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About Lincoln County leader. (Toledo, Lincoln County, Or.) 1893-1987 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 26, 1913)
DISARMS THE ENEMY PERHAPS IT WOULD BE MORE CORRECT TO SAY "DIS-CLAWS." Anyway, New Jersey Farmer Devised a Scheme Which Resulted In Dis comfiture to the Spoilers of His Hen Roosts. Benjamin Groner, a farmer In the Bird's Eye Hollow neighborhood. Just " over the New Jersey line from Gosh en, In studying the habits of hawks noted that those prowllDg and snoop ing birds always perched on the branch of some tree or on , a high fence or other good point for observa tion near a poultry yard and from there took a comprehensive view of the surroundings and their possibili ties before swooping down on the con tents of the yard. That set Farmer Groner to thinking, and he thought to such purpose that It resulted In his de vising a contrivance which he believed would be the ruination of every hawk that came nosing about his premises. He had a sythe blade made of the best steel he could procure. He ground and whetted the edge of the blade un til It was as keen as keen could be. Then he fastened the butt end of the blade with bolts tight to a high pole near the top, edge up, and at air angle of 45 degrees. The pole he then set In the ground, a few rods from his poultry yard at the edge of a wood lot In the afternoon of the day be set the trap a hawk came sailing along over the tops of the trees. Farmer Groner was In his barn and saw It and watched its manoeuvers. The big bird circled about a few times and then dropped down on the outstretched scythe blade, which ap peared as a convenient point of ob servation. The Instant the hawk lit It began to slide down the smooth slant of the blade and the razorlike edge sliced Its claws off as quickly and as neatly as a meat cutter slices smoked beef. The bird fluttered to the ground, but as Its wings were still at Its command It flew away. And it has never come back to Farmer Groner's place again. Going out to the trap pole and finding the talons of the crippled hawk. Farmer Groner knew that his .pondering over the ways of hawks bad resulted In a successful demon stration of the conclusion he had come to, and next morning he dis covered that he had builded even wiser than he knew, for he found a couple of sets ot owl toes on the ground beneath the scythe blade. He had not calculated on owls, but hold ing to the old fashioned belief that thoBe nocturnal prowlers were habi tual robbers of hen roosts, he gloat ingly accepted the evidence of the ef ficacy of his trap as an owl dis courager. Ever since that Installing of the scythe trap for business on the Groner farm It ' has been kept on duty, and the frequent findings ot hawk and owl claws scattered beneath It and the noticeable Increase In his poultry flock "are Incontrovertible proof to Farmer Groner that It Is doing the work It was planned to do. An owl or hawk that lights on that terrible perch Is forever unfitted for stealing chickens, for both birds capture their prey with their claws. ; , Hearth-Hunger, "Beyond the need for bread, a wom an's needs are two; deeper than all cravings save the mother's passion, Orm-rooted In our endless past, Is the hearth-hunger. The trees that sweep my chimney have their roots at the world's core! The flowers in my door yard have grown there for a thousand fears! What millenniums have done, shall decades undoT We are nqjt so shallow, so plastic as that! We will go Into the mills, the shops, the offices, If we muBt, but we know we are off the track of life. Neither our desire nor our power Is there." Cornelia A. P. Comer, In the Atlantic. Ornaments Last Longest Ornaments last longer than any thing else that man makes. There are brooches and necklaces in museums more than 40 centuries old. Monu ments, perhaps, stand second, and houses third. The life of furniture is shorter still. There Is very little fur niture in England which dates be yond the year 1600. Pictures last long er than furniture, and there are paint ings still In fair condition which have weathered six centuries of life. Pretty Near. It was Sunday afternoon and Ma bel's little sister, Ruth, aged four, was seated beside Mabel on the sofa. Presently the little girl asked of Ma bel's fiance: "Aren't I your sweet heart, Mr. Bumper T" "Well," answered Mr. Bumper with a fond glance at Mabel, "you're the next thing to It" Puck. False Hopes. "Who said this suffrage que) Ira is absorbing women's minds T" "Isn't It?" "Not to the exclusion of tha sum mer trip fund." POLISHED FLOOR NEEDS CARE Methods by Which It May Be Mads to Last Long and Always Appear at Its Best The first step In polishing a soft wood floor Is to see that It le perfect ly smooth and clean. It It has been already painted or varnished the stains should be removed with strong ammonia and thorough scraping, when all cracks and dents should be Closed With DUttv and a "filler" annllerl all over. This can be purchased at most oil and varnish shops, and should either be mixed with a little color or a sufficient nuantltv of floor stain snouia De added. The filler should be PUt on with a flat brimh or niece of cloth and worked In one direction with the grain of the wood, while on completion of the process the room Should be closed for 24 hours. At thn end of that time the boards should be rubbed until they shine, with a long handled, heavy welehteri hroom nvar which a piece of carpet has been tacaea, and this process may be re peated ad libitum. Finally the floor may be polished with boiled linseed oil and turpentine, this mixture being ruDDea well in with a cloth and then left for an hour or two to dry, after which It must be again polished with me weighted brush. Instead of a final ton oh of thi . scrlptlon, the floor may be finished wuu a coat or varnish or shellac or With Some Dretlarerl tiarrlwonrl . ment, both of which should be put on evenly and thinly with a weighted brush or with an old piece of carpet In order to keen tha firm at Its best after the polishing process has uuen completed, it should never be washed with water, but after all the dust has been removed crude petro leum should be rubbed In and left to dry. Endives, stewed. change as a vegetable. Cold sauce or fruit nridpd iimko makes a pleasant change. 10 cook macaroni without tioVinr use a vessel with a sieve bottom. To clean rusty knitting needles rub With kerosene and polish with pum ice. People Who suffer from nr-Mltv should eat acid fruit with farinaceous food. Flies don't come around without ha. lng Invited and the invitation consists of refuse. With a Steam conker nn entire ihahI can be cooked over one burner of the gas stove. In cooking asDararua for nnlnd it should be dropped Into cold water when done. Flowered cretonnes make thn heat covers for beds on the out-of-doors sleeping porch. Fruit Frappe With Nuts. Almost every woman nowadavn has her own special frappe combination, with which she delights to mystify ner guests. Into the bottom of the frappe glass put a generous snoonful of preserved strawberries, on top of tne Derries come the Ice cream, vanlla In this case, then a spoonful of whipped cream, and on top ot the cream a grating of . English walnuts. All sorts of fruit combinations are used as foundation for the frappes, and the covering for the whipped cream Is variously" cocoa, grated macaroons, chopped nuts, a sprinkle of cinnamon or candled rose leaves. Pretty little frappe glasses In the American pressed ware, light and dainty, can now be purchased as low as 80 Cents a dozen. In serving, each glass la set on a pretty china plate with a little dolly between the glass and the plate. A spoon, of course, goes with It Cantaloupe Glace. Cantaloupe glace Is a delicacy that Is truly delicious. Take melons that have been thoroughly chilled, cut in halves and lengthwise, and scrape out the seeds. Fill the hollow of each half with vanilla Ice cream, paoklng It In as firm as possible, leaving a lit tle mound In the center. Place the halves together tightly, thus forcing the cream up Into the fruit, causing the melon Juice to mingle with the cream. When ready to serve, a knife run between the halves separates the fruit and slices the cream. Vegetarian Sausages. One and one-half cups lima beans, two tablespoons butter, one teaspoon salt a dash tabasco sauce. Soak tha beans over night cook them In salted water until soft drain perfectly dry and then squeeze the pulp through a potato rlcer. Beat In the butter and seasoning. If not moist enough, add one beaten egg or as much of It as re quired, making the paste so soft that It can be rolled into croquets. Shape like sausage, dip In beaten egg and flour, and fry In butter until brows. PUlAEOUND HABITS OF BROWN ANT Injurious Little Insect Found In All Cultivated Lands. Forms Rather Extensive Settlements In Corn Fields, Mainly In Hills Cultivator Is Not Likely to Tear Up Nests. fBv b. a. pnnRFB The little brown ant notorious for iib injuries to corn and called, conse quently, the corn-field ant. Is not bv any means limited to corn fields, but aounaant In all cultivated lands, In pastures and, meadows, In dense for ests, along hard pathways, and In tha Bandy soil of dry, sunny roada. One sometimes finds It nesting In rotten wood or under bark, logs or stones, and even opening up Its underground burrows to the surface between the bricks and sidewalks and pavements. It la distributed "over the whole of North America, except the extreme nouinern and southwestern portions, from the tree line of the highest moun tains to the sands of the shore." Its home and habits have been chiefly studied In corn fields, and there It forms rather extensive settlements, mainly centering In the hills of corn. Several adjacent hills so occupied by It being connected by underground channels by way of which- members of the same family may pass from hill to hill. This Is partly, no doubt, be cause in corn fields it is usually in possesion of plant-lice, which live on the roots of corn and whloh contribute to the support of the ants the fluid surplus of their own food, but nartiv also because In the corn hills It is un- Usturbed by the cultivator, which Is Various Stages of Corn-Field Ant likely to tear up its nests if they are established between the rows. . In the burrows of this ant one mav find a rather mixed and varied popu lation, consisting of the exes. Jarvae. pupae, males, females and workers of ine ants themselves, together with the various species of root-lice harbored by them and certain kinds of mltea which share Its underground habita tions on terms of mutual toleration, If not active friendship. In clover fields It Is very likely to have In its nests many mealy-bugs of a species which Infest the roots of the clover plant and theBe It treats as it does tha root. lice of the corn plant Seizing them and carrying them away when Its nest la disturbed, just as It hurries out of Bight with its own maggot-Mke larvae, Its egg-like pupae, and Its minute, spherical white eggs. . Age of Usefulness. The average hen outlives her use fulness in two years, and is more profitably sent to market There are at times good hens In the third and even the fourth year, but the aver age limit Is two years Old hens are more likely to contract disease than younger ones. Kind to Dispose Of. When disposing of some of the old stock, pick out the poor layers and oldest specimens. They are Just as good for the table, and you can't afford to part with the money-makers. Harvesting Hay Is Science. Harvesting hay is a science that not all of us have learned. Cut no more grass In a single day than can be taken care ot at once. Noise Is Harmful. Many horses are quite nervous by any unusual noise or confusion about the barn, and this affects their eating. Food will not digest to well. Injurious to Pigs. Dirt and filth taken into the stomach along with feed impair digestion and reduce the gain, also affecting the ap petite and general health of the pig. Corn for Hogs. While ground shelled corn is some, what more valuable for fattening hogs than is whole corn, it is not rule, economical to grind corn for hogs. CAPACITY OF AVERAGE SILO Easy Matter to Determine Number of Cublo Feet of Ensilage Required to Feed Cows. - (By A. D. WILSON. Superintendent Ex tension Division, University Farm, Bt Paul. Minn.) The amount of silage required and the size of silo needed to hold It can be quite closely calculated, provided the number and kind of animals to be fed from It are known before building. " An average cow or beef animal may be fed about 35 pounds of silage per day and the usual .period during which silage Is used In this latitude will be about 210 days. Large ani mals or those that are being fattened may consume considerably jnore than 35 pounds per day, but this has been found a fair average. In a silo of ordinary denth. the average weight of the silage Is about 40 pounds per cubic foot. Near the top of the silo, however, where the pressure Is not great It will weigh only 25 pounds per cubic foot, while at the bottom of a 35-foot silo Is may weigh 60 pounds. Taking these aver ages, if a cow eats 35 pounds of en silage in a day, she will eat 35-40, or of a cubic foot per day, and with this as a basis it is easy to determine the number of cubic feet of ensilage required to feed a cow or any number of cows throughout the season. The diameter of the silo must be such that the stock on hand can use one or two inches of silage off the top each day during the winter and at least three inches Der rlftv when cum mer feeding of silage Is to be prac ticed, mis is necessary to keep the silage from spoiling. A Bllo 10 feet In diameter la oHint. ed to feeding 10 mature cattle. One 12 feet In diameter will feed is hen and one 14 feet in diameter will meet tne needs of twenty head- hut t there are 80 or mora e.nwa to food a 16-foot silo should be erected. These' snos should be 30 or 40 feet, or even more in height. COVERING ALFALFA IN CORN Problem of Overspreading Soil on 8eed Solved by Use of Plank Drag Shown In Illustration. Sometimes farmers obtain good re sults from sowing alfalfa between the rows of standing corn. Where this is done it Is often a puzzle to get the seed properly covered.. The accom panying illustration la a home-made plank drag, 34 Inches wide and 22 For Covering Alfalfa Seed. inches long, that Is used for the pur pose on a small alfalfa and truck farm In southeastern Ohio, where the Ohio station hae experimented In de termining practical methods In small farming. Awnings for Hen Houses. . It 1b a good plan to have awnings or hoods of cheap muslin or boards to go over the windows of the hen house In summer" to keep out the sun, and thus keep the house much coaler. But it Is not advisable to have those awnings up during the winter, as the sunlight Is needed In the houses to purify them. Reason for Few Eggs. The chicken does not refuse to lay eggs or get fat through perverseness of character. It is simply because the owner does not know how to bring about desired results. . Best Cow Is Cheapest It Is being - gradually understood that the best cow la the cheapest, re gardless of the price paid for her and for such correspondingly good prices are always obtained. Raise Beef Cattle. Beef cattle may be raised on many farms, and there are good reasons for raising them. Not the least of these Is that they provide means of build ing up the farm in fertility. Care of Dairy Cows. Never allow the cows to be exoited by hard driving, abuse, loud talking, or unnecessary disturbance; do not expose them to cold or storm. Do not change the feed suddenly. The Pasture. Pasturing grass too soon or too hard is an expensive way of saving feed.' It costs several times the amount of feed saved. Kindness to Hogs. If the practice is followed of talking to the hogs, and moving around among them, they can be handled very easily. l Blake Your Own Gas. Acetylene gives a pure white light, in which all articles show in their true colors the same as in the sunlight, and burns in burners consuming about half a foot of gas per hour, each burner giving forth some 20 candle power light The gas is obtained by adding water to calcium carbide, which is ob tained by fusing together ground coke and lime. The use of gasoline gas has become quite common for small to medium sized plants. It is a mixture of gaso line vapor and air, the pure vapor be ing impractical to burn on account of a high pressure being required. While the gasoline is considered somewhat dangerous to handle, neglect and care lessness are a large factor in the mat ter and common carefulness will ren der the gasoline safe to handle. There are different grades of gasoline for sale, and that used for gas machines should have a specific gravity of 86 for summer use and 88 for winter. J Many people who live outside the limits of the gas companies' lines do not use gas, Bays Farm and Home, be cause they fail to realize how cheaply the acetylene or gasoline machines can be installed and at how small an ex pense they operate as compared with other forms of lighting and cooking. The experiment once tried, they are surprised to find out that it is just as practical as independent water works or steam or hot water heating. The party who has one of these individual gas plants is entirely independent, running his apparatus when and how he pleases. PORTLAND, OREGON Y.M.G.ASSGH00LS $500,000 EQUIPMENT. SO HEN TEACHERS. ' 75 COURSES. GYMNASIUMS. SWIMMING. LIBRARIES. Course Dj tdml fct, S aw. Commercial 60.00 Shorthand 60.00 Automobile.... 61.00 Wireless Telegraphy 60.00 Telegraphy and Train Despatching; 26.00 Electrical Engineering 60.00 Civil Service 26.00 College Preparatory 40.00 Boys Elementary School 25.00 Plumbing- 25.00 Carpentry 16.00 Mining- and Assaying 80.00 Pharmacy 80.00 Mechanical Engineering 26.00 Other courses $2.00 to 160.00 Send for Free Illustrated Catalogue. CENTRAL Y. M. C. A., PORTLAND, OR. One Limit He Dare Not Pass. "As a general rjroDosition. I care little for the plaudits or criticisms of my fellow men," stated Pip Maudlin, the blase young clubman of Skeedee. "While I am not defiant of public opinion, I am to a great extent indif ferent to it But, try as I may, I have never been able to persuade my self that my feet are small enough to permit me to wear white shoes with out violating the laws of physical prosody." Work. The beauty of work denenda nnnn the way we meet it whether we arm ourselves each morning to attack it as an enemy that must be vanquished be fore night comes, or whether we open our eyes with the sunrise to welcome it as an approaching friend who will make us feel at evening that the day was well worth its fatigues. Lucy Larcom. Don't bay water for bluing. Liquid bine Is sU Eost all water. Buy Ked Cross Ball blue, the us that's all blue. Sickroom Screen. A screen in the sickroom is almost indispensable, for it is needed to keep light from the patient's eyes, to guard the bed from drafts, or shut out the Bight of medicine bottles and so forth. An excellent sanitary screen is made by tacking white oilcloth on to frame, then painting on in oil a pretty scene, as birds or butterflies. These screens can be washed as often as necessary. What Shall I Give Her. If funds are low and a weddlnar present is a necessity to a friend, make her a "memory" book or books covering stiff-backed blank books with white satin or pretty silk. In side have the titles indexed books, business, addresses, Christmas lists, garden lists, invitations, new dishes. A companion book can be made and filled with "own" tried recipes from, friends. ConstiDation Cannes, mnnw a . j diseases. It is thoroughly cured by Doctor Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. One a laxative, three for cathartic Off Color. Tha man who lets everv Htr.la ton. ble keep him feeling blue must have a streak of yellow. Chicago Record Herald. Useful Life. Any Christian SDlrlt worVW kinrii in Its little sphere, whatever it may be, will find its moral life too short for Its vast means of usefulness. Charles Dickens