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About Lincoln County leader. (Toledo, Lincoln County, Or.) 1893-1987 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1908)
t ik-W -ft a tut S 7 A formal declaration of party princi ples specified as the party platform wan as unknown in the early days as was a convention. The noisiest, the jolliest, the most exciting and perhaps least logical presidential campaign was that of 1840. William Henry Harrison, hero of an In dian victory at Tippecanoe, a plain old man, who had lived, his opponents sneer ingly said, in a log cabin decorated with coon skins and had drunk hard cider, was selected by Thurlow Weed as a better candidate than Henry Clay. To defeat Clay in the Republican convention, the unit rule was adopted. The issues between Van Buren, the Democratic candidate, and Harrison were not clearly drawn, but the adventitious circumstances of Harri son's early life were skillfully utilized for theatrical effects. "Old Tippecanoe" was the slogan. Processions, miles long, with log cabins, cider barrels and coon skin caps on poles, stretched from State to State. Glee clubs were a feature of the campaign nnd the Indian fighter was fair ly sung into office. So vigorously did the Whigs sing their favorite refrains that echoes of the songs still linger. What has rauned this great commotion motion motion motion, Our country through T It Is the ball a rolling on l'or Tippecanoe and Tyler, too, And with them we will beat little Van, V mi, V un. in a Ubeil up umu. Karewell, dear Van, You're not our man To guard the ship. We'll try old Tip. In the campaign which resulted in the election of Itenjninin Harrison the fact that he was a grandson of old Tip was not forgotten by his adherents. Many slnngy, even irreverent references fixed on grandpa's hat as a fit subject for campaign quips. In 1844, the year when the Democratic convention brought the first dark horse into the running, the songs of the majority were: O, poor Henry Clay, poor Henry Clay, You cannot be our President, for I'olk Is In the way. end Hurrah for Tolk and annexation, Down with Clay and high taxation. When John Hanks, cousin of Abraham Lincoln, carried two weather-beaten rails into the Wigwam the structure especially built for the Republican" convention held in Chicngo, in Mny, 18(50 Lincoln be came the "railsplitter" candidate as Har rison had been the log cabin and Jackson the hickory candidate years before. In the convention of 1800 began the modern custom of cheering and counter cheering. The Seward contingent gave a parade the dny of the conveintion. While they were marching Lincoln supporters filled .the Wigwam. With the naming of the candidates began the cheering. When Seward was nominated and seconded the shouting was absolutely frantic, shrill and wild. But when Lincoln's nomina tion was seconded the West was heard from, and gave a scream that was posi tively awful, and accompmled it with stamping thnt made every plank nnd pil lar in the building quiver.. On the third ballot Lincoln was nominated. The shout ing was so deafening that the cannon which was discharged on the roof of the building could not be heard inside. HUNNINQ AWAY FROM HOME. The Ora y-Hnlreil Man Remember a Dor Who Tried It Forty Years Abo. "Whenever I rend In the newspapers that a boy has run awuy from home to fight Indians or seek some -other sort of adventure, It takes mo buck forty years," said the gray-haired man In Iho club smoking room. "For I rnn awuy from home once, Just as I sup pose every other youngster does, once at least, only in my case I wasn't seek ing adventure, I was escaping tyrnnny. "It seems foolish now, hut it was nil very real to me then. The tyranny, consisted of the one fact that I got my first licking, nnd I guess there's no doubt that I deserved It. Hut I couldn't see It that way theu ; I was very hitter, and the one Idea I had was to get away where life was ,ree and tyrants were not. "Tlie impulse to depart on my trnv els was carried out so suddenly thnt I found myself wandering far nwny, from the house before It dawned on mo thnt 1 was 111 provided for a jour ney. In fact 1 had gone Just ns I was, with the smart of my physical ns well ns my inentnl wrongs still acute. "As I went I pondered over the mat ter of provisions, nnd the Iden enme "to me that I would make my first stand In a cranberry bog right on the farm. With this as a headquar ters I would make raids on neighbor ing orchards, and If the worst came to the worst I supposed the cranberries would support life. "Well, I reached the cranberry bog presently and bivouacked. Here 1 should spend the first night under the friendly stars. I picked out a soft place for a bed and sat down to wait the coming of night. "Now, cranberries are not very fill ing, especially In the rnw, green state, but I managed to eat some of them. And then It began to get dark. "Well, sir, the shndows fell quickly on the hills about me nnd the air grew chill. Fantastic monsters reared their horrid heads on every baud. The free life began to pall. "So It won't surprise you to learn that a very Utile boy ran home crying before the supir things had been clear ed nway, and that he never ran away again." DISCIPLINE III BERLIN. Germans Not Only Obey Rule, Dot Arc Unhappy Without Them. The Berllners, nnd the rest of thb Germans, are the most governed people on earth. They like It and howl for more. They have restrictions of all kinds placed on the order of their dally lives, but they are used to It. Indeed, they have arrived at a sort of mental state in which they look to the author ities to tell them what to do, and how to do it, In every contingency. "Ver boten !" Is the German word thnt has the greatest vogue, so far as I was able to see. "Forbidden !" Btares them In the face everywhere. They are regu lated In all sorts of ways, down to the manner they shall conduct themselves In their houses. There Is a certain time for beating rugs, a certain time for playing the piano, a certain time for everything else. You can move your household goods only In a certain wny. You ennnot shake a dust rag out of the window. You cannot do this and you cannot do that, and, they told me, after once you get accustomed to It, It is a comfortable wny to live. It absolves you from thought If you know what hours there are for doing your work nnd how you must do It. If a cab knocks you down in the street, you are arrested for obstructing the tralllc. Your place Is on the side wnlk. Every Berliner does exactly what hb Is expected to do, and you must do the same. As an example of how well trained they are, they are not obliged to have guards on the underground trains In Berlin. The Berlin folks know they nre expected to shut the doors, and they shut them. If you observe their regulations you nre not disturbed, but If you violate one of them you Instantly get Into more kinds of trouble than you had Imagined could exist. All you are expected to do Is to walk a chalk-line, and you can be happy, If the regulations allow the kind of happiness thnt agrees with you. Samuel G. Blythe in Everybody's. The Unnnoch. One of the hardiest, bravest, and most difficult to handle among all the western tribes was the small but val orous band known ns the Bannock, Bannk, or Pnnaifl. This little tribe, never numbering more than 700, has for many years Inhabited the country between the Snake river nnd the moun tains which mnrk the boundary between Montana nnd southern Idaho. Of Shoshone rnce, but brnver nno more turbulent thnn nny other Sho shone tribe, the Bannock fought the Blnckfeet nnd drove them hack when they came over the mountains, domin ated tamer tribes of Idaho and Ore gon, and made themselves general nui sances, when the white man took the country. The Bannock troubles culminated li. 1878, when they broke out in open war, drawing many of the riute and Sho shone along with them. After consid erable fighting their young chief, Buf falo Horn, was killed by friendly In dian scouts, and the Bannock warriors surrendered. All of tho Bannock tribe, except h fragment, n't Lemhi, now make their home on the Fort Iiall reservation. Some 500 of them still survive, but are slowly decreasing In numbers. They do not take kindly to civilization, but seem to have accepted the Inevitable, and behave fnlrly well of recent years. The Bannock nre very dark of fnce, nnd of medium stnture, while their physique Is wiry and sinewy, as might be ex pected with a fighting race, equally ex pert hi horsemanship and mountnlo climbing. i a. Not I'leanant. Bacon I see a German scientist as serts, that thoughts can be photograph ed. Egbert It wouldn't be possible, however, to ninke some of 'em look pleasant. Yonkers Stntesnian. A Flttlnu Term. "How would you deslgnnte a tailor's Jug?" "I don't know of any particular namo unless you would call It a tight fit" Baltimore American. When you see a boy with curls and a sash, It Is a very good sign that the father doesn't have his way In tho house. There Is one time when a woman gives as little satisfaction as a widow er ; Whea she Is la "mourning. The J'amlly Melon Patch. Many who pride themselves on a good garden and are fond of melons never attempt to grow them. "Cnenper to buy at 25 cents each?" Maybe for the first two or three, but If you would like or dozen or two, enough that If compnny comes unexpectedly nnd there Is no dessert for dinner, the melons can richly replace the pastry that Is a different matter. Despite theories to the contrary, mel ons nre as easily grown as cucumbers nnd there nre a number of vnrleties which will mature unless the summer is unpsually short. A rich, light soil, sloping toward the east or south and well fertilized In the hill, will bring he luscious fruit If there is danger from dry weather fill an old pall or oyster can (first per forating the bottom with nail holes) with stable mnnure or poultry drip pings, sink It partly In the ground and keep it moistened. This will not only furnish moisture but food. The reser voir being below the surface will tempt the roots to grow down Instend of seek ing the surface, ns when water comes from il-e hos In only small quantities, and Uey will be less susceptible to 'Irouth. If the plants go to vines nip off the ends, but do not try to check vigorous growth by starvation. The Rocky Ford Is one of the best early muskmelous and one of the easiest to grow, bearing n profusion. The Indiana Sweetheart Is a favor ite watermelon, ripening early and of excellent quality. Cut Out the Undesirable Seed The renl up-to-date farmer, following the most scientific methods In the op eration of his ground, Is taught to make use of the se lected material only In order that the species may be con stantly Improved, following the law of the survival of the fittest. For In stance, In the selec FOB SEED COBX. tion of the seed to be placed In the ground, he Is not con tent merely to secure the best species, but wherever possible he will go care fully over the seed and pick out only the largest specimens to be placed In the ground. In this manner the pro duct is generally of a much higher standard. It Is difficult to carry out this 'selective scheme In the case of corn and similar seeds which are made use of In great quantities. In the case of corn, however, the small kernels are generally at the tip of the ears, and In order to get rid of these undesirable pieces a corn-tipper has been invented. The device seems to have been sug gested by the familiar pencil-sharpener. It Is -operated by a small crank, and has a cone with a tooth Interior. The tip of the corn ear being placed In this revolving cup, nil the small seed are cut off, leaving only the full-sized ker nels on the ear. ' J-eu Weakness, Leg weakness Is due to chicks be coming heavy rapidly, so that the weight of their body Is 'too much for their legs. This Is not always nn alarm ing condition, for It denotes that the chicks are growing fast, and If careful ly guarded and fed properly they will pull through all right. The cause arises from heavy feeding nnd forcing, which enrries the chicks forward so rapidly as to cause the legs to fall. Change the food to a light diet of veg etables nnd feed bone menl In the food. They should also be well protected against the dampness, and the difficul ty will soon pass nwny. Leg weakness Is nearly always due to rapid growth of tho body or from lack of uniformity of hent In brooders, If the chicks nre small enough to be kept In a brooder. Crowd ing and pressing together to keep warm nt night is a liinin cause of little chicks having leg weakness. No great alnrm need be entertained unless the trouble continues for too long a time, but ehange the food and keep the birds ry. Feed in Cons on Grass. Trofessors Stewart nud Atwood, of the West Virginia Experiment Station. Inst year conducted some careful tests to determine whether ft Is profitable to feed milk cows grain on grass. With out going Into the details of these ex- Slip perlments we quote the conclusions as follows : "This experiment clearly shows that there was no direct flnnnclal gain In feeding the grain to the cows while at pasture. It Is true thnt the cows which received grain were uniformly In somewhat better flesh than those that did not receive grain, but as far as the milk yield was concerned the Increased flow was produced at an ac tual loss." Data obtained In similar experiments at other stations are sum marized, and from these In comparison with their own Investigations the au thors conclude "thnt unless dairy prod ucts are especially high lu price it Is not a profitable practice to feed grain to cows at pasture. It Is true that more milk Is obtained and the cows hold up their yield better nnd reuinln in better flesh when receiving the grain rations, but under ordinary circumstances there Is no direct profit from the grain feed ing, as the Increased production usual ly costs more than It can be sold for." IIoks that Make Meat. The h"g rn!o"i' of Knnsns station made a test to show what kind of a hog grows the best meat The weights of hams In the test were as follows: Berkshire hams, 23 pounds; Du roc-Jersey, 24 pounds; Toland Chlnas, 25 pounds. These hogs in size were as near the same weight ns possible to get them. The shoulders of the Berkshlres weighed 21 pounds; Duroc-Jerseys, 19 pounds nnd Poland-Chinas, 19 pounds. The Berkshlres have larger shoulders than the other breeds. The butcher who saw the hogs slaughtered thought the Duroc-Jersej had the most fat on the back ; the Poland-China next, then the Berkshire. The Berkshire hnm showed more lean and less fat thnn the Poland-China. The butchers considered the breed of hogs that had the most fat the most profitable hog, both for the farmer nnd the butcher. Utilising Waste Timber. The wood chemistry section of thi Forestry Burenu has been giving some atteutlon to the subject of production of. turpentine from yellow pine waste. It Is stated that for the recovery of turpentine from waste wood the steam distillation process Is far superior to destructive distillation, making a more uniform crude turpentine, and usually a higher grade refined product The wastage from the yellow pine cut each year would yield as much turpentine ns the entire present annual output In this country, with a vnlue of $14,000, 000. At the present rate of cutting .the supply .of long-leaf yellow pine In the South will be practlcnlly exhausted In twenty years, but that the methods of exploitation now In use convert only nbout half the tree Into market pro duct. Milk Cooler. This milk cooler Is arranged so that the milk flows In a thin sheet over the outside. Cold water enters at the bob torn. Bacteria In Cold Milk. M. E. Pennington of the Bureau of Chemlutry, Department of Agriculture, reports that experiments on milk kept at nbout the free. , point showed a continuous Increase of organisms for five or six weeks. At their maximum they numbered hundreds of millions per cubic centimeter, and occnslonally they passed the billion mark. Although the milk experimented with was never solidly frozen, yet nfter ten days to two weeks It was a mass of small Ice crystals. No odor or taste indicated the higher bacterial content, and even on heating no curd was produced until the very end of the experiment For the Piss. Plant a patch of sweet corn handy to the piggery for early green feed. If early varieties are chosen, the green stuff will be ready for feeding by July. By having two or three plots coming on In succession, nice feed will be con tlnually on hand until the field of corn Is ready to be fed. Follow the first field of sweet corn with millet or cow peas for dairy feed. F. L. Rlsley. wrw SOMETHING FOE EVERYBODY Canton has fewer than 500 foreign esldents. The New York Central employs 50, 000 men nnd between $3,000,000 and W,500,000 Is paid In monthly wages. Trained falcons to carry dispatches In time of war have been tested In the Russian army. Their speed Is four times as great as that of carrier pig eons. If the real estate of Manhattan Island were divided equally between Its Inhabitants each Individual would own $2,020 worth, according to the as sessed value. Prof. Carl von Noorden, addressing a number of prominent scientists at Vienna on the subject of "Food and Nourishment," declared that the reason so many men begin to get fat immedi ately after they have married Is be cause their wives give them their favor ite dishes on every possible occasion. London Standard. "Vegetable milk" Is used In Japan. It Is made from the soja bean. The liquid Is exactly like cow's milk In ap pearance, and in taste can hardly be distinguished from it To make it the beans are first soaked and then boiled in water. Some sugar and phosphate of potassium are added, and It Is boiled down till It has the consistency of con densed milk. Alfalfa was first brought to Kansas by the late Harrison Parkinan, of Em poria. Mr. Parkman first saw alfalfa growing In Chile. He brought the seed to America, and In the late seventies he went to Emporia to live. He sowed alfalfa In a farm which he bought and the plant prospered. It was slow In gaining popularity In Kansas, but Is now one of the State's most Important 'orage crops. , In New Zealand everybody Is bound by law to take a weekly half-holiday, and there must be no shirking the obli gation. The Grand Hotel, Auckland, was recently crowded with guests, and several waiters, Instead of obeying the law and taking their prescribed weekly half-holiday, remained at work on the promise of extra pay. But the authori ties enme to hear of It and the proprie tor of the hotel had to appear in court w here he was convicted and punished. The death of Gen. Stephen D. Leo leaves only two surviving lieutenant generals of the Confederate army. They are Gen. A. P. Stewart, ranking Heu-tennnt-general of the Confederacy, of Blloxl, Miss., and Gen. Simon Bolivar Buekner, of Kentucky. General Stew art celebrated his eighty-sixth birthday anniversary on October 7 last. Gen eral Buekner was a candidate for Vice President on the National Democratic ticket with Palmer In 1S9C. lie was slghty-flve on April 1 last. The German Emperor has a well equipped pottery which brings him In $50,000 a year. The King of Wurtbm berg owns two large hotels which yield him a yearly income of some $40,000. The King of Saxony owns the famous porcelain factory at Meissen, nnd the Regent of Llppe Detmold runs a lnrge model farm from which he sells butter and milk nnd eggs. The King of Servla Is said to own a barber shop and an apothecary shop, lu addition to which beholds 'an -agency for mtotor cars. I once had a cat that did a rathei remarkable ratting feat. He stalked two young rats on the eaves of a low flat stable roof, and caught one In the usual way. The other Jumped on to an elderberry tree just below. Bob, how ever, not satisfied with the one' grasped It firmly In his mouth, and then jumped headlong for the other. Either he was very lucky or extraordinary agile, for he fell to the ground with one rat still in his mouth and the other in his paws, and promptly killed them both. The Scotsman. A strtyige story comes from one ot the Balkan states, where commercinl morality Is still in Its Infancy. At a recent bnnquet given at the house of the prime minister a distinguished dip lomat complained to his host that tho Minister of Justice, next to whom he wns sitting, had taken his watch. The prime minister said : "Ah, he shouldn't have done that. I will get It back for you." Sure enough, toward the end of the evening the watch wns returned to its owner. "And what did he say?" asked the guest. "Sh-h ! He does not know I have got it back," said the prime minister. Philadelphia Record. "Instances of desertion from the nrmj In Mexico nre very rare and for the best of reasons," snld Senor Jose do Mlnaldez, of Nueva Leon. "The reason lies in the almost sure enpture of the fugitive nnd the certainty that he will get not one but numerous floggings on his bare bnck. These lnshlngs nre done in the presence of the comrades of the deserter, and when the men see how great Is the suffering of the miserable wretch who tried In vain to quit his military Obligations, they, are forced to conclude that It is better to stick to the army than undergo such a terrlbl ordeal t" Baltimore American, '