' was 1 A MIRACLE IN, WHEAT' NEW RICHES FROM ALASKA FOR THE FARMER. __ Hard Wheat From Fall Sowing â€" Yields Up to 222 Buslicls to the Acre! When the United States paid eighty millions for the Territory of Alaska, it was to the fur the pur- chasers looked for a return on the investment. When gold began to pour in from that great country the investment was pronounced good. But‘not in gold alone was Alaska destined to repay those early states- men for their realâ€"estate specula- tion. Years after the yellow metal was discovered, there came an aged farmer to that far northland, and took back to the States the basis for wealth to his country by the side of which the gold from the hills and icy river-beds should pale into in- signiï¬cance, writes Oscar F. G. Day 'n the Saturday Evening Post. It was in 1903 that Abraham Ad- ams, a native of Kentucky, who had gone with the “star of Empire†to the great West, to farm it, was taken with a desire to trv his forâ€" tunes in Alaska. Leaving his ranch in northern Idaho, he made a trip to the land of promise and of gold, but nothing came of his attempts at discovery. Turning his attention then to exploring, he drifted along the coast of eastern Alaska, where the Japaneurren flows near the shore and makes of the land from coast to mountain eternal spring. Many miles he explored. investigatâ€" ing the possibilities of that country for future farming and grazing, preparing himself for a report to the farmers of his community. He found many beautiful bays, splendid beaches, sweeps of timber, and meadows heavy with juicy grasses. Here and there were trac- es c†gold, but not of promising quant'ty, and then he chanced up- on ' A SURPRISING DISCOVERY. Lodged in a nook under protecting rock, sheltered from the winds, was a little familiar patch. Interested at once, he investigated and found that here a patch of wheat was growing, far from any living hu- man that could have planted it. On hands and knees he pulled away the matted straws. Yes, it was certain- lj wheat that was just ripening. The explorer sought among the thick stems for some heads, but the wild game had been before him, and he was‘just about to give up when he discovered one head of wheat almost intact. A gigantic head it Fully four inches long with its rough bearding, and broad in proportion. Packing the head carefully away, the old man brought it back with him to his ranch at Juliactta, Idaâ€" ho. ,Not a word did he say to his neighbors of his ï¬nd. Whether it was wild wheat or not he could not say. Perhaps, some wild bird had ï¬lled its crop with the grains in an unknown region, where it grew na- tive, and coming to Alaska deposi- ted the seed in a fertile spot. And yet it was only curiosity that moved Abraham Adams. He never dream- ed of his ï¬nd being of any value except as an experiment for his own pleasure.~ In the fall of 1904 Mr. Adams planted his head of Alaska wheat on high and allâ€"too-dry land â€" the natural soil of Idaho. It grew rap- idly‘when the spring opened its founts, and in the summer he had seven pounds of wheat from this one head. That was startling. He hardly dared tell a farmer of it. He examined the kernels. Four times as large as ordinary wheat, and in colorâ€"instead of the homely brown- ishâ€"gray of wheat of commerce â€" the prettiest cream color Without a darker spot. SEVEN POUNDS OF WHEAT from one head, and the ï¬nest-look- ing wheat mortal had ever seen! Abraham Adams began to dream. Having tested the grains as win- ter wheat, Mr. Adams . seven pounds to try as spring wheat, and in 1906 he planted the whole seven pounds. Sturdily it grew, and when it was harvested be weighed 1545 pounds. His Alas- ka ï¬nd had broken the world’s re- cord for wheat yield! More than two hundred and twenty-two bush- els to the acre was the ratiopf yield, and that without any speeial petting or manipulation. With the world’s average yield 12.7 bushels tn the acre, and a fair yield for exâ€" W Satisfaction means “that which satisï¬es.†Use “Salada†Tea and you will appreciate this deï¬nition. Sold by all grocers in sealed lead packets only. a revolution in the wheat industry of the world. But still there was something that might dash every hope of a wheat miracle. Was this Alaska wheat of good quality? Would it make good bread? With this last idea in mind the experimenting farmer carried a small quantity of his wheat to the Idaho experiment station at Mos- cow . He knew he had a wheat that yielded past any belief. He had something marvelous in a wheat that yielded equally as well planted Winter or spring. Did he have a good wheat? The chemists and ex- perts at the station tested it and pronounced it a good quality of hard wheat. Hard wheat! That was sufï¬cient. But Adams knew he must have patience for another year. In the fall of 1906 the 1545 pounds lwere planted in ï¬ields by the side of the famous Blue Stein and Club wheat grown in that section. VVatchâ€" ing their comparative growth, Mr. Adams picked on the same day green heads of Club wheat and gren heads of his Alaska wheat, the latter so many times larger than the ordinary wheat that the Club wheat seemed hardly started. THE FARMER WAS JUBILANT. Then Nature took a hand, and hail- storms of the worst kind came, locating down the ordinary wheat until it was not ï¬t to harvest. The farmer, discouraged, went out to his Alaska wheatâ€"ï¬elds and saw that the sturdy stems had partly withstood the storms, and he ï¬nally harvested 53,000 pounds of seed. Now was the time to make his ï¬n- al test. He had enough for a test from winter-grown. Taking this to the experimental station, he soon received a report which made him for the ï¬rst time that he had some- thing worth giving to the public. The station chemist wrote: “The kernels from the fall-sown wheat were plump and sound and doubtless will grade No. 1. Judging from the chemical and physical con- dition of this sample. it will pro- bably take rank with the best grade of Blue Stem for flour. “The sample grown from springâ€" sown wheat showed by chemical analysis a somewhat higher protein content (this being an indication of its probable strength for bread- making purposes). I am inclined to think that the wheat that you have here is the equal, if not the superior, of our Blue Stem for flourâ€"making purposes. I should like to make a mill test whenever you can send me a sufï¬cient quan- tity for that purpose.†These arethe facts about the won- .derful wheat of which the world will soon be talking. Farmers do not believe it; wheat speculators do not believe it; but those who have traveled to see it do believe it. Mr. Adams had his ï¬elds surveyed and 'has absolute proof of the yield from each ï¬eld. Te has tried his wheat in other lands, and in some places it did better than in Idaho. Alabama raised wheat from it with leaves seven-eighths of an inch b road, GROWING LIKE CORNSTALKS. As a last test, Mr. Adams sent single heads of wheat to other parts of the country where he had men he could trust to plant and ascer- tain the result. Reports are just coming to him, and he ï¬nds that in other States his Alaska wheat does better than on its home soil. In Ala- bama a head was planted Decemâ€" ber 31, was up January 30, waist- high April 1, with leaves seven- eighths of an inch broad, and July 7 was harvested. It showed to be hard wheat of a ï¬ne quality, and the one head yielded the same as the ï¬rst head planted in Idaho. Under ordinary soil conditions the new wheat will yield two hun- dred bushels to the acre, under exâ€" tra conditions above that. What will be the outcome? Had all America had Alaska wheat to seed this year, the American crop _ alone would have been ï¬ve billions cf bushels. Does that not mean a saved his revolution in the wheat industry? Will the food of the poor become 1so cheap that there will be no fam- iiies'l Or will farm property rise in value with the capacity for the yield? All this is conjecture, but these things are certain: That wheat Alaska has given 11s will withstand hail if not too heavy. It will withstand frost. It grows hard wheat from fall sowing. It yields up to 222 bushels to the acre. It will grade up to No. 1 hard. And, last and best of all, it will bring back wheat-raising to the worn-out farms of the East where, with wheatâ€"yields two hundred bushels to the acre, farmers can afâ€" ford to use manures and chemicals, and make a proï¬t. ' If all America could seed With the TWENTYâ€"DOLLAR WHEAT. Since the above article was in . type the following despatch has ‘ been received from Spokane, Wash- ington :â€" “In the Juliaetta county, in northern Idaho, Abraham Adams, formerly a lumberman in Wiscon- sm, will clean up more than $1,- 000,000 from 700 acres of land this season, in addition to producing grain which gives every promise of revolutionizing the wheat producâ€" tion of the world. Conservative es- timates place the crop at from 70,- 000 to 75,000 bushels of; grain, which Adams and his son-in-law, O. K. Hobe, a wholesale lumber dealer of Minneapolis, have contracted to sell to farmers at $20 a bushel, not more than one bushel going to each buyer. . “Adams acquired a tract of land in the Gem State six years ago and sowed his land to wheat, harvesting from 23 to 30 bushels of blue stem club and other varieties from every acre under cultivation. ' “One day early in 1904 he receivâ€" ed a single stalk of wheat, picked by a friend in one of the fertile val- leys in Alaska, and sowed the ker- ' nels in his back garden. A crop of seven pounds resulted the follow- ing summer. This Adams planted in the spring of 1906. harvesting 1,545 pounds of grain in July, or over 220 bushels per acre. Embold- ened by his successhe sowed the en- tire crop in the fall of 1906, anl last summer cut enough grain to sow 700 acres of-land, from which is now being cut what is believed to be the world’s record yield.†a; RIGIIT IIANDEDNESS. How Gne Hand Came to be Chosen For Special Training. ‘Fixed in all our military and so- eial customs and living at the base of language itself are two facts which solve the riddle and make clear whence and how right-handâ€" edness arose. countries since man used imple- ments of offense and defence, the sinistral or cardiac side was proâ€" tected by the shield and the sinis- tral hand was called the shield hand, as the dextral was calledethe spear hand. Next to ï¬ghting and ccntemporary with it was the need cf barter. Now, the fundamental condition of bartering was count- ing with the low numbers, one to ten. The ï¬ngers of the free or dex- tral hand were, naturally, ï¬rst used. Every drill and action of the soldier, is dextral in every detail. The dominancy of the right eye is shown in ï¬ring from the right shoulder and sighting with the right eye. _._-._ .4}..â€" HOT WEATHER AILMENTS A medicine that will keep children well is a great boon to every mo- ther. This is just what Baby’s Own Tablets do. An occasional dose keeps the little stomach and bowels right, and prevents sickness. During the hot stomach troubles speedily turn to fatal diarrhoea or cholera infanâ€" tum and if a medicine like Baby’s Own Tablets is not at hand tne child may die in a few hours. The wise mother will always keep a box 05 Tablets in the house and give them to her children occasionally to clear out the stomach and bow- els and keep them well.’ Don’t wait until the child is sickâ€"the deâ€" lay may cost a precious littie life. Get the Tablets now and you may feel reasonably safe. Every mo- ther who uses these Tablets praises them and that is the best evidence that there is no other medicine for children so good. And the mother has the guarantee of a government analyst that the Tablets contain no opiate or harmful drug. Dea- lers sell the Tablets at 25 cents a box or you can get them by mail from The Dr. Williams’ Medicine 00., Brockville, Ont. >75 HEATING THE HOUSE. One hears many objections to the use of furnaces. The most common one is that rooms on the north side of the house are hard to heat. If the house is in an exposed situaâ€" tion and there is a. heavy air pres; sure against one side of the house, the heat is naturally driven to the other side, for not only is the cold air forced in on the one side, but it is drawn out on the other. It frequently happens that such a house should not have been heated by hot air, but by hot water or steam; a mistake which the heating engineer should have avoided. A frequent cause of trouble comes from having the furnace set in lthe middle of the cellar, or perhaps on the opposite side from the cell rooms. This is a mistake; it should be on the cold side, making the "1-: me“,- wheat it would, at only ï¬ftyltance to the coldest rooms as Sl'lnl‘t 'cents a bushel, add nearly two and lag possibleâ€"Suburban Life. -â€"- h..‘.‘.._...~.â€" weather months “ ceptional land of twenty bushels la half billions of dollars to thel ' ‘ " here was the prospect of a miracle; wealth of the farmers every year. 1. The Difference in Sewing Machines ï¬ll It is a mistaken idea that sewing machines are pretty much alike, when as a matter, of fact there'is a vast difference. 1]} There is but one machine that sews better? than any otherâ€"and that one is the Singer.“ ‘1] This is because the Singer idea is dis- tinctiveâ€"every year shows improvement in that idea. Q} This is because the Singer factories are not only equipped with tools and machinery, better calculated to make good sewing ma-~ ,ehines than any other, but this equipment .is unique and not to be found elsewhere.‘ El] This is because a half century has been devoted to training and Specializing men,‘ ‘E’rv construction. each to do one thing best in sewing machine The Singer’s superiorityâ€"- its lifetime-lasting valueâ€"does not appear, on the surface. ' i a One machine does otherâ€"~and that one saw better than any is the Singer. Sold only by Singer Sewing Machine Company. TORONTO 312 Mannlng chambers In all tribes and. ‘ MONTREAL 533 Board of Trade Bldg WI :‘JNIPEG 304 Maln Street Indoors or outdoors there is nothing quite so good as Triscuitmthe Shredded in smallest bulk all the muse qualities of wheat. Wheat Wafer, which contains le-building, brain-producmg TRY IT AS A TOAST WITH BUTTER, CHEESE 0R FRUIT. 501!) BY ALL GBOCERS THE WORD. Today whatever may annoy, The wprd'for me is joy, just simple Joy; The joy of life; The joy of children and of wife; The joy of bright blue skies; The joy of rain; the glad surprise Of twinkling stars that shine at night; The joy of winged things upon their flight; The joy of noon-day, and the tired True joyousness of eventide; The joy of labor, and of mirth; The joy of air, and sea, and earthâ€" . The countless joys that ever flow from Him Whose vast beneï¬cence dot hd'vn The lustrous light of day, And lavish gifts divine upon our way. Whate’er there be of sorrow I’ll put off till tomorrow, And when tomorrow comes, why then ’Twill be to-day and joy again! --â€"John Kendrick Bangs. >3 COURAGE OF INDIVIDUALITY. The test of true journalism, as of everything else, 'lies in its effects, which should be educative and ele- vating, infusing a love of right, a hatred of what is low, petty and false, a zeal for the reform of what is wrong and to uphold the cause of right and truth. If, in rising from the perusal of a journal we .feel stimulated to take sides with the cause of righteousness and jus- tice, even at the seeming sacriï¬ce of our personal interests, we feel assured that such a publication is founded on the enternal verities. Such a journalist asks himself ï¬rst and foremost in the consideration of every topic. what is right, where lies the truth, and having settled this, all else is plain sailing. Thus tc elevate any subject is to remove us out of the mists and fogs of pre- judice and passion and petty per- sonality. Self and all its blinding influences are left behind, and the truth is luminous in its own heavâ€" enly light. Such a journal can never be moved from its moorings, and any opposition is as futile as any angry waves at the base of a heaven piercing rock, whose bark- ing is unheard and unheeded at its summit. This is the spirit of true- journalism, and this spirit should pervade its whole course- In this- way the press can be made a power and a blessing. To lower the stand ard to more personality is pro tanto. to abuse the power of the press, to degrade those within its influence, and to.be veered around with every' wind of passion or selfâ€"interest. Such journalism is a counterfeit,, unworthy of the name. 4' A. CONTEST WORTH ENTERING... A Life Annuity of FIFTY-TWO DOLLARS is offered by the ORANGE MEAT people to the one: sending in the largest number of bottoms of ORANGE "MEAT pack-- ages before May 31. 1909. This. means that the winner will receive- One Dollar EVERY WEEK, or FIFTY-TWO DOLLARS every year, as long as he or she lives, or they can exchange it for a CASH PRIZE cl SEVEN HUNDRED DOLLARS. Besides the above there is a sec- ond Cash Prize of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS, also other Cash Prizes as follows:â€" ' Ten Cash Prizes of TWENTY DOLLARS ea‘ch. , Ten Cash Prizes of TEN DOL- LARS each. ' Twenty Cash Prizes of FIVE DOLLARS each, and ONE HUN.- DRED Cash Prizes of ONE DOL- LAR each. The only condition attached is that you cut out the bottoms of the» ORANGE MEAT packages and send them in to ORANGE MEAT, Kingston. The bottom of a Jumbo package counts equal to Three of the smaller size. You should be able to win one of the above prizes if you start immediately and get your friends to help you. Send your name and address to ORANGE MEAT, Kingston, TUâ€" DAY, and state that you are en- » tering the contest. It .is surely iworth trying for. v _ - >5 The healthiest streets are usually those running north and south. If a man who owns an automobile is a bachelor it’s his own fault. Hong-Kong harbor, with a water area of some ten square miles, is one of the ï¬nest in the world. 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