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About Lincoln County leader. (Toledo, Lincoln County, Or.) 1893-1987 | View Entire Issue (June 26, 1908)
LINCOLN COUNTY LEADER R f COLLINS, FdRer r N HAYDEN, Muiftr TOLEDO OREGON Invention of a noiseless firearm in announced. Doubtless it will bare the endorsement of the Assassins' Union. The failure of a Copenhagen trust company verifies Mr. Hamlet's opinion that something was rotten In Denmark. In the fishing treaty between the States and Canada there la unfortu nately no clause against telling fish stories. Grover Cleveland has cheerfully cele brated his seventy-first birthday. Osier will be terribly disgusted when he hears about It. A Chicago scientist announces that he has discovered the origin of heat. Must have JuRt received his winter's coal bill. Once more taxes are to be raised In Japan. Those little brown chaps are finding out that civilization and glory are expensive. One of the learned doctors announces that a certain amount of candy Is good for people. Why can't somebody say as much for strawberry shortcake and lee creum? Twenty-five per cent of Chicago's milk supply Is reported by experts to be under the proper grade. Are they never going to stop the leaks in the water department? Esperanto is reported to be making rapid headway as an International lan guage, but there la no likelihood that baseball reports will ever be written in It It has no slang. Great wealth does not appear to give Its possessors the ability to get. any more matrimonial happiness than Is allotted to the ordinary person who has to work for a living. Dr. Edward Everett Hale, 86 years of age, says he has been a 'hard worker all his life. How contemptible he must seem to some of the members of the Vanderhllt and Gould families. Ten thousand men are wanted to work at Fairbanks, Alaska, for $5 a dny each and board. But this Is not likely to be at all encouraging to the ninny people who are anxious to find out how to live without working. Although It Is only six years slnct St. Pierre, Martinique, was destroyed by the eruption of Mont Pelee, the Is landers have begun to rebuild the city. Steamers call at the port, and business 1b slowly resuming, so short Is the memory of a great terror, or so Indif ferent are the people to a rarely recur ring danger. An association of students In a co educational college near Chicago Is promoting a plan to Introduce a depart ment of "art appreciation," and offer ing to pay the first year's salary of a competent Instructor. Not only will the new member of the faculty Instil correct principles of home-bulldlng, fur nishing and decoration, but he or she will be expected to teach "the decadent art of good and appropriate dressing." Perhaps the phrase, "decadent art," Is more forcible than It needs to be; but the movement marks a wholesome de parture from the silly old notion that carelessness about one's appearance Is a sure sign of Intellectual simerlority. Neither England nor France, in so liciting the services of a man of let ters or a man of law to Berve diplomat ically abroad. Invites him to impover ish himself and find consolation for his losses In the "honor." When the Unit ed States "owns Its legation buildings In the great capitals, and grants allow ances for a reasonable amount of en tertaining, It will have revived the best' traditions of Its diplomacy, and If the Berlin epslode has the effect of re minding us of the error of the ways Into which we have fallen we may again see our diplomatic service more brilliant at the. council board than at the dinner table. Our ambassadors mnv wall; with -princes without pos sessing prliicely purses. In a small Eastern town the half dozen Influential young men were, dis cussing "graft," the sins of corpora tions, the venality and cowardice of public servant all the fervid polltlcaf evils of the day. In each man's talk there was an Implied assumption that were be in high office, he would be brave and Incorruptible. Yet one of the men was a town constable, and he and everyone else In the room knew that every night men came drunk out of a kitchen barroom In the center of the town, that no constable had lifted his hand against the criminal who sold liquor, or had arrested a fellow citizen for drunkenness and disorder. The. oth r day the editor of a newspaper In a small Western town was assassinated, lie bad assailed in, his editorial col utnus the corrupt local politicians. The chief of police and a police sergeant proved the truth of his charges by try ing to kill him. Three attempts were made on bis life before the bullets final ly found him. That, editor had done the bravest and rarest thing attacked the known corruptions of his neighbors. Any man can assail with bitter Invec tive the President, the Senate, the Su preme Court, and cry valiantly to his fellow voters to save the country from the wickedness of a few hundred Con gressmen. But the local. Immediate salvation which can be secured by the petty officer In his own community Is a Jewel often lost, and requiring the highest courage to win. The sheriff who maintains the law In the face of a mob led by his lifelong friends, the selectman who stands for the rights of his town against the private Interest of his dearest neighbor these men are the bravest of patriots, the most potent of reformers. President Eliot, In an address before the Fortnightly Club in Chicago, wild that In the education of children the old practice was to set before them the tasks that were hardest for them, but that the modern method Is to give them the sort of education they desire and In which they are able to excel. These are sound Ideas and, when properly quali fied, are of the greatest importance. There are two separate principles In volved lu tlit-ui one lu reaped lo Hit child's maturity and the 'other in re spect to bis mental bent. Every one will admit that the human mind passes from concrete to abstract Ideas, and that the power of abstract thluklna hardly belongs to childhood at all. It Is clear, therefore, that the imposition of abstract studies on young children Is not only useless but discouraging and hurtful. English grammar Is a type of this kind of study. A celebrated pro fessor In a Southern university used to lecture a month every year on the dis tinction between a noun and a verb. Certainly the discrimination between the parts of speech and the different moods and tenses of the verb Is a per formance for which very few adults are prepared. Yet this was formerly one of the first studies taken up in the pri mary schools. Just as bad Is the prac tice, wherever It exists, of Ignoring the bent of a child's mind. His mind ma v be that of a mechanic, a mathematician, a naturalist, a historian, a poet or a physicist. President Eliot says the modern practice Is to take advantage of this bent, whatever it may be. And It is to be hoped that this Is the practice. President Eliot no doubt believes that these principles can be followed without a total or even an injurious neglect of mental discipline. A child's powers ought to be called Into play as fast as they develop, and certainly at some stage he must be required to make a mental effort which goes against the gralu. Otherwise he will be unneces sarily narrow minded and poorly edu cated. But the leading Idea in the edu cation of children should be that a due regard must be paid to their stage of development and their peculiar talents and bent of mind. Below Is given a list of Proofreader's Marks, a knowledge of which will prove of great value to anyone who does advertising : X Chant bd latler. C atovo ortr. X Push down aptae. n ?) Turu over. Q Em - A Tk out (UU). y Oae-emdsah k Latt out i Insert. J Two-cm datl f Insert spsos. V EveatpMlnt Ptpn. wUiaspaot. Nof Hopsrph. C ClOMspsatlMl,. Wr0Bf (0BU O Ported. .... Latllsuad. Comma, iMtlit.B4 G Count. fr. Ttsmpom, 7 8emleo'a- Cap Capita! MMM V Apostrophe. Small saps. Hy Quoutloa. L$. Loworeuaor rk... small WUrs. t iW. Italic. StfssjktM Inua. Caaervtlle Etiquette. When a wedding guest fails to re spond to bis Invitation, who should re gret it the guest or the givers of the invitation? When the Knapp-Hoover matrimonial alliance was in the mak ing this question proved a disturbing one In the "best circles" of Caseyvllle. Decision could not go far wrong lu such a matter. Simple politeness seem ed to require that the host should re gret the failure of his company to come; so the mall brought to each per son who bad failed to attend the wed ding this announcement upon a neatly engraved card: "Mr. and Mrs. Hoover regret your not being present on Thursday, the six teenth, at the home of the bride's pa rents." ' In I'ralae of Hnnilllt-. It 111 beseems a man to vaunt arro gantly. Homer. The older a man grows, the more convinced he becomes that be will havr to bs his own boat friend. A Gate for the Barn Doorway. When the horse stable opens Into the buggy room and It Is necessary to keep the door open for ventilation, I find that a small gate constructed of light material is an excellent protec tion against horses getting loose and Injuring the buggies. The cut here with shows a light gate we have in use In our horse bam. It Is very simple In construction, but serves a very Im portant purpose. Were It not for this light gate we would find It necessary to keep the door closed between the horse stable and buggy room, thus shutting off ventilation. The gate Is hinged onto the rolling door with light strap hinges, explains a writer In the Prairie Farmer, so that when the gate is not in use it swings SLAT STABLE DOOR. around and fastens to the large door out of the way. For material in mak ing the gate we use Inch strips of good pine for the horizontal pieces. The up right pieces are light strips gotten out for fence pickets. I find a light gate of this character a good thing to keep poultry out of the barn during the" sum mer months. The Colony Plan. If you want vigorous chickens and hens that lay do not overcrowd them. Forty or fifty In one flock are suffi cient. If you have more than this num ber by all means make a change, for your chickens are probably costing you more than they are worth. If you do not care to sell any of your birds then start Into the chlckeft business on the colony plan. Divide your flock Into colonies of about forty fowls each and build houses for them In different parts of the farm. For Instance, if you have one hen house on the east side of the barn, put another house on the west side. Then if you have enough birds put another house down by the calf lot and another to the farther end of the barn yard. A dozen different places will suggest themselves If you look for lo cations on your farm. If you have' made a failure In raising chickens or your hens "don't amount to much," try this method. It will surprise and please you. Your hens will be, healthier, will lay better and will require less feed. The reason for this will be easily seen when you have once tried It. Chickens, or anything else for that mat ter, cannot stand- crowding. Also the colony plan gives the fowls wider range and encourages the birds to hunt for their living. Exchange. . Bracing; Corner Poata. Tbls method, while cheaply devised, is used very effectively In bracing cor ner posts. Use as a brace a pole nine or ten feet long, four or five inches in diameter and square at both ends. Fit one end of pole to the post half way between Its middle and top and place other end of brace on a flat stone. Se cure one end of a wire around bottom of post, then take it to outer end of brace and back to post again, fasten ing securely. With a short stout stick twist wires together until very tight METHOD OF BRACING. . and your brace Is complete, says Fann ers' Review. This brace comes in line with your fence and by fastening your wire or boards to It prevents It from slipping sideways. Corn Stover. Corn stover is used . both shredded and unshredded. Ordinarily the cattle will waste a considerable quantity whichever way it Is fed. The shredded fodder Is prepared because the cattle eat a greater percentage of It and the manure Is handled more easily. Fod der Is often fed on the ground in the open pasture held to save the hauling f manure. There Is a saving, however, In bar ing the fodder shredded. T . tne feed Is taken care of earlier aud there Is less exposure to leaching rains aud weathering processes. Again, more feed can be put In a smaller space, thus requiring less storage space. What Beef Men Think of Silage The success attending the use of silage in the dairy business has created much Interest among beef cattle men. Silage furnishes a succulent food. which Is quite essential to the dairy sow in keeping- her digestive system in good condition. The same will be found true for the beef animal. Twenty pounds of silage per day will supply all the bulk and water needed In a fattening ration. The other roughage may consist of either long fodder or mixed hay. The economy of using silage for fattening purposes Is well brought out by Prof. A. M. Soule of the Virginia station, who has stated the following conclusions: "There was a difference of from A to .5 of a pound of grain per head per day in. favor of the silage-fed cattle. They also finished out better and In any discriminating market would cer tainly bring a better price than the dry-fed cattle. "Of the three forms of roughage fed, the silage was eaten with the greatest relish, and there was absolutely no loss, whereas with the stover the loss amounted to 13.5 per cent and with hay 4.18 per cent. Where a large number of animals aro fed this would make a considerable difference in the cost of ration, except that the shredded stover can be utilized to advantage for bed ding." Silage as It Is put up to-day Is bet ter than when the practice was flrst started. Good silage of corn Is made when the grain has passed the milk stage and has commenced to glaze a lit tle. Silage Is trade also from sorghum, corn and cowpeas and pea vines. Double Brooding Coop. The double brooding coop shown In the drawing is four feet square and three feet high at rear, two and one half In front. It may be built of tongue and grooved stuff or straight-edge boards one-half or three-fourths inch thick. The hinged lidp sBould have two cleats each . to make them firm. - In front Is a one-Inch mesh wire netting and at the edges are strips of three quarter by one and one-half-lnch stuff, to insure rigidity. In one corner, as shown, is the nest, four Inches deep and fifteen or eighteen Inches square, according to the size of the hens kept. The board floor, explains the Orange DOUBLE BROOD COOP. Judd Farmer, is covered with sawdust or sand. Food and drink are 'more readily supplied through the door, which preferably lifts in front, as shown. Corn Leading- Weatern Crop. The statistical bureau of the Union Pacific passenger department Issues a statement compiled from government reports showing the value of farm products in seventeen States west of the Mississippi In 1907 to have been $1,091,000,000. Corn leads In produc tion, being valued at nearly half a billion dollars. Winter wheat Is next, valued at $200,000,000, and domestic hay was valued at only $2,000,000 less. Rye, oats, barley' and potatoes .follow in order. The report also shows an in crease In live stock of 250 per cent since 1870. . Farm Notea. Alfalfa' seed is now selling In many parts of the West for 10 to 12 cents a pound. Egyptian cotton land produces nearly four times as much per acre as that of this country. The Irrigated districts of Egypt com prise 5,340,000 acres and support 10, 000,000 persons. Owing to a prolonged drought in In dia the productive area of wheat land has shrunk from 9,000,000 to 6,000,000 acres. ' ' In four years a pair of rabbits could secure a progeny of nearly 1,500,000. A doe rabbit produces as many as seven families a year. Many important drainage projects arc under way in the marsh land In Lou isiana, which will ultimately make it a great, agricultural country. A dairy train which recently went out from Lafayette, Ind., covered 500 miles on the Monon route, and 4,000 people heard the lectures which were delivered from the cars. It is estimated that if the cattle ship pers of Iowa succeed in establishing their claims against the raUroads for excessive shipping charges in Chicago they will get back fully a half million dollars. EE1'- 1 HTTOr 1 Owing to the great amount of decora posed vegetable matter contained In i Brazilian waters, which causes rapid j deterioration of thin steel, the hull of the new dispatch boat Guanabara, . built for the Brazilian Government, Is constructed entirely of bronze. Against this metal, says Popular Mechanics, the 1 corrosive action of the Brazilian waters has no effect, and, ' although more cost ly, both In material and construction, the vessel Is much lighter than If built 1 f steel or wood. The propeller shaft ing and propeller are also of bronze. The brownish spots which appear In old books are really due to the ravages of bacteria, says Popular Mechanics. The tiny destroyer is especially fond of starchy material and Its propagation is promoted by dump. It has been well understood that damp produced discol oration and decay, but the share of the microbe In the operation has not hith erto been suspected. Tiny fungus or mold Is responsible for gray and black marks upon old papers. In spotting the surface the fungus helps to break down the fabric and hasten the process of its destruction. K. Lydekker, the English naturalist, calls attention to the observations of R. I. Poeock on the significance of the b-puls on lion cubs as indicating tiie close relationship of lions, .tigers and leopards. On lion cubs the pattern of the markings Is intermediate In char acter between the stripes of the tiger and the rosettes of the leopard, but in clines more toward the former. East African Hons retain more or less dis tinct traces of these early markings even when they reach maturity. A dis tinct tiger-like feature of the lion cub Is a white patch over the eye, which disappears in the adult Puma cubs show a pattern quite unlike that of the lion, tiger, leopard and Jaguar. At the recent meeting of the Ameri can Association for the Advancement of Science, In Chicago, attention was called to the interesting fact that the work on the Panama Canal la changing biological conditions In Panama, and that its completion will enable the fresh-water fauna? of the Atlantic and Pacific slopes to intermingle. Undoubt edly many marine animals will pass from one ocean to the other. Thus a permanent change of conditions will be brought about, which may or may not possess much practical Importance, but Its scientific interest Is very ereat In view of these facts, the association re solved to urge upon Congress the neces sity of an Immediate biological survey of the Panama Canal zone. The report that the Gulf Stream now runs with greater sieed than formerly, and Its influence on the time required for the crossing of the Atlantic, fur nishes the theme for an article by Dr. Brennecke In the German magazine, Umshau. Dr. Brennecke analyzes the climatic and geographical reasons for the existence and continuance of the Gulf Stream, and points out how the change in the wind currents and the density of the atmosphere all affect tbi life and power of the famous current. This is chiefly dependent, he points out, on the location and areas of high aud low pressure over the sea. A series of carefully made reports over a long period of time by the German Marine Observatorlum seems to Indicate thnt the Gulf Stream now moves more rap idly than formerly. A Rapid Connter. It Is not every one who proves the ln effectualness of Insomnia cures at 7 years of age ; that Is why a youngster's experience, as the Louisville Courier Journal records It, seems remarkable enough to quote. ' , The father of the lad, who was about 7 years old, was a physician, and when the child found difficulty In getting to sleep, was ready with advice. "I'll tell you" somethlug that will soon put you to sleep," he said. "You begin and count siowly up to one hundred, and then another hundred, and so on, and before you know It you'll be sleep ing. Try it to-night when you go to bed." Everything remained quiet that night until the father went to retire. As he passed the boy's bed a little voles piped : "Papa !" "Yes, my boy." "What comes after trillions?" But the wakeful youngster's query was not answered ; his father had van ished Into his own bedroom. Then the Quarrel Ceaaed. They were having the usual family quarrel. As was also usual, she could not convince him that she knew where of she argued. "Didn't I go to school, stupid?" she IBcreamea. "Yes, dear, you did," he replied calm ly. "And you came back stupid." The Bohemian. ' V When any one feels good, It Is not .because be has good luck, or takes medicine, but because he is young.