Newspaper Page Text
lints on Catching Hawks.
' A New Jersey poultry keeper gives
the Practical Farmer Lis egperience
in catching hawks as follows:
Set a pole three or four inches
through at top anl twelve feet long
on a hill overlooking the pouliry
yards. Set a small steel trap ocn iop
of pole and the hawk is almost cer
tain to get caught when he alighis
-on the pole, Hawks prefer to alight
on the pole. I have caught 100 in
three years, since I hegan. The trap,
of course, should be fastened; other
wise, a large hawk would take it
away. This beats watching about
half a day to get a shot at them.
Mange on Horses.
Mange is an infection caused by
& microscopic mite that lives on and
burrows in the skin of the animal,
causing intense itching, says the
Maine Farmer. The treatment and
cure are similar for all animals. Re
move the scabs by softening in warm
soapsuds. Prepare an application of
one and a half ounces of .tobacco in
two pints of water, by boiling. Ap
ply several times at intervals, and
repéat after fifteen days to make
sure of destruction of any new brood
that may have been hatched in the
interval. To make a sure job, ail
harness and stable utensils should
he treated in same manner, and the
stalls covered with whitewash c¢on
taining one-fourth pound chloride of
lime to the gallon.
Setting Gate Posts,
The matter of setting gate posts is
one that should interest every one
who has a gate to hang, for no mat
ter how strong the post may be and
how carefully it may be braced it is
bound to sag sooner or later so that
the gate catches on the ground. It is
often desirous to set a gate post in
soft ground, such as around the barn
yard, or just after a heavy rain when
the ground is too soft to do any work
in the field. In such cases it is almost
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r T'wo Ways of Setting Gate Posts.
impossible to set the post firmly, but
even in such cases this work can be
done very satisfactorily by paecking
small stones in the hole around the
post. This work might be even more
effectually accomplished if the post
were set in concrete, which is a little
more expensive, but will hold the post
more firmly than stones alone. In
setting the post in concrete it should
be tamped firmly as the hole is being
filled up. After the hole is filled with
concrete the post should not be dis
turbed for several days so as to give
the cement time to “‘set.”” Care must
be taken tc have the post exactly
plumb all the time while the work is
going on as it ¢an never be straight
ened after the cement hardens. As
gate posts are usually much heavier
than ordinary posts and are therefore
expected to last much longer than the
rest of the fence, it Is always well to
use thoroughly seasoned wood so as
to make the work as permanent as
possible.
Another method of setting posts,
says The Farmer, is by using two
large flat stones to hold them in place.
The hole, of course, must be dug
much larger and before it is set in the
hole one stone is laid edgewise in the
bottom upon the gide which is to re
ceive the greatest pressure at the foot
of the post. The post is then set in
the hole, half filled with earth and
the other stone placed against the
side of the post to receive the draw
ing weight from the gate. In this
way both stones receive the pressure
holding the post firmly in position. |
4 Random Jottings.
-The chicks have great appetites
as they near maturity and they need
full feeding at that time. Keep a
hopper_filled with good grain before
“the birds all the time and then they
can bhalance any shortage in your
feeds of the day.
Ordinarily, there is no advantage
in high roosts and the fowls will do
better and keep healthier if the
perches are not more than three feet
above the floor. Os course all the
slats should be on a level, as this
avoids erowding and fighting tor the
highest positions.
This is a good -time of year to
whitewash the hen house. Use a
little erude carbolic acid in the prep
aration.
Glass may be all right for use as
- grit so far as grinding ability is con
cerned, but its use is dangerous, as it
-is liable to puncture the crop of the
- pird.
Soft-shelled eggs mean that the
hens are too fat or else there is not
enough lime in the ration—some
times both.
Many farmers do not know the
value of Kaffir corn as a feed for
poultry. It has the same nuiritive
value as Indian corn, but is not to
fattening and therefore is a better
egg-producing grain. The fowls liko
it,—The Epitomist. ne it g
How to Draw Pouliry.
When birds are to be drawn the
operation should be performed imme
diately after the pin-feathering is fin
ished or after they. have become
slightly cooled, as it is more difficult
after they are thoroughly chilled. A
sharp knife is essential, although
some dressers prefer to make the
necessary incision with curved scis
sors similar to those used by sur
geons. Drawn fowls usually have
the head removed also, and this
should be done first. Sever the neck
close to.the head, taking care not to
cut the windpipe and gullet, which
can be more easily pulled out if left
attached to the head. Draw the neck
skin back and remove a short seec
tion of the bone, thoroughly washing
out any blood that may collect.
Finally draw the skin forward, and
tie firmly. Remove the intestines
through a small opening, as a large
aperture is unsightly as well as un
necessary. Cut carefully through the
walls of abdomen, making the incis
ion entirely around the vent, then
hook the first finger into the loops of
the intestines and thus pull them out.
Usually the heart; liver, lungs and
gizzard are left attached in their
-natural position, as ordinarily the re
moval of the intestines is considered
sufficient. After this has been ac
complished the cavity should be thor
oughly washed to remove all blood
and other secretions. A select pri
vate trade often demands that poul
try be even more carefully prepared,
in which case the giblets should be
removed and cleaned. Cut the gall
sack from the liver, the blood ves
sels from the heart and remove the
contents of the gizzard. Cut off the
shanks after first removing the
strong sinews which run up through
‘the leg to injure the quality of the
“‘drum stick.”” To take out these
'sinews run a knife blade down the
‘back of the shank, between it and
the sinews. Remove the skin above
the sinews, and pull the latter out
singly by means of a strong fork or
skewer. A still easier way is to have
a strong hook fastened to the wall
at the proper height. Place the point
of the hook under each sinew, which
can then easilybedrawnout. Thebird
is now ready for lying up. Replace
the giblets in the body cavity, draw
the end of the drum sticks down to
the “‘pope’s nose,” and there tie firm- ‘
ly. Finally fold the wings behind the
back. Birds so tied are usually at
tractive, always appearing plump and
chunky, due to the absence of sprawl
ing legs and wings. Broilers may
be attractively prepared for private
trade as follows: Pluck carefully
and remove the legs and sinews as
above. With a heavy sharp knife
make a cut each side and the entire
length of the backbone, severing the
ribs. Let thege incisions meet in
front of the neck and below the vent.
This permits the removal of the head,
neck, backbone and entire intestinal
tract, and the bird opens out flat in
convenient form to be piaced upon
the broiler. The giblets should be
cleaned and should accompany the re
mainder of the carcass.—Butchers’
Advocate,
Good Hay Cover. ;
Where lumber for barns ig often
dear, temporary roofs of inch boards
over stacks serve a good purpose.\the
boards being carefully selected to
have no cracks in them, well painted
with some light-cglored paint and
laid on as shingles are laid, one lap
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ping over the other,.and held by a
light flexible chain at each end and
a staple. Have the ends of the chain
attached to large rings which slip
over slender poles driven in the
ground and with headless spikes driv
en in like barbs, so the winds will
not lift the roof. By boring one small
hole near the lower edge of each
board a wire would tie the two to the
chain and not injure the beard as
lstaples might.
Sapphire Mining Revived.
Sapphire mining in Kashmir is
being revived by a new company,
composed of Europeans of high stand
ing and wealthy natives.
~ “THE EDITOR AND THE TOWN.'
By D. W. GRANDON, TELEGRAM,
ADRIAN, MICH, e
Communities are different. The
people of one town differ from the
people of another town. An edito
rial policy that will win applause in
one community would create a bushel
of ‘“‘stops’ in another. The editor
who would be popular and a power
in one community might play a losing
game and hecome a man of small in
fluence in another. ~
There ar¢” towns that will take
almost any kind of slush that an
editor may give his r~aders. There
are other towns that almost resent
a real editorial opinjon. The editor
ig an evolution. He is growing better
yvear by year. The town is an evolu
tion. It is growing bigger and broad
er and greater year by year. I be
‘lieve and - have always maintained,
both in public and private, that an
editor both to be successful and in
fluential must play square with the|
peopls. il |
1f partisan politicians, rings or ma
chines are robbing the public and |
the editor is sure of his grounds, |
he should be man enough to say so. |
I special interests are working|
special schemes to give them special
privilegs to bencfit the few at the |
expense of the many, the real editor
who plays square with the people |
should be willing to oppose directly |
and emphatically all such schemes. |’
The real editor should be broad |
enough and have backbone enough |
and brains enough to take a stand in |
opposition to his best friends, to his
largest patrons, to his heaviest ad- |!
vertisers, if the public interest de- |’
mands it. The public interest should |’
come , first. Even from the most |!
selfish standpoint if no other, :
Your best friend may die. Your
largest patron may sell out or move |
away. Your heaviest advertiser may |
go into bankruptcy. DBut the pub-|:
lic goes on forever. é
Play square with the public and
the public is your friend, and if the |
public is your friend, the advertiser |
will go to the paper the public reads, |
whether he believes in the editorial |
policy or not. ]
Then on broad principles without |
attempting to suggest any plan that
would apply generally, the editor |’
should be honest. He should be hon- |
est with himself, honest with the |
public and honest in the presentation |
of public questions. ]
1t is impossible to always be right. |
Mistakes will happen. Honest edito- | !
rials are often written on misinfor- |
mation. But even they should ring |1
true. They should strike clear. They |!
should not be written as if the editor |«
was feeling around for a soft place |
to light. More than that, a news- |
paper ought to have editorial opin- |1
jons. More than that, it ought not
to dodge local issue. It is the local |
questions that interest the local|¢
readers. 1
A Republican editor or a Demo- |
eratic editor, who devotes a column |°
to lambasting the opposition party |!
on national or State questions, and |!
permits his party council to give half |!
the town away, without ever uttering |
a protest, is not living up to the |:
high ideal of a real editor. :
The local editor cannot do much |
toward shaping the destinies of his
State or national organization, but |
with the use of brains and tact and |
hard work, he ean do wonders toward |
helping his home town. It is the|
duty of the editor to do all he can |
to help his town.
He should favor the policies that |
will help hig town get new factories,
new enterprises, new improvements,
new citizens. He should help his
town by frequently speaking of its
advantages, its good location for
business, its opportunities for buyers.
The newspaper that is not afraid to
get on the right side of public ques
tions will be respected. A great
many editors speak out strongly on
most questions, but weakly dodge the
liquor and similar questions. Don’t
dodge anything. Don’t be afraid of
anything. 1
Meet and treat the questions of
the day fairly and honestly. The
public is willing to differ from you.
But it doesn’t admire an editor who
is always squirming around and
flopping about.
If{ a Democratic alderman should
make a mistake, take a wrong posi
tion, the thunders of Mt. Sinai would
not be egqual to the thunders of vi
tuperation the Republican organ is
usually able to turn loose.
Or if the shoe should happen to
~be on the other foot, the roar of
Niagara would be as mild as a sum
mer breeze, compared to the raging
torrents of denunciation and noise
that a partisan Democratic editor
jwould fire at the political culprit
whose chief fault probably arose
from his standing in the way of some
graft in which some friend of the
partisan journal was interested.
| A thousand worse things, however,
would go toboganning through the
town, creating havoe, piling up taxes,
getting the town by the ears, and the
same editor would never utter a word
of protest.
It is my judgment that an editor
should be an editor. That he should
never be g partisan partisan. Belong
to a part&it vou feel that to be your
duty, but don’t let the party use you
to pull its burning chestnuts out of
the fire.
Like a just judge sitting on the
bench, the editor should deal with
public questions from the sole stand
point of doing the greatest good to
the greatest nuinber. I believe that
such policy is not only the right pol
icy, but I believe it is the winning
way. 2
i The editor must be fair. He must
be honorable in his dealings with the
public. He should stand fairly in
favor of right principles, sobriety,
honesty, integrity, honest and eco- |
nomical public service and ‘“‘hurrah”
for his town always and all the time,
He should print a good newspaper,
a newsy newspaper, an enterprising
newspaper, an up-to-date American
newspaper. He should see that the
local news field is carefuily handled,
thoroughly covered, and the paper
edited with a view to making the
news reliable as well as readable. -
But it is useless to offer suggestions
along these lines. You all know these
things as well as, many of you better,
than I do.
As to the town much depends on
that. Some cities are very proud
of very poor papers. Some cities are
constantly kicking =at very good
papers. No hard and fast lines can
be laid down as to what the town
should do for the editor. But I
think it is safe to say that if he will
’give his town his best efforts, even
though they may not always be bril
‘liant, just an honest, earnest effort
‘to serve the people, his town will be
good to him. |
The editor must take the peopie
as he finds them. He must take his
town as he finds it. It is not the
editor’s duty to carry all the burdens
of the town on his own shoulders,
but he will have to carry ten times
as many of them as any other man.
The editor should not imagine that
he is the dictator. He should not
svell up and become infected with
the notion that he is the big boss
or the one overgrown boy, who is to
do all the talking. That won’t go
down with a lot of people. ;
The town is full of people who
know what they want done just as
well as the editor knows what he
wants done. They can give him bush
els of points every day in the week.
They can tell him where to back in.
In fact some of the people some
times get so excited over their fail
ure to reform the editor that they
are liable to quit taking his paper for
a few weeks at least. :
If the paper is really worth while,
they soon come back. After that they
do not try to reform the editor all
the time—they begin to stop and eat
once in a while, at least—and they
usually stay longer after an experi
ence of that kind. ;
For myself, I believe in opening
up the columns of my paper freely
to the people who disagree with my
editorial policy. The public is given
to understand that while I am com
pelled to pay for the privilege of
saying what I please, as well as pay
for the other fellow’s privilege of
appearing in print, the public can use
the columns of the Telegram without
money and without price to agree or
disagree with my editorial policy or
utterance just as much as they like
so long as they present their remarks
in a respectful manner.
. The real editor it seems te me
should not be afraid to open up his
columns to the kicker, the knocker
or the objector. Give these people
space and if they are wrong, they
will hang themselves. If they are
right, the editor certainly has no
reason for keeping their utterances
from the public. After all every
great reform that has ever blessed
mankind has been started by what®
in this day and age would be called
a “knocker.”
If the editor is the man he ought |
to be, he lights the torch o
and goes marching up and down the
streets. He asks the populace to
unnitedly and earnestly get together i
and give the old town a boost.
Sometimes in some towns the
people quickly respond. They fol
low the leader and they do things
for the old town that make the
knockers and the kickers’ club waken
up and take notice:
Sometimes in some towns, no l
amount of coaxing, no amount of
argument, no matter how well the |
story is presented will bring results. |
In such a place I can see only one |
hope for the real editor, and that is
to sell out and get into some town
where intelligence, hard work and
enterprise will be appreciated. |
1 The editor must believe in the
town if he wants the town to believe
in him., It seems to me that he
should keep his paper free from en
tangling alliances of all kinds.
If an editor is constantly asking
the politicians to favor special ordi
nances that will give him business,
he gets into a position where he natu
rally is compelled to favor the ordi
nances the politicians want passed
to give them or some other workers
special privileges.
I don’t believe the editor will get
as much from that kind of method
as he will by keeping entirely free. I
don’t believe he is doing the best he
can for his town, and I don’t believe
his town will do the best for him if
he follows that kind of a policy.
He should ask only what is fair.
He should be willing to share in the
general prosperity. He should not
insist on cream all the time. He
should get his results by working for
the good of the whole town.
It seems to me that the editor who
does this will have greater prosperity
on the average. He will at least
enjoy the confidence and respect of
his fellow citizens. He will live a
life of usefulness for the good of the
lold town. He can make a good liv
|ing for himself and leave an honor
able patrimony for his family.
- When at last old Father Time
| strikes “thirty”’ and the work of his
|life is done, the old town will be a
; sincere and honest mourner that so
| good a fricad has gone to his re
| ward. “
; What more can the editor ask of
.| the town than appreciation while
-{alive and real sorrow when he is
galled to his long rest, well earned.
| —From the National Printer-Jour
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Motors on Country Roads.
My home is on a road over which,
on Sundays, sometimes pass a half
dozen automobiles. In front of the
house this road makes a sharp carve,
on one side of which is a hill hiding
the road beyond the curve. It is an
unusual thing for an autoist either
to blow his horn or to slow up on
this eurve. What is done on this road
i 8 probably done on all roads. The
only reason there has not been a
serious accident at this particular
point ig because two vehicles have
never happened to meet there. A
timid horse meeting a machine in
such a place would have no chance
at all. The picture in the August
Century, called “The Right of Way
of the Automobile,” illustrates a
common occurrence in the country.
The roads are for the use of the
people who live on them, and not
chiefly for those who merely pass
over them on pleasure trips. The
farmer must use the road if he is
to sell his crops; his family must use
it if they are ever to see any place
but their own home. Now the road
is used at more or less risk to every
one, and at great risk to the old men
who cannot move quickly, and to the
women who are not constant drivers.
In fact, few of the women who used
to drive when the roads were free
now attempt it.
if autos are rare on any particular
road they are all the more dangerous
when they do appear.
A horse cannot be easily trained
to pass them in the country because
of their irregularity, and because
during the winter, when autos are
rare, the horse forgets all about them
and is ready by spring for an acci
dent. Also, a horse which is unafraid
in the city often becomes unmanage
able in the country.
I believe the Times has been mak
ing a list of automobile accidents,
but I think many of the accidents
to the horse-drawn vehicles are not
reported. The owner of the auto
who causes the trouble is not apt to
publish it abroad, and reporters are
not so plentiful throughout the coun
try as to learn of all such cases.
So far as I know, it is at present
Tawful for an auto to be driven at any
rate of speed by any person “whether
he has intelligence or experience or
not,” over any road in the State that
is not within eity limits.
When bicyeles first eame into use
they were ridden on the sidewalks
until laws. were passed forbidding it.
These laws, no doubt, proved an in- I
eonvenience to eyclists; they often
had to give up short cuts and smooth l
roads, but as pedestrians were in the
majority, the walks were reserved
for them, and the cyclists built their
own eyele paths.
The farmers are a great majority
in country roads, and horse-drawn
vehicles are likely to be employed
on them almost exclusively for some
time to come, judging by the present |
cost and unreliability of the motor
! t the machines be re
‘stric W certain main lines
throughout the State, connecting pri
vate owners by their own private
lines? I admit that this doesn’t
seem feasible, but what can be done?’
The present state of things is more
dangerous than even a people as
careless of life as we care to see pro
longed.
I understand that in London steps
are being taken to have separate
roads for autos. Could we not, at
least, limit the autos to use of such
roads as are twenty-five feet wide
throughout their length, and which
are so built as to have at least 150
feet of the road visible in both direc
tions from any part of it?
The roads are just about as pleas
ant for driving as a railroad track
would be for a sidewalk.—L. A, C,,
in the New York Times. e
j Road Planer.
On heavy roads that are likely to
become very hard after being wet and
traveled the tool known as the road
planer is especially useful. 1t also
serves the purpose of the road drag
and works on the same principle as
i p Nst e e o ey
/W/!}
: The Road Planer. :
R R
the King road drag. ~ The sketch
shows one which is very well de
signed, says Farm and Home. It
‘should be about fourteen feet long
| and five feet wide, the outside run
! ners, seraper, blades and inside run
‘ ning boards all of 2xlo or 2x12-inch
| planks.
. The runners keep the planer from
going too deep and will bridge over
| low places in the road, filling them to
| uniform surface while cutting off the
i high lumps. The planer boards are
. edged with a strip of steel so they
| will keep a sharp edge with consid
| erable usage. -If an ordinary dirt
| road is properly constructed and once
put in good condition, it can be
| maintained in shape by the use of
| this planer and the King drag at a
cost of five of ten dollars per mile
1 per year. 58
. "USED PE-RU-NA
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77i€ Jor &’
M RS. LIZZIE LOHR, 1155 W. 13th St.,
Chieago, 111., writes:
*] take pleasure in writing you
these few lines, thinking there may be
other women sukering the same as I did.
“1 had my complaints for over a year,
night sweafs all winter and noalppe
tite, I was run-down so far that I had |
to sll(t down to de my cooking, 1 was so
weak.
“1 tried maxfi different medicines and
doctors also. othing seemed to do me
any good. The doctors wanted to operate
on me.
“At last 1 wrote to Dr. B=ctman. 1 1
told him just exactly how I was, and he |
told me what ailed me and how I should
take Peruna. !
“1 did as he told :ne for four month:.
and now I amv all evred. 3
“No one can tell how thankful I am te
him, as 1 had given up all hopes of ever
getting well again.
“] am a wisow and the mother of six
small children who de%end on, my s;]pport.
I work all day and seldem get tired.
“] ‘took five bottles of Peruna in all.
“Any woman wishing to know more °
about my case may write to me and I
will gladr{( tell all about it. I
“1 thank Dr. Hartman for what he has !
t}(_me for me.”
GA.-ALA. BUSINESS COLLEGE &
MACON, GA.
Hew Management Most Expert Facully B
FINEST POSITIONS ‘‘AMERICA’'S BEST’’
WRITE FORCATALOGUE :
No man ever has as muei;xénée as
the woman he is engaged to thinks he
has.
Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Bweet
Gum and Mullen is Nature’s great reme
dy—ocures Coughs, Colds, Croup and Oon
sumption, and all throat and lung troubles.
At druggists, 2530., 50c. and SI.OO per bottle.
Chicago University Library.
The university has already collects
ed a library of 460,000 volumes, Gen
erous appropriations are made annyglé
ly for the purpose of desired addi
tions. The whole world is being drawn
upon for rare books essential for coms
pleteness in a given line of study,
Now publications in fifty departments
of edueation are being bought, Files
are being kept up te date. Already,
so far as size i 3 concerned, this li
brary ranks among tne largest in the
country, with every assurance of comn
tinued increase in its facilities. Tak:
en with the ether great libraries of
Chicago, it helps to maks 2,000,000
volumes availlable in this city. But
its usefulness has been impaired sads
ly by the lack of adequats stack room
and improved machinery of adminis
»tratlun.—’“*c-avn Tribune.
NOTHING SERIOUS,
Major—Did the Kentucky delegation
reach the conventien in safety?
Colonel—Yes, sah, although thera
were quite a few smashes on the way.
Major—Gracious! Train smashes?’
Colonel—No, mint smashes.—Chk
cago News.
ANOTHER WONDERFU{, CURE,
“You say you owe your life to this
patent medicine?”
“Yes, indeed. I was penniless and
starving when I received sl@ for writs
ipg that testimonial.”—Kansas City
Times,
3 BEGAN YOUNG .
Had “Coffee Nerves” From Youth,
“When very young I began using
coffee and continued up te the past
six months,” writes a Texas giri,
“I had been exceedingiy nerveus,
thin and very sallow, After quitting
coffee and drinking Postum Foed
Coffee about a month my nssvousnesa
disappeared and has never returped,,
This is the more remarkable as I am
a Primary teacher and have kepi
right on with my work,
“My complexion now is clear an
_rosy, my skin soft and smooth. As 4
good complexion was something I had
greatly desired, I feel amply repai
even tho this were the only benef
' derived from drinking Postum.,
“Before beglnning .8 use I ho
suffered greatly from indigestion an¢
headache; these troub.es are now u
known. £
“Best of all, I changed from coffed
to Postum witheut the slightest in
convenience, did not even Lave @
headache. Have known .coffee dring
ers who were visiting me, to use Pos
tum a week without being aware that
they were not drinking coffee.
«I have known several to begin tha -
use of Postum and drop it becauso
they did not boil it properly. After
explaining hew It should be pre_parefl
they have tried it again and pro
nounced it delicious.”
Name given by Postum Co,, Battle
Oreek, Mich. Read the heoklet, “Thp
Road to Wellville,” In pkgs. “There’s -
& _Reason.” = .