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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 13, 1914)
2 HOME AND FARM MAGAZINE SECTION Oregon Agricultural College is the Friend of the Farmer Page of News Notes and Interesting Articles Specially Written by College Experts For This Newspaper. r.saHB I m Jt " w-MJ. u J,A w tl m ami w II at W J rWCT wi iMtfCKjj.AgMja9&ia!L-1Mg-lM r1( innimii'f din hi hi m ii "ii -SaaAu View of Oragon Agricultural CoUere Comllls, Oregon, the Sole Aim of Which Is to A id Agriculturist. ESSENTIALS OF BREAD MAKING. iifOOD BREAD can be made from either good hard wheat flour or from good soft wheat flour," says Dean Henrietta Calvin of the Ore gon Agricultural College, "but you should know whioh yon are using be-' eanse they require different treatment Kurd wheat flour may bo made into s soft dough, and if it hi very hard wheat then the bread should be kneaded down Beveral times. Soft wheat flour should be made into a very stiff dough and the bread will not need to rise more than once before it is put into the pans. "Home-made yeast is much better than the dry yeast, tl can be likened to the seed saved by a good gardener from his own healthy plants. When properly prepared it contains millions of live, growing, microscopic plants. Liquid yeast can be kept in a cool, dark place about two weeks. "Sweet milk is the best of all liquids for bread making." It should be scalded and then cooled. The micro-organisms that cause sourness in milk are thus heated until they all die. Milk bread will be a little yellow but its flavor is better and it is more nutritious thau water bread. Water may be used in wtead of milk, however, and good bread can be made with it. "Sugar is a good yenst food. A little Added to the bread does not affect the flavor of the bread but does quicken the action of the yeast. Salt is used for flavor. Such a small quantity as ia used in bread does not materially retard the .growth of yeast but does whiten the bread. "Bread while rising must not be hept too warm. More bread is spoiled by too much heat than too little. Bread that if eels warm to the band is too warm. The bacteria which cause sourness, and are to the bread bak-er as -weeds are to the gaTdener, grow rapidly in the dough if it is quite warm." The foregoing information in compre hensive form, together with detailed directions for making good and whole some bread, is found in Extension Bul letin Series 8, No. 29, 'Essentials of Bread Making," which may be had by writing the Extension Division, 0. A. C,, Corvallis, Oregon, for a eopy,. worthless. One plantation fanner sowed 350 acres to lespedeza with untested feed, and reports that he secured only a ten per cent germination, resulting in entire loss of time, labor and seed. Activity is greatest in the months of December, January and February, dur ing which time many planters gave a great deal of thought to the selection of -seed. Seed dealers also take a .great deal of interest in seed testing, and one seedsman publishes advice to his cus tomers recommending a frequent resort to the seed testing laboratory. Next to lespedeza the seeds most largely sub mitted for test are riee, eotton, cow peas and velvet beans. WHERE FARMERS PROFIT BY SEED-TESTING WORK. WURING the three years of opera- 0 tion at Baton Rouge, La., the co operative seed testing laboratory doubled the number of samples of seed tested each year. Last year tliere were about 900 tests mado and 90 per cent of them were for individual farmers. This is in marked contrast to the record at the Oregon Agricultural Col lege, where fully 75 per cent of the . tests mado are on samples supplied by seed houses. Farmers have not been so ready to take advantage of the work in Oregon as they are in Louisiana, with the result that there is greater loss due to imperfect seed in this state, There js likewise greater eed of seed testing in Louisiana. The viability of many kinds of seeds is greatly reduced by tho heavy rains and hot weather. Northern grown seeds that keep their vitality well in the north rapidly lose it in tho humid warmth of the south, and after a year alfalfa and clover seed arc generally worthless for plant. Bat little of these crops are grown in the Red River Valley, with the exception of crimson clover, which is grown on sandy lands. Lespedeza, or Japan clover, takes tl o place of clover in rotation, nitrification of soils and forage, and is especially important in diversified farming. The seed is threshed with hulls on, so that it is likely to heat badly and become AGRICULTURAL BULLETINS. THE following bulletins, issued by the Extension Division of the Oregon Agricultural College, have been pub lished since January 1, 1914, and copies may be had by residents of Oregon upon request: Oregon Corn by H. D. Scudder. How to Conduct a Fly Campaign by . F. Wilson. Fruit and Vegetable By-Produets by C. I. Lewis and W. 8. Brown. Feeding Young Chieks by Miss Clara Nixon. Making Babeoek Test and Keeping the Records, by W. A. Barr. Feeding and Care of Dairy Cows by E. B. Fitte. Fowl Tuberculosis by T. D. Beekwith. Septic Tanks and Absorption Systems by T. D. Beekwith and T. A. Teeter. Feeding the Dairy Cow by B. R. Grave. Raising the Dairy Calf by E. B. Frtts. Farm Butter Making by O. G. Simp son. Silo Construction and Silage Feeding by R. R. Grave and W. A. Barr. Improving Oregon Dairy Herds by R. R. Graves and E. B. Fitts. Breeds el Chickens by J. Dryden. Handling the Fruit Crop by C, I. Lewis and W. S. Brown. Growing the Oregon Potato Crop by H. D. Scudder. How and When to Spray the Orchard by H. S. Jackson. In addition to the foregoing list 31 In dustrial Club bulletins have been issued for special use of the members of the Boy' and Girls' Industrial Clubs of Oregon. USE POXBOH BRAN MASH TO CON TROL CUTWORMS. CUTWORMS are menacing various garden truck and lield crops at points throughout the valley. The attack is so general and the cutworms are present in such nui berg that drastic measures seem warranted to prevent the occurrence of an epidemic of the pest. Arsenical sprays some times prove practical, according to A. L. Lovett, in sect specialist at the Agricultural Col lege. The best general treatment for this cutworm is, however, the poison bran mash. This material is prepared as fol lows: ' ' Bran -50 pounds White arsenic or Paris .green 2 pounds Salt 2 pounds Syrup 2 quarts Oil of lemon 2 ounceB Mix these materials thoroughly and add sufficient warm water to make a coarse erumbly mash. Don't get the ma terial sloppy; it should fall apart readily after pressing together in the hand. This material should be sows broad cast over tho field in tho early even ing. About five pounds to an acre is usually sufficient. Cutworms feed on this material in preference to vegeta tion. Some succulent crop, such as hog weeds or alfalfa snraved keavilv with Paris green, then mowed and placed in small heaps about the field is of some value. VALUE OF SILAGE FEED. IfiHE relative value of roots, kale and silage the usual sources of succulence for winter feeding depends upon their composition, com parative feeding values, cost of pro duction, keeping qualities, and conven ience of feeding," savs Professor R. R. Graves, head of the O. A. C. Dairy Department. "The total digestible nntnents in one ton of corn silage is 326 poundR. In a tun of red clover silage the totul is 224 pounds, but the nutritive ratio is 1 to 6.9, while in corn it is 1 to 11. The digestiblo nutrients in a ton of sugar beets is 224 pounds, with a ratio at 1 to 8.5. In rutabagas the total i 186 pounds to the ton, with a ratio the same as that of sugar beets. The di gestible nutrients in a ton -of kale sre but 139 pounds, while the ratio is very narrow 1 to 2.8. It is also true that the nutrients of apple pomace silage are pretty high, about 16 pounds to the ton. Their nntritive ratio is the widest of any of the eommon winter succulents, being 1 to 15.3. "The corn and el over silage contain the greatest percentage of dry matter, while kale and some of the roots con tain 90 per cent water. Ono ton of corn silage contains as much digestible nutrients as a ton and a half of sugar beets, 1.8 tons rutabagas or carrots,; and 2.3 tons of kale." distributed among the few. We have many illustrations of the latter method in European history, and a few cases in America that are right to the point, one of the best of whreh is the success ful struggle of the grain grower of the Middle West with the elevator trust.'' ART IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS. THAT public sentiment in America will demand better and more beau tiful architecture, better planned cities, more refinement in tho furnish ings of homes and more urt in dress and daily surroundings, is the belief of Miss Edna M. Flurida, instructor in art at the .Oregon Agricultural College. It is the purpose of art in the public schools to train the cliild to meet these demands. The child should be taught to know tho needs of our people and tho finest ways of meeting those needs. This is where the appreciation and ap plication of art principles are a vital part of the child's training. Apprecia tion of the beautiful r.t:d finer things in life will make htm happier, broader, more liberal and an inspiration to hia fellow creatures. Thus it is that nrt is for the many and not for the few. AMMONIA rs sons. If HE transformation of nitrogen I ous substances into ammonia in soils is one of the most impor tant phases of the nitrogen cycle in soils," says ProfcBBor T. D. Beekwith, baeteriologist at the Oregon Agricul tural College. "It represents a certain stage in the process of decomposition, and bears a close relation to soil fer tility problems. The chemical reaction, in which ammonia is one of the end products, depends upon many factors. Moisture and temperature of soils, as well as physical and chemical composi tion, play an important part in deter mining the amount of ammonia pro duced. Soils that are well aerated are favorable to ammonificatiou. Lime is of distinct benefit in acid and heavy soils, sweetening and lightening them so that aeration and chemical reaction can proceed. It may be said in general that while ammonificatiou is a neces sary and complicated part of the pre paration of plant food in soil, fortun ately for the farmer it proceeds most readily in those soils that are tn good condition for cultivation, so that is a matter that will regulate itself in soils that are kept in otherwise good condi tion for crop production." BASKETRY EXHIBIT. CO LEARN and to construct articles of basketry, reed and raffia, in a eourse of forty hours, was accom plished by a number of summer school students at the Oregon Agricultural Col lege. A collection of baskets and basketry arts was made by the instruc tor, Miss Heles Cowgill, last Thursday afternoon. Some of the individual ex hibits showed very great progress by the exhibitors, and one member of the class had five well executed nieces of various artistic designs, all prepared in the space of two weeks. LIMITING POWERS OF TRUST. IflfIIE problem for the future is the regulation, sot the destruction, of tho trust," says Dr. Hector; Macphcrson, of the Oregon Agricul tural College. "The question of the statesman who is intelligently solicitous for the welfare of our democracy is -not 'Shall largo combinations exist! ' but rather, 'In what form and under what limitations shall they exist." we want to get rid of the evils of the trust and preserve tho economies of consolidation. One way to uccomplish .this is for tht state, by virtue of its police power, to compel publicity, regulate prices, and control the treatment f workmen. An other method is for the masses to take over the control of indntry and com merce, and distribute the profits among the manv. which have heretofore been 1-1 HITS SCRUB SIRES. HE SCRUB SIRE has done in estimable damage to the quality of Washington livestock. He is a curse to his owner, who is cursed by his neighbors. The pure bred sire that is backed by parents and grandparents of high merit will add quality to the offsprings of your herd." From the foregoing, which was taken from the Washington State College news letter, it is evident that Oregon is not going to be left alone to f igbt the battles for better sires for the dairy breds. Bet ter herds, right feeding, proper manage ment and sanitary products are the things sought by the dairy department of the Oregon Agricultural College. A. H. BURTON Education Igraduated from Southern lllinoi. State Normal, 1901; University of Ulinoie, 1907j University of Oregon Law 3chooL 1912. Experience Teught 6 years :ln eenntr schools, 6 years principal ana s superintend ent, 7 years ia large hick schools; now State Superintendent Via' in g Of Schools fanah0,",I0rt" Principles I furor longer terms for cons try schools, consolidation where practical, better teachers, teachers promoted for merM only, practical conriei, Bute's money most aaanomiullf uesded. Precressln Nominee