Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Lincoln County leader. (Toledo, Lincoln County, Or.) 1893-1987 | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1909)
'gtazPdvs's.. of A Shelter (or Sheep. Sheep to do uot require warm quar ters, except for early lambs. In gen eral they are better with little pro tection from cold. The wool Is heav ier and of better quality. A stable for other stock Is too warm for sheep, and outside feeding Is best whenever possible. Therefore, says a writer In Farm, Stock and Home, they should not be housed in the barn. They must be sheltered from cold rains, and muddy fields often make outside feed ing Impossible or wasteful. The building shown provides a sim ple and cheap shelter for use by the man who Is trying to "grow Into sheep," and who cannot afford costly buildings. It has a stone foundation, and a floor of enrth. Hoof is covered with prepared roofing. Sides may have cheap drop siding; or cheap boards perhaps from logs cut on the farm, and light weight roofing. The wide doors prevent Injury to ewes from crowding, lioors will usually be left open, cither allowing the sheep to pass In and out at will, or using fire covered gates In the doorways. In case of early lambs or In severe storms the doors can be closed, and effective ventilation supplied by the open sash covered with heavy muslin. This material Is being much used for poultry houses, and is good for other farm buildings also. While enough air will pass through for ventilation, the cloth will largely stop wind and la nearly as warm as glass, especially In still cold. He who has noticed how much warmer a bedroom is with the windows screened with mosquito netting than with wire will appreciate the effect of the muslin in "entan gling" the air. Still, the correct way is to use two thicknesses of cloth ; the air space formed being very effective, while not preventing ventilation. Lambing pens are on south side, and can be thrown together when SHKl.TF.il FOR SHEEP. not required for separate use. Par titions are of wire fencing, with gates of same 011 wood frames. Hemalnder of building can be divided with some material as seems best, changing when necessary. Feeding racks are movable. No provision is made for storage of grain or roughage. Feeding is so largely "In the opeu" (hat it is often best to bring the feeds from the barn as needed. The overhead track will carry food or in a mire. It would of ten be better to attach the building to the main baru. Gate for Wire Fence. The cut Illustrates a method of making a wire fence gate without the use of braces. No description Is re quired, save, perhaps, that the wire at (he top or the posts Is twisted tight and held to the posts wllh staples. Dairy t'leaiillnen. Prof. C. K. Kckles says the cow her self Is the chief source of the contam ination to which milk is subject. Es pecially is this true when the cow is kept under the conditions found In some barns. The cow must, first of all, be kept decently clean If it is expected to produce milk suitable for human food. In many cases the difficulty Is to be attributed to the poor arrangement of the barn. Putting the cow in a well-lighted stable, with good floor, a platform the proper length to stand up on, a suiiame guuer ami a manger, and It Is possible, at least, to keep the conditions fairly good. Then keep the cow decently clean. Curry ber and brush off the udder and adjoining parts Ijjjfiji ijk the body with a stiff brush before milking. v The strainer can not be depended upon to take out dirt If must be kept out in the first place. , Another source of contamination la Improperly cleaned utensils. Prof. Eckles says a single dirty can may con tain more bacteria than there are In hlbltants In the world, and they are ready for business as soon as milk Is placed In the can. The most proper thing to use In cleaning utensils Is a good, strong brush. Nothing else should be em ployed In cleaning palls, cans or cream separators. Economical Feed Carrier. In handling dry feed, such as oats, buckwheat, shelled corn, bran and the like, for feeding farm animals and poultry, one wants something lighter and less cumber some than a bas ket, and more convenient than a peck measure. A tin pail would answer the pur pose very well were it not that when It gets wet It will soon rust. The receptacle il lustrated consists I'KEU BUCKET. of nothing more elaborate than a cheese box, to the outside of which three strips of tough lath or thin board are nailed, as pictured. At the top of the two upright pieces a hole is bored, which, allowing the in sertion of an old bucket ball, makes the carrier complete. Used with rea sonable care, It will endure service for years. Farm and Home. Mldllemen, Retailers are necessary according to present methods of doing business, and until farmers organize a selling force of their own middlemen will continue to toll the farmers' grist as thoroughly as the tralllc will bear. Peaches may rot on -the ground in Missouri while selling for 2 cents each in Chicago, but the farmer in Missouri Is helpless be cause he has no representative in the market center. The time will come when farmers will have an agent at each central point to handle farm nrod- ucts and distribute them either to the consumer or retail grocer. When that time comes farmers will come nearer getting what they work for. It Is Just as necessary to sell right as to farm right. Agricultural Optimist. Prolific Ducka. The origin of the Iudlan runnel ducks Is unknown. It is claimed they were introduced Into Eugland about thirty years ago. It Is said that they will lay nearly 200 eggs in a year. One breeder gives food comparison with Pekln's average about as follows : Food need for 100 Tekln ducks for one mouth amounts to about 2.250 pounds; food for 100 Indian runner ducks, same period, 1,500 pounds. Time required to reach marketable size is given as ten weeks for each breed named. Time to reach maturi ty: Peklns, 6 to 9 months; Indians. to 5 months. The Peklns are the larger ducks. Billion Ton of Earth Yearly. A billion tons of enrth are swent by our rivers Into the sea every year nn amount of soli equal to a block one mile square and more than a thou sand feet high, weighing as much as the total yearly tonnage carried by all our railroads and river and -lake vessels, and valued at not less thnn a billion dollars. "This soil waste," rajs an authority, "Is sapping a re soiu ee richer than all others combined save one. our Inland waters." It is mainly due to lack of forests on the s;opes where the rivers rise. Arbar Culture. Poultry Picking. Keep the fowls quarters warm and dry. luuifi seeu is saia to oe an excel lent egg-producing grain. Green food Is Just 88 essential for young chicks as for hens. Dirty quarters mean lice and niltes, and lice and niltes mean no eggs. System, as in everything else, is re quired to make the poultry business profitable. Unless you want your flock to have the colors of Joseph's coat don't use males of different breeds. Experienced poultrymen know that uncomfortable fowls do not do well, and they devote their time and work accordingly. Good laying breeds are too numer ous for us to suggest one. The buyer should use his own discretion, only be ing sure the particular breed will thrive under the conditions of bis v lection. WHAT "MEECEBJZED" MEAITS. A Process of Imitating 8111c Dlare atarded for Many Year. Mercerized cotton was first Intro duced as a substitute for silk some ten or twelve years ago, although th process for making it was Invented about 1840 by a celebrated English dyer, John Mercer, the Craftsman sayc. He discovered that when cotton, either In cloth or yarn, was subjected for a 'short time to the action of strong caustic alkali and then thoroughly washed the resulting material was much stronger than before, had shrunk very considerably and had a much greater affinity for dyestuffs. Mercer patented his discovery and made some use of it in calico printing, but tho process was nearly forgotten until, In 1889, it was discovered that by proper treatment cotton could by this means be made so lustrous as to compare not unfavorably with silk. To make the cotton lustrous the goods, after dipping into the strong alkali, are kept firmly stretched, and their strong tendency to shrjnk resisted, until the alkali has been thoroughly rinsed off and the last traces neutral ized with a little acid. If this is done carefully, when finally dried the cotton fibers will be found drawn out smooth and lustrous, while still retaining their new qualities of strength and Increased dyeing power. To get good results In this process the materials treated, whether in yarn or cloth, must be made of the very best and longest stp.pled cotton, preferably Egyptian, and when well done the results are extremely sat isfactory. The luster Is not as good aa the very best silk, but It is quite well marked, and for replacing the cheap grades of heavily weighted silks, as, for Instance, for Underwear, linings, etc., the mercerized goods are of very great value owing to their strength and dup ability, aa well as their cheapness. Style of Make-up In Africa. The efforts of American girls to beautify themselves are copied throughout Africa, but the standards of beauty differ. Most of the women scar their bodies and many have great welts on their foreheads and cheeks, marking the tribe to which they be long. In Central Africa nmltllatlon of the ears is common. The Swahllis enlarge the holes In the lobes until they be come mere straps which will Inclose a glass tumbler. These same glrle have holes all around th rim n.i t lw 1 T. nn tn ...1.1.1. . 1 t 1 1 ... .. t-ucn cnio, wuicu luey Ull Wlin T0111 of paper. The Masai women load down their ears with Jewelry, fasten ing great weights to the holes In the lobes so that they are gradually pulled down until they flop against the shoulders. Great rings and plugs are worn In the lips by people In German East Africa. The upper lip sometimes extends several lifthes out over tho mouth. In another African tribe both men and women knock out the six front teeth of the lower Jaw. On the south side of Victoria Nyanza there are tribes where the women file their teeth sharp like a saw, and the Bu Yumas knock out two of the Incisors. Invigorating Okluhoma Msrhts. It doesn't make any difference how hot the day may have been iu Okla homa nor how still and sweltering the air may have seemed, for as soon as the sun goes down In the new State the breeze rises. It comes from no mysterious source. It is simply the radiation of heat which will occur Id any open country which Is hot enough. At 6 o'clock the breeze will make your hatband whistle. At 8 It will slap your tie In your face, and if you are wearing a soft hat and glasses the brlin of your hat w ill beat against the rlra of your glasses and make deep red marks on your cheek. By 10 o'clock the breeze Is no longer a breeze, but moans and whistles round the corners like a March zephyr In Missouri. And If you stay up until blood-red Aldebaran rises In the east and Vega dips low in the west the wind comes in enormous sighs like the very world must have been shaken t give them vent. One Thing- He Could Do. Green I'm looking for a plumber tt do some work for me. Do you happen to know of one that does satisfactory work? Brown I know of one that I can guarantee to fill the bill ; but I won't know how satisfactory his work will be. Mmle Her Weary. Little Helen Sister, that new bea, of yours makes me tired. Elder Sister Why, dear? Lltlte Helen lie has the manners of a street-car conductor. When I went Into the parlor Inst night he salt "How old are you, little girl?" When a preacher begins to hint around that he has offers from other towns, It Is a sign that he Is working a scheme to have his salary raised. When a ninu starts out with "I don't know that 1 deserve any credit for It," you can depend on It that credit Is Just what he is seeking. The Best Spring Medicine It is as easy to prove that Hood's Sarsaparilla is the best spring medi cine as it is to say it. Spring Ailments are blood ailments that is, they arise from an impure impoverished, devitalized condition of the blood; and Hood's Sarsaparilla purifies, enriches and revitalizes the blood as no other medicine does. It is the most effective of all blood medicines. There is Solid Foundation for this claim, in the more than 40,000 testi monials of radical and permanent cures by .this medicine, received in two years, this record being unparalleled in medical history. Hood's Sarsaparilla Cures all spring humors, all eruptions, clears the complexion, creates an appetite, aids the digestion, relieves that tired feeling, gives vigor and vim. Begin taking Hood's Sarsaparilla today. Get it in the 'usual liquid form or in chocolated tablets known as Sarsatabs. 100 Doses One Dollar. Bualneaa Proposition. "Tour honor," said the convicted beg gar, "can't you change my sentence of imprisonment to a fine?" "Suppose I did," said the Judge, "where would you get the money to pay It?" "Oh," replied the c. b., "I could beg a little every day till I had enough." CTC St. Vitas' Dftnee ana orvons LMsesse permi I 1 1 J nently cured by Mr. I -ine's Great Nerve Re storer. Send for FREE $3.00 trinl bottle and treatiae. Dr. H. U. Kline. Ld . Kil Arch St.. Philadelphia. Pa. Kttiue. Uncle Hiram So you play base ball, do you. Dickey? Has your ball club got a name? Five-Year-Old Has it got a name! Gee! You've heard of the Rag Alley Yannigans, haven't you, uncle? Well, I'm their reg'lar shortstop. We're goln to whale the everlastin' stuffin out o' the P.umtown Iiillygoats next Saturday! Chicago Tribune. Mothers will find Mrs. Wlnilows Soothing Syrup the best remedy to use lor their chllUrea during the toethiug period. Amply Qualified. Farmer Honk Hear ye are goln' to send you son to college, Eben? Farmer Bornkicker Don't see any reason why I shouldn't he's too dum lazy to work, has too much hair, and can yell so's you can hear him 'most a mile. The Circle. SORE EYES, weak, inflamed, red, watery and swollen eyes, use PETT IT'S EYE SALVE. All druggists or Howard Bros., Buffalo, N. Y. Any Change an improvement. Photographer Is that the most pleas ing expression you can assuim? Sitter Yes, sir. Photographer Then, for heaven's sake, glare ferociously at me! Her Constitutional Right. Gladys So you've sent Herbert about his business, have you? Maybelle Yes; but I have since used the er recall on him. Chicago Trib une. I Restorative I Recipe for Men This will prove welcome bit of information for all those who are overworked, 'irloomy, de spondent, nervous, and have trembling limbs, heart palpitation, dizziness, cold ex tremeties, in somnia, fear without cause, timidity in venturing and areneral inability to act naturally and ration ally as others do. because the treatment can be prepared secretly at home and laken without any one's knowledge. . If the reader decides to try it, Bret three ounces of ordinary syrup sarsaparilla compound and one ounce compound fluid balm wort; mix, and let stand two hours; then get one ounce compound essence cardiol and one ounce tincture cadomene compound (not cardamom); mix all tog-ether, shake well and take a teaspoonful after each meal and one when retiring. Inside History. Indignant Wife What's the use of my saying anything to you, John? It goes in at one ear and out at the other ! Provoking Husband Not always, Ma ria. When you say anything worth mind ing I stop It on the way through. To Enjoy the full confidence of the Well-informed of the World and the Commendation of the most eminent physicians it was essen tial that the component parts of Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna should be known to and approved by them; there fore, the California Fig Syrup Co. pub lishes a full statement with every package. The perfect purity and uniformity of pro duct, which they demand in a laxative remedy of an ethical character, are assured by the Company's original method of man ufacture known to the Company only. The figs of California are used in the production of Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna to promote the pleasant taste, but the medicinal principles are obtained from plants known to act-most beneficially. To get its beneficial effects always buy the genuine manufactured by the Cali fornia Fig Syrup Co. only, and for sale by all leading druggists. nn a n?n i nil At the Night School. Teacher Who's Wordsworth Shaggy Haired Pupil (interrupting) A dollar apiece? Any living ex-President's. Almost Incapacitated. A colonel In General Lee's division la the late Civil War sometimes Indulged in more apple-jack than was good for him. Passing him one evening, leaning against a tree, the general said: "Good evening, Colonel. Come over to my Jent for a moment, please. S-s-cuse me, g-g-en'ral, s-s-cuse. me," replied the Colonel. "It's 'bout all I can do stay where I am.' Snrcasra. Cleaning the Staa-e. We hope," said the spokesman or the committee, "to enlist your support In favor of a clean stage." "You have It," responded the theat rical manager, heartily. "Why, almost every one of my plays opens with a girl dusting everything In sight" Philadelphia Ledger. Lesson from the Past. Robin Hood had just handed back bait the contents of the slender purse be had taken from the plainly dressed traveler. "If you were a rich man," he said, "I'd soak you for the whole of it, but I'm no hog ; I exact only what I Chink the traffic will bear." For Robin Hood, with all his faults, lived faithfully up to his idea of what a graduated income tax ought to be. Getting It Right. They asked him if his name was Tab. ft. And merrily the big man laughed. "Why, no," he said; "my name is Taft. Which, as you will find by consulting the various dictionaries and paying particular attention to the marks Indicating the correct pronuncia tion of the words therein, Almost, if not quite, rhymes with 'raft.' " Chicago Tribune. L'ncle Jerry. "A a general thine." ohsprvprl rinrl. Jerry Peebles, "I believe in lettin' wom en nave wnatever they want ; but when I see one of 'em goin' around with a spring hat on her head that looke like an old-fashioned beehive that's been tarred and feathered and then struck by lightning, I begin to wonder, by George, if It would be safe to trust her with the ballot !" Chicago Tribune. The Similarity. Mrs. Gunner Henry, you would Der- slst in calling that last cook a vision. There was nothing pretty about her. Mr. Gunner Not at all. - Mrs. Gunner Then why did you call her a vision? Mr. Gunner Because visions fade away. She remained only two days. Suspicious Circumstance. The grocer had warranted the maple sirup to be the real stu "It doesn't taste like any maple sirup I ever bought," said the customer, who had just sampled it, "and I strongly sus pect " "Sir !" said the indignant gracer. "I strongly suspect, in spite of your guaranty, that it's genuine." Telegraph l'oles. Harker Flue automobile, Coggwood. What do you call it? Coggwood Peary. Harker After the arctic explorer, eh? And why? Coggwood Because It Is always mak ing a dash for the pole. Ilevenge. "I'm golug to get even with alt the phonograph fiends In our flat." "How so?"' "Give my kids snare drums Christmas." Detroit Free Press. for Fufllluient of a Prophecy. Hannibal, the illustrious general, driv en to despair by his enemies, had taken poison and had laid himself down to die. "Anyhow, he said, "my name will live in history." His foresight was unerring. Two thousand years later a town ia Missouri was named In his honor. Cbj cago Tribune. Why They Don't. Would some oracle might utter. Giving me the reason why Maidens in a constant flutter Never fly 1 Indianapolis News. A flavoring used the same as lemon or vanilla. By .dissolving granulatrd sugar in water and adding Mapleine, a delirious syrup is made and a syrup better thsn msple. Mnpleine is sold by grocers. If not send 35c for 2 os. bottle and recipe book. Crescent Mfg. Co., Seattle, Wn.