Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, May 21, 1919, Page 8

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© CABBAGE ROOT MAGGOT. This is the most important insect of the early cabbages. It attacks lfiower, turnip and radish, doing considerable amount of injury to b The adult i« a hairs, two winged only 516 of an inch long, and % {somevwhat resembling the housefly but bt Riistinctls smatler, with a narrow body.| I 50 48 to aflow/time fo f;" t April or early May these lay Wh"!'hn“' for two . or m M Lga about 1-5 of an inch long in or|OAEe o LWE OF LOReeCH m,‘ "near crevices on or mear the «tehmlo‘l i young plant. These egas hatch % B trom 3t0 10 days. 'The litte white| Fellurs pédaptly to 4 o the minence o rasp the sur-|reo mites "”‘ B e N Bmaggots commence to rasp the sur- s pooltry, Sace of the tender roots gradually|'a*E® part of s #Smining into them. This causes dec: THE ASPARAGUS BEETLE. o the tissues and in many cases :lc.\rh | There are many ol tar the market which are more economieal. . job, whitewash and crude car! very good. One cup of crn'&etrd bolic acid to, five gallons.of Wl | sprayed over the whole"inte: house will last for a sm,m\ to use any of these paints %o the plant. From & to 4 weeks are| Both young shoots'and leaty:tops of iyequired for the magsots to mature.|asparagus are attatked by’ the {fMhev descend into the ground tojand adults of ‘thé asparagus transforn ing stage) and|The shoots are rendefed ‘unfit for use There|and the tops weakened. ur| The adult iy one-fourth ot an inch Arst brood long, with wing covers yellow, ‘bor- dama |dersd and marked with dark ‘blue. The ntomologist| grub is threestenths of ah inch lom tural _college |grayish or olive, with-a Shinthg hh& he following|head. O Raties emerge from winter mneru n-|about the time twhen the ,‘ylpknoo u 0% reads. Begs areleid on the paper | shoots, and later on the stems. There fme of|are two or thres gZenerations each|’ | year. ¢ and po: vear but the rious Tate Prot. G. H. Lamson, entomelogist:tor The Connecticut Agricultural ‘. college ' at. > offers the rallowmz lu:lestlons par " ofiac long as i cutting season lasts; pe-i=ty as | afterward, if the beetles or larvee are abe ~labundant ahd Hable to caunse:damage, Bolic v he preparedspray heavily. with lead arsenate (two 3r- |ounces pasts in one galion of ‘water), b oan | qt. |directing” the spdy Iveny the _plant < va1. |from different am Seedling and bt |mewly:set beds s hoia " pe - praved e water aqd|When the beetles fitst appear. r and forth b 723, T pump or stir violent-| ICE OR THE FARM. thickens on gut Agricy uted with 30 before u houl ion service of Conneeti- aral College at Storrs has been making' a survey to .- determine | what_percentage of 4 normal ice .crop as_harvested 11,'s season. fer use of fa depression{ agoling milk on the furm. each plant ne resilts of the survey show that average of 58.8 per.cent. é2'a mor- | mal_crop of natural ice was harvested thelin the state, according to W. A. Rhea, FIGNTING HEAD LICE. k n. Xo let-up| on daitvman. - ;Only ' two should be al-|counties in the northeastern part of o remedies on| the state show 70 per cent. 6f a nor- ho m lard about| e the south and western| h 1 thoroughly | s low as 47 per cent. = and neck is! hece Agures are on Connecticut w s safe to say that the same rue for all of svuthern New| t present very few artifi-| Comnecticut, and the. these plants will be used s city consumption. < tor par- bave solved | In tce from T8l da!r!’- i b il -have o spring I otk ! 1 'mean that the ~ooled immled SHOULD HAVE NT AND FARM BUREAU EARLY-LAYING PULLETS secd corn| lowa. Backs | w and bl avenously s or seri- treated thelt, The acre- increased, rected, and stock impdrted. he sunervision of’ county over 300,000 farmers tn tae| ™ state ucted - demonstra- legum 6.000 ;AW over | tions was as fol Corn, = §00,000; | cotion, 500,600: wheat, -~ 160060; -.rye, S 69.000: soy beans, 18,000; veivet beats, e 00000: alfalfa, 45,000; peanute, . 100, | 0607 Trish potatoes. 15,000; swest po- < | tatoes, 11,000; - miscelluneous = forage omplete record. of the . splendid ments - of tha- Gounty agents Aiewspaper - columns, great- triath: count¥should have a farm eady | burean’ and a f m adviser, and the | people shoutd Gehind them: and s better investment i3/ NORTH STERLING A nd Mre. Henry H. Crowell, who have n Spending two months in litornia and the west, have returned me. in thej in the BUYTETAGCESHE ol o] spring. E K The prospect for a crop- is' good,.as i look in y use around nearly every apple tree -ds - in fall| e roost suppert, or in corners, you!bloom 2 may find numerous tiny &pots as if fine | r. and Mre. ‘George- C.. ‘Spoorner, [ olored pepper had heen sprinkled | spent Friday with: relatives in:Dantel- | o Mtentin this the only son. pereent ple indication of but lift| Mr. and Mrs. H, H, Crowsll spent roost or or boards apart and Friday with relatives ‘in Danfelson. Jou will seo thousands of them r. and Mrs.- Walter Earl’of Wor- - and complete,|coster spent the week end \at’ . 'O, provided thorough w ork is done, ac- [’lummnr ording to Roy Jones, poultryman| John of ‘New Ym was r the extension service of Connecti-|here at h|s 'arm reéently. st Agricultural college at Storrs. All| Henry Giibert of DUILisn® Tled'on fested woodwork should be thor-|relatives here last week. pughly drenched with some liquid| A large number ef loeal:people at- which is strong enough to kill all m ing!tended the Wejcome ‘Home day eele- ites by contact and long-lived enough |bration in Danielsou Feiday. * retatn its effectiveness for a season. adication is simnle ik WEEPING RECOMMENDATIONS, ‘contrive-how they.can get. the- better !"‘ { Two new houses are heing bullt Mr..trflmflv: ri¥als, may-prove:helpful-riy. BULLETIN, WEDNESUDRY, MAT Zis 1919 m\!‘hm 10! be! unities g iabor sus- | sindustrial. com- l it capital ‘and labor - are . to -to, ‘:nh‘glhl:fle’ [ns};ad ol" = being, partnera, y: are’ to. con- tinde:to - distrost. on: anather: cand ] jone. ‘another, or ./ what , perhaps gmh -to the’ “g.ma th.inz, calculate they:can:manage to ‘extort cu tol:e oné’! work \enough to. make enterprise wrm)a. “tfi“ other, " justice - m treatment en to ‘make | tolerable. “Thatiibad' road.has turned| o0t .a'blind ‘alley. ; It.is 1o ‘thorough- fare to real prosperity.. We must find another ; infanother diréction and:to aivéry different destination. It thust lead not ‘merely to. accsmmoda- tlon but also to a : genuine. -co-opera- tion-and partnership based upon'a real community ot tntereu and participa~ tion'in control - pital and Labor There is'now in'fact'a real commun- ity ‘of interést ~hetweer . capital Ind laber, ‘butiit hes ¢ business men’ and gense “of our work such a they. reall eeek and s Tabor ertotation lies, ot * cotree,| chiefly ‘with the states; but the new| spirit” and . method of organization which .must be effected are not to be brought about by légisiation: so much | as by the common counsel and volun- {91y eo-gperation of capitalict man- | ger and workman. = Tegislation can| g0 - only ;e very: mlmbew;v in.. com- anding wl 3 erganizatigh ' u%’in&hstrs e e v&il’; ytl corporatd anditidividual -ini of . practical . _buginess arrangement. Those' who really desire a new rela-| tionship between capital and ldbor reddily find & way 16 bring it ‘Bbout; and perhaps federal legislatlon ca Rélp more than state legiclation could.| The ebject of all reform in this:es: sential matter -must.; be thesgenuirie| | demberatization of industry, based ups on o full recognition of the right ofi those who work,'in whatever rank.’to|* the part they are:to play:in:industey.| Some positive legisiation 15 practicable. | The congréss has already shown the, way to one reform -whici should: be| world-wide by, éstablishing the eight- houf daf ds the standard day in every| 14 ‘of labor -over rwhich it can ex-! ercise control. It has scaght to find the way' to’ prevent ohild labor #ill, T 'Hope’ and beliede presentiy Tt has served the whole o be Teading the 3 oping the ¥ eguarding | tlori ‘by co-ordi several agencies” of and by ction and individuals. cor- Depart men ates; he Miberty of ‘gently that his e | als, rather, and eommon servants, very mich. nee great shipyards, new and ' old, o e N e A to have considerable favor say ‘hat he is perfectly .pouttrymen, says Mr. Jones. h.uhrhmuym'n Happy thnfl.."“n an and, very ‘welcome.” Our | er. | shall be stable and that it shall be con stant and in its revenue-yielding pow ‘We have found the main source to such plan - Dismiss the idea that they are High Priced! NNSYLVAN.A Vacuur Cus 6000 Mile Tires and Penns;j jlvama “Ton Tested” Tubes (guaranteed tensflq st_rgngth 1% tons per square inch), under an economical and efficient zone selling plan, are marketed by responsible dealers at standardized net prices uniform throughout the United States. Price Sdiedule Effect!ve May 12th: g § GEEGCYRGRUBRER N 3 PENNSYLVANIA RUBBER COMPANY IEANNETTE. PA NEW YORK BRANCH, 1889 BROADWAY Pennsylvania UUM CUP 6000 MILE TIRES lines of em an where will least of the peopic. permanent t the Fede; provided for d workable | well cquipped ine placing of the faxes |chemical ingustry. with which we will 10 o hamper .the lite |be brought into’ competition, was and ears to come. ccentuated fo s | that it may have to be met by counter | wa: {legislation. This subject has fortu-|lic atcly been exhaustively Investigated nited States tariff commission. | of t report of that commission n very clearly that we lack and that we ought to have the instru- thees Least of al ties of o the policy |} of 1313 of| ufactures hould we adopted in abroad, depart the Tarift . modern life om chemical plants. Gerroan it when' it required steadfast courage|bee so much beforehand W common conviction: and T fo; one, So far from | hostile legislation' by other nations isfthat in the case of the tslegraphs and |\\ot bevond the range of possibility and | telephones, as in the case of the rafl it is clearly desirable in the pub- iterest that some legislation sheald be considered which may tend to make indiepensable ‘Instrumentali- a uniform ané co-ordinated system which will affora oc L those who use them as omplete ane . r of 1917 and | Permitting the* frec ry into the necessary for the aévurance of|certain means of communication with {trial - enterprise 1n: the Immediate m ~h, no doubt. made neces-| United Staies of the - raw mamrld»- and equitable treatment. The|all parts of the country as has o long ture. Unweual opportunities will prec ) ies of the | Needed to supplement and enrich °“”al1emion of the congress has been|been afforded by the postal system of eEfi‘,i'( ”-’”5,;“&"} = n be "u‘f;\li:::n find su{ficicn[\o\'rn abundant is matter on t occasions | the government and at rates as uni- chants and prod 3 r the easier circum-| re parts of measures which are now|form and intellig Expert advice i kets and large' fields for, profitable 11 lons. The nd can now happily | eed promipt a by the tariff commission|of course, ava his very prac vestmert will be opened. to our tree‘lfl which those obligations have aris- | Among these, T hope you | 3 wa ially the same that have|tical matter, and the public interest is capital. But'it.is not of that I|en are very great indeed, but they are g cxeises upen veri- | ed by previous adminis-| manifest. er the telegreph ner am’ thinking; jt' s not ‘Chiefly of that!not so zreat as to make it difficult for | oy irers andthe fixes, uponis ommend that this phase|the telephone e of the comntry L am th - great indutries|the nation to meet them, and meet | retai] sales. They are inequal in me‘dflm"'rons and that in dets question receive the early|can be said to be in any sense a ns- Rrostrated by fhe War Wait to be ré-|them, perbaps, In a single Eenera- | pemerieon Siire o I e ain parte of SUF tAriff Bl the congress. onal eysiem. There are many con the many parts of theltion, by taxes which will neither cru. Blon gifferent individuals. Their col-|Consideration: must be ‘borne In mind| WIll you not permit me, turning|fusions and inc stencies ofv.rates world whete what mill be lacking is|nor discourage. These are not s lection cult and expensive. Those | are po! matters, to speak once|The s by which com 0ot brafy ov wiiling harkds or organ-as they seem, so great B M ng and very earnestly of the pro-imun ~mentalities {zing capasity or experienced sl mmense sums w Brecly Evadenilye thalreans consideration should be Bt cd amendment to the constitution, could and machiriery 4nd raw tmaterjals;and cap-|added to the' immense tment of retail pri On the!of the manwfacture ‘of d!which would ext the suffrage to|satisi Hal T believe -that ‘our business men;|had to 2 | other hand. T should Seomme that it 1g|Telated chemicals. D women and which passed the house ofof. ofr merchants, Gur manufacturers gnd S A e et ;g b" pendence upon German supplies .before entative the last session of|qu our capitalists” will 'have the vision|of those E axpoient o mentainza o et le | the war made the interry congress? It seems to me that|and of t to see that: rityilione: DUE O] that they might . be loaned. to. the Juatess v 2nd the fact|, cayge of cicentional: economic consideration of justice and ofauthorit the, world minictass {6 brosperiis i #85- | Governments with which we Were aec liqours will presently no | tyrhance. The close relation. hetween T calls for the immedi- | u erpuwirere; tirt 4h ,,‘5, S St s e B M » source of revenue by |the manufacture of, dyestuffs on the that an, sense 2 sofidarits of interest through- will, ‘of, conirse, constitute. assets, not |t ro kes it the more necessary|one hand and of. the explosives. and mission forthwith fo the legis. out',the’ wold_of ‘suterorise and. that |1 bitities. and’ will not have o b 1AL the arefully re-| poisonous gases, sn .the other, more veral states. Through- |even i oUr; dealings: with the ‘countries that st bl e el U, ® equivalent | over, has given the industry an excep- out il the world this lonz delayed ex- | benefi ? Have need ef our préducts and our( ' o D > peyer | revenue be found | tional significance and value. Although' tension of the suffrage i B i money will teach them .to deem us| Income Tax the Mainstay. will be legitimate, and not|the United States will gjadly and un-|in the United States, lonzer I believe Remove Ban on mare man\‘ae\r f;len;rmuae fagas- | burdensome, to draw upon. But you |hesitatingly Jofir i ‘the ptogram of In- than anywhere else, the necessity for| The de: S 2 sttips: we 3 T “t The main thing we shall have to have at hand in the Treasury Depart- | ternational disarmament,- ill, never- it and the immense advantage, of it to|forces of ¢ sped serve. jcare for is that our taxation shall rest ment many experts who can advise |theless, be a policy of obvious pru-|the national life has been urged and| to me én- Our mew merohant:ahips;whichi hawe | a8 Hghtly 25 possible on the productive | vou upon the - matters. much better |dence to make certain of the success- debated by women and men who saw |t 1 upo: }in some quarters been feared: 28 deg- | sources of the country,-that its rates than T can. | can only suggest the|ful maintenance of many strong and the necd it and urged the p of | g7 17 P e from which it must be drawn. I tak may w..;n be Afi‘m,.‘ lner:ughly l\mx‘bo\cr for our country the distinction ut“s'n ared’ o the . Uee -of Vorl for gronted that its roainstay 2 monopoly capable of exercisifig a com-|being amonz the to act in a great that the '.h-.t”uscv AL prove, Lg:m: 5 f{!hcnte'flflh be u-:»zm ome r:\ Jz ;‘(4 No Fear of Foreign Competition. | petition ‘of a vecuifarly -insidious and | veform 7 . serviceabic " to.overy maritime. { coss profits tax and the estate tax. All. There is, unfortunately, no occasion dangerous-kind. '+ Return of Wires and Railroads. in’, restoring mbch thess can be adjusted to yield coa- for undertaking in the immediato fu-| Retalistory” Tariff Laws Necessary. | . : than would otherw: éext | stant and adequate returns and yetture any gemeral revision of our sys- o telegtanhiiabd stelephoge ilines Doseiblc the torinaxe wantosly destroy. [not constitute & 00 grievous burden | tem of import duticr. o serious , Tue United Stafes should moreover, | will, of course. be returned to their | PrO ed.in the,war.” I Tiave only o suggost|on the taxpayer. A revision of the |dangor of forcign compeiition now |Lave the méans of.properly protecting owners on as.tho relransfer. C"‘"““‘ . that there are many points at which |income tax has already been provid- ¢ American industries. nur;;“e‘;d“""e"fv" Il e [ ecied without aminisiestive-vori (1L LIS A0 We can facilitale American enterprise | ed for by the act of 1918, but 1 think 3 emerged from the war \naed agalnst By foreign nations infusion: so <oon, that is. as the change|tien of uzricy i in foréign trade’ by. opportunc legisia- | you will find that further changes can less disturbed and less weakened than | OT9CT that we may be assured of that can be made with least possible in- G insofar as it -applies 10 wines 5 3 |equality of treatment-which we hope convenience to the public and to the, Pealcd a plies o tion and make itieasy. : for . American|be made to advantage both in the amy of the European countries which| 5" ceord and.to-gprombte .the world owners themselves. The railroads will|and beers matchints {0, go where ther Will be|rates of the tax and in the method of are ou petitors | in ‘mianUCtITe. | orar. OLE HALE Saoes £ (hey. Bow | b hARed overio thets caros ot Thali Tl insceriy s tAlbt Hatl RN ey welcomed - u5.'fricnds * rather than|its cellection. The excess profits tax trial blishments have siang provide no.weapon of retaliation end of the calendar vear: if I were injsoon be ai Ty puct in Washingten dreaded antagonists. Amenica, has-a |need not long be maintained 4t the { to greater strain than in caso. other gom i e i ; 5 c governments en- immediate contact with the adminis-|again to report upon the _matiers mfi ’&ngn‘nmor-ble ‘service to.per-|rates which were necessary while the bor force to a more se-'act lezielation unequal in its bearing trative questions which must govern| which made by presence at the peace obm.| i$ -;\;d-m; th: em:\rmzcm wg ;m;mous expenses of the war had 3 sorganization and - this s on our products, as compared with the the ret nsfer of the telegraph gnd‘eabxc apparently imperative, and to put ) macak iz ot the v;olzx}‘ hejoes | !;l;:’mt‘ns;a"uld}tiflze‘“md“chll-(,fi o he Jme 0 seck an org. products of other councries. Though| telephone lines T could name the exact mysel? at the service of the o | Bagk. i ® sys ¢hic dvantag he work of e lhlfl. d putting.a solid structure ot | wi Al our, llrml cot reach undue profits vithout dis- lan the enterprise and activity . tion will, | am we are us far.as possible 1 nz date for their return also. | to enter ypon any cou of rétatiation, in direct fact that questione involved I can only suggest|ceutive Until T am|in every ufraid !he capacity and the resources of thelr | we must fl‘l-llkb face **- 52 or advice. matier of administration er contact with the practical |counsel that may scem to demand -

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