03 Viim, FIELD, GARDEN. EW3- NOTES AND EXPERIENCES IN COUNTRY LIFE. -A Kepart of Experiments Minle with the . Cm of the Lnd Roller at U Wtseon nlm Ag-riealtuni xperf Men Station In Ordinary Viatel'' Culture, J , ;: -''j ' A report from the Wisconsin experi ment station gives the resalta of investi gation into the effect of rolling on both laod-aBd .crops. The work was done in ordinary field culture in different locali ties with the following remits: Tint Rolling land makes the temper at of the soil at 1.5 inches below the surface . from ' 1- to . 9 degs. Fahrenheit - warmer than similar unrolled ground in the same locality,' and at three inches from 1 to 8 degs. warmer. . . Second Rolling land by firming the 'oil increases its power of drawing wa ' -iar to the surface from below, and this influence has been observed to extend to depth of three to four feet. '.- Third The evaporation of moisture is more rapid from rolled than from un rolled ground, unless the surface soQ is vrr wet, and then the reverse is true. and the drying effect of rolling has been J round to extena to a depth of four feet. Fourth In cases of broadcast seeding germination is more rapid .and more complete on rolled than on 'unrolled , ground, and the following differences in the completeness of germination, have been observed: For oats, 4.2, 4.10 and 11.35 per cent.; for peas, 33.7 per cent. ; for barley, 10.3, and for clover, 1.2 per mt, and 68.7 per cent, greater on the ' Tolled '' than on the unrolled ground. .These differences are greatest when dry . weather, and least when copious rains follow seeding. '- Fifth In the experiment on oats re ported in fall, the yield per acre stood 1.13 bushels on the rolled ground and 68.98 bushels on the unrolled ground. ' Sixth The size of the kernel was larger on the rolled than on the unrolled ground. . , Seventh The oats from the rolled ground weighed 28.25 pounds per bushel, and those from the unrolled 26.83 pounds per bushel. -....' Eighth The oats from the rolled con tained at the time of cutting 11.60 per ent ' of water, and those from the un rolled ground 11.81 per cent. . ' A H Msde Brooder. Here is the description of a simple "brooder which will accommodate 100 : chicks for a period of four to six weeks: ."Take four boards 13 inches wide and ' S or Si feet long. ' Nail them together so ' as to form box without top or bottom. Cover the -top -with sheet iron nailed -down. Over the . sheet iron and around the outside nail inch b trips one and a naif inches wide, leaving a space an inch wide at each of the four corners: .' Now pot on another cover of boards, which win form the floor of your brooder. In the center of this floor bore an inch or an inch and a half hole, and insert a tin tabe four inches long. , Hake a . platform of boards (half iach stuff will do) six or eight inches aaorter and narrower than the floor of . yoar brooder, and nail a leg five inches lng under each comer; tack a slip of flannel four inches wide around the edge of this platform, and slit it with the Aemn every threeor four inches to allow the young chicks to ran through easily That is all there iB of it, except cutting eat a V shaped (inverted) hole in one of the sides of the box, nine inches high and wide enongh at the bottom to slide v a lamp in. 'The lamp heats tbe air be tween the sheet iron top and the floor of tbe brooder, which, rising through the tube in the center, strikes against the platform above and is diffusedoover the chicks. With a little experience one can moaa tell how high to keep the flame of the lamp so as not to make the floor of the brooder too warm, which is injuri- , us. With this brooder and proper feed-. ' xng there need be no trouble in raising at least 90 per cent, of all the healthy "hatched chicks. Ohio Farmer. ! Differences la Butter Fat 1 In farm and dairy practice the milk of , the entire herd is usually mixed; so that individual differences are rarely noticed or receive much consideration. That the 'sulk of - some one or more cows is better than that' of others is 'sometimes ob served, but not until tried by tests made at the experiment stations has it been demonstrated that these differences are eo great as to make cows that are kept for their lifetime as dairy Miimula wholly profitable. At the Illinois station the results of their trials represent a record of one milking from each of thirty-eight cows from different farms, the animals being from various breeds. In comparing in dividuals it was found that as between JHos. 2, 8, 23 and 8, No. 2 produced twice aa much butter fat as No. 3 and nearly five and one-half times as much butter fat as No. 8, and that No. 22 produced seven and one-half times as much butter fat as No, & Comparing No. 13 with No. 14 shows that nearly twice as much anilk must be bandied by tbe owners to get the same weight of butter fat from No. 14 as from No. 13. Besides these vases, cows were found aH along the line from very profitable to very unprofitable. Tests were also made of the milk brought by 113 patrons to two creameries on the .wine day, showing striking variations in the fat in the milk of the different herds. Suitable tlniim for American Cultivator says it is no doubt important in. laying down pasture to learn from neighboring meadows -what are the most suitable grasses to sow, what flourish ' best and what are jnost consumed by the stock. Super ficial observers sre often misled by the plants which, having been rejected by the stock, have run to seed, and so make the greatest show in the autumn. The practical man does not need to have it -pointed out that' the grasses and other .plants in a pasture which run' to seed are the plants to be rejected by him, nt they have been rejected by the stock. PEDIGREE ANIMALS. Importance of the . Selection of Finn Animal for Breeding Stock. , . ' The old saying that blood will tell is equ axJrue and applicable to animals as to men. It is a belief in this theory that lies at the foundation of herd books, cattle registers ' and all" associations for the importation or improvement of ani mals. When a farmer has stocked hi? farm with his' favorite breed he is too apt to consider that there is little more for him to do than to preserve his herd in its present purity of blood. This too often leads to a neglect in making him self fully acquainted with the excellen cies or defects of its individual members. Then a man may have an excellent breed of cattle in which many of. . the animals, if they could - be tried by the pedigree test, would be found to have descended from ancestors in no way remarkable for the - better characteristics of the breed to which they belonged. . , : ' . - There are existing differences ' among the members of a herd of Jerseys or Hoi steins as wide as any - that separate the breeds. Consequently, in the improve ment of a breed by the selection of ani mals as breeding stock, where it can be shown by pedigree that in addition to their own inherent fitness for certain purposes the selected ones have descend ed from progenitors possessing more than an average proportion of the. dominant quality of the breed, a steady improve ment may be confidently expected. In other words, there are individual families in breeds that possess, when, compared with the average, either in a high or low degree, the excellencies of the strain. In the selection of the breeders it is also to be remembered that very much depends upon" the male as well as upon the female. Hence the progeny of a cow of high milking qualities, and a sire from a fam ily deficient in that respect, although of the same breed, is quite likely to show a falling off from the record of the mother. These principles, "however, although believed to be correct, do not necessarily preclude the idea of improvement from parents not of registered or pedigree stock. There are numerous instances of unusually fine milking qualities to be found in cows of the so called native cat tle that cannot be traced back to any an cestral stock. With such a - dam and a male from a family of superior milkers, an improvement is not only possible but probable. At the least, it may be ex pected that the best traits of the mother will reappear in her offspring. Through careful selection . and breeding for a series of years, not only is a great im provement in cattle possible, but it is in this way that some distinct-and valuable breeds have been formed, says the agri cultural editor of The New York World, authority for the foregoing. .''"'; ' '. .' -Clover Bast. :'T Of this disease, which differs from two other diseases of the red .-and white clover of minor importance, it is said, that it has not been long - known in America, but has prevailed to such an extent during the several wet, cool sea sons preceding 1890 in many sections of the northern states that it must be re garded as one . liable 'to affect seriously under conditions favorable to. its devel opment .this agricultural crop. . In the scientific discussion of this parasite, which is found in a bulletin of the bo tanical division of the - Agricultural Ex periment Station of Cornell university, while the description of its different forms and stages will no doubt be read ily understood by botanists and mycolo gists, it ' will not be so easily compre hended by farmers. As a summary of the matter, so far as it has been investigated it is assuring to be told: First That the early crop of red clover is not likely to suffer injury from the rust. , Second As the second crop is likely to suffer greatly if the mid summer is cool, and as clover becomes a valuable fertilizer when plowed in, tha fields should be carefully- watched in, such -seasons, and the crop might be plowed under to advantage. .Third Burning the clover-fields in- the fall would probably have some - effect in checking the spread of the disease dur ing the next season, but the application of fungicides seems impracticable. ' Maaortnf: Orchards. W. Sommerville told at the Minnesota Horticultural society that he manured his bearing' orchard every year at the rate of forty loads to the acre, mulching thoroughly. He has . trees that 1 have stood twenty-eight years that are as healthy as they were twenty yesfrs ago. He sold four "tons of apples this season from an orchard seven by nine rods in size. With this manuring his trees bear every year. Producing fruit tends to exhaust a tree, and hence the importance of feeding bearing trees, while cultiva tion only of young ones may be sufficient. Things Told by Bee Keepers. ..Doolittie says: - If you wish a large yield of " section- honey keep prolific queens and let the brood combs alone after they are once filled with brood in the spring. ;'f ' - . - : An English correspondent advises that tea leaves in a pan of water be -kept for drinking places for bees. Dr. C. C Miller says in Gleanings in Bee Culture: ' Bees in cellars are always quieter at least mine' are just after a windy time, whether cold or warm. A still, muggy time is ' worst Don't toll me cellars need no ventilation. . Farm, . Stock and Home advises in painting hives that dark colors be avoid ed, for in extreme hot weather the combs in such hives will melt down, while in a hive that is painted . white no - damage will be done. Bees serve as active agents in the fer tilization of plants, and it is . generally' conceded that they are not destructive id the Mmft, In reply to the query, "How do you keep brood combs when not in use?" the editor, of The American Bee Journal says: The bees will take care of the empty combs in the summer season bet ter than yoa can do it. In winter they should be boxed up tightly,' after being thoroughly fumigated with sulphur, if they have any moth germs in them. FARM AND GARDEN. INFORMATION OF PRACTICAL IMPOR TANCE. .: TO RURAL , READERS. The Oroood I'Un, Elevation . and Side View of an Ice House of Sufficient Ca pacity for a I-r Farm ; Dairy and Household ami Farm Use. ' The capacity of the house is 12 by 12 by 12 feet. This will hold over 100 tons of ice. or over half a ton per day for six months in the year. The soil upon .which the house stands, if -not porous should be well drained by means of a foot of gravel, rock or other suitable material. A DAIRY ICE HOUSE. ' with a drain leading away from it. The specifications are as follows: Sills are to be 2 by 12, bedded level on the ground; the inner studs, 3 by 6, sheathed on both sides with ; common boards, the outside to be covered with felt paper, the space formed by." sheathing to be filled with tan bark or sawdust. ' The outer stud ding to be 2 by 4, spiked to outside sheathing and covered with common sid ing, leaving a space -under frieze and above base of three inches. The floor to be constructed by spreading from four to six inches of tan bark or sawdust; level the same and cover with common boards, leaving a three-quarter inch space between each. The plates to be the same as studs. 2 by 12; rafters, 2 by 4; roof shingled. Ventilators in top should be 2 feet 6 inches square. Doors doubled and filled with sawdust. . ." The bill for lumber is as follows: Eight pieces, 2 by 12 by 14, for sills and plates; 80 pieces, 2 by 6 by 12, for inner studs: AIR SPACE '. THE GROUND FLAN. ' " 8 pieces, 2 by 6 by 12, for hip rafters and collar beams; 38 pieces, 2 by 4 by 12, for outer studs;' 20 pieces, 2 by 4 by 12, for rafters and ventilator; 750 feet siding, 14 feet long.. Two thousand feet common boards, for sheathing, floor, roof, etc.; 24 pieces fencing, surfaced, 12 feet long, for cor ner boards, etc ; 80 yards building paper; 8,000 common shingles. : Our Agricultural .Exports. ' According to" a seport of .the statis tician of the department of agriculture, about one-tenth of our agricultural prod ucts is exported. The sum is, however, made up from a very few articles. These are cotton, tobacco, meats, -.breadstuffs and cheese. ' Seven-tenths of the cotton product goes to. foreign markets.-' All other articles, except those above stated, when put together are but 3 per cent, of the exports.. The exportation of tobacco is not increasing materially or -so rapidly as home consumption. More cheese could be sold if its reputation for quality should be kept up and there- were more disposi tion to cater to fastidious or peculiar foreign tastes. Butter exports could be made larger if they were of better qual ity. Our great American crop corn is chiefly' consumed on the spot, not more than one-sixth, it is said, going beyond the boundary of the county in which it is grown, and only 2 to 8 per cent, being now exported. - Nearly two-thirds of this crop is produced in seven states Ohio. Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, Kansas and Nebraska, few -others producing more than is required at home, and the larger portion having a deficiency to be supplied by those seven states. Are Incubators ProfltableT : Are. incubators profitable? The answer to this much vexed question remains the same as last year; namely, yes and no. Under favorable conditions such as a superior machine, good eggs, and an intel ligent and! above all patient management incubators have been made profitable; otherwise there is more money in the hen. Mr. George Q. Dow is one of the authori ties on poultry matters who think the artificial incubators are not profitable. J. K. Fleck is another stern defender of the hen and skeptical concerning incuba tors and incubated chicks. An authority in The Fanciers' Journal gets at the real issue in the remark that, there, is really more in the proper rearing of. the' incu bator chicks after they are batched than in the hatching. He says: , "We hatch chickens by both hen and incubator, and reiterate the statement that artificially hatched and reared chickens will- lay as well, ' feel as well and score as well as those raised by nature's methods.": ' - - . ' ? w. . :j. . ... '' When to Buy Bees. " - - Professor Cook says on this subject in his book on . bee keeping: It is safe to purchase any time in the .summer. In April or . May (of course you will . pur-, chase very strong stocks), if in the lati tude of New York or. Chicago it will be earlier further south you will be able to pay more, as you will secure the in crease of both, honey and bee8.: If you desire to purchase in autumn that you may gain the experience of wintering, either demand ' that the one of whom you purchase insure the safe uniting of the bees, or else that he reduce the sell ing' price' at least one-third from his rates the next April. Otherwise the novice had better purchase in the spring. If you are to transfer at once, it is de sirable that you buy in the spring, as it is vexatious, especially for the beginners, to transfer when the hives are crowded with brood and honey. 4 1 tM J. M. HUNTINGTON & CO. flbstraeteps, Real Btate and Insurance Agents. Abstracts of. and Information Concern ingLand Titles on Short Notice. Land for Sale and Houses to Rent. Parties Looking for Homes in COUNTRY OR CITY, OR IX SEARCH OF BugiqejSg Location, . r;.- Should Call on or Write to us. , 1 Agents 'for a Full Line of EeajFireluSiiraicfi Cbmpanies, ' ' ." . And Will Write Insurance for ' ; ; on all DlffiSHa-AJBICE RISKS. Correspondence Solicited. All Letters Promptly Answered. Call on or Address, J. M. HUNTINGTON & CO. Opera House Block, . The Dalles, Or. JAMES WHITE, Has Opened a Xjvlxio1x: Counter, . In Connection With his Fruit Stand and Will Serve Hot Coffee, Ham Sandwich, Pigs' Feet, and , Fresh Oysters; Convenient to the Passenger Depot. ' On Second St., near corner of Madison. - ;, ,- ' Also a ' V Branch Bakery, California Orange Cider, and the Best Apple Cider. If you want a good lunch, give me a call. Open all Night C. N. THORNBURY, T.' A. HUDSON, Late Kec. U. 8. Laud Office. - Notary Public. THOQPDRY & jlODSOji, ROOMS 8 and 9 LAND OFFICE BUILDING, - I'oxtofHc! Box 32B, '. . THE DALLES, OR. pilings, Contests, And all other Business in the D. S. Land Office Promptly Attended to. AVe have ordered Blanks for Filings, Entries and the purchase of Railroad Lands under the recent Forfeiture Act, which we will have, and advise the pub lic at the earliest date when such entries can be made.. Look for advertisement in this paper. . Thornburv & Hudson. Health is Wealth ! Dr. E. C, Wkbt's Kkevk akb Bbain Tkkat HENT, a guaranteed specific for Hysteria, Dlzzi nesx, Cnnvulnfong, Fits, Nervous Neuraleia, Headache, Nervous Prostration caused by the use of alcohol or tobacco. Wakefulness, Mental De pression, Softening of the Brain, resulting in in sanity: and lending-to misery, decay and death, Premature. Old -Age, Barrenness, Loss of Power in either sex, Involuntary Losses and Spermat orrhoea caused by over exertion of the brain, self abuse or over indulgence. Each box contains one month's treatment. $1.00 a box, or six boxes for fo.OO, sent by mail prepaid on receipt of price. WK GUARANTEE SIX BOXES To cure any case. With each order received by us for six boxes,- accompanied by 15.00, we will send the purchaser our written guarantee to re fund the money if the treatment does not effect a cure. Guarantees Issued only by BLAKEtET HOUOHIOS, Prescription Druggists, '. 175 Second St. The Dalles, Or. $500 Reward! We will pay the above reward for anv case of Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, In. digestion, Constipation or Costiveness we cannot cure with West's Vegetable Liver Pills, when the directions are strictly complied with. They are purely vegetable, and never fail to give satisfac tion. Sugar Coated. Large boxes containing 30 Pills, 25 cents. Beware of counterfeits and imi tations. The genuine manufactured only by THE JOHN C. WFST COMPANY, CHIGAGO, ILLINOIS. . - , . . BLAKELE1" ft HOCOHTON, Prescription Druggists, 17S Second St. The Dalles, Or. TDe Dalles is here and has come to stay. It hops to win its way to public favor by ener gy, industry and merit; and to this end we ask that you give it a fair trial, and if satisfied with its course a generous support. The four pages of six columns each, will be issued every evening, except Sunday, and will be delivered in the city, or sent by mail for the moderate sum of fifty cents a month. Its Objects will be to advertise the resources of the city, and adjacent country, to assist in developing our industries, in extending and opening up new channels for our trade, in securing an open river, and in helping THE DALLES to take her prop er position as the Leading City of Eastern Oregon. The paper, both daily and weekly, will be independent in politics, and in its criticism of political matters, as in its handling of local affairs, it will be , - . , . JUST, FAIR AND IMPARTIAL We will endeavor to give all the lo cal news, and we ask that your criticism of our object and course, be formed from the contents of the paper, and not from rash assertions of outside parties. For the benefit of our advertisers we shall print the first issue about 2,000 copies for free distribution- and shall print from time to so that the paper will reach every citi zen of Wasco and adjacent counties. THE WEEKLY, sent to any address It will contain from four to six eight O column pages, and we shall endeavor to make it the equal of the . best. Ask your Postmaster for a copy, or address. THE CHRONICLE PUB. CO Office, N. W. Cor. Washington and Second StS. cipnicie Daily time extra editions, for $1.50 per year.