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About Lincoln County leader. (Toledo, Lincoln County, Or.) 1893-1987 | View Entire Issue (July 6, 1906)
A Home-Made Brooder. The brooders sold by manufacturers are unsually all that are claimed for :liem, but when one desires to economize, a home-made affair can be constructed by anyone with a little Ingenuity which will work nicely. Take two boxes of convenient size, three feet square by flfeen or eighteen Inches high Is a good size, and set one on top of the other, cutting a hole through ench directly In the middle. The hole In the bottom or floor of the upiier bos Is covered HOME-MADE IWOODEIU with an Inverted tin pull, or can, which is perforated at Intervals of two Inches, using a wlro null for the work und punching In. Fit this can snugly over the holo and place the regular brooder lamp underneath It, resting on floor of the lower Ihjx. A little door Is made In the side of the lower box so that the lump may bo properly at tended to. The roof of the upper box Is lined with canton flannel, as are also the sides, except the front, which Is left open and across It, three Inches from the edge, Is nailed a strip (dou bled) of canton flannel, which Is cut In strips an Inch wide. A walkway Is built from the ground to this opening through which the chicks pass. Essen tial ventilation may ho had by boring a few tiny holes In the upper box at a point furthest away from the lump. Exchange. A I'rofltnltle Implement. Oh soil that Is Inclined to lump up Some Implement must he used willed will level the soil readily, and at tho snmo time crush tha clods. Such un Implement cun readily be made at horn-; and he quite as effective as those which must be bought for the purpose, If one has a leaning toward manufactured tlcles. This home-made clod crusher and soil leveler can me mado of a log of hard wood by splitting It In half. The log should he about two feet In diameter to work to the best advan tage. Lay the two halves of the log sldo by side with the rounding part down and at cither end, about a foot from the end, spike a two-by-four strip, letting them project out sumeiontly far at one side so that an Iron strip or hoop may ho set over the ends, Into which to hook the whlllletroo chains. This Implement can bo mnde at small cost, and unless the logs are too heavy a good team of horses can CLOI-Cl:t'SIIKIt AND I.KVT.I.KIt. handle It nicely. The Illustration shows the Idea clearly and how very simple It Is. Indianapolis News. Mlicrp Are Uond Fertlllxcra. When a Hock of sheep Is kept on a Held the laud will be made fertile In a short lime, us the sheep not only dis tribute the manure, hut press it Into the ground by trampling, the loss being but little. For that reason it has been suld that "the foot of the sheep is gold to the land." A flock of sheep, how ever, cannot add anything to tho land other than to prevent waste of materl als, which they naturally cousiimo and nre, therefore, more valuable when they are fed at a barn at night, tho additional food rendering tho manure valuable. German Carp. A few years ago there was consider ahlo enthuHiaxm regarding German carp. A pond covering one acre will, It Is stated, hold 7,000 carp to growing condition, If they are fed. Tho carp will eat anything that a hog will con sume, even com, and will gain about three pounds annually until It reaches 12 or 15 pounds. Belonging to the "sucker" family of fishes, tho carp has not become popular In this county, and probably never will, as It Is not very durable, compared with other varie ties of fish. Hoed Crops lm the Orchard. The best orchardlsts are averse to growing anything In the orchards but the trees even when the latter are young. They argue, and properly, that the growing trees need all the virtue there Is In the soil and that If the ap ple crops In future years are to be of any value they must 'be provided for during the earlier years of the trees. There are fruit growers, on the other hand, who Insist that a hoed crop will be of benefit to the trees, and that this may be conslreded so under certain conditions and up to certain limits. If the soil In the orchard Is kept up to the highest state of fertility so that the trees will not suffer the want of the portion of the fertilizer taken by the hoed crop, then the latter can do no harm, Indeed, It will be of value because the soil will receive a certain amount of cultivation which, perhaps would not be given It If It were not for the hoed crop. Work the hoed crop In the orchard cautiously, watch the effect on the trees. and Carina; for Chick. When chicks are removed from the Incubator to the brooder great care should be taken that they do not be come chilled. The floor of the brood er should be covered with fine, clean chaff. Fine sand and clean water should be In the brooder from the be ginning. All the fine, dry bread crumbs they will pick up every two hours should constitute the feed for several days, gradually adding rolled ont, hnrdlmlled cl'l's. cracked wheat, Johnny cake, millet seed, etc. Milk and water should always be kept In the fountains. When three weeks old make mashes of bran, meal, middlings, beef scraps, tnble refuse, all salted to season and mixed together with skim milk. Alfalfa leaves may also be thrown Into the brooder In the place of straw or chaff. The mash In the morning, wheat at noon and cracked com or knfllr corn at night constitute the main feed to keep tho chicks grow- ng. Holder for liar Rack. I used a pair of the Jointed braces to a commonplace top buggy, writes a correspondent. Tho Illustration ex plains the position of braces on rack when standard Is un and down, Fasten braces on outside of standard and on Inside of bed piece. By taking brace and trying you can soon tell how fur buck to fasten It. Shape of Ideal Dufrr Cow. Whether she he a llolsteln, a Jer sey or whatever she uiny be, you will find the typical dairy cow with bony head and strong Jaw, long between the eyes and nose, 'with broad muzzle. She should have a bright, protruding eye, which means strong nerve force and action later on. She should have a thin neck mid retreating brisket. The lines above und Mow must not be straight, or she will steal from you. She should be slightly depressed be hind the shoulders with a sharp ehlue not too straight n backbone. She must have large organs of reproduction and largo heart girth, wide between foru legs mill sharp on shoulders, which gives large heart action and strong arterial circulation. And last, hut by no means least, she must have u good udder, for one-half the value of u cow Is In her udder, which should bo long from front to rear. Poultry Pointer. Never refuse a fair price for n bird that you do not want for breeding pur poses. At the same time never sell a good bird that you want yourself. Do not feed the newly hutched chick ens too early; wait at least twenty four hours. There Is sufliclent amount of feed In tho shell for the chick this length of time.- In feeding fowls always keep In view tho fact that the excess of food over and above that required for warmth of body and egg production will be con verted Into fat. Journal of Agrlcul ture. A correspondent of a farm paper, who was not well satisfied with his disk harrow while It had the tongue on It, thus tells how ho Improved it: I have been using my disk harrow without n tongue, or rather, I cut the tongue off Just ahead of the evener, I find that tins is very much more satisfactory than to use with the tongue; In turning all the horses help turn tho hnrrow instead of the two polo horses having to pry It around by tho pole. In addition to this, It takes the weight off of the horses' necks when Uiey stop, '"V HOLDER FOB THE HAYBACK. CARL 8CHURZ. Had Gained an Honorable Place Among- Oar Great Men. After having lingered between life and death with a complication of dis eases for more than a weeK, can Schurz, the famous publicist, editor and statesman, passed away at his home In New York City. From a poor Immigrant, landing In this country when be was 23 years old, Carl Schurz worked his way upward to a position In the foremost ranks of pub lic life. The story of this Immigrant boy reads more like a volume of Juven ile fiction, with the hero always good and true and struggling for high Ideals, than a recital of incidents which make up the career of the great publicist As statesman, soldier, editor and thinker, Mr. 8churz held the respect of the best element of this country, and many of those who fought side by side with him In the many battles for civic righteous ness in which he took a leading part be lieve it Impossible for the country to measure the full vulue of his services to It The life of Schurz was full of ad venture and Interesting details. lie was born nt Liblar, near Cologne, Prus sia, on Mnrch 2, 1821). He was edu cated at tho Gymnasium of Cologne and subsequently at the University of Bonn, which he entered In 1840. Gottfried Klnkel, poet philosopher and patriot, who had married Carl Schurz's cousin, was professor of rhotorlcs In the university. After the revolution of 1848 had broken out Kln kel headed nn insurrection, was cap tiired und condemned to Imprisonment for twenty yeurs. Schurz was engaged In the defense of Uastudt a town and fortress In Baden, when It was cap tured, lie hid in a shed for three days and Anally escaped through a sewer and made his way to Switzerland and thence to Paris. There, disguised as an organ grinder, he effected the rescue of Klnkel, who accompanied him to England. Schurz support d himself iu London for a while, teaching German and writing letters to German news papers, before he came to the United States In 1852. When Schurz landed In New York he could neither speak nor write the En glish language, and the political ban ners of Pierce and Scott which spanned Broadway were a sore puzzle to him, Yet three years afterward he was ad mitted to the bar in Jefferson, Wis., and immediately entered the struggle against the aggressions of slavery, for which the Republican party wns rap- Idly organizing. Schun worked mainly through the Germans of the Northwest and five years after landing In this country the Immigrant boy was nom inated for Lieutenant Governor of Wis consin 'and came within 200 votes of being elected. In 1858 Schurz took an active part In the Lincoln-Douglas campaign In Illi nois, and it was during this that he formed a friendship with Lincoln which was ended only by tho death of the President. In 185U Schurz went to Eos ton, where he made an address on True Americanism, which was commented on all over the country. One reading the speech -would find It hard to believe that It was written by a man who sev en years before could not speak En glish. A year after making this address Mr. Schurz was elected chairman of the Re publican national convention in Chi cago, and supported the nomination of Mr. Seward to the last After the con vention he spoke In various States of the Union, and on the accession of Abraham Lincoln to the presidency Mr. Schurz was apiotnted minister to Spain. He reached Madrid In July, but after he realized how great a strug gle tho Civil War was to be he was recalled at his own request In Decem ber he was appointed a brigadier gen eral of volunteers. Mr. Schurz com manded a division of the Eleventh Corps under Howard, fought with Fre mont and SIgel, and ended his service under Sherman in North Carolina. After the war Mr. Schurz was ap pointed a special commissioner to re port on the condition of the seaboard and gulf states, and after that he be came a special correspondent of the New York Tribune. In 1800 he became CARL BCnuBZ. editor of the Detroit Post and a yeai later he moved to St Louis, where he purchased an interest In the Westliche Post of which he took charge. In 1800 Mr. Schurz was elected United States Senator from Missouri. He found himself very soon forced to oppose the tendencies developed by the strenuous war period In the party to which he had been warmly devoted, and he threw aside the party yoke by opposing the plans of President Grant The first open difference came with the submission to the Senate of the treaty for the annexation of Son to Domingo, which he fought with all his energy. In the Liberal Republican movement he took a prominent part and was chairman of the Cincinnati convention which nominated Horace Greeley. He was actively engaged In the Ohio can vass, supporting the election of Hayes as Governor on. a hard money plat form, and he also took an active part In the presidential campaign which re sulted In the election of Hayes. In 1877 he was appointed to a seat In the cab inet It was while Secretary of the In terior that Mr. Schurz put Into opera tion the principles and methods of civil service reform, seven years before their adoption by law. Although Mr. Schurz held no public office after his retirement from the cab inet his Influence in public affairs was felt almost to the end of his life. He was a powerful antagonist of machine politics, and because of his strong fol lowing his co-operation In all reform movement wns welcomed. MlnUterlal Conrtenle. Wien the Rev. Frank Ritchie of St Ignatius' Church In New York waa rsc tor of the Church of the Ascension In Chicago, he was most popular with his bishop because of his extremely high church ritualism and was known as the "black sheep of the diocese." At a general gathering of the clergy, Fath er Ritchie was paired off with the only colored rector In the bishop's Jurisdic tion. The clerical wits Joked about It "The two black sheep of the diocese walked together," remarked one of them. The colored brother, a broad churchman, happened to overhenr the remark. , "I should like' to know what I have done?" he demanded with rancor. It was not long afterward that Fath er Ritchie went to preach In this same colored rector's church, and he was In troduced in this manner: "Father Ritchie will preach this even ing. Before the sermon we will sing the hymn beginning: 'My soul, be on thy guard.' " Everybody's Magazine. DOWAGER EMPRESS MAY LEAVE RUSSIA. The Dowager Empress of Russia Is said to have decided to leave that coun try forever. A few weeks ago she bought the beautiful palace of Hvl- doere, near Copenhagen, and she has now bought another country seat in En gland. Her sister, Queen Alexandra, of England, It Is said, Is responsible for this change and the Dowoger Empress expects to spend her summers in Den mark with her brother, King Frederick, and her winters In England. Method, "No matter what opinion Is offered, you express a contrary view," said tho Impatient friend. "Well," answered Mr. Bllgglns, "that's a way I have of acquiring knowledge. A man Is more likely to give up all he knows on a subject If you get him to warm up with a little controversial Indignation." Washing ton Star. Good Hornlna;, Jadn-et "Who's dat old guy?" "Dat's me old friend Judge Whelan." "Yer old friend! I s'pose you an hlm's vlsltln' acquaintances, eh?" "No, merely speaking acquaintances. I know him well enough to say "Good morn In' to him every few weeks." Cleveland Leader. Unpolled. "Dont you think Brown Is Inclined to dally with the truth r "I don't think he ever touches It" Milwaukee Sentinel. Pay day comes slowly to a man who watches the clock. DOWAGER KMI'UESS OF BUSSIA. gganvention Commenting on Benjamin Franklin's kite experiment which proved that lightning and electricity are the same, a scientist says : "It was one of the most brilliant examples of lack yet recorded. To attempt the extraction of lightning flashes from a lowering sky was almost suicidal. Even at this late day timid persons occasionally fly to feather beds, sit on glass-legged chairs, or find refuge In rubber boots during thunderstorms. A repetition of Franklin's experiment cost his immediate Imitator his life." Emll Jung, a professor In the Uni versity of Geneva, says that snails per ceive the odor of many substances, but only when not far away. In order to prove this It Is necessary merely to dip a glaas rod in a strongly smelling sub stance and bring It near the large ten tacles of a snail in motion. If It Is put close to these horns, the tentacles are violently drawn back. As the animal perceives the odor, It changes Its course. Snails also smell by means of their skin. Contact Is not necessary, for the mere vicinity of a perfume causes an In dentation of the skin. An Englishman who Is a large em ployer of labor has been Investigating tue arguments of those who say that u worklngmun under modern conditions becomes at an early age vuiueiesa. Ilo has kept a record of all accidents tlntt have incapacitated his men for throe days and upward. The people engaged In his employment are from 15 to 05 years of age, and he asserts th:.t more accidents occur to men under .10 than to those over 50. He says: "I would much rather Intrust an exceptionally dangerous Job to a man over 50 than to one of 30 years of age." Amateur entomologists will be Inter ested In a suggestion by Dr. F. K. Lutz for the preservation of all kinds of spiders' webs. The webs should be sprayed from an atomizer with artists' shellac, and then, If they are of the ordinary geometric form, pressed care fully against a glass plate, the support ing strands being at the same time sev ered. After the shellac has dried, tiiu plates carrying the webs can be stored away In a cabinet Even dome-shaped webs may be preserved, In their orig inal form by spraying them with shel lac and then allowing them to dry be fore removal from their supports. Many spiders' webs ore very beautiful, and ftll are characteristic of the species to which they belong, so that their perma nent preservation is very desirable. Prof. Sllvanus P. Thompson, who re cently visited the electric plant In Nor way, where soil fertilizers are made direct from the atmosphere, descrloes the apparatus there used as differing from all others In that the flame of electric sparks Is caused to move rap Idly through the air Instead of having the air blown over It. The result Is the production of a much greater quantity of nitric oxld In a given time. The flame disk," formed between the elec trodes, swiftly expands and contracts, being now only half an Inch and now six feet in diameter. To make nitrogen burn with oxygen, electric energy must be pumped In, because, whereas In ordi nary combustion, such as occurs when carbon combines with oxygen, heat Is given out the formation of nitric oxld Is nn eudothermlc reaction ; that Is to say, bent Is absorbed. Prof. Thomp son estimates the nitrogen hanging over the city of London nlone as considera bly greater In quantity than all that Is contained In the nitrate beds of Chill. CHTJRCH WITH SIXTEEN SIDES. The curious structure shown in the cut Is at Richmond, Vt, and It Is one of the most peculiar church edifices in Americn. It Is a sixteen-sided build ing, planned for union services held by sixteen denominations. It was "built as long ago as 1813 on the south side of the Wlnooskl River and Is in an ex cellent state of preservation, having been constructed of hand-hewed timber. The building has not been used for public worship for over thirty yeaxs. Lonar-Llved Family. At Bordlghera, Mme. Verrando Ma ria has Just died, aged 107 years. She leaves a sister of 105 and a brother of 102 years. Their father was also a cen tenarian. There are numerous sure-thing confi dence gomes, but matrimony Is the surest s mm