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About The Columbia register. (Houlton, Columbia County, Or.) 1904-1906 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1904)
BalT Plynoath Bock. Wnile the Buff Plymouth Hock Is" no better thau the well-known barred. It has proved Itself better than the white ftort, and. as a breed for fanciers, baa become very popular. As a practical fowl, we consider It not aa good as the barred, for with us It has shown some weaknesses that the older strain does not hare. It must not be Inferred, however, that this is likely to be the case with all of them, for ninny breed ers consider them even better than the barred. They are similar In site and form, lay well, are good mothers aud the carcass Is quite like the bar- WWW I X L a aft. V i n i j. . . r- Till BUFF TLTUOUTH SOCK. red. The. breed Is attractive because of . Its genuine Plymouth Rock form and stse and the beautiful plumage. The Marketable Hog. Hogs to be marketable at the high est prices must be largely of a uniform type or at least the types must ap proach In uniformity. The buyers in the great markets of the country carry in their mind's eye the style of the hog they think will make the most sal able pork.' The tendency to gravitate toward one type Is, therefore, marked. The buyer is Inclined to be arbitrary, lie cannot tell why he prefers a cer tain type, but sticks to it that that type Is the kind be wants. This varies also In different markets, both at borne and abroad. The English buyer who has been buying bacon hogs for many years has in his mind a very different type from the type of the man that in the Chicago market has been buying lard hogs all his life. This variable type the raiser of bogs has to consider and it both hinders and helps him in improving his herd. It helps him in improving bis herd. It helps him while his animals are far below that type, but it binders blm as soon as be has reached the type of hog In the mind of the buyer, for be cannot progress beyond it except at loss to himself. This fact has been the greatest obsta cle in the improving of the bone and Atsmlna of hntm mfsfwl In tha Min Knit St Louis Republic. ... Gate that Will Mot Sag-. The accompanying Illustration repre sents a form of farm gate, which Is cheap, durable, easily made, easily op erated and will not sag with years of use. The gate shown in the illustra tion Is 14 feet long, but may be made any reasonable length desired. The top bar is a twenty-four foot stick. The bar Is fastened to the gate post by 3 IS u CHEAP FABlf GATE. means - of a pin on which the gate turns. The box shown on the free end of the top bar is filled with sufficient field stones to almost balance the gate. The frame of the gate consists of a stiff wooden structure strapped and bolted at the corner. On this barbed, plain or common wire is fastened. It is well to drive a ring over the top end of the large gate post to keep it from wearing or splitting, and also to attach an iron plate to the underside of the top bar where It rests on the post Potatoes aa Hoe Feed. Potatoes are quite largely fed to hogs, but it is found advisable to boll them. In the New England States they are fed extensively, being boiled in milk and mixed with meal in a bar rel. Frequently several bushels are boiled at a time, and when mixed with cornmeal make an appetizing mess. The only fault to be found with this combination Is that it Is badly out of balance. The potatoes are rich In starch and so is the corn. To such of our readers as are still following the old practice we would advise the sub stitution of bran or of ground oats for the cornmeal. This would make a fairly well-balanced ration. The Ca nadians say that potatoes have a good effect on the quality of bacon pro duced. There Is probably no better use to which small potatoes may be put than this. Exchange. Chickens that Bat Eggs. A poultry man says: Four years ago' j. uuu, a cwy oi dud: wyanaottes that ate eggs as fast as they laid them, and I was at loss to know what to do, so ; I tried the following experi ment: I went to neighboring baker shop and procured all the egg shells that they could give me and put them in oven, browned them, and had, con stantly, a peck of them In the yard, and I found that It lessened the evil very much, and after killing two lead- era, I had very little trouble. I bars bred buff Bocks fifteen years, and never had any trouble about soft shell ed eggs. I always keep my yards cov ered with a foot of gravel I find that the chicks aa well as old chickens get ill Use substance for eggs from gravel, and for digesting food. The Manure Spreader. This department is uot for the pur pose of advertising tools or Imple ments, and no such article that la sold Is eer mentioned by the manufactur er's name. There are Implements and conveniences, howerer, made by differ ent manufacturers which should find a place on every farm, aud one of them Is the manure-spreader, of which there are several good makes. No one can appreciate the value ot this Implement until he has used It It la not only a labor-saver, but It spreads the manure in any quantity desired, and spreads It evenly. All of Its operations are controlled from the driver's seat The work of manure spreading should be In operation from now on more or less through the win ter, and no farmer can make a better investment than to have this Imple ment It will give him added years of life in the labor it will save him. and euable him to grow better crops. An Improved Lawn Mower. An exchange reports a machine which is a combination of the bicycle and the mowing machine for mowing lawns. They cut a much wider swath than the ordinary lawn mower and do the work much easier. We would like to see one of them In operation. It Is now more work to take care of a few square rods of lawn and keep it neat and clean as it should be, than to care for an acre of grass grown for hay or an acre In some cultivated crops. And yet many people wonder why the far mer does not have an acre or two of lawn around his house. American Cultivator. , Combined Iloeand Rake, In boelug of any kind one generally feels- the need of a rake as well as the hoe, and the little tool here described is a happy combination of both that any one handy with tools can readily construct Select a piece of hard wood eight Inches long, one and one-half Inches thick and three Inches wide. Bore an Inch hole In the center of It Into which to put a handle. Then take six six-Inch spikes or ten-penny nails and drive into this strip at eoual dis tances apart To make the hoe take a portion of an old cross-cut saw blade, or nave the blacksmith fashion a piece of iron for y6u, bend over one edge an Inch so that It may be riveted to the piece of wood.' . -Then fasten the handle In the hole and your tool is ready for use. The illustration plain ly shows how the details are per fected.' Potato GioweiV On t fit. To grow potatoes easily the grower should be supplied with all necessary machinery. In addition to the plow, a spring-tooth harrow, roller and two horse cultivator, with which almost every farmer Is supplied, should b used; it is also essential to have a planter, digger, weeder, smoothing har row, low wagon with platform and a numlier of bushel crates. A four row barrel sprayer is very useful for spray ing potatoes, to prevent blight and to kill bugs, but can be dispensed with and the work done with cheaper ma chinery. Farm Notes. . High and gravelly soil la the best for fruit trees. The farm work should alwavs ba kept in advance of the season. The profitable culture of the soil de pends upon its thoroughness. " The nature of farm life Is, In no small degree, conducive to economy. Good stock will not sustain 'Its ex cellence long if It is not well cared for. Premature cooling of the milk be fore setting will injure the butter yield. A pedigree is simply a certificate of character, and unless It shows a good character it Is of no practical yalue. Fill the vacant places with vouna trees, unless the orchard Is old, then it Is better to plant a new one. Farm life may be made a burden or a pleasure according to the manage ment of the home, the farm and the work. Every farmer should have a few colonies of bees, enough at least to supply the table with pure, fresh honey. Clean up the farm, and its value will be Increased, and when It Is clean. ed and cleared it will cultivate more easily and cheaply. An unfruitful orchard may often be brought Into bearing by a heavy ap plication of good stable manure scat tered broadcast A wet place in a field can often ha drained out with but little trouble nnd expense, but if this Is allowed to go undone will spoil the field and ruin the crops. It is essential that a cow's udder ha entirely freed from milk at each milk ing for if any milk Is left in the nd. der from any cause the secretions are checked and tpe cow will soon go dry if this method of milking beconea a common practice. HASIT COMBINED TOOL. DOINGS OrWOJTN A Pong to ttrave Women. They were married lu the autumn when the leaven were turutug gold, And the nioruiucs bore a weuace of the wlnter's.comiug cold; Side by aide they stood and promised hind la hand to walk through life. And the pawn said, "God bleat you!" They had little wealth to aid them; little or the world they knew; Hut he whispered, "Oh, iny darling, I Then they vowed that, walking ever side by aide and hand lu hand. They would (rain the distant summits ot their far-off, bppy Uuu. Side by side they walked toother, llu- gerinj; wiim-time for a kiss, breaming of thise far-off smuuiits, o( the future' it perfect bliss: But "the b:Utle-.tren wa on them, and the f.H'inau bade them yield. Aud their onward steps were hidden by the smoke upon the field; And his heart grew faint within him, a he murmured. "1 must fall. For the foeuian presses eyer, aud hit cohorts conquer all." But the woman, loyal ever, only whis pered, "lou shall win! Von shall snatch the victor's laurel from the battle-strife and din." Then again he struggled onward, though his wounds were xiiluir wide. Listening ever for a whisuer "I am bat tling by your side." Struggling onward, struggling sver, though the mists were dark about: Beaten downward by the foeracu, lost iu mists of gloom and doubt. Still he heard that getltle whisper that his stunt must obey. Till he reached the golden summits past tne borderland ot jrrav. Then the world, as wise as ever, said. Behold a consuerlna kniuht!" For It never heard the whisper that had urged him to the height Call it fable, fable only; to, the world is ' full of these. Men who struggle onward, upward, till the splendid priie they seise; Men who stumble, stumble often, daied and stricken in the din, But to rise and falter forward at the whisner. "Ton ahull win!" . And we name them knights and heroes of the battle and the fruv. Knowing not that there behind each is the one who showed th wr- - - ... - i - . Just some little loyal woman, forcing back the tears that blur Ton may honor your brave hero;' I wil) sing a song to her. Alfred J.' Waterhouse. In Success. Dainty Lawn 8hlrt Walat. Women in War-Time. Terrible as are the miseries of the battlefield and the hospital, they do not equal the heart-sickening suspense which Is the lot of women in time of war. The pain which must be borne in In action Is of itself paralyzing to the will and to high resolve. A man overboard In mid-ocean, for example,, suffers a fear beside which that of the battle field is a trifle. The bravest of men. alone in the waves, will turn coward. although he may have a life-buoy and practical certainty of rescue. But the heart which fainted at its own' now- erlessness before the great forces of nature 'moving remorselessly on may rise to splendid feats of braverv on the field of battle. To women war must be alwavs llk the untamable sea a succession nf t.n lows, rising each above the other, and each capable of engulfing the world of love and hope in Its bitter. death. Nn woman's hand can stay them. No woman's voice can calm them. And so. on the steppes of Russia and in the villages of Japan to-day. women are praying in strange tongues and with fantastic rites, but with a world. old mingling of cowardice and cour age, or love or country and. hatred of war. tnat tne angei or peace mav sinin fold his wings over the earth. Youth's, Companion. , ; . The Influence at Home, A delegation of young men' lately waited on their employer's wife with lbs oddest request on record. "You I Hec," wild th spokesman, "we want to nave a Hair holiday every Saturday. Now. if you will be tartlculurlT nh to Mr. Jones for a few days, we'll go io mm ami ask " "Gentlemen," the lady haughtily Interrupted, "do you unpiy mat i tio not understand what is du to my husband?" "Oh. I know all about It," the spokesman went on. I m married myself. Things go wrong In the house, nud you're tired and cross at breakfast Tlieu we suffer at the ltlce. Yon stay tip into to chuperono jour daughter at a ball, and we have more trouble at the offlcv. You're a bit cross three mornings lu succession, for one reason or another, aud we have a a terrible time nt the office. You Me bow Ut matter HtniuU, aud how greatly you will oblige us bv. belnir more than usually agreeable to Mr. Jones for throe or four days? The fourth day give hliu the best breakfast you can everything that bo like best -anti we'll get what wo wnnt In three minutes. Talk alwut a woman having no Influence in the business! Why, the iiumor she a in has more effect than a pan failure or a boom in trade." Sh thought she ought to be angry, but. Instead, she laughed, and a creed to the proposition, and four days later, when tney waited on the head of the firm, he made the closing hour 12 o'clock, and said that never In the history of the nrtn naa things run as satisfactorily as they bad the lust four days. All hall to the power behind the throne! Ex change. Mrs. Daniel McCall of Cat Island lighthouse, on the Mississippi coast turned the light for two nights1 bj band because the mechanism was out of order and her husband was lying dead. The richest spinster lu New York City is Mary G. IMnkney. bho is said to have more money than Hetty Green, and certainly more than Helen Gould. The reason her name has never been connected with matrimonial gossip li that she is 87 years old. To paint portraits of American so ciety women, says a writer, is an achievement seldom attained hv an American artist as the graude dnmet or the "500" aristocracy of the land of the free usually insist upos. a foreign signature to their pictures. The custom of marrying girls wheb they are mere children of 9 or 10 yean U Increasing rather than decreasing in Bengal and otber parts of India. The resulting racial degeneration is becom ing bo obvious that laws have' been passed in several regions forbidding tbe marriage of girls under 14. English women, according to MIsa Anthony, are well informed on politics, and talk of it and indeed of most sub jects of general interest much more than do American women. The same holds true of Scottish and Irish wom en. Miss Anthony also reports that "we found the German woman very responsive.".. Health and Beauty Hinted Plenty of fresh air in our living rooms,. lu our public conveyances, In our bedchambers, our schools and out churches would insure us longer lives and more Joy in living. A harmless, inexpensive and yet ben eficial powder for profuse perspiration Is made from two ounces of corn starch with one dram each of boraclc odd, alum and salicylic acid. Dust this over tbe skin immediately after bath ing. That Americans as a general thing suffer from living in overheated rooms must be conceded, and perhaps we should be hardier, less liable to colds and maladies which follow In their wake if we believed more firmly in the beneficent effect of open windows. Many cures for nerves are advised and advertlned, but the greatest of these is common sense. How shall wo manage not to be nervous? Bv proper living, proper working and play, ing, entlng, drinking and sleeping; above all, proper thinking andvfeellng. A satisfactory skin food that will not Induce hair to grow on the fane ia witch hazel cream made by heating once ounce each ot white wax, sper maceti, lanolin and witch hazel toireth er, then adding three ounces of, almond oil ana rosewater with one dram of tincture of benzoin. The teeth should be rinsed 'attar each meal, aiid for this purpose there is nothing pleasanter than a month wash of peppermint water. This per fumes the breath and is very refresh ing. Tour a little of the essen f peppermint in a glass of water arid rinse the mouth and throat with it ' Was It Yon? Somebody did a golden deed; ' Somebody proved a friend In need; Somebody sang a" beautiful song; Somebody smiled the whole day long; Somebody thought, "'Tis sweet to Mve;" Somebody said, "I'm glad to give;", j Somebody fought a valiant fight,' . Somebody lived to shield, the right! -. Was that somebodv vou? B. Vinton Francis. f4-H--M-T-r-W-f"f-l T -Q: The Re mora trot Cakea. A little boy named Thomas ats Hot buckwheat rakes for tea A very rash proceeding, as We presently shall see. He went to beil at eight o'clock, Aa all good children do, But scarce had closed bis llrtlt eyes. When he moat reitltws grew. He Topped on this aide, then on tha. Then keeled niton his head, And covered all at once each spot Of hia wee trundle-bed. lie wrapped one rg around hia walat. And (other round hia ear, While mamma woudxrod what on earth Could ail her little dear. But sound he alept, and as he slept Me dreamt an awful dream Of being spanked with hickory slabs Without thtt puwrr to scream. He dreamt great big lion came, And rlppd md raved and roared. While on his brenst two furious bulls lu mortal combat gored. He dreamt he herd the flop of wings Within the ehJmney-flae, And down there crawled, to gnaw hii ears. An awful butnbon! When Thomas rose next morn, his face Was palled as a sheet: "I never more," he firmly said. in eaups mr supper eat!" Eugene Field. wtt calling om Vi doov Little there's 1W Tooth. OruiVi ? wtnt To acrut The. $loovr S Jolly Evening Games. ' A number of Jolly evening games can be played with ordinary pins, one 5-cent papei of which will supply the foundation for an evening's entertain ment A Paper-Spearing ContestTear or cut clean scrap paper into Inch squares and pile them on a pasteboard box lid. There should be several handfuls, enough to make a good-sized bean. Place tbe box lid In the center of the table at which the game Is to bo played and give each player a pin. Tho fun consists in seeing who In the fif teen minutes allotted to the game can spear tbe most pieces with his pin. By the rules of the game only one piece of paper may be taken on the pin at one time. If two are captured by mistake, both must be returned to the pile. . ' A small prize may be given to the boy or girl having the most squares when the game Is at an end. Pins and Marbles Each boy or girl receives three pins, which are stuck upright In tbe carpet Marbles are then used to bowl over the pins. Nat-' urally, there must be a prearranged place for the pins to be stuck add for tbe bowler to stand, In order that ev erybody shall have an equal chance. If more than one boy or girl should succeed In downing all three pins in the three bowls allowed by the rules, the successful players can have "rub ber" games together until one or the other becomes champion. True Education of Boya, A philosopher has said that true ed ucation of boys Is to "teach them what they ought to know when they become men." First To be true and to be genuine. No education is worth anything that does not include this. , A man had better not know how to read and be true and genuine In action rather than to be learned In all sciences and in all languages and be at the same time false in heart and counterfeit In life. Above all things, teach the boys that truth is .more than riches, power or possessions. , . .Second To be pure In thought, lan guage and life pure In mind . and body, Third To bo unselfish, to care for the feelings and comforts of others, to be generous, noble and manly This will, include a genuine reverence for the aged and for things sacred, ; Fourth To be self-reliant and self- mm helpful even from childhood, to be in LITTLE STORIES AND INCIDENTS t That NU11 Interest and Entertain Young Readers, hrrMMMHHh4 dustrious always and self-supporting at the earliest, possible age. Teach them that all honest work Is honor, able; that an Idle life of dependence on others is disgraceful. When a boy bus learned these things, when he has made these Idea part o( him, however poor or bow. ever rich, be has learned the most Im portant things be ought to know. KImer Was Witling. Little Klmer bad a habit of leaving the crust of bis pie, and one day bis mother said: "Kluirr, you should not waste your pie crust. There aro hun dreds of poor little boys who would be glad to get It." "All right, mamma; let them bnve It" replied the 'charitable youngatcr. From the Dead tetter OflU-e. ''Oh, iiiamiun!" exclaimed little Mar gie, who bad met the postman at the door, "here's a letter from the dead let. ter office!" "How do you know, dear?" asked her mother. " 'Cause it's got a black border on It" replied the small observer. Johnujr Had a Way. "Elsie," said small Johnny to his lit tle sister, who was running the scale, "If you'll give mo half your candy I'll fix the piano so you won't have to practice any for two weeks.'" A Popular Abbreviation, "What is 'don't' the abbreviation of?" asked the teacher. ."Doughnut." promptly replied the small boy at the foot of tho class. Clerical Hill of Fare. "We bad tho minister for dinner last Sunday," said little Harry. "Huh, that's nothing," rejoined small Fred. "We had a turkey." 80ME POINTS ON HUMIDITY, Weather Kipcrt Ksplalna How Mole ture AtTecU the Temperature, While It has been the aim of the of ficials of the weather bureau to get the best possible Instruments for reg istering the temperature aud maktug the predictions of "weather present and to come," it Is said tio thermoin cter Is perfect and that uo two ther mometers register exactly alike. This is the reason given by weather bureau officials for the difference iu temperature noted at the weather bu reau and that registered by thermome ters in the possession of private citi zens. According to Professor Garrlolt neither the weather bureau nor Its of ficial thermometer is, as many sup pose, any muterlal height above the city. The thermometer, according. to Irofessor Garrlott Is probably forty feet higher than those on the city strets, but this, it is said, Is not great enough to affect the mercury to any noticeable degree. Professor Garriojt says that the question of "humidity" Is one which frequently agitates tbe mind of peo ple during the summer, but that It is so technical in its nature that hardly one person In ten understands what it all means when an authority disser tates on the subject For this reason little Is given out officially at the weather bureau, it la dlsposod to confine itself to the mere statement of temperature. After a rain in summer time, when every one, is declaiming abqjit the stickiness of the atmosphere, it is be cause tbe air retains all the moisture It has absorbed and there is no means of cooling the atmosphere. On the con trary, when it is dry the hent may be greater, but the moisture is evaporated, and In that process the air Is renllv cooled. It Is on the same principle. rroressor Garrlott said, as the cooling air of tbe morning, when tho dew from the grass evaporates and materially coois me air. It Is not therefore, the purpose of the weather bureau to attemnt tnmntr plain to the general public the question of humidity. Professor Garrlott says It is a thing which must be studied. thoroughly in order to be understood. Washington Star. - . India's Great Cltlea. Bombay la the second city in nonnu. tloa in India, Calcutta standing first on the list with 1,350,000 people, and, if you will take your map for a moment you will see that the two cities He In almost the same latitude, one 'on each skle of the peninsula called India Bombay at the, top of the Arabian Sea and Calcutta at the top of the Bay of Bengal. By tbe census of 1891. Bom bay had 821,704 population. By the census of.. 1001, the, total was 770,006, the decrease pf 45,758 being attributed to the mortality by .the plague In lfloo and 1001. It 1 the most enterprising, the most modern, the most active, the richest and the most prosperous city in (ndla. More than 00 per cent of trav elers who enter and leave the country pass over the docks, and more than half the foreign commerce of the coun try goes through Its custom house. ThA reason A widower fnrcra .. 'Bv.ia ouuuer than a widow is that the latter has to ji i . i i i wan un a man nunis ner up, and tells her It is time wasted to remember. , - It sometimes happens that a woiran never forgives a man for letting her marry blm. .'.:....-, 4