St. Helens mist. (St. Helens, Or.) 1913-1933, March 26, 1915, HOME AND FARM MAGAZINE SECTION, Page 4, Image 10

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    TOME AND FARM MAGAZINE SECTION
4
Editorial Page of Home and Farm Magazine Section
Timely, Pertinent Comment Upon Men and Affairs, Following the Trend of World News;
Suggestions of Interest to Readers; Hints Along Lines of Progressive I arm Thought.
TO ADVHRT1SKRS
Advertisers in thin locality who wish to fully
cover all sections of Oreijon and Washington
and a portion of Idaho will apply to local pub
lishers for rates.
General advertises may address C. L. Bur
ton, Advertising Manager of Oregon-Wa-hinr-ton-Idaho
Farmer. Oregonian Building, Port
land, Oregon, for rates and information.
TO READERS
Readers arc requested to Bend letters and
articles for publication to The Editor, Oregon-Washington-Idaho
Farmer, Oregonian Build
ing, Portland, Oregon.
Discussions on questions and problems that
bear directly on the agricultural, livestock and
poultry interests of the Northwest and on the
uplift and comfort of the farm home alwaya
art welcomed. No letters treating of religion,
politics or the European war are solicited, for
the .Oregon-Washington-Idaho .Farmer .pro
claims neutrality on these matters.
Comparatively brief contributions are pre
ferred to long ones. Send us also photographs
of your livestock and farm scenes that you
think would be of general interest. We wish
to make this magazine of talue to you. Help
us do it
POWER MACHINERY FOR THE FARM.
THE gasoline engine hits long since passed
the experimental stage. There was a
time when it took both skill and pa
tience to manipulate one of the "monsters,"
but with all the improvements that havo
come by the application of skill auil genius,
a gas engine is as safe ami reliable as any
other pieee of equipment about the farm.
Any equipment that will obviate labor and
increase the output is worth considering. In
those times of activities and rush and hurry
a pieee of machinery that will perform with
out being constantly watched is deserving of
a place iu farm operations.
Tho uses are so varied and so extensive
that the labor problem takes on a much dif
ferent aspect where the gas engine is on duty.
It not only pumps the water, but. it runs tha
feed grinder, silo filler, cream separator,
churn, washing machine, woodsaw, and if
properly equipped furnishes electric lights
for the house and barn.
The gasoline engine is one of the labor
saving devices on the farm. It pays for it
self within a short time; it enables the farm
help to be devoted to the tilling of the soil,
rather than doing chores. Women can use
it as well as men. It is a long stride in eco
nomical farm operations when gas power is
made to perform various operations about
the farm.
COMMERCIAL FERTILIZERS.
TILE matter of plant food is all iiopor
taut in purchasing fertilizers. When
a farmer buys a ton of an average,
commercial fertilizer he buys in reality only
about 300 pounds of actual plant food. If
lie buys a cheap fertilizer he gets less than
this amount. If he buys a high-grade fer
tilizer he may receive as much as 600 pounds.
It costs as much to mix a ton of fertilizer
containing 300 pounds of plant food as it does
one containing (500 pounds. The cost of
sacking, hauling and freighting is the same.
Therefore, it is evident that the manufac
turer can sell the plant food in a high-grade
fertilizer cheaper per pound than lie ean the
plant food in a low-grade fertilizer.
In other words, the higher the grade tho
cheaper can the plant food be bought. Farm
ers are advised iherefore to purchase only
high-grade fertilizers.
Attention is called to those brands which
have less than 2 per cent of ammonia or pot
ash. Less than 2 per cent of either of these in
gredients is too small a quantity where such
ingredients are needed, and where not needed
it is useless to purchase them. It is an utter
waste of money to purchase potash or ammo
nia in fertilizers containing less than 1 per
cent of these ingredients.
L
PAYING THE TEACHER.
ONE of the striking situations revealed
by the Federal investigation of teach
ers' salaries in the United States was
the wide variation iu pay for tho same or
similar work. The inquiry showed that pub
lie elementary teachers msy receive $2400 a
year, as sonic do in New York City, or $15 a
year, as in certain rural communities.
Even in cities of the same class there are
considerable differences iu the salaries paid.
On the administrative side there aro county
superintendents with pay ranging from $115
to $4000 a year, and college presidents re
ceiving salaries of from $!H)0 to $12,500.
In city school systems salaries have in
creased steadily in recent years, particularly
in the Western states, and in general, sal
aries in city school systems are fairly well
standardized.
It is in the colleges and universities, how
ever, that the widest variation pre.vails.
Salaries of men with the rank of "profes
sor" rango from $150 to $7500. "Pro
fessors" in some institutions receive less
than "instructors" or even "assistants" in
others. Salaries of deans of these institu
tions vary from $'00 to $5000.
University teachers of subjects for which
there is direct commercial demand outside
receive somewhat higher salaries than teach
ers of academic subjects, but tho difference
is less than might be expected. The highest
average salaries for full professors aro paid
in law and civil engineering.
"DEAD" SUBJECTS.
AN INSTRUCTOR in the English depart
ment of a certain agricultural college
says that students do not take nat
urally to reading about London in the six
teenth century, while they are interested in
the war, woman suffrage, the Filipinos, col
lege athletics, and a score of other modern
subjects. Besides, these are the topics that
most writers are handling and will continue
to handle.
"What point is there, then, in giving stu
dents such subjects for treatment as ""The
Literary Style of Ben Jonson"! Upon such
subjects they have no ideas, but are brim
ming over with ideas about the matters of
which the literature of tho moment is full.
Upon them, therefore, they are asked to
write.
"Naturally," it is gratifying to learn,
"their written work is improving." At tho
risk of seeming to align ourselves with thoso
fossilized individuals who place tho literature
of 1616 above that of 1914, wo may remark
that this instructor is not the first to find
that it is easier for most persons to write
about subjects that arc in the air than about
those of a day that is dead.
MARKETING NEW YORK APPLES.
JOHN J. DILLON, treasurer and general
manager of the Rural New Yorker and
one of the most aggressive champions
of farmers' rights in America, has been ap
pointed Commissioner of the Department of
Foods and Markets of New York City.
It having transpired that there aro about
2,000,000 barrels of apples in storage iu New
York state, .Mr. Dillon proposes to experi
ment with a public, sale of apples in New
York City by the growers themselves. Tho
plan is to sell these apples at a "fair" price)
evidently meaning a price that will be sat
isfaetory to both grower and consumer
ami the prices named aro $2.50 per barrel fojj
first grade and $2 for second grado apple,
the sale to bo in open market under state '
supervision.
TIic growers are asked to do their part aol
eo-operato with the department and thus
move these apples into consumption, for it Is
stated that if some such plan docs not suc
ceed the growers will loso both apples and
cost of storage. In Mr. Dillon', letter lift
says:
"There arc 10,000,000 people within shop,
ping distance of New York. If each ono ot
them cau be induced to cat two apples a day,
in 50 days there will not bo a barrel of ap
ples left in storage in the state.'
Tho success or defeat of this project will
intensely interest all who are advocates of
free public markets and any other method
of business that will bring producer and con.
sunier into closer relations for their mutual
benefit.
I
THE SCHOOL GARDEN.
IT is not too late to plant a great many;
varieties of ornamental things. Those
deciduous plants and shrubs that have
begun to grow when this issue reaches our
readers might best be left to another season,
although most curly starting shrubs, such OS
lilacs, may bo obtained of nurserymen iu a
dormant stale several weeks after thosA
which have not been disturbed have started
to grow. Practically all of our flowering an.
nuals may be planted now with the best of
Success.
There are ninny school grounds in the
Northwest that arc not in a condition to 1)0,
attractive to our 1915 visitors; in fact wo
are not proud of tlieut ourselves. Thcsfl
grounds should be planted to some growing
thing now and thus give an impression t)
the children who go there to school that it
schoolhouse and school grounds are really,
of some importance to tho jx-oplc who send
their children there.
"Who can tell just how much influence a
well-planted school yard has upon tho pupils
in the way of creating an interest in their
school work, and how much influence the
bare yard has in discouraging themf
A small glass house would not be amiss ifl
some schools where some of tho tenderer ra
ricties of flowers may be started early or pot
ted plants protected from Winter frosts. Of
course such a house would bo valuable, and
so would hotbeds, cold-frames or a lath
house. The fact is these things would not
only add to the attractiveness of tho grounds
hut if the pupils wcro allowed to build nl
operate them themselves they would get a
better understanding of tho uses to whicli
some of the subjects which they are studying
may be put.
A small sum invested in a good sire for
his services will in a very few years mean 4
large sum in the better quality of the,ani
mals handled And fed. ' i
The tide of gold is now homeward lounD,
and the first shipment comes from China,
gold-band China, so to apeak.
"Whatever you dislike in other persons ITo
sure that you are not afflicted with tho same
trouble.
The man who is afraid of burning up ?
wick need not hope to brighten the xrorldj
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