Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 29, 1907)
FEEDING PEK1N DUCKS. t w i Is. c- - A rami lard by Jmh BiW, a -, Successful Breeder. It Is' Impossible to give all the good formulas for feed for Pekln ducks, but here is one recommended 'by James RanUIn of South Easton, Mass., the father,.of the Pekin duck Industry in America, which Is probably as good as any .a - For the first four days feed equal parts pf rolled oats and cracker or bread crumbs, 10 per cent of hard boil ed eggs chopped fine, 5 per cent of coarse sand. Feed four times a day what they will eat up clean. Brooder heat, 00 degrees. When four days to three weeks old feed equal parts of rolled oats and wheat ,brnn. 10 per cent cornmeal, 5 per ee$t coarse sand, 5 per cent fine ground;; beef scraps, soaked finely cut green (clover, rye or cabbage. . Feed four times a day. Brooder heat, 85 to 75 degrees. When from three to six weeks old feed equal parts of eornnieal, wheat bran and red dog, 5 per cent of fine grit, 5 per cent of beef scraps. Mix in green food. Feed four times a day. When from six to eight weeks old feed three parts cornmeal, two parts wheat bran, one part oat feed, 10 per cent of beef scraps. 5 per cent of grit. Feed three times a day. When from eight to ten weeks old feed two-thirds cornmeal, one-third equal parts of wheat bran and. oat feed. 10 per cent beef scraps. 5 per cent grit and less green food. Feed three times a day. They should now be ready for market Never cook the food for young ducks after they are a week old, and mix with cold water. Mr. Rankin Bays: "With us ducks are the surest crop we can grow. Inde pendent of the elements, affected nelr ther by floods nor droughts, heat nor cold, a concentrated cash product turn ed every three months, they make the best returns of any crop on the farm." Frnlta of Correct Poultry Methods. The average American Imagines that there is little or nothing for him to learn. It might surprise many per sons to know that either in the county of Sussex, England, or what is known as the Houdan district of France, two counties about like some of the largest counties of our several states, there are grown, dressed and shipped into the London market more poultry than is grown in any one state of this coun try, says the Feather. Perhaps one or two states w ould equal either of these counties in magnitude, but just consid er the small farmers of one county raising and marketing more fowls than are grown in the state of New York or Iowa, all of which sell for nearly double the price paid for the general run of poultry in this country. If the average of our farm raised fowls were put In competition with the Sussex or Houdan fowls In the London or Paris market they would not even be considered in the race. What we must learn in this country to benefit the farmers, to benefit every poultry grower, is the fact that poultry proper ly grown, finished and marketed is al ways worth twice as much in value as the common average stuff that Is a drug on the market Tlie Cornlah Indian Fowl. The popular notion of the origin of the Cornish Indian, formerly known as the Cornish Indian Game, is now said by some one who professes to know to be wide of the mark. Accord ing to this gentleman, the Cornish In dian was originated in India by crosses of the Malay, Sumatra and native com- COKNISH INDIAN MAUL . mon stock found in the vicinity of either Bombay or Calcutta. The name, he says, was given to them In honor of their originator, an English fancier named Cornish. The Cornish Indian Is not a heavy layer, but is a very fine table fowl of large size, with perhaps the greatest percentage of breast and thigh flesh to total weight of any fowl tn existence. Prematnre Cnlclca. It Is not very uncommon for chicks, especially Leghorn, chicks, to hatch out a little ahead of time. If the hatching was done with an Incubator it usually indicates a bit too high temperature. If the germs were quite strong and vig orous and the temperature was kept well up, Leghorn -chicks should be gin hatching on the -twentieth day. Chicks of the Asiatic varieties would be a day later probably under equally favorable conditions. Cheap Dlslnfeetlaar, The cheapest and best method of dis infecting is to dissolve one pound of copperas (sulphate of Iron) In two gal Ions of hot water, adding a wlneglass ful of sulphuric acid. When cold, add four gallons of water and apply to ev ery portion of the house and grounds. and if several applications are made so much the better. LIMBER .NECIC- Hnr TUi Base of the Poultry" Tare. ; Mar Freaseatly Be Cored. Umber neck Is the result of ptomaine poisoning of some kind, says the Feath er. Decayed meat full of maggots is the usual cause. Some claim that the live maggots moving about In the crop so irritate it as to communicate through the nerves to the brain and cause the peculiar twist of the neck. No matter what the real cause may be, whether it Is the meat or the maggot the pto maine poison taken into the system par alyzes the brain and causes the trou ble. The surest relief from this is by mixing a tablespoonful of turpentine la an equal amount of warm water and pouring the same into the crop. Follow this with warm water until the crop is nearly filled. Take the fowl up by the feet, head down, and gently work the entire contents of the crop , into a box partially filled with earth. The reason for using the box of earth is so that the refuse of the crop may be buried deep away from any possi bility of other fowls or dogs consuming it Wash the crop out in this way two or three times if necessary. When thoro.ughly cleansed, administer a ta blespoonful of warm castor oil and leave the fowl in a quiet cool place by Itself to recover. It is always best to confine It to itself, so that the place may be thoroughly cleansed after the fowl has recovered or died, whichever may be the outcome of the treatment If not too many are attacked, destroy the ailing ones, burning or burying the carcasses. To prevent all this never permit putrid meat of any kind to lie about for fowls, pigeons, dogs or chil dren to eat as it is likely to Injure them the same as it does the fowls. . A Fine Example of HI Breed. The. Buff Plymouth Rock, cock here with illustrated is perhaps as close to the ideal as any of his breed ever pro duced in the United States, the home of the Buff Plymouth Rock. Because of the admixture of Buff Cochin blood necessary to produce the color this va riety has not until recently acquired that distinctiveness' of shape and mark ings and the tendency to breed true to them that are considered necessi ties. But today the Buff , Plymouth, BUST PLYMOUTH BOCK ILiXJl Rock often wins in the large shows in competition with buff fowls of all breeds. The feathers on the legs have disappeared entirely except on the scrubbiest specimens, and there is no more hardy or better utility fowl in existence now than the Buff Plymouth Rock. The illustration shows how one of these birds should look. There should not be the blocky shape of the Wyandotte. That Is something to be carefully avoided, for Plymouth Rock shape must be preserved at all costs. Then there must not be the long, straight body of the Dorking, which is as objectionable as the short body of the Wyandotte or the peculiar trunk of the Rhode Island Red, which Is good only In its place, t Breed as close to the type shown In the illustration as possible, and you will not go far wrong, no matter what variety of Plymouth Rocks you may be Interested in. Low Rooata For Growing? Fowla. Low roosts must be provided for growing fowls and their houses kept scrupulously clean. If It is unsafe to leave houses open at night cover win dows and door frame with poultry net ting. While it may not be as harmful as some suppose to crowd grown fowls In cold weather, it Is certainly a grave mistake to crowd growing fowls. By disposing of the culls and all hens over two years old there will be more room for the pullets. If there be not enough room then and one Is unable to build another house, cull again more closely. It is much better to do this than to have a lot of runty, undeveloped pul lets eating food and laying no eggs all winter. No amount of care will ever make a stunted fowl a paying propositi-. Exhibit Tun Poultry. Be sure to attend, some of the poul try shows and study poultry from an exhibitor's standpoint It is an object lesson that will be well worth the time and expense necessary. Better yet, take some of your birds and show them In competition with others. If you do not win. It will give you an oppor tunity to compare them with the win ners and ascertain where they are de fective, giving you an idea how to im prove them. Coll Carefully. It Is impossible to cull your flocks too closely. Always draw from the poor, quality for market purposes and to sell. Never permit the best and most valuable to go from your posses sion unless it is in the way of an ex hibition specimen, which perhaps can be as well spared from your flocks as not What you should hold fast to are the most vigorous, most profitable pro ducers, and cultivate them for future results. .... THE FIRST LIGHTHOUSES. Tbay Ware an Outgrowth of Boaoon Fires on Headland. . When, ships are sailing upon the ccean the lights of heaven are their guides. Even in the dark ages, when the compass and sextant wre unknown instruments, the swri:-.."-ly motionless pole-star bur f It..- . beacon light in the northern ; ens, and the rising and, sett it-: the sun and stars distinguished t: east, from the west. - When; lio: ever, ships came near' the-land 1? " lights of heaven are not sufficient' safe to guide them. Eocks lie in their paths, unseen in the night; reefs and shoals spread under the water, while unsuspected currents sweep the frail craft all blindly upon these dangers' Nevertheless, .. ships . : were sailed along dangerous' coasts, for cen turies before' a plain system of marking dangerous places was in vented. The early mariners were bold and reckless rovers,' more than half pirates, who seldom owned a rood of the coasts along which they sailed and could not have establish ed lights and landmarks on them had they cared to do so. The rude begin ning, then, of a system' of lighthouses was when the merchants with whom the reckless mariners traded in those dark ages built beacons near the harbor mouths, to guide the ships into port by day and lighted fires f oi their guidance at night. . As such a harbor guide had to be a sure land mark in the daytime and a light by night, it soon took on a settled shape a tower on which could be built a fire, and such a tower was usually built of stone. This method of guiding ships into the ports which they sought was scarcely established before human wickedness used it : as a means for their destruction. Bands of robr bers, or, as they came to be called, "wreckers," would bide themselves somewhere near the haven sought by a richly laden vessel and, after overpowering the fire keepers, would extinguish : the beacon fire on the night on which the ship was expect ed. Then tfiey would light another fire near some treacherous reef. The mariner, sailing boldly toward the false light, would dash his vessel to destruction on the reef, whereupon the robber band would plunder the wreck and make off witji the booty. St. Nicholas. She Opened the Door. A doctor who had saved the life of a woman, a personal friend, was asked his charge. He said he gen erally allowed his patient friends to remunerate him as they thought be fitting. "But don't you often get disap pointed on these terms?" she in quired. "I may say, never." "As you are so easily pleased, here," and she playfully gave him her empty hand, while in the other was concealed a check for a hand some sum. "How easily I could have taken you in !" she added, pro ducing the check. "But you have only succeeded in drawing me out," he said, declining , to relinquish her hand. "Don't in sult me with a check. I am most generously rewarded." Perhaps she understood the doc tor's difficulty and wished to help him out of it. At any rate, the giv ing of her hand led him to offer his heart. Bismarck and His Wig. Bismarck occasionally wore a wig. He wore it for warmth and was ; proud when it successfully served its purpose. But at a blessing of the Neva, at which his sovereign and tha . czar were present, the wig played him false. An officer remarked up on its appearance as they galloped along together. . "Is it visible V ask . ed Bismarck. "Yes; devilish dia ; tinctly. It's slipping down on one i side," was the answer. Bismarck careered up to the carriage which was waiting for him, removed his helmet, tore off his wig and threw it into the vehicle, while the czar and a whole host of other distinguished men looked on in amazement. Said Bismarck's sovereign at the end of the day, "What an utterly diabolical maneuver you executed with that wig of yours!" St. James' Gazette. Had Not Learnta It Yet A bank official, -who has many amusing stories at his tongue's end, tells of a stolid German woman who went into the bank one morning to deposit a fat roll of bills and open an account.- She was asked to sign her name in the book reserved for the signatures of depositors and be gan to do so with many twistings of her face and pauses after the pain ful completion of each letter. Sud denly she stopped and after a period of dismayed reflection looked ap pealingly at the benevolent young man on the other side of the broad writing shelf. "I haf Katrina done," she said, pointing to hex work with the pen, "but my secont name I don't p'lieve I can write him. I don't peen marriet to dis man long alretty only lorn; as yesterday." Additional Local. F-hH' TomUinavo. died in Albany Sat urday evening, after fighting 'bravely for sever weeks for life. Death resulted fr j a very complicated case of typhoid lev which refused to yield to treatment M . romKason was a young man i y , ud was born in Benton county viviving widow was formerly nui Dwker o Wells ale. Par t t-im-emiiu ine tuneial were not 1- . -. - - i- Ha'l, familiarty koovrn by many p pk in Corvallis as "Gifty," died at Sro rntoH. Calif., Saturday ninht at 9:30, a a lingering illness with consump t' "'. Deceased was born in Polk coun ty, and was 29 years old this month. He was married to Miss. Rose Lenger in Co Uis, December 2a, 1898, who is the surv'ving widow. The remains are to be brought here for burial and are ex po ted -to arriva tomorrow altho mh nothing is known of the funeral arracg ments. W. R. Hall, father of the de ceiled, came up from Bueoa Vista, Sun day, and will remain until the funeral is over. Stetson's "Uncle Tom's Cab in" at the opera bouse on Thurs dap night will be a thoroughly fif-t-class production of that famous play. The company is one that appears at the leading theaters in all of the cities, and is sure to be greeted by a pack ed house. FOUND A few days ago by A. Fon- tana, on Mam street a watch charm 'ocket containing lady's picture. Owner pay for this notice and receive property. 11 The funeral of the late William H. Ab bott, who died in this city Saturday night, occuired from Barrett Lyceum at 2 o'clock yesterday afterooon, the services being conducted by Mrs. Jessie Flint. Inter ment was in the I. O. O. F. cemetery. Mr. Abbott was in his 85th year and was born in Homer, N. Y. He canu to Ore goo in 1892 and to Corvallis in 1899. His ailment was heart disease. Mrs. Rebecca Harris died at the home of her son, John, near Wells, Sunday evening, at the age of 80 years. The funeral occurs at noon today, from the John Harris home, Rev. Douglas, of In dependence officiating. Interment will ba in Locke cemetery. Prof. Shaw of OAC was the victim of a iappy surprise Saturday evening, given him bv his students. The affair took place in Miss Snell's room, and in behalf of the company assembled W. R. Allen presented Prof. Shaw with a high grade. L. C. Smith shot gun, bearing a silver plate with the inscription, "W. T. Shaw, from his students, OAO, Jan. 26th, 1907." This is some slight indication of the es teem ia which Prof. Shaw is held by those with whom he has been associated in college work, and he was deeply touched by the gift The evening proved one of pleasure for all present. and it will ever be a pleasant memory to Prof, shaw. A Correction. Editor Corvallis Gazette, Dear Sir: Jan. 26, 1907 A few days ago I noticed a news item in your paper which contained the words "hereafter Mr. Otto Hathaway will be the Eilers representative That statement is incorrect. I am th.9 only representative of the Eilers Piano House and nobody else in this town is in any way representing that firm. It seems that Mr. Hathaway has opened a music store and has bought a few pianos from Eilers piano house which he has for sale, but that does not make him a representative. He is an independent dealer, whereas I can sell any of the dif ferent makes of pianos which are hand led by that firm. Your statement tha he was to be the representative "here after" was misleading, and for this reason I am prompted to ask you to publish this letter. I am, and shall continue to be the only representative of the Eilers Piano House of Portland. Yours truly, G. TAILLANDIER. A Costly Joke. A woman of Bochum, says a Vi enna dispatch, wishing to give hex young nephew, living m a neigh boring, town, a pleasant surprise, bought a little tablet of chocolate and posted it to him in an envelope marked "Value $25,000." The package, on account of its high de clared .value,- attracted the notice of the postal authorities, who de manded $4 extra fee on delivery. The nephew, suspecting a hoax, re fused the letter, which was duly re turned to Bochum and the sender advised. The woman, half ashamed, declared that the envelope contain ed nothing of real value, but it was pointed out to her that the contents, whatever they might be, were de clared to be worth $25,000 and she must pay. The poor woman signed the receipt, but then was told, to her dismay, that a double fee had been incurred owing to the return of the letter. She paid $8 without further complaint. A Serial Story Entitled "LI N C LOVE Af FAIRS" Will Soon be Published In the Gazette This entrancing by WARD HILL LAM ON Lincoln's . Lamon was coln's Boyhood." a serial published in the Gazette a year ago .... "Lincoln's Love Affairs" affords a vivid insight of the life and beautiful womanly attributes of Miss Ann Kut ledge, the object of Lincoln's first great affection, and unhappy mental condition on her death. His short courtship of Miss Mary Owens creates intense in terest and is historically correct. Final Courtship and Marriage of MISS MARY TODD Lincoln's early experiences as a law maker and other interesting incidents in the life of the great emancipator. SUBSCRIBE fOR Published twice a annum, This Story Alone OUR JOB PRINTING Facilities are the Best 0 LN'S story was written Law Partner the author of "Lin THE GAZETTE NOW week for $1.50 per in advance. is Worth the Price