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About Lincoln County leader. (Toledo, Lincoln County, Or.) 1893-1987 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1913)
FARM d& Notts and Instructions from Agricultural Colleges mnd Experiment Stations f Oregon and Washington, Specially Suitable to Pacific Coast Conditions Turkeys Beat Hogs. Washington State College, Pullman The feed it takes to produce a hog that will dress two hundred pounds for the market would probably feed and fatten a flock of twenty turkeys, which would average at least twelve pounds dressed at market or holiday time. These usually sell as high as twenty-five cents a pound. The two hundred pound hog would bring (26. The twenty turkeys would bring $60. It is true that young turkeys ' re quire more care the first few weeks than do chickens, but one is abundant ly rewarded for the extra work. Al though the domestic turkey is, with proper handling, as tame as the chick en, they are yet of a semi-wild nature, and must be allowed, so far as possi ble, to follow their natural inclina tions. Much of the failure in turkey raising is due to not knowing how to handle the little poults. One may sum up the essential things in hand ling the poults as follows: Proper food and drink ; keep them free from lice; keep them out of the rain and wet grass, and out of damp, filthy quarters. Many poults are killed during the first few weeks by feeding improper food, and by over-feeding. For the first several days they may be fed four or five times a day, but only so much each time as they will eat in a few" minutes. Do not leave surplus food in the feeding dish to become sour or mussed. Never feed sloppy food. Keep clean, fresh drinking water and fine grit constantly before the poults. Stale bread moistened with sweet milk, with all the surplus milk pressed out, is an excellent feed at first. Hard boiled egg (boiled at least thirty minutes) chopped fine, including shell, and mixed with finely chopped onion tops or lettuce, is also good for the first feed. After a few days, a little cracked grain may be fed. One can vary the feed some, but must use judgment as to the quantities fed. Milk curd, commonly called "cot tage cheese" and fresh meat, either raw or cooked, chopped fine, can be fed after a few days. The egg, meat, or curd should be fed moderately with other feed; green feed, such as cab bage, kale, onion tops, lettuce, grass, and the like is, always relished by tur keys, and should be provided, espe cially for those that are kept in close quarters. One can plan on having such feed on hand when needed, be fore that time comes. When several weeks old, the poults are likely to do best if allowed to have free range, and will after that time find much of their feed, such as waste grain, bugs, grass hoppers, and many other dainty mor sels to their liking, but they should be fed morning and evening. Keep grit, pure drinking water and charcoal where they may get them convenient ly. Charcoal to a great extent is a preventive of disease. When poults must be closely con fined their quarters should be clean, light, airy and free from dampness. As they become older, they will choose outdoor roosts in preference to being housed, and when possible allow them to roost in trees or on outdoor roosts, that is, proper places for them. While poults are small, if necessary to have a floor in their coop or building, keep a good layer of dirt, sod or sand on the floor so that they may scratch in it The exercise is good for them, and their legs will be stronger than if kept on hard board floors. Whenever weather will permit, allow them out in the yard or field, but little poults must be kept out of hard showers and wet grass. If the ground is reason' ably dry, coops without floors are best and can be moved about to fresh, clean places. farasites are very destructive to poults, and poults infested with them are quite likely to be short lived. Poults hatched in incubators and reared away from other poultry are not likely to be troubled, but one must make sure that the lice are not pres ent. If chicken hens are used to hatch and rear the poults, see that the hen and nest surroundings are free from lice and mites before the poults hatch. There are different ways of ridding poultry of lice, but persistent effort counts more than all else. In sect powder rubbed thoroughly through the feathers, or washing them well, on a warm, sunny day, in a weak solu tion of good louse dip will make lice scarce. If latter treatment is given, follow directions as given with the preparation. Hens should be given such treat ment before young birds hatch, as it is not advisable to have the feathers of the hen filled with powder when the poults hatch; nor should her feathers be wet with louse dip when the birds are young. When lice are present on the poults, rub a little melted lard or weet oil on the head and throat, and ORCHARD use insect powder on the rest of the body. Use very little grease on young birds. When the poults are older after ten weeks of age they may be treated with the louse dip, but must not be allowed to become chilled. Choose a warm day, and the earlier in the day the better. In dipping young birds, one should have the dip very weak, as their skin is tender. An important thing for success with the poults is to have eggs from healthy, vigorous stock. Many flocks of turkeys have been abused by failure on the part of breeders to procure nec essary new blood from time to time, and have been inbred, and hence, have lost their natural vitality. Such stock will produce weak ofFpsring. If one has but four hens, and needs new blood, if the unrelated male bird should cost $12, the gain in number of poults hatched and raised, and the quality of the birds, will thrice pay for the new bird. That turkey rais ing is a very profitable line of poultry production can no longer be doubted. Washington State College Notes. The Early Rose is one of the best early potatoes for planting in practic ally all regions of the Northwest It is not quite as early as some others, but it is a potato that always is well received on the market. With two hundred and forty active members, the Pacific Northwest Live stock association last year exhibited 2800 animals at its December shows held at Lewiston, Idaho. Secretary S. B. Nelson reports the present mem bership of the association as 500; and with the increase, in membership and strength of the Livestock association, and the increasing interest in livestock production in mind, believes that at the stock show the coming December, no less than four thousand animals will be exhibited. In winter, cream is very difficult to chum because of the small and hard fat globules, low temperatures, sweet cream, and possibly thin cream. When cows are far advanced in their lacta tion period, the globules become hard er and when churned do not stick to gether easily. Cream held at low tem peratures previous to churning makes quick churning impossible. I would suggest that if you have a cream sep arator you separate about a 85 per cent cream. By the use of a starter. ripen this at a temperature of about 75 degrees for six to eight hours. Then cool down between 65 and 60 de grees and churn in the ordinary way. This ought to bring the butter in about 35 to 40 minutes. Feeding a few roots may change the character of the fat to some extent and facilitate churning. " The practice of raising a crop every year has been followed on the experi ment station farm at Pullman, Wash ington, for a number of years. Our rainfall is on the average about 23 inches. With a rainfall of 16 to 18 inches summer fallowing seems to give better results. We do not follow any definite system of rotation. The crops grown on the farm consist of alfalfa for 6 or 8 years, frequently followed by corn. Clover is also grown for three years, when the land is plowed up and corn is planted. We can raise field peas followed by wheat with excellent results. Afterwards corn or oats may be grown on thiB field. I think a good rotation where it could be followed would consist of red clover three years, corn one year, wheat one year, oats one year. How ever, our conditions are Buch that we nave not yet been able to follow this rotation regularly. If you have grown alfalfa on this land for three years, it would ordinar ily be a waste of fertilizer to apply any commercial material at the pres ent time. Milk Problem Solved. More than 10,000 quarts of milk are handled daily by the Erie county milk association, which began business in December, 1899. The association now owns a three-story brick building that cost $26,000, and is equipped with $13,000 worth of apparatus for hand ling all classes of dairy products. Business has grown from about $100, 000 the first year to $250,000, says farm and Home, and the company now distributes about half the milk used in the city. Great economy in distributing milk has been brought BDout because the city of Erie, Pa.. is divided into districts and the one driver serves all the patrons along his route. I he producers have taken stock in the company on the basis of (3 for each quart of milk produced, For the last five years the company paid producers 8 cents per quart for the contract milk and 3 cents for the surplus. LEAVE ODD LEGACIES SOME REMARKABLE BEQUESTS NOTED BY LAWYERS. Pair of Old Shoestrings, Left by Mil waukee Woman to Friend, Among th Queerest on Record Hair Brush Left to Nephew. When they opened the will of Miss Mathilda Tommet In Milwaukee the other day they found that one of her bequests was a pair of old shoestrings given to a woman relative with whom she had been on friendly terms for many years. There did not appear to be any sarcasm or ill feeling connect ed with the legacy, and judged by the common sense way in which the re mainder of her property was bestowed there did not seem to be ground fpr the suspicion that the decedent was not In her right mind. The cases are numberless In which odd things have been bequeathed' and countless have been the contests to break wills that contain provisions along lines similar to that of Miss Tommet's will. In New Orleans there died not long ago a wealthy old man noted for his shrewdness In business deals. One of the bequests of his very long avlll was a hair brush that he had used for many years. This brush he gave to a nephew, Samuel Thompson Flnnerty who had been named after the old man with the proviso, however, that the brush should be kept in the Flnnerty family vault one month out of twelve and In a mahogany box containing an elec tric belt that the decedent had worn for years. The acceptance of the brush, conditional on carrying out the old man's wishes, meant that the nephew was to inherit and enjoy two thirds of the estate. The rest of the will was sound and tight in every re spect, according to the lawyers. Margaret Ann Epplng of San Fran clesco left $5,000 each to ten of her nephews about six years ago, but this was the condition: Her tombstone was to be replaced every two years with a new one on which each nephew In turn "should cause to be chiselled an appropriate verse setting forth his love and affection." As the be quests were In the shape of annuities from a bulk fund the nephews In or der to draw upon the fund for their income had to comply with the de mands of the decedent. One nephew sued and was beaten. Although under the terms of the will he was to forfeit his share for contesting, the will was so construed and Interpreted that he still received his annuity, hut subject to the new tombstone conditions. Jabez Holllster of Montreal left his two sons the use of a corn razor that he a cutler had specially ground and fixed up for chlropodlo use. "For the sake of their .health and the risk they ran from blood poisoning If oth er corn cutters were UBed," the sons were admonished to use no other cut ter and a cash amount was to be for feited If they disobeyed. One son, after he had recovered from the shock of his father's death, laughingly told the lawyers that he had never had a corn in his life. But the lawyers In sisted that his father was likely to ha.ro known whether he had or not What Figures Prove. Most men cannot be Idle and live, rhat sounds strange. It is true. It Is a law of nature. If a man past forty leads an Idle life the probability Is that he will live to be fifty-seven rears old. If he leads a harmonious ind sufficiently occupied life he will live to be sixty-six. , This is the expe rience of life insurance companies, which make a specialty of old-age an sultles. Skill, money and time have been spent by these companies to learn these figures. The success of the companies depends on them. The figures tell the story. Idleness Is harder on the vital organs of man kind than work. To be idle is to die, to work is to live. That Constabulary Band. Filipinos nave always shown a par ticular aptitude for muslcand In few other countries does musts play such a large part In the dally Ufa of the people. They learn all kinds of in itruments readily and even among the poorest classes there are few who have not some form of musical accom plishment No village Is without Its orchestra, which Is called out on every ocacslon and plays for hours ap parently out of the sheer Joy of the music Yet the Filipinos are the one people without a national muslo, and no Flllplnlo composition, Is known to fame. They have never produced slther vocalist or an Instrumentalist of more thon local note. All who attend ed tne Bt Louis exposition wu re member the fine Filipino Constabulary band whloh attraoted to much favor able comment The organization is still In existence and no one eould de mand finer concerts than those It gives at dusk on the cool green of the Luneta at Manila, but the leader of the band Is a negro from Boston, and no Filipino Is able to take bis place, world s Work. SKILLFUL WITH THE ARROW Amazon Indians, Using Poisoned Weapons, Are by No Means a Foe to Be Despised. The uncanny skill of the Amazon In dians with poisoned arrows won the awed admiration of Mr. Algot Lange, who was cured of jungle-fever by Man geromas after his comrades had suc cumbed to beriberi and poisonous swamp snakes. In hie book, "In the Amazon Jungle," Mr. Lange describes a hunting trip that be made with two members of the tribe: "We had scarcely gone a mile, when we discovered on the opposite bank of the creek, about one hundred and fifty yards away, a wild hog rooting for food. We were under cover of the brash, but the hog was in full view. Al most simultaneously my companions fitted arrows to their bowstrings. In stead of shooting polntblank and manipulating the bows with their hands and arms, they placed their great toes on the lower end of tha how- strings, and with their left arms gave me proper tension and Inclination to the bows, which were eight feet long. With a whir the poisoned arrows shot forth, sailed gracefully through the air, aescriDed a hyperbola, and plunged Into the animal's neck, a little back from the base of the brain. "The hog dropped in his tracks, and I doubt If he could have lived nvfm If the arrows had not been poisoned. We siung tne body over a heavy pole and carried it to the maloca. "All the way the hunters disputed over the ownership of the hog, and from time to time they put the carcass on the ground to eestlculato and Arena. When they appealed to me, I declared wai tne arrows had sped so rapidly that I could not tell which had found Its mark first "As we neared the house, the chief ent out a messenger to learn the cause of the altercation. ,. The emis sary returned to the chief and the dis putants became quiet The messenger soon came back, and said that tha great chief would judge the case, and ordered me men to enter the maloca. The chief motioned me to a seat on the ground beside his hammock. The men told their story, now and than looking to me for an affirmative nod of the head. The chief listened to the argument for some time without ut tering a, syllable, and regarded the crowa witn a steady, unblinking ex preseion. Tben be said: .'The hog Is mine, uor "Strange as It may seem, there win no grumbling at this extraordinary aecision. xoutns Companion. Helping a Brother. Referring to brotherly love. Senator William H. Thompson of Kansas said be never saw It more beautifully ex emplifled than the way In which Green helped his friend Brown over a rather uimcuit place. Some time ago the Greens called at tne borne of the Browns. Brown, not expecting the call, was absent from the domestic camp. "Oh, Mr. Green," remarked Mrs Brown during the conversation. "1 warn 10 as it you something. I was looking through my husband's desk tnis afternoon and found some of the queerest tickets you ever saw. One was marked. 'Mudhorse. 8 to 1.' an other was marked 'Getaway, 10 to 1,' and so on like that What do you sun pose they refer to?" "That's an easy one, Mrs. Brown," was the smooth relolnder of riraen "Tour husband is probably making a study or archeology." '"Archeology!" was the wondering rejoinder of Mrs. Brown. "Do you really -think so? How very Interest ing!" "Yea," responded Brother Green "those queer-looking tickets you found are undoubtedly relics of a lost race.1 Remarkable. Frost Sometimes one runs across his friends In the most unexpected places. Snow True, yesterday I found Agnes at home. To Remove Match Marks. Marks on kitchen walls, which have been caused by carelessly striking matches on them, will disappear if rubbed with a bit of lemon and then with a clean cloth dipped in whiting. Afterwards wash the surface with warm water and soap then wipe with a clean damp cloth. Never Touched Him. Father "I want to tell you, my boy, that there is a secret of success and that this secret Is hard work." Lazy Boy "Well, father, 1 hope I'm too much of a gentleman to take advan tage of Information gained in such i way." - Must Have Pleased Henrv. Wife "Henry, you need a rest Let as go to Bongtong Springs." Huh "That place! Why, it's only fit for women ana roois." wife "I know Let's go there together." It Town Bars Women. The Aslatio town of Malwatch, on the borders of Russia, is peopled by wu oniy. women are forbidden en trance there. OF THE EARTH'S BEST CLERGYMAN DEFINES THE MAN WHO IS A GENTLEMAN. May "Go Wrong" for a Time, but to the End He Is "On the Square," and Friendship With Him Is a Privilege. - ' When asked, not long ago, to give his Idea of "a gentleman," a noted clergyman said: Of one thing I am. assured, nameiy, that he will never be ashamed of his origin and that he will studiously re fuse to pretend he is anything except what he is. He will be conspicuous for pity, always doff his hat to a ruin, be chivalrous to a woman, whether young or old, beautiful or plain, noble or Ignoble, just because she Is & woman. Also I am convinced that while the perfect gentleman will be deferential to his mental superiors, recognizing talent, wherever it may be found, be will pay respect to social differences with absolute ease, as su premely unimportant, preserving the while his entire Independence, of which no one on God's earth can ever rob him. The gentleman Is accustomed to accommodate his pace to the weakest, to arrange his conversation according to the capacity and Interest of his au dience, to give without conferring the wound of an obligation, to use hos pitality without grudging, to be care less of a visiting list, and ever to keep his door on the latch, so that it may easily be pushed open by the stranger or even by the criminal, who finds a city of refuge at his hearth and in his heart The true gentleman belongs to the world and is never insular, which is only another form of self-consciouB-ness, but whatever his nation, he Is morally a polyglot and talks the lan guage of humanity. You will find him without exception on the side of the weak, and ready to shiver a lance for the oppressed and the degraded, or those who have been ostracised by the world. The gentleman is a person whom you never notice when he Is In a room, and never forget when he is gone, and no one is so much missed, though no one desires to be so less. He under stands like no other being on earth, says the right thing, though oftener still preserves silence, as the case may require, and always carries about with him a sense of comfort and livable withness which is unique. Strange, as it may seem to the thick skinned and unsensitive, the gentle man may be as wild as a hawk and may get into messes of various sorts but, unlike many who claim to tread the path of virtue, his soul is never blackened by underhandedness or scheming. He would not marry a woman for her money, make a display of what he may happen to possess, tell a lie except to shield a woman's honor, slander his neighbors, engage in con versation which is even questionable, cheat whether on a large or small scale; in fact indulge in falsity of any kind. He is infinitely gentle and re tiring, utterly masculine, in the best sense of that word, and always courte ous. He may "go wrong" gentleman have been known to but to the end he is "on the square," Inwardly "hank ering after God." Correction. The essential difference between baseball and cricket, as explained in the Topeka Capital, is In the gloves the catchers wear. The cricket catch er wears long gauntlet gloves, for wrist protection, while the baseball catcher wears a glove to protect his fingers. The American catcher wUhes to preserve his forefinger so he can guide a billiard cue, while the English catcher fears he will be incapacitated for drinking tea of his wrist Is bruised. Probably the truth, except that the American catcher saves his finger, we believe, not to play billiards, but pea pool. ' Just a Bit Doubtful. Nearly a half century ago George Chorin, then a dashing young soldier In the First Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry, lost $990; now he wants the government to reimburse him, and has appealed to It through Congressman Mitchell. The latter is not quite clear as to what can be done for the veter an, and as for Interest on the amount he has so far balked at any attempt to figure it. Chorin explains that back In the sixties, JuBt before his regiment was mustered out, he was set upon and robbed by four men of his own company while in camp at Bunker Hill, Md. He was on guard duty at the time. While the Identity of the men was known, Chorin alleges, there was no court-martial because of the dlsbandment of the regiment which then was under way. Just Work. "You say you haven't any time for exercise?" "No. I've no time for anything ex cept my work." "What is your work?" "I'm a gymnasium instructor." i