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About Lincoln County leader. (Toledo, Lincoln County, Or.) 1893-1987 | View Entire Issue (July 18, 1913)
FARM m ORCHARD Notes and Instructions from Agricultural Colleges and Experiment Stations of Oregon and Washington, Specially Suitable to Pacific Coast Conditions Loganberry One of the Best Busi ness Propositions. "From a strictly commercial point of view the loganberry seems to be one of the best business propositions that is open to the small fruit grower of the Northwest at the present time," says Prof. V. R. Gardner, of the Oregon Agricultural College. "If an average of five tons is ob tained, this means an income of ap proximately $400 an acre," he contin ues. "With an average yield of only four tons, a very moderate estimate indeed, the income an acre would be $320. The cost of picking amounts to about 25 cents a crate, or $20 a ton This leaves a very good margin to cov er the cost of production and for profit upon the amount of capital -invested. "Heretofore the demand for logan berries has beeamore or less limited. The fruit is comparatively soft and not suitable for long distance ship ments. With the development of the canning trade and with the discovery that the fuit can be dried to advan tage, a very large market is open to it. Canneries are willing to pay about four cents a pound, or $80 a ton, for the fresh fruit, the same price that they pay for raspberries and strawber ries. They are able to pay this price because they can sell it to practically the same trade that takes these fruits. and it is no more costly to put on the market in cans. Furthermore, it seems very likely that they will con tinue to pay this price for it, for the prices of strawberries and raspberries will tend to establish a level below which it cannot well drop." Winter Butter Making. Good butter can be made in winter, but it takes careful attention to de tails from start to finish. Be sure that utensils used in working the but ter are thoroughly ajred and dried af ter using and before being put away, In the absence of direct sunshine dry ing is slower, and may not be thor oughly done unless special attention is given, says a Farm and Home Writer. Always scald pails, strainers and separators with as much care as in mid summer. Because milk does not sour so quickly is no reason why vigilance in this direction should be relaxed. The bitter odor is bound to creep in unless this is carefully attended to. We cannot hope to make good but ter without proper ripening of the cream, for proper ripening is most im portant. Most farm people keep cream an entire week, putting all in one lot. Often the cream is skimmed directly into the churn, and this, of course, has not ripened at all. Cool the cream thoroughly after separating and before mixing with the other cream. Stir thoroughly every time fresh cream is added. It will then ripen evenly; more butter will be ob tained, and it will come easier and quicker. Churning should be done at least twice a week. After separating is done cream should be kept cool until within 12 hours before churning. It may generally be ripened in winter by letting it stand in a warm room a few hours. The temperature should be raised to about 65 degrees, or a little over. If churned at more than 65 de grees a good deal of the curd may be incorporated and this will give a cheesy flavor and the butter will not keep well. . If all the conditions are right, but ter should come in about 40 minutes. If it takes longer, it may be due to too much cream in the churn, cream too cold, cream too thin, and it may be so thick that it whips and sticks. Students Close Year of Country man With Fine Number. Oregon Agricultural College, Cor vallis The fifth year of the Oregon Countryman, published by the students of the Oregon Agricultural College, closed with the June number. It is full of good things, containing 13 spe cial articles on various phases of farm and home life, with 11 illustrations. The leading article is on "The Evergreen Blackberry," by W. R. Siler, of Vance, Wash. E. W. Cur tis, of Claremont, Cal., writes on "Important Phases in Dry Farm Till age Methods," and A. B. Lunn, Cam den, N. Y on marketing farm eggs. O. C. Simpson, of the dairy faculty, has an article on farm butter making, and W. W. Howard, of Corvallis, gives' some valuable information on the care of draft horses. Flax culture is the theme on which R. W. Alspaugh, of Barton, writes. Dean Henrietta W. Calvin, of the home Economics department, has the leading article in the home prob lems division, discussing the principles of bread making. A dairy of the sen ior stock judging trip is given by Blaine Ferguson, of Harley, Idaho, and there are editorials on the dairy students' trip, the work in poultry husbandry, animal husbandry and other departments. Profit in Kindness. Too few breeders and dairy farmers give the needed recognition to the basis on which the dairy industry is founded the motherhood of the ani mal furnishing the milk. One of the most successful of the early Wisconsin dairy men had for his motto, "Speak to a cow as you would to a lady," and when he was asked if he removed his hat when entering the stable door in the morning, he replied that he cer tainly would do so if he thought he could get more milk thereby, writes a contributor to Farm and Home. What owner, especially in testinar. has not noticed that some one of his milkers was able to get more milk from the cows than were the other milkers? It is the personal equation, tne regard the cow has for her attend ant, that gives hand milking an ad vantage over the machine; and the more nearly the cow has adopted her milker in place of her calf, the great er will be bis success as a milker, There is usually a vast difference in results between the milker who gets a cow into position by pushing the leg of the stool into her flank and then kicks her on the shin to make her step oacK, ana the one who gains the same end with patience and gentleness. Who can blame the cow for wanting to kick the first man? Aside from the knowledge of how to feed in general and the study of the special wants of the individual cows, u attain me greatest success a man must win the affection of the cows. Some will say that this cannot be done. But if the calf and growing yeaning is treated gently and kindly, and then is stabled and handled before freshening like a cow, there will be no such thing as breaking the .heifer to milk; she will take it as the regu lar thing. Four Bud Weevils Injure Fruit Scions. That young fruit scions are receiv ing great injury from four different bud weevils, and that immediate steps snouia De taken is the opinion of Prof. H. F. Wilson, in charge of entomology worn at tne uregon Agricultural Col lege. "They sometimes appear in im mense numbers on fruit trees and feed on the foliage and buds just opening," he says. "On large trees the damage is slight, but very young trees suffer, and may lose the proper branches for forming the head by having the buds eaten Dy tne weevils. They do con siaeraDie damage on young prune scions, stripping them completely and causing them to die in a short time. "Spraying with arsenate of lead would undoubtedly kill them, but all the weevils respond slowly to poisons, and the breedine sroundn would fnmiati new supplies before the old disap peared. Hence spraying is not a prac tical remedy. As the beetles have no wings under the wing sheaths, they must crawl in to the trees. If, therefore, the trees are shaken in the cool of the Hnv t dislodge the weevils, and something sticky is put around the tree, a large part of the damaee will be nreventnn1 Printer's ink or a special preparation maae Dy the "Tanglefoot" manufac tures would be good. . How to Prune Roses. The hybrid perpetual and blooming roses are commonly not pruned hard enough. The best flowers are Brown on vounc wood, and the aim should bo to cut them back enough to inauce a strong growth which will bear a few fine flowers, rather than a lot of common ones. Long, straggling growth can De cut back in the fall, but prunimr should crpnpmilv ha de layed until spring, according to a Farm and Home expert. Many suc cessful rosarians cut bark their to within one foot of the ground and also remove all weak shoots. The aim should be to cut off from one-half to two-thirds of the previous season's growth, and to remove all dead, frozen and weak canes. There is little dan ger of cutting off too much. The Man of the Hour. You may sing of the man with the hoe. Of the hero behind the gun ; X our may carol of valiant knights, Who have hundreds of battles won ; i our may weep of the martyred saint. Or the poet who rules the pen ; uut who on earth Can compute the worth Of the fellow Who fends the tionf Josephine Pago Wright in Farm ana norae. Free Government Seeds. For a bet a young seedsman of Leeds Rashly swallowed six packets of seeds ; And now, silly ass! He is covered with ir.n.. - ".v.. Kanaa, And cannot sit down for the weeds. Charles Dobbs, in Farm and Home. AIRSHIPS USED IN BALKANS Writer Vividly Describes Two Scenes H Witnessed During the Recent Conflict There. "As I stood watchine one day 1 saw two scenes In this grim drama which made my pulses beat with great ex citement." BSVS a writer In "Thn Ral- kan War," a book by Philip Glbbs and oernara urant "A great bird flew across the skv toward th Mtv And as It flew It sang a droning song like me ouzzing or an enormous bee. It was a monoplane, flown hv a Bulgari an aviator, who had volunteered to reconnolter the Turkish defenses. It disappeared swlftlv Into the nmok wrack, and for some time I listened intently to a furious fusillade which seemed to meet this winged spy. Af ter half an hour the anrnnlnna no mo back, flying swiftly away from the biioi ana sneu which pursued It from the low lying hills. Its wings were pierced, so that one cduld see the sky through them, but it flew steadily from the chase of death, and I heard its rhythmic heart beat overhead. Its escape was certain now. It " had mocked at the pursuit of the shells, the loud beat of its engine above me was a song of triumph. I watched it disappear again to safety. So it seemed, but death has many ways of capture, and when I came back to Mustafa Pasha that day I heard that the unfortunate aviator, after his es cape from the guns, had fallen from a great height within sight of home, and that the hero's body lay smashed to pieces in the wreckage of his ma chine. "Then on another day I saw another drama In the air. While mv eves watched the smoke clouds from the siege guns something twinkled and glittered to the left of the four tall minarets of the great mosque of Adrl- anople. It was the smooth silk of an airship which caught the rava of the sun; this cigar-shaped craft rose siowiy and steadily to a fair height, though I think it was tethered at one end. It rose above Deaceful Ground into a great tranquillity, which lasted aoout ten minutes. Then suddenly there was a terrific clap of thunder and a shell burst to the left of the air ship. I gave a crest crv. It aeemed to me that the frail craft had hnrat and disappeared Into nothingness. But a few seconds later, when the smoke was wafted awav. I bw the airship still poised steadily above the earth, untouched by that death ma chine. A second shell was flune skv ward, far to the rleht. and for an hour I watched shells rise continually round that airship, trying to tear It down from its high observation, but never striking it. I do not know the names or tne men who piloted that ship, but whoever they were, they may boast of a courage which kept mem at their post In the sky amid mat storm of shells." Perils of the Late Afternoon. Late in the afternoon Is the nerll ous hour for all day workers. Not only do statistics prove it, but there is an easily understandable nhvatnlo? leal explanation for It For it Is to ward the end of the day's work that ratigue comes on, and tired bodies and brains inevitably lead to mistakes and accidents. "Bank clerks." savs the Medical Record, "make most of the errors in the late afternoon: wherefore there Is now early closing of these institu tions, since bankers have found their employe's mistakes too exDenslva for the maintenance of longer hours. Ev ery one knows what dreadful calamity must be feared when railway men work too many hours through many days. As to druggists, to err (with pernaps fatal consequences) in the filling of a prescription is indeed hu man and hardly blameworthy In a clerk who must be attentively at his post almost two-thirds of the twenty four hours. Amone industrial work ers the desire for drink has often sprung from sheer physical exhaus tion." . Patriots. Vice-President Marshall was talklna in New York about a famous multi millionaire: "The man Is a exeat patriot," said the witty and genial vice-president "Yet, for all his pa triotic talk, some people think he doesnt really love his country. The idea. Him not love his country! Why, be loves his country so well that he'd take the whole of it if he eould. As it Is. he's taken far more than hi a share. Love his country Indeed he positively adores it!" To Keep Cut Flowers Fresh. An Interested reader writes that whether the stems of flowers be lth. er hard or soft, they may be kept rresn longer lr the stems are cut off about a quarter of an inch after plac ing them In water. Use a sharp pair of scissors, and be sure that the cut end Is not exposed to the air at all Prepare! Never write on a subject wlthonf first having read yourself full of It, and never read on a subject till you have thought yourself hungry on It. Richter. WEALTH OF THE INCAS (r&k A. m' IT " Mia? i mm n'sk 4" ' - ' MMrj HUNICIPAL PALACE, LIMA PERU is conceded to be the third richest country In the world. Its own leading men believe positively it Is the richest, and no one can say Just how great is the wealth of its un explored hills and canyons. The ef fort of Its statesmen to redeem it, as recently reported, by land concessions to immigrants and railroads to carry the products of the fields and the mines, which are now carried on the backs of natives, has attracted more attention In Europe than the United States, which is godfather to it Peru is said to be the one country in South America where there is no racial antipathy to Americans, as this country did. Peru a good turn prob ably before that spirit was born among the Latin races to the south. It was in 1858 that the United States re stored to Peru the Lobos guano is lands, to which some adventurous Americans had laid claim. The fair ness of this government has since then been something of a tradition down there. Wealth Back of Desolate Coast Much of the wealth that Spain has dissipated, her gold and silver that was made into ornaments as well as money, and the precious stones be longing to the royal houses are re puted to have been largely carried back from Peru by the Conqulsa dores. For a thousand miles the coast of Peru presents a bold, unspeakable barren appearance. Mountains tower up toward the cloudless skies day aft er day as one pursues his slow way down the coast Not a tree or a green bush can be seen, but back of the barrier Is the wealth of the Incas gold and silver, coffee and cotton and spices and fruits and rare woods. No where does the desert run back' for more than 80 miles from the coast, and usually not so far. Then there is the long stretch of gradually ris ing plains, the foothills and then the great Interior table lands. From 1630 to 1824 Jesuit priests are credited with taking 27 tons of pure silver out of a single valley, while other mines are said to have yielded hundreds of millions of dol lars, and even with the primitive system employed by the monks and the native Indians. But for nearly half a century or more Peru went backward, and became so poor that her richest citizen lived on the pawn shops. But that period has passed, and with permanent peace the country Is slowly recovering its prosperity. Silver is one mineral that is, per haps, most abundant, and that is to be found in every section of the re public. In many places it Is found in a native state, and the deposits are of great richness. Copper mining Is comparatively a new industry in Peru, as not until the depreciation of silver, did miners turn their attention to copper, when it was found that It existed In paying quantities In the great silver districts. Within the last few years the Haggln-Guggenhelm copper mines at Cerro de Paseo have produced enormous quantities of ore, and modern smelting works have been established at several of tho more Im portant centers. Cerro de Paseo and Yaull are the two best known copper regions of Peru, but others are known to ex ist The ores of Peru are always found In various combinations with differ ent metals. , Gold, which constituted the great wealth of the nation before the con quest by Pizarro, was not mined to a very great extent by the Spanish con querors, who, for some reason, gave all their attention to silver mining. 1 1 oi For this extraordinary reason the gold mines from whence the native Incas derived their fabulous wealth remained more or less abandoned for three centuries, and it is only now that there is a revival of gold min ing. Gold is found In several parts of Peru. There is alluvial gold gen erally on the Amazonian slopes and throughout eastern Peru the rivers have all gold bearing gravel beds, so that hydraulic mining, the most in expensive method known, is likely to assume some magnitude. The Germans are showing the same enterprise and aggressive policy in Peru that they have shown in Brazil and other parts of South America. They are elbowing the British out, and are absorbing the export trade. In almost every city throughout Latin America the retail shopB, the com mission business, the manufacturing Interests, and all kinds of enterprises are owned or controlled by Germans. They have recently gone into Peru. The United States might have had the best of everything, but Americans do not show any disposition to go out Into other countries. There are, how ever, several large American enter prises In Peru. Mines Forgotten. In the northern part of the repub lic It Is proposed to rebuild and ex tend two lines of railway in order to reach valuable deposits of coal, cop per and other minerals, and open up tracts of . land that are suitable for vineyards, fruits and general ag riculture. One of these roads will be an extension of a short line now running out of Pascasmayo to the an cient town of Caxamarca. where Atahulpa, the "Last of the Indas," was strangled In the most treacherous manner by Pizarro, after he had filled with gold the room of the palace In which he had been confined." The mines from which that gold came have been forgotten, but are believed to lie somewhere back In the mountains, and, what Is more to the point, there are known beds of coal of good qual ity, almost inexhaustible, It is said, and much needed in South America! It is also proposed to build about 100 miles of road from Ho to Mo- ' quega through a rich agricultural valley, where the soli is especially adapted for vineyards. An English corporation holds a con cession to build a line a distance of 200 miles from the port of Chlmboto over the mountains to the town of Huarez, capital of one of the northern provinces, which Is the center of a mineral region with large deposits of copper, silver and coal. An American syndicate obtained a concession a' few years ago, and deposited a for felt of $60,000 for the extension of a railway from Payta to the Maranon, one or the largest branches of the Amazon. ' The proposed line was to. cross both ranges of the Andes and open up an agricultural country and vast rubber forests. It was surveyed and is yet to be constructed. Floor Stains. When hot fat ia snllled on a flnni the first impulse is to pour on hot wa ter. Do not do this, as It keeps the fat melted and allows it to sink Into the wood. Pour qold water a lot of It and the fat will harden h sinks In. Then it can be removed by scraping up. Area of the Oceans. The Atlantic ocean haa an in. 24,636,000 square miles; p'aclflo, 60,- bus.uuu; inaian, 17,084,000; Arctic, 4, 781,000, and Southern, 30,692,000.