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About Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 25, 1908)
QUALITIES OF THE AYRSHIRE. C. M. Winslow. secretary of the Ayrshire association, says: "While an Ayrshire cow should be shapely and handsome to look at as she stands or walks, she shoo Id when bandied reveal much looseness of vertebra, flatness of rib and width between the ribs. Indicating large dairy capacity. The Ayrshire Is a tough, hardy cow. with a vigorous appetite, and not too particular what she eats. She is al ways hungry, eats greedily and chews her cud rapidly. Yon can rarely see an Ayrshire cow when not taking in food or chewing what she has already gathered. While at pasture she does not wander around looking for sweet patches of grass, but goes to work rapidly gathering what Is most con venient either of grass or browse, end when full lies down to chew her cud, with no time wasted, and when going to and from pasture will chew her cud while walking and often con tinue to chew when started into a run "The general appearance of an Ayr shire as you look at her Is striking 6he Is alert and full of life and re served energy. She is a healthy cow, rarely having ailments of body or ud der, and you seldom see an Ayrshire cow that does not have four healthy quarters in her udder, yielding a uni form quantity of milk from - each. She Is a very persistent milker, giving t uniform quantity well up toward calving, and many of them are dried eft with difficulty. "She is very Intelligent, quick to learn and of a retentive memory, easily taught to take the same place in the stable and. If required to change, will In a few days readily take the new place. She is quiet and plensnnt to milk, not easily disturbed and will, as a rule, yield her milk as readily to one milker as another and does not seem disturbed by any amount of noise In the stable. "As a dairy cow she is particularly adapted to the production of milk for the milkman and for table use, as her medium size, vigorous appetite and easy keeping qualities make her an economical producer, while her even. A FINS IMPORTED AYRSHIRE. uniform production makes her a re liable supply, and the richness of her milk In total solids places It above suspicion from city milk Inspectors. Her milk Is particularly adapted to transportation, as it does not churn or sour easily, and when poured back and forth a few times will readily mix the cream back into the milk, which will not again readily separate, giving Jt a uniform quality until the last is sold or used. It has a good body, is rich looking and never looks blue. The milk itself, being evenly balanced with casein and butter fat is a com plete food, easily digested, nutritious and is particularly adapted to chil dren and invalids. Stomachs that are weak and unable to digest other milk And no trouble with Aryshire cows' milk-" Keep Stock Separate. 4 There used to be a theory that every thing could run together in the barn yardthe colts, the calves, the cows. pigs and chickens should all have ac cess to the same yard. After the farm ers began to keep better stock they saw the advisability of giving each class a yard for itself. It is hardly right to keep the cows and the calves In the same lot for evident reasons. The colts and the cows will not har monize because the exuberance of the former tends to irritate the latter and lessens the milk flow. -The chickens ' and the pigs should not be kept to gether because there Is a chance that the hogs may get to eating hens. Every farmer has had experience with all of these things. The only peace able plan Is to have a yard for each kind of stock. If you want to run the pigs In the barnyard, do so for a time each day. but not when the calves and hens are there. It Is Just as advisable to keep stock upon the farm separate as It is to use separate fields for the crops. Clover For Winter Feeding. The question Is asked if clover can bo ensiled for feed next winter instead of corn silage. Clover may be ensiled and will make a good feed if it Is cor rectly handled, but it requires more ' care in the handling than does corn. It should be cut when in full bloom. If allowed to get old and woody It is apt to overheat and mold or fire fang and have little feeding value. If ensiled With too much moisture on, as after a 'shower or heavy dew, it is apt to be come more acid than is desirable. The material must be well distributed in the pit and should be thoroughly tramped and covered to exclude, the air. Clover silage Is apt to -slime if not well packed when put into the silo. Jj. W. Lighty. Variety Is 8pice For Stock. Animals relish a variety of feed and will give better results when they have K. A feed of corn stover now and then and a barrel of salt lying In the yard, with four or five staves cat oat between the hoops so that they can ei jrya help themselves, is a. good .thing. -77 " THE BERKSHIBES. . A Farmer Tall Why He Prefers TImm to Other Breads. Writing of Berkshire in Rural New Vnrtor P n Snnlrea sara: After try- I tag nearly all of the various breeds I - am thoroughly convinced from a busi ' ness standpoint, in dollars and cents. fhnt the Berkshire are the most profitable animals I ever tried. There are Just four reasons why I should choose the Berkshlres for the business A BUBKSHXliK BO AH. farmer's business hog. And when I say the business hog I don't mean a hog for show, as I don't believe in show animals for the average business farmer. If by chance he should pro duce a show animal my advice would be to sell It for a show animal to a show animal man and Invest It In an animal for profit First activity, combined with strong digestive and assimilating powers, re turning a maximum quantity of flesh for food consumed. Second, their pigs are strong, active and vigorous at birth. Third, their flesh Is of the highest quality of pork, and their loins are much sought by. butchers as being of finer quality than any other breed. Fourth, they can be fattened at an early age on less feed than any other known breed. The brood sow should be long and deep bodied, with ribs well sprung. Jowls full and heavy, running well back on neck; shoulders smooth and even on top and In line with side; ham deep and thick; legs and feet short straight and strong, set wide apart with hoofs nearly erect and, above all alse. she should have at least twelve well developed teats. Treat her kindly and give her plenty of nourishing food, but not fattening, during farrowing season, and she will present you with a fine sample of her progeny, and at killing time you will never be sorry you selected the Berk shire for profit Pasturing Sheep on Alfalfa. Every now and then the statement is made that sheep may be success fully pastured on alfalfa. In some Instances they can. In other Instances they cannot Under some conditions they can. Under more conditions they cannot In a very dry atmosphere sheep may be safely grazed on alfalfa when accustomed to it If fed dry food early in the day, such as grain, they may safely graze on it But the fact remains that there Is usually some danger that sheep will be lost through bloating more or less while being thus grazed. Moreover, the further fact remains that the sheep graze so closely that under many con ditions they injure the alfalfa plant and shorten Its period of growth. When the alfalfa grows with grass crops, the element of danger from bloat Is practically eliminated. Pro fessor Thomas Shaw. THE DAIRYMAN. I used to have a lot of trouble feed ing calves their milk, says a dalrymru. So will anybody who sets a pall oer the fence and lets the calves do with It as they have a mind to. But finally 1 woke up to the idea that stanchions are just as good to feed calves in as they are for cows. I picked up a few pieces of boards such as are to be had on almost any farm and fixed up a nice little pair of stanchions, with mangers to feed hay in besides. That ended my troubles in that line. A Big Influence. The bull Is one half of the herd. The cows are the 'other half. The bull ex erts his Influence, his breeding,' over every cow In the herd, whether 'it be for good or bad. If his breeding or pedigree Is of the wrong sort that is. for example, of a poor dairy sort his influence is for bad, and the young stock will not be of the kind that de velop Into useful animals. This Influ ence is not on one cow, but on all the herd. With cows it is different If In the herd there be a poor cow her ef fects are felt only on her calves, while the calves of her sisters in the herd will be good or poor,accordlng to the individual cow. The good bull will make his good qualities felt in all the cows. Protect the Cream. A great deal of cream leaves the farm in fine condition for the cream I ery, but In being exposed to the sun on i the road to the creamery or receiving station the development of souring germs rapidly begins. In delivering a can of cream throw a wet blanket over i the can and a dry cover. over the wet Dlanket The dry blanket prevents the evaporation of water from the wet blanket and will enable the farmer to deliver cream only a few degrees warmer than when it left the farm. Testing the .Milk Giver. The farmer can learn to operate a nand tester In a half hour. His results will not be accurate to a fraction, but close enough for all practical purposes. There is no way to determine ifie actual value of a cow except the milk be weighed and tested. It is worth I many dollars a year to know what each cow Is doing and Is wjrth while , to boy a tester and And out The more a fanner knows about his dairy the better be will be pleased with the creamery treatment . ROLLER ARMED WITH SPIKES. Machine That Rips Up Red For Re pair Work. A big machine has been at work or the roadway at the north end of Lin coin park. In Chicago. It Is a monstel steam roller, with a double row ol spike In one of the wheels, and the function of the contrivance Is to loosen up the old material In the roadway, preparatory to covering It - With a fresh coating of crushed stone. As th wide tired wheel rolls on the roadway the spikes sink in the old stone, ma teria! that has hardened from many years' wear. This serves to loosen the material, so that when the fresh sup- ' ' HEW EOAl MACHINE. ply of crushed stone to applied it may be forced down Into the old bed by running an ordinary steam roller evei It The spikes are removable, so that the wheel may be used also for a pack ing stint Scores of persons gather around the big 'sharp toothed crusher and ask all kinds of questions. When the puncbei has been rolled along the road until the rows of holes reach the width of the driveway It presents, the appearance of a sheet of perforated postage stamps, and the whole operation has to be explained for the benefit of the onlookers. - , . - GOOD ROAD CONGRESS. Purpose and Features of the Interna tional Gathering at Paris. Colonel Charles S. Bromwell, Clif ford Richardson and William Page have 1 been appointed by President Roosevelt to represent the United States at the International road con gress to be held In Paris during Octo ber, 1908. Napoleon was a great advocate of road building, and since his time France has spent between $500,000, 000 and $000,000,000 on her highways. The' advent of the automobile has proved a serious menace to the sur face of the roads, and the purpose of this congress Is to hear opinions of experts on the subject and to con dense them Into a practical idea of the treatment and care of the surface of ., a road. ; - This congress, to which the govern ments of the various nations have been oflicially Invited to appoint rep resentatives, will be opened Oct 11 and will be in session seven days. It is proposed during the life of the congress to give several' festivals In Paris and also excursions, one par ticularly .to Nice, to enable the mem bers to visit especially fitted up roads or roads in course of preparation. The United States government has made several tests at Washington late ly, principally by taking photographs of the clouds of dust raised by each automobile, going at different rates of speed at from five to- sixty miles an hour. These dust clouds were weighed in order to determine how much of the surface of the road was taken off by a motor going at an ex cessive rate of speed.. This point and a number of others which have been ascertained by the government of the United States undoubtedly will be brought to the attention of the con gress by one of the American repre sentatives, and it is more than likely that Colonel Bromwell will read a pa per. SPLIT LOG DRAG EFFECTIVE. Heavy Rains Give Implement Fine Chance to Prove Itself. The heavy fall of rain that the Red river valley and northern Minnesota experienced recently proves beyond doubt the extreme efficacy of the split log drag as a good roadmaker. The streets of Thief River Falls and many of the rural highways leading into the city have been consistently worked by these drags for two years. The re sults were most apparent and strik ing the other week, just following the heavy rains. In spite of the amount of traffic that the streets of Thief River Falls carry daily, they are In excellent con dition, nicely graded and as hard as a paved street The country roads that have been dragged for two years are as passable as during the driest sea son in summer, while the roads that have not been worked by the drags are almost Impassable. - . Novel Highway Proposed. A novel proposition has been made for the beautlfication of the highway between Thermal and Coachelia. in CaIifonia a distance of three miles. The waste waters from the Coachelia Ice plant are diverted along this high way and extend almost to Thermal be fore they are absorbed by the soil. says the Los Angeles Times. The proposition is now made that fig trees be set along the highway, on the water ditch, where they would be kept grow ing by the waste water,. Within a year these trees come tato bearing, and the three mile highway, lined with bearing fig trees, wonldnot only be a most attractive drive, put might be made to yield a profit for road Im provement ( THE SIMPLE LIFE The simple life I love to atna Because It's musical With bleating lambe and moolag eewa - And barnyard Jing-a-ling. We wear a bright red sunbonnet And loosely fitting prints: We never dress for minuets Nor put on beauty tints. We have our cow and chickens, too, A hog. a mule, a churn; . We never could return to you -In city heat to bum. We've done for aye with city strife. Give vb our hogs and chickens. We're badly stuck on simple life; For fun it beats the dickens. . C. M. B. THE WYANDOTTES. This breed was at first commonly ! palled "American Sebrights." which was changed to "Wyandotte" after the Indians of that name. Historians have ' failed to trace the time and circum- I stances of its origin, but all claim it to ! be an American bird with Dark Brah ma and Hamburg blood in its veins. Today the man who originates a breed erects a marble statue to himself if no one else will. The varieties are Sil ver. Golden. Silver Penciled. Partridge. Columbian. Black, Buff and White. STANDARD WEIGHTS. Cock 8 lbs. Hen 64 lbs. Cockerel ....7 lbs. Pullet 6V4 lbs. The White Dotte is the most popular and Is a Mrd of beautiful curves. The original of this picture is a feathere? aristocrat, 'low kingly! What vigo: . IDEAL HEAD FOB BREEDERS, rwhlte Wyandotte from life. What a proud pedigreed prince! Then think of the big brown eggs from his harem and the fluffy, bright eyed chicks, instructed, in wormology and scratching stunts by his snow white cackling queens! Then smack your lips as you smell the savory odor of a bast ed Wyandotte! Round, yellow, velvety, smooth as silk, it is the unsurpass ed epicurean bird. In dining on Dottes hold yourself in check at least till tin; blessing is asked. In breeding avoid .single combs, or hybrids, by using broad combed males. For brassiness and cream in White Wyandottes use no-corn cream cure. FEATHERS AND EGGSHELLS. Cleanliness is the keyhole to success in the poultry business, but some chicken raisers, like the man late home from lodge, can't find it. "Money makes the mare go," but it doesn't always make the hen lay. The millionaires going into the business don't always strike Standard oil. If you . knew It all, you would be drinking government cream on an ex periment station, while your typewriter would be working overtime on chicken reports from the cyclopedia. Continual feeding of one kind of grain often brings indigestion, loss of appetite and bowel troubles. If this is your feeding method and you are mak ing -a profit you deserve a monument The farmers are buying bone cutters, and the butchers have such a rush for bones that they are always engaged. Once more the American hen registers by knocking out Mr. Rags Bones and Gum Boots Have you reached the broiler stage? Don't Jump from the frying pan Into the broiler. Raising cockerels in aero weather to sell at Alaska prices Isn't what it's cocked up to be. - Beware of a broiler explosion! Now that the hatching season Is here get out your sighs of the zodiac so you get your hen set In the right sign. Bet ter look for signs of lice and set your hens right and give them better atten tion. You'll get more chicks. It has often been asked why the New York poultrymen keep mostly White Leghorns. Simply because the New York epicures demand large white eggs. Bostonlans possess a predilec tion for brown eggs. Why? Oh, Browning, of course! As the chicks dry off under the hen re move them In a soft lined basket to a chair beside the kitchen stove. Have a soft woolen cloth hanging down in the basket to warm their backs, but ar range so they cannot get on top of the cloth, as they may smother each other. By this plan the old hen cannot tram ple them in the nest When spring is In full bloom you may expect to hear that the American hen has invaded Panama. We are told that the chickens on the isthmus are a sorry set When a newly wedded cou ple, bound for the big ditch, found eggs were 10 cents apiece they sim ply sent an order north for an inctt bator and 100 Rock eggs. Good luck! The number of poultry books adver tised Is a .sign of the Interest manifest in the business. You can get a full fledged library for $2.50. They will help you, but don't forget what experi ence , teaches you. It doesn't deal In theory. mSMi NOTES Et C.M.BAENITZ ravERsros PA. o ICOCHESPOKIVXNrX SOLICITED Copyright 190S. by C. M. Barnlts. These articles and illustrations must not be re printed without special permission. . THE ROGUES' GALLERY. Strange that the $250,000 Hall of Fame at New York university thus far contains only thirty-seven famous names and down on Mulberry street at the rogues' gallery there are 18,000 pictures of famous people. It gives one a cold chill to look Into the eyes of all those cutthroats and thieves, but you feel crawly all over when you get Into the poultryman's rogues' gal lery. The skunks, foxes, weasels, minks, rats,' hawks, owls, mites, pigeon ticks and sand jiggers occupy mur derers' row. Louse crooks, alias mallopha, are everywhere. One declares there are fifty varieties, another counts a thou Band, while the man who escapes from a crawling coop swears In all languages that there are 20.000.000. Scientists class lice In four genera Upeurus, gonlodes, gonicotes and meno pen. When these marry and Inter marry, from the lipeuruses down the line to the menopens, there s some thing doing for the stork, for in twelve weeks a single' louse can become grea grandpapa to 125.000 lousy little folks. Thns ten of these multiplex multipliers hatch out 1,250,000 creepers in three months all crooks for chicken cash. Thev vary in -.size from one-thou sandth to one-sixth of an inch, and few suck blood. Some live on scales. crusts, dead cells, quills and feathers; others bite and gnaw, and all crawl. ft Upeurus variabilis. 2. Goniodea eyns fordli. 3. Goniodea dlssimtlis. 4. Goni cotes hologaster. 6. Gonicotes gigas. 8. Menopen pallidum. The four genera are represented In the cut No. 1, Llpeurus variabilis, you find In wings, primary and secondary feath ers of chicks. No. 2, Goniodes eynsfordil. Is the head and neck louse. Nos. 3, 4, 5 and 6 are tramp lice, hen hoboes. No. 6, Menopen pallidum, the pale louse, is most common. The simple mention of a louse running around your neck, down your spine and up again across your bald head makes you scratch. TO DESTROY LICE. Clean up. If house is tight burn two pounds sulphur to every hundred square feet of floor space or spray house and fixtures thoroughly with mixture of six ounces crude carbolic acid to gallon hot water. Allow fumes to escape before fowls return. Dust hens with Persian Insect pow der three times in three weeks or dip them Into a solution of a teacup full of chloronapbtholeum to four gallons of water. Pure lard In moderation for head lice on chicks and clucks. Sulphur ointment; tablespoonful sul phur to two ounces lard. . Apply on head, under wings, around vent of fowls-. Jiot with chicks, and not in wet weather. Louse paint two pounds napthalene flakes dissolved in two gal lons kerosene. Louse powder, five pounds tobacco dust one pound air slaked lime, one pound naphthalene flakes. Mix and apply for lice on poultry, plants, cat tle, for sheep ticks, ants, moths, etc. These are sure good stuff, but don't forget the dost bath, and remember that as men have more f suite than fair women so crowera- bare not crawl - era than cacklers. . . . ., ' - ------ OILIll ROAD BUILDING How Petroleum Is Used on Top of a Macadam Bed. FINE SURFACE OBTAINED. Better Than Asphalt, Does. Not Crack and Lump Rolling Must Not Be Done In Wet Weather or When Ground Is Soft. The old system of "oiling roads and streets" is clearly a flat failure except for a moderate improvement of some of the worst thoroughfares. The new; svstem of "making roads with oil" 19 proving a success whenever proper methods are pursued. The oil and natural soil no longer go where real results are wuuicu. The use of the heavy ten to eleven gravity petroleum has become quite general. Its superiority has been well demonstrated, but there is a wide dif ference between different oils of this gravity and with the same amount of asphaltum. Some of that sold is well nigh useless, although It is unques tionably of the specified gravity ana contains the required percentage of as phalt The oil must possess the ad hesive quality and be able to bind tne rock and asphaltum together In other words, the necessary petrol Ine. The best roads are undoubtedly the macadamized highways found In older sections. The building of such thor oughfares with the use 'of" o on .the surface to form a top dressing and ROAD BEADY FOB OIIilNO. present a surface like asphalt pave ment is Just in its infancy in southern California, says, the Los Angeles Times. In Pasadena there are a num ber of streets of this kind, notably Madison avenue, prepared at a cost of 12 cents per square foot and with a depth of seven inches of foundation. Blocks of this street are scarcely dis tinguishable from asphalt paving. There are others similar, but some are not equal to this. At the same time they are superior to those prepared in the old way. The new method of macadamizing: and oiling as laid down In . a set of specifications used for a number of streets may be outlined substantially as follows: For the foundation grading: is done by the removal of all earth, stone, loose rock, cement, shale, hard pan, etc.? to a depth of seven inches below the intended finished surface and to a farther depth of two feet be low the subgrade whenever mud, sand or other soil material is encountered, the space to be refilled with good earth or gravel. The whole is rolled with a roller of not less than twelve tons In weight until the surface is un yielding, all depressions made by the roller being filled up and rolled again. All portions that cannot be reached by the roller must be tamped solid, and the rolling must not be done in wet weather or when the ground is sort and muddy. This subgrade must be checked by the street superintendent before proceeding with work. On this grade a bottom course of macadam is laid consisting of stone not exceeding three inches in diameter and not less than one and a half inch es. This layer will be five inches in thickness and Is rolled with a twelve ton steam roller until the stone cease to sink under the roller or to creep In front of it. - A top course of stone between three fourths of an inch and an Inch and a half In diameter will cover this to a depth of two inches and will be rolled as before after a first coating of oil (one-half a gallon to the square yard) Is applied evenly so as to saturate the entire top layer. Then all voids are filled In with rock screenings of the same material as the macadam not ex ceeding three-quarters of an inch in diameter, with a top dressing of the same materia! laid to the depth of half an inch, after which there is given a second coating of oil to the same amount as before and the whole ro'led and tamped until no evidence of the oil remains on the surface except as shown in the color of the screenings. Sharp sand is to be sprinkled wherever any oil remains to absorb it. These specifications provide that oil shall be of 10 to 11 gravity, with 80 per cent asphaltum at 80 penetration and with nnr more than 2 ner cent water. The Pacific Electric and Los Angeles Interurban railways are using this method on their rights of way in Pasa dena, Long Beach and one or two other points. It is said to be better than the use of asphalt as it gives with the pressure of the rails under weight of cars and can be taken up and replaced without diflSculty. It does not crack and lump, as does the as phalt It Is hard to tell it from the latter, sometimes Impossible, for the average person. In Long Beach the result has been very good. , - New Road Machine. " C. A. Baldwin of Pasadena, Cat, 1 experimenting with a new machine. . built on the principle or a cuss; piow, ' tot the purpose fit keeping oiled road I to eoodltks. . . '...; - I