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About Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909 | View Entire Issue (July 28, 1908)
NOTES: BY C.M.BAENITZ PA. ICOBEESPONDDotZ SOLICITED I , ill. ...... -i Fruit c3 j Farm and . IPlowers (Sa-rden CARNATION NOTES. THE POULTRY 8NEAK THIEF. The weasel as a sneak thief and softly stealing assassin Is beyond de scription. Silently gliding like a serpent, he Hps through an Inch opening, bounds on his harmless victim, sucks its blood Bnd wantonly cuts the throat of every fowl. The beautiful thrush, nestling Its young or on leafy branch caroling to its Maker, Is suddenly seized and Its trilling throat pierced by the fangs of the murderer. His technical name, putorius, from "putor," "bad smell," is appropriate, for, like the polecat, he throws off a vile odor. Diminutive In size, he Is a consolidated devil a cross of deep dyed villain, skunk and silent striking copperneaa. uenoia mat long, nine, wiry, restless, quickly moving, muscu lar body! That flat head, projected from all the openings in his retreat seemingly at once, sways from side to side, like the cobra ready to strike. Varieties Attracting Attention at tho ( Recent Carnation Convention. Afterglow Well to the lead In many classes. A fine thing. Alma Ward Peerless on the exhibi tion table. White Perfection This and White Enchantress are leaders In the com mercial class. Annie Blossom A fine flower, but not quite distinct enough. Beacon Very mnch In It In the red classes; lacks in color. Cardinal Shown in fine shape. Creole Beauty Perhaps the brightest crimson shown. Defiance Not shown at its best. Enchantress Still best of Its class. Harvard A little dark. Imperial Not a pleasing color. John E. Haines No place for it Mrs. Tom Harvey Fine dark pink. THE INDIVIDUAL - EM. MARVELOUS LAMBING. SUMMER FEED" FOR HOGS. PLUW FOR ALFALFL Utah Farinere -Adaptation the Com " - own Walking Plow. ' An article coming under my observa tion is one entitled "Types of Plows," accompanied by a cut of a German wheel plow. Why a man should run a clumsy, lumbering construction akin to a self binder for breaking np lucern when onr common hand plow will an swer the purpose to beyond me. 1 fail to see where the writer's concep tion of i German wheel plow of the 1870 type is much In advance of Mr. Wing's idea of a French plow In the twentieth century. A farmers time is too precious and capable architects are too few and too expensive in this coun try to make a plow of such design of any practical value to its owner. We have, here In Utah thousands of acres of alfalfa as luxuriant and 1 Stop and Consider This Easy Way to p;nct Crop For Years In Montana RM Oalna at Lew Coat From Both boee on a vorn ,rop. Thia Spring. I rorago m w.n. By J. B. PETERSEN. Kansas. Lambing is In full progress through- When hogs are kept It is a good plan What constitutes an ideal ear of ont tue state (Montana), and the per-. to produce as mnch of the feed for corn? This question must be answered rentage of loss Is remarkably light, ac- thm right there on the farm as possl by every corn breeder if be wishes to cording to reports from the leading ble. All want to make pork as cheap- succeed. He mast have an ideal : in sheep sections. For many years it has y as they can, and the feed raised on mind and work to that end. The ear of , Deen tue custom or snippers to nave th. frm la. as a rule, cheaner than his ideal must be determined by the j jome lambs come in February in order commercial feeds, r But there are ex- . THJB 1IUBDEBEB UNMASKED. j Above are the fearful jaws and serpent fangs that cut the throats of eighty chickens in one night. The skin is drawn back to unmask the murderous killing weapons and to dis play the Intricate network of muscles that work the powerful jaws, which make the weasel the most dreaded enemy of the poultry keeper. Though be weighs from five to eight ounces and is from six to ten inches in length, yet this little sausage shaped creature is much feared and formidable. He has been known to kill the eagle aud attack a five prong buck. On Jan. 17 last a miner was ter ribly lacerated and bitten by a weasel at Bear Valley shaft, Shamokin, Pa. In the darkness the weasel seemed master, but miners, hearing the cries of distress, rescued their companion and killed the weasel with drills and shovels. This animal has been known to kill six full grown hens, twenty tur keys and eighty chickens In three nights. His victims are not disfigured. He bleeds a rabbit between the eye and ear. but has been known to chase One Into a stone fence and open an artery in the hind leg. He will clean the rats and mice out of a barn and bleed them the same Vay. He bites old chickens in the arteries of the neck close to the head. Young chickens, pigeons and wild birds are caught back of the neck and sucked dry. If wounded, he will suicide by sucking his own blood. A hunter followed a weasel for twenty-Are miles, the little animal stopping to kill only eight rabbits dur ing the race. At times he would dis appear and travel under the snow for fifty feet In this way he kills many -quail that seek shelter under wind falls, the farmers In the spring re porting them frozen by the hard winter weather. In one night a hunter trapped a dark brown, light red and white weasel. The most common color is brown. Weasels are dark and light brown, dark and light red, maltese and white. Maltese are rare. The weasel wears white In winter. On the snow he can hardly CARNATION APTEBGXOW. Pink Imperial Looks well under ar tificial light President Seelye Will score well up to head of standard whites. Bed Chief Not quite large enough for the show table. Robert Craig A few still shown. Kose Pink Enchantress Fine, but too many varieties too near alike. Ruby Crimson, promising. La wson Enchantress; very pretty. Lieutenant Peary Scores high. Melody Will not trot with Enchan tress. Mrs. C. W. Ward Lights up well under electric light Mrs. Charles Knopf Large flower, a little weak In color and stem. - . Mrs. M. A. Patten Nothing better shown in Its class. Mrs. Robert Hartshorne Not shown at Its best Sarah Hill Fine white bloom. Snowflake Very good white. Splendor Fine flower In the Wlnsor class. Toreador Very decorative, unusual ly long stem and fine color; under sized. Variegated La wson Shown in good shape. Victory Disputes with Beacon first place In commercial reds. Viola Sinclair A pretty rose pink, medium In size. Wanoka Fine crimson, a little dark in color. Welcome Not quite in it with Wln sor. White Enchantress A leading white. A Writer in Gardening. CONOAVXD FLOWS HABR. thrifty as any in the world, some of which is broken every spring. Farm ers would find this a very great task Indeed If they found it necessary to ' employ any such cumbersome devices as the one accompanying the article in question. We use a common -walking plow, with a wheel or shoe under the end of the beam and a straight or slant tng cutter.' The secret of the whole problem lies in the fact that the plow share from A to B along the dotted iline D is "concaved so that the plow I rests upon the curved portion and the point C is at least a half an inch above the level or a half an inch higher tnan the point A or the point B. The share should be new or com paratively so In order to give room for the concave surface. Any village blacksmith can fix the share. It would be advisable not to temper the share, as It is necessary to file It every few rounds when plowing old alfalfa. Any ket. when lambs bring fancy prices. Pns to the rule, and the man who As a general rule it is necessary to ld ,h,mse'f V rfflrdIVtof have these lambs come under sheds, conditions should change his methods, and it Is often found a requisite to take : Experiments have proved, what we the young lamb into the herder's cabin nv '0UE(1 b-T experience to be true, until It is strong enough to stand up the table waste and sklmmilk and .nri Mo. nnnMw Thio co.,nn i : cornmeal constitute a feed for hog discarded and the good ears shelled ; Is entirely a different proposition. The running to pasture that makethe most and the com made ready for planting. I weather Is quite like summer. The ; npld gains for the cost of r nJ'- There Is perhaps no one thing that sun shines all the time, and it seldom y rouna, write . a. whp condition of the soil and climate. In buying seed corn It is not advisable to secure it from a long distance. - Seed corn should not be shelled until Bear planting time, but early in the spring a germination test should be made of each ear and the poorest ears will do as much to increase the yield of corn on every farm as the testing of each ear to be used for seed. The importance of discarding the ears that are poor In vitality is essential when we realize that one good ear will plant one-eighth of. an acre. The simplest and best method of test ing the germination of each ear Is by using a germination box. The most convenient box is 3 by 4 feet with wire Btretched crosswise forming freezes during the night Orange Judd Farmer. It is not neces- The season is far the best sheep men : ry to 8toP to theorize In regard to- of Montana have enjoyed for a decade or more, and the percentage of lambs saved - is little short of marvelous, averaging upward of 100 per cent This condition Is due of course to the fact that twins offset more than the deaths. It is making the average of the ewes' product more than one lamb. These lambs will be very valuable, as in May and June they wlll be worth souares large enough to hold six to an average of $4, eight kernels. Fill the box with sand. J A new experiment has been tried Number each one of the squares. Take a few kernels from each ear and put in each of these squares. Then wet the sand and place "a damp cloth over the box, keeping the sand and cloth moist and warm. Keep a record of the time of germination and note the kernels which fail to grow. What Eight Good Ears Will Do. After the germination test the next step Is to prepare the corn for the planter by removing the mixed ker nels, the ununiform kernels; the in jured or rotten kernels and the tip and butt kernels, when the corn should be carefully shelled. . The value of testing the vitality of corn which Is intended for seed can not be overestimated. It is strange how many farmers., even today, are willing to plant corn without the least certainty that the seed will garmlnate and produce good, healthy plants. There are thousands of acres that have been planted over each year on ac count of the poor vitality of the seed. I wish each farmer would stop to consider this. Get a seed tester and test your seed this spring. The vitali ty of each Individual ear of corn in tended for planting may be determin ed. You can discard the poor ears, this season and ' with not a little suc cess. This has been to feed the ewes on alfalfa for thirty days before lamb ing. Judging from the lamb crop, it is believed that this has met with the most encouraging results, especially in the matter of strength. If lambs en ter the world in an enfeebled condi tion, the danger of loss is very great. On the other hand, born strong very few losses are recorded. - The present winter has been remark ably favorable to stockmen. Cattle, team worthy of the name can pull the j keeping the good ears for seed. Some plow with as little effort as is requir- : larmens ny wej u.c uvi iuC . ed when plowing stubble. test tne seea. We do not plow alfalfa more tnan I owy miu .wu ."- ""'j three inches deep, because after that ; from eight to ten good ears for each depth the deeper one plows the harder acre. Suppose you plant an ear of . - .. . wr44-n14-r nPVv Tinn o fa. IrkOfrtf stria- the alfalfa Is to kill. Tne aeptn isT- "C. . regulated by the wheel under the beam. ; eighth of your crop, and it takes only and any boy who can plow stubble : a few minutes to make the germina- s.ocllt7 ormnirh handle the Plow in . uuu irau tau j o alfalfa. "When the plow is thus fixed. for plowing alfalfa, however, one can nnf nlnv era in stubble with It For Apples on Long Island. Long Island In the past was noted CAUGHT AT LAST. le seen by his victim and enemy. His white fur is the ermine of royalty nd august courts, and the dark spots on these robes are the black tips of weasel tails. The mink and weasel should not be couf used. Minks reach two pounds and have half webbed toes. When a chicken is ripped from the neck down the back, it is neither a weasel, mink, rat nor opossum, but a cooper's hawk did the damage. Weasels are born from April to May, six to two to a litter. The young ones are great poultry fiends and are easily caught in steel traps. They are common all over the country, except in Arizona, New Mex ico, southern California and the gulf states. , Work For Boys. The man who hopes for fruit, wheth er he has ten trees or a thousand, must keep the insect war moving. Some thing can be done now which will tell for the saving of the fruit next sum mer. Those who have large orchards are prepared for spraying, but thou sands of farmers whose fruit Is only a side Issue are not so prepared, re marks Iowa Homestead. But for that reason they need not abandon the orchard entirely; They may do mnch to save the crop on their fifty or hundred trees. Have the boys go over the trees carefully and gather ait of the worms' eggs, cocoons, etc Ev ery dead leaf found adhering to a limb covers a bunch of worms' eggs, and you will be surprised at the num ber of these when they are gathered together. An active boy with a good tall stepladder will gather a pocket ful in an hour, and every one of them should be carefully deposited In the redhot kitchen stove. Do this work carefully and persistently, and the re sult will appear next summer to your great delight ' Cultivation of the Currant. ' As the currant to do well must have a good supply of moisture, cultivation should be begun soon after, planting and the surface soil kept loose during the summer. While the plantH are young the cultivation may be fairly deep in the middle of the rows, but 7J7- y':. " nM h.v. to for its trees, both fruit and foliage, and be made into its original shape, or, j many rare ; foreign trees are thriving j LUUilJ UU 119 lUCai OV., w : climate to back It It has developed ! some of the finest apples known, ! among them the Newtown Pippin, both I green and yellow; Flushing Spitzen Iburg, Long Island Russet, Long Island ! Seek No Further and other varieties. 1 The Yellow Newtown Pippin Is un donbtedlv the most widely known of todeb sidb of PLOWSHARE. &u apple& Jt jg unsurpassed as a des- better still, if one has a great deal of or a COoklng apple, and for cider alfalfa breaking to do, use another it stands unique both In clearness and share, using the especially prepared nlgn qllauty. They are known in some one for the purpose of breaking up lu- sectjon8 aB Albemarle Pippin, but all cern only, concludes A. J. Syndergaard came trom a seedling originating at in Breeder's Gazette, Chicago. i Newtown,- N. Y. Introduced Into Eu- rope by Benjamin Franklin in 1759, It Quality In Seeds. ' still brings two and even three times As the result of tests of alfalfa, red as much as any other apple. It bears clover and grass seeds secured in the annually; hence it Is an all around open market Chief Galloway or tne.. "good thing." a. b. ruuerron. AN EAEIiT LAMB. sheep and horses are in excellent con dition, and the season is so far ad vanced that a severe or prolonged ! storm is wholly unexpected. Even should it come stock will be in fine shape to weather it, not having been compelled to undergo the rigors of a winter beforehand. Experience has taught that because of their weakened condition from a long and severe win ter stock cannot withstand the custom ary spring blizzard; but, the former having been eliminated this year, it seems safe to.predict the banner record so far as light losses are concerned. Leon Shaw in Breeder's Gazette, Chi cago. Treatment For Loco. The results of tne loco weed when eaten by stock are unpleasantly fa miliar to the stockman of the plains the matter. It la sufficient to know that such things are a fact But the question comes np as to the kind of pasture that furnishes the best feed. It has been proved again and. again that alfalfa makes the best feed, frith June clover a close second. In the absence of clover, blue grass Is the next best pasture. When none of -the clovers or grasses are available it Is far better to sow rape than to com pel pigs to go without any. green for age. The man who gets lopsided and keeps his hogs either on green forage alone or on grain alone makes a mistake. Experience has shown us that hogs can live on forage and make some gain, but do not make the gains rapid enough to show the venture a satisfactory one. Hogs may make rapid gains on a grain diet alone, but it is too expensive. The man who uses both forage and grain makes a rapid gain at a low cost pro vided the feeds are well balanced. Hogs fed on both forage and grain show a better quality of meat than If either is fed alone. The forage helps to make bone and muscle, and the grain helps to add the fat The sklmmilk, buttermilk, dishwater and whey pro mote growth, and all help to produce cheap pork if fed In connection with the other feeds. They also help to Im prove the quality of meat. INJURE THE MILK. Ue of Rusty or Poorly Tinned Can Produce Off Flavors. "Rusty Cans and Their Effect Upon Milk For Cheesemaklng" Is the title of a recent bulletin of the Wisconsin experiment station prepared by George A. Olson, assistant cnemist. experi ments made by Mr. Olson show that milk hauled in poorly tinned or rusty cans is materially Injured for cheese making. "The cheese factory operator should not hesitate to refuse milk which is hauled In poorly tinned or rusty cans," writes Mr. Olson, "for, in. addition to the retarding influence of the Iron on the rennet action and tht neutralization of the acid by the iron, there are also produced taints or off" flavors." The milk cans used to haul milk to the cheese factory are often of a cheap grade and are dented the first or sec ond time that they are used, with a result that the tin cracks and the iron is exposed and rusts. At one factory a can was found that had been used for this source In bureau of plants industry makes a re port that is certainly of Interest to farmers. Red 3Iover. Of the 1,217 samples 01 Southport Globe Onions. Connecticut's famous Southport Globe onions stand unsurpassed among popu- red clover seed secured 405, or one-third, r,ar American varieties of the onion. contained seed of dodder, 424 contain- They are in high favor In some of the ed traces of yellow trefoil seed, andfinest commercial onico growing dis 135 bore evidence of having originated , mcta of Ohio and New York and dur in Chile. Ing a few year past have made a Alfalfa. Of the 399 samples of alfal- teady advance in standing everywhere fa seed secured 191, or about one-half, as a highly bred, perfect onion. East contained seed of dodder, 135 contained ern oni0n growers use the red and a trace of yellow trefoil seed, 120 con- j wbJte Southport Globes to produce talned a trace of sweet clover seed, 1 exceptionally Urge, solid, beauti and 16 contained a trace of bur clover tuily formed bulbs that bring top seed. ' S- pricc-s in the New York city markets. Bromus Inermls. Of the 55 samples Besides the two varieties named. of Bromus inermls seed obtained 15 jere is a yellow Southport Globe that reached the sum of a million dollars per annum. ' The national bureau of plant industry has been taking a turn at the loco problem, and C. D. Marsh, expert in poison plants, reports that it has been found that locoed cattle can in most cases be cured by a course of treatment with strychnine, while locoed horses can generally be cured by a course of treatment with Fow ler's solution The animals under treatment must not be allowed to eat the loco weed and should be given not only nutritious food, but so far as pos sible, food with laxative properties. To this end magnesium sulphate was administered to correct the constipa tion which is almost universal among locoed animals. It should.be noted, too, that magnesium sulphate may serve to some extent as an antidote to the poison. It may be added in regard to the question of Immunity that loco poison ing comes on in a slow and cumulative manner, so that there Is no possibility of animals becoming Immune. contained seed of cheat or chess, 28 contained from 2 to 3 per cent of seed of the wheat grasses, several con tained seed of meadow fescue, and one contained more than 24 per cent of meadow fescue and rye grass seed, together. Kentucky Blue Grass. or tne 4Ztf samples of Kentucky blue grass seed obtained only 8 were found to be free from any trace of Canada blue grass. In most of these samples the trace of Canada blue grass found was Immature, seed, showing that it was harvested with the Kentucky blue grass seed. The seeds of the two plants not ripening at the same time. It Is Improbable that mature seed of Canada blue grass' would be harvested with Kentucky. KItia mu cumuI Tn lift sumnlps. how- when the roots begin to extend across eT Canada blue grass seed was found the rows cultivation should be quite m qnantltie8 exceeding 5 per cent. 82 snauow. as moujr " - 0f these being Canada blue grass seed near the surface. W. T. Macoun. Disease of the Quince. The quince Is subject to much, the same disease and Insects as pear and apple. It Is especially liable to injury by the black rot, blight rust and leaf spot which together almost destroy the quince crop annually. They could be easily' prevented by a little trouble In misbranded as Kentucky bine grass . 6eed. . . SOtJTHPOBT WHITE GLOfeE. Inches in diameter in some places. Milk kept In such cans would take for ty minutes longer to coagulate than that kept in good cans. In these experiments milk was piacea In rusty tin cans and allowed to stand for different periods, while other sam ples of the same milk were kept in glass beakers. Every time that this experiment was repeated the milk kept in the rusty cans gave evidence of a re tarding Influence on the rennet action as compared with the milk kept in the glass beaker. Milk which was allowed to stand in iron utensils for several hours had a peculiar bluish gray color,. Indicating the presence of Iron In solu tion. It was evident that the acid iu the milk acted upon the iron and dis solved some of it The maximum quan tity of iron dissolved in the milk ranged from one to one and a half pounds for every thousand pounds of milk. This iron in solution at least partly causes the retarding influence of the rennet action, since it Increases the solids In the milk. Growing Feed Crops. Theoretically when I feed my cows a full amount of good corn silage and alfalfa hay my milk yield should be satisfactory, but actually I find my kind of cows will increase their milk giving if I add some cornmeal to the bill of fare, and Increase still more if in addition I furnish about two pounds per day of oilmeal per cow; hence, while I am personally very much In favor of the farmer-dairyman growing feed crops to the fullest extent, of proved profit endeavoring to do so my self, yet to all I grow I never hesitate to bring in as supplementary by pur chase any feed needed which my cows can use at a profit to me. I have no manner of doubt that a ton f clover hay, being all one acre could produce, is of materially less feeding worth, than a ton from an acre having grown a three ton crop, all conditions of cutting and curing in both cases be ing equal. I" know that when I secure a crop of 100 bushels of corn per acre I have more than twice as much feed Oats For Calves. The great business of the growing calf Is to make muscle. This muscle Is what gives plumpness to a thrifty calf. For this purpose a food Is needed which is especially rich in muscle forming material. Grass is not For this nothing can be found that is bet ter than oats. Not only are they rich in the material desired, but that rich ness is not so concentrated as to make them a dangerous food. They are neither heating nor fattening in their nature, but tend Instead to build up muscle and give, the animal strength and vigor. In the spring, before the pastures are ready to turn on to, is the time that the calves will need this addition to their feed. If at any time they are allowed to grow thin in flesh It will take a long time of good feeding and careful atten tion to bring them again into a thrifty condition. Gilbert Allen. ummhioa tho nthora hi shane and gen eral character, but Is of a rich yellow j as I have If I am so unfortunate as to color. The white is one of those beautifully ! white, perfectly globe shaped onions Where Hogs Follow Cattle. Even if m addition to corn other concentrates richer Hn protein and ash that take the eye and bring highest than is corn are fed to steers, the corn nriort in anv market Its skin is thin in the droppings is mnch more readily and paperlike, the flesh fine grained, found, and the benefit derived by the crisp and mild flavored. Add to this get but fifty bushels per acre. W.- F. McSparran. Fodder Terms. Roughage includes the coarser and less nutritious feeds, such as hay, straw, com xouaei, "- 1 u aota ton M to irlve Concentrates Include the more nutn- j " ... Cows That Pay. Professor Spillman of the Washing ton experimental station writes: "In the first place, the paying dairy con sists of cows that eat heartily and do not make meat, but do make milk of their food. This means that they must be dairy and not beef cows. A good dairy cow, though she be killed and easily' prevented by a little trouQ-.e m nog from the feeds other than corn Is that it is a tremendous cropper, ana it t onceuirai V"' ' milk, will give a profit fiat will buy spraying and cutting oat blight and'not very great, although Jt is belieTed represents almost an Ideal product in 'tlons feeds, such as corn, whiat bran, J" , w back rat Injuries. J. B. S. Nortoa . that some benefit may be derl' d. ' Its line.