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About Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910 | View Entire Issue (July 8, 1909)
Save the Babies. NFANT MORTALITY something We can hardly M®«*® good rieaftN, •$»•<$*• «•eaapaON« A®® an waappraachatf racaad ■ • a bJoad-pu»ifier. To 11st Hood’. Sarsaparilla today. In n»n»l liquid form or iu ehwulausl utblau known u baraatab.. TYPEWRITERS "New Vtoilde Yo»>’’ All make' rebuilt like nt w Mt M < ond-ht>nd prive«. Two Smith lien a K tuii>g on front 125 to M5. Supplì»'« forali MiMkefl Mai hini'it rented. V2 to 13.50 monthly Th« Typewriter Exchange 2&Ó Montgomery, Kan b ranci«»« Potatoes steeped in sulphuric acid and •ubjected to pressure make an excellent substitute for ivory in the manufacture •f billiard balls. DO YOU WANT A TYPEWRITER? Th« Wholesale Typewriter Co.. 37 Montgomery St., San Francisco, will sell you one at 40 to 75 pet cent discount from factory list, all makes on mar ket, all fully guaranteed. English mercantile marine, which formi more than one-half of the whole world'i •hipping, brings that country about $450, 000,000 every year. Mothers will find Mrs. Winslow’s Sorithlnj Syrup th.- b Bt r. un 'lv to use for their chlldrai luring the teething period. C|TC «»■ Vitus’ Dance nua >*rvous ln.oaso. y.rwa- I 11 J neatly cured by Dr. i . ine’s Great Nerve Ke Storer. Send for FREE $2 00 trial bottle and treatise. Dr. K. H. Kline. Ed, 931 Arch St., Philadelphia. Pa. The ruby is the most valuable of tb precious stones. A four-karat ruby it quoted at about $2,250, and a ruby of for ty-seven karats brought $100,000. ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ 0 ♦ J Overcomes Loss of J ♦ Nervous Force in * ♦ Men and Women ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦« Men and women who are nervous wrecks, whe lack energy and ambiiton. who suffer with nerv ousness. dread, anxiety and a general inability t< be happy or to act naturally and rationally at all times, may try this treatment with a certainty of astonishing results. The ingredients can be obtained separately at all well stocked drug stores. At any leading drug store get three ounce* syrup sarsaparilla compound in a half-pint bottle. Get one ounce each of the following in separate packages: Compound fluid balmwort, compound essence cardio), and tincture cadomene com pound (not cardamom). Add balmwort to sarsa parilla; let stand two hours, »hen add other two, shake well and take a tvaspoonful after each meal and one at retiring. Four-Horne Evener, This particular form of four-horse eveuer is entered to work with one horse iu the furrow and the other three on the laud, To get an even draft will perhaps require some ad- justment of the left hand double tree and the proper place to attach the chain to the plow beam can be found by experiment. The two double trees are of the ordinary length and the • tick used for eveuer needs to be tough oak and five feet four inches In length, The two pulleys should be large enough to allow a small link log chain to work through them. Two bolts are required for the pulleys, and two pieces of strap iron two inches wide, used as braces. The illustration does not indicate ex actly the distances between the dif ferent points which should be as fol lows: From the right end to the first pulley, 7 inches; from the point of attachment of the plow to the center of right hand pulley, 15>4 inches; from the point of attachment of the plow to the center of the left hand pulley 8’4 inches. Tills places the two pul- leys almost 24 inches apart. At the left end have three or more holes into which the double tree for left hand team can be hitched. For an even distribution of the draft the proper point of attachment of the left band double tree will depend sole ly upou the point of attachment of the chain to the plow, If the chain is ear rled far back, its draft will be differ- ent from what it would be if it were attached closer to the nose end of the plow. Assuming that tlie angle of al EVwv °JS ewva acts vvowpWy on\W buwiAs, ckanses PLAN OF FOUR HORSE EVEN ER. CALIFORNIA Fic S yrup 50 Co. ’ a BOTTLE DYSPEPSIA •‘Having taken your wonderful ‘Casca- rets’ for three months and being entirely cured of stomach catarrh and dyspepsia, I think a word of praise is due to •Cascarets’ for their wonderful composi tion 1 have taken numerous other so- called remedies but without avail, and I find that Cascarets relieve more in a day than all the others I have taken would tn »year.” James McGune, 108 Mercer St., Jersey City, N. J. Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good. Never Sicken. Weaken or Gripe. 10c. 25c. 50c. Never sold in bulk. The gen uine tablet damped C C C. Guaranteed to cure or your money back. 919 Detail plans: bill of mat* r al with cost; full direct ona bo anybody, at small expense, ran build his own tank, connect old style toilet and seweraire for kitchen slops! making hia home sanitary. $.1.50. G. H. HAMILTON 474 Manzanita Street. Portland, Oregon WANT TO SELL? Send us a full <b'Kcrp‘ion of your property—im proved ranch loggeJ-otT land, timber land, irri gated land, dry land. nv rcantile business, saw mill, ahingle mil' anything and we will show you how we do it. H’rife today. Don t use binder twine or any other kind in tying fleeces save the regular wool twine. The trade generally made extra efforts last year to have this det rimental custom discontinued, and did do much then to eradicate it. This year most of the mills and leading dealers reiterate their determination not to handle wool tied with sisal twine, as it renders the wool unfit for dyeing; hence, if growers or those pre paring wool for market exjtect to find ready sale and top prices for their wools, they must adhere to this ad- vice. Iligher prices and active compe tition for the receipts, if properly and Carefully handled, is confidently antici pated in this market the coming sea son, and shippers are also advised that In order to realize the best results con signments should lie sold here on the open market, where all buyers can com pete for them. To Hold (he Gate Open. A piece of timber 4x6 two feet long, with a notch in one end 3x6 inches, a piece 2x4 two feet long with one end beveled and a notch 2*X>x6 inches cut in position as shown in sketch serves Jt4 XKJEL a Z« A. PACIFIC COASI MERCANTIlf ASSOCIATION 98 Union Street. StAITLf, NN, JjOLDEN «W est r coffee O I TEA SPICES BAKING POWDER EXTRACTS JUS I RIGHT CLOssnaotVERs PORTLAND. ORE. ) AVegelable Preparai ion fonts similaiing the FoodandRegula ting lite Siontaclts andlWlsof Promotes Digestioni heerTnl- ness and lïest.Coniains neitiur Opium.Morphine nor Mineral. to hold the open. The dotted lines show the position of the holder as the gate is forced over the bevel. The post should be set to correspond with I he height of the gate when open. If the gate drags on the ground there is something wrong; hang the gate a little bit higher. The end opposite the notch of the holder should be the heav iest so as to keep the notch in position on the gate. taehmeut of the chain to 30 degrees the left hand should be attached to the of the eveuer at a point inches from the point of of the plow to the double is no reason why this eveuer should not work on any kind of plow provid ed that tlie lengths of the parts are adjusted to suit the distance of the point of attachment of the main tree from the furrow and that there is a rigid brace to which to attach the chain. Treatment for Potato Scab. It Is true that as early as 1842 a German investigator suggested that the trouble was caused by a parasitic or ganism, but later it was definitely d< termined that the fungus, Sorosporimn scabies, which he had isolated, was not invariably the canes of the trouble. It was not until 1890 that Prof. Bolley definitely determined that potato scab was caused by a fungus parasite. I'll- til resistant strains could be bred up it was necessary Hint some temporary preventive be applied, says Farm, Stock and Home, Treatment of wo bies may be made by the use of for- malin or corrosive sublimate (blc’nlo- ride of mercury). Tlie latter ls per- haps tlie most effective, but it should be handled with the greatest caution, as it is a very powerful poison when taken Internally. The solution is pre pared by dissolving two ounces of cor rosive sublimate in two gallons of hot water. When the poison is well dis solved. add twelve gallons of water, making fourteen gallons in all. The potatoes, which should be reasonably clean, should be put In a gtinn.v sack and the whole suspended In the solu tion for an hour and a half. Then empty them out on a floor to dry thor oughly before cutting and planting. Wash for Nursery A hog is a hog frequently because he is given no opportunity to be cleanly ■ind decent. There are farmers who believe a hog would die if not allowed to wallow in mud and filth, while oth ers are of the opinion that the hog -hould have plenty of clean water. The hog needs a great deal of water in hot weather, and if he cannot get it he will take mud as the next best thing. A hog rushes to a niudhole to coo) off. He conies out and the nntd dries >n his skin. The next mud oath he lakes adds another layer to that al- ready dried on. and in a short time the pores of his skin are completely dogged wit li mud. Now, a hog cannot thrive with his pores all clogged up any better than a num. If a hog has access to a deep pool of water, as he should in hot weather, he will keep lean and thrive much more than if lie lies around in a niudhole made lilthy by continued use. ^lost farmers who supply a bathing place for their Ilogs make them so shallow that they ire soon converted Into mudholes. On air farm we usually keep from thirty to fifty pigs, and they have a pool of water fed by a stream, and it is deep ■nough for them to swim in. The sides are dug down sharply, and were laid with cobblestones for a distance of four or five feet from the water's edge. The pool was always clean; we never have trouble with mange or lice, mil when on two occasions cholera swept through the country our Ilogs were not affected. The hogs never used the pool unless tile weather was extremely hot. A Smooth Field. It worries the good farmer to see liis neighbors plowing the fields round and round the same way year after year, He knows that by-and-by there will be deep furrows all over the farm. and all the while these might beavoid- ed. Ilow? Change the order of things this spring by going out into file een- ter of tlie field where the dead furrow is and turning it full the first thing. Then gee around instead of haw, as is usually done, plowing back to tlie place of tieginning. Keep this Up to the end and you will have no ditch in the middle, but a field that is nice and smooth and good to look upon. It may be a little awkward turning round to the right where one lias always been in the habit of turning to the left, but you will soon get accustomed to it, and so w ill the horses. Champion Holstein Ball. Stock. cently been much advocate«! as a sub Y. P. Expo. Souvenir stitute for fumigation with hydrocyanic Send us your name and address with that of two of your friends anti we will send you FREE a 25c piece of the late t sheet music or a beautiful col- oiwsi picture of the A. Y. P Exposition. Include a 2c etamp for p stage ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. I nfants /C hildren BLACK LAND COMPANY Dipping nursery stock In lime-sul 450 451452 New Ywrk Bik Seattle, Washington phur wash or other insecticides has re f TDTT’C’ 25c Sh*et Music or Letters from Prominent Physicians addressed to Chas. II. Fletcher. N ot N arcotic . Utapeof Old Dr.SAML'LLltnUlER linvpkin Seed" jtix Sriina * /tocMftSrfs- .Ausf St rd * fyüunûnt- lit Curtonuir Sda + liiarmSerd- ÇfcaÎKd Suçar • ìdutitnfceea Mavar. acid gas. The station at Genova. N. Y., finds, however, that this treatment. If used nt all. must be handled with care to secure scale destruction without In juring the tree«. With the sulphur wash, exposure of the trees for too long a time or at too high temperature resulted In Injury; while with any of the materials used, exposure of the loots to the mixture resulted In serious injury to the stock. For nurserymen the station still recommends fumigation a« moat effective and least liable to Injury, and would advise orchnrdlsts to use the Hme-sulphur na a spray after the trees are set, rather than as a dip when they are received.—Farm J<»iri>aL t o Illinois State Pair, Applying l.lme tn the Soil. As a rule all compact clay soils may be greatly benefited by the application of one ’ton of lime per acre, just after breaking up, either in fall or spring, and thoroughly mixed with the earth. Lime should not be applied with ma nure of any kind, but the latter (ma nure) may be applied as a top dress ing and worked in by cultivation of the crop. One application of Urne every five years is usually sufficient I I I 2 ( 1 t Apcrfect Remedy for Constipa tion, Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea Worms ,Convulsions .Feverish Concerning Hou«. Of the timber England import«, 87 pel cent is pine and fir, 3 per cent oak and 14 per cent teak, mahogany and other furni ture woods. WbWuoX consbpaVxon pcxmawGnWy To óetWs beucJvcXaY cjjccis.aXwaysbuy tfcmnnc, HANUfACTURf□ QV THE is frightful. realize that of all the children born in civilized countries, twenty two per cent., or nearly one-quarter, die before they reach one year; thirtyseven per cent., or more than one-third, before they are five, and one-half before they are fifteen! We do not hesitate to say that a timely use of Castoria would save a ma jority of theso precious lives. Neither do we hesitate to say that many of these infantile deaths aro occasioned by the use of narcotic preparations. Drops, tinctures and soothing syrups sold for children’s complaints contain more or less opium, or morphine. They are, in considerable quantities, deadly poisons. In any quantity they stupefy, retard circulation and lead to congestions, sickness, death. Castoria operates exactly the reverse, but you must see that it bears the signature of Chas. II. Fletcher. Castoria causes the blood to circulate properly, opens the pores Gf the skin and allays fever. I It effect« it« wonderful cures, not «imply because it contains sarsaparilla but baeaoaa it combine« the utmost remedial values of more than 'JOdifferent ingredients. There is no real substitute for it. If urged to buy any preparation •aid to be “lust as good” you may be acre it is inferior, costs less to make, and yields the dealer a larger profit. SOLD BY LEADING DRUGGISTS i A Cood Blood ness and Loss of S leep . Facsimile Signature of Dr. A. F. Peeler, of St. Louis, Mo., says: “I have prescribed your Castor!« in many cases and have always found it an efficient and speedy remedy.” Dr. E. Down, of Philadelphia, Pa., says: “I have prescribed your Cas toria in my practice for many years with great satisfaction to myself and benefit to my patients.” Dr. Edward Tarrish, of Brooklyn, N. Y., says: "I have used your Cas toria in my own household with good results, and have advised several patients to use it for its mild laxative effect and freedom from harm.” f Dr. J. B. Elliott, cf New York City, says: “Having during the past six years prescribed your Castoria for infantile stomach disorders, I most heartily commend its use. The formula contains nothing deleterious to the most delicate of children.” Dr. C. G. Sprague, of Omaha, Neb., says: “Your Castoria is an Ideal medicine for children, and I frequently prescribe it. While I do not advo cate the indiscriminate use of proprietary medicines, yet Castoria is an exception for conditions which arise in the care of children.” Dr. J. A. Parker, of Kansas City, Mo., says: “Your Castoria holds th® esteem of the medical profession in a manner held by no other proprie tary preparation. It is a sure and reliable medicine for infants and chil dren. In fact, it is the universal household remedy for infantile ailments.” Dr. II. F. Merrill, of Augusta, Me., says: “Castoria is one of the very finest and most remarkable remedies for infants and children. In my opinion your Castoria has saved thousands from an early grave. I can furnish hundreds of testimonials from this locality as to its efficiency and merits.” Dr. Norman M. Geer, of Cleveland, Ohio, says: “During the last twelve years I have frequently recommended your Castoria as one of the best preparations of the kind, being safe in the hands of parents and very ef fective in relieving children's disorders, while the ease with which such a pleasant preparation can be administered is a great advantage.” CASTORIA GENUINE >7 Bear8 the Signature of ALWAYS ___ NEW YORK. Alb months old ■ 35 POSES-J5CENTS J); * 0 Guaranteed under the Food Exact Copy of Wrapper. In Use For Over 30 Years. THE CENTAUR COMPANY. TT MURRAY «TRE ET, MEW YORK CITY. 33 UNSANITARY CONDITIONS. Water Supply in Many Cases Found Unnecessarily Polluted. E. F. Pernot. Oregon Agricultural College. Corvallis. The condition in which I find water received from various parts of the state warrants my calling the attention of the public to the unsanitary conditions which must exist surrounding their cesspools. It is the lowest point in | from the ej gs deposited by flies, from water supply. Some samples of water its vicinity into which liquid’s drain. I this they pass into the pupa stage and taken in storile bottles under asceptic Frequently a privy is located within a ' again emerge as flies with the return precautions, contain as high as 63,580 stone’s throw of an open well. When of warm weather. TheBe flies enter germs per cubic centimeter (a teaspoon the water table rises to the surface of ourjdwellings, walk upon our food and holds about five cubic centimeters of the ground, as it always does during directly transmit the organisms from water and an ordinary drinking glass the winter in Western Oregon, all sur excreta to our food. Contanimation about 225 cubic centimeters). A glass face water is contaminated, and, as the does not cease at that, for we hav® ful of such water W’ould therefore con water level lowers, the open wells be definitely proven that the organisms tain 14,305,500 living germs. While come reservoirs for the drainage. which the flies take into their bodies it is true that many varieties of these The ordinary stone or brick wall of from the excreta are not destroyed by germs are not directly disease produc an open well only serves the purpose their digestion, and passing from their ing, the continued introduction of such of preventing the caving in of the bodies with the excreta the germs util large quantities of them into the sys earth and in no sense acts as a filter. | ize this excreta for food and multiply. tem lowers vitality and increases sus We have received samples of water Therefore a fly speck containing fifty ceptibility to the disease producing from open wells, situated near barn germs will increase its numbers fifty types when they gain access to the yards or dwellings, which were loaded fold. body. Water containing so many or with organisms that are instrumental If perchance the organism happens ganisms carries also, in solution, the in decomposing manure. The samples to be the typhoid bacillus, a fly speck ptomaines from the putrefaction of the gave strong reactions of ammonia by upon an apple, or other food, will organic matter in which they grew. chemical analysis and were even tinted eventually contain thousands of germs. These large number of organisms gen with the color of liquid manure. One This we have conclusively demon erally find their way into open wells by particular sample was thus polluted strated by hatching flies in a sterile surface drainage and where they can from a flower bed near the house, the box, then feeding them with bread or pass, so may the disease producing flower bed having been heavily ma sugar saturated with cultures of th® types pass also. typhoid bacilli, then allowing them to nured. The wrnters from driven wells are In localities where water is piped in excrete upon apples, cabbage leaves, comparatively free from organisms. to the house and there is no aewer, the other material that gives off moisture. An open well is an abomination and is toilets should be connected with a prop The fly speck, after some time, as not in keeping with our present under erly constructed septic tank and the sumes the form of a colony and is standing of the laws of sanitation. effluent should be piped a long distance found to be loaded with living typhoid The question arises, how can we bet from the well and empty on the surface bacilli, showing that the» had passed ter our condition. Where a well is the of the ground, where sun and air may through the fly uninjured and had mul only means of obtaining water, let it I still further purify it. If an open clos tiplied abundantly in the fly’s deposit. be dug to the water bearing stratum, et must be used, a concrete vault, well It is well known that milk is an wall it up with brick laid in cement cemented, should be constructed, in ideal food for typhoid bacilli, and for for ten feet, arch it over with the stead of a mere hole in the ground, and that reason should be well guarded pump pipe and arch well cemented in, lime frequently thrown into it to pre from the invasion of flies. Keep flies fill the remainder of the hole, which vent the breeding of flies. Earth clos out of the house, especially that part may be 15 to 20 feet, with clay well • ets have been very successful and con where food is kept. tramped down and the result will be a sist of galvanized iron trays or tubs If Your Eyes Bother You bottomless brick jug, deep under that may be emptied away from tne ground, into which no surface water, premises; dry earth or ashes should be get a box of PETTIT’S EYE SALVE, worms nor animals can penetrate. The used in connection with them to absorb old reliable, most successful eye rem edy made. Ail druggists or Howard water from such a well is as pure as moisture and suppress odor. Bros., Buffalo, N. Y. can be obtained from the locality in It is well known that flies breed in PNU No. 21.O®- which it is situated. human and animal manure; for exam There are many families living in ple, the deposits of human excreta are writing to a<l▼•rtisers pleaw the country who should enjoy the best often seen to be a crawling mass of VF mentl«»n tbi« paper. of health, but who are always ailing. maggots, these are the larvae hatched The cause of ill health may, as a rule, 1 be traced to their use of polluted water I produced by the unsanitary condition ' of their surroundings. But few homes have proper drainage from sinks and baths, dish water is thrown out of the sack door on the ground near the well, garbage is similarly disposed of to de- 1 compose and drain into the well. Wash j water containing filth that would not A flavoring uaed the rame as lemon or vaaflla. By dissolving granulated sugar in water aad be tolerated on the clothing is also adding Mapleine. a delicious «yrup is made and emptied on the ground to drain into a syrup better than maple. Mauleme is sold hr gr<H ers. If not send 35c for 1 oa. bottla and the well. Most of the open wells aitu- | recipe book. Cr««cent Mfg. Co.. Seattle. «ted near the house or barn are but |