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About Lincoln County leader. (Toledo, Lincoln County, Or.) 1893-1987 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 16, 1908)
To Matte Poor Fnrm Rich. "The progressive farmer rotates his crops, lie tile-druliis his land. He keeps dairy cows or mutton sheep or both. lie breeds draft horses and does farm work with brood mares and grow ing colts. He improves the power of the soil by growing legumes." James Wilson, secretary of agricul ture, In the above words sums up the vital principles of good farming. He declares that the people of the United States have wasted their Inheritance of bind and wood, and' the productiveness of the soil near the great centers of population has steadily decreased. We have been a nation of soil robbers, but there Is at lust an awakening slow but sure. Farmers of all sections are wanting to know how to stop the lenks and in crease the deposits of their business and the government Is helping them In ninny ways. There are over 0,000 persons employed in the Department of Agri culture and 2,000 of these are scientists, nil working Intelligently toward help ing the fanner solve the problems which confront Mm. Them nre slyty II ve lund grant colleges with 10,000 stu dents In agriculture. These boys are learning that rotation of crops is neces sary, that live stock must be raised to make manure, of which there is never enough. They are finding out that young grasses and legumes are nature's per fect ration for domestic animals. Milk and meat and work are had more cheaply from the pasture than from other sources. Pasture hind Increases as farm help becomes scarce. Mutton sheep are suggested when labor Is dear. Cultivated crops reduce' organic matter In the soil and render It unfit for profit able growing. ' Pasturing replaces or ganic matter. When good crops of grain or roots are wanted the pasture, plowed and reduced In season, Is the best place to get them. Western farm ers lu the corn belt get their heavy crops from pasture land. With the help of improved machinery the progressive Individual farmer is producing much more than the average fanner did a generation ago and men of this class are keeping up the productive qualltes of their farms. The neglected lands of the eastern mid middle states can be brought back to their primitive frultfulness through the aid of scientific farming. Secre tary Wilson says they are the cheapest land in the country and people wanting homes who have saved a little capital from their earnings or young men of means nnd tastes for the Independent life of the country will find rich oppor tunities lu these lauds for profit and usefulness. IIciiiiivIiik Sapllnajs and Stamp. In uprooting young trees a team of holies or even a single horse with a chain can do effective work. Rest re sulls can be obtained where the growth consists of saplings two to rour Inches in diameter and where the root system Is lateral. The plan Is to fasten one end of the chain to the trunk ns high above the ground as the flexibility of STUMP WITH LATERAL BOOTS. LTUOOT1NO A bAPLINU. the tree will permit. While the horses lire pulling at the tree a man should sever the roots at the base. Stumps of moderate size may also be pulled with chains and horses. One end of the chain should be fastened around a large root as shown In the Illustration. 15y placing the chain across the top of the stump a leverage can be secured to take full advantage of the strength of the horses. Fence I'oat Expense. au annum lence post uill of more than $1,250,000 Is one Item In the ex pense account of the farmers of a sin. gl agricultural State. It U estimated that the formers of Iowa use posts bay ing a value exceeding this enormous sum each year to maintain the fences on the 2j.Ooo.0OO acres of Improved land in the State. .In making these estimates. H. r. Baker, professor of forestry In Iowa Mute Agricultural College, figured that! the farms of Iowa required 78,000,000 1 j pnsts for fences, or 2.000 to the square mile. Placing the value of the posts at 15 cents. each, the cost of renewals ev ery eight or nine years, which Is the life of the post. Is $11,718,000, making an annual bill for renewals of $1,405, (XX). Like many other farming States, Iowa has a lack of fence post material, ! but there Is little excuse for this con dition, according to the foresters who have made studies In the State. A prop erly managed forest plantation will produce, when the trees have reached post size. 3.500 posts three to five Inches In diameter per acre; thus, It would take 22.350 acres about every ten years to grow the necessary posts to supply the State. Iowa is said to have 200. 000 acres of planted timber, and yet th.e fence post supply is insufficient. If properly cared for, many of these plan tations can be made to produce more timber, and thus Insure the future post supply. These 200.000 acres are not at pfesent furnishing the posts which it Is esti mated can actually be grown on 22.350 acres of properly handled forest land. Effect o( Rnral Delivery. There is a veritable network of rural routes out of nearly all of the town lw this section of the State, and seldom does one find a farmer who Is not placed in a position to take advantage of one. With present conditions exist ing, the man on the -farm has the op portunity to take his daily paper as the one in town, and gets his mail some times earlier than many of the resi dents of the cities. There are rural mall carriers and rural mail carriers each one has his striking characterls-' tic. The majority are favorites in their particular field, and as a rule the patrons of his route would not trade him for any other man on an other. The carrier and the farmer lenm to know each other, and the coun try visitor on bearing them greet each other would say they were both "good fellows." The man that carries the mall should have a whole lot of credit. He Is obliged to make the trip In all kinds of weather and the best of pro tections will not make the job an en joyable one. Some time when he Is not busy, let the reader talk a few min utes to a rural mall carrier and he will find that he Is In touch with ev eryone on the route. Bloomlngton (111.) Pantagrnph. Graaa a Great Drinker. When a man is dying of thirst give him a drink of water. Whv not do the same with grass? Why should grass be i allowed to lie all day In the broiling ; sun, Its parched tongue hanging out without a drop? It must be dreadfully 1 thirsty about noon, or a little after; yet It Is allowed to suffer till dusk makes It agreeable for the gardener to exhibit himself In gay attire with hose. The gentleman gardener, the New York commuter, looks mighty pretty In rolled-up flannel trousers and an Indigo shirt, canvas shoes and a 35-cent r.ina- j ma chapeau. He pushes the mower, ' ul 1,l"""u;1 WW ti, h, n,i fli.f- ,m, fi,'!conis: cover wltn cold water; simmer lassies of the neighborhood, while the grass Is dying. New York Press. Bellevea in Mixed Farming. I firmly believe In mixed farming, but even then we must specialize on some certain line of stock feeding and rota tion of crops If we make a decided sue-, cess of the business. Call It general farming, but let's not cnll It mixed farming. As grandfather used to say,; He something. If you cannot be a lone- i tailed rat, be a mouse." Have som hobby, some kind of a crop or somt kind of live stock and specialize on that and make your other farming subservl. ent to that one special crop or kind of live stock feeding. We have too many common mixed farmers. John C, Barnes, Indiana. Profitable Cattle. A train load of cuttle sold in Omaha recently for $20,000, being exactly $8 ! per hundred pounds for every Btoer on board. These cattle were fattened on '. a mixture of corn and alfalfa. To en cournge feeders to take up the balanced ration as best for cattle, the puckers are to have exhibits at the National Corn Exposition to be held In Oiuuhn next December, and will show In the cuts of meat the superiority of that from alfulfa-corn fed steers. Enula (Tex.) News. Salt Purification. Salt Is purified by melting In the new and rapid English process. The crude rock salt is fed automatically to a table contained in a large furnace. Is then fused and runs into troughs, from which It Is drawn at one side of the furnace into, large caldrons. Air Is forced into the molten mass and-llino Is added. The Impurities sink to the bottom, and the upper portion Is ground , and screened while the lower part Is used for chemical manure, I IlJL2 . W II raft FX 1 151 I Homemade Linoleum, A good, strong linoleum may b mntle from old Bru88'8 carpet thut hag not been worn through, says Popular Mechanics. Tack the carpet right sldo down on the floor and then apply paint. givln8 It a large number of coats, the last few coats to be of the desired color, allowing each coat , to dry well. If the paint begins to' wear, apply a fresh coat of paint. The effect of mo saic tile may be produced by dotting the last coat with different colors of paint Griddle Cake. For those who have no waffle Iron a recipe for delicate griddle cakes Is given. Beat the white and yolk of an egg separately. Add to the yolk on cup of milk, one-quarter level teaspoon ful of salt, and one and one-half cups of sifted flour. Mix well, then add two and one-half level teaspoonfuls of bak ing powder, and beat hard with strokes across the bowl. Fold the white of the egg in lightly and cook on a hot griddle, allowing one tablespoonful of batter to each cake. Mexican Rarebit. Melt a tablesnoonful of butter In a chafing dish. When well heated add a tablespoonful of Mexican pepper pulp, a half-teaspopnful of mustard and a little salt To this add a half pound of cheese cut In small pieces. When the cheese Is melted stir in slowly three or four teaspoonfuls of milk and then add one beaten egg. The mixing should be stirred constantly while cooking. When sufficiently thickened, serve on small squares of toasted bread. A Tomato Sauce, For a tomato sauce such as the chef In one of the best hotels makes, melt two tablespoonfuls of butter in a sauce pan and cook In it half an onion cut fine. .When the onion is yellow, add two tablespoonfuls of flour and cook until it is delicately browned. Then turn 'In two cupfuls of tomatoes, a small glass 'of wine, a bit of bay leaf, two or three cloves, a bit of garlic, and salt and paprika. Cook ten minutes, strain and serve with baked fish. Quick Co (Tee Cake. Sift together one pint of flour, one third of a cupful of sugar, three tea spoonfuls of baking powder and half a teaspoonful' each of salt and ground cinnamon. Mix to a soft dough with about half a cupful of milk stirred Into a well-beaten egg. Add four table- "P00"11"1 of so" Du"er, spread In a sha,low Pnn' 8Prinkle with sugar mixed With cinnamon and bake in a moderate oven- Sorve tresh w,th coffee- Raisins or currants may be added If desired. Boiled Tonurne. Have a fine pickled ox tongue, It Very S"U 14 "? i" cold "ater for ?"e or wo hours b,fuforte cooklnS; P,,t Into a stew pan with two carrots, one nlon hunch ,of berb and P"'8 gently for about three hours ; remove from the stew pan, take off the skin, trim the roots, put a paper frill around and serve on a hot dish. Yorkahlre Padding. Mix one cupful of flour with one eighth of a tablespoonful of salt and add one cupful of milk gradually to form a 81uotn Paste, then add two eggs beaten ulltn "Sht- Bake ,n 8em P"ns greaseo. witn rat from tne roast, ana baste" with the fat after the pudding is fully risen. Serve around the roast. Th!s PlldllnB is often baked in a drip, Plu6 P and cut in squares to serve. Flexible Glne. According to Power, a flexible glue for attaching leather to metals may be made by adding one part of Venetian turpentine to four parts of glue. The mass Is heated In a glue pot as usual Bnt1' 11 becomes sticky and ceases to B'v ofr bubbles. It works best when fresh. naked Codfish Haah. To each cup of finely flaked and freshened codfish allow two cups of chopped cold potatoes; mix In two ta blespoons of melted butter nnd one cup of milk ; pack In a buttered pan, cover and bake thirty minutes. Fried Salt Codflah. Cut the fish In squares and soak in cold water over nigbt, dry on a cloth and dip each square In beaten egg, to which has been added one tablespoon of cream ; roll the fish in flour and fry a golden brown In hot fat. Bntter Scotch. Two cupfuls of sugar, two table spoonfuls of water, a piece of matter tne b1m of an 6". 8011 without stir-. rlnS unt" " bardons on a spoon. Pour out on buttered plates to cool. DOQ TEAMS BEAT HOUSES. ttoat Reliable Meana of Tranaporl la Northern Michigan. A dog owner who takes great pride in the breed and smartness of his teams is the elty treasurer of the "Soo," J. I. Deadman. He has six of the finest dogs In the upper peninsula, and drives thein almost dally during the winter months. Ills trips extend as far as St. Ignace, Detour and ether p.'lnts within a hundred miles of the "Soo."' Last winter he made a trip to St Igmice, stopping over night on the way, and covered a distance of sixty fire miles In five and.one-half hours by ctual time on the road. Mr. Deadman la a veterinary sur geon by profession, and be uses bis dog team in respondlu to all calls which take him out luti the snow cov ered cnuiiiry. Wrapped up in a huge fur overcoat, and with a buflalo robe tocked around him he starts out with his six dogs In the fiercest storms in the coldest weather, and will pass any team of horses on the road. In mak ing a long Journey, with favorable con ditions, bis dogs will keep up a pace af ten' miles an hour and wear down ny horses. In fact, the dog is the most reliable means of transport through the upper peninsula of Michigan in the long win ters, and civilization has not been able to retire him along with vanished rel ics of the older and ruder times. The dog team has kept Its place In the life of the community ever since the days when these teams were the only means of communication with the outside world for five months of the year. Outing Magazine. (EOUKKES, Glass Is made Iridescent by being exposed, in a red-hot condition, to the fumes of salt and of tin, barium and strontium. lied Is produced by the Btrontia, blue by the baryta and bluish white by the tin. In ancient glass, I which is more opaque, Iridescence Is due to partial decay. j It having been urged as a possible objection to the setting apart of forest reserves on the great Western plains that the huge buffalo wolf, or "timber wolf," would take advantage of them to breed In security, Mr. Vernon Bailey recently gave before the Biological So ciety of Washington an account of his observations of the habits of these wolves, which were undertaken, lu part, for the purpose of learning to what extent the animals are harbored by the forests. His conclusions are re assuring, since he shows that although the wolf dens are found In the open and on the edge of the forest, none exist In the timber. In the scout cruiser Salem the Uni ted States possesses the fastest war ship afloat. In the recent government standardization trial over the measured mile course off Rockland, Me., this handsome vessel was driven at a max imum speed of 20.83 knots and at an average speed for five runs over the mile course of 25.05 knots. The Salem Is equipped with Curtis turbines, a type which has been developed In this! country. The Chester, a sister ship, Is conceded to be the second fastest war ship afloat. Reports from across the ocean that the British Indomitable reached faster speed than these are said to be lacking in verification. Messrs. C. A. Pafsons and A. a. Campbell Swinton described before the Royal Society in London recently the transformation of a diamond into a blnck coal-like mass by the action of cathode raps In a high vacuum. The diamond first became red, and then In tensely white-hot, and finally, at 11,200 volts and 4S milllamperes, It disinte grated, Increased considerably In vol ume, and assumed the appearance and consistency of coke. The temperature at the time of disintegration was esti mated to be 1,890 degrees Centigrade. Differences were observed In the spec tra of the gases in the vacuum tube before and after the operation, but they were not sufficiently marked to determine with exactitude any varia tion In the nature of the gases. At a meeting of the Philosophical So clety of Washington, Dr. J. W. Spencer presented many new and surprising facts about the Niagara river below the falls. Soundings have recently been made at points where such work was supposed to be Impossible. A self-registering buoy was repeatedly sent over the falls. On one occasion It struck the fallen rocks at a depth of only 72 feet; but lower down the depth was found to be between 84 and 100 feet. In a lateral channel the depth found was 192 feet. A depth of 180 feet was repeatedly found near the cantilever bridge, two miles below the falls. In the whirlpool rapids a sounding of 120 feet was obtained. Below the rapids a narrow channel was discovered, 183 feet In depth, being 181 feet below the level of Lake Ontario. It must have been formed when the lake lay about ISO feet below Its present level, Advice. "Never marry a man to reform him, my dear," counseled Aunt Hephzibah. "It you do reform him he'll bate you for it, and if you don't you'll always be pitying yourself for having married a man who wasn't good enough for you." f FITC &t Vita Danes and erroaa DlseaaM parma I 1 1 J BfBtlf carta by Dr. l -tne'i Great Narva He. ftorer. Send for FREE t J 00 trial bottle and treat I ne. Iir. B. H. Kline, hi., Ml Arch St., Philadelphia, Fa. Rebuking HI Preeumptlon. The proud beauty eyed bim with regal (corn. "I have told you before, Mr. Jordle," she said, "that the difference in our so-' cial position makes it exceedingly pre sumptuous on your part even to hint at a possible marriage between us. If you can't talk to me without doing the sentimental stunt just keep your face closed, will you?" Utterly crushed, the young man prom ised to be good, and Bhe laid her golden brown head down on his shoulder again, Itema ot Interest. Chattel mortgaged. Bonds. Promissory notes. Pawnshops. Loans. Toledo Blade. Mothers will find Mr. Wlnslow'g Boothtni Byrup the best remedy to use ioz their ch.'ldi'W luring the teething period. Apportioning the Year. Now strolls the youth beside the aef, Vo longer grimly thrifty, Fr just two weeks vacation he Must save up coin for fifty. Washington Stvf - ' Defined. "Uncle Henry, what are pajamas?" "Pajamas my bov, are the masculins substitute for the bloomer costume." Shake Into Your Shoes x Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder for the feet. It cures painful, swollen, smarting, sweating feet. Makes new shoes easy. Sold by all Druggists and Shoa Stores. Don't accept nny substitute. Sample' FREE. Address A. S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Gen. Corbln Likes Old Clothes. Ever see Gen. Corbin's old shoes? lie bad them made four years ago when be went to the Philippines, and he's wearing 'em yet. They're great. The general de tests a new pair of shoes or a new suit of clothes. A young fellow came along to his place near Washington recently and said : "Sir, I don't want to ask for money, but I would be grateful If you would give me an old suit of clothes." "Not by a good sight," said the general, "but there is a new suit inside you can have." New York Sun. Caturrn Cannot be Cured with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they cannot reach the seat of the diseuse. Catarrh Is a blood or constitutional di ease, and in order -o cure It you must take internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, and acts di J?? ft upon the blood and mucous surfaces. Hall s Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It wan prescribed by one of the best physicians Sim L0Uin,ta 'or yendis a regular pre crlptlon. It Is composed of the best tonics Derfefr. K " ".? the. m,'"," rfaces. The whl -.ISmblna,,,J.110' heo ingredients is Tmr rf,., kV". wonderful results in cur ing Catarrh Send for testimonials free. sJV'1" 4 ro- PrP"-. Toledo, O. Sold by Drnptrl.ts, price 7.V Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Seeking a Fitting; Environment. Mrs. Uaynor Your brother Algy is going to spend the rest of the summer in a logging camp, is he? What is his idea in doing that? Mrs. Shyne The poor boy has taken a notion that he wants to wear a French beard, and he's going there to try to raise the necessary foundation for it. Tta Faulty Conatrnetlon, "I yias away up in front," Mrs. Lap sling was saying, "and yet I couldn't hear half the actors said. I tell you there's something wrong with the agnostic properties of 4hat theater." Chicago Tribune. KASPARILLA TLts sterling household remedy is most successfully prescribed for a "world of troubles." For derangements of the di gestive organs it is a natural corrective, operating directly upon the liver and ali mentary canal, gently but persistently stimulating a healthful activity. Its beneficial influence extends, however, to every portion of the system, aiding in the processes of digestion and assimilation of food, promoting a wholesome, natural appetite, correcting sour stomach, bad breath, irregularities of the bowels, con stipation and the long list of troubles directly traceable to those unwholesome conditions. Kasparilla dispels drowsi ness, headache, backache and despond ency due to inactivity of the liver, kidneys and digestive tract. It is a strengthening tonic of the highest value. If it fails to satisfy we authorize all dealers to refund the purchase price. Hoyt Chemical Co. Portland, Oregon CRESCENT EGG-PHOSPHATE BAKING POWDER A modern leavener at a moderate price; is 30 per cent, more efficient than "''Trust" or Creara-of-Tartar products and absolutely free from the health-racking Rochelle Salts residue Invariably accompanying their use. Get it from your Grocer 25c FULL POUND - 25c