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About Tillamook headlight. (Tillamook, Or.) 1888-1934 | View Entire Issue (July 5, 1906)
TO BREED UP A DISEASE. Efforts of the Government to Start a Plague Among Destructive Varmints. GUY ELLIOTT MITCHELL Did you ever see a rat or mouse or wild rabbit sick from what might be termed natural causes? Any one who can contribute such an animal to the Department of Agriculture may unwittingly confer a benefit of mil lions of dollars annually on tills country. What the Department wants Is a fatal and contagious malady, which it is working hard to get now, but up to date the work Is merely promising, there having been no satis factory result to record. So If any one has a hutch of rabbits swept oft by a sudden and mysterious disease, or If he notices any swift and sudden mortality among the rats and mice in his locality, that may be the very thing the Department is looking for, be bought by the pound and spread on bread. The contagious quality has not developed yet in any of the foreign cultures tried. THE RABBIT I’EST. The biological survey has been able to do a good deal in a practical way with the rabbit pest. Some time ago the forest service set up a howl of in dignation. It had planted some hun dred thousand young trees, nursery stock, in one of the California forest reserves, and the rabbits ate them up in about a week. Then it seeded several hundred acres with white pine to restore the land after a fire, and the rabbits cheerfully set to work, dug up all the seeds aud ate them. But PRAIRIE DOGS. One of the Pests of the West. 'slents should be forth- to Secretary Wilson, to get it. Jery one knows that the <>in is a serious one In of the West, and tlie rab- tiifneW.108 8t Uraes threatened to „ u ’ Australia. and even Call- > vitals ’¿together the small unlnials ve sliowi. a,moun‘ of damage, but •e, and It “ot realize what its Yet in one cou..- o must lo‘all> 'aiulng y< tate of Washlngton last ... .v <■<> i„ mice destroyed at least mnn ’on dollars worth of prop- ire ansa? Iu t,ie 8ame tlme wo,ve* ■He alone mulcted the ztock- l, .’.l.OOO.OtX» worth of cattle, ,,,,1,1,.- “damage from Held mice, and „..’.ttle "varmints” throughout l>e ln‘e^ Stotes, especially In the n ¿..»nd South, amounted to mnny “ns. , TASK OF THE SCIENTISTS. To cope with these pests Is one of le most Interesting tasks of the ' , £gg Farms of California. By T. F. McGREW. and 'other necessities Is not so high as in the colder parts of the country, as much of it is usually produced near at hand. AU of these things combine to make the regions of Southern California most attractive to poultry growers, who may be seeking a softer climate to lessen the aggravation which the rigors of winter heap upon some member of the family. Many have gone there seeking a place merely to benefit their health, and have been much improved by so doing; but they have also been able to make a living for themselves and their families through the com bination above described. ALL CANNOT SUCCEED. All do not succeed. This can not be In any following of life. Those who do succeed usually have more or less experience in the business before they embark upon it. The failures come to the inexperienced, and those who are unable to contend with the diffi culties always confronting one in the upbuilding of a new home In any lo cality. What are known in the San Fran cisco market as “range” eggs, the Nt v York market designates as "fresh-laid” eggs. Ranch eggs of California are tlie fresh-laid eggs that are brought direct to the market and sold as such. During November and December last this quality of eggs sold in the mar kets of San Francisco as high as fifty- one cents a dozen, and as low as thirty cents, influenced, no doubt, by tlie s ip- ply and demand, governing this pro duct in every locality. Eggs sold in Chicago during tlie year of 1905 as low as fifteen cents. In San Francisco the lowest price quoted for the year was fourteen the -------- lesser expense of ------ ----- . cents. When caring for them is considered, the ad vantages or profit from poultry grow ing should be fully equal to, if not bet ter than would be the same pursuit in Illinois. Many years ago I assisted a friend in the loading of a car of poultry for California. This car was shipped from Central Ohio, and the fowls contained therein were very well selected from flocks of desirable varieties. The owner of this car crossed the conti nent in care of bis birds and settled in Central California. Reports from there a few years later told a direful story of the impossibility of success in poultry-growing In California. It is unnecessary to relate the many troubles experienced, except to say that the amateur in poultry at that time imagined that the birds would live and prosper in the California cli mate without proper shelter within houses during the cold, damp weather. A close study of these conditions has entirely eliminated all these mis takes, and to-day there is no place In tlie United States where there is an enthusiasm equal to that found throughout California with reference to this Industry. The construction of proper houses, the selecting of proper breeds and the proper cariDg for them has built up an enormous egg business through that section of tlie country. In the neighborhood of Petaluma, more Leghorn fowls are probably kept for producing the white-shelled egg.-> for the California city markets than BUSINESS METHODS IN FARMING can lie found within the same number of miles in any other place in the Successful Kansas Farmer Who Has world. One enthusiastic visitor to that Kept Trace of Receipts and Ex locality lias made the statement that penditures for Twenty Years. every acre In the fifty thousand acres the Kansas City Journal of the suc visited contained a hundred Leghorns. cess of A. L. Hollinger, a well-to-do Tlie climate of Southern California, Kansas farmer who opened a set of tlie beauties of the scenery, the pleas books he began farming twenty ure of fruit cultivation and the profit years when and who has kept his ac able growing of poultry have attracted counts ago as accurately as a bank does many hundreds to that section to em Its. The other day he struck a trial bark In these pursuits under pleasant balance and found himself $50,000 to conditions. good. He has now retired from A Mr. Brownlow who purchased a the the farm and will make a tour of few acres of ground in that locality America. ten years ago has built up for himself, The compilation of his long record with the assistance of his wife and with 1886 shows the total children, a most profitable combination beginning figures given as follows: He has of poultry, fruit, bees and squabs, all raised acres of wheat, a yearly of which thrive continually under the average 5,265 of over 263 acres, and on softer climates of that locality, ena that area has raised 98,791 bushels, or bling these people to produce broilers an average per acre for twenty years every month with a minimum amount of 18% bushels. During all the two of care and attention, the fruit and decades never had an entire failureof bees being a remarkable source of wheat, he although an average of 1% profit during the greater part of the bushels an acre in 1895 came very near year. to it PROTECTION AGAINST DAMP His corn record Is equally interest IMPORTANT. ing. He has raised 2,846 acres of The buildings used for poultry in corn, a yearly average of 142 acres. these localities need not be so expen The total number of bushels was 72,- sive in construction as is necessary In 672, or an average per acre for twenty that portion of the country visited years of 25% bushels. The corn the biologists were loaded for rabbit, to speak, and they furnished the forest people with a harmless wash to soak their pine nuts in before plant ing, and with a cheap dip for the nursery stock which a self-respecting rabbit will no more nibble than will an ordinary human being smell auto mobile odor for a perfume. In tills tlie biologists confessedly took a leaf out of the book of the Flute and other desert-dwelling In dians. The Flutes have been caching food supplies of pine and pinion nuts in tlie desert for hundreds of years and they found thnt the rabbits, the ground squirrels and prairie dogs would clean out their cache. But they found by experience that there was a little desert weed that the ground animals disliked excessively and that anything dipped In a tea steeped from the bark of the weed was rabbit-proof for a long time thereafter. So tlie rabbits were checkmated on that play and tlie forest officers have no more trouble from that quarter. FL AG I E OF THE WOLVES. But It Is the very presence of the forest reserves that lias bred the present plague of timber wolves in tlie West. No hunting is allowed in the reserves and they form nurseries for game of all sorts. But it seems that they breed wolves quite as fast as they breed anything else, of which fact the cattle raisers have been made painfully aware. In the days of the buffalo on the plains, thousands of wolves lived on the herds. When the buffalo were killed off the wolves disappeared also, till there was not one where there used to be a thousand. Then the cattle men began to stock the ranges, and the wolves found conditions much the same as In the buffalo days. They promptly multiplied and Increased till they are now doing an immense amount of damage, aided largely by their asylum In the forest reserves. THE SCOURGE OF THE CATTLE COUNTRY. The biological survey has sent out Mr. Vernon Bailey, one of Its best feeding the fowls; and the facility men, to study tlie wolf problem, and with zero weather during the winter he has been skeelng aud snowshoeing months. Protei’tlon from rain, damp through Wyoming and Montana while and vermin is the most necessary ad the snow was on the ground anil the junct to a properly constructed lioultry wolves were particularly easy to track bouse when the [sjultry can not run and study. He has not done any nt large and range over the land. shooting, but Is trying the effects of There is no month in the year in which IMiisons and traps. But the wolves are they can not tlnd more or less animal about as cunning as foxes, and after and vegetable life for food upon the you have trapped and poisoned a few range. This 12 months of food supply in a given district the rest grow wary | reduces the espouse very materially in bo AN OUT OF DOOR BROODER AND FLOCK OF YOUNG WHITE LEGHORNS. and the poisons and traps are rele gated to seat 23. The wolves get so crafty that they will not swallow a piece of meat without mouthing It, and if they get the bitter taste of strychnine or arsenic they drop It and look for something else to eat Whether or not the survey will be able to kill them off with some contagious disease is a question, but thev are rapidly becoming as great a pest and far more dangerous than the smaller "varmints." with which sqnab breeders can fly their birds at large. continually ndda vigor anti strength to the breeding stock, which naturally assists In the quick growth and site obtained In the squabs. The quotation of eggs, dressed poultry and squabs In the California market, while not the equal of the New York and Boston markets, will grade well In value with the average markets of our larger Inland cities. The expense of living as to food averaged for the twenty years 25% bushels per acre. In all these figures the number of acres sown Is given aad the number of bushels harvested. “During the twenty years,” said Mr. Hollinger, “I have aimed to carry enough cattle to use up the rough ness and the corn raised on the farm, usually from 100 to 460 head. Of late years I have paid more attention to cattle and alfalfa, and have found that it was a far more reliable com bination than purely grain farming In which I was chiefly engaged in the earlier time of my experience. There is no question but that any Intelligent farmer can make a competency, and support bis family in abundant com fort in central Kansas. I have done no more than any of my neighbors did or might have done. Kich yerr the same income approximately can be se cured if the work is carefully planned and such cropsare raised as areadapteil to Kansas soil and Kansas climate.” As an example of Mr. Hollinger’s stock raising it may be mentioned that lie came to Kansas City recently with $9,500 worth of stock which he sold off his farm. He has lived on the same place for thirty-three years and is not leaving Kansas because he is entirely satisfled with his wealth but because be wants to give his family a broader education and to secure recreation for himself. “I think I have enough to keep me from want,” he said, “and I am entitled to get some thing more out of life than I have heretofore done.” WANTED: Amateur photographs art and advertising subjects. Mail pr with postage for return If not acct* pte K. Lawrence Company, 274 Wabash . I IL_______________________ __________ GREAT BEAR COUNTRY. Representative Bede of Minnesota Tells the President About Big Game Hunting in Duluth. How It happened that the war cor respondents at Washington found out about J. Adam Bede’s conference on bears with President Roosevelt does not appear. However, a full report of the Minnesota Congressman’s tales has been made, and was made public in the New York Evening Post. It makes an alluring document. Mr. Bede, who is the acknowledged wit of the House, sought the President with the friendliest intention. "You like to shoot bears," said "Jadam,” diplo matically. Mr. Roosevelt admitted it. “But you don’t have to go into the wild West for your sport,” went on the Minnesota statesman. “Think of this fact: thirteen bears were shot in the streets of Duluth last year—in Du luth, the pride of the Northwest, that beautiful city on the great unsalted sea.” The statement had a perceptible effect on the President, and Mr. Bede was encouraged to go on. “It’s the only place in the whole world, Mr. President, where you can go bear hunting by trolley car, under the elec tric light, and on asphalt pavements. We have all the conveniences so dear to the heart of the true sportsman, and without leaving your hunting ground you can walk across the street to the mall box and drop in a postal card to your friends, telling them all about the game you have bagged." With the Congressman was a Duluth constituent, a lady with first-hand knowledge of bear hunting in that city. She added her corroborative statement: “Oh, yes, Mr. President, a short time ago a friend of mine heard a noise outside his window, and on looking out saw that it was a bear try ing to climb a telegraph pole. He shot that fellow without leaving his bed room.” Then, to the joy of the Presi dent, Mr. Bede took up the tale: “Why, bears are common things with us up in Minnesota, Mr. President. Last year five bears held up one of our trolley cars. They were two old ones and three cubs. This occured right In the streets of Duluth. The big fellow got in front of the car and put his paws on the dashboard, driving the motor man off. while mamma and the cubs went around after the conductor. After they had had enough of this sport th ey raised the siege and trotted off toward the outskirts of the city. Oh, no, we don’t let the bears trouble us much. When they get too bothersome we turn them over to the police, who drive them out of town; -but it’s a great bear country up there, and I’m sure you would like to see a bit of it.” Now, If it is announced that President Roose velt means to take a vacation up In the Minnesota woods, the correspond ents may go straight to Duluth, where, as Mr. Bede is a true prophet, the great bear slayer may be found sitting in the door of an up-to-date hotel, a rifle across his knees, waiting for the promised sport. JO ACRE TRACTS CHOICE8T fruit and farm land (on the Gulf Coast Highlands tn Alabama) for 860 cash and 45 monthly Instalments of 810 each (in. «per cent). Crops pay 875 to 8250 an acre a year. Remark ably healthful. Send for booklet. Irvington Lana Co.. 184 La Salle St., Chicago, 11L CALIFORNIA COLONIZATION LANDS. Tracts of 2000 to 20,000 acres ; low prices ; easy terms: level, rich, alluvial soil ; abundance of water ; best climate on earth. U. L. Dike Investment Co. 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Se nd for sample book of uniform flannels and 1906 Athletic Catalogue. Charges prepaid to any point In the U. S. Established 1826. william Read & Sons, Boston. Mass. BEES, HONEY, BEE SUPPLIES. All races bora gueens, full line supplies. Everything for the bee- eeper, books, magazine. Also fine honey. Write for catalog stating which you want. A. I. Root Co. Medina, Onio, n TY. City, Philadelphia, Chicago. 81000 FOR 81 Accident Policy paying 85 weekly. 10U0 death benefit. 8260,000 deposited with N. Y. In, ommissioner for protection. Send 81 for Policy. Good Agents earn 830 a week. N. Y. Registry Co., 1181 Broadway, New York. 8