Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 57, Number 47, Jasper, Dubois County, 27 August 1915 — Page 8
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OUR BEST CLU
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A WÄRNIN
Make 3'our yard and garden a rosy Paradise. This assortment consists of the most beautiful varieties; there are a wide range of colors and they are not surpassed by anything in the rose family. They are strong, well rooted plants,
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transplanted in your garden. We guarantee them to" reach you in good growing condition. They will be mailed at the proper time for planting in your section. . s
THE FARMING BUSINESS O A Real Help to the Fanner The great new $1.50 weekly farm paper, illustrated in colors, with a circulalion of more than 100,000 and but a 'ew nonths old. Not an ordinary farm naner:
jt treats farming as a BUSINESS and the
(armer as a BUSINESS MAN. It helps ou run your BUSINESS at a profit helps l'ou with tho celling end to get highest Jiricca for your products. t MANY ARTICLES BY EXPERTS ON FARM PROBLEMS only farm paper with investigator in Äuropa on crop outlook for benefit of U. S. farmen. Many features News Review (or Farmers Colored War Map Market Letter (War affects markets, markets determine success of farmer's BUSINESS) Mew farm inventions and discoveries which lower costs and increase profits Many Departments to show the farmer Eow to make more money. Ycu need this Extraordinary paper in your BUSINESS.
DEPARTMENTS FOR ENTIRE FAMILY Boy and Girl's Cg Pattern Department Needlework and Embroidery Section The Home akar'a Club in short you will find The Farming Business a mighty big surprise. We have made arrangements with the W. D. Boyce Co., publisher, by which we an lifer you th following wonderful club with your subscription to tho
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feJca, wB3 &nr a list of ibski fi pic-
Th Utter Usclcssncss of Takfnj Course In German. VA cüstoner during a trying on asked her dressmaker, whose son was at college, if he were pursuing a general course or specializing in any particular branch. The answer
came promptly, through a mouthful of pins: t "Sanskrit! ma'am. He's specializ
ing in Sanskrit. I can't sav but I'd
have preferred something a bit
more usuai m xne way or education something more plain tailor made for every day like. Sanskrit's such a fussy stud'." Her criticism, if oddly worded, was comprehensible and not unintelligent. Less reasonable and equally unexpected were the remarks of , an old farmer in a remote lull village upon the favorite studies of his son. He had always been suspicious of the higher education and was far from pleased when his Joe, whom he wished to keep on the farm, obtained n scholarship. "Languages may be all right for folks thai' bom to 'nm in foreign pnrLs" ho declared recently, with irprcK-iv cli'jibrration, "but a man t.,.ii Hin I had hotter talk plain Van!;c? and do tinner. 7 "To see that boy of mine sit down with a book ye can't read, saving over words ye can't sense jest putter, putter, mutter, muttersputter, sputter why, it makes me fair sick. And for all he's been at it most a
year, he can't make those Italians on the highway understand three words together. He owns himself he can't." "It is Italian he is studying, then?" the listener murmured politely. "Xo, Hain't; it's German," admitted the old man in a reluctant growl. "But a precious poor ex
cuse I call that, and so I told him.
" I don t care if Hain't their own
lingo, J oe says I. It ousrhter come
a long sight nigher to it than jest
United btates talk. Squeezed all
up together the way folks be on the
map o' Europe, course they must get
used to each otherB7 talk enough to make each other out.
Bet ye my Sun da v-ero-to-
meeting hpt I told him, 'if ye talked reel Gorman to those Italians they'd understand yeP
"But lie can't. All he can do 's
to set in a corner with Iiis book.
putter puttering and sputter sput
tering".
"Don't ye talk to me about col
leges! Joe's a warning." "Youth's
vjomnanioTi.
Benefits of Education.
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i HOW IT WORKED EM OHIO.
Paulding Banker Shows How Sugar Beet Culture Increased Prosperity. That the establishment of the sugar beet industry in Ohio will result in an increase of $20,000,000 in the value of farm lands in the state by the end of tiie present year is the statement of G EC. Allen, a banker of Paulding, O. "Ohio and Indiana should become aa great producers of sugar as Michigan,"
said Mr. Allen, "and they will unless hostile legislation by congress interferes with the natural development oi this industry. In Paulding county alone, although the beet sugar factory here has been in operation ouly two years, the value of farm property has increased ?u,000,000 as a result of the
introduction of sugar beet culture. Another result has been the Investment of $5,000,000 or more in other beet sugeir factories in this section of the state within the pa3t year, which in turu will vastly increase the value of the farm land surrounding them, adding $20,000,000 or more to the agricultural wealth of this region. "Aside from tho direct financial re
turns that; have followed the establishment of the sugar beet industry in
NOhio, there are numerous other benefits
which, though not so divert, are no less important. To obtain good results from beet culture farmers have found it necessary to put more hand labor on the land. The result is that thousands of men. women and children are being taken from tho overcrowded sectious of the cities of the state and set to work on (ho land, a back to tho farm movement that is of real practical value.
"This increased tillage of tho soil is the very best and. in fuct, the only effective moans of overcoming the weeds that are the chronic enemies of the farmer, choking his crops and exhausting his soil. Resides all this, we have found thnt " mhor prop rais
ed upon laud V:t u, - been put into sugar beets shuv. s a gruaüv increased yield. "Upon a piece of land that had been In beets the previous season I myself raised seventy bushels of oats to tho acre, while across the fence one of my neighbors, on exactly tho sarao kind of land, got a yiHd of not quite fifty. Last year on another -picrc of land that had been used for sivrar beets I grew fifty busiicly ux wheat: to the acre where tho ordinary crop is between twenty-two and tweuty-fivo bushels. Farmers have learned so well that sugar land inerenses the yield of oats thnt when they are in conversation among themselves and cue reports a yio'.d of from seventy to ninety bushels an acre the other will reply: 'Ymi have raised it on sugar beet land Thar a.vounts for it' "This year there will bo taken from
Ohio cities so Jk; corniry to work in tho beet fie'ds over r.,000 people, anä yet tliis industry is only beginning in the state. Ohio nu.-ht to have tAventyfivo beet sitirar f'u 'ori. and Indiana, equally f.ivoriib,r lurafivl and with land peculiarly urteil t Mis crop, should have an equal mini her.'
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NEW YORK.
Mothers Know That
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THC CENTAUn COMPANY. NCW YORK CITY.
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ESTABLISHEDJ847
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2
Mistress Good gracious, Marie, what
a mess your kitchen is in I Whatever
have you been doing? It will take you
a week to clean it, I should think.
Marie Yes, mum; the yormg ladies
have been down here showing me how
to boil a potato according to the cook
book.
Ar
e
A Poser For Mummy.
g M" : 1 mm
Th
Wo
mans
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Marjorie (who has just been listening to the story of Noah and the flood) Wasn't there no " mummy V-
EL 1
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Connor.
PLANT THAT IMPROVES SOIL The Sugar Beet Increases Yield of Other Crops.
How sugar beets improve the fertility of the soil and increase the yield of all crops grown in rotation with them is explained in the National Magazine by Truman G. rainier, who has spent the past ten years in studying agricultural methods in Europe and America. "The sugar beet being a deep rooter," says Mr. Palmer, "a prerequisite to its culture is that the soil be stirred to a depth of ten to fourteen Inches. The tender bectlet having to undergo the shock of thinning soon after it comes up in order to leave but one beet to a place, it demands a well prepared, mel
low seed hod. Gathering the sugar in
its leaves from tho atmosphere by the aid of the light and storing it up in the roots, it Avill not thrive if the light is cutoff through being shaded by weeds, and their eradication means not only a further stirring of the soil by cultivation and hoeing, but they are removed before going to seed, thus leaving weedless fields for succeeding crops. Being plowed out in autumn gives an extra fall plowinc. vhUh leaves the land in condition t absorb Instead of shed the fall and v!i.-:- t-ains and store up the moisture for Ji following season's crop. With i .! '-fmov:iI of the main root myriads r r. I irons roots are broken off and left in the soil to an average of a ton to tho acre, and In rotting they net or.Iy deposit humus in the lower strata of soil, but leave minute channels through which it becomes aerated ami hence fertile. The roots of subsequent rops follow these
Interstices and f.rnv nutriment from two and three tlim the depth of soil formerly reached, and hence the farmers double find treble their soil output without increasing their acreage."
A
ca.
e are better equipped than ever to handle I wheat We offer you fair weights and grades less unloading and courteous treatment. Com
and see us. We always pay Highest market priC3.
J asper Koller Mills.
Andrew W. Eckert Propr,
'Visit
Win
mum
n v
I 8
i P
58
Don't miss the wonderful opportunity for educational
and pleasure travel afforded by the Panama-Pacific Exposition San Francisco Panama -California Exposition San Diego v. Tickets are on sale every day at Very Low Excursion Fares via
(to?
.uiiiEEN Railway
rVernicr Carrier of the South
Fcr full information, sec Ticket Agent. Southern Railway or write B. H. Todd, District Passenger Agent, Southern Railway, Louisville, Ky
none'"
Mrs. Hippo Oh, Mr. Monk, I wocii fast lore to see how much I weigh! Mr. Monk One moment, pleas 1 want to see If I have tha prica t m
calft-PhiladaipnJji
Beet Pulp 3 CaV.'2 Food. In sumraarisdnj: lLo important features of sugar beet growing In various parts of the country the Department of Agriculture calls attention to its peculiar importance to the middle western states because of tho extent to which stock feeding is followed as an Industry in this territory. Beet pulp thnt is. what remains of the beet after the sujrar has been extracted has been proved to be the finest feed yet discovered for milk cows and for fattening cattle, sheep and other farm animals. This Is true whether the pulp is fed in its wet state as it comes from the factory or after being dried. A business of about ?2,000,QOO a year has grown up in thf laleof dried beet pulp, in which on it c&ü b shipped to any distinct.
ft Yon Pätnizfi Im Ih-
istras if Mail OiF
Mm ? The Jasper Courier, is the only paper in Jasper that is owned, edited and published by a citizen of Jasper. Don't kick about Mail order concerns if you spend your money for your printing to concerns that are owned and bossed by non-citizens of the town.
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