Show IPA FARM irias A af wa U E ERADICATE GR GRUBS EARLY IN SPRING it y dockage estimated bypath by pack Pach r at yearly clad ad flies or heel flies which pester cattle in the springtime may bd killed while still in the in the lie backs of cattle by alic plic irig no ointment consisting of one flirt lodo form an and d three parts cruda petrol petroleum eumon on each warble hole this chis ointment should be placed on the 7 hole bole of each warble or large swelling on tiie ant malls hide with the fluger finger according to dr george IL 11 glover head of tile the veterinary division of the colorado agricultural college the grubs grubi cabbe can be removed from the aa backs achs of animals by pressure with the fingers but tills this deems like a hopeless pelesa ho undertaking then too crushing or destroying the grubs in the hacks of cattle attle la Is liable to io bring on dangerous anaphylactic symptoms doctor glover says the problem of efficiently erad eradicating lent the gad fly Is one of the most important and most difficult problems relli relating ting to the cattle caille industry which esnow facing the government tl the e ointment treatment will never stamp out oui tile pest but Is 13 useful as a temporary measure of relle relief f the problem of bf the ox warble Is a difficult one to solve but ae it Is believed wit luit the combined scientific efforts of the leading cattle producing countries will ind a solution johen when the gad fly begins to pester cattle tile the animals throw their tails high big h in the air and run for the nearest water liole hole contrary to the prevailing opinion these flies do not sting or bite cattle but instinctively cattle are aie thrown into a panic by their mere presence th these ese flies files look like large bees they hatch batch from the grub which tares aes a heavy toll of the live stock industry resulting in reduced milk supply severely damaged hides along uie the buck brick where the thickest and must most va valuable luaLle leather Is obtained and wasted jellied beef along the backs I 1 one packing company estimates 1 the doc dockage krige on account of grubby hides ut at a year the total loss losa from the cattle grub to the live stock industry in the united st states alps has bosn been estimated ut iii a year canadian field peas alone not recommended in parts of the pacific northwest canadian held field peas tire are grown extensively and grades of low merchantable meren ant value are arc available as feed for live fetock these low priced pena have ve become popular no as hog flog feed in the palouse country of eastern washington and northern idaho these pens peas hove been made the main feed for brood KOWS during the winter which ii Is tilso also the period of gestation As aa time went on the question arose ss to the effect of III this Is practice upon the physical condition of the brood flow w and the resulting effect upon the weight and vitality of he fie pigs 0 since the value dof of pigs Is toa great degree established y their ygor vigor tit at tile the idaho experiment station 1 I nade nn investigation of the effect of the ahe pen pea ration the investigation disclosed 1 that frequently brood sows bows fed too large a proportion of peas went olt feed throughout throe ghost the investigation 3 olgs farrowed furrowed far rowed in the herds which worp frd fed on paa liens were small from the i check chech pens the greater numb or of pigs wel glied from fram 2 to 3 pounds af at pirth birth while in the others the greater munib I 1 r of young weighed 1 to 2 floun dounda po unda d s the smaller sn baller pigs were also less vigorous the investigators tit nt the station have recommended that brood sows bows be fed n supplementary supplement nry ra alon where peas are utilized heaviest infestations of wo worms r ms among lambs sheep of any ago age are liable to in with aih stomach ach worms but the heaviest infestations are usually among L Inie infestation station may occur occur tit at tiny any season of tile the jear benr the trouble Is 19 usually first noticed in young lambs about the middle of the summer though thong vt it may become evident much earl earlier ter depending depends aig upon the tempera 1 ture and moisture condIt conditions inns have f 11 pre prevailed often the first notice that ann la is present Is the death of i ode or more sheep or lambs low flow ever it if the lock flock to ta closely ati attended ended the tha symptoms symptom a of stomach warms are fiscally noticed before death claims acta its victim give ewes variety advice about feed of owes ewes before lambing Is stereotyped to one kind of tiny hay and two of groin grain think of the body needs of the mother and what la Is needed for the growth of the tae labib sheep cannot hayo too man many kinds of tiny hay and it if there are weeds in hi it when forked in the liny hay rael rach notice tiie liens on hoth both reach for them A lias fins no nor hot tor of coeds either in his pasture or hay tho the sturdy little oo 00 n cry ary kind ot of weed family garden needs good to be successful it must bo B thought out before work begins A garden should grow pled by piece said earl carl stanton landscape architect speaking nt at corneals Cor nells farto faria and home week tit at N Y 1 bt the garden which Is ii to be successful when completed la Is the one which has tile whole plan of it thought out before the work starts such a plan makes make s each installment tin an integral part par or of the whole each part dovetails dove tails with flie tile rest and there Is 1 I 1 no chance or of duplication or work to be done over many small gardens tire are lovely at a first he be sald said but they tire are enlarged until all rem semblance blance of design and balance la Is lost frequently they are not orderly and are greatly gre overcrowded rules for mr stanton gave certain rules r 11 ae 3 tor for planning the lie small garden no R garden r or flower bed r should hould be placed in tin an open lawn area unless it be tied by plantings or architecture to some permanent feature avoid competition between the garden and any other feature such as a vista or a view tile the size else of the garden which should be decided from the farst Is governed by three important principles the first li Is taste the preference bre ference of tho the owner tile the second deals with ability aud and willingness of the owner to pay for the maintenance both in time and money and the third governing element esthe chosen site mr stainton Str inton said alint abbit he preferred the or br oral square or circle tile the garden Is only as good as its background he continued in the country the he background question Is easily solved sol vedIn in the city more often than not the satisfactory solution ls is unattainable do not give an nir air of depression to the picture by surrounding your garden with too high fences and walls whenever possible use evergreen trees ns as a background for bed edg ings ingo use such material as will tend to avoid hard hard lines do not cut your garden up into a jig saw pattern of beds planting 9 important the planting Is ns as much of th the 0 design as Is the layout tile the planting should bo be counted upon to furnish mosses variations in light and shade much of the ho repetition and continuity required as well dwell as the anticipated beauty of line and color particularly avoid tiny any flatness in the planting where flower beds are above tile tho average width resort to the use of shrubs to give added height and bulk do 60 not grade the height of the ilie flowers it in the beds evenly with the lowest in the foreground more afore fascinating will lo be 10 the picture when the top tol line la Is broken up by placing some s slightly taller varieties in the front with the lower growing sorts soy bean beakas as fertility crop Is disappointing knottier recent development in the legume phase of soil I 1 improvement Is ia that the soy bean which it was hoped would he the leguminous savior or of poor land has in it a number of experiments proved disappointing it Is variously charged with increasing erosion being a heavy feeder of mineral elements at the expense expense of succeeding crops ridding only small amounts of organic matter through its root sy systems and even robbing the soil of its nitrogen As a hay and seed crop the soy bean Is rapidly gaining favor but as is a fertility crop there appears to be serious doubt in ninny many cases Iler perhaps tile the next live years will reveals reveal how soy beans bean s should be 10 grown to make them a first class fertility crop |