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About The Santiam news. (Scio, Linn County, Or.) 1897-1917 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 14, 1898)
A prize of $50, offered by ’the Of all times, feed the heifer good now that will come fresh in the Charleston News and Couridl’, for spring. Give her a chance to make the best half-dozen stnoKe.-curel IS PUBLISHED EVER? FRIDAY, BY a good udder by giving her plenty hams made in South Carolina from BOY B. GILL &. ALBERT COLE.* Feeding ljye stock for best results of feed to do it with, pon’t feed her hogs born after Noy. 1, 1895, was IN THE CITY OF is a trade. This, like most other fattening feed, but something that awarded to'hams cpred by the fol SCIO, MW CO., OREGON. callings, requires a person that has will make milk, keep her bowels in lowing recipes “To 100 pounds of TERMS; aptness for the business. A man good condition, and by the way meat, use four quarts salt, four lbs. yer annum, invariably in advance«.. tr.,$1 5< must be industrious, a keen observ there is nothing better than a little brown sugar, and three ounces salt lix months, “ # • 9 1 Of Per annum if not paid in advance, 2 O'* er and have a love for the business. oil meal occasionally. Some people petre. The ingredients to be well Advertising rates at fair, living r^tes,to be It is said that no man is fit to feed are afraid of oil meal, but all dairy mixed, the salt having been beaten »aid monthly. cattle who could not sit on the fence men recommend it.' Something of fine. When the meat is cold, rub in Transient advertisements must be paid for when the order is given for their insertion. in the worst storm and see the cat this nature is essential to producing two-thirds of the mixture and pack tle eat. The ojd method of feeding a good flow of milk when feeding in a cask. The next day rub in the cattle was to feed whole corn and dry feed. remaining third,and put meat again IF WE KNEW have small bogs to follow to pick up In judging a calf that is intended in cask, reversing pieces from top the waste. This method is giving for a milk cow, remember the large to bottom. Let them remain three Could we but draw the curtains That surround, each other’s lives, way to other and. more economical bag may be caused by the animal weeks, reversing once a week. At methods, that of grinding the grain. being fat. But if the calf is in me the end of two weeks pour off liquor See the naked heart and spirit, Know what spur the action gives, It has long since been observed by dium flesh and then has a good big in the cask;-boll and skim till clear, the best feeders that what was call udder,that calf will do to tie to. The and when cool pour over meat again. Qftpp W© should find it better, Purer'than we judge we should; ed moderate feeding was the most calf’s teats should be set wide apart, At the end of three week's wash profitable. That was to feed only too, and at each, corner 'of the em meat in hot water, wipe dry and We should love each other better what the stock would eat up clean, bryo bag, then a large udder will smoke three weeks, after which bag If we only understood, and bo ready for the next feed. It surely follow. and hang up.” Those who cure was claimed, and rightfully, that their own hams might do well to .Dairymen who know, say that “ 12 Cpu!d we judge all deeds by motives, the process of digestion was much preserve this recipe,'but we would See the good and bad within. more complete if the -feeding was tons per acre of corn raised for the suggest that the length of time for silo is only an average yield ; twen Often we should love thesinner, moderate. If heavy feeding was re remaining in the brine and for smok All the while we loathe the sin; sorted to, much of the food passed ty tons are frequently reported; and ing might vary a little, according to that 15 tons ought to be-the aver Could we know the powers working the animal undigested. The exper the size of the hams. For the small imental stations have verified this age.” Think of it, you fellows who ham or shoulder might be cured a To o’erthrow integrity, are feeding straw and paying long We should judge each other’s errors corp mon observation. They have prices for feed and then scarcely get little quicker than the large ham, given us the exact Agues in heavy, Something might also depend upon With more patient charity. medium and light feeding. In the your cattle through the bad winters- the taste of those who intend to eat Silo is little more trouble to put up experiment corn meal was given in it, as some want but little salt and If we knew the cares and trials, connection with coarse fodder. One than your hay crop. It makes a good others but little smoke. But the re-, Knew the efforts all in vain, flow of milk when the grass drys up pound of meal to 100 pounds of ani cipe is good as it is. And the bitter disappointment, mal was considered heavy feeding; and is good for any kind of stock. The successful swine breeder does Understood the loss and gain— Take a pencil and figure on the mat two-thirds of a pound of meal a me Would the grjm, externa] roughness dium, while one-third a slight ra ter, it- will surprise you. It takes a not forget that ashes are essential in building bone in hogs. When Seem, I wonder, just the same? tion. The gain was 1.80 pounds for big cow to eat 50 lbs of silage per wood ashes cannot be obtained, corn Should we help where now we hin the heavy ration; 1.77 for the me day. People who have tried them cobs can be burned -to a charcoal or der? dium, and 1.59 for the light. It will are loud in their praise. Investigate else to a fine ash’and kept in some Should we pity where we blame? be observed that the most profitable and find out, maybe the silo people place to which the hogs have access gain was much in favor of the me are wrong, and you can. set them at all times. There need be no spec right. dium and light ration. Ah, we judge'each other harshly, ial work in feeding it to them. While the gain per day was some We want to say right, now, that Knowing not life’s hidden force; greater in the heavy ration, the any farmer, or for that matter any’, The superstition that human be Kno wing not the fount of action most profitable was the medium. In one one else, whoowns a cow can not ings should sleep with their heads . Is less turbid at its source. case of heavy ration the gain per ■ afford to be without Hoard’s Dairy to the north is believed by the Seeing'not amid the evil head, when sold was $9.62, for the man. The editor is a practical dairy French to have for its foundation a All the golden grains of good— medium $14.50, and for the light man himself, and, talks everyday, scientific fact. They affirm that Oh, we’d love each other better $15.64. It was observed that it was common sense talk to you. The each human system is in itself anel If we only understood. necessary to increase the lighter ra Hoard creameries, have 800 patrons, ectric battery, th.e head being one tion in order to complete the final and men of experience write their of the electrodes, the feet the other. —Chicago Tribune. finish, it had to be raised up to the views on everything pertaining to Their proof was discovered from The enmity between Governor larger measure. These experi the successful management of the experiments which-the academy of Bushnell and Senator Hanna which meats are very suggestive. These milch cow. There are now run Sciences was allowed to make on the broke out so unexpectedly and. with fine discriminations might decide ning in the Dairyman a series of re body of a man who. was guillotined. such violence isof.no recent growth. the question of profit or loss in feed plies, written by farmers.and dairy This was taken the instant it fell Senator Hanna got in the way of the ing. As competition becomes sharp men, to a list of 27 questions asked and placed upon a pivot free to Ohio governor, and he was forced to er these fine points must be observ by that paper that are simply too move as it might. The head part, play second fiddle Or none, as Hanna ed. good to miss, and we want others to after a litte vacillation, turned to was thé shrewder polititian of the To be able to write on glass with read them. You will find facts in the north, and the body then re two. Party bonds was busted, and an ordinary pen and ink would be these answers that you are looking mained stationary. It was turned part .of the republican party sided in an advantage to many housekeepers for, and some more facts that will half way round by one of the pro with the democrats, and stopped at with a regard for the orderliness of be a revelation to you. This is no fessors, and again the head end of nothing short of crime to furthur her cupboards, in which each jar or advertisement and we do not get the trunk moved slowly to the car dinal point due north, the same re the defeat of Hanna. bottle would instantly suggest its any pay for writing this. Bushnell and Foraker are both contents. A suitable ink for writ Don’t lead a bull by a rope, get a sults being repeated until the final traitors of the most pronounced ing on glass with an ordinary pen, strong, light pole, and fasten to the arrestation of organic movement. type. No matter to what party a can be made, in this manner: “Take ring in his nose and you can keep Estray. man belongs, when the proper time of shellac (bleached), ten parts; of him at a distance in case he gets a One small bay pony with roached comes, if he is honest, he will stand Venice turpentine, five parts; lamp- notion he wants to fight. ' mane, one white hind foot, branded “ee’n” for all he is. worth, regard black, fiye parts; and of ordinary, After several years experience I on right hip with bridle bit. Came less of petty jealousy or personal turpentine five parts. Place the am convinced that for growing hogs to_my place six miles southeast of grievances. This, Bushnell did not shellac and two turpentines in an from the age ot 2 to 6 months barley Scio, about six weeks ago. A. L. R ichardson . earthen jar with a cover. Set this do. jar in a saucepan, not too full of is preferable to corn if only one The plain unvarnished truth of water, and boil it until the contents thing is fed. But to be able to feed W anted —stock beets—tho ehave the matter is this: Bushnell, at one are quite dissolved; then add the barley profitably it must.be finely ing any to sell please leave prices at time, had to a great extent, control lampblack, stirring constantly; bot ground and soaked at least six“ this office. of things in Ohio. Hanna, a busi tle, and the ink will be ready for hours before it it given to the pigs. ness man until then, jumps out and use. Any kind of pen can be used It should always' be fed in the form so manipulates things, that he had to apply it to the glass, and it can of a very thick, slop. Skim milk Is preferable to water for making'the control of the primaries, and made not be erased, terms with Bushnell, agreeing to A cure for abortion in cows has slop, especially for young pigs. I let him have the nomination, and long been desired. Mr. N. A. Lind once fed a lot of pigs 5 months old, push his election for governor, if he a breeder’ of shorthorn cattle at and they made a gain of 2J pounds (Bushnell); would help present a Rolfe, Io., states that he finds car a day on finely-ground barley fed as “solid front” for Hanna for U 8 bolic acid a cure. In a western a thick slop with a liberal amount of senator. This was agreed to by thé journal he states that, knowing car skim milk. For very young pigs j Bushnell people and Hanna stumped bolie acid to be a deadly poison, he prefer to feed equal, parts of shorts the state of Ohio, paying out his own feared to use it, but triedit on one and ground barley and then gradual money for campaign expenses and cow, giving her an eighth' of an. ly change it to one-half each of corn Bushnell was elected. You know ounce in bran mash every other day. and barley the last six weeks, when the rest. Hanna, in his own party, Finding that it did not kill her,and finishing for market.—Lewis O’Fol is noted for being very generous to that she improved, he gave it to the low in Orange Judd Farmer. Well-cured fodder, shredded fod his opponents, reports to the contra entire herd,gradually increasing the ry notwithstanding, and his gen dose to half an ounce, The disease der and hay may be accepted and erosity was what put Bushnell in disappeared, the first cow has pro-1 eaten by cattle, but they will always thé office he now holds. -It was a duced a 'strong healthy calf, and not take ensilage in preference. The “dirty Irish trick,” not Irish either, a case of abortion has since appear-': reason is that in winter they apprec iate any kind of food that is juicy for they never act the traitor that ed. and succulent, or approaching that Bushnell did. One writer in an exchange says: which they recieve in summer. “So 'far as making money out of “Gentlemen, you do not use your skim and buttermilk is concerned, Ensilage and linseed meal is a ra faculties of observation,” said an old the shortest road to profit is through tion that never fails to give excel pi of essor, addressing his class. He the cow—feed it back to her. She lent results. • pushed forward a gallipot con tai ng a will give you iit'least one hundred Wisconsin ranks second of the states chemical of exceedingly ‘.offensive per cent more profit for it than any in the production of cheese and smell,- “When I was a student,” hog could afford to pay. But here fourth in the production of butter, he continued, “I used my sense of again ycu must be scrupulously’care- There are in Wisconsin 951 cream taste..” And with that he put his ful not to let her trough or the buck eries producing 75,653,730 pounds of finger in the gallipot and then put ets she drinks from, or the milk is butter per year, 1571 cheese factor his finger in his mouth: “Taste it, carried in, get the least bit foul. If ies with an annual output of 52,480- gentlemen—taste it,” said the prof you do, the taint of that milk will 615 pounds. The great' butter pro essor, “and exercise your, percept get- right into the center of every ducing counties are Dane, with an ive faculties.”' The gallipot was pound of butter you make, and rise annual production of 5,521330 lbs.; pushed toward the reluctant class- up in judgment against you. The Walworth, 2,089,420 pounds; Jeffer One by one the students resolutely profit of your dairy will depend son, 3,683,400 pounds; and Rock, Ready Jan. 1, 1898, dipped'their fingers into the concoc very largely upon the use to which Tempealeau, Dodge and Fond du On All News Stands. tion, and with many a wry face, you put the skim milk, and other Lac each producing a little less than 'JU sucked the abomination from their 3,000,000 pounds. Sheboygan coun by products of the dairy.” ty leads in the production of cheese fingers. “Gentlemen, gentlemen,” said the professor. “I must repeat The longer you'can feed your calf with 9,950,000 pounds, followed by Larger, Better, More Complete Than Ever. that you do not use.your faculties skim milk, after it begins to eat oats Green with 7,790,250 pounds, and of observation; for, had you looked and other dry feed, the better. Milk Dodge producing 6,000,000 pounds. most widely sold Annual Refer more closely at what I was doing, is a great muscle and bone former, A shipment of 100 horses, mainly you would have seen that the finger and will add greatly,to the growth for riding and carriage use, arrived ence Booh and Political Manual published.. in .Berlin from me United States, L which I put in my mouth was not of the calf. THE WORLD, the finger I dipped in the gallipot.” Sternberg’s for ,the latest styles of and were all sold within twenty- Pulitzer Building, New Yo. ¡four hours. —-Home Journal. neckwear. ■phe ^antiam <fCew3. c ’ Of Interest To Farmers, Tte lori # Standard American Annual. XTOTICE FOR PUBLICATION— Land Office at Oregon City, Ore gon, Nov. 15, 1897. Notice is hereby given that the following named set tler has filed notice of his intention to make final proof in support of his claim, and that said proof will be made before the County Clerk ol Linn county, at Albany, .Oregon, on January 12, 1898. viz: Robert Strachan ; H. E 10893, for the N W i of Sec; 12, Township 11 S R 1 Bast. He names the following witnesses to prove' his continuous residence upon and cultivation of, said land, viz: Archie C. Gaines, J. L. Davenport, James Craft, of Larwood, and Wil son Richardson, of Scio, Oregon. CHAS. B. MOORES, Register. SAY. LOOK HERE! ' Why don’t you patronize the School Library at Peery & Peery’s? It contains the boohs of our best authors. Reading for short or long periods at oery low rates: Gall and examine it. Market Report. Scio Q uotations Wheat. 66 B.ts. per bu. Oats, 25 ’’ Flour $4 20 ” bbl. Bran 12 00 .“ton. Middlings-16 “ Chop, $16 per Eon. Potatoes. 50cts per sack.- Eggs, 25c. per doz. Butter,creamery 25: ranche 12 > ft. Hams, 12c per lb. Shoulders. 8c per lb. Bacon, 10c per lb Lard, 10c per lb Chickens, 2 50 per doz Anyone sending a sketch and descriptibn may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. Communica tions strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special -notice, without charge, in the Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir culation of any scientific journal. Terms, $3 a year ; four months, Sold by all newsdealers. 0Q(361 Broadway, Branch Office, 625 F St., Washington, D. C. MUNN & New York For sale—An Advance 36 inch cyl inder separator, in good order. Call on Austin & Propst, four miles East of- Albany, Oregon. The Columbia Pad Calendar for 1898 is ready for distribution. 'Send five two-cent stamps to Pope Mfg. Co., Hartford, Conn. (Western Edition American Agriculturist.) ONLY $1.00 A YEAR. All tlie Leading Features that have made this journal so popular are to be retained the coming year and many new ones added. An Ideal Farm and Family Weekly. a Cnrm fl lu I da III Such as Live Stock, Dairy ing, Horticulture, Poultry, * On and after. January 1 1898, the old prices will be resumed., towit: Haircutting, 25c; Shaving, 15c; Shampooing, 25c; Seafoam, 15c; Baths, 25c; 6 Bath t’kts. $1 Shaving by the month, (cash in ad- vance) two baths included, 150 H. L. Sumner, Prop. rAAi1111MA Market Gardening, and rBalUlBSa otlier topics, written by " Practical and Successful Farmers, supplemented with Illustrations by able artists, combine to make it invalu able to those who “farm it for a living.” The Latest Markets and Commercial Agriculture, Crop Reports in their season, Condensed Farm News, and Letters among the Farmers are Leading Features in which T he O range J udd F armer is not ex celled. It has reliable Special Correspond ents at the General and Local Market Cen ters all over the United States. Short Stories, Latest Fash fl QlllliJ ions, Fancy Work,The Good ^ aa I hvaa Uook, Talks with the Doc- rvullIluSa tor,Puzzle Contests,Library Corner and Young Folks’ Page, combine to make this department of as much value and interest as most of the Special Family Papers. QUESTIONS answered on Law, Medicine, Veterinary and other topics FKFK. THE MAGAZINE FORM. Each ¿ssue comes out with a heat cover, the number of pages varving from 28 to 36. FREE SAMPLE COPY sent on request. YEAR BOOK FREE A Cyclopedia of Progress and Events—A Guide to Markets, Marketing and Prices. PRESENTED postpaid to each yearly subscriber, new or old. A Treasury of Statistics for Farm or Home, and Office or Factory. A Reference Work on Every Subject Pertaining to Agriculture, In dustry, Commerce and Markets; Public Af fairs, Economics and Politics; Household Education, Religion and Society. Also an ALMANAC of Calendars, the Weather, As tronomical Data, Hints for Each Month, Dates, Etc.—-Year Book alone 50 cents post paid. NEW SUBSCRIBERS sending S1.00 prior to January 1st, 1898, receive the re mainder of this year FREE! a ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, Marquette Building, - CHICAGO; HX- S antiam N ews , $1.50 ) O range J uud \F arner , 1.00 > $3.00 Y ear B ook .50 J Our price is only $1,80 for both pa pers one year each, and Year Book and Almanac. A new “Gibson girl,” drawn by the society artist, C. D. Gibson, will make her debut in print as the cov er design for the February Ladies’ Home Journal. The new “girl” is the artist’s own little daughter, who at one year of age, will be shown-as drawn by her clever father. The legend under the picture is “My Valentine.” The Weekly Oregonian, Per San Francisée Examiner, irds Dairyman, nge Judd Farmer, ice-a-week World, mr Field and Fireside, par ti „ „ „ „ 1 1 2 1