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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 18, 1910)
PAGE TWO. DAILY EAST OREGONIAV, PENDLETON, OREGON, THURSDAY, ATJGCST 18. 1910. EIGH1 PAGES. 51 FACTS FOR FARMERS MENS SUITS ONE-HALF PRICE Beginning Thursday Morning August 18 and Ending Aug. 31. We will offer men's summer suits irre- One-Half Price pectwe of color, price or size, Exactly The assortment is very complete alt sizes from 34 to 46 Longs, Stouts, Stubs and Regulars Our famous Hart, Schaffner & Marx Suits are iucluded in this great offering-'THEY'RE THE BEST CLOTHES IN AMERICA. All-Wool, Corectly Tailored, Serviceable and Perfect Fitting. We never carry our Men's Clothing over from one season to another, hence this sale NOW IS YOUR CHANCE! Many of these suits are heavy enough to be worn all winter and any of them are good until late into fall. The Peoples Warehouse Where it Pays to Trade J Byers Best Flour Is made f roa the choicest wheat that crows. Good bread is assured whsn BYERS' BEST FLOUR is used. Bran. Shorts, Steam Rolled Barley always, en Laud. Pendleton Roller Mills Pendleton, Oregon. LADY IlEADFORT IV SCHOOL FOR, SCANDAL London. Those who knew Miss Rosie Boote, of the Gaiety theater. In the old days would scarcely recognize her now, as the sprightly, but always dignified. Marchioness of Headfort, who is at the moment entertaining a very large house party at Headfort House. Kells, Ireland. In spite of her humble origin, Lady Headfort has, with her almost American genius for adapting herself to her surroundings, broken down all social barriers, and she is not only immensely popular FOR SALE n T BE SOLD One Quarter Section of Land Improved. 2 miles South of Pendleton on Tutuilla Creek on road leading from Pendleton to Pilot R.ock 4.;. ?J! A Neat Cottage, Good Barn, Chicken House, Wood House, Wash House with Furnace. A well of good water. Water main through yards, piped to barn. A good cistern with soft water. 70 acres in summer follow. 90 ton of hay well stacked, cut from 60 acres of Spring sown grain. Stock, Farming Implements, 250 white leg horn Chickens, Household Furniture. Price reasonable. Owner will step out and leave everything. Good reasons for selling For further particulars call at the above said Farm- H. H. HOOPES with all classes In Ireland but Is gath ering a very Influential circle of friends in London. Like another Gaiety favorite, Con nie Gilchcrist, now the Countess of Orkney. Lady Headfort is a splendid horsewoman, and she hunts regularly with her husband during the winter months. She Is worshipped by the peasants in the Kells district, who call her "Our Rosie." Lady Headfort finds plenty of time for music and reading. She Is a voracious reader of good literature, and amazes people who meet her for the first time with her knowledge of art and books. The big house party which has as sembled at Kells Is busy rehearsing for a performance of "The School for Scandal," which Lady Headfort Is or ganizing for a local charity. This will be her first appearance on any stage since she left the Gaiety theater. The marquis, who Is an extremely amiable but not over brainy, young man Is go ing to play a small part in the play. Lady Headfort will be the Lady Tea zle and Sir Anthony Weldon, a well known amateur actor and sporting baronet, will take the part of Sir Pe ter Teazle. Lord Farnham and Sir Charles Wa ters are two other members of the house party who will appear In the play. Organizers of charity perform ances In London are beginning to hope that now that Lady Headfort has "broken the Ice" they will be able to induce her to make an appearance on the stage In town. Up to the present they have signal ly failed In their attempts to secure the marchioness as a "star turn." In some respects Lady Headfort Is like the late Countess of Clancarty, who was Belle Bilton, of the variety halls, and who hated the sight of the stage after her marriage. When the digestion is all right, the action of the bowels regular, there Is a natural craving and relish for food. When this Is lacking you may know that you need a dose of Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver ablets. They strengthen the digestive organs. Im prove the appetite and regulate the bowels. Sold by all dealers. 15,0l. Patents a Year. London. Somo of the principal Ideas that have recently occupied the mind of Inventors make the report of the comptroller-general of patents al most as Interesting as a novel. Even the unguarded points of ladies hat pins have not escaped the invent ors' vigilance, and numbers of pat ents have been applied for In connec tion with suitable point protectors. Altogether, during 1909. 30,603 pat ents were asked for, the highest num ber but one on record, and the num ber granted was 15.066. One of the outstanding features was the development In aeronautics, more than three times as any patents be ing applied for In connection with fly ing, machines as were received the year before. Inventors also gave considerable attention to electric rail way signaling systems, In which the track, rails were used for both the signaling and the power circuits. Poultry Pointers. When lice get a good start among chickens it takes more effort to get rid of them than u takes to keep them from getting a foothold in the first place. Hens are more liable to eat eggs if the shells are thin. The shells will be thicker If plenty of lime be. had by the hens. Oyster and clam shells are the best artificial lime for poultry. Although fowls are grain eaters they thrive beet with some- meat food. When they have free range they pro vide themselves with this In the bugs, worms and grasshoppers they find. Eggs will always continue as a popular food because of their food value and paiutabillty. Even when their price Is high they are valuable as an article of diet. Cook some beans or peas, mix them with wheat bran and feed twice a week and see It you don't get a lot more eggs. It is perfectly natural for chickens to hun at large, and If the weather be suitable, they are much ' stronger for doing so. Many a setting of eggs has been spoiled by making the nest on the floor where the wind can come up through the cracks under the old mother hen. A hen should not be set on more than fifteen eggs. The writer has aU ways made much better success by us ing thirteen eggs to a hen unless she is unusually large. If given too many eggs hens are sure to break some try ing to cover all. When brood chicks seem very thirs ty-wlld for water, let them drink and feed very lightly while so feverish The average egg record for all the pullets and hens In the United States would probably not be as high as sev enty-five eggs In a year. It a hardly worth while to bother with broody hens at this season of the year. The best way to handle them is to chop their heads off and dress them for the table. Hot Weather Feeding. Over-feeding, or the feeding of too much fattening food to poultry, Is followed by trouble In warm weather, and care should be taken to guard against this mistake. Toung chicks and growing chicks especially, should not be fed more than they will eat up promptly three or four times day. For all over three months old, three times a day is sufficient. With the hopper system that Is, where food is kept in hoppers where the chicks can reach it at any time the fact that it Is always available will prevent them from eating too much at one time Dry grains, principally wheat and oats, are better than too much mash though an occasional masn will often assist growth. Fowls, especially those that are confined In yards, need a variety of food at this season of the year,, but that variety should not Include much corn. It should Include green rood In abundance and plenty of pure water to drink, fresh, In clean vessels, three times a day. There Is not much danger of tur keys being overfed If a very light feed is given in the morning and the tur keys range during the day and have enough grain given them at evening to fill their crops. Old ducks, and those Intended to be kept over next winter, should hava two light feeds a day, In sufficient quantity to keep them In fair flesh Mash food is best for ducks, though three or four feeds per week of hard grains may be given. Toung ducks that are being fattened should re celve three times a day a mash com posed of three parts corn meal, one. part of wheat bran and one part beef scraps, mixed with cold water and fed cold. This will fatten them In from ten days to two weeks. Geese may be fed both mash and dry grain and if they have a good range they will not need very much at this season of the year because they will pick up a large part of their nour ishment when foraging. Fort Worth Citizen-Star. Hoe Notes. Never neglect a breeding sow that la nervous, irritable and always on the go. The hog has time for all that he is required to 'turn Into pork, but he has no time to fight lice. If the spring pigs are doing well, hold them steady until fall and then push them hard for market. Given plenty of range clean pens, clean'food and water the hog as a rule will take enre of himself. When boar pig are about five months old they should be separated from the" rest of the herd. A man who Insists on breeding his gilts too young will find the quality of his hog herd steadily deteriorating Select your brood pigs from the largest litters, as they are generally better breeders and better feeders A sow that suckles a big litter of hungry pigs needs a great deal of nourishment, but some farmers ap pear to be ignorant of that fact. In the market the bunch of hogs that is even in weight, conformation and color will bring more than the lot made up of all sorts. The muscles of corn-fed hogs are high in fat and low in protein nnd low In water in the fat-free meat Is do cidedly high. The proportion of ash to protein In the flesh of corn-red hogs, however, Is not !o. Rations of corn balanced by pro teld supplements from sources othe than corn appear to be more palatable rind more efficient to cause growth In hogs than rations of corn and corn products only. I tela t Ion of Livestock to Form Prices The relation of livestock to farm prices is very close and the more live stork on the farms of the country the better prices of farm products will be The price of land Is hign, mainly be cause the prices of staple crops are high, and the reason they are high w because so much of them Is de manded for feeding livestock, while there Is a world shortage of livestock which keeps up both relative demand anu prices for meat In all countries because population Is growing faster than the supply of meat animals. Take away from the farms a con siderable share of their livestock and It would follow that such enormous quantities of corn would be thrown upon the' market as to reduce its price below the cost of production and such general drop tn the value of corn would surely lower me vaiue oi lands all over the corn belt, and hence would affect seriously the value or ail lands. it follows, therefore, that If the farmers of th United States would continue to receive remunerative pric es for their annual corn crops, and if they would maintain tne preseni gen eral value of farm lands throughout the country, they must keep up or in crease the supply of livestock, on the farms. Makiiur Good Bnttcr. .nK Acx-a'm run in . can bV C.kU V J V - . - - litiBii ntll 1 la thnrntihlv cooled. It can then be put In the general stor age can ror oenvery. Even the frame of the macmne should be kept clean. Some seem to think that their duty Is ended when they have cleansed the bowl. A hand separator presupposes some power other than hand power for run ning. Tou may start with the Idea that you are going to run It by hand, but vou soon realize the economy of something different. There must be better care an aiong t-k. iin if wnuM comDete suc cessfully with the oleo people. There it nothing they llKe to near onitr than .high officials knocking on the separator product In any state. Dysentery Is a dangerous disease but can be cured. Chamberlain's Col- Ic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy has been successfully used In nine epidemics of dysentry. It has never been known to fall. It Is equally vnl uable for children and adults, and when reduced with water and sweet ened, It Is pleasant to take. Sold by all dealers, NEW OOIXS MAY BE INSCRIBED IX ENGIVI.SH London. The production of a new coinage Is always a rather Blow pro cess, but on the present occasion It may be expedited to some extent. In the case of the late king, who came to the throne In January. 1901. the order In council and proclamation determining new designs for gold and bronze coins was Issued on Decem ber 10th of the same year and came Into force on January 1, 1902, while the order relating to silver coins was not approved until January IS. ' On that occasion there were sev eral changes on the reverses, notably the half-crown and florin, with the object of making the two coins as dis similar as possible. The only change. It is understood, which will be made in the new coins will be the royal ef figy, for which Mr. Bertram MacKin nal, R. A., the Australian sculptor. Is now engaged In making designs. The portrait of King Edward which appears on the present coinage is the work of Mr. De Saulles, the then en graver to the Mint, the head In pro file being truncated in a similar man ner to the effigy on the first coinage of Queen Victoria and on the coinage of most of his late majesty's prede cessors since the reign or Charles II. Perhaps the best that can be said for the design is that It Is commonplace and Inoffensive. There is a confident expectation that Mr. MacKlnnal will produce something worthy not only of his reputation as a sculptor, but also of a coinage which, as far at least as gold Is concerned, enjoys the larg est circulation In the world. Many suggestions are being made as to alterations which might prop erly be made In the new coinage. It Is contended, for Instance, that the Inscription should be ln English In stead of Latin. State of Ohio, Ciry of Toledo, I.nrst Co as-, tj, M. Prank i. Cheney mike, oath that b Is color pirtner of the firm of t. i. Ck oey ACo , doing Bn-lueta In tM City o. I'olcrti). County and Hint sforeuld, sail rbat said firm will pay the lorn of ON UUNL1(KI DOI.LA1I8 for each and e-ari case of Catarrh that rannoc be curea o the use of uulri Catarrh Cor. FRANK t. CBENET. Sworn to before sad subscrlsed Is my prwnr., this flth day of Iierambar, A- t. 1886. A. W. OLtfAMON. (Seal) Notary Habile. Hall's Catarrh Cnr Is taken Intcrnall) and acta directly on tba blood and mucoos urfacea of the system. Head ror testimo nials irea. r. i. CHENEY CO., Toledo, U., Bold by all DmgRlats, Itic Take Halls Family tills for constipation. ITALY IS AN'GltY AT OPERATIC HONORS Rome. The fact that three Italian composers will visit the United States and that two new Itatmn operas will be given for the first time In New York has caused some adverse com ments In the Italian press. Up to this time new opera was never al lowed to go out of Italy without be ing first submitted to the verdict of Milan, Naples and Rome, except the case of Verdi's "Alda," which waa first produced In Egypt at the time, of the opening of the Suez canal. Tho Italian public will consider the present departure quite a slight and composers will bo called to account for It when they again seek popular approval. That is ns It may bo. The fact remains that Hicclnl. Mascagnl and Don Perosl, tho Slstlne Chapel music director, are all scheduled to appear some time this year In New York, and Puccini's "Girl From the Golden West," as well as Mascagnl's "Isabeau" are both to be heard for the first time In New York. Puccini's opera Is completed and Mascagnl Is Just now writing the bars of "Isabeau" In his home at Castle Arquato. Do yon Uke the Bast OregonlanT