Image provided by: Multnomah County Library; Portland, OR
About Gresham outlook. (Gresham, Multnomah County, Or.) 1911-1991 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 28, 1914)
•- \ 3 M C HOME AND FA RM M AGAZINE STRETTOI Home and Farm Magazine Section Editorial Page Suggestions From Our Associate Editors, Allowing For an Interchange of Views, W ritten by Men of Experience on Topics W ith Which They Are Fully Acquainted—Hints Along Lines of Progressive Farm Thought. ♦ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 TO ADVERTISERS. <?> Advertiser» in this local- <?> ity who wish to fully cover 0 all sections of Oregon and 0 Washington and a portion 0 ot Idaho will apply to local 0 publishers for rates. <$■ General advertisers may <;> address C. L. Burton, Ad- & vertising Manager of Farm 0 Magazine Co., Publishers <$> Oregon - Washington - Idaho 0 Fanner, 411 Panama Build- 0 ing, Portland, Oregon, for 0 rates and information. <& The publishers will accept 0 business from no advertiser 0 whose reliability can be ques- 0 tioned. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 <§> 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 A WOMAN HOMESTEADER. BOUT two years ago Mrs. Mary M. Younger, a widow, came west to grow up with, the country. She filed on a homestead in Wyoming, and, relying upon her industry, she has shown what a .Western woman of pluck and experi ence can do. Mrs. Younger broke 24 acres. Disc ing the ground, she planted oats. Her wheat averaged 18 bushels to the acre on sod, but her oats were a failure because of bad seed. She also planted five acres of alfalfa. Prom half an acre of rutabagas Mrs. Younger harvested two tons. Half an acre in cabbages yielded ’ 1500 pounds. In her garden she raised turnips, onions, carrots and sunflowers. She had plenty of to matoes for her table and to can for winter use. Her chickens are thriv ing and healthy. One hundred hens are laying. She raised most of her own feed for stock, getting 15 bush els of corn an aero from newly broken sod. Mrs. Younger was in danger of becoming a factor in tho unemploy ment problem, for her needs were greater than wages could supply. She came west, but she did not stop in the cities. She was a woman, and therefor© she wished to bo inde pendent. She is prospering because of intelligence and hard work. She is not a member of the army of the unemployed. What Mrs. Younger has dono in Wyoming can be done in Oregon and Washington. It is being done in this etate. Why is it that some men con Btantly permit women to outshine them in initiative and industry! A ------>------ GLAD HE BROKE AWAY FROM THE CITY. ISTEN to the story of Boland W. Day, who describes how he worked at a trade in the city without getting ahead and how ho and his wife decided finally to make the break and go to the country. He has made a success in the country and writes in part, as follows, about his enthusiasm for tbe new life that he is enjoying: “ What would I be doing if I were in the city working at my trade to day with two feet of snow on the level! Sitting by the fire just the same as I am doing now, only I am making dollars today where there I would bo spending them. Would my wife go back to the city and live! Well, I think this is answer enough. Why should we, when we are happier than we ever were before and are both young and have tbe best part of our lives yet before us. “ This same opportunity is awaiting all such young men and women who are not afraid to get out and work and take advantage of a helping hand when it is offeree and work on a little borrowed capital so long as they can see their way clear. “ There is one point that I must say, that I can stop my team in tbe field, or any other place, and light my pipe, and I never could do that working for a boss in the city. “ There is one great thing that my wife and I are aiming for now, more than anything else, and that is, that when our five-year lease is up on this farm we shall be able to move upon our own.” L WHY FARMERS SHOULD ADVER TISE IN THE NEWSPAPERS. RECENT issue of Farm and Fireside, the national farm paper published at Springfield, Ohio, J. M. Taylor writes a valuable and interesting article telling farm ers how to get to the market with their goods. Mr. Taylor goes on, as follows, to show how farmers can use the newspapers: “ Tho cities are full of people who want to buy their goods direct, the country is full of farmers who would gladly sell direct for the sake of the additional profits to be gained by that mode of selling. All that re mains is for them to get together. “ There is no need of an extensive advertising campaign. All that is necessary is a small display adver tisement in the newspapers of the nearest large city. And in writing the ad the farmer should not be bashful about having his name easily seen. Let him advertise Sm ith’s po tatoes, or Sm ith’s cabbages, or what ever Smith has to sell. Do it in a manner that will leave the impres sion that Smith is proud of his cab bages, that he knows them to be up to standard and that he personally stands back of them. People will more readily buy of a man when he stamps bis name on his goods in a manner which shows that he is not afraid to bo known as their sponsor. Furthermore, it is good business, for if people buy Sm ith’s cabbages this year and find them good they will clamor for Sm ith’s cabbages next year and be satisfied with no others. ” A BUMPER CROPS. IFTY SIX million dollars is what it is estimated tho railroads of this country will get for moving the record breaking wheat crop. It is impossible for any one to get a full idea of these staggering fig ures. The only object in quoting the estimate is to show why “ big crops” and “ prosperity” are words that go together. Great as it is, tho wheat crop is not everything this year. From near ly every section of the country comes news of bumper yields of nearly all crops. But moving the wheat is the big job right now. This means get ting it from tho thresher and dis tributing it for storage and for mill ing. It takes brains as well as money to do this. It takes the farm er, the banker, the miller, tho ex port man, and, of course, the railroad man. Somebody must pay for this vast yield—and here is another place where prosperity comes in. Good markets join the big crops in making it complete. Millions of bushels of wheat will be made into bread for immediate consumption. Other millions will be kept for seed. The rest will become a potent force in business affairs of the country and the world. It is the game with the other big crops. Without modern invention, the reapers and the binders, it would not have been possible for the United States to produce the greatest wheat crop in the history of the land. ---------0 --------- DENATURED ALCOHOL. F WE COULD utilise the products of the farm to their utmost there would be greater profit iu farm ing. With the price of gasoline go ing higher because of such universal use for autos and gas engines it would mean much to the farmers and users of engines to have a market for those products that could be converted into alcohol. Hundreds of tons of fruit go to waste every year because they are not marketable, and the potato mar ket is easily overstocked. Many pro ducts contain alcohol that should be distilled for mechanical purposes. But why isn ’t it! We have a de natured alcohol law, but the farm ers are still lettmg stuff go to waste instead of trying to make it into alcohol. The reason why is because the denatured alcohol law was not made F I for farmers. The law m Lae the ship building law—made for and by the very interests that would be hurt by a real good law. Farmers cannot make their potatoes and fruit into alcohol under the present iaw, hence there is no means of trans forming these waste products into a marketable product the world so much needs at this time. There are probably enough waste, or practically waste, products on the farms to make into alcohol that would largely furnish heat, light and power, at least all the farm needs, and that would save gasoline for city needs. But until the law is changed there will be no attempt made to conserve this great by- produtc of farming. It might bo well for the farmers to ask their congressmen and sena tors to help fix up a iaw that would be workable to tho advantage of the farmers. ASK FOR INFORMATION. ERBERT QUTCK, editor of Farm and Fireside, says that we citi zens pay our scientists and ex perts, but that few of us use them as we might. There is not a worm, a bug, a blight, a disease, or a prob lem of the soil which is not studied by these hired men of ours and about which they are not anxious to tell us. Mr. Quick goes on in part, as follows: “ At the United States Depart ment of Agriculture in Washington almost any question will be answered by experts free of charge. In such cases not even a stamp is required for reply. They will examine dis eased plants and tell what the rem edy is, if there is one. Some one has said that tho way to tell a toadstool from a mushroom is to eat it—if you die i t ’s a toadstool—but these experts will save you the trou ble of dying, and tell you in case of doubt, if you will send them the specimen. “ The number of things an obser vant farmer—especially a young one —wants to know is simply illimit able. And he can be sure that if there is an answer it will bo sent him. The country teacher who wants to ruralize her rural sehool might well ask for these problems to be brought to tho school and sent thenco to the experts. Such a policy will do much to bring the govern ment closer to the farms, and - to make the pupils feel that it is really their government.” H these associations, which are virtual ly farmers’ land banks. “ The plan is extremely well de veloped, is now twenty years old, and, in Mr. Haymaker’s opinion, needs leadership more than any legim latiou. * ’ ---------J>--------- FARMERS CAN CHOOSE THEE» NEIGHBORS. FARMER is about the only man who can keep at a distance from uncongenial neighbors tf he chooses. On general business prin ciples it is bad policy to sell the cen> ter or even a large corner out of a farm for any purpose or for any figure very much less than the total value of the farm. If the partiea who wish tho land seem desirably give them a long lease that does not grant the privilege of subletting. The smaller the piece of land to be di vided tho more rigidly the foregoing remarks apply. Owners of large tracts, on the other hand, can ad vantageously sell of slices to indus trious farmers to mutual advantage. But no neighbors at all are betttff than undesirable ones. ---------0--------- NEVER DISAPPOINT CUSTOMER. FARMER who plans selling some of his produce by mean* of the parrel post must start out with one thing firm in his min^ and that is not to disappoint a cus tomer, either in delivery or in tbe quality of his goods. The farmer must remember he is competing with the corner grocer and the huckster in the city whose wares the house* wife may inspeet when she buys. Buying “ sight unseen” by mail it will take but one or two shipments of inferior vegetables, fruit or pro ducts of the poultry yard to drive the buyer back to the old source uf supply. A A “ EV ER A SOHO SO M E W H E R E ” T here is ever a song some w here, my drnut T here is ever a som ething th at tin g s ai* w ay; T h ere’s the song of tbe lark w hw en the akiea are clear. And the i o n | of the thrush whwen the sk ies are gray; The sunshine show ers across th e grain. And the bluebird tr ills in the orchmA tree; And in and out, when the e a res drip r a l^ The sw allow s are tw itterin g c easelessly. T here ia ever a ton g som ewhere, ray dear. Be the akies s h o r e dark or fair; There ia erer a song that oar hearts map hear— There is erer a lo n g som ewhere, my deas*-e T here is aver a song som ew here! PLANTS AS EMIGRANTS. T IS often hard to account for the There is ever a song som ew here, my dear. way in which plants spread from In the m idnight blaek or tha mid day b lu e , ono country to another, and yet The robin pipes when the sun is here, no such emigration has taken place And th e crick et chirrups the w hole nigfcl but the botanists have been able to th ro u g h ; advance some theory to account for The buds may blow and tha fru it may grow. it. In the early seventies of the last And the autumn learee drop crisp and century the scientists in Franco were •ere; puzzled by finding that many new Rut w hether the sun or the rain or the snow. T here is ever a rong som ewhere, my doac. plants hitherto unknown in that JA M E S W HITCOM B RLLZT. country had mysteriously sprung up. In the summer of 1872 noted botan- THE W IN D IN O LAKE ,j‘s went carefully to work to find The wood lig h t grow s more m ellow dim, the cause of this strange emigration, T^ie lea res denoe happily, and hey succeeded admirably. They The russet path glow s deeper hued found no fewei than two hundred To greet her w orthily. plants natural ta Germany and tho And all tha birds in chorus sw eet Ring, rapturous, insane. countries south of her, these plants When la ssie comes to meet nse were mostly of the grass, pea and Adewn the w ind ing lane. bean families and were found only in the territory occupied by the Ger S h e 's sw eet s s little roses are. mans in tbe siege of Paris. This is As qnaint as m ignonette. a good example of t,ie strange way And shy as m odest penny buds. in which plants travel from place to W ith show er jew els set. S h e 's H appiness I And from this world place. ■» I ’ve nothing more to gam When laaaie c o m e s to meet me WHERE OHIO FARMERS BOR Adown the w inding le a st ROWED »12,000,000. V. HAYMAKER of Defiance Thus earth would he a kin dlier p leo^ If every man eould know a county, Ohio, whose rural cred Tha fragrance of a shady path it plan for farmers was din- W here cool, green eras see grow. etissed recently in Farm and Fire W here, when tbe sunset hour r a ise bp. side, has been continuing his investi And life w as sw eet and anne. gations as to facts, and in a recent H is tin g in g la ssie terned th e stile issue of Farm and Fireside the fol Adown th e w inding lane. lowing results are recorded: •— E thel H allett Porter, in Ju ly LippM “ In tbe State of Ohio over twelve coU 'a. million dollars are now out on loan Those who think farming is ill fn to farmers from building and loss associations. Thia is over sixteen per should give it n trial. It taken brainy energy and business judgment U eent of all tho farm loana in tho a •ueeeaa ua auy ia«ia. M U , Only six couut.ee do not hava I K