. - - - . The Thoroughbred Dairyman. It takes I ho ! thoroughbred t dlmlryman 10 produce a good ( herd of clalry COWR. This Is because there III no rule that may be laid down hy which the work of dairy herd producing may IwlI1er. . rlnE-ly accompllahed. The work IR not one that may he cut out by machinery : after some particular pattern , but , to . use a common phrase , we ! must "cul and ntTho whole thing comeR : back : I 10 the quality of the man that I does the "cutllng and fitting. " We have hud a very small number of thoroughbred dairymen In the past , and that Is why we have HO few really . ly I god dairy hOI'lIH. Fortunately the Elate dalr'y schools and the progressive ! . .Iro ,11 " ' ' , . III , ' , . bmiryua'n nil the states are I now laboring to produce Ii large ! ; numm ' her of thoroughbred dairymen uud ( we . > have reason to hope that In the fur hire the tribe will not be so small ) ) as it has been In the IIISt. ) The thoroughbred dairyman Is al ways trying to educate himself \ In dairy nowlodgo. l lie finds this a hard task : : ; with the present sources or In. lormatlon : for the information Itself IR hilI. just being I1ccll1l1ulnted. Much ho learned yesterday : : ; he Is compelled to let go of today , and sonic part of what he learns to'llny will have to he discarded \ to'l\Iorl'ow. But the thor , oughbred Is not discouraged by this state oC things. lie Is not only not satisfied ; with the amount of infornia tlon that he can get from others but 110 sets 10 work to do some experimenting . mentlng on his own behalf. Ho finds enough to keep hIm busy In trying to solve the problems that 11'0 ret : un solved or that have been solved in avery very Imperfect manner. 1'hls kind of . . , - . . - . dairyman IS malting his Impress on the country because ho is a worker and knows how to Intelllgenll direct his operations , whether they relate to the work of his dairy or to the experl- ments he Is conducting. The thoroughbred dairyman learned long ago to control his temper and to 110 gentle with his dairy animals. He also Insists on the other men having the care of the cows being genlle. He bas learned perhaps by Instinct that II rough mnnner or a boisterous voice docs not Increase the milk flow or the production ) of cream. Gentleness Js ) one of the thIngs that marks him as dIstinct from must of his fellows. \ t -r , , , . . . . . . . . _ _ _ _ " L' Milking Machines. Of the various : makes of milking machines that arc being sold on the market the Thistle seems to stand at the head , though It has few friends In the United Stntes. We hear from It however from lime to time in Eng- land , Germany nllll AustralIa. In 1 those countries It Is being tested quite extensively , with varying results so far as making Itself friends and ene- mles. In recent tests In Germany It has been used continually for a year or two hut the cows where It Is used are not kept for milking purposes beyond - yond : It year and a half. Then they are sold to the butchers and new cows pUl'chnsed. It has been asserted that the milking , machines dry up the cOW . and reduce the length of the mllllng I period. With cows that are only to be milked to the end of one mlllcing per rlod It Is Impossible to ascertain the truth of thIs. A few cows purchased would not allow themselves to be milked by the machine. Some of the hflfl.ml11lng cows had to he stripped by hand after the machine bad done what It could , but the ens.mllklng tOWS were milked clean by It. II seems to be evIdent that If we are , to have milking machines we vvlll have to develop a special class of tows with teats of a certain conformation - tion and with nlllk ducts that easily sand quickly give down the ml1l AI a general thing the grape "Ine. yard should be given clean cultivation every 'car. Lff STOa.t , "I , - - . . . I" I. ' ) : , - - , - . . . " . . , ( ' \ ( "t , : ' ' . ' " ' ' . . . " , ' . tI'Z h I . . .s.f ( , . I'f \ ; c. , . , _ I ' : k'.l . : ' ' ( ' : /tt . , ' 4 . . . . . . . to. . . , ' - . \t'J \ ' aa _ . : $ . ( , . ! , ( , . ! I . - - " 'U h'\- . y Nr' II- rr . : : . , . Fattening Sheep for Profit. Where Ilosslhle the farmer should fatten his own sheep , Recently we heard about a coin n inity oC farmers where a great many sheep had been raised hilt had been sold to lien that made a business or fattening and fitting . tlllg sheep for market. The men that did the finishing 111 this case took their sheep only Il Cew miles away and began the worle oC IHIUlllg on lIeah and fat. 'they came back from time to time lo buy the clover and com fodder of the farmers and even the grains they had mlsed. But priu- cipaliy \ they IHll'chllsed the rough feed that every farmer had ] In abll\II111nco The finishers : made money out of their olltel'lH'lio. 'I'hu question ) naturally comes , why dl.ln't . the farmers them' selves have the enterprise to leeep the rough feed at home IIl1d not let go of the animals 10 consume It. They would then have retained on their I farms the manure that was lost to them. In some : : ; cases the farmers In the locality mentioned hauled hay and other roughage fifteen miles to sell to the men doing the feeding. H looks very much as If some ; of our farmers have not figured the different operaS lions down close enough to know what ; will prove profitable and what will \ . not. We Iced the work \ of the pencil more In the problems of the farm. Because a certain method of doing has become the vogue Is not a proof that It Is the right thing to do or that It. Is the IH'olilallle tltillg. Ultimately Il will ho found that It pays the farmer ' er to follow nil the operations of sheep breeding , feeding , Inchllllng finishing on his own farm. ' - - - - - The Clean Stall. n Is a usclen piece of advice IJer. haps to say "Ieeep the horse stall clean " Yet we have seen horse stalls that were always dlrtr. Moreover we have seen white and gray horses kept In such stalls. When they came out of them In the morning It was a good task to get the dIrt and stain off tlll\ a. 'rhey wore unsightly In spite or all the washing that coulll lJe done. A good many farmers are too much afraid of wasting lJedding. Sometimes too they shake out and save not only the dry straw but also much of the wet straw. The horse Is not a dirty animal and there Is little use In letting . ting him get dll't ) ' . lC the stall is kept clean work will be save . - - - France and Horsebreeding. The French government has for a long time done much to encourage horselJreeding , and the result Is now seen In the number of good horses In that country and In time high-priced horses she Is constantly sending to other countries. 1'hol'e has been a vigorous attempt there to reduce horse breeding to a science. Legislation - tion and government money have been freely applied In the direction of safeguarding . guarding the breeding of horses The government stallions have been of course the great factor in this forward movement. The French horsemen say that this expenditure of money and effort has laid well. - - - - - The Goat and Disease. One thing In favor of the goat Is that It Is little subject to disease. Whether this Is true of all of our common diseases we do not know. Doubtless the goat Is subject to some IJlsease. At least It Is asserted that the goat does not have tulJerculosls. If this Is so It Is a strong factor In Its favor. Its milk should , in that case , be used more and more , and gew and better breeds of mill goats should be de'eloped. We are sup. posed to have about two million goats In this countr A physician says that we should have twenty millions just to supply milk for the babies of the country. . LPoulqRiJ C ; . , , . . . . ' . : - . ' , . " . " . . . -4. : " , . ; ; . = l- .r' I ) r. . . - ' - . " . / . . . " \ " , : - . ' " " . , fl , /It . . ' - ' ' " ( ! 1 . . t't ! ; ) \ . ; , . . . ' ) t . , I" ' ' . / ' . . , . . , , 'W.IIII' ; j/ . . . , . . : , " . . . . . . " . . . . 1 # . . . . . . . " . - . ' , I ' --1 . Geese. In COlllmon geese the males and females differ In plumage , but this is nol the case wIth the purebred geese. In their case the males and females are alike. The largest geese are the Toulollse , and these are popular with men that have a fancy for large fowls. If a IIan wants layers , however , he will choose the China. 'l'hose that raise the geese largely for feathers will choose the gmlHlen , because their feathers are pure white , and hence the market value or them Is greater than with those geese whoRe feathers are nnmlti . colored. It a man merely wants to produce birds tlnt can be mal'Juted to guui ( advantage 110 will find a cross of the Toulouse with time Eniblen ( give good results. Where geese have access to n ponder or a river they will derive much of 1:1011' : : subsistence fl'om the water. The \\TlltH' knew of a man that lived on the hanles of n river and had a large flock of gcese. Across the shallow river was a starch factory , and from thIs a large amount of soaked corn daily ran frol1\ \ the sluices into the ri\'er. The geese made their living off this corn , which they fished up out oC the water. It made a perfect' food so far as softness and digestibility wen concerned. They [ balanced their ra lion with the semi-aquatic plants growing . Ing In the river and along Its margin. There are many lice ] situations where a flock of geese : would rave : what would otherwise go to wnste. Shallow ponds III summer teem with fish , water beetles , worms and other forms of life. A flock \ of geese shows great enjoyment In hunting their own food in such places. Geese are also consumers of some oC the hugs that 1IIstIJ'the / peace of the farmel' One man tolll the writer how he used to use them for the destruction of po' talc hngs. 'rhe geese would travel down the rows , darting their heads now to this side ! and now to that. 't'hey consumed In the course of a day a very large number of bugs. The fault to he found with them was that they did not do their work per. fectly , hut left colonies of bugs here and there , which later had to be des- troyed by other agencies. 1'he goose lays from lwenty-11ve to fifty eggs and If she could he bred up to lay more would become more Iiolmlllr 011 time farm. Perhaps It Is possible to ultimately develop geese to lay as many eggs as hens , but that result Is a long way In the future at the present time. Freshness of Eggt. 'rhere are many old ways of test- Ing time freshness of eggs. Some or them nH1) lJe of little \'alue. Here Is one that Is going the round , but for which we cannot \'ouch. It maybe lJe all right : Eggs are placed in a pan of water , giving each room enough 50 that Its motions will nol be Inter- fered with hy time nthN Tlr air in the egg will be governed according to the age of the egg , If the egg has been kept In a moderately warm state H the eggs are just laId they will lJe motionless. If they are more than a week old they will partly stand on the little end. This Is because the air chamber Is In the other end of time egg This air chamber grows larger aR the egg becomes older and the moisture In It evaporates. When the eggs get still older they will stand up straight In the water and when very old will float. This test of course would be of no value In the case of pickled eggs or of eggs kept In cold storage where the temperature was so low that the evaporation of moisture from the eggs would be very small. - A good bone mill wlll pay Its cost many times over in the course ot a year , with a fair.elzed ftock. I I 'f f { UEE . . The Prairie Dog Nuisance. - I Prairie dogs ! have been declared to he nuisance by the laws of Nebraska and other states. The Nebraska law goes so fur ns to declare that any one having land Infested hy prairie dogs and not getting rid of them Is maintaIning a nuisance. The harbor- Ct' of these animals Is made liable for damages committed on other land. Highway commissioners are Instructed - ; ed to see that the law Is enforced. In the dischurge of his duty connected with the extermination of prairie dogs the ommisslonf1' : ! Is allowed $3,00 per day and expenses and instructed to add the amount to the taxes of the land where the work of exterminating prairie dogs Is done. This makes It necessary for the owner of IUlld to be vigilant In the extermination of the nuisance. The quickest al\l ( cheapest way to get rId t oC the dogs is I : : ; to poison them , and , this Is generally resorted to. In mal- & tug UII the poison three ounces of , strychnine and half a pound of Jotas- ' slum cyanide are put Into one quart of boiling wHter. To this two quarts of molasses and a teaspoonful of oil of anise are added. Then a bushel of wheat Is placed In a tight t receptacle and the mixture Is poured over It. Il Is then stirred , while four pounds of finely ground corn meal is poured Into It. Time molasses makes the liquid adhesive , so It will stick to the grains of wheat. The object of using the corn meal Is to absorb the superfluous liquid 01' syrup and thus enable the grains of wheat to carry u larger amount of the liaison. 'I'hls poisoned , grain Ie sown about the places ' in- ualJlted h- the dogs. They eat - it and y. " ' lie In large numbers. . . ti There Is , however , a decided sentiment . ment against the use of the polson. finnchmen and farmers hate to handle _ It and birds are frequently poisoned as well as the dogs. There Is also some danger to live stock and chlllJren. Carbon blsulphlde has been used for many years In the extermination of burrowing animals. It Is costly , but It Is effective and Is still being quite generally emplo 'ed. It has the advantage - vantage of I'eqchlng all of the ani- mals : for there are always some prai rte dogs that will not eat the poisoned gmln. The chemical mentioned Is put Into the harrows and changes to a gas that lellls the animals. The damage done by insects in the orchard can never be figured out , for the reason that we are many times r unable to tell just what It is that killed a tree. That the damage from" borers , caterpillars and other insects Is very large there Is no doubt. Like- wise the man that wages successful ) war on borers and their allies can never know how much damage to his orchard he has prevented. ! Farm buildings should lJe given a "polnp ; ; ; over" before the cold of the winter c . . ) nnes. Too many cracks In time barn may give abundant ventilation . tlon , but they give more-too many drafts. Ventilation Is health , but drafts are the opposite. It does not cost much to stop up cracks , and If one kind of material cannot lJe secured - cured for this work another can. , - ' - - ( , t There are now Innumerable varieties - . . 7' lies of potatoes and they are IncreasIng - \ Ing In number every 'ear. Withal , there Is an Improvement , but It Is dif- ficult to say Iow long this improve- ment will go on. . - - - If potatoes are planted on land con- taining much humus there will be lit- lie occasion for the application ot nitrogen. This Is why new land Is frequently very good for potatoes. ! , The dairy Icehouse should have Ii . , good fountlation end good draIDa e. f