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About Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 28, 1909)
iwR ORCHARDS A GABO F.E.TR1GG REGISTER. ROCKfORD.IA. CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED L.................................. (Thia matter must not be reprinted with out special permission.] CONVINCING DEMONSTRATION. A reader of these notes living at Le- raysville, I’a., sends us a clipping giv ing a brief summary of the potato spraying experiments which have been conducted by the experiment station at Burlington, Vt., during the past eighteen years. The showing is such an excellent one that potato raisers will be glad to hear about it. Thor ough spraying with the bordeaux mix ture, blue vitriol, lime and water made up in tlie 5-5-50 recipe twice yielded 67 per cent more and spraying three times yielded 141 per cent more than the unsprayed. During the eighteen years that the station has used the bordeaux mixture there has been an average increase of 92 per cent, or 112 bushels, per acre. The lowest increase in yield was 26 per cent and the high est 215 per cent in seasons when there was much dampness. The varieties experimented with were the White, Star, Polaris, Green Mountain and Delaware, and these when unsprayed yielded from 54 to 267 bushels per i acre under least and most favorable I conditions, while sprayed the returns varied from 133 bushels to 389 bushels per acre. These figures should be scanned twice by the fellow who pre tends to raise potatoes on a commer cial scale, and even for the home gar- den the precaution is well worth while The hazelnut* wtd n ♦h» chüdfva ga'Lered this fall *'U taste Biigtety go-jd by the winter tire. (htod management on t h* farm as well as in the home consists as much in knowing what to let go as in what to do—in other words, in the power of discrimination. Just why it is so we have never seen explained, but fruit that is grown on sandy land seems to develop a brighter color at maturity. In select ing an orchard site it is therefore well to keep this point in mind. A British abortion remedy that is said to be very effective consists in giving animals subject to this ailment two drams of pure carbolic acid well diluted in water in soft feed every other night during each alternate fort night during pregnancy. A A SURE HOG CHOLERA CURE, E xperiments which have been con ducted by experts In animal disease at the Kansas City stockyards with a view to giving the new senim cure for hog cholera a still further test seem to prove beyond doubt that it is both effective and reliable. At the be ginning of tlie test, which extended for thirty days, thirty-five hogs were placed in an isolated pen, twenty-two of which were inoculated with serum, four with virulent cholera blood and the nine remaining given no treatment at all. During the period all the bogs which were not vaccinated with the serum died, while the twenty-two that had been inoculated did not contract the disease at all, but were alive and healthy at tlie close. In order to give the new cure the severest test the treated hogs were subjected to the most aggravated type of exposure, hogs that had died of the disease be- ing left in the pens for periods of two or three days. Dr. I. 11. Baker, chief of the government inspection depast ment at Kansas City, had the work in charge ami in conjunction with his assistants will shortly make a full re port of the experiments to (he depart ment of agriculture, which will in turn give the matter still further publicity SOMETHING TO WORK FOR. A scad of young fellows don't fare any better than they do in a financial way because they spend every cent they earn jut as fast as it comes luto their hands. The outcome of this is that, saving nothing, they have nothing ahead toward which to strive and nat urally feel unprepared to tackle any business proposition requiring capital or to make definite plans to have a home of their own. both of which in fluences would tend to have a steady ing and uplifting Influence on their Ilves. The average young fellow, plug ging along alone without any well de fined objts t in life, often has spells when be questions whether the mere feeding and clothing of himself is real ly worth w hile, and in too many cases his doubt would seem to be justifiable. It is only w hen he gets to working for something or somebody outside of him self that life has zest and meaning. A savings fund laid aside for some def inite pur|M>se, perhaps the starting of a home or the helping of some friend or relative in need, is a boon which thousands of young fellows ought to avail themselves of. The start may be hard, but the rest is easy. The sec ond hundred dollars Is often easier saved than the first ten. Better a little dirt on the kitchen floor and a bright smile for the tired and hungry husband when he comes in from a hard day’s work in the field than floors white as scrub brush and elbow grease can make them and a cross and Irritable wife with the back ache. In a good many years’ experience in the feeding of silage there has been virtually no evidence forthcoming that it is tn any way injurious as a feed for cattle. More than this, it is relish ed by the other farm animals. and all seem to thrive when it constitutes a portion of the regular ration. Before the hot fires of the early win ter are started in heater or furnace it is a good idea to inspect the flues and see if the brick and plaster are sub stantial enough to last until spring without repairing. It is an easy mat ter to overlook because it is quite out of sight, yet an important one not withstanding this fact. The highest price paid for beeves on the Chicago market this season was $8.30 for a buuch of native steers weighing 1,600 pounds and finished for the market at Bloomington. III. This means that a single animal of this weight cashed its owner $137.80. In the words of the hapless little ne gro in the comic supplement, “This makes a noise like prosperity.” There seems to be a pretty well set tied opinion that while seed corn will retain its vitality if buried in an oat bin it will not do so if the ears are hung over the bin above the oats. The reason for tills seems to be that in the first place the ear is kept quite dry, its moisture being absorbed by the oats, while in tlie second instance it gathers enough moisture so that hard freezes kill the germ The fellow who puts off the securing of bis seed corn until be is afield with a husking wagon the latter part of November or December may be trust ing Providence for a good stand of corn next season, but has mighty lit tle ground ou which to base any such confidence. In this as in some other familiar experiences the Lord helps those who stir around and do most to help themselves. While a chicken will roost on most any old thing, from the edge of a bar rel to the reel of a reaper, a glance at the shape of the foot when it clutches a support siiows that to be comforta ble the roost ought to be nearly round. While straight and even poles about two inches in diameter with the knots trimmed smooth will do nicely if one can get them, a pine 2 by 2 with the corners rounded off makes an excellent perch. Oranges grown in some portions of Mexico are infested with maggots, the larvae of flies which lay their eggs In the skin of the growing orange and hatch by the time the fruit is ripe and have a fine time in the pulp of the orange until they emerge as fully developed flies. Eor this reasou Cali fornia, with her immense orange grow ing interests, has placed an embargo ou Mexican oranges as well as nursery stock, so much is a spread of this pest feared. The maggot is white in color and is from a third to half an Inch long. Washington rated agriculture as one of the noblest and most useful of pur suits in a daj- when the methods fol lowed were cmde and the results at tained meager. Today it occupies a still more exalted position and in a very true sense furnishes the means whereby we are able to subsist as a nation. The time is fast approaching, if not already here, when an increas ing number of the brightest boys and girls of the land will look to agricul THE NEED OF SHADE. ture and horticulture in their general During the hot weather of July and and special fields as callings which August this year there appeared in they may enter with ample equipment some of the central western states ac of Intelligence and energy, knowing counts of cattle in pasture being killed that In return for the same effort nec by the intense heat. In most cases essary for success In professional, busi where such losses were reported there ness or clerical pursuits they will reap was no shelter for the stock from the a generous and substantial reward. glaring rays of the sun. in one in The conditions to be found in rural stance all of a herd of twenty-three life may and ought to be healthful, died, while tn another some fifteen wholesome and uplifting—nay, even perished, the animals when found t«e Inspiring If the right spirit is brought Ing pile«! up one upon another In an to Its activities. Notwithstanding the effort to reach a mere patch of shade progress made in the past fifteen years, hardly sufficient for a single animal. there is ns yet but a meager showing Losses of this type would seem to sug of the possibilities of the hight*st and gest the wisdom of providing shade of best type of agriculture. It is the one some kind in the pasture lot so that great field of effort, tremendously wide ou especially hot days the stock may and roomy which has not yet been ex find refreshing shelter there. Where ploited and exhausted The door of op a grove Is not available shelters of portunity swings wide for those who gome kind should Is’ erected, which would enter it. promising a typo of life, may be left o|>eii on two or three sides though fraught with hard toil and ao as to permit of a food circulation some discouragements, at once the of air This item is too late to help most health giving and Independent of out any this year, but it may serve as hose pursuits which young men a reminder fur next. Women are eu ter lag lu4»y 1 At tt« rate wlu t •uto®oblle a el Notice of Sale of Tide Lands are hr - t login»' <•» ••»A Notice l hereby given that the State Land as though tlie old w>w ’The ftxjls are Board ot the State ot Oregon, w ili «11 io the not all dead yet” would soou be un “ AiestJ aider, at its office m the Uapilel build ing al Salem, Oregon, on Deci I * true. Cows and elover in some form arv the two best agencies knowu for rest ing and regenerating tired aud worn out soils. Many realize this truth:| good many ought to. It is fair to assume that work hornet enjoy a frequent and refreshing drink of cool water just as much as work men do. If they were rememl>ered In this way there would be fewer of them giving oyt on hot days during harvest. As a Hile, the most beautiful colored autumn leaves are noticed those falls when heavy freezes hold off till late, the varied colors which the leaves of different trees take on being in way of a chemical change, the result of a nat ural ripening process. Many a grower of produce comes to grief by rising to the bait of a little higher price offered by an unknown firm and shipping stuff which repre sents the best part of a season’s work on which no account of sales is ever given and for which no pay is ever re ceived. It Is much better to play safe at somewhat lower price levels. 1)0 YOl Do you want to buy a farm or some city property? Do you want to sell your farm or city property? Do you want to insure your property in a reliable com- pany? Do you have any wants in the realestate or insurance line? at 1000 a. m., oi «aid day, all the state's in terest in the (¿de and ovriHou lends hereinafter described, giving however, to the owner or own ers of any lards abutting or fronting on such tide and ove flow lands, the preference right to pur < tm <• -aid tide and MNHMW land.. at th. I ight i price offered, providing such offer is made in l good faith; and also providing that the land will < not be sold nor any offer therefor accepted foi less than $5 00 per acre the Board reserving the right to reject any and ail bids. Said lands are situated in Coo. countv, Ore gon, and described as follows; Beginning at a point on the meander line of the C cMjuilie river at the northwest corner of lot C. which said point is 1320 feel east and 1965 fret north from corners ections 17, IB. 19 and 20, running thence along meander line as follows, to-wit; S84® e 130 feet. 5 74 ° 45’ e 492 feet. North A) feet to low water line N 75 - 15’ w 257 feet along low waler line. N 73 0 10' w 232 feet. N B0° w 137 feet. S 100 feet to place of beginning, containing 1.31 acres, . being __________ ____ on _____ _____ tide land _____ fronting west hail of lot 6. i7.’f 28. S R 14 W oi W M. Applications and bids should be addressed to G. G. Brown, Clerk State Land Board, Salem, Oregon, and marked 'Application and bid to purchase tide lands ’ G. G. BROWN. 39-10» Clerk State Land Board Dated this Sept. 28. 1909. A big list of property to sell. Your choice of seven insurance companies. Anything else you want. HL EL OA KE The Real Estate Man Bandon Fonudry & Machine Shop There is little excuse for the farm animal being afflicted with vermin or scab when there are so many effective dips and disinfectants on the market Dipping tanks which will do for hogs, sheep and calves are on sale at most any agricultural implement house and are quite inexpensive. Eor larger cat tie disinfectants may be applied in the form of a spray. A. Garfield Mill and Steamboat Work Our SPECIALTIES week or month. A flock of hens is doubtless better off from the standpoint of health if SPECIAL MACHINES BUILT TO ORDER they sleep out of doors in pleasant weather in the same way that folks Tnrned Shafting, Cap anti Set are if they sleep in tlie open air or in Screws, Machii.e Bolts. 1* tents instead of in stuffy bedrooms an.I Fittings, Brass Work Tlie hens may dislike being ejected from the henhouse for the first few nights, but they will soon become ac GENERAL REPAIRING customed to the outdoor perch. Pattern Shop Sample Room in Connection. Bandon Connection in If the money which is annually spent by farmers in mining and other wild cat and blue sky enterprises were put Into the purchase of better machinery, the installing of dairies and the hiring of more help to give the acres worked a more intensive tillage, more profit would be forthcoming from these im provements in a single season than from the aforesaid investments in a lifetime. CAPTAIN CHRISTENSEN. Commanding Coos Bay and Bandon twice a week Coniiectinj? with SteamjShip Alliance at Marshfield, information of J. E. WALSÏROM, Agt. Bandon In latitudes where the winters are forbidding and tend to keep folks closely boused during the winter II months it is a sensible thing to be out :• r of doors during the fall and early win ter as much as possible in order to store up vitality and energy to bear the more rigorous outdoor air of the colder months. Every chance that of fers should be improved to breathe this fine, crisp, life giving air that is so characteristic these October and No vember days. o Alvin Munck, Prop Portland and Coos Bay Steamship Line BANDON, OREGON A Sails from Coos Bay Saturdays at Service of Tide Sails from Ainsworth Dock, Portland, Wednesday HAS A SELECT STOCK OF Wines, Liquors & Cigars The designations “nigh” and “off” used in referring to the left and right hand animals of a team came into use because of the fact that the driver ot the pioneer ox team used to stand when driving to the left of the left band animal so he could wield a whip in his right hand, which was nearest the team The customary position of the driver of a team of horses is on the right instead of the left side of tile 1IANDON seat, with the result that the nigh horse is the one farthest from him and the off horse the one nearest. “A BR EAKWA 1ER The Opera at 8 P M. MILLF.R. Agent, Marshfield Of ^20 BANDON STEAM LAUNDRY Family Washing a Specialty. OREGON The El Dorado According to figures which have been | compiled by the Canadian forestry de-1 partment. there is in the Dominion a total of l.fiOO.OUO square miles of stand ing timber. but notwithstanding this enormous reserve there were set out! in 1908 under the direction of the de partment 3.000.000 young trees to take the place of those felled, while a total of 10.000,000 little trees have been set i out during the past few years, it would have Iteen well for this country’ had a like policy been inaugurated when its timber resources were con sidered inexhaustible. WANT -4 First Class Laundry Work Guaranteed. attention given to fine woolen goods. Hearting and pressing Mens' Suits anil Ladies prompt attention Special fine skirls given F. A. BATES, Proprietor Vi. Rasmussen Bros., Props WINE5, LlQUoR.5 AMEKK’A’S GREATEST WEEKLY TIIETOLEIM) BLADE, T oledo , oiuo The Best Known Newspaper in the United States—Circu lation 200,000—Popular in Every State AND The 74th year of its existence iiuds I lit» Tol <1<> Blade more popular than at any period of its remarkable career. It is now read each week by more than a million people. Its field is not circumscribed by state Itoiindartes CI6AR5 tm involves the length and breadth of the United States, giving it an tin questionable right of claiming to be tlie greatest national weekly newspaper Bandon Oregon in tbe country. The Weekly Blade is distinctly a family newspaper, l ite one object of its publishers lias always been to make it tit for tbe American home, for the fireside and of interest to every member of the family. To fulfill this put pose it is kept clean and wholesome. I'benews of the world is handled in a EOR comprehensive manner, and the various departments of Tbe Blade are edited with painstaking care. The Household page is a delight to tbe women and children, cut rent »flairs are treated editorially without prejudice : l adies’ and Children's Furnish* the serial stories are selected with tbe i lea of pleasing the greatest number of fiction lovers; the Question Bureau is a strap book of information; tlie ings, .Men’s Shirts and Farmstead columns are conducted with the purpose of giving (fie patrons a medium for the exchange of idt‘.'is and information on farm topics. No de Overalls partment is neglected, bill every feature is taken care of with tbe idea uj ME ARE JUST RECEIVING making Tlie Blade worth many times tbe price of subscription $1.00 a year A LARGE STOCK OF Sample copies mailed free Address, THE BLADE, Toledo Ohio. A good number of farmers in the: vicinity in which the writer lives this year attended big state fairs in com ( pany with their good wives. This is j the proper system—a practice which many another man might adopt with both pleasure and profit to those con cerned. From the very nature of the case family and household cares tie a 1 woman at home closely, and for this reasou s|>ecial pains should be taken to see that now and then at least she is given a change which will put a new > element Into her life and make more' endurable the humdrum work of every ' day. In all too many instances the j farmer's wife has too little recreation and too few outings, either because the man of the house is so selfish that be won’t let her step off the place or AT THE so much of a tightwad that he does not allow her the money to dress neat ly or to spend on a trip that she might like to take. Any woman who does the work that falls to a w oman's lot to do on the average farm should receive just as much credit for its successful operation as her husband, who cares for the stock and tills the fields On Carrie, a fine line of this I sis she is entitled to outings as much as her husband and to the where Watches, Clocks and Jewelry withal that she may enjoy them. Toys, Notions, Dishes, HOLIDAY GOODS Coos Co. Nursery ROOMS and Racket Store LODGING TREES, BERRIES, ETC.. ETC. a lull line of Prices lower than others Boyles’Jewelry Store M.G. I'OIIL AGENT: Newly AGATES CUT AND Agate Jewelry POLISHED Made Bring your your .lob Work to T he R ecorder furnished large light rooms Telephone Electric Lights Rented by single night, week or month IN’ QUIRE AT Ol 1 ICE Of I he BAMMLN STRA W IAll)R\ to Order FINI ENGRAVING The Recorder $1.50 per year