2 HOME AND FARM MAGAZINE SECTION Oregon Agricultural College is the Friend of the Farmer Page of News Notes and Interesting Articles Written by College Experts. TREATMENT FOR SMUT. OREGON farmers annually lose muny thousands of dollars from smut in their grain crops. Thiis Bmut, according to Professor H. D Scudder of the Agricultural Collego greatly lowers the market value of wheat and also rapidly increases In amount from a very Bmall begin ning. Thus it becomes of the great est importance that the funner in sure his crop against the ravages of Brant by some effective treatment. Fortunaloly these treatments are simple and relatively inexpensive. For the stinking or covered smut the seed wheat la fanned and a day or ho prior to Beedlng time is given either the formaldehyde or copper sulphate ( "Milestone") treatment. The first Is decidedly the better. One of the simplest methods of treatment Is dipping the Backed wheat by means of a home-made derrick Into a trough containing formaldehyde. The proper mixture contains one pound or pint of formalin to every forty gallons of water. The sack of wheat should remain Immersed in the solution until thoroughly wet to the center, which genorally require? from five to ten minutos. It should then bo taken out and the excess Bolutlon permitted to drain off. The grain should be allowed to dry out fairly well before it is sown. A method rather more effective le to pour tho seed Into the solution tirrlng it and skimming off any smut ballB that may appear, then taking it from the solution and par tially drying It before seeding. The drill Itself, of course, should be dlslnfectod with the same solu tion and tho treated grain should bo put back only Into sacks that huvo been disinfected or new and nnused. Where tho seed Is not sown Immediately after treatment, It Is boiler to dry It out by shoveling It over and spreading It thinly, on a clrnn tapnullQ or floor, since the Tltallly of tho seed is considerably affected by lack of care In drying It out thoroughly after dipping. It la of the greatest Importance that farmers get formalin of guaranteed ctrengih nnd purity. The commer cial form of 40 per cent formalde hyde is the kind to be used la the ratio of ouo pint to forty gallons of water. HORTICULTURAL EX11II11T AT AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE AFHUIT, vegetable and flower show will be hold by the Hor ticultural division of tho Agri cultural College on Novombor 7. Tho following list of exhibits bus been prepared for tho occasion: A collection of apples from vari ous purls of the United States! Competitive three plate exhibits by studunts, apples to bo grown In any section of the country; A collection of 75 jars of nuts by The Oregon Nursery Co.; Collection of tub-tropical fruits by gradual oa ot the college In Califor nia; Collection of sub-tropical fruits from Southern Florida; A by-product exhibit Including tanned frulU, vegetables and fruit Juices; A chrysanthemum show; A demonstration of tho proper methods of pruning roses; A demonstration of the potting and rn-pottlng of bouse plants; A collection of plants suitable for student rooms nnd for homes; A collection of flowers from flor as; A collection of vegetablo garden Oregon AKrirultiiral College, orvullis, Oregon, ing seeds from various parts of the country. A collection of vegetable by-products; A collection of vegetable types from various truck farms of the state; A collection of greenhouse vege tables; A collection of vegetable packages and methods of packing; A collection of implements used in vegetable gardening; A demonstration showing best types of plants and methods of transplanting the same; A contest among the women of the college on floral table decorations; A contest by the women of the college on the best cooked apples. All horticulturists are Invited to attend this educational exhibit. CHEMICALS USUALLY BAD AS ('H)EK PRESERVATIVES THE use. of chemicals In preserv ing sweet cider, as quite fre quently recommended in Borne parts of the state, Bhould not be undertaken by those unacquainted with the action and effect of chemi cals. The three chemicals that are most frequently recommended are salicylic acid, calcium vulflte and benzoate of soda, and there are many reasons to believe that they exert a bad Influence on the health of those who use them in preserved food products. Tbolr use in food products offered on the market la either prohibited by law or greatly restricted. Our dairy and food com missioner has brought a number of prosecutions based on the use of sulfite,, whoso use is prohibited In Oregon. Benzonte of soda may not be used in excess of one tenth of one per cent, and in less strength would not control fermentation. "There are three principal ways of checking fermentation," says Pro fessor Tarter, chemist of the Oregon Agricultural College. Low temper ature mere holds the ferment bac teria In check, the cider gradually becomes sour. A very high tempera ture will kill the bacteria, and If tbe product 1b then bottled and sealed it will keep sweet Indefinitely. Unfor tunately this temperature Injures the quality and flavor of the cider. Chem icals Btrong enough to destroy the fermeutative organisms are very apt to Injure the health of those who uso the products preserved by iHem. Digestion itself Is largely a matter of I'ermenlntlon that Is brought about by the action of the so-culled soluble ferments, The action Is stopped or largely Inhibited by these chemicals, so that their use Involves a risk too great to be taken by the layman." INCREASING TUN PROFIT ON GRAIN FED TO IHX1S BV TUTTING protein Into grain fed to hogs the feeder nearly dou bles on every cent Invested eco nomically In protein material. Skim milk or butted milk in tbe propor tion of one and a half pounds of milk to one pound of grain will pro duce a much more efficient use ot tho grain, parts of which are not utilized when grain Is fed alone. Grain does not contain all the feed elements In tho right proportion to suit the pig's needs. Whore milk is not available, tank ugo makes tho cheapest protein Blip ply in Oregon, Ten pounds of tank age at $D0 IV ton added to 90 pounc'r of grain at present prices Increase! the cost of 100 pounds of feed ten cents, but It Increases the pork yield 2.05 pounds, which nt 7 cents per pound amounts to $13.05 nor bun- the Solo Aim of Which r to Aid Agriculturists. dred. The cost of this increase yield was but $10. "In terms of returns per hundred pounds of gain on the hog, the feed er secures 87.5 cents more by fced- jing tankage with grain than by feed ing straight grain," says Professor Samson, who conducted the feeding tests. "In terms of the price that the pigs return for 100 pounds of grain the tankage causes them to return 23.3 centu more, which is $4.66 more per ton. If pigs wero paying only market prices for grain fed alone, this $4.66 may justly be counted as the feeder's profit. This profit is further Increased in the fertilising value of the manure. FOUND HEREFORD HERD. FOUNDATION Btock for an Agricul tural" College her dot pure-bred Herefords has been purchased by the Animal Husbandry department. It had been the intention of Profes sor Potter, head of the department, to go east to get this stock, since only the best types were desired, but he found precisely what he was looking for in the herd of George I Chandler, of Buker City, from whom I the following fine animals were se-j cured: One cow and calf, fouri yearling heifers, all breeding stork of the projected Hereford herd tu match the splendid herd of college Shorthorns. At the same timo four head of Hereford steer calves and four head of yearlings were pur chased for use as class and show animals. In addition to these ani mals 100 head of two-year old Shorthorn steers were purchased for experimental feeding at the Union branch station, with which field peas and barley hay will be tried out and the value of grain with al falfa hay ascertained. MILKING CONTESTS AT FAIRS. W'flLKING contests at various 4i county fairs In Oregon are unique and valuable features reported by some of the Agricultural College specialists that judged the fairs. These contests are conducted by weighing and testing tho milk of each cow entered, usually for a period of two to five days. The prines are awarded, as previously announced, either on the wholo amount of milk produced by each cow during the contest, on the total butterfat content ot each cow or upon a combination of both points. 1 These contests Invariably arouse a , great deal of Interest among tho visitors of the fairs, and undoubted ly result in a great deal of good. Not only do farmers learn the ex-1 act value of each cow as a milk pro- J ducer, but they learn in a general way the type of animal most profit-, able In the dairy herd and the meth ods of toBtlng that can be applied ' to their own herd. ! A MAN TO BE First Considers Quality, Then Hnys at Lowest Prices. SEE ME FOR WATER SYSTEMS of All Kinds. LIGHTING PLANTS Electric and Carbido. PLUMBING SUPPLIES AT WHOLESALE. R. A. TWISS Fourth and Jefferson Streets Portland, Oregon. THE COUNTRY STORE. fl"HE In fluence of the country I store and Its owner In Na tional development has been a factor of tremendous Importance," writes. Dr. Hector Macpherson of the Oregon Agricultural College. "As the frontier planted settlements In Its westward adbance the country Btore became everywhere the first nuclous of social nnd economic prog ress. It was the clearing house of ideals, and the medium through which news from outside the new settlement reached tbe inhabitants. It became their first postoffice, and it was to a large extent the forum from which public opinion anil neighborhood policy were crystal ized. It bridged the gap betweoa the pioneer community and the big world outside. The storekeeper brought In whatever goods the neighborhood wanted and was ever on tbe alert for markets for tho community products. As the grow ing population began to practice division ot labor the store was medium through which the Burplua products were exchanged. Families having more potatoes, butter, egga, and other produce than they couLi use traded out their surplus with the grocer who resold thorn to fam ilies producing none for themselves. Abraham Lincoln was probably only one among hundreds who sharpened their wits and won their spurs ovor the counter of the country store." MAKING VP MEAT SHORTAGE. HOG cholera alone takes enough meat from the visible supply to make up the present deficiency, is the surprising concIuBlon of Dr. Virgil Knowles, Federal and O. A. C. specialist now working' on the hog cholera problem in Oregon. "The farmer bringing his drove ot hogs right up to the marketing stage, putting his entire grain crop Into them with the expectation thut they will bring In a badly needod money supply and then seeing them die on his hands, has lost more than his hogs he has lost confidence in the swine Industry. It takes more pluck and prefllBtency than the aver age man possesses to turn around after such an experience and take up the task of raising nnothor drov ot hogs. He will probnbly lack even the capital for producing a new herd, and it not he will not be very enthusiastic about doing so. Ilut most of the losses fro mhog cholera aro preventable, and there Is no more promising way xt making up the meat shortage than by banishing the disease from the state and the county. We hope with the aid ot farmers and newspaper men to ban ish It from Oregon nnd to keep It out." SUCCESSFUL