early and given a good start, wheat will give a good account of itself. 'USEFUL RUNWAY FOR CHICKS iPortable Inclosure Is Most Convenient Where Few Chickens Are Raised ' By Mother Hen. A portable runway Is a most con venient thing to have around a place where few chickens are raised by mother hen. It gives an opportunity to get them away from the regular chicken yard, where they will get! fresh earth to dig in and still be safe. Tlie loss of young chicks from cats, hawks and other pests is as great as loqs from sickness. This loss can be averted at a very moderate expense, Anv man or woman can make a run- way of common lath which is prefer,- able to some other kinds of material. I ly and are extremely easy to raise, peo ple have not learned to relish goose meat In the middle West. Raising geese in large numbers would not be profitable, on account of distance to markets. Every farmer, nevertheless, should raise enough geese for home consumption and for the feathers for home use. The largest numbers of geese are found in southeastern Kan sas among the German settlements." The best breeds to raise in Kansas are the Emden, a white goose, and the Toulouse, a gray goose, in the opinion of Mr. Ilarris. Those are the largest geese. Because no water need be provided for swimming purposes, they are called "dry land" goose. j While geese forage well and produce meat cheaply, they are of little value for egg production further than breed ing purposes. The young geese sel dom lay more than 20 eggs a year and from 30 to 40 is an exceptionally high record for an older goose. Geese for breeding purposes can be profitably kept until they are from eight to four teen years old. A LARGE SCALE. Houses and Yards Constitute Hatch eries Unless Preventive Measures Are Observed. Poultry houses and poultry yards constitute bad fly hatcheries, unless preventive measures are taken. The accumulations on the dropping boards and under the roosts left for only a few days become a live mass of maggots which in a short time increase the fly population of the farm by mil lions. Even, when the poultry houses are regularly cleaned every few days and the manure stored in ordinary boxes or barrels, the eggs continue to hatch and the maggots wriggle through cracks to the ground, and the fly in crease goes on just the same unless the manure Is treated with borax, hel lebore, or some other effective prepara tion. Experiments have shown that borax is the most reliable and effective prep aration, and the expense Is also less. The plan followed In treating manure in this way is to have can dusters of borax in the poultry houses and sift a little of the borax over the dropping boards, or under the roosts, where no dropping boards are used, making sure to sift the borax thoroughly along the edges where the fly maggots will move when leaving the manure to escape in to the ground. Only a small quantity of the pow dered borax is required an ounce or a trifle more being sufficient for each bushel of manure treated. The cost of borax in 100-pound lots obtained from mail-order houses or other wholesale channels should not be over five or six cents a pound, and about nine cents purchased by the sin gle pound. The cost per hen for treat ing the manure during the fly-breeding season need not exceed a half-cent a bird. SELECTED EGGS FOR MARKET Steadily Increasing Demand for Fresh Product of Good Quality Little Labor Required. Eggs for market should be the most ; Important source of income from the j farm flock. There Is a steadily increas- ' Ing demand for fresh eggs of good ' quality at profitable prices. In addi- ! tion, eggs are produced with less labor . than other poultry products and are j more conveniently marketed. i Poultry for market should be the ; second source of income. Under pres ent conditions, the larger part of the poultry meat produced on most farms is a by-product produced and sold with little regard to the cost of pro duction. The poultry man should plan for his work so that while producing eggs for market, he may obtain con siderable revenue from the sale of broilers during June and July, fowls during September and October, and capons from January to April. WATER AND GRIT FOR CHICKS Be6t Not to Feed Youngsters Anything Until They Get Accustomed to New Surroundings. Chicks may have water and grit Im mediately after being placed In the hover, but it Is best not to feed them for a few hours until they get accus tomed to the brooder. The first food may be bread and milk, johnny-cake baked hard and fed dry, or dry grain chick feed. Some poulterers assert that a feed of clabbered milk is good be- cause the acid in the milk has a tend- ency to kill any germs that may exist in the digestive organs. THE CAN DEPEND ON DAIRY COWS Preservation of Milk Is as Essential as Production Keep Out All Dis ease Germs. The datrj cow will be called apon to yield her maximum share of the world's food supply during the com ing months of war. She can be de pended upon for production, but pres ervation of the milk Is man's part. The value of milk Is dependent upon the care it receives after it is drawn from the cow. Consequently preservation Is as essential as production. Milk is dangerous as human food if it con tains disease germs or worthless If it is so loaded with bacteria that Its com plex food nutrients are partly decom posed. It Is equally valueless to the producer and distributor if it sours be fore It can be put to use. To prevent the entrance of disease germs into milk, healthy, tuberculin tested cows free from any udder in flammation or garget irre the first es sentials. Healthy men, and pure Ma ter from a protected well or spring are of second importance. Clean utensils, covered pails and clean cows come next. Keeping milk sweet is entirely ft matter of cleanliness and temperature regulation. Cows free fWm manure and dirt especially in the region of the ud der and flanks; utensils that are care fully cleansed, scalded and dried; and careful protection of the milk from flies and dirt after production, will prevent the entrance of bacteria Into milk. Milk Is soured by bacterial develop ment and multiplication. Bacteria can not reproduce fast enough to sour milk in 24 hours if it Is kept below a tem perature of 53 degrees Fahrenheit. Therefore, milk should be cooled as soon after production as possible. The easiest and most practical plan of cooling is to sink the cans to the level of the milk in a tub or running spring of cold water and to stir the milk fre quently for five or ten minutes until cool. It should be held at or below So degrees Fahrenheit If possible until used. The five essentials for production of first grade milk, as given by Percy Werner, Jr. of the Missouri college of agriculture, are: 1. Healthy cows and men ; 2. Clean cows and men ; 3. Clean cans and palls; 4. Covered milking pails; 5. Cooling milk to 55 degrees Fahrenheit or below within an hour af ter production and holding It as low as possible until delivered. IMPROVEMENT ON MILK PAIL Arranged to Minimize Possibility of Dirt Entering Milk Very Sim ple in Construction. In illustrating and describing a milk pall, the invention of W. G. Parmele, 4025 North Kostner avenue, Chicago, the Scientific American says: The main object of the inventor is to provide a milk pail which minimizes the possibility of dirt entering the Improved Milk Pail. milk, as from the switching of the cow's tail, which prevents the milk from reaching the milker, which is con venient for carriage, which serves as a seat for the milker, which is very simple in construction, highly efficient in use, and thoroughly practical, and which is comparatively inexpensive. COMPLETE RATION FOR COWS Animal Weighing Approximately 1,000 Pounds Should Be Given Wide Variety of Feeds. A complete ration for a cow weigh ing approximately 1,000 pounds may be made by feeding one pound of grain mixture for every three or four pounds of milk produced in addition to: (1) 30 pounds of corn silage and .10 pounds of hay clover or alfalfa preferred), or (2) 80 pounds roots and 15 pounds of hay, or (3) S pounds dried beet pulp soaked 12 to 24 hours prior to feeding and 10 pounds of hay, or (4) 20 pounds of hay with 1 to 2 pounds of oilmeal added to her grain. RAISE BEST HEIFER CALVES Good Cows Are Becoming Scarce and High in Price Young Animals Will Replace Thr.n. It pays to raise the heifer calves from cows of high producing ability as good cows are becoming scarce and high in price. These heifers can then replace any cows that may not be paying well and the cows when sold will bring a good price and add to the farm Income. i " i I I I I B FUNGOUS DISEASES EXCELLENT YIELD OF POTATOES, FOLLOWING VETCH. (Frepared by the United Slates Depart ment of Agriculture.) The sweet potato is attacked by a number of fungus diseases, some of which attack the vine and others the tubers. Some of these diseases dovel I op and cause losses In the field, while , others appear after the potatoes are ' placed in storage. With a knowledge ! of the different diseases and how they spread, with a proper system of crop 1 rotation, and with care in the selection, handling and bedding of seed potatoes, much of the loss from diseaseslcan be I avoided. Stem Rot (Wilt, Blue Stem, Yellow j Blight), i This disease is caused by the fungi Fusarium batatatis and Fusarium hy peroxysporum. The stem rot is first noticed as a yellowish discoloration of ' the leaves at the tips of the vines. If i the stem is pinched open It will be j found blackened Inside. This discolor ation often extends 3 to 5 feet from the I hill, and Is soon followed by wilting and collapse of the vine. Later the ' stem ruptures and the surface becomes blackened and rotted, though the plant ! may produce a few potatoes. The fun gus causing the disease may invade the potatoes also, forming a blackened ring about a quarter of an inch below the '. surface. ! Control. The fungus causing stem ' rot lives through the winter on dead ' sweet-potato vines left in the field and In potatoes put in storage. The dis ease may be spread by Insects, farm animals, farm Implements and wind, or by dumping discarded diseased pota toes on the fields as fertilizer either before or after feeding to live stock. Stem rot may be controlled by proper selection and handling of seed potatoes, by using clean hotbeds, and by crop rotation. The fungus causing stem rot invades the potatoes; there fore, if plants are produced from these potatoes, they will become diseased. It is very hard to detect the disease on young plants when pulled from the bed, therefore many diseased plants are set in the field and continue the spread of stem rot. It is necessary, then, to have seed potatoes free from disease, and these can be secured by growing seed from vine cuttings on new land or in selecting the seed in the field at time of digging. In selecting the seed each hill should be tested by splitting the stem, and If no black streaks appear the po tatoes may be used for seed. Tills se lection should be done before frost has blackened the vines. The seed potatoes should be placed in the storage house separate from other potatoes. Dipping Seed. In the spring at bed ding time the seed potatoes should be dipped for 5 to 10 minutes In a solution of corrosive sublimate, made by dis solving one ounce In eight gallons of water. The solution should be placed in a wooden container, such as a keg or barrel, and the potatoes may be dipped by using a burlap sack or a wire basket. After dipping the potatoes should be rinsed in clean water and al lowed to dry before being bedded. This dipping will not kill the fungi that may lie in the potatoes, but it will destroy all spores on the surface. Preparation of the Hotbed. The use of the sa;ie hotbed year after year is probably one of the chief ways of spreading stem rot. In localities where the disease is prevalent the soil in the hotbed should be changed every year, and the framework of the bed and surrounding ground should be thor oughly soaked with a solution of one pint of formalin to thirty gallons of water or a solution of one pound of copper sulphate to twenty-five gallons of water. New soil or sand for the hotbed should be procured from a field where potatoes have never been grown. As ric lirt Is not ncuvv-uiry for the bed, sarl may be procured from a sand bank and thus danger of Infection consider ably lessened. The same wagon or tools used In hauling away infected dirt should not be used for hauling in new sand, unless they have been disinfected with a solution of formalin or copper sulphate of the strength previously mentioned. In localities where sweet-potato dis eases are prevalent fire-heated hotbeds are preferable to .those heated by ma nure on account of the chances that the manure may have become infected. Discarded diseased potatoes usually find their way to the manure pile, and If any diseased potatoes are left any where about the farm, infected parts may be carried around on the feet of chickens i.nd other farm animal. OF SWEET POTATOES Crop Rotation. Healthy plants may be grown by careful seed selection and proper care in the preparation of the hotbed, but if these plants are set In soil that is infected with disease, much of the effort toward control is wasted. Sweet potatoes should be set in new ground or ground upon which potatoes have not been grown for several years. It is not known how long the fungus of stem rot will live in the soil in the ab sence of sweet potatoes, but if they are not planted oftener than once in four years the fungus will undoubtedly be greatly reduced. Black Rot (Black Shank, Black Root). F.lack rot is caused by the fungus Sphaeronema fimbriatum and may oc cur on any underground part of the plant. On the potatoes the disease is characterized by dark, slightly sunken, more or less circular spots, while on the stems It appears an small black spots which soon enlarge uutll the whole stfcm Is rotted off. On the po tatoes the surface of the diseased spots Is of a metallic luster and just under neath the spots the tissue is green. When cooked the potatoes are very bit ter. Control. Black rot Is disseminated in about the same general way as stem rot, but unlike stem rot it spreads free ly In the storage house If conditions are favorable. The fungus may be spread in the storage house by handling the potatoes, by settling In the bins, and by files and other Insects which may carry the spores on their bodies.. The same methods of control used for stem rot will control black rot, em phasis being laid on preparation of the hotbed, proper selection and handling of seed, and crop rotation. Where black rot is prevalent the potatoes aft er being dipped should be picked over carefully, and all that show suspicious looking black spots should be discard ed. Treating the fields with lime, sul phur, etc., has no effect on the disease, and dipping the plants In bordeaux mixture or lime-sulphur mixture Is not to be recommended. Foot Rot (Die-Off). This disease is caused by a fungus called I'lenodomus destruens. The dis ease first appears as small brown-to-black spots on the stem of the plant near tho, soil line. These spots spread very slowly, but eventually girdle the plant and extend 4 or 5 Inches up the stem. Control. Foot rot is distributed in the same manner as stem rot and black rot, but unlike black rot it does not cause heavy damage in the storage house. Proper seed selection, care In preparing the hotbed, and crop rotation will aid In controlling foot the same as stem rot and black rot. Scurf (Soil Stain, Rust, Jersey Mark). This Is a disease caused by the fungus Monilochaetes infuscans and Is characterized by a brown discoloration of the surface of the underground parts of the plant. The discolored areas may be spots of varying size and shape, or there may be a uniform discoloration of the entire surface of the potato. Control. The fungus lives through the winter on potatoes in storage and on decayed vines left In the field. If Infected potatoes are used for seed, the fungus grows from them onto the plants anil is carried to the field. No injury is caused to the plants in the bed or in the field, but the growth fol lows down from the stem of the plant to the potatoes. Dipping the seed as for stem rot will destroy all spores that may be on the surface of the potatoes. Deep, clean cultivation, crop rotation, and the selection of disease-free seed potatoes will aid in controlling scurf. Soft Rot. Soft rot Is caused by a mold known as Ithizopus nigricans, and this fungus is one of the most destructive diseases in the storage house. The fungus en ters at one end of the potato and grows rapidly. With a high temperature and a relative high humidity a few days are sufficient to destroy the entire potato. The potatoes become soft, watery and stringy at first, but as the moisture in the roots evaporates they become hard and brittle. When the skin is ruptured while the potato is soft a moldy growth appears on the surface. The spores of the fungus may be spread by handling the potatoes, or they may be carried about the storage house b flies and in sects. Control. Careful handling of the po tatoes when stored, so as to avoid bruises, and proper management of the storage house, as recommended undei "Storage." will aid In aontrolllcj soft rot MRS. KIESO SICK SEVEN MONTHS Restored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Aurora. Ill.i-"For seven long months I Buffered from a female trouble, with severe pains in my back and aides until I became bo weak I could hardly walk from chair to chair, and got so nervous I would jump at the slightest noise. I was entirely unfit to do my house work, I was giving ' up hope of ever be- f ing well, when my sister asktd me to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound. I took six bottles and today I am a healthy woman able to do my own housework. I wish every Buffering woman would try "Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and find out for themselves how good it is." Mrs. Carl A. Kieso, 596 North Ave., Aurora, 111. The great number of unsolicited tes timonials on file at the Pinkham Lab oratory, many of which are from time to time published by permission, are Eroof of the value of Lydia E. Pink am's Vegetable Compound, in the treatment of female ills. Every ailing woman in the United States is cordially invited to write to the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confidential), Lynn, Mass., for special advice. It is free, will bring you health and may save your life. SOME STRANGE INDIAN NAMES That Red Men's Cognomens Retain Pic turesqueness Is Shown by Those Figuring in Recent Land Sale. That Indian names still possess their early strength and picturesqueness is shown by the names that figured prominently in the recent sale of In dian lands in the( Standing liock reser vation In North and South Dakota. An Inspection of the list reveals such names as Kate Good Crow, whose nearest neighbor is Barney Two Bears. Mary Yellow Fat adjoins Melda Crow ghost, while Mrs. Crazy Walking, on the southeast quarter of section 19,23 25, has probably reached the state In dicated by her name by being In the same section with Elk Ghost. Mary Lean Dog rather envies Agatha Big Shield, her aristocratic name. In like manner, Jennie Dog Man and Mary Shave Head may be all too will ing to assume on short notice the he roic name borne by Morris Thunder shield, heir apparent to Long Step Thundershield. . Mrs. Did Not Butche?, judging from her name, is in no condition to supply the wants for her nearest neighbor, Mrs. Frosted Red Fish, who lives on a half section, not far from Helen Diffi cult. And on festal days there gather such notables as Francis Many Horses, Joseph Shoot the Bear, Mrs. Stanton Grindstone, Mrs. No Two Horns, Plus Broguth, Good Voice Elk, See the Bear, Married to Santee, Her Holy Road, Tiberius Many Wounds, Pius Shoot First and Shave on One Side. Whitewash. Mayor Hosey sat at a dinner In Fort Wayne beside a pretty girl. "Oh, Mayor Hosey," she said. "I saw such a good film play last week 'The Man Who Failed.' You certainly must take It In." Mayor Hosey frowned. "Humph," he said. "They're always screening failures." Two Spendthrifts. Mary I spend as much as you do. Alices Perhaps, but I have less to show for the money. Life. Both weddings and funerals admit men to the silent majority. Instant Postum A table drink that has taken the place of coffee in thousands of American homes. "There's a Reason" Instant postum Delightful flavor Rich aroma Healthful Economical Sold by grocers everywhere. Iipapj 1