TITE BT7XDAT OREGONIA7T, PORTLAND, MARCn 2G, 191G. 13 NEWS EVENTS COVER WIDE RANGE FROM SPORTS TO WAR , i . 1 . ; Curling Becomes Popular Winter Sport Americans Present Swiss Soldiers' Home Hawaii Has Large Japanese Population Battleship Nevada Commissioned Palm Beach Has Society Play. I: i -J .Cbfum&ucr, 7J.7f. Jos? Office, TJkrcJi S, 1376. i: 1 " t f. : .3,, ' ' : :" 5 f - ..... ,.4.:- 1. & : . .tss? . i. -. 'IWevada" Tfctcnp 222. Jtnqis pnffsj This Trip. Shs. S"J70LZ?J Ie pu. in C?omm on iiis- JVeet. &azn J i Sis ' ff S 1 i fry ' " S8 .:::::.::::. --.---.W. -w, i...;-. " "5?S: . y- fc -t y W J ONE of the favorite sports of Win ter and one 'which la growing in popularity, la curling-. It origi nated. In Scotland, but It is now in vogue to a. limited extent in the United States and it is much played in Switz erland, where conditions for it are JdeaL Alexander Blair Thaw is a brother of William Thaw, who is with the French army aviation corps. Alexander is an aviator also. Recently he was trying- to fly to Governor's Island, when his engine went wrong, and he was obliged, to make a perilous descent in Central Park, where his machine was wrecked. The aviator and his me chanic escaped unhurt. Mrs. John Jacob Astor uses the horse and buggry as a mode of travel in and about Aiken, S. C. fihe drives her own horse and carriage from the Aiken sta tion. Mr. and Mrs. . Allan Appleton Robbins, of Xew Tork, are guests of Mrs. Astor at this new and favorite resort. m m Japanese in Honolulu gave three "Banzai3" for their Emperor on the occasion of a recent celebration. Ha waii has a very large Japanese popu lation, which is thought to be com posed largely of war veterans, ready at a sign of trouble between the United States and. Japan to take up arms for Nippon. George W. Guthrie, the United States Ambassador to Japan, calls frequent ly on the Emperor. The automobile has not yet replaced the state coach in Japan, though there are many "devil wagons" in use there. The royal palace at Caserta, Italy, is where the aged King of Servia, an ex ile from his own country, has taken refuge. 1 The battleship Nevada has gone into commission at Boston this week. She was built at the Fore River works, in Quincy. The ship made 22 knots an hour on her official speed trials. - - m 9 v The postoffico at Columbus, N. M., was wrecked by the Mexican raiders. The postmaster was killed. German Zeppelins recently swooped down on Liverpool and after they had iff) , . -r JT t f . r I f- L?A v " J; X, rt 1 . msixz m -r I (XJI I : : Ym::nS?!m.v .... TZTTZZz ' . ill 1 1 h"'' & ijJ V, V ' 1 ''II . rr:. t - ,W f -r - . - I retreated a number of dead and wound ed were left to testify to the success of the raiders. A number of dwellings occupied, by workingmen were demol ished by bombs dropped by the raiders. Mrs. D. C Gurnee Munn. of Washington, is the heroine of the society play, "The Isle of Happiness," the en tire action of the play being- laid in and about Palm Beach. The cast is composed of well-known men and women of society wintering there. Ten thousand feet of film have been taken of the scenario. After its appearance on the screen in the dining-room of the Royal Poinciana Hotel it will be de stroyed. A part of the proceeds will go to the American Ambulance - in Paris. , Minister Pleasant A. Stovall. at Berne, recently presented to the Swiss army, on behalf of the American col ony in Switzerland, a home for sol diers to be known as the Wooflrow Wilson Soldiers' Home. Like homes were given before in the names of Washington and Lincoln. In accepting the Woodrow Wilson Home Colonel Wildbolz. commander of the Third Army Division, said it was a valuable testimony of the friendship of America for Switzerland and that it. would make the name of Woodrow Wilson forevw remembered in that country. The home has been taken to the Swiss aviators headquarters at Uubendorf. The threa homes presented by the American coL ony cost $6000. odemPouhry Culture SHE has proved her worth. She has the goods and can deliver them This astonishing performance makes plain the wealth of possibilities in every man's dooryard flock. The expert tells us that there are more than 7000 latent eggs in the normal hen. One individual has shown that she can lay hundreds of these hidden, dormant, potential possibilities in a twelvemonth. If one can do it, then others can. No one expects 7000 ggs from any hen, however long she may live. But every one knows now that he need not go round the world to find his "Acres of Diamonds." One American hen has shown us that there is as great economic value in her as can be found, weight for weight, in any animal in the world. What then? Simply this: It is up to tts to make the most of the domestic fowl. She has the eggs and she is riever happier than when laying them. The hen that can lay 200 eggs in a year has become common. Her dis covery is of recent date, however. A dozen years ago there were few who Relieved that such a producer could be bred. Today the 300-egg hen has been discovered in various parts of the coun try. The evidence is so overwhelming that millions -of the American people are challenged to dig for the diamonds that are hidden away in the common Jien. Yes! The producing power is in the little hen not a ehadow of doubt remains. What are we going to do (bout it? She is able and willing: are .we willing and able? It isn't a matter of a particular breed. There are a dozen breeds of fowls that can be depended upon for the high economic values if rightly handled. The egg-laying contests in various parts of America, as well as in Australia, prove that most of the common breeds of fowls have marvelous possibilities in egg production when handled right ly. While the heavier breeds may be slightly inferior to some of the smaller breeds in average agg production, they have points of superiority in other re spects that make them of equal value. The man behind the bird is the deter mining factor. Proxrtas Made In Ekk Production. "Lady Eglantine," with her 314-egg record, has set the whole continent in searcn of poultry possibilities. Practi cally everybody outside the large cities keeps fowls. This amazing year's work fe? one hen has been heralded from ocean to ocean. It will mean a power ful stimulus to the movement already widespread to make the most of the utility value of the backyard flock as well as of the tens of thousands of birds herded together on the million egg farm. The average yearly yield of the farm flock is about 70 eggs for each hen. This is the finding of the Department of Agriculture at Washington. We write it and read it with shame! It is purely a long, long way from 70 to 311! The world is on fire today over "eco nomic efficiency." Most certainly the figures that are before the American people today will mean a mighty stride forward in egg production. Otherwise we prove our economic deficiency. A farmer told me the other day that he keeps 75 hens and that they "eat their heads off two or three times a story to that of another farmer who kept 400 layers last year and reports a profit of $1100 above the cost of their feed. The man who can't get paying results from a flock of hens today must hold himself responsible. If he does not re sort to every possible method to in crease his egg production, he must con fess that he is- not interested in poultry culture, or that he is hopelessly sunk in the ruts of a former generation. What splendid stimulus we have in. these record birds! Why may not every one of us start an egg-laying contest right at home with the purpose of in creasing our egg yield, by spotting the mere boarder and breeding better birds for the filling of the egg basket? A liberal estimate of the cost of feed for one hen for one year wuld be $1.50. Allowing a yearly production of only 120 eggs, there will still be a profit above her feed of $1.50, with eggs at 30 cents a dozen. An increase of SO eggs a year to the fowl above this would mean an average of only 150 eggs for each layer. But It would mean an increase of $1R00 a year proflt on a plant carrying 2000 layers. This average would still be less than half the record of the top-notch bird. Here is where the American people can cut "the high cost of living" by half a billion dollars -a year, namely, by increasing the average- egg yield of the common hen from 70 a year to 140 a year. Poultry National Industry. The modern high-record hen should mean this "unquestioned recognition." Poultry culture has come to stay. We are forced under the circumstances to rank it with dairying, wheat and corn production, lumbering, manufacturing, or any others of our great National industries. Two decades ago men made merry with the "poultry business." There was good cause for this in many cases. It was the day of beginnings in the building up of the modern egg ma chine. At present there are plenty of plants handling thousands and even tens of thousands of birds. I visited one farm last Summer where more than 40,000 fowls more than three months old were then being cared for. The same farm has an incubator cellar with a total capacity of 48.000 eggs. I vis- BEARDED GOLDEN POLISH THESE races of Polish fowls were I as well as a producer for the table, the first known as the Crested Dutch, golden Polish will be found both pleas n i rH v,f ,o r. I urable and profitable. The hens are Italy to the Netherlands, thence to Western Europe, aad later to America. The first of these varieties was the white-crested black; and from these the Dutch breeders obtained the silver and golden Polish, some with crests only, and others with both crests and beards. The golden Polish, as shown above, are of the latter variety, and they have immense crests and beards which almost hide the eyes. Their plu mage is generally golden tan in color, each feather laced or edged with bril liant black. The hens are excellent layers of large non-sitters, hence their eggs must be hatched by other hens or by artificial means. The chicks are rather delicate, unless kept dry. Damp ground or damp coops are fatal to young Polish. They should never be reared in large open spaces, as their crests prevent them seeing the hawk in time to avoid cap ture. In size these fowls compare with the Leghorn and weigh about the same. They are very fine boned and carry a larger proportion of desirable meat. The legs are blue, or, in old specimens, white; the skin is white, and each fowl has a round protuberance on its skull ited another farm which had a produc ing capacity of 250,000 baby chicks a year. Such extensive plants usually handle 10,000 or more layers. From 50 to 300, and sometimes as high as 700, birds are kept in a flock. Smaller plants for intensive egg pro duction are numerous and multiplying rapidly all over the land. A "one-man farm" is supposed to handle from 1000 to 2000 laying hens, the "one man" requiring an assistant during the busy season of incubation and brooding. These intensive and extensive plants, taken in connection with the tens of thousands of people on the farms and in the towns who keep fowls In smalK flocks, lift poultry culture to the rank POULTRY SCIENCE CONTRIB UTES TO WONDERS OF AGE. BY G. R. SMITH, Author and Practical Poultryman. Copyright, 1916.) This is an age of miracles. You can sail on the sea, under the .sea, or above the sea. You can sit in an easy chair in New York City and talk with your friend in San B'rancisco. The "wireless" pulses your message through 5000 miles of ether as quickly as you could dictate it to a stenographer. Our modern wizards of progress are perform ing greater wonders than the ancient masters of the "black art" ever attempted. The feats of science are' equal ly astounding in the animal king dom. Minnesota announces that one of her Holstein-Friesian cows. Duchess Skylark Ormeby, has produced an average of more "than four pounds of butter a day for 12 consecutive months! And now we have the amazing out put of a three-and-a-half-pound Leghorn hen 314 eggs in 365 days. What does it mean? Let us see. white-shelled eggs, so that for a home I from which, the feathers of ten crest of any of the great industries of the country. The 300-egg hen puts her seal of certainty on the proposition. If one can lay 314 eggs in 12 months, there should be millions in America that can lay 200 eggs apiece. Scientific Methods Advocated. This is not least. In fact, it is pri mary. Without scientific methods in breeding and care, we would never have known of the possibilities of the hen. The trap nest, the balanced ration, the line breeding for high egg production, the most skillful care-taking day and night. Winter and Summer In fact, "scientific management" in its purest and most approved form, must go along with this business, as with the building of locomotives, ocean lin ers or 16-inch guns, if the largest re sults are to be achieved. Given this scientific management, with all that it means, and put behind it the right kind of a personality, combining above all things a heavy business caliber with a keen and forceful initiative, and every reasonable hope inspired by the high record bird will be realized. White diarrhea is the "plague" among poultry, and, although not gen erally known, it has its origin in the mature fowl. In next week's article Professor James B. Morman discusses this dreaded disease in all its aspects, and offers many valuable suggestions for its prevention and cure. Asuncion. Ketchikan for lUchtnond, 112 COQUILLE DAIRY RANCH IS FOUND AMONG BEST Addison Bennett Describes Building of Industry From Land Developed by Hard Labor Equipment Alone Costs $10,000. ' BY ADDISON BENNETT. MARSHFIELD, Or., March 23. (Special.) While I was in Ban don I learned that George P. Laird, one of the solid, substantial citi zens of that city, was "making" a dairy ranch about 15 miles up the Co quille and that he was starting with some of the best Holstein cattle to be found in the country. As I have learned by long experience that it is the policy of The Oregonian to lend its assistance to any enterprise that tends towards building up the country, I concluded to seek out Mr. Laird, who was at that time in Bandon, where he has been in business for many years. So he came along with me and to gether we looked over the place. He has 106 lucres lying on the north bank of the Coquille River, almost opposite Rlverton, about 15 miles above Bandon and about ten below Coquille. About 100 acres of -the placa is on the bottom that overflows occasionally when the water reaches an unusual stage, and 25 acres, partially in timber and brush, that lie3 on the second bench far above the reach of floods. Mr. Laird bought the land about a year ago. At that time there were no improvements on the place worthy the name and only about half of it had been cleared of brush. As soon as he took possession he began cutting the trees and slashing and grubbing the brush and now the SO acres on the bottom is all cleared and plowed and more than half of the hill land Is also in a plowable state. Fine Cottage Is Erected. On the bench he has built a fine cot tage, a nice cheese manufactory build ing, nice hog sheds and an A-l barn. By A-l I mean it is about as good a building as I ever saw called a barn. It is 52x98 feet. 40 feet high and equipped in the best possible manner running water, drinking fountain before each cow, electric lights, manure and feed carriers, cement or 3-inch plank floors, stalls have Porter equipment, storage room for 300 tons of hay and as many tons of roots and grain well, well, well it is sure a beautiful barn. And what is more to the point he can raise hay and grain enough each year to fill it and the two 110-ton silos he is now building at the west end of it. And he will have one of them filled with vetch and oats before midsummer and the other filled with corn before the November frosts come. (Speaking of corn reminds me that I am going to have a lot to say on that subject before I get done writing about Coos County. Where the corn area is en larging as rapidly as it is here, where they can raise 100 bushels and over of matured corn to the acre and of as good quality as can be raised any where that is something to brag about and something worth printing.) Equipment Costs $10,000. However, it was not to tell how Mr. Laird expended $10,000 in equipping his place that attracted me: it was his start in creating a herd of Holsteins and a "flock" of Jersey Duroc hogs. So about the first thing I had pointed out to me was the little herd of cows, jtad tba iuU. la stasia tha feajTu. First let me say that Mr. Laird was Wise enough to know that a herd of fine cattle is seldom brought to the top notch by hired labor. So he looked around and found a man who was a good cheese maker, a man who has had many years' experience with fine stock and a worker. His name is Lutsey, who learned the business thoroughly in Wisconsin. And what means more is the fact that Mr. Lutsey hud money enough to become half owner of the herd. Besides that he has a lovely wife who is not afraid of work and two lovely children. They purchased six pedigreed and registered Holstein cows, two heifers of the same stock and the famous Hol stein bull. Sir Segis De Kol America 112,950. I will not give the names and rtumbers of the cows and heifers, but I saw the-papers of each one. Then in the hog barn we found a brood sow, boar and seven pigs, all registered Duroc Jerseys about as fine animals of the variety as I ever saw: Aside from the pedigreed stock, there are 15 head of grade cows on the place and 30 head more to come; then the cheese business will be pushed and the herd built up on the foundation al ready laid. Isn't that doing something worth while? Is not Mr. Laird to be envied as well as prajsed? And he and Mr. Lutsey will gain fame and lucre. Sure. And what a place Mr. and Mrs. Lutsey have for bringing up the little Lutseys. There on the bench close to the fine Coquille, with the whistles blowing for steamers passing up and down every hour, a fine wharf to land on. with the lovely mountains back of them and across the river, with a fine home are they not to be envied? type of harem veil for thn beach. Sha wore a wisp of green chiffon over her face, covering all but her eyes, but in stead of yards of the material trail ing from the back of her hat the veil was neatly folded under her chin and drawn up and fastened in a tight knot on the back of her small round hat. Her sweater was also quite new. It was of green jersey cloth and had a deep pleated cape and a long full skirt. Miss Helen Simon, daughter of Frank lin Simon, of New York, took a dip and wore one of the most striking bathing suits of the season. It was a jockey costume, with black silk bloomers, a very short skirt, belted with white under her arms, siik stockings with white boots and ballet slippers strapped with black. She wore a black-and-white jockey cap tied under her chiri. BARONESS WILL MARRY Mme. Von Andre's Engagement An nounced in New York. NEW YORK, March 15. Mrs. Chaun cey M. Depew informed her friends in this city today that her sister Baroness von Andre, is to become the wife of Baron F. H. H. Wedel Jarlesberg, Nor wegian minister of finance. The an nouncement of the engagement also was made today in London, where Mme. von Andre is at present. The wedding probably will be celebrated soon in London. -Baroness von Andre, or Mme. von An dre, is well known in society in New York, London and Paris. She passed the early Winter here and was seen fre quently at the opera and at private en tertainments. Her first husband was the late Baron Adolph von Andre, a Belgian nobleman. NEW HAREM VEIL APPEARS Jockey Costume Bathing Snit Also Seen at Palm Beach. PALM BEACH, Fla., March 15. Mrs. El&AsxlsH J-ewlsoUn intrfiduced aew Q-BAN DARKENS GRAY HAIR Everybody Uses It Darkens Your Gray Hair So Evenly So Handy and No Dye, Harmless. Also Stops Dandruff. By applying Q-Ban Hair Color Re storer, like a shampoo, to your hair add scalp all your gray, streaked with gray, prematurely gray or faded, dry or harsh hair quickly turns to an even, beautiful dark shade. Q-Ban makes hair and scalp healthy, so every strand of your hair, whether gray or not, be comes glossy, fluffy, lustrous, soft, thick, with that even dark shimmer of beautiful, radiant, healthy hair just as you like to have your hair appear fascinating and abundant, without even a trace of gray showing, only natural, evenly dark, lovely hair. Q-Ban imme diately stop3 dandruff and falling hair. Q-Ban is harmless; no dye, but sold on a money-back guarantee. Only 50c for a big 7-oz. bottle at Huntley Drug Store, Portland, Or. Out-of-town folks supplied by mall. TODAY'S BEAUTY HINT It Is not necessary to shampoo quite so frequently if your hair is properly cleansed each time by use of a really good shampoo. The easiest to use and quickest doing shampoo that wo can recommend to our readers may be pre pared very cheaply by dissolving a teaspoonful of canthrox, obtained from your druggist, in a cup of hot water. This rubbed into the scalp creates a thick lather, soothing and cooling in its action, as well as very beneficial to scalp and hair. After rinsing, the scalp is fresh and clean, while the hair dries quickly and evenly, developing & bright luster and a soft fluffiness that Ajajiea it seem yerx teavyjAdv, . fear," Its. a ioag look rcm eucb a aocjt that soil fee a. d6Ub,t &q tua sxe, i gees,. 4