Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Lane County leader. (Cottage Grove, Lane County, Or.) 1903-1905 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 2, 1903)
W i t e r a t th e B arn . I f one lias n pump located in or near the barn there 1«, o f course, no diffi culty In obtaining all the water needed for all purposes In the barns. If, how ever, It Is necessary to carry water for the stock, then some plan should be put in operation whereby water may be obtained for other purposes, such as wagon washing and the cleaning of harnesses, without carrying It any great distance. The rainfall may be utilized by placing a barrel which Is water-tight on a box or other platform and, by the use of a simple and cheap V-trough, carrying the water to the barrel from the eaves of the barn roof. A faucet should be placed In the bar- held quite early and after the wheat Is up watch It closely for attacks of the hessian fly. Iu case the pest does not appear It will be safe to fluiah the sowing at once. In the event o f trou ble with the small strip of wheat, wait until Just before a »harp front may be expected before sowing the balance of the field. The Idea Is that If the wheat does not make Its appearance until Af ter a sharp frost It will be safe, as It Is thought the frost will kill the hes sian fly. This method Is well worth trying and repeating each year until some better plan la discovered.— Ex change. T h e W o n d e r « o f M o d ern F a r m in g . Little Stories and Incidents that Will Interest and Enter- tain Young Readers not suffice that they be graceful. They must also be useful. Their aim in life Is not merely to be good; they must be good for something. The great aim la not to train girls so they will live according to rules, but so they may nobly live without them. For It la Impossible to make rule# to fit every emergency. The only safe method In a daughter'* training Mamma has made him little suits. is to equip her with the stuff from With pockets In the pants, And cut off all hie yellow curls which to make her own rules, as the And sent them to my aunts. occasion presents itself. And Will, he was so pleased, I believe, Our chief duty Is not so much to cor He almost jumped with joy, rect the faults as It Is to Instill th# But I must own I didn't like virtues. The secret of high living is Will turned into a boy. not, How much evil do we avoid? but. How much good do we find? The se And now he plays with horrid tops— cret of successful parenthood is not, I don't know how to spin. And marbles that I try to shoot. How many restrictions can we compel But never hit nor win. our daughters to live down to? but. And leapfrog— I can’t give a "back” How many rights and privileges can Like Charlie, Frank or Roy. we safely truat them to live up to?— Oh, no one knows how bad I feel Lavlula Hart, In Collier’s. Since Will has turned a boy. L a m e n t o f ■ L i t t l e G ir t. My brother Will, he used to be The nicest kind of girl, He wore s little dress like me And had his hair in cnrl. We played with dolls snd tea seta then, And every kind of toy; But all these good old times ers gone— Will turned Into a boy. A ll the great crops are now planted, and all except cotton are gathered by machinery. Let us follow a crop throughout a season’s work and see the changes that have come In Its treatment. The plowman no longer trudges slow ly and wearily back and forth across his field. He rides a sulky plow with a spring seat. There are special plows for every need—turf plows, stubble plows, subsoil plows, plows for heavy I have to wear frocks just the same. work, plows for light work, and gang And now they’re mostly white plows turning three furrows at once. I have to ait and just be good, So simple are many of them that a boy While Will can climb and fight. may drive one. Plowing by steam Is But I must keep my dresses nice not commonly practiced In the Middle And wear my hair in curl; West, but out on the great wheat And, worse— oh, worsteat thing of all— I have to stay a girl! ranches of the Pacific coast It Is com mon. On the tule lands o f California S o m e th in g f o r B oys. a slxty-horse-power traction engine Any boy who is clever with his TO S A V E R A IN W A TE R . drawing twenty-one feet o f disk plows knife can make many pretty and use rel, as shown, so that the water may will break the ground to a depth o f j ful articles from dry branches o f trees. be drawn off readily when wanted. ten Inches at the rate o f forty-five to One shown here Is a key holder, the Over the top of the barrel Is placed a sixty acres a day. With mold-board j other a photograph stand. They are frame, covered with the finest mesh plows designed especially for this j cut with a sharp pocket-knife and the w ire obtainable. This will keep out work a strip twenty-eight feet wide different parts glued together; or vermin and small animals, and yet can be broken. This means that a man nailed with thin wire nails. The most permit sufficient air to circulate over and a pair o f horses with a single j the water to prevent It from becoming mold-board plow would have to cross' stagnant. The Illustration shows the a field twenty-eight times to do the I plan, which Is an excellent one and same work that the traction engine does by one trip of Its plows. A farm-1 very inexpensive. er In the Central West who uses a \ small traction engine and a gang of! Pinchine B e r r y B u s h e s . The Ideal treatment for raspberries four fourteen-inch plows says that It and blackberries Is to pinch them back coata him from 50 to 62 cents per acre at intervals during the summer and to break his ground. H e considers \ thus secure strong, sturdy bushes three steam economical. and one-half to four feet high, with The land made ready for the recep laterals from one to one nnd one-half tion o f the seed, machinery still does feet long, rather than to practice "the the work that muscle used to do. The severe heading back after the plants sower goes forth to sow, but not as he have become long and "leggy.” If, once did, dropping his seed into the however, as is frequently the case In soli, trudging backward and forward Important point about It la the Joining the best managed gardens, the plants from dawn until twilight. His grass of the pieces. Notice how the joints are at this seas n making vigorous or his grain Is broadcasted or drilled are cut to fit well together (see Illus growth which may not mature, they In with mechanical evenness, and the tration). When the key-holder frame should at once be cut back to the de machine automatically registers the Is ready, books and rings should be sired height and the canes w ill harden acreage sown. In like manner hla corn screwed Into It to hang the frame up before cold weather. Many prefer to Is drilled In, listed or planted In hills, and to hold the keys. The back support cut back the bushes In the spring. his potatoes are planted, and even bis o f the photograph stand Is fastened Thinning the canes, which should al cabbage, his cauliflower and his tobac with thin strips of leather nailed down ways be practiced, may be done at any co plants from the seed beds are set oyer the horlaontal ends of the support time during the sraron. In general, out by machinery, aud the work is one-half or more o f the young canes done better than It could possibly be S t a m p s a n d C o lle c t s «-# . which appear should be cut out. Black by hand—this, besides the saving of Germany has comparatively the berry and raspberry bushes may be time and toil. Even In the vegetable most stamp collectors and consequent transplanted In the fall, but better re garden seeders for all kinds o f seeds ly also the most counterfeit manufac sults are usually obtained from spring are now extensively used. The ma turers. plantings.— Maine Expei lmcnt Station. chines are pushed In front o f the op- ] Germany Is said to have a great erntor, and they automatically drop many more philatelists than the Uni b o i l i n g S m a ll A n im a ls . and cover the seeds at the desired dis ted States. Nearly every family seems When one raises stock of any kind tances and depth, and at the same time to have a stamp collection, conse and Is obliged to cart them to market mark off the next row.—W. B. Thorn quently no stamps have gone to waste there should be some device for load ton, In World's Work. In years. Dealers are so thick that In ing the animals Into the wagon with Stuttgart there are a dozen windows out the exercise of too great labor. The given up to the display of stamps. F a r m N o te s . loading crate shown In the Illustration A great collection of stamps, valued The man or woman who does not Is one of the best appliances of the know how to keep up a rotation In the approximately at *50,000, which was kind one! can have. It should be made garden crops Is not up to present day stolen from Consul Weber, of Ham burg, Germany, has been recovered privileges. through the work of the police depart The longer the calf Is left with Its ment of Berlin. The collection, It dam the harder It will be to teach It seems, was Innocently bought by a to drink. The longer It is left with London dealer for *1,910, and when he the cow the harder It will be to wean, was confronted with evidence proving and the more foolish the cow will act It to be stolen property, the purchaser when weaning la attempted. offered to return the lot upon being Don't kick the hogs for rushing reimbursed with the amount that he around you for their meals. It Is your paid for the loot. A fter some litiga own fault. I f you would feed them tion the stamps were returned to the as you should, you would not be in owner upon hla payment of *1,750 to such a hurry. I f you must kick, give the dealer. yourself a good big Jolt for not feeding C h a r le s C a r r o ll’ s B r a v e r y . better. There Is one episode In history It Is a very good plan to keep all which made a great Impression on me grain sacks and similar property the first time I remember hearing marked or branded. It la not a matter about It, and that Impression has not A t-O A D IN O D E V IC E . o f proving dishonesty, but a matter been lost or even become fainter In o f convenience to have them so strong, yet light so that It can be eas the years that have passed since. marked. There are times when they ily handled. A frame Is made of two It happened In July. 1776, when a by four material and the floor made w ill accidentally get lost. group of men, the representative# of The commercial feitlllxer used annu the American people, were gathered o f Inch lumber with cleats nailed on eight Inches apart. The upper end ally In the United States amounts to together about a table, signing their should be well braced and the Incline between *16,000.000 and *50.000,000. names to that great work known aa should not be too sharp. With a load Most of the States have provided for the Declaration of Independence. ing rack of this kind little trouble will official Inspection of fertilizer to pro Among the last to come forward v n be had In handling sheep, swine or tect the farmer from fraud. The heav a man from Maryland, and after w rit iest applications are made in the calve«. ing his name, Charles Carroll, one of Southern States. In some o f the prai the others said to him. " I f England A I. a m l o f S m e l l F a r m e r s . rie States hardly Siny commercial fep- ever gets us In her power we are sure From a recent report on agriculture tllizers are sold. to be hung as traitors. But there are In Germany, It appears that of the I f a strip of light burlap Is fastened other men in the colonies by the name total agricultural area o f 12S.W10.000 around a milk cow's body loosely to of Charlee Carroll, so you have more acres In Germany three fourths are ac keep the flies off In By time she will of a chance to escape.” tually under the plow or In cultiva give more inllk, says an Indiana farm For a moment there was silence; tion aa meadows, pastures and hop er, who adds; “ 1 have noticed how then Carroll picked up the pen aud gardens, and less than 1.0W1.W10 acres cows stand and fight flips and eat lit after hla signature wrote the words: are cultivated for market garden and tle. but when thus protected they put •'Of Carrollton” —the only man In all vineyard produce. The area Is divided In their time at eating. I milk with those flfty-slx to tell the name o f the Into B.BOO.OOO holdings, and la princi much more comfort since adopting this town In which he lived. pally In the hands of small peasants plan, which costs little.” Other things, perhaps, of far more and farmers. These peasant holdings The finest and softest wool la al Importance to the world have taken o f from two and a half to live acres place than when Charles Carroll wrote form the backbone of German agricul ways on the shoulders o f sheep. An the name of his town after his own; expert In judging sheep always looks ture. at the wool on the shoulders first. As but the remembrance of hla unselfish suming that the wool to be Inspected ness and bravery will ever be treas V l a h l l n c H e a e la n F l y . Whether one grows 10 or 100 acre« Is really flue, the shoulders are first ured In my mind ae an evidence of o f w h eat the hessian fly Is an enemy examined as a part where the finest those qualities which I most admire — that will need watching. Scientists wool Is to be found, which Is taken as 8t. Nicholas. bare worked for years trying to find a standard, and it compared to the A G ir l an d lia r T r a in in g . The girl* o f to-day have a higher some method o f exterminating this wool from the ribs, the thigh, the peat, and agree that the best way of rump and the shoulder parts, aud the mission In life than to look ornamen nearer the wool from the various por tal. It la not sufficient that they make combating It Is the following: A t the usual time of sowing wheat tions of the animal approaches the the best of their charms; they must likewise develop their talents. It will In tha fall, sow a small portiou o f the j standard the better. J T o u r F a th e r# Boys, when you speak of your fath er, don’t call him “ the old man.” Of course, you are older now than when you learned to call him “ father.” You are much smarter than you were then; you are much more manly looking. Your clothes fit better; your hat has a modern shape, and your hair Is combed differently. In short, you are "flyer” than you were then. Your father has a last year's coat, and a two years’ old hat, and a vest of still another pat tern. He can’t write such an elegant note as you can, and all that—but don’t call him “ the old man.’’ Call him fath er. For years he has been hustllug around to get things together, he has been held to the thorny path of uphill Industry for years, and the brightest half o f life has gone from him for ever. But he loves you, though he goes about without saying much about It, and If he knew you were bad, It would be the heaviest burden be has to bear. FIFTY YEARS IN PARLIAMENT. b a k e o f D e v o n s h ir e , L ib e r a l L e a d e r o f th a H o u se o f L o rd s , The Duke of Devonshire has lately figured In gossip from across the sea In which It has been stated that he would retire from Parliament. Thla suggestion Is scouted by th# well-in formed, who know that the fact of his leadership In the House of Lords will keep him from retiring. Few men In politics hare had such a curious career as the Duke. Like Caesar, he has twice refused the crown of a statesman’s ambition. The pre- A RUSSIAN EXECUTION. R e m a r k a b le B a n g F r o ld o f a D e s p e ra te C r i m i n a l o n t h e S c a ffo ld . Some time ago a Russian criminal was executed In St. Petersburg. He had during the last two years mur dered twelve persons, the last one be ing a priest. The law did not show this monster any mercy, but speedily condemned him to death. Stebljanskl was the name o f this wholesale murderer, and he hoped to the last for clemency. When the death warrant was read and the keeper In formed him that he had but six hours to live, he raged aud swore to revenge himself In the most terrible manner. After being left alone In the cell the first thing he did was to break his lamp, and, procuring some matches, he set fire to the oil. In a moment the flames broke through the window, and the entire building was for a time threatened with destruction. Fortu nately the fire was discovered In time and gotten under control before much damage bad been done, but In the meantime a terrible struggle ensued between the keepers and the criminal, who had fortified himself with an Iron bar, taken from his bedstead. The first man to enter the cell was knocked senseless, and It was only after being almost suffocated with smoke that the prisoner was finally overpowered. Next morning the execution took place. The condemned man ascended the scaffold with much bravado, made a thorough examination of the same, and finally declared that the rope was too short " I cannot get my head In the loop,” he said, “ and though It will cause me some Inconvenience to w a it I will smoke a cigarette while you are hav ing It attended to.” He lighted a cigarette, and, turning to the executioner, made a speech, pointing ont the detestable In his pro fession, and as a condemned criminal In Russia has certain rights, no one dared to interrupt him. The executioner, who really was n tender-hearted man, became visibly af fected by the moralizing words of the murderer, and, turning to the crowd assembled before the scaffold, declared that his conscience did not allow him to proceed or to take a fellow-man’s life, and he then and there resigned his position and departed midst the shonts of the assemblage. This caused great confusion among the representatives o f the law, for where could they In a hurry get an other executioner? The question was. however, solved by the condemned man, who declared that he would ex ecute himself as soon as he got through smoking. He started an In teresting conversation with the priest during the five minutes or so which he had left, and recommended that he read Count Tolstoy's latest book, which contains striking remarks about the relation of capital punishment to the teachings o f Christianity. He then threw a klsa to a pretty girl among the «peciatora, stack his head In the loop, and kicked away the trap beneath his feet. DUKE Or D E V O N S H IR E . mlershtp was within his grasp In 1880, when Queen Victoria called him, to form a ministry on Lord Beacons- fleld’s defeat. As Lord Hartington he was elected leader of the Liberal par ty, and led for five years while Glad stone nominally rested In his tent, laird Hartington was born to great ness, and did not covet honors; am bitions are without his sphere. And so with rare self-denial he called from the tent and handed to him the wreath and the party power he had built up. Six years later, when the hjme rule split came, he became by consent the leader of the Liberal Unionists who seceded. laird Salisbury offered to serve under him If he would take the premiership. Again he refused. Whether he was considered last year when Mr. Balfour was chosen to suc ceed Lord Salisbury la not known. Probably he was not for three years before he spoke of retiring from po litical life, and It was not generally believed that his Inclinations lay In the direction of party headship. An idea prevail» that “ the noble Dnke,” as the lords call him. Is indo lent and Indifferent He may be In different as to his own advancement, for he has always been assured of more than apparently he craves for— great wealth, high social position, seven mansions, an honored name In the peerage. He is careless of his per sonal appearance, careless of the form and manner of his speech, but he mat ter Is always good and the judgment sound. He Is what people call a safe man. Aa to actual work In the field of poli tic», he has done as much aa most men. while at the same time guiding important business Interests at Bar- row. F.aatbonme and elsewhere. He Is now 70 years of age, and has been In Parliament since he was 24. eggs In a hen’s nest Jack c Rushvllle to live. He wandered about town ft days and then took up his qua a barn where an omnibus la a] and where be found friendly ready to aid him and when It vtlle he seldom falls to go with to the railroad station. H e was at the station one da a tramp kicked him and Jack the steps o f a passenger coa the train carried him away, gone for two weeks, when h back on a train, took his old p the bus and went back to tha live. Jack made a trip by train t bridge City a few days ago an he returned on a freight tral was no bus at the station. He on a dray and refused to get c he had been hauled to town. The dog goes to Neweasth once a week and he haa hla friends there, who feed him 1 fat of the land,” most of tl coming from hotels and reati In Newcastle be makes bis he ters at the postoffice, riding from the station in a mall guarding the pouches as he rl< sleeps before the safe In th castle poetofflee and regards flee men aa his friends. In the Same Band. Homer Davenport tells of a U lice Court Judge who formerly In Sllverton, Ore., where Da was born. Once an unfortuna who waa arrested for Intoxlcat the Judge that he had playt Davenport in the Sllverton Band. The Judge dlacharg prisoner. The Incident was published newspapers, and In the followi at least five other prisoners wl brought before the Judge ei that they had played with Dg In the Sllverton Cornet Bam other day the Utica Judge telei Mr. Davenport asking him o many pieces the Sllverton orgai consisted. H e concluded hla t by saying: “ Hereafter no prisoners will charged on account of former n ship in this hand. The limit h reached." F acts About Portland, Oi This fair city of the Padfl Is exceeded by but four other c the United States as a whe ping port. In round number# tal for 1001 was nearly 19, bushels. It la to-day the greatest i center on the Pacific coast Ii first among the coast cities west In the vast quantity of annually exported, and the 8 Oregon, with lta area of 96.000 miles—equal to New York am England combined-still haa a amount o f standing timber th other. A Personal K n o w l e d g e . Howard Bell, the publisher, t Ing shaved the other day. “ Do you like James I.sne Allei book?” asked his barber, striv an appropriate subject of conve “ Why, yes,” said the publish* Just now I am Interested In • 1 William Dean Howells. Do jc him?” “ No,” replied the barber; heard o f him.” "W hat, never heard of Mr. R 8TORY OF DOQ TRAVELER. Why, be surely Is better know Waa Ralatd oa Farm and Ha. since Mr. Allen.” Become Widely Known. “That may be, sir; but you Jack Is the name o f a dog that Is shave Mr. Allen.” known to everybody In Rushvllle, Ind., Weaeouable ftw Ice Plant and which makes that place headquar "A ll kind* o f vegetables ar ters while he travels to all the towns within thirty miles of I t says the In backward thla aeason. ’ groan Introspection. dianapolis News. Hs comes from an pinnacle o f pessimism. “I Afraid that young man who Is aristocratic fam ily of spaniels and col “ W ell.” «eld the optimistic constantly trying to say bright things lies and spent his earlier years on a "a t any rate, th# Ice plant Is ■ is a cynic.” farm. He made occasional trips to lng.” —Baltimore American. "Y'es. answered Miss Cayenne "and town with the farmer In bis youth Yon go days and days wlthoa he’a afraid be lan’t ” -Waahlngtoo and one day after the farmer’s son vltation, and then **t three * Star. gar* him a whipping for disturbing one day.