The Covington news. (Covington, Ga.) 1908-current, October 12, 1916, Page PAGE SEVEN, Image 7
GOVERNMENT EXPERT TELLSfSEEG CORN HK SAYS PREPARE FOR PROFIT¬ ABLE CROP NEXT YEAR BY CAREFUL SEED SELEC¬ TION NOW. Autumn is the time to prepare for a profitable corn crop the following sea¬ son. At corn-ripening time drop all other business and select an abundance of seed corn. The process in too impor¬ tant to be conducted incidentally while husking. When selecting seed corn give the process your entire attention. • let the very best that is to be had and preserve it well, and your increased yields will return you more profit than any other work you can do on your farm. In 13 years’ investigations conducted upon Scioto River bottom soil near Piketon. Ohio, with Woodburn White |£S=:-=gfJ. t ■ r -V’ 1 ; i fJP% . mm. ..’iltii'i -•‘ill, n V OUR satisfaction * means more to us than the amount of your purchase. The House of Bom makes more clothes to measure than any other tailoring house — seventy - five per cent of our yearly sales are made to sat¬ isfied customers — their friends make up the other twenty-five per cent. So we can’t afford to let you pay for a Born gar¬ ment that does not please you in every detail of the style, fit, material and needle work. Resident Born Dealer E. H. MOBLEY Covington, Ga. ................ N: v ) fc I The Savings spift Account fattens' x on COFFEE T 7C TE flatly guarantee that Luzianne VV goes £ twice as far as a cheaper coffee. We flatly guarantee that it will satisfy you in every way. If, after you have used the entire contents of one can according to directions, it has not made Hi good on both these claims, throw away the can and ask your grocer to refund your money. He will do it without ar¬ gument. Write for premium catalog. * bL, ■ •' U. ' The Reily-Taylor Co. New Orleans ! Dent, U. S. Selection 77, the yield was raised from an average of 63 bushels of dry shelled corn from 1901 to 1907 to an average of 75 bushels from 1907 to 1913. The principal influence pro¬ ducing this increase in yield was the selection and the care of seed corn. The only proper way to select seed corn is from the stalks standing where they grew, as soon as ripe and before the first hard freeze. As soon as the crop ripens go through the field with seed-picking bags and busk the ears from the stalks that have produced the most corn without having any special advantages such as space, moisture, or fertility. Avoid the large ears on stalks standing singly with an unus¬ ual amount of space around them Preference should be given the plants that have produced most heavily in in competition with a full stand of less productive plants In all localities the inherent tendency of the plant t< produce heavily of sound, dry, shelled corn is of most importance. Late-ma taring plants with cars which are heavy because of an excessive amount of sap should be ignored. Sappiness greatly increases the weight and is likely to destroy the quality. In th< Central and Southern States, all other things being equal, short, thick stalks are preferable. Short stalks are not so easily blown down and permit thick er planting. Thick stalks are not sc. easily broken down, and in general arc more productive than slender ones The tendency for corn to produce suck¬ ers is hereditary. Other things be ing equal, seed should be taken from stalks that have no suckers. The same day seed corn is gathered the husked ears should be put in a dr> place where there is free circulation of air and placed in such a mannei that the ears do not touch each other This is the only safe procedure. Good seed is repeatedly ruined because il is thought to he already dry enough when gathered and that the precaution mentioned above is unnecessary. Manj farmers believe that their autumns art so dry that such care is superfluous Seed corn in every locality gathered at ripening time will be benefited b.c drying as suggested. If left in the husk long after ripening it may sprout or mildew during warm, wet weathei or become infested with weevils. The vitality of seed is often reduced b> leaving it in a sack or in a pile for even a day after gathering. During warm weather, with some moisture in the cobs and kernels, the ears heat or mil¬ dew in a remarkably short time. The best possible treatment immediately after gathering is to sting the ears Ordinarily the best place to hang strings of ears is in an open shed or loft. Wire racks are more convenient, and in the end cheaper, than binder twine. Such racks may be made from electrically welded lawn fencing. The cutting of the fencing into seed-corn racks is done without any waste. Only during unusually damp weath er at seed-gathering time will fire be necessary. If.heat is employed in a poorly ventilated room it will do the seed ears more injury than good. If used, the fire should be slow, long, con¬ tinued, and situated below the seed ears, with good ventilation above them. After hanging in the shed or lying on the racks for two months f he seed ears should he as dry as a bone and contain less than lrt per cent of mois tore. They can remain, jvhere they dried or he stored in mouse-proof bar¬ rels. boxes, or crates during the winter, but. in either case they must not be ex¬ posed to a damp atmosphere, for they will absorb moisture and be injured. Some farmers place the thoroughly dried seed ears in th v > center of a wheat bin and fill the bin with loose, dry \v heat. In localities where weevils and grain moths injure stored grain,the thorough¬ ly dry seed ears should be stored in fityVifttiiNlAi folwR. TRt’RSljAY, OCTOBER 1*. IS 16. very tight ihotise-proof receptacles with 1 pound of moth ball3 or naph¬ thalene inclosed for each bushel of corn. This quautiy tightly inclosed with the corn will prevent damage from these insects and will not injure the seed. If at any time signs of wee¬ vils or grain moths show on the corn, It should be inclosed with carbon bisul phid in practically airtight rooms, bins, •oxes, or barrels for 48 hours. The bisulphid should be placed in shallow dishes or pans on top of the seed. One lelf pint is sufficient for a box or bar el holding 10 bushels or less. One >ound is sufficient for a room or bin 10 feet each way. After fumigation he ears must be thoroughly aired, a king care that no fire is present when the fumigation box opened.—Weekly News letter, U. S. Department of Ag¬ riculture. WOODMAN CAMP AT LEGLIN. A camp of the Woodman of the World is to be organized at Leguin Friday night (13th). The meeting will be held in the Odd fellows hall at that place. District Deputy Luther C. Jones has been at work in the vicin¬ ity of Leguin for some time and has secured about 40 members for this popular order. The W. O. W. is a fraternal insur tnce order boasting of a membership of 800,000 and a surplus fund of $30.- 100.000 safely invested in Government ind State bonds, the only way that unds of this order can be invested In is provided for by the laws of the >rder. While the order is of an insur tnee nature, the fraternal feature Is tfrongly stressed and fully exemplified in the beautiful burial and unveiling •eremonies. One of the features of the order which is original with the W. D. W. is that of placing a monument >ver the grave of all its deceased mem Iters, More than 50,000 monuments lave been erected in the 26 years exig¬ ence of the order. There are 30,000 members of the W. ■ >. W. in the state of Georgia and they ire looking forward to the meeting of the Soverign Camp convention in At¬ lanta July, 1917, where it is expected to have at this time a groat demonstra¬ tion of the Woodman from the sur¬ rounding states. The meeting at Leguin Friday night is to be a public one, and every one is invited to attend. LOST —One black and tan hound with nip in one ear. Covington Dog Tax Collar. Reward. Notify Lester Lee, Covington, Ga.—Adv. BUYING AS WE DO Mostly from the Manufacturers, we are certainly in a position to give you the best prices. We have the best line of Ladies and Childrens Hats 50c to $2.25 Ready to Wear Dresses 75c to $1.25 Middy Blouses and Middy Coats 50c to $1.25 Ready to Wear Skirts .. .. 75c to $1.25 Shirt Waits, 40 to 65c and $1.00. Best 50 cent Corset. Ladies,’ Children’s and Men’s Hosiery,—10, 1 5 and 25c Men’s Dress Hats, ... $1,00 to $2.75 All sorts of Men’s, Women’s&ChildrensSIlOfiS, from 10c toS2.98 Best line oi 5 10, 25, 50c Merchandise. Best 50g OfBSS Shirts. No better line of medium priced goods were over offered in Covington than we have. Gold Band Cups, Saucers, and Plates, 75c per set. Come to See Us Pennington’s 5 & 10c Department Store COVINGTON, GEORGIA. SHERIFF’S SALE. GEORGIA—Newton County: Will be sold before the court bouse door in said county on the first Tues¬ day in November, 1916, within the le¬ gal hours of sale, to the highest bid¬ der for cash, the following described property to-wit: All that tract or parcel of land sit¬ uated, lying and being in the town of Mansfield, Ga., being lots Nos. 1. 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, LI, 12, 13, and 14 in Block “F” of the plat of said town, each of said lots fronting 25 feet on First Avenue and running back even FREE DELIVERY ANYWHERE IN NEWTON COUNTY On Purchases Amounting to $25. or More For the convenience of our customers we have installed an auto truck which enables us to make FREE DELIVERY of any Furniture Bought of Us. K. E. EVERITT Furniture and Undertaking Covington, Georgia width 110 feet to alley, except lot No. 1, which fronts on First Avenue 40 feet and runs back along Poplar street 113 feet and along alley 13 1-2 feet, upon which said property is the home place of W. B. Beckwith. Deed for the pur¬ pose of levy and sale having been exe¬ cuted and recorded as required by law. Levied on and to be sold as the proper¬ ty of W. B. Beckwith, defendant in execution in favor of S. C. Steadman for the use of the Bank of Covington, issued from the Superior Court of New¬ ton County. Defendant In possession notified in terms of the law. This October 10, 1916. 11-2, 4. S. M. HAY. Sheriff. rage seven Patronize our Advertisers and pass the other fellow by. ' It is nothing but right for you to pat¬ ronize those, who make the suc¬ cess of your county paper possi¬ ble. While trading with our customers, don’t forget to say, “I SAW IT IN THE NEWS.