SORE HEAD IN POULTRY. Moot Common Anions "Vocngr Clilete- u-Effective Treatment. By C A. CART, veterinarian, Alabama experiment' station. Chicken pox sore Lead, or contagious epithelioma. In poultry is a common disease. It i3 more prevalent amonj young chickens, from broilers to ma turity, yet younger and older chickens HEAD OF A HXN AFTER EECOVEBY. This was a bad case of sore head. The bare places on the skin around the eye give some idea of the extent of the crust. This case was treated with creolla and vaseline. may have this disease. There are no positive differences between the vari ous forms of diphtherial, roup and chicken pox, or "sore head," other than the location In which the lesions occur. I have found nothing better or more effective then iodoform by itself, or iodoform one part and tannic acid one part, or Iodoform one part, boric acid one part and tannic acid one part. It Is best to wash the head, wipe out the mouth and throat with a weak solution f creolia (one or two to 100), using a boiled cotton or medicated absorbent cotton swab. Next remove the crust oa the t;kin, comb, wattles and eye lids and the exudate from the eyes, the mouth and"' throat. Then, with sterilized cr boiled or absorbent cotton, wipe away the blood on the raw sur faces until they cease to bleed, then with cotton swab cover the raw places with iodoform or either of the iodoform powders above mentioned. Do not be afraid to put iodoform into the eye or the conjunctival sack. The next day cr the same day a few hours later apply freely vaseline or fresh lard all over these places. In some cases it may be necessary to apply the iodoform or iodo- YT CASS OF SORE HEAD. (Showing cruets on comb, eyelids and skin. form powders once a day for two or three days, and thereafter apply freely only lard or vaseline every day. In other cases one application of the iodoform and daily applications of lard and vaseline are all that is required. In tad cases, especially where they do not improve as rapidly as they should, give internally as much as a teaspoonful of vaseline containing a few drops of creosote or ten to thirty grains of, ep som salts In a tablespoonful of water. This may be given once per day or once every other day. It usually pre vents intestinal infection or complica tions. In cases where roup predominates or where the suborbital sinus becomes filled with pus and the eye Is greatly distended there are several lines of treatment that may be followed. In the early stages apply sweet oil or olive oil to the nostrils and if possible inject some of this oil into the nasal passages by using a small nozzle and syringe. After Injecting or applying the oil apply pressure over the distend ed parts, and thus expel as much of the pus as possible. This may be re peated twice per day. Hard Mouthed Hortci. Here Is something of practical value to any one driving a horse that pulls on the bit: Fasten a small ring to each side of the bridle and as near the brow band as possible. Pass the lines through the bit rings and snap them Into the rings at the brow band. This, with a common jointed bit, will enable a child to hold a puller or bard mouth ed horse with ease under almost all circumstances. It can be used on a fast horse in double team or on both, as desired. It is cheap and easily ap plied, and It won't make the mouth sore. It is better than any patent bit. Farm Press. Vitality of Alfalfa Seed. Tests made at the Colorado station seem to Indicate that "good, plump, mature, clean alfalfa seed does not lose its vitality rapidly when kept with or dinary precaution to prevent injury from moisture." The oldest sample bad a germinating power of 93 per cent wb. t six years old, of 72 when ten years old and of 63 when sixteen years old. Professor W. P. Headden believes that the limit for the vitality of good, mature alfalfa seed exceeds six fee- years. CORN TALK." A Stsdy -of Important Poiata Im ffc Jndsing of Corn. There appear to be some vital points both us to desirable qualities and de fects In picking out a good ear of corn. Professor V; M. Shoesmith of the state college has prepared for the Kansas boys who engage in corn contests a lit tl' study of corn which furnishes an elementary guide In corn judging and Includes among its twenty-seven prac tical questions and answers the ones here reproduced: First. Why should, corn be studied as to trueness to type or breed? So that a better idea may be had as to the certainty with which the char acters will be transmitted. Corn pos sessed of desirable characters, but little breed type, is of little value, since these characters may be substi tuted the following season by latent or hidden characters of little value. Hardiness, productiveness and other invisible characters may be as distinc tive breed characteristics as the color, sliape of ears, etc., and these must be judged by the type as seen in the vis ible characters. . Second. How may the trueness" to type best be judged? By studying the uniformity of the ears in shape, size, straightness of the rows, color, etc., and also by study ing the uniformity of the kernels in size, shape, color and indentation. The uniformity of ears is studied by com paring with the "standard of perfec tion," but as it is difficult to sufficient ly define the standard of perfection for the kernels a heading "Uniformity of Kernels" Is placed on the score card. Third. Why should an ear of corn be cylindrical or nearly so? Because this is the only shape which wiil permit of the same number of rows throughout the length of the ear and also the same size and shape of kernels in all parts of the ear. In a tapering ear there must be some short rows or the kernels must be larger or have more space between them at butt than at tip of ear. Jn such an ear or one of irregular shape some of the kernels must be of irregular size or shape, which will not permit of an even distribution by the planter. Fourth. What is the proper ratio be tween the length and the circumfer ence cf an ear of corn? Although there is not much experi mental data to show that an ear of corn should te of exact proportions, most corn breeders agree that the ratio between length and circumference should be" about as 10 is to 7. It appears that ears which are long and slender are often associated with plants which are not possessed of the great est vigor and hardiness, and also such ears have a relatively small percentage of grain, while ears which are large in circumference and short are usually late in maturing and also often have a small per cent of grain because of an extremely large cob. . The Irish Cobbler. While not a recent introduction, hav ing been grown for many years In Con necticut and Long Island, tne Irish Cobbler potato has only lately attract ed the general attention of eastern growers as a profitable early market variety. It Is not of first quality Infe rior even to Early Ohio but is such a fine grower and reliable cropper under ordinary trucking conditions that it has literally forced itself on the attention of market gardeners. Its origin ap pears to be something of a mystery. Seedsmen and dealers disclaim knowl edge as to when or where it first got Into cultivation, but have generally been compelled to catalogue it. Seed stock has not always been easy to ob tain, but will be freely offered the com ing year. The plant is strong and up right in growth, with thick and healthy dark green foliage. The potatoes in good Boil run from medium to large, oblong In shape, with thin white skin and rather prominent eyes. They grow rapidly and usually reach marketable size within a week of Early Ohio plant ed at the same time, but far outyield that formerly popular kind. The table quality of the young tubers is very tol erable, but falls off as maturity is reached. Notwithstanding its rather unsatisfactory cooking quality Irish Cobbler has turned out so. profitable that it is displacing other early kinds in many localities. Rural New Yorker. Pare "Water In the Dairy. A good illustration of the need pf pure water in the dairy Is afforded by experiments at the Iowa station on the quality of butter washed with pasteur ized and unpasteurized water. In every case the butter washed with the sterile water kept better than the other. Adjustable Scaffold. The drawing Illustrates a good ad justable scaffold for painting and is described by. a contributor in New Eng land Homestead. It consists of two brackets of 2 by 4 scantling support ed by long 2 by 0 props, the brackets In turn bearing the scaffold board. The construction is simple. Let the I lower arm of the'1 brackets be Ion- J ger than the hori-, rontal one. There . j is one brace on 1 1 each side of the' I a bracket, and the. I long 2 by 6 prop goes between them. The upper end of the prop is rsK scaffold. round, and the lower is cut at an acute angle. The scaffold may be raised or lower ed by pushing In or drawing out the feet of the props. As the props are not fastened to the brackets, several pairs of different lengths may be used for high or 16w painting. Those la tot drawing are father abort WML w i n i : : : : : milium m- f A Successful Rival T. , .,.-?-, r i .-- ihTii ; : i h1- Original. It i3 not unusual for either, a man or a woman to come between an engaged couple, but It is unusual for the course of true love to be turned awry by a horse. The story begins back in the days when the Indians In the west were constantly breaking away from their reservations and slaughtering all palefaces who came in their way. It was then that Florence Brooks was visiting an older sister at Fort R., the wife of an officer in the United States army. And then it was that, the gar rison having marched away, leaving . the women and children to the protec tion of half a company under the com- mand of a lieutenant, another tribe . consisting of several hundred warriors came down to take possession of the fort. , When a friendly redskin rode into the inclosure and announced the com ing of his fellows, every man being needed for defense., Florence Brooks volunteered to ride, to the nearest post, fifty miles distant, for succor.. Lieu- ' tenant Howard Whiting, In command placed her on his .own Kentucky bred horse, Comanche, and sent her flying i out "of the fort, shouting after her, 1 I "Their lives depend upon you!" How the horse enabled her to cross the. jpath.of the coming-Indians an hour" before they reached the point of Inter- j section, how ten miles farther on she ;. met a squadron of cavalry, how when the Indians reached the fort they found a force ample to protect it, need only be referred to here. From that day Comanche was beloved by the whole garrison, and especially by Miss Brooks. As for Miss Brooks, she was beloved by the whole garrison, especial ly Lieutenant Whiting. And now the view of alkali plains surrounding Fort R. has changed to vacant lots on the outskirts of a city. Miss Brooks rides in a trolley car in stead of on horseback, and Lieutenant Whiting spends the greater part of the day in a recruiting office in one of the dingiest streets of the city. But early in the afternoon he leaves his sergeant In charge and, mounted on Comanche, rides past Miss Brooks' abode. Sha is watching for him from an upper win dow. He raises his hat, and from be hind the curtain she throws him a kiss. But for one thing the lover would be supremely happy. He i3 jealous of Comanche. "Why," he asked on joining his fiancee after one of his. rides, "do you always feast your eyes on-my horse and pay no attention to me? This aft ernoon when I rode by you didn't even see when I raised my hat. You waved your hand long after I had done so." -. "I love Comanche," she replied. Miss Brooks left the city for a month, and when, she returned her lover ln . formed her that he had sold Comanche. The reason he gave for doing so was ! that he had been ordered to rejoin his regiment in the west, and, Comanche having become old, besides gone lame, the lieutenant would not feel warrant ed in transporting him so far, especial ly as he would need a serviceable ani mal. Miss Brooks looked astonished when- the news was imparted to her and argued long and well against the necessity for the sale. But Whiting had nothing but his pay, which was not sufficient to keep so expensive a I pet, and she was obliged to admit, I which she did reluctantly, that he , could hardly have done otherwise. 1 They parted with an embrace, warm j enough on the part of the man, but not the girL However, It gradually came over Miss Brooks planning as she was for the coming wedding that Comanche could not have been included in the calculations. Indeed, It was very dif ficult for her to figure out the problem of living on Whiting's pay, even with out what Comanche would have cost. She had an income of $800, which she must relinquish upon her marriage. This left only a second lieutenant's pay, with commutation for fuel and quarters, on which the couple must live. After all, Whiting was right. There is no doubt that all would have gone well had It not been for certain Inopportune meeting. One morning while Miss Brooks was out buying her trousseau she saw a man driving a cart with an enormous load on it. ; The horse was unable to get It up an in cline, and the driver was belaboring him unmercifully. . Miss Brooks,, natu rally fond of horses, approached .to pro test The horse turned his head, look ed at her out of a pair of melancholy eyes and whinnied. He was Comanche. Miss Brooks embraced him and wept The next mail carried to Lieutenant Whiting a breaking of the engagement from Miss Brooks. No satisfactory reason was given. The real reason was that she loved Comanche better than Whiting. On her income, which, if not married, she would retain till death, the could live and take care of Co manche. She bought him for $50 and kept him in royal equine style. Comanche lived five years after be ing rescued from the melancholy posi tion into which his master had sold him. Then Miss Brooks, after a de cent period of widowhood, began to think of her lover of other days. He, hearing that his rival was dead, sought her. They were married and went to live at the post where he ws stationed. "Whiting,' said his colonel banter Ingly one day, "I hear your wife kept you waiting five years while she lavish ed her affections on a horse. I didn't know I had an officer under my com mand with so little capacity for pleas ing the fair sex. "Colonel," replied Whiting, "I would much rather have been kept waiting for the woman I love by a horse thaa by some men I have known." ELLSWORTH TCMTTRSOML , A writer in Farm and Fireside says the cow stanchion shown in the illus tration has been used in his stables with much satisfaction. We have used both chains and the old station ary stanchions and have seen some of the modern patented cattle ties, but consider this stanchion superior to any of them, he says. With this stanchion the cows are given sufficient freedom without undue liberty. They can turn around to lick themselves, yet cannot get back on the walk or ahead in the manger.- Fig. 1 shows the stanchion closed. Fig. .2 shows it open. The two sides are made of hard wood, four feet long, one and one-fourth inches thick and A GOOD COW STANCHION, two and one-half inches wide. , The end pieces are also of hard wood and are one foot long by three and one half inches square and are mortised 'to. receive the sides, as shown in Fig. 3. The sides arc fastened to the ends with bolti, one side on bolt at X and being hell when closed by clevis, C. Eyebolts -arp aSred at each, end, to .which short chains are fastened and Jty which the. stanchion is suspended. .; The whole stanchion, including bolts, labor, etc., should not cost more than j60 or 75 cents and may be made for even , less than that amount. , ij ,.. .. Parentage Valuable. t, Cows, like men, are good or bad ofttimes because of their environment. bringing up and education. We look fpr nd expect men to be good if rought up in good, religious families and communities. I have often heard it said, "Give me the first six years of a child's life, and I will tell you with a great deal of certainty what the future of that child's life will be. So I believe that the conditions under which an animal is reared determine in a large measure her future usefulness or uselessness, says a writer in Kim ball's Dairy Farmer. As with men, the parentage Is of great value, and we look for and have good reason to expect cows to be better cows from a long line of productive ancestry. This, then, is the . stepping stone in the de veloping of a dairy cow. The Good Bull. ; Authorities say that "slaughters take after their fathers and sons after their mothers" in predominant character istics. This is true of all animal life. If a bull's lineage can be traced through a line of remarkable milkers his value will be enhanced. He will transmit the qualities of his dam to his offspring. It often happens that the farmer who buys cows with the idea of raising heifers is disappointed. He Is Impatient He cannot wait for the second generation. He thinks his cows are: unprofitable because their heifers are hot as good as he had hoped they would be. It usually takes at least two generations to get a herd into good working condition. You an't do it in a" minute. Don't get hasty, but keep the facts in mind and work toward a definite purpose. Above all, use a good sire. ; You need good cows. That is plain. And you need a good sire to get good cows. That isn't as plain as It ought to be. By a good bull we mean one whose maternal, blood stands for milking qualities and performance. , f T Care f the Dairy Calf. . The young calf should be taken away from -the mother after it Is three or four days- old. It should be fed pure milk for a time, the temperature being about 98 degrees F. Care should be taken not to feed the calf too heavily, or it may get the scours. The cab! should be taught to drink from a pail at the outset- This can be done by putting the. finger in its mouth and gradually lowering the hand until it is beneath the warm milk in the pail. In a short time it will drink by itself. After being fed on the pure milk for a week or so the calf may be fed on skim med milk. If the calf does not run on pasture, it will be profitable to put a lit tle meal or shipstuff in the skimmed milk. After a month o two it should be . fed some good timothy or clover hay. , . - . Vmc the Tester. A good cow is known by her per formances at the milk pail. If she doesn't do her duty by that she Is not a good cow and should be convert ed into beef. Use a pair of scales and a tester and know what your cows are doing. tig ' .v. ft Tig. 3 X PARAFFINING OF CHEESE. It Slay Be Ddne on.O Farn at Lit- .' tie ExieiiBt. -' Nearly all factory cheese is how par affined, and the advantages I obtained -by covering the cheese with a thin lay er of paraffin are: . ' The loss In weight during curing is much less than without the paraffin, and the cheese will stand a higher tem perature in the curing room without ; damage. " j Mold is, entirely prevented or at least ? greatly checked. I Flies cannot deposit their egg3 through the paraffin, and that prevents skippers. The paraffining of factory cheese is ; done by dipping it in melted paraffin, so that a thin layer adheres to the cheese, but of course it takes quite a large kettle full to dip even a ten pound cheese, and this method would on that account be somewhat expen sive for , cheesemakers on the farm. The paraffining can, however, be done at practically no expense and with very little work by the following meth od: Melt a pound or two of paraffin (cost ing about 15 cents per pound) in a ket tle until it is quite hot and begins to smoke and then cover the surface of the cheese, using a fairly stiff brush, say about an inch In diameter, and rub It in good. Be sure to keep the paraf fin hot and dip the brush frequently. Do not try to cover too much surface with one dipping of the brush. The coating should be about half the thick ness of a dime and adhere well to the cheese. It takes less than 1 cent's worth of paraffin for a ten pound cheese. The cheese should preferably be from three to ten days old when par affined, and the surface must be wiped dry. It is best to leave the cheese in a warm room for some hours before paraffining; otherwise it is difficult to got a coating that will stick. As the farmer generally has no regular curing room, says a writer in Hoard's Dairy man, it will pay him well to take the little extra trouble in paraffining all his cheese. Iloniemrtslo Ijntier Worlcer. A very effective butter worker, which will save a great deal cf labor, can be made- by any man at all handy with tools out of some strips cf hard wood, mar.Ie preferred. Fashion the pieces into a wide, shallow trough, taieriug at one end toa'uout four inches. Set this trough on throe less, two under the wide end and one under the narrow end, strengthened by an extra piece un derneath to fit them into. . Make a roller out of a piece of the wood four inches square and one foot longer than the trough or body of workr er. A very good length for a medium sized dairy would be thirty inches for the body part and four inches for the roller. -Cut with a line tooth saw one inch deep on each side of the stick at a point twelve inches from one end. This extra twelve inches is for a han dle and should be dressed down round and smooth to about two inches, so that It is easy to grasp by the operator. The remaining three feet must be made tapering, the small end (that opposite the handle) being not more than an Inch in diameter. Dress the wood square, then cut off the four corners to make it octagon In shape. In the narrow end of the trough drive an ordinary iron staple and in the small end of the roller a short, heavy cut Iron nail not a wire nail, which would be likely to bend. The nail should project about an inch. This fits into the staple, holding the roller in place, and completes about as effec tive a butter worker as any one need ask for. Dairy TaJk of Today The best cows do not always have the largest udders. Often udders are de ceptive. Scales and the Babcock test is the surest way to determine your most profitable cows. Test Associations. It is important to know the yearly yield of every cow in the herd and whether she is paying or not if the best results are wished for. To this end test associations are being formed In some parts of the country to work out the problem of herd improvement Just Before Milkinsr. There are two very practical meth ods of reducing the amount of hair, dust and filth that ordinarily falls Into the milk. By giving the flanks of the animal and the udder a good washing and then wiping dry just before milk ing; the other, and probably the most satisfactory method, Is to wipe the ud der and adjacent parts with a damp cloth. Stable Bacteria. At Cornell Agricultural college some of the trained scientific men engaged there undertook the study of stable : bacteria and how fast they will multi ply. A hair from a cow's flank was put Into 500 cubic centimeters of steril ized milk. After shaking it for a minute there were fifty-two bacteria per cubic centimeter; after twenty-four hours it contained 55,000 per cubic centimeter. A cubic centimeter of milk is a very small quantity, only a few drops, and is expressed In abreviation by the letters C. C. Another experi ment was made in which a piece of hay taken from the stable floor about two Inches long was placed in 500 cubic centimeters of sterilized milk. The milk was shaken one minute and then con tained 3,025; after twenty-four hours it contained 3.412,000 bacteria per cubic centimeter. Now, it Is these bacteria of the destructive kind, says Hoard's Dairyman, that destroy the quality In milk, cream, batter and cheese Additional Local. Lost, between Lohgter Brd.In- r, lIgf Holstwn JTK.y co-c, on j ii jured. Reu'v n Norwood. 2 Tl:e room adjoining the Moeea store on tli north is being thoroughly over hauled and improved, and when com i-ieted it ia lo be occupied by the Bell t elf jjhote company. . ' JJa?ter Darrell While of Tortlsnd is speeding the holidays Uh his grand parents Mr.and Mrs. S. N. Wilkins in tiis city. The Presby teriftns ' held their Christ mas -exercises Monday n fcht. There hs tree, a program - which ws in the nxtureof a cantata, and a good time for all present. .;' Mr. and Mrs. Meers of Portland have been guests this week of the latter'd parents Mr and Mrs. R. N. White, in tins city. Frank White has returned from a biief trip through Eastern Oregon. Prof, and Mrs. George Paul arrived from Portland Monday for av'eitwith relatives. Prof. Paul ii et.ll witli the Western Academy of Music aB head of the department ol dramatic and is doing well.. He returned to 'Portland yester day but Mrs. Paul will remain for two eeks. . The Foreign Missionary Society of the M. K. church ia to hold its annual tea in the church basement New Year's eve. A very interesting program will be jjiven and refreshments will be served ; for a trilling sum. The public is invited. Tha performance of "King Richard the Third'' at the opera bouse New Year's ninht will begin promptly at 8: o'clock, and closes at 10; 30. This will give those who wish to go ample time to at tend the Masonic banquet, aher the theatre. . . John H. Stowe and Miss Carrie E. May, both pf Alsea, were married at the home of Rev. and Mrs. O. T. Uurd at nine o'clock Christmas morning. Only the necessary witLeeses were preseut. After the ceremony the young people WiHt to Albany on a biief visit. 1 hey will icside in Alsea, where they a e both well and favorably kuown. Harold Wilkins left yesterday for a holiday visit in Portland and Oregon City. United Evangelical church. Regular services Sunday. Morn ing subject, "The Golden Wedge;" evening subject, 'A Good Guide." Mr. and Mrs. Bradv Burnett arrived Wedenesday evening from Canyonviile whera they were married Christmas day. TU I . .. I J - - - C 1 ... C TT iub unuc waa iurmeny jjiisb OUaie nop Kius. Mr. and Mrs. Burnett will reside with the groom's mother iw this city. Brady is too well known in Corvallia to tie-d praise from the Gazette, and con gratula ions are extended by a wide circle of friends. A special series of evangelistic meetings will be held at the Uni ted Evangelical church begin ning Monday eve, Dec. 31st. Rev. A. A. Winter, of Portland, will be here on Jan. 8tb to assist. The Christmas exercises at the First Methodist church Monday night were well attended, the basement being crowded with friends, parents and children, all eager to see and hear. Sonjs. recitations and exercises by the children made up a very interest ing program, and two attractive trees delighted the little iolks. The room was prettily decorated with cedar and the occasion was very pleasaut lor all. The Old Year. Slowly tha Old Year dies tiara nrensprl. Time was when it was yourg 17..11 f .1 o r - r j. uj ngur uib opnng 01 me Bounding to meet the summer. But now, old, forsaken 1 Summer and autumn vanished, Lo-ked in storms and daeknees The.Old Year dies. Pity those who live by years They die daily. Rejoice in life I Eternity is not measured by time, But since thou must measure thy ex ' pression, Be wise and do cot bury thyself in it Express the Life. Contributed. "Scaly iicgr- u uosiagicu. Scaly leg is a form of scabies or mange, caused by the mite known as the Sarcoptes mutans. It Is a con tagious disease, but does not spread very rapidly, and there may be only a few affected birds in a flock at one time. When the disease is first ob served prompt and energetic measures should be adopted to eradicate it The affected birds should be isolated to prevent the spread of the contagion. Begin treatment by soakinsr the leers in warm water to which soaD has been added until the scales have become thoroughly softened, and the loose scales can be removed without causing bleeding. After this has been done apply a good coat of carbolic ointment ' or balsam of Peru. This should ba