1
THE RANCH lice: 38 Downs Building. -"""" MILLER FREEMAN Editor and Proprietor, Associate Editors: F. WALDEN. H. L. BLANCHARD. T^ed the First and Fifteenth Each Month. |I,MM " ' Subscription, in advance, one year, 60 cents; ir months, 30 cents. If on time, subscription ill be $1- Seattle subscribers are required pay $1 Per year > on account of local postage. Aeents wanted In every town to solicit bscriptlons. Good commission and salaries paid to hustlers. The paper is sent to each subscriber until n order to discontinue Is received from the nbscrlber. We must be notified ln writing, hv letter or postal card, when a subscriber wishes his paper stopped. Returning the aoer will not answer, as we cannot find it „n our list from the name alone on the naper We must have both name and ad- dress and all arrearages or dues must be nald as required by law. Date of expiration of subscription Is shown on your paper by address label containing your nam*. Failing to receive the paper regularly, you should notify the Seattle office at once, when mlHtakes, if any, will be corrected. The Kanch Is entered at the Seattle post- office at second-class rates of postage. Address all communications to THE RANCH, Downs Building, Seattle, Wash. The Review is the name of a week- ly paper started at Toppenish, on the Yakima Indian Reservation. If the Review will exert its influence to- ward throwing open the reservation to settlement, and thus bringing un- der cultivation and making taxable property of a large area of fine agri- cultural land it will be rendering a great service not only to that section but to the entire state. Stockbreeders who may figure on shipping pure bred livestock into the United States from Canada or other foreign countries, will find all neces- sary information regarding U. S. gov- ernment requirements in a bulletin just issued by the United States De- partment of Agriculture and which is entitled "Regulations for the Certifi- cation of Associations of Breeders of Purebred Livestock and Books of Rec- ords of Pedigrees." This bulletin gives a list of the livestock associations whose certificates of registration are recognized by the government. Anyone anywhere can get a copy of this bul- letin by writing for it, addressing the Secretary of Agriculture, Washington, D. C. The National Irrigation Congress will meet next year at Portland, Or. The change in the Pure Food law, by which the retailer was released from the responsibility of. adultera- tion, provided he secured a guarantee from the manufacturer, was secured by the editor of the Trade Register, in the presence of two Seattle business men, the pure food commissioner mak- ing this and one or two other suggest- ed changes, one affecting baking pow- ders.—Trade Register. To hear him tell it one would think the editor of the Trade Register is the whole thing around the pure food com- missioner's office. We believe he did anpbint himself as special advisor to the commissioner when the office was first created several years ago. but lie was soon given to understand tint be couldn't come in and tell the com- missioner what to do. In view of the numerous vicious and entirely unwar- ranted attacks of the T^ade Register ""on the commissioner, it is not likely that Mr McDonald looks to that onar- tpr for advice as to how to administer the affairs of his office. A bache^r cattle king who bad be- eorno tired of maverlcking around the homo corral in single blessedness Entered into Chicago on a wife-bunt- ' <? expedition. He scoured trip can Vf)"s and 4iothills of the windy cltv "n'l final]- '^ated a bunch of ***** 001.-ing, h«-.,fprs. we ll fed and trimiv ""'t. in a dpnartmont store. After be boss rancher had assured him that the brands on the beauties were duly registered, the man from the west galloped into the middle of the bunch and proceeded to cut out the prettiest. He gradually worked her to the edge of the herd as the others shied off, and at the first pitch of his lariat the noose settled down over her and he had but little difficulty in putting the cupid brand over the right one. He then rushed her aboard the cars and hiked for the home corral, where she is grazing in the richest of feed on the green hills of eternal happiness, the star of the whole out- fit.Field and Farm. The Cultivation of Mushrooms is the title of a bulletin recently issued by the U. S. Department of Agricul- ture and gives the latest information on this subject. The Secretary of Ag riculture, Washington, D. C, will send it free to any address. As nearly as can be determined, more than $200,000,000 has already been spent in the United States for constructing irrigation canals and res ervoirs for the distribution of water and for preparing land to receive irri- gation water. Over 10,000.000 acres are today being watered and some- thing like 15,000,000 acres more can be watered by the ditches already constructed. The cost of this irriga- tion may seem large, but returns jus- tify the expenditure. In fifteen states and territories the very existence of life depends upon the ability to use river and flood water for growing crops. And the farmers are not the only ones benefited. Cities like Den- ver, Colorado Springs, Salt Lake, Los Ange:es, were created by and depend ent upon irrigation. And there are still millions of acres to be watered and numberless cities to be developed by the application of water to the soil of the West. The national irrigation law is at work and many vast enter- prises under way. Nearly $30,000,000 is now available for government irri- gation works. Do not be impatient if results do not come as soon as you think they should. Remember that constructing mighty reservoirs and systems of ditches is no small task and cannot be accomplished in a day or a season. We notice that the old reliab'e Studebaker wagon has come to the fore again. At the St. Louis Exposi- tion the exhibit of this company cap- tured the grand prize, which is the highest award. This award covered practically everything manufactured by the Studebaker Bros, wagons of every description for both farm and city use, together with all styles of harness and the accessories that go along with such lines of manufacture. The annual report of the Alaska Agricultural Experiment Stations for 1903, by Special Agent Georgeson has been received at this office. Anyone wanting to get an idea of the possi- bilities in farming in Alaska should write the Secretary of Agriculture, Washington, D. C. for a copy. Drainage Investigations Bulletin No. 147 of the Office of Ex- periment Stations, issued by the U S. Department of Agriculture, is a report of drainage investigations carried o^ by that office during 1903, under the direction of Elwood Mead, chief of ir- rigation and drainage investigations. This is the most important work of the kind attempted by the depart- ment, thus forming a new feature of investigations along agricultural lines; yet, judging from this report, it covers a broad and important field The bulletin has a special practical value from the fact that local &*}*. conditions have been examined and dealt with and the methods of treat- ment which are applicable to ea?b case are briefly discussed. The wide range, specific differences of treat- ment and financial and sanitary im- portance of drainage In its relation THE RANCH to the improvement of farm lands, make it one of the most unique sub- jects which engage the attention of agriculturists in many localities. A the report says, so many phases of the drainage problem are involved that any investigation resolves itself into an examination of individual cases in each locality and the par- ticular difficulties there encountered. The application of drainage to irri- gated lands is shown to occupy an important place in the restoration of fields which have passed beyond the limits of profitable production by rea- son of over-irrigation; or perhaps, putting it in another way, by reason of lack of natural drainage facilities to care for the surplus water used in irrigation. Elevating Influence of Horticulture The art of horticulture has had its attractions for men and women in all ages, and the wisest and best have found delight and instruction in its pursuit. The festive and warlike mon- archs lon the banks of the Euphrates spent their leisure hours on their re- turn from expeditions of rapine and conquest in hanging gardens that re- vealed their beauty and shook their odors from the lofty summits of their palaces, the wonder of the world. In such a place can one find the recrea- tion of a passing hour a respite from weary care, a study and an employ- ment for a busy life. Here the poet can find inspiration for his sweetest song, the philosopher food for his most profound meditations, and the devout a persuasive call to worship. Were we to press this subject to its limits, we might recall the fact that the gardens of the earth, wrought into forms of incomparable beauty by the skillful training of human hands, are the types and prophesies of all that is bright and ideal in life. It is an ad- mitted truth that horticulture is both ancient and honorable. Pursued as an art it is a most useful industry, en- larging the number and improving the quality of those products of the earth that add immeasurably to the satis- faction and comfort of human life. It cultivates the taste, refines the sensi- bilities and educates the spirit in its higher realms of grace and beauty. It is a higher department of agriculture, requiring a more specal training and a more careful study. The luscious fruit, the juicy berry that in' its exquisite flower suggests the utmost limit of excellence, may not afford the solid nourishment of the wheat loaf, but they greatly en- large the range of human enjoyment and give life a new interest. The pansy, creeping low upon the ground, the climbing clematis, with its fine shade and delicate beauty, reflects upon the inmost soul their own un- rivalled colorings. They speak a new language, which all mankind instinct- ively desires to understand. In its advancement horticulture indicates in marked degree the march of civiliza- tion —of progress. Each fruit made choicer or more plentiful for the use of the people, each flower made more perfect, each shrub and tree that shows a more graceful sweep of its boughs, touches a higher range of sensibilities, reaches purer and better impulses and ex- pands the meaning of life. First in the order of things must naturally come its finer equipments, its more elegant adornments. There is a nat- ural hunger that must first be satis- fied, but there yet remains a hunger of the spirit that yearns for a better nourishment. —Jas Montgomery in Pu- yallup Valley Tribune. Human and Bovine Tuberculosis Much controversy has been had as to whether these two forms of tuber- culosis were Identical in character. Koch, the most eminent living bac- teriologist, maintains that such Identy has not been proved. Very eminent authorities have declared to the con- trary. Sir Michael Foster, who Is at the head of the British Royal Com- mission, has lately made a very Inter- 3 esting report on this much mooted question. This report shows that where cattle are inoculated with hu- man tuberculosis the disease is iden- tical in all respects with tuberculosis which originates in the cattle. The investigation is not yet com- pleted, but the results thus far ob- tained admonish us that the wisest course for every breeder and dairy- man is to thoroughly test his cattle at least once a year with tuberculin. It is worth doing this for the cattle's sake alone, and it adds to the import- ance of the test to have the milk free from all taint of this much dreaded disease— Dairyman. Mr. Homeseeker Do you want to get the latest infor- mation regarding irrigation farming? Write to E. F. Benson, Prosser, Wash, and he will send you free of charge a pamphlet just issued, which tells all about the resources and opportuni- ties of the Lower Yakima valley, the section that will grow faster in the next ten years than any other part of the Northwest. Land can be pur- chased there for a small amount down, and the returns from crops will meet the later payments. >yi& SMMM H -•}' \u25a0'• < -;' 9 H '--^^ -: I* mm ma •: - '' ™-— —~———— <~^ . '' "- ••; ••'!].• OFFICES AND STOREROOMS H. F. NORTON & CO. Colds It should be borne in mind that every cold weakens the lungs, low- ers the vitality and prepares the system for the more serious dis- eases, among which are the two greatest destroyers of human life, pneumonia and consumption. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy has won its great popularity by its prompt cures of this most common ailment. It aids expectoration, re- lieves the lungs and opens the secretions, effecting a speedy and permanent cure. It counteracts any tendency toward pneumonia. Price 25c, Large Size 50c.

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Page 1: Ranch (Seattle, Wash.) (Seattle, Wash) 1904-12-01 [p 3]€¦ · shied off, and at the first pitch of his lariat the noose settled down over her and he had but little difficulty in

THE RANCHlice: 38 Downs Building.

-"""" MILLER FREEMAN

Editor and Proprietor,

Associate Editors:

F. WALDEN. H. L. BLANCHARD.

T^ed the First and Fifteenth Each Month.|I,MM" '

Subscription, in advance, one year, 60 cents;

ir months, 30 cents. If on time, subscription

ill be $1- Seattle subscribers are requiredpay $1 Per year > on account of local

postage.Aeents wanted In every town to solicitbscriptlons. Good commission and salaries

paid to hustlers.The paper is sent to each subscriber until

n order to discontinue Is received from thenbscrlber. We must be notified ln writing,

hv letter or postal card, when a subscriberwishes his paper stopped. Returning the

aoer will not answer, as we cannot find it„n our list from the name alone on thenaper We must have both name and ad-dress and all arrearages or dues must benald as required by law. Date of expirationof subscription Is shown on your paper by

address label containing your nam*.

Failing to receive the paper regularly, you

should notify the Seattle office at once, whenmlHtakes, if any, will be corrected.

The Kanch Is entered at the Seattle post-

office at second-class rates of postage.

Address all communications to THERANCH, Downs Building, Seattle, Wash.

The Review is the name of a week-ly paper started at Toppenish, on theYakima Indian Reservation. If theReview will exert its influence to-ward throwing open the reservationto settlement, and thus bringing un-der cultivation and making taxableproperty of a large area of fine agri-cultural land it will be rendering agreat service not only to that sectionbut to the entire state.

Stockbreeders who may figure onshipping pure bred livestock into theUnited States from Canada or otherforeign countries, will find all neces-sary information regarding U. S. gov-ernment requirements in a bulletinjust issued by the United States De-partment of Agriculture and which isentitled "Regulations for the Certifi-cation of Associations of Breeders ofPurebred Livestock and Books of Rec-ords of Pedigrees." This bulletin givesa list of the livestock associationswhose certificates of registration arerecognized by the government. Anyoneanywhere can get a copy of this bul-letin by writing for it, addressing theSecretary of Agriculture, Washington,D. C.

The National Irrigation Congresswill meet next year at Portland, Or.

The change in the Pure Food law,by which the retailer was releasedfrom the responsibility of. adultera-tion, provided he secured a guaranteefrom the manufacturer, was securedby the editor of the Trade Register,in the presence of two Seattle businessmen, the pure food commissioner mak-ing this and one or two other suggest-ed changes, one affecting baking pow-ders.—Trade Register.

To hear him tell it one would thinkthe editor of the Trade Register is thewhole thing around the pure food com-missioner's office. We believe he didanpbint himself as special advisor tothe commissioner when the office wasfirst created several years ago. butlie was soon given to understand tintbe couldn't come in and tell the com-missioner what to do. In view of thenumerous vicious and entirely unwar-ranted attacks of the T^ade Register

""on the commissioner, it is not likely

that Mr McDonald looks to that onar-tpr for advice as to how to administerthe affairs of his office.

A bache^r cattle king who bad be-eorno tired of maverlcking around thehomo corral in single blessednessEntered into Chicago on a wife-bunt-

' <? expedition. He scoured trip canVf)"s and 4iothills of the windy cltv"n'l final]- '^ated a bunch of *****001.-ing, h«-.,fprs. we ll fed and trimiv""'t. in a dpnartmont store. Afterbe boss rancher had assured him

that the brands on the beauties wereduly registered, the man from thewest galloped into the middle of thebunch and proceeded to cut out theprettiest. He gradually worked herto the edge of the herd as the othersshied off, and at the first pitch of hislariat the noose settled down overher and he had but little difficulty inputting the cupid brand over the rightone. He then rushed her aboard thecars and hiked for the home corral,where she is grazing in the richestof feed on the green hills of eternalhappiness, the star of the whole out-fit.Field and Farm.

The Cultivation of Mushrooms isthe title of a bulletin recently issuedby the U. S. Department of Agricul-ture and gives the latest informationon this subject. The Secretary of Agriculture, Washington, D. C, will sendit free to any address.

As nearly as can be determined,more than $200,000,000 has alreadybeen spent in the United States forconstructing irrigation canals and reservoirs for the distribution of waterand for preparing land to receive irri-gation water. Over 10,000.000 acresare today being watered and some-thing like 15,000,000 acres more canbe watered by the ditches alreadyconstructed. The cost of this irriga-tion may seem large, but returns jus-tify the expenditure. In fifteen statesand territories the very existence oflife depends upon the ability to useriver and flood water for growingcrops. And the farmers are not theonly ones benefited. Cities like Den-ver, Colorado Springs, Salt Lake, LosAnge:es, were created by and dependent upon irrigation. And there arestill millions of acres to be wateredand numberless cities to be developedby the application of water to the soilof the West. The national irrigationlaw is at work and many vast enter-prises under way. Nearly $30,000,000is now available for government irri-gation works. Do not be impatient ifresults do not come as soon as youthink they should. Remember thatconstructing mighty reservoirs andsystems of ditches is no small taskand cannot be accomplished in a day

or a season.

We notice that the old reliab'eStudebaker wagon has come to thefore again. At the St. Louis Exposi-tion the exhibit of this company cap-tured the grand prize, which is thehighest award. This award coveredpractically everything manufacturedby the Studebaker Bros, wagons ofevery description for both farm andcity use, together with all styles ofharness and the accessories that goalong with such lines of manufacture.

The annual report of the AlaskaAgricultural Experiment Stations for1903, by Special Agent Georgeson hasbeen received at this office. Anyonewanting to get an idea of the possi-bilities in farming in Alaska shouldwrite the Secretary of Agriculture,Washington, D. C. for a copy.

Drainage InvestigationsBulletin No. 147 of the Office of Ex-

periment Stations, issued by the U S.Department of Agriculture, is a reportof drainage investigations carried o^by that office during 1903, under thedirection of Elwood Mead, chief of ir-rigation and drainage investigations.This is the most important work ofthe kind attempted by the depart-ment, thus forming a new featureof investigations along agriculturallines; yet, judging from this report,it covers a broad and important fieldThe bulletin has a special practicalvalue from the fact that local &*}*.conditions have been examined and

dealt with and the methods of treat-ment which are applicable to ea?bcase are briefly discussed. The widerange, specific differences of treat-ment and financial and sanitary im-portance of drainage In its relation

THE RANCH

to the improvement of farm lands,make it one of the most unique sub-jects which engage the attention ofagriculturists in many localities. Athe report says, so many phases ofthe drainage problem are involvedthat any investigation resolves itselfinto an examination of individualcases in each locality and the par-ticular difficulties there encountered.The application of drainage to irri-gated lands is shown to occupy animportant place in the restoration offields which have passed beyond thelimits of profitable production by rea-son of over-irrigation; or perhaps,putting it in another way, by reasonof lack of natural drainage facilitiesto care for the surplus water used inirrigation.

Elevating Influence of HorticultureThe art of horticulture has had its

attractions for men and women in allages, and the wisest and best havefound delight and instruction in itspursuit. The festive and warlike mon-archs lon the banks of the Euphratesspent their leisure hours on their re-turn from expeditions of rapine andconquest in hanging gardens that re-vealed their beauty and shook theirodors from the lofty summits of theirpalaces, the wonder of the world. Insuch a place can one find the recrea-tion of a passing hour a respite fromweary care, a study and an employ-ment for a busy life. Here the poetcan find inspiration for his sweetestsong, the philosopher food for hismost profound meditations, and thedevout a persuasive call to worship.

Were we to press this subject to itslimits, we might recall the fact thatthe gardens of the earth, wrought intoforms of incomparable beauty by theskillful training of human hands, arethe types and prophesies of all that isbright and ideal in life. It is an ad-mitted truth that horticulture is bothancient and honorable. Pursued as anart it is a most useful industry, en-larging the number and improving thequality of those products of the earththat add immeasurably to the satis-faction and comfort of human life. Itcultivates the taste, refines the sensi-bilities and educates the spirit in itshigher realms of grace and beauty. Itis a higher department of agriculture,requiring a more specal training anda more careful study.

The luscious fruit, the juicy berrythat in' its exquisite flower suggeststhe utmost limit of excellence, maynot afford the solid nourishment ofthe wheat loaf, but they greatly en-large the range of human enjoymentand give life a new interest. Thepansy, creeping low upon the ground,the climbing clematis, with its fineshade and delicate beauty, reflectsupon the inmost soul their own un-rivalled colorings. They speak a newlanguage, which all mankind instinct-ively desires to understand. In itsadvancement horticulture indicates inmarked degree the march of civiliza-tion—of progress.

Each fruit made choicer or moreplentiful for the use of the people,each flower made more perfect, eachshrub and tree that shows a moregraceful sweep of its boughs, touchesa higher range of sensibilities, reachespurer and better impulses and ex-pands the meaning of life. First inthe order of things must naturallycome its finer equipments, its moreelegant adornments. There is a nat-ural hunger that must first be satis-fied, but there yet remains a hungerof the spirit that yearns for a betternourishment. —Jas Montgomery in Pu-yallup Valley Tribune.

Human and Bovine TuberculosisMuch controversy has been had as

to whether these two forms of tuber-culosis were Identical in character.Koch, the most eminent living bac-teriologist, maintains that such Identyhas not been proved. Very eminentauthorities have declared to the con-trary. Sir Michael Foster, who Is atthe head of the British Royal Com-mission, has lately made a very Inter-

3

esting report on this much mootedquestion. This report shows thatwhere cattle are inoculated with hu-man tuberculosis the disease is iden-tical in all respects with tuberculosiswhich originates in the cattle.

The investigation is not yet com-pleted, but the results thus far ob-tained admonish us that the wisestcourse for every breeder and dairy-man is to thoroughly test his cattle atleast once a year with tuberculin. Itis worth doing this for the cattle'ssake alone, and it adds to the import-ance of the test to have the milk freefrom all taint of this much dreadeddisease— Dairyman.

Mr. HomeseekerDo you want to get the latest infor-

mation regarding irrigation farming?Write to E. F. Benson, Prosser, Wash,and he will send you free of chargea pamphlet just issued, which tellsall about the resources and opportuni-ties of the Lower Yakima valley, thesection that will grow faster in thenext ten years than any other part ofthe Northwest. Land can be pur-chased there for a small amount down,and the returns from crops will meetthe later payments.

>yi& SMMM H-•}'\u25a0'•

< -;' 9 H '--^^-:I*mm ma •: -'' ™-— —~———— <~^

.

'' "- ••; ••'!].•

OFFICES AND STOREROOMSH. F. NORTON & CO.

ColdsItshould be borne in mind that

every cold weakens the lungs, low-ers the vitality and prepares thesystem for the more serious dis-eases, among which are the twogreatest destroyers of human life,pneumonia and consumption.

Chamberlain'sCough Remedy

has won its great popularity by itsprompt cures of this most commonailment. It aids expectoration, re-lieves the lungs and opens thesecretions, effecting a speedy andpermanent cure. It counteractsany tendency toward pneumonia.

Price 25c, Large Size 50c.