Drat Them Hens: Scenes from Life in the Early 1900s

Reader Contribution by Sam Moore
Published on February 16, 2012
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I was looking through a stack of old Country Gentleman magazines and these tidbits were in one from 1912 (that’s 100 years ago, folks).

An Ohio farmer purchased, eight years ago, a secondhand two-horsepower gasoline engine to use for pumping water. So well did it work that he bought line shafts, pulleys and belts, and employed the engine to run a cream separator, churn, washing machine, feed-grinder, corn-sheller, grindstone and buzz saw.

To make his wife’s job easier the farmer installed a soft-water tank in the attic of his house, connected with the range, which supplied hot and cold running water with the assistance of the engine. Not including his own labor the homemade “power plant” cost him about fifteen dollars, and has run eight years with only three dollars in repairs.

There are those who would call this the forerunner of mechanical power on the farm. We prefer to label it the application of brain power.

I wonder – does anyone call their kitchen stove a range anymore? And why were they called ranges in the first place?

The moving-picture machine has proved to be a great educator; but this sputtering pedagogue is not infallible, as it frequently demonstrates by the incongruities which it flashes upon the screen. The other day while enjoying all the sensations of a trip through the West of yesterday, the spectators at the nickelodeon, or at least a few of them, were amused to see the faultlessly attired “cowpunchers” driving up the canyon a herd of – not wild-eyed Longhorns or even Whitefaces but – meek-eyed Jerseys and deep-uddered Holsteins.

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