By ELMO SCOTT WATSON NCE upon a time a gov- ernor of the state of Il- is paid a tribute to one of the principal prod- ucts of his state and his eulogy upon this princi I urce of her wealtl ! become a classic in American oratory. Oglesby, his subject was corn and this is what he said about it: But now again my mind tu glorious r See tt! Look ripening, ving fleld! Wears a . prouder tha ever wore, sometimes sometimes, after the storm, the fied survivors of the tempest seem view a field of slaughter and to pi fallen foe And son the pendant caskets of the cornfield, filled with the wine of life, and see the silken fringes that set a ion and for art. And y he evening comes and somethin ime to rest and listen The scuddis clot conceal the half and reves h whole of the moonlit beauty o } n And then the gentle wi make heavenly harmonies on a thousand-thousand harps that hang upon the borders and the edges and the middle of the field of ripening corn, -until my heart seems to beat to the rising and the falling of the long melodious refrain The melancholy clouds sometimes make shadows an hide its aureate wealth: and now they move, and slowly Into sight there comes the golden glow of promise for an industrious land. Glorious corn, that more than all the sisters of the fleld wears tropic gar. ments Not on the shores of Nilus or of Ind does nature dress her forms more splendidly. My God, to live again that time when for me half the world was good and the other half unknown And now again the corn that in {ts kernel holds the strength that shall {in the body refreshed) subdue the forest and romp r wonse from every FODor: id, o y ng in the eye of beauty make blossoms of her cheeks and jewels of her lips and thus make for men the greatest ins to well-doing, the hope ' nior ship of that sacred, warm and well-em- bodied soul, a woman Ave, the corn, the roval corn, within whose yellow heart there 18 of health and strength f« all tt nations! The t riumphant, hat with the aid of man 1} } Y victorious pro- reas y 8 h { n and laid foundation for the social elience that is and is to } ious plant transmuted by h alchemy of God, sustains the the poet in song and r everywhere the thousand arms that work ihe purrs poses of jife. Oh, that 1 had the voice of song y e skill to translate into tones and harmonies, the symphonies and pratories that roll ross my soul when standing sometin YY ght up- on the borde ) dant sen, 1 note a we mi then be- fore one-half the year is gone 1 view its full fruition and see its heaped gold await the need of man, Who fancies cleaning the jaws and fangs of a highly annoyed king cobra or hamadryad whose bite is something very special in the way of death? This was one of the unpleasant tasks performed by keepers at the London 200, Snakes in captivity are frequently attacked by canker of the mouth, and the king cobra had to go through the ordinary medical examination. Its Although lowa boasts that she is the “state where the tall corn grows” not from California. The stalk Majestic, in the United may upon “ripening, waving grown in every state in the Union, al- though the eastern half of our coun- ry is richest in this splendid product of its fertile soil. No other form of plant life is so typical of the North le 40M) (xx). re than $ al Hawkeyes know hy Ray and IOWA CORN SONG [let's eing of grand old 1.O-WAY, Yo- ho, yo-ho, yo-ho. i Our low i ronger ev'ry day, Yo-ho, | yo-ho, the throng. nd strong, ng, Yo- tory as is maize or Indian corn. The name itself speaks of its real Ameri canism for maize is the Anglicized form of the Spanish “maiz,” which in turn was derived from the Haytian “mahiz” or “mabhis” the name by which the copper-skinned inbabitants of the West Indies, who welcomed Columbus, knew this plant. cultivated by the prehistoric races of the New world long before Columbus navigator carried the first grains of corn to Europe on his return voyage. every schoolboy Is familiar with the story of how Massasoit’'s people taught the Pllgrims to plant corn the size of a mouse's ear” and how to fertilize it by planting a fish In each hill with the grains of corn, “Aye, the corn, the royal corn—" for indeed “Corn is King” in the United States, From the beginning of our history corm has been its principal annual corn crop is around two and three-quarter billion bushels which far exceeds the one and one-quarter billion bushels record of oats and less The value of this gigantic corn crop Is well over two billion dollars and the only other crops which can ap proach it in value are cotton with its value of one and one-quarter billions and hay with a value a little over that of cotton, Although Illinois gave to the nation, in the words of one of its governors, head was secured in a “snake stick” a peculiar rod with a leather loop, and its jaws were pried open and swabbed out with an antiseptic pad. The venom of a king cobra has been known to kill an elephant in five hours. A short-sighted cobra probably mistook the elephant’'s trunk for a black snake and started a fourdon meal, The hamadryad's cage at the 200 has a special grille over the Ingpection window to prevent the creature leap log up six feet aud biting its keepers. . way, l-o-wavy, State of all the land, loy on e ¥ hand We're fr l-o-way., l-o-way { That's where the tall corn grows. i Our land !s full of ripening corn, Yo- ho, yo-ho, yo-ho, We've watched it grow both nig morn, Yo-ho, yo-ho, yo-ho, But now we rest, we've stood the test, All that's good we have the best, I-o-way has reached the crest, Yo-bho, yo-ho, yo-ho, ht and 1 Chorus Nebraska, which plants more than ROOM) acres and harvests nearly 300000000 bushels, celebrates her fame as the second corn-growing state by proclaiming to all the world that | her citizens are “Cornhuskers.” Illinois takes third place with an acreage of | some 300,000 less than Nebraska's and a production of some 37.00.0000 bush- els less, Fourth place goes to Kan | sas and this state has also produced | a great tribute to corn—in the form | of poetry instead of prose, For the state's most famous woman poet is Mrs. Ellen Palmer Allerton, who moved from Wisconsin to a farm near Ham. lin, Kan., just 50 years ago. There was no house yet built upon their homestead when Mrs, Allerton and her | husband arrived there and they lived in a small granary (which still stands on the Allerton farm) until a house was built. All around them for miles stretched fields of waving corn and this gave her the inspiration for the poem, “Walls of Corn,” which she wrote in 1883 and which has been reprinted many times as a wonderful tribute to a wonderful “gift of a rich and fer. tile land™ | i ————————— Friendship’'s Elements There are two elements that go to the composition of friendship, each 80 sovereign that 1 can detect no su- periority in either, no reason why either should be first named. One is truth. The other is tenderness. —Em- erson, Not Family “English” The English walnut is not a native of England, but comes from the moun tains of Greece, from Persia and from Afghanis‘en. 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