The citizen. (Honesdale, Pa.) 1908-1914, July 10, 1912, Page PAGE SEVEN, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE CITIZEN, WEDNESDAY, JULY 10,1912.
PAGE SEVEN
AGRICULTURE
4
OF LOCAL
4-
1 WAYNE COUNTY FARMERS J
A Moderate Priced Farm Barn
Designed by WALTER C DUTTON. College of Agriculture.
Ohio Stale University
THIS farm barn can be built for a
little over $-100. It Is twenty
four feet wide and forty-eight
feet long and Is designed for n mod
erate sized farm where general farm
ing is followed. The building material
required Is ns follows:
Posts, S-2 CxS In. xlS ft.), 170 board
feet, 25 $4.75
Plates (2 tn. xfl ft.), 144 board feet, $25 3.C0
Plates (2 In. xS ft.), 192 board feet, 25 l.iO
Joist bearers, 4-2 (2x10 In. x2t ft.), 320
board feet, $25 S.OO
Joists, 32 (2x10 In. xlO ft.), K12 board
feet, $25 12.S0
Braces, 4 (2xS In. xlO ft.), El board
feet. $25 1.35
Draces, 4 (2x0 In xS ft.), 32 board
feet, $25 SO
Patters, DO (2x0 in. xlG ft.), EOO board
feet, $25 20.(K
Nail ties (2x0 In), 763 board feet, $25.. 19.20
Nail tic supports (2x0 In.), 1S2 board
fect, $25 3.S0
Elding (1x12 In.), 2,600 board feet, $30.. 75 00
Mow floor, 70S board feet, $25 19.20
thectinB, 1,000 board feet, $25 40 00
hlncles, 14,600 board feet, $3.00 50.75
Battens, 2,500 lineal fect, IVic, 37.50
Wain doors, matched, 420 board feet,
$10 1G.S0
Ioor track, 50 foot, Cc .. 3.00
Hangers, S. 50c 4.00
Hinges, 3 sets, 40c 1.20
Windows, 14. $1.50 21.00
Nails 10.00
Concrete floor, 123 square yards, 50c.. 04.00
Total $442.05
-24.
An early frost was net or kuowu to
prove any serious backset to a crop of
Wild oatB nor heat nor drought. It is
tho only sowing that Is dead sure to
brln.E a good crop to maturity.
An excellent ration for the ducklings
consists of one-half cornmeal and one
half bran, with a little sand added.
They should also have fresh water,
and if milk can bo had It Is good for
them
For a quick growing vine to cocr
unsightly places there is nothing bet
ter than tho wild cucumner. The lit
tle plants may be got in the woods, and
if taken up with considerable rt!i
they will stand transplanting nlcdy.
Some idea can be gained of the Im
mense proportions of tho canning busi
ness of tho country from tho reports ou
last year's output, which tshow that
72O.0OO.WO cans of tomatoes, sweet
corn and peas were filled and consum
ed In the United States.
The young growing things-und these
Include pigs, lambs, calves and chicks
should be furnished, In addition to
tho ration suited to their several needs,
nil tho fresh water they will drink. Not
only tho best health, but most rapid
growth, depends upon this condition.
A few weeks ngo eight carloads of
potatoes from Scotland were received
on tho Chicago market and brought at
wholesale $1.10 per bushel. Only once
or twice beforo havo foreign potatoes
been shipped to Chicago, ulthough
they are quite frequently shipped to
Now York to supply tho local und ad
jacent markets.
Fruit tree agents in different parts of
tho country seem to mako easy money
periodically by selling calomel on the
claim that, if Injected beneath tho
bark on tho trunk of apple trees, it
will kill borers and other Insects. This
is bosh puro and slmplo nnd would
havo.po more effect on tho borers thnn
I IHSIDC BUIT I
, - i 4
INTEREST TO -
a I
z Ca
-o
r I
z
' J I
thD t3CNT
woma nnlse oir ruMt'ofi ITio hitch
lug post just outside tho front gate.
The future would seem to have
mighty little in store for the young fel
low living in town or country who at
tho age of twenty years is still spong
ing off tho "old man" and not doing
enough work nbout homo or anywhere
else to pay for his board and the
clothes lie wears. Unless fellows of
this typo take a radical turn for tin
better they will live nnd die scratching
a poor man's head.
The crop of field beans will bo much
freer from damago by tho weevil If
the planting is delayed until after the
1st of June. Tho growing of beans on
land that has been producing heavy
crops of other stuff Is to be commend
ed, for It not only makes posslole the
destruction of all weeds, that germinate
beforo tho beans are planted, but the
beans, being a legume, onrlch the soil
Instead of impoverishing It.
Crop rotation has oven more to com
mend It from tho standpoint of good to
tho irop than rest nnd change for the
soil. Many of tho fungous pests which
affect plant life. Including tho several
types of rust, smut and scab, arc quite
effectually kept In check by putting a
different crop on tho land year after
year. If this slmplo fact were kept
more often In mind It would save both
loss and disappointment.
Judged on the basis of crop produc
tion, it is questionable If there is any
section of tho country that Is moro fer
tile than tho celebrated Imperial valley
In southern California, Authentic re
ports tell of nlno cuttings of alfalfa In
a single season, averaging thirteen tons
to tho ncro. Ono alfalfa ranch of thirty
flvo acres is cited (on which wero kept
thiay-fivo dairy cows) which produced
135 tons of hay and during tho sum
mer furnished pasturo for 200 hog?.
A naner products comnanv of St.
Louis has lately nut on tho mnrkcr. n
corrugated paper.packago for tho w
ketlng of apples that bids fair to ue
como popular as tho trade In fancy
apples Is further developed. The
boxes are nmdo to hold ono lmlf perk,
onu peck, n half bushel nnd a bushi-l.
Not only do these boxes make It po
slble to display npplos to odvantngc
but tho packing of them In the smaller
iKixes would seem likely to lncreisp
the consumption.
It is a fair guess that tho corn belt
'farmer who this year had to pay from
S to $( a bushel for tip and butt seed
corn which in ordinary seasons Is fed
to the pigs will select his Feed ears
next September nnd get them thor
oughly dried out before nny freezing
weather conies. If this were done nud
the seed ears were kept absolutely dry
during the winter season there would
bo no need whatever for testing the
seed next spring. It Is because farm
ers gamble with the picking of their
seed com by selecting It at husking
time that they have ns much trouble
as they do.
For four or five dollars the farmer
who milks cows can provide himself
with n Bnbcock tester, which will tell
exactly how much butter fat there I?
In the milk of each cow in his herd,
'fids data, which can bo got at easily,
coupled with n record showing the
number of pounds of milk each cow
gives during the year, will make 11
possible to figure out jut what hei
milk or cream Is worth. Against thl
should lie charged the cost of her feed
bill for the year. If her yield of butter
fat production does not exceed by $2(1
or more the cost of her food It is :i
fair conclusion that she is n prett
punk proposition nnd should be sent
to the stockyards ns soon ns possible.
Honey Producers, Attention!
Now Is the time when colonies should
be given n hasty examination to de
termine which have died and which
need feeding, nnd mnny colonies that
would otherwise die can be saved if at
tended to In time.
No colony should be examined or Its
blvo opened unless the day Is clear and
reasonably wnrm nnd should not be
left open for n longt-r period than Is
absolutely necessary, and in closing the
hive great core should be exercised in
replacing the packing that constituted
tho winter protection.
Whore colonies havo died the hives
with their combs should be taken into
the house,, and later on these bodies
and coinbs can be used as extracting
combs with colonies that have win
tercd well, or they can be used foi
mnklng increase, as the bees will soon
free them of dead bees and other ref
use nnd niako them all right again.
Where rapid Increase is desired wc
shall hav to resort to artificial uieth
ods of division, as natural swarming
cannot be depended upon to give us til
the Increase desired.
Too Dull.
"No." said Hill Squeezer, who was
down from Bodle the other day. "No;
I didn't go to Judge I'odger's wedding
The notice said 'No cards,' and I'm
darned If I can fool away a whole
evening where there's no chance of a
little four-bit ante." Milwaukee Sen
tinel. No Joke.
We're, nil so willing to do good
With money that we've spent;
U'o'ro all such cheerful givers when
We haven't got a cent.
Cincinnati Enquirer.
A Useful Tip.
"flow did you get that fine spring
overcoat?"
"I had a sure tip on a horso race."
"I never knew ono of those sure tips
to pan out."
"Neither did I. So I didn't nlav it.
Put tho money Into an overcoat
stead." Loulsvlllo Courier-Journal.
in-
Logical Course.
"Vos, sir," said tho expert accountant,
who had spout a week In looking over
the books, "I havo found the key to
your financial difficulties at last."
"Then there's nothing to do. I sup
pose," sighed tho despondent merchant,
"but to wind up my nffalrs."-Chlcago
Tribune.
O'BRIEN'S COSTLY BALK.
Dropped the Wet Dall and Allowed
Player to Reach Base.
Buck O'Brien, tho Kcd Sox sensation
from whom so much is expected this
year, was. In ono of the recent Boston
New York games, tho victim of the
strangest balk seen in professional
baseball for some years.
In the third inning, after Hartzell
had got to first on an error, O'Brien
wound up, and Hartzell prepared to
steal. O'Brien made ready to throw
tho "spltter." Just as ho let tho ball gi
Ilartzell started. Tho ball rolled from
tho pitcher's hands and fell at his feet
while ITnrtzoll continued on nnd made
tho base. O'Brien could not bo charged
with a wild pitch, as tho ball did not
reach tho pinto and could bo called
neither ball nor strike. Tho scorer
wero up In tho ah- and wero going to
credit Hartzell with a stolen base until
Uinpiro Connolly solved nil doubts bf
charging O'Brien with a balk, stating
that ho would havo allowed the runmtr
his base had ho not started.
O'Day a Howling Success.
Tho sad part of Hank O'Day's suc
cess as n manager Is that nil that
ability should havo been wasted while
ho was umpiring.
Tris Speaker Playing Great Ball.
Outfielder Tris Speaker of tho Ited
Box la playing remarkable all round
ball, nis throwing Is really bettei
than ever.
SO i:ClS13 FOR CAI'T. hOItl).
London. Tho 'Board of Trado In
quiry into tho Titanic disaster has
concluded Its Investigation and Lord
Mersey, the presiding Judge, an
nounced that Its roport would ho
produced within a "reasonable time."
Sir HufuB Isaacs, tho Attornoy
tieiiernl, in his closing speech snld
ho had been anxious to find, If pos
sible, an excuse for tho Inaction of
Captain Lord of tho Callfornlnn; but
ho had rogrotfully como to tho con-'
elusion that there wns no excuse for
him. Tho court, he said, must find
Captain Lord's evidence unsatisfac
tory. Lord Mersey suggested that if
Captain Lord saw the signals of dis
torts nnd did not go to tho relief ho
was possibly guilty of misdemeanor.
Sir Unfits Isaacs assorted that un
necessary risks had been taken by
the Titanic and that tho causes of
the disaster were a bad lookout and
excessive speed.
'During the thirty-six sessions of
the court of inquiry ninety-eight wit
nesses have boon examined and 25,
C31 questions put to them.
ORPHANS' COURT SALE OF VAL
UABLE BEAL ESTATE.
By virtuo of an order of the Or
phans' Court of Wayno County, dat
ed the 17th day of June, 1912, the
undersigned Executors of tho estate
of John Kuhbach.lnto of the Borough
of Honesdale, Pa., deceased, will ox
pose at public sale at tho Court
House In the said Borough of Hones
dale, Pa., on Friday the 19th day of
July, 1912, at 2 o'clock in the af
ternoon, the following described real
estate of which the said decedent dies
seized:
All tho following two pieces or
panels of land, situate in the Bor
ough of Honesdale, County of
Wayne, and State of Pennsylvania,
hounded and described as follows,
viz.: One of the same, being dis
tinguished as lot No. Nineteen and
half of lot No. Twenty upon Third
street (now Court street) and de
scribed and designated in the Vil
lage plot of the property of the
Delaware & Hudson Canal Company
in said Borough, being in front seventy-five
feet and in rear seventy
five feet and of an irregular depth
and being bounded westerly by
Third street (now Court street)
northerly by the northerly half of
aforesaid lot No. Twenty upon Third
street, now Court street; easterly by
the top of the bank of the Lacka
waxen River and southerly by Ninth
street. The other of the said two
pieces or parcels of land, being a
pipce of land adjoining the -aforesaid
parcel or piece of land and be
ing bounded westward twelve and
one-half feet by the eastern line of
Third street, now Court street, In
said Borough, northward by a lino
parallel to and distant twelve and
one-half fet southward from the
northern line of Lot No. Twenty on
the aforesaid Village plot of the
southward from the northern line of
Lot. No. Twenty on the aforesaid
Village plot of the Delaware & Hud
son Canal Company, in said Bor
ough, eastward twelve and one-half
feet by the top of the bank of tho
GET THESE
Money-making Secrets
WITH Farm Journal
tT. (f 1 Cif) you can get now not only the
JL Ul si) X JJ TOURNAT. fnr FOTIR full
your choice of any one of the famous booklets, "Money-making:
Secrets," which other people have bought by the hundred thousand.
Just note what the information given in one of these booklets, "The
Million lig-gr-i'arni, did lor
In May, 1910, Robert bought 2300 day-old chicks.
week studying the methods now given in this book, his only preparation for the business.
Result this ' greenhorn" raised 95 per cent, of all his chicks, and 1350 of them were pullets.
( Poultry Secrets" tells you this secret.) In less than seven months he was getting 425
eggs daily, and selling them at 58 cents a dozen. His feed cost averaged $4.00 a day, leaving
him OVER $17.00 A DAY PROFIT, and this before all his pullets had begun laying.
Isn't Money-making
Read what people say
"I find your Egg-Book worth untold dollars," says
Roy Ciianey. Illinois. "What it tells wuuM take a becinncr years
to learn."
"I am much pleased with the Butter Book," writes
F. J. Dickson. Illinois, "anil would like to know how I could
secure 300 copies, one for cacli patron ol our creamery."
"Duck Dollars is the best book I ever had on
duck-raisinc" says P. M. Waknock. 1'cnna.
"If your other booklets contain as much valuable
information as the Kgc-Uook, I would consider them cheap at
double the price." says 1". W. Mansiield, New Voik.
T. F. McCrea, a missionary in China, writes, "I
found Garden Gold a crcat help in my garden this summer. 1
lost my health in the crcat famine, try mi; to save the starving
Chinese, and I am toine to net it hack by Betting near to the
soil. After a lorn: tussle with the Chinese language and mission
problems, it is a ercat rest to net out with the vecetablcs,
trees, chickens, etc. 1 am savins money and reeaiuina my
health. My wife and I both find 1'axu Journal indispensable
"The Farm Journal beats them all," writes T. II.
Potter, Penna. -Kvery issue 1ms reminders and ideas worth a
year's subscription."
"One year I took another agricultural paper,"
says N. XI. Gladwin, Washington, "and it took a whole column
to tell what l'Atu Journal tells in one paragraph."
"I was very greatly helped by your garden page,"
writes Mrs. Joe Lawrence, Saskatchewan. "I was never
successful in crowine cabbaee until last summer, when I tried
the Fakii JoUKNALjivay. Now I have more than I need to use."
"Farm Journal was a regular visitor at my boy
hood home," writes Dr. William Davis, New Jersey. When
the first copy came, it carried me back ten years, and 1 felt a boy
neai'j. I shall never he without it again I want home to seem
like home. When it arrives, I feel the eladness lump liuht into
me. I begin on the first page and read to my wile until half.past
ten, and all through the month I drink of its cream. You must
work hard to keep it so rich,"
"FAim Journal is good for the man behind the
counter, as well as the man in the field," says J. I. Sloat, a
Virginia bank clerk.
"If I could get as good interest on every dollar as
I get from the Fau Journal, I would soon be a millionaire."
says A. W. Weitzel, Penna.
Farm Journal FOUR full n vv
?heo,rb'sc,;!:ny cne o,both tor 1 .00
FARM JOURNAL, 333 N. Clifton St., Philadelphia
Write tor tree sample copy, with premiums to club a.-: tits,
nn ir
Lackawnxon River and southward by
tho soutliorn half of said lot No.
Twenty on Third strcot, now Court
street, being tho southern half of tho
northern half of said lot No. Twenty
upon Third street, now Court street,
nnd being the samo land that Har
riet Martin and Katherlno s Bar
bour by their deed dated tho Twenty-second
day of April, 190S, grant
ed nnd conveyed to John ljuhbach,
said deed being recorded in Wnyno
County Deed Book No. Ninety-eight
at page Two Hundred and nlnoty
slx. Upon tho premises Is a large
threo-story brick dwelling house,
frame ham, and other out buildings.
Also, all that certain lot or par
cel of land Bltuato lying and being
in the township of Texas, County of
Wayne, and Stato of Pennsylvania,
bounded and described as follows, to
wit:
Beginning at a stones corner at
foot of ledge being the southwest
corner of the land hereby conveyed
and also a corner of land of tho
Torrey estate; thenco north thirteen
and one-fourth degrees cast along
lino of John H. Weaver, nine and
eight-tenths rods to a birch trco for
a corner; thence north nineteen de
grees west four rods along land of
said Weaver to stake and stones
corner; thence along lands of Wil
liam Hienry Bell ct al. north sixty-
seven degrees east twenty-nino rods
to lino nf A (In in TCrnff; th nnrn nlnnf '
lino of said Kraft land south four
teen degrees east twelve rods to
corner in angle of stono fence;
thenco along land of tho Torrey es
tate south sixty-seven degrees west
thirty rods to tho place of begin
ning. Containing two acres and
seventy perches of land, be tho samo
moro or less, and being the same
land that Louis Sheutz ot ux. by
their deed dated tho Twenty-third
day of August, 1910, granted and
conveyed to John Kuhbach; said I
deed being recorded in tho office for
tho recording of deeds In and for
Wayne County, in Deed Book No.
One Hundred and three, page Four
Hundred and Sixty-six.
Terms of Sale, cash.
CHARLES A. EMERY,
AUGUSTA K. KUHBACH.
Executors.
Chas. A. McCarty, Attorney. 51w3
NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR
CHARTER.
Notice is hereby given that appli
cation will be made to Alonzo T.
Searle, President of the Court of
Common Pleas of Wayno County on
July 20, 1912, at 10 a. m., under the
provisions of tho Incorporation act of
1S74 and its supplements for a char
ter for Intended corporation to be
called Tho White Mills Heptasoph
Association, the character ant' object
of which are for lodge purposes, and
for social enjoyment, and for these
purposes to have, possess and enjoy
all the rights, benefits and privileges
conferred by the said Act and supple
ments thereto.
SEARLE & SALMON,
52w3 Solicitors.
Kobert Liddle, a clerk of Scranton,
He sncnt
Secrets" a good name for such booklets?
of the other booklets, and of the Faum Journal itself:
"MONEY-MAKING SECRETS."
Ttiese booklets are 6 by 9 inches, all profusely tlluttrateJ.
I'OUJntY SHCItKTS is a great collection of
discoveries and methods of successful poultrymcn.long jealously
guarded. If gives Fclch's famous matmi: chart, the (.'urtiss
method of evttinc one-half more pullets than cockerels, lloycr's
method of insuring fertility, with priceless secrets of mating,
breeding, feed and feeding, how to produce winter eges, etc.
llOltSH SUCKHTS exposes all the methods ot
"bishoping," "plugging," cocaine and pasohne doping, and
other tricks of 'gyps" and swindlers, and enables any une to
ti-11 mi iiiigmuitl ior. It also gives many valuable train
ing, feeding, breeding and veterinary secrets.
The MII.T,10X KOG-FAIOl gives the methods
by which J. M. Foster makes over $ltf,000 '"r mainly
from eggs. All luck-j.ird tlifken-raisers shouiu learn about
the "Rancucas I'nit," and how Foster FF.F.DS his hens to make
them produce such quariitics of ecus, especially in v. inter.
STIiAAVniiliUY SOCKETS' tells how you can
have the finest fall-he jrmg strawberries almost until snow flies.
It gives ) ott the fruits of ten years' work and study of experts in
this new industry. It reveals the secrets of fertilizing and bios.
som-rcmoing U produce berries in the fall, tells inside facts
about varieties, how to get three crops in two years, how one
utuycr gcis iw.ww iiuans
l,. i. i armer, tne tarr.ous
ic i.
Iran
grow ordinary strawberries can, if they read thisliook, grow fall
berries almost anywhere.
COItN SECltETS, the great NEW hand-book of
Prof. Holdeu. the "Corn King," tells how to get ten totvtcuty
lumlii'M iiinrt) iit iut of corn rich in protein and the best
ttock.feeding elements. Pictures make every process plain.
THE "IiUTTEU BOOK" tells of seven cows
that produced Imlf a tint of butter each per ear (140 pounds
is the average). , An eye-opener for dair men. Get it. weed out
your poor cows, and turn good ones into record-breakers.
GARDEN GOTjD shows how to make your back
yard supply fresh vegetables and fruit, how to cut down your
grocery bills, keep a better table, and get cash for your surplus.
It tells how to plant, cultivate, harvest and market.
DUOK DOLTiAKS tells how the great Weber
duck-(arm near lloston makes every year 50 cents each on
40,000 ducklincs. Tells why ducks nay them better than chick,
ens, and Just HOW they do everything.
TUItKEY SECltETS, the latest authority on
turkey-raising, discloses fully the methods of Horace Vose, the
famous Rhode Island "turkey-man," who supplies the wonderful
Thanksgiving turkeys for the White House. It tells how to
mate, to set eggs, to hatch, to feed and care for the young, to
prevent sickness, to fatten, and how to make a turkey-ranch PAY.
inr
TN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
1 OF WAYNE COUNTY.
Libel In Divorce.
No. 19, March Torm,;1912.
LILLIAN C. BUiHLL, Llbellant,
vs.
LEWITT E. BUELL, Respondont.
To LEWITT E. BUELL: You are
hereby required to appear in tho
said Court on tho second Monday In
August, to answer tho complaint
exhibited to tho Judge of said court
by Lillian C. Buoll, your wife, in tho
cause abovo stated, or In default
thereof a decreo of dlvorco as pray
ed for in said complaint may bo
made against you In your absence.
F. C. KIMBLE, Sheriff.
Mumford, Attorney.
Honesdale, July 2, 1912. 54 w4
JOSEPH N. WELCH
Fire
Insurance
The OLDEST Fire Insurance
Agency in Wayne County.
Uflice: Second floor Masonic Bulla
ing, over O. C. Jadwin's drug store
Honsdale.
SPENCER
The Jeweler
Swould like to see you if t
X you are in the marketJL
I for
JEWELRY, SILVER
t WARE, WATCHES,
I CLOCKS,
X DIAMONDS:
AND NOVELTIES
"Guaranteed articles only old.'
If you know of any news let us
know about it. Call us oa either
'phone.
FARM
Is this rtvt AmtArfv hfliif
Pa.
ivuury carets ' tells how la
carry fowls, and manv other
iust one "crets (ar ",ore important.
D
an acre and neis cents a quart, etc
uerry man, san. Any c
mi nr-