PORTLAND OFFERS A M A R K E T FOR YO U R P R O D U C E M AID O’CLO VER B U T T E R -IC E CREAM MUTUAL CREAMERY CO., Portland. ■ — B — You W ill F ..I Ri«hl at Horn« Her* S A F I AN D C E N TR A L— REASONABLE RATES E x c«ll«u l C * /« ftR cIa ) W ftk ljr H ate« Hu# Mrcta All Traina 11th and Star*. Portland, Or«. Evening*. SA\ OanUmKHi« l tw II n. m l'hiidran 10 canta ail tun«* PORTLAND HIDE A WOOL CO. _______ MVMtN «tota, PMTUiA, M IM E Writ« for Pricaa and Shipping Ta** Page & Son Portland, Oregon A rood p aca to Eat and Lé va Wait Ramaràahia 4iY lunv’haon at mu». RH E U M A T IS M Jack Kin* Cur«« tt. L td *« and G#nu Exam- taauon lrea. «K Etokuai bid*.. Purtiaod. Or« RITZ HOTEL Right D ow n Tow n Yamhill St OOU MOHAIR. CALCARA HARR AJdraaa lVt»artm«nt R Now la U m ttraa to mark«* rapor.a W # aro pà>m*ar* aitd larcoot hand er» of ih«aa m U m Northwaot. Writ« u i Capons INFORM ATION D EPARTMENT, PLE ATIN G S P E C IA L Cue «««UTV ham and raaotuna Q C pkaat aairts iwaiy fur ha ul L C I ll» Hamatitrhin*. picodng and tuckin*. LAh I LR.N N O V aL T Y Met*. CO. ««•* n /i h St. Portland. Ore Park and Morrison Sta. Portland. Or« Cbftoful Lare* Lobby. Well furnished room* with all modern convacctoneea. Pncaa SLJU up. A T T E N T I O N L A D IE S Sanitary B eauty Parlor*— W e fix you up. You trill caruunly faai at borna bara. w « m ake all kind« of H air Goods of your W . J. Sofleld. Manager. to m b ln c a Juin our sch ool of Iteauty Culture. 400 to 414 D eaum B dg., Phcn« B roadw ay 49082. Portland, O regoiv SHIP US YOUR WOOL Gaaniri*. cardirv* and mattraaaaa. Crystal BM a Z i NG. W S l OI N O a c u t t i n q Spring* W o o l« Mi.la, 7 « L'nabia. PoaUand. N orthw est W aidinc ¿a Supply C o »* 1 st St C L E A N IN G A N O D Y E IN G mtchakjcal For reh aoi« C leaning and D yeing «ervice »end parcel* to Protact th at Idea w ith a United us W e pay return p o sta ge B tat«* Pat«nL O ther« have m ad « fortunes Inform ation and prices glvea out of P a te n ts W h y not y o u ? T h om as upon request ailyeu, 202 Steven* Bldg-. Portland, Or«. ___ E N K E '8 C IT Y D Y E W O R K ! abed 1 A M ________ Portland C U T F L O W E R S A F L O R A L D E S IG N S Clarke B r o e , Florists, 2$7 M orrison St.___ F O U N D R Y A N D M A C M 'N E W O R K S Com m ercial Iron W o rk s, 7 th 4k Madison.__ for farm produce brines producer b e t­ FO O T C O R R E C T lC N :S T ter returns. W s Ilk« to tell you of F eatherw eight Arch Support* made to our plan. order. J. E. T ryzelaar, 61S Pittock Biock* Portland, O ra.__________________________________, MOl FR BAKBrK i OLLRt.K Taach«* trad* in s weaka So:ne pay while learn- »1* Front St. Portland, Or. in*. Positions aacorad. Write for catalogue 234 Buma.de street. Portland. Ore _____ I F IT HURTS DON'T PAY.** G uaranteed dental w ork. C row ns $5 00, Plates 115. ov. Bridge w ork W o o a tooth. Teetn extracted by gas. L a te st modern ' methods. Dr. H arry Sem ler, Dentist, Ird m d M orrison. 2nd floor A lirk y B id* . Port- , land. Or. W r ite or phone for appointm ent, j Straw berry and R aspberry Plants ! W rit# Platers Gardena, AS 12 W . Queen A v e , 8 pokar.e. W a sh , for pricelist r\ er- | bearing straw berry and raspberry plants ü oentl y cured of tout Pile« i and save m oney. __ br a highly R o d a l M pb>w- M O N U M E N T S — E. 3d an* Pm * Sts. a-*»« My method M ncT-»i.fi* ur.laaa and O U A R A N ­ 1 U tto Schum ann Granite A M a rt.« W ork a CO cure Toa^ Saad f«r psnso M arry if L o n ely ; moat successful “ H om s M aker” ; hundred* rich. confidential; j reliable, years experience; descriptions free. ”T b e Su ccessful Club.** Mrs. N ash. Box 554. O akland. California. ____ ND AMD H O atfS O N PONTIARD. OREGON .[■.T. Of. •’•-■S PAPÇP * » -'l-i.Q W edding Bouquets and F u n e r a l Piece« Lubllner Florists. 341 Morrison SL PATENT ATTORNEY ^ NEW MARKETING METHODS R U B Y & CO. PILES D H poaltively «od penna. DR.CHAS. J. DEAN 2 TANK HEATERS ARE FAVORED When Milk Cows Are Watered Infre­ quently It It Poor Policy to Supply Ice Water. When a cow drinks water, her body at once seta to work raising It. If necessary, to the same temperature as exists normally In the body. In order to warm the water taken in, heat la Just as necessary as It la to warm a kettle of water on the stove. To provide the heat necessary, the blood and Internal organs give up a portion of their supply until more Is supplied from food previously con­ sumed. As the milk cow Is a heavy consumer of water, much heat Is re­ quired to warm It Consequently when cows are allowed to drink water that Is very cold, a high percentage of the feed eaten is required to heat It. If It Is true that some heat is being given off from the body all the time and when the amount of water taken In at one time Is small the loss Is un­ important But when the cows are watered only once or twice dally, and then get Dear Ice water, they are like­ ly to suffer Injury and more feed la necessary. Stated briefly. It Is a ques­ tion of balancing good feed and the cow's time digesting It against the cost of a good tank heater and a few palls o f cobs or coaL The man inter­ ested In getting the most out of his cows and in their comfort will not expect them to be their own tank heaters. SILAGE READY WHEN NEEDED Mistaken Idea to Think That Certain Time Must Elapse Before Feeding to Stock. What Is the best time to begin feed­ ing silage, la a question which la In­ teresting many dairy farmers. The specialists on live stock feeding say that the time to begin using si­ lage Is when the dairyman needs It; they feel there Is no Justification for the Idea that a certain time must elapse between the filling of the silo and opening It for use. Experiments made at the state col­ leges of the country Indicate that fer­ mentation starts almost as soon as the corn Is placed In the silo, and that the greatest change takes place during th* first five days after filling. After V. days, fermentation Is practically com­ plete, and the allage undergoes very Uttle modification after two week». Some farmers do not know that sil­ age will keep for a long time Ex­ periments Indicate that silage Is as palatable after several years as that which has been kept only a few months. Although moldy silage apparently does not Injure mature cows. It has been found to affect the health of calves and horses. To be on the safe side, careful fanners discard the moldy silage from the top of the silo. REAL VALUE OF DAIRY COW Mott Reliable Method Is to Figura Her Actual Butterfat Produc­ tion by Weight. The most reliable way of getting at the real value of a dairy cow Is to fig­ ure her actual butterfat production. This can be done by weighing the milk produced by each cow and by deter­ mining the per cent of butterfat through occasional tests of the milk with a Babcock tester. UGLY INDIAN UPRISING PUT DOWN -------------- LENGTH OF WORKING SEASON Mott Important Factor In Road Can- atructicn— Thara la Contldor- ablo Variation. iP r*| iir.l by th* V a lt.J a t . ; . . l > .f « r t m ..t •t Agrlculttlr. I Portland. O raron V A U D E V IL L E PH OTO P L A Y S 0\«npWt» t'han*« Saturday A Julia. Vatina«. v >V Ovan 7 a. m. to 2 a. m.. i WRIGLEYS ■■■ NORTONIA HOTEL BAB’S RESTAURANT ROAD- BUILDING A f t t r F .vtry A itai Uncle Sam’s Great Testing Machine in Operation # -------------------------------------------------------- -— Notable Dattl* Between Aborigine* from tnalsb corn and grass seed, and Spaniard* Recorded In Hie- Tne descendants of These Indians tory of Surangc, Mexico. retain symbols Intrisluced by early missionaries, but little of Christianity. The nnme of the little settlement j when they worship pagan gods tiefore of Tepehnantes, In Durango, Mexico. „ Christian cross they pour out liba­ recalls one of the earliest events In tions of tesvlno. They feed It to In­ Durango’s recorded history, a bulletin fants along with their mother's milk of the National Geographic society to ward off sickness. They use It as remarks. It was the tribe which gave a liniment, and take It Internally for the name to the village which, with every ill. They employ It at orgies ths Tarahumares, arose against the with no thought of debauchery, for Spanish settler* four years before j gucii orgies are part o f their worship. Plymouth colony was founded. In that year some 23,0011 Indians of these Had Looked Ahead. The river was dangerous to bathers, two tribes inarched on Durango city. They killed missionaries and burned and Johnny lind been forbidden to One day, however, he came down churches as they moved. Not swim. tnora that 000 white people withstood home with unniistaknlle signs o f hav­ this siege, and even allowing for an ing been In the water. Ills mother exaggeration In their estimate of 15.- scolded him severely. "But I was UOO of their er.erny killed, the white tempted so badly, mother," he com- man's victory was a terrible lesson plained. "Yes, I suppose you were. Put liow did you happen to have your to their assailant*. These tribes had s beve-age, tes­ bathing suit with you?” Johnny vlno, peculiar to then—a leer, of pansed. then said: "Well, mother, I milk an l water hue--that was made took It, thinking I might be tempted." Tito length of tho working aoaaoo la a iiKMt lui|Hirtaut oloiuout In road cou- at motion anti two In which I hero la considerable variation, according to tht* huroau o f public roads of I ha Unit- ad States IViwrtiueut of Agrlculturt, which hat collected data from all of the stataa. I'eductltig Sundays only thara ara 313 working days In lha yaar. and Ala­ bama. Mississippi anti New Mexico ra- poit that grading Is possible on 300 of them. Neighboring states report as Man and the Flowers. The fragrance of plants Is not for man's pleasure; It I* a mean* of at­ Dr. F. K. McGowan, chief of tho textile division *»f tin* hiirvuu of stnmhmla, and I>r. F. C. Ilrown, ndtng director tracting Insect* to fertilise them Th* of tho bureau. lu*p«vtlng n four-Inch ninnila hemp hBW««*r broken by tho moat powerful precision testing machine In object of many preacut day florists la tho world, which la located at the bureau. The machine U cupnlde of exerting a com pressi on of 2.0UÜ.UUU |Kiunds and to Improve a flower In Ita coloring, a tension o f 1,800,000 pounds. It la used to test tho strength of hemp and wire cables. alae anil subalanco—-In short to "paint iht> Illy.” They cannot Improvs the fragrsuce, whith 1» perhaps tho reason IT 4 they erem to t-aro so little for Ita dis­ Two-Foot Snake L appearance uuder their handling —Ex­ Found in Calf’s Body change. A yrnrw>ld calf owned by Bird* and Animal* Exterminated. Henry L. t'larke. of Ktart. Mich, dirt! under mysterious circum­ U u li Agnesis Fuertes, the well- stances. Unusual symptoms known nsturnllet, says that about fifty baffled veterinarians, an an au­ specie« of birds and animals havn been inal heat, since »he neither enls nor Recent Escanaba Fever Hoax Re­ topsy was held. A two-font wa­ drinks, and »liy doe* the body grow exterminated In the United States, ter snake was found twined calls Fasting Young Women when nothing goes Into It?" while several other* aro on the verge around I he lungs aud heart of Building on On# S i t of Retd Whilo Symptoms of the "fit.ting girls" of extermination. The buffalo (or the animal. Ollier la Open to Traffic. Who Astonished Sages. varied, and there «ere some who »ere blaon) la not extinct, there being near­ IVath came «hen the snake follow s: Florida, 3 3 ; Louisiana. ICO, reported to have been marked In a began rating Its way thrxmgh ly 70.000 living buffalos* la th* Faltsd and Texas. 173. Contrasted with these è miraculous manner with the wounds the «alia of the stomach. States today. What, do you think, was ths < received by CTtrlst ut Cnicltlxlon. One are Maine, with 110; New York, 130; object of that# girls In pulling J o f the most recent ca .e . of ab­ > • • « ► » • • • * Wisconsin, 133. and western Oregon. ths stunts thay dldf 100. In 14 states grading will prob­ stinence from food nllti .tlgmlllxatlon Watch Cutlcura Imprevs Your BkUV ably be Impractical after the middle of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 was reported widely t bout »I« months reached from two to four o'clock In On rising ami rellrkig gently smear November, and In some of them at an ngo In until* of the ntvmptiperi of the morning and the highest nfter eat­ the far« with Cnilcura ointment. New York.—Temperature* as high New York city. earlier date. ing. The normal range Is leas than Wa.li off Ointment In five minute* Gravel surfacing can be placed In as 114 degrees Fahrenheit, registered While temperatures fluctuate widely 2 degrees. IVnth usually follows with Cutlrura Soup aud hot watsr. It most of the states on from 1 3 to 3 0 with the aid of a hot w ater bottle hy In the case o f women who are afflicted temperature* below HO degree* and la wonderful sometime, what (Vtlcurt working days, although 10 of them re­ Mlsa Evelyn Ly.m*. who fooled th* with hysteria, the highest tenq»era- «III do for poor complexion., dandruff, doctors of her home town, Escanaba. ture# usually found are accompani­ above 106, but variations from 73 de­ 'tilling aud rial rough bauds,—Adv. port a greater number. grees to 112 have been recorded Mich., for more than two weeks, are In 3 states concrete surfacing ran ments o f Inflammatory rheumatism j be placed on from 100 to 150 dnya, and actually recorded sometime# In ensee and malarial fever. In addition to sun­ w here the patlenta survived. Original lias of Word "Dopo.” Compared with the mean average of sunstroke, according to local med­ In 16 states on from ISO to 3 0 dark stroke. The limit of human endur­ The wont “ dopo" as applied to temperature of 96.4 degrees In man In 3 states the season Is generally ical authorities, who exptuln that the ance Is usually reached when the tem­ patient always dies within four or five perature reaches 106 or 107 do?roe* some of the lower animal* show mark- drugs cornea from ths Dutch "doop." over by November 1. hours unless the temperature la re­ nml stays there for any length of wily higher temperatures. The spar­ which In English originally meant a duced. Hysterical temperature or time, according to Dr. Samuel W. row, for Instance, tins a temperature thick liquid or e"ml llq 'd. It was tin t FINE STREET-PAVING RECORD thermal ataxia, occasionally will run Lambert, who has served n* attend­ of 110. The temperature of the horse applied aa a term for tho treaclollk* as high aa 108 or 110 degrees without ing physician nt some of the leading varies from 90 to H*> degree«, the ox preparation of the opium smoker. Total ef 1S0 Miles Completed In City giving permanent lujury, according to hospital* of New York, and as pro­ 100 I - 101, the cow 101 to 102, Sheet» of Birmingham During the MM ' 1 MX tbs « 0 $ tin bi I d , the some medical textbooks. fessor of therapeutics and dean of J tit Records. Year of 1922. The young woman of Escanaba wn* the College of I'hysb-lnn* and Su^ eat 100. the pig 101 to 103, the rab­ bit 101 to 107. and Ihc duck bill Fond Mother—"Jack writes homa described aa a "hysterical malingerer” goon* of Columbia university. The street-paving record of Birming­ platypus 70 degrees. The hen ha# e and says that he haa broken seven of Doctor Lambert believed the case ham for the year 1922 la a gratifying by Dr. Slorrla Flshbeln. editor of the temperature of 106 to 100 slid th* the college records—one of them the one. A total of a hundred and fifty Journal of the American Medical As­ of the Escanaba girl fraudulent when duck 107 to 110. dlacuo record." I’oor Dad—"More ex­ miles of paving has been completed. sociation, who Investigated her strange It was brought to Id* attention three Of diseases In general fever 1* on* The nearly $800,000 Invested could not case anti ex pose-1 her deception. It days before Miss Lynns *na exposed. of the most common accompaniments. panse! I suppose I'll have to send have been spent In a better cause. The was found that Miss Lyons was run­ Guested th* Reaeon. Temperature# In excess of normal are him a check to cover the damage." city as a whole has reached that stage ning a slight temperature, due prob­ “ A hot-water hag In the bed will largely caused hy toxic poisoning, at- ably to Injuries site Is said to have of highway construction where contin­ often send the thermometer up,” was ■ though In some rases fever Is mused Tea Grown In Pennsylvania. uous travel east, west, north or south received In an automobile accident th# first observation on her rase made hy nervous shock. In children's ilia- I'ennsylvanla baa a tea crop In tha MU* Lyons' case suggests the cases inside the city limits over smooth and ; eases high temperatures may develop by Doctor I.amheri, who milled: "The hard-surfaced thoroughfare Is possible. o f the “ fasting girls"—found ns far temperature will go to 114 degrees In I suddenly and subside rapidly In ty- vicinity of the Rlue Mountains region Within another year the connecting back as the Middle Ages—whose de­ cases of sunstroke, hut the patient j phold fever, for ninny years one of which largely supplauts Oriental tea links with the outlying suburbs still ceptions, usually the result of hys­ will die within a few hours unless Hie most dreaded dlsrase*. the tem- In that district. required for completion of the Greater teria. convinced many learned men the temperature Is reduced. | peratur* at first registers from 104 to Birmingham highway system will prob­ o f their time that they were able, with Silence Infectious. "I have seen temperatures rise to : 105 In the evening and 103 to 104 In ably have been finished and the city the aid of some mysterious power, to 110 degrees In eases of Inflammatory j the morning. In the second and third It la always obaervablo that alienee may then look with real pride on her live for long periods without eating. Hysteria, in the opinion of many rheumatism, hut the patient always ! weeks the dally range Is comparative- propagates Itself, and that the longer system of streets. talk haa been suspended, the more medical authorities, I* certain to be died. In cases of that kind the tem­ I ly small. accompanied by mental changes. In perature rises very suddenly and difficult It I* to find anything to aay. FINE HIGHWAY IN TENNESSEE some cases disclosing nnly a lack of death quickly follows. Temperatures Sixty Raw Eggs One Meal. —Samuel Johnson. Wlnsted, Conn.—Sixty raw eggs Just balance and will power, the partial will run as high as 107 degrees In Largest Contract Ever Let in State lose of memory, or In other cases re­ rases of malnrinl fever, hut they about satisfied Mooney Clangl when At Least, She Thinks So. Calls for Construction of 50 curring melancholy, sudden emotional come right down again, otherwise | he went Into a cafe for a meal. Then The trouble Is, It ho has discretion Miles of Road. I Gnngt had to eat two Mg snndwlchea outbursts, loss of Judgment and disre­ the Issue Is fatal." Tho inojin average» temperature of to nettle h!» stomach, enough not to write her letters that gard of truth. Une of the marked The largest highway contract ever symptoms o f the affliction la a crav­ man Is 98.4 degrees by mouth. HI* James Casey lost n wngsr ns the can be used In court, he doesn't love let In Tennessee provides for 80.2 ing for sympathy. temperature I h mnrked hy dully vnrlu last egg slipped down nnd paid for her enough to be convincing.— Ex­ miles of new road In Grainger county, The last two symptoms were the lions, the lowest point unuiilly being the meal. change. beginning at Fate Springs, 43 miles basis for the strange actions of the across Hawkins county and two miles “ fasting girls" and self mutilating Postal Employees’ Holiday*. In Sullivan county extending to Kings­ martyrs, as well x , of persons who January 1, February 22, May 30, and port. sometime* pretended they were suf­ The new highway passes through fering from paralysis, tumor, stone In Christmas are the holidays that ara the Holstein river valley for abont 40 the bladder, and who often were eager given to employees of ths postofflc* miles and lies between Bay mountain to submit to surgical operations. depart incut. and Clinch mountain. The road will The story of a nun at Leicester j be surfaced with asphalt and will cost who was said to have taken no nour- j Birds' Attitude In Sleep. $1,387.000, or $27,700 a mile. It la a Ishment for seven year*, yet preserved lilrds, wilh few exceptions, sleep federal route. her strength and health, attracted the ^ with their heads turned tallward over attention of Hugh, bishop of Lincoln | the bark and tholr beaks thrust be­ HIGHWAY BUILDING IN TEXAS In 1223. He ««signed 15 clerks to ob­ neath tho wing. serve the subject without relaxing ! Leads All Other State* In Matter ef their vigil. Whpn tho clerks reported ; Construction, Having Added to the bishop that they had followed That Word ''Saffron.” 933 Mile*. his Instructions and had found that Tho word "saffron" cornea Into th* the nun took no food, the bishop said English dictionary from tho Arabic. Texas led all other states In th# he was convince*! of the genuineness Thn Arabs use tho word "tufaran" to matter of road building In 1922, having of the nun's claims. doslgnuto n spoclea of crocus with added 933 miles during the year. The Grew Without Eating. light purplo flowers which develop In average for all states was 200 miles. One of the most striking cases In autumn. Tho plant grow» In part# of Sometimes It Is a good Idea to stop the early part of the modern era was planning what we’re going to do Just that of Margaret Weiss, a girl of ten Asia nnd In tho south of Europe.— for a moment In order to contemplate years who lived at Rode, a smoll town Milwaukee Sentinel. what we have accomplished. Five near Spires. A history of the case of years of this sort of progress and trav­ the little girl was left hy Ceraldu* | That's ths Trouble. eling salesmen will be the envy of all Rucoldlaniis, whose patient she was. A road hog can’t decide which half who know the Joy of a good car and a The girl was said to hare taken no of the road ho wants to use.— Nash­ good road. food or drink for three years, during ville Tennesseean. which time she continued to grow, to Roads W i t h Banked Curve*. walk atiout, laugh and pnjoy herself Highway engineer* In England are like other nortnhl children of her own "Some Baby.” constructing roads with an allowance i age. She was said to have suffered At the time of Its birth tho giraffe for super elevation on corner curves greatly from hysteria during the first mensures six foot from Ita hoofs to wherever desirable. French road en­ year. Iho top of Ita head. gineers long ago adopted the banked The child played her part so well curve, and In some parts of the United that she was sent home to her friends States they are now In use. by order o f the king after she had been watched persistently and de­ Would Color Highways. clared to be no dissimulator hy Doctor In England, the suggestion ha* been B-icoldlanus and the parish priest George Hernia, Inillnnnpolla, ln