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About The Turner tribune. (Turner, Or.) 19??-19?? | View Entire Issue (June 11, 1925)
below, lie glanced down Would tl net be b etter to Jump then and <>u.l the horrible suspense? No. lie loved Ills life, and then—some help might come. And so lie waited. T h e unu F R E E —fron» ráster taste U te* which had e»»>uuM to coiur rapidly upon each other at Oral, now F R E E—/r e m «*»•' s t a t t « . seemed slower, until he wood. re.I II Not fU\or*u. the clock iulgtit not be stopping Hut no. it cn.t.e ou and on. this dreadfu, r ref n#d for mtJutruil ust 5>rr#«gtK B y C R E T E W A R R EN Pari I v unchMur*i Ntvtr »dJ m thing which was to kill him. lie bulk Borristi s ia l UhsJUti *r tb s Lsbor- found him self calculating whether It Sterrss. T b s oc «K* n si tsstvivst . u t « etl t £ by Short gioty t ub. C o ) , would crush him or knock him off FRFT — liertrun on mju«t te T A L T FR T WAS a cold; tUsagrei'ahle day. l ie wished the hands moved steadily JANVIER, Inc . 4 i- Canal St . N m York late In November, « M the culling Instead of In those terrible Jerks Te«# ne«— W ^tr. wind blew In nerve little gusts One .more Jerk, or minute, and the *t eff |W j'e f **•«** around the corners of the tall city hand would touch his head. lie buildings. T he streets were almost crouche»! over and waited T h e hand deserted, save Tdr a few men and descended and he could not sit up women who, muffled almost beyond without touching it. lie must lie tint T A srrL M S s j recognition, hurried with heads bent —It would l.e easier that way. he | In face o f the wind. w hich seemed thought, and he was quite calm new All this tim e be had been sitting to come from every direction. The therm om eter registered several de with his fa»-e. toward the clock. Ids grees below ten», and tlje sky was feet hanging down between the hour Common Sign Language heavy, with every Indication of snow. baud and the dial. As he raised Ids T ra v elers in th e in terio r of South No one oolUvd that the great clock In feet to lie on Ihe hand he suddenly A me pda, although knowing little or the courthouse had atoppeit and at Mopped, and in a moment was gelling nothing of th e language o f th e Indi throe o’clock uo’ one missed the strik over the side of the hand next to the ing of the hour. « • . clock. Yea. there was room for hi« ans, claim th at an aston ishin g amount At Just one uilnute before three the body tf he could hold Ms weight until of com m unication m ay be held by j power which ran the clock was turned the minute hand hud passed the hour m eans of a sign language T h e dlf- j off, and. for the first tim e since It and then he could raise him self again leren t Indian groups o f B razil, fo r In was started, several years before, the to his form er position. Ills muscle* sta n ce, w hile speaking each a d iffe r groat hands were stUL T h e nut which were strong, and at first tds weigh) as nothing. T h e minute- en t language, have a m ore or le ss com held the hands In place bud become seemed loosened, aud a muu skilled In the seemed longer now than ever and the mon language of signs. mechanism o f d ock s had been called biting cold wus beuuintylug Ids Angers a ID tighten the screw in spite of the heavy gloves he were. S ta te Named from R iver. _ It was a perilous undertaking. The At last. Just as It seemed that he must W isconsin derived its nam e from clock w as thru» hundred and eighty let go. It passeik and be raised hliu th e principal river, named M asconsin feet above the street, ami his only self once more. by P ere M arquette, translate»! wild, I way to get at It was by lowering him- But what would this avail him? he rushing channel. T h e present spelling self fro m '« lookout thirty feet above, thought. Ju s t another hour of lif e ! is derived from a m isprint. All early j The face m easured twenty four feet. He could not endure this for twelve F ren ch docum ents have Ouisi-onsing the m inute hand was nearly twelve Pours, even If he could manage to feet long, the hour hand nine. T hese keep his hold, and this seemed un or M ¡sconsing. hands Were very heavy and solid. of j likely, for the slant of the haud was wrv*l covered with galvanlxed iron, j making It more difficult each minute Down on th e Farm . and w ere.tw o feet thick. ) to keep tils position. Ill a few hours “T h e only w orker I ever knew who j Th man stood for a minute, g ssln * [t would be dark, and with the night would work when th e boss was away out over the city, a fte r fastening the m e cold was certain to b»*i'»>iiie mere was the old fashioned A m erican hired reps which was to let him down lo 1 intense, and he would freese. IV atls m an.” declared a pnitqgsor at (Irand J the clock. He planned to gain a foot- : seemed Inevitable, but he determine»! Rapids. W e have known a couple of j. Ing qn the hour band, which was al- hold out as long as a ray of hope them to sit on a fen ce at such tim es m o « horizontal at this hour, and work \ i a me to 1dm. and work u n til'th eir jaw s were totally his way across to the center, where And so on through the lengthening It would tak e him but a moment to exhausted. hour. Then he found, with the In tighten the screw , get back >to Ihe creasing slant of the baud, that he rope and poll him self up. He drew must devise some other 'm ethoil of Already Free. a ileep breath and carefully let him During the Sunday School lesson self over the « o n e railing of the look hanging on. so be laid him self Hal upon Ihe beam. and. with his anus the tea ch er made referen ce to a pas o u t around It. braced bis feet against the sag e of Scrip tu re reading. "Y e shall The snow was now falling fine and Jut which formed the point. In this know th e truth and th e truth sh all fast, driven hard by tlie wind. The way he could keep lilt position, even m ake you free.” A little girl in the man was almost blind»*! by It, when though the bauds were perpendicular. front row exclaim ed : “I'm already he felt Ms foot ffrrn * p o . th e hour ^ « c h ^ . r i e r T h . g ^ . r c h T i ^ . r .n g hand. The rope was barely long out. tlieir vibration almost sickening free. I'm free and a h alf.” enough, and he wished he had taken him, so loud and cl»»se were they. a longer one, but he thought It would _ . . . , , Q uarter post four— and he must s«x>n One W ay to Reduce. not ray to go back . » l o n g as this on to the huml aCllln whlle , h„ A rath e r robust woman recen tly one would reach, though he renllzed other passed. He lowered himself, asked a doctor w hat she should do to that It would be harder for him to and this time it wus harder than be reduce. "T a k e a certain kind of ex get back with the short one. Sitting fore, fo r Ms Join ts were stiff with the down, he slid over to the cen ter and e rc is e ." said he . "W h a t kind do you co ld and the altere»! position of the recom m end?" she asked. "P u sh your commenced his work. Every momeut hour huud made It more difficult to se lf aw ay from th e table th ree lim es the snow becam e more blinding, and as get a good hold. Ju s t as the long hand be glanced downwards he noticed th sl was passing over the shffrt one, a il»*8 a day” replied the' doctor.—Topeka be could not see the streets below. perate Idea entered the frenzied mind C apital. He had finished and was Just about of the man who was making such a to »tart back for the rope, when be fight for hla life. Quickly, though Word fo r th e Cyclone. heard a great w hirr Inside the clock with great danger of slipping and fall About the only good thing th at can and alrno« at the same tim e felt a tng. be reached one leg and then the be said about cyclone is th at it doesn't Jerk of the hand upon which he was •ther around on to ihe minute hand seated He made one m ad hurried an d Just aa It passed the hour hand, co st the taxpayers anything for an ; move towards the end of the hand swung him self ujtoo It. investigation as to who was to blam e, i when all at once his every sense T he horrors of that dlixy Jo u m ej — Des Moines R egister. seemed to be paralyxed by the deaf- enlng sound of the chimes. T he sound «round^hp riock on the minute h,.n.l. Slig h t A ccident F atal. seemed to vibrate through every part the terrib le danger he underwent In A young man in London who was ! o f him. and it was Impossible lo at changing his position on Ihe baud w stru ck on the head by a ch icken bone ' tempt to move until the last of the as to escape having his head down wards, cannot he expresseil In words used as a m issile died of sep tic pneu !.*. ee deep tones striking the hour died huF he was saved from death, for a' away, and he felt another Jerk of the m onia set up by the slight scalp wound a little a fter ten minutes past five hand beneath him. It was but an In he had received. s t a n t and he had gained the end of o'clock. Ms half-frozen hands reached the hand and was cautiously getting the rope that meant life to him. And Fought A gainst Odds. to his feet. He reached for the rope. when he had gained the upper halls S ir Richard G renville, w hile attem p t The wind was blowing It and he could of the building to take the elevator to the ground floor, the elevator boy ing to run through th e Spanish fleet barely touch it with the ends of hla He groaned aloud and stared at him in horror. T he man o ff the Azores in Septem ber. 1591. was finger«! he had taken up less than three hours attack ed by fifteen ships, and m ain strained every ligam ent In an effort before was young and Ills hair had to get a hold on the rope, but It tained a hand-to-hand fight for fifteen seemed impossible. At last It was been a rich, dark brown. T h is was hours before surrendering. almost within his grasp, hut with a surely the sam e man. but his hair was je rk which nearly unbalanced him, the as white as the snow falling outside! O bject in Reading. hand again slipped, and the rope was Read not to contrad ict and confute, hopelessly out of reach ! It seemed C o u n try ’$ S m a lle s t T o w n not to believe and tak e for granted, to the desperate man that his reason Lewiston. 'Vyo., an abandoned gov must go In that awful In sta n t! not to find talk and discourse— but He reseated himself, for the shock ernment station where pony express to weigh and consider. had weakened his knees and his riders changed mounts In the early strength scorned gone. T h e cold was days of w estern wilderness. Is said to Meat D istribution. Intense and there was no way of have the distinction o f being the small Tw o-thirds of the live stock used for making anyone hear a cry for help. est town In ttie United States. In a food is raised west of the M ississippi, Nor was {here any chance of anyone recent comm unication to the General while two-thirds of the consum ers live discovering his danger. With every E lectric company broadcasting station. east o f the M ississippi. T h is accounts minute the hour hand slipped down Denver. Iloy Griswold w rites that the for th e 1,309 packing houses occupied ward over an Inch, and— merciful two lone residents, counting him self comprise the total population. in converting live stock in to m eats and heaven! As he looked up at the great minute hand he realized what on aw tra n sferrin g them to m arkets. W isd o m in C h o ic e ful fate would overcome him In a few minutes If some help did not come to A doctor who had taken up ns his R em ark L eft Im pression. Mm. With every minute the descend specialty the treatm ent of skin dls A man and his wife w ere buying a ing hand brought certain death so eases was asked by a friend hoiv lie horse. "How could such a lovely much the nearer I Good G od : Must happened to select thnt branch of med cre a tu re have a tem p e r?" asked the he sit there calmly and count the lolne. “T h ere » e r e three perfectly woman. “ My dear, th at Is exactly minutes until be should be gradually good reasons,” replied Ihe physician ; what passed through my mind when I crushed to death? f o r at a quarter -j|y patients never get me out o f bed m arried you," answ ered the man, and past the hour, the minute hand inusi nt nlg h t; they never die and they pass the hour hand on which he was “neVer get well.”— Medical Review of he has not heard th e la st of it yet. seated, and the distance between the j ({„views. two was only a little o te r two Inches! __________________ Final Adjudication. His hraln seemed dend. He couldn’t _ • a > u i Though reading and conversation think. Ills gaze w as fascinated by E gyp tia n B a rley H elp s may furnish us with m any ideas of the rapidly descending hand which ! Barley brought from Egypt Is prov- men and things, y et it is our own was either to crush him to death or Ing very successful In the seml-arld hurl hltn off on lo the steeply slanting regions of t i e W est. It grows during m editation must form our judgm ent. roofs of the building two hundred feet dry seasons when other grains perish. AT THE THIRD HOUR I KELLOGGS CASTOR OIL Oxalic Acid in Rhubarb. Rhubarb, when eaten in excess, has been known to a c t as a powerful poi son on account of Its natu ral content of oxalic acid.— Scien ce Serv ice. R eal L og O nce Used to The nautical “knot” was originally an actual knot on a »hip’s "log line.” T his In turn took 11» name from the Must Move F ast. log of wood w hich « as used hy the old T he low est speed at which it is pos tim e m ariner In measuring distance. sib le for an airplane to fly is 31 % Presuming the sea lo be wlrbnnt cur rent. a log thrown Into the w ater will m iles an hour. remain stationary. Obviously, there- fore. If It Is thrown overboard from M ankind's Duty. the bows of the ship, by the time the L ife Is a problem ; m ortal man was stern passes It. the ship must have made to solve the solemn problem, traveled Its own length In such nnd such a time. T h e log, then, ivas right or wrong.—J . Q. Adams. renlly the flrst way of determining a You Want a Good Position ship’s speed. T he next step was to attach a line to the log. the line he- V ery well—T a k e th a A cco u n tan cy and Rualneaa M an agem ent, P riv a te 8 « ere t o n log knotted at regular Intervala of so al, C alcu lato r, C om ptom eter, s te n o g r a many feet. T h e log. by this lim e phic, Pen m an ship, or C om m ercial T e a ch - of a fixed type, was thrown overboard •ra* C ou rse a t and the line allowed to run free from a reel. At the end of so many sec- onds the whole apparatus was hauleo T h * fo r*m o »t B u * ln **s C o ll*** o f th» In and the knots that had been payed N o rth w est w hich h as won m o rs A co u rscy A w ard» and Gold M edala th an an y o th er out counted. T h e ship waa then said school In A m e lia *. Send fo r o u r B u rreee to he traveling at so many knots. The C a ta lo c F o u rth S tr e e t n e a r M orrison, dlstunce between the knots, as well P o rtlan d , Or Isa a c M W alk er, P re s P. N. U. No. 24, 1925 as the number of seconds during which tlie log « a s overboard were Behnke-W alker FARM STOCK P A D T I CThc. A |V n r o I \ 1 J L i/\ lily MILL FEEDS FINE FOR SPRING PIGS DAIRY PROFITA BLE OFFERS A M A R K E T for y o u r pro duce :0NT1NU0US I l o 11P .M .' WITH SMALL HERDS W heat by products, such na mid dlings and re»! »log fi»>ur. can be uaed Many n v a n itrt« « nr tin» prca«nt tlm r to advgntage with a ration of corn and tankage under p rle* condition» n i t liw lni money h«vnu««* they cannot which have prevailed »luring the past got enough crcutit for the farm er* In two years, according to f»>e»llng tests ! their territory to pay their merlinml which have been made at the Minne ei|H'U»e«L T he volume of hutterfat ° ju d . sota statl»»n Spring pigs were u»»xl In neee**ary to put theae plants on h the tests, and f»»ur lota were fe»l due profitable ho»t« Î* not likely to he ae PU RG ES3 Ing each o f tw»\ unmoor*. Each year cured until a lari;«* uumhor of farm ere heuIn to appreciate the value of »»tie lot o f pigs had a ration of IK* (>er the Incutne from a few cow * cent alien«*! c»'rn and 10 per cent tank In the opinion o f I’rof J IV I n age until they reached 100 pound* H i« aft«*- which the ration ivna I'hangwl to Master, ch ief of the dairy division at 03 per cent com and 3 \>er cent tank ! Clem son college, the cream ery «level age. T h e ration for each of the »»tlier opinent must «lepend on farm ers «% ho three lot* each season before reaching «III milk from four to s li jt « hh | row «, 100 pound* In weight was 05 per cent and there la no doubt a pluee for ait« h corn, 80 per ixuit w heat hy proiloot» i a number «»f row's on every f *r»»i and 3 \*>r cent tankage. Aft«'r passing which la operated hy Its owner Itvltitf Ihe lOtkpound mark, theae pig» had on th«» la ml. T h ree few row s ran t*e I 73 per cent corn, S t per c»>nt wheat by 1 mllketl nml cared for In a very few product nml 2 per cent tankage. The ! inimités before and a fte r working throe wheat by-product« compart'd hours em it «lay. No tstru l»lre«l Libor w ere standard middlings, flour mid is necemmry. aud* Th«» feed which th rw cowa dlings and reit dog flour. ami which the farm er m nr« for them Gains made »»n the rations contain Ing the wheat tulll-fix'di were slightly amt the pasture they ronMtiiiie. w*»ul«t A M a\p frank higher than on corn and tankage rin ^ yield no Itmome for hint If lie did no. 'anda, neuneu IcilSUK each 100 p»viintls o f gain. 80 to *3 pounds have the dairy cowa. When a farm- » ia lliiL o f the mill fee»ts saved from AO to S3 gets many more cowa than I*» Indb uied laud a pounds of com ami about 0 pounds of above, say a I *ro feasor I ■*. M Her. the labor problem beeom«»« tm|>orit«nf. a* tankage. h e le » t t Resilienti« R e sid e n tia l & l m u s im i 1 ¡1 JJ 1 1 baric» T he ilulry T ankage used In the tests cost >00 d«»ea ala«» the feeil problem H IV lo i’A C lt i n * « « » . ......» i P u t « ! • > '• ! < > » « * * “ * * per ton. while the corn averaged about herd then b fo n m n a m ajor pro)**« » A met R an Plan E i l l d i i U l V Mud V" 03 cents per bushel. T h e grade of on the farm and n e u tre * suit»* l* nt * J * K * Ig» MHl l»t MAT» standard middling-» fed rest $20 per time and labor to make It lnierf»*re It ton. Flour middlings were slightly , with the other plana o f operation higher, averaging about $30 p»>r ton. la often Just large enough to l*e bur while the n s ! dog flour c»»st an a v e r denaome amt >et not large enough to be profit aide. age of about $33 per ton. T h ere la very little place for herd«* At these p ric e * the pigs which had the two grades of middlings made a between a ll or right and twenty cows little cheaper gain than pigs fed corn for cream production. M.»ny a farm er and tankage, the sa» Inga amounting lo lias made money and has been ««M* 23 to -40 cents on «xioh hundred pound» fled while milking four «»r five row« o f pork. In one case the gains made but when he Inervnaed hla herd to by th e pigs which rroelv»*! red dog twelve or fourteen cow«, he did not IU(n*«tw«t v;ow flour were a little cheaper than th"Se m ake na much money In proportion A N D E R S O N & R IC E . Portland, Ore 40-1 II.»«« H b fft #t Ninth made hy th e com and tankage lot. and waa «Il nanti «fled with the ro*iilt* while th e other year the red dog flour A larg«* number of farm er« with four or five cowa each will m ake tin trying adde<1 a little expense to the gnlns. Purely Myth. T h e tests Indicate that when the profitable. Th»' M i r f that the ta ll of a mtiake wheat by-products, particularly mid a fte r th»* head la cut o ff or the r«*nt dllngs, can he bought at not to exceed of the *nuko la killed liven until sun half the price per ton o f tankage they Beans Fail to Improve not la m erely un old m yth. Owing to Dim c u kS t u cittNrs» can he ns«*l with com and tankage to Silage for Dairy Cows the reaction of Ih e mnak«’** nervous M r p t r is r c o . i t« kmhku the extent of about one-third o f the i Ihawfiaa I •> Oomp*rl«i>n» of .«»m nml corn ay»tctn It* ta ll will contin ue to wiggle ration for pig* which are on g .* d paa • (• » « n a ch g l# s > rd # r« , h ln # f. and a*>y l*»**n r II iik «* for dairy «•«•w*» at long a fte r the snak«' 1« oth erw ise ap ture. tl* T I » r t r s .s u t » !# * . fa it i I u m « the Iowa million fall to «how nint h i«d par» fitly U« »ul Hut th ere I* nothing S I vantage for th«* corn anil b«*»«n Milage • to mf «It rwmpUlnl*. Y>** **• Hog Will Keep Clean if In the firm two trluta, the row * pro to th notion that It will «'onttnu« I X w J H 1 * 0 l r « * l » * « l * •» K « I» # If I f * about ‘J per cent more milk and wlggl»' until *un«ot and then stop 14?I M»«'»»t»>l M| . m $ Given the Opportunity dure«] be for«* ami B P r ' n#r Alitsr. r»»r1l**4. bu tterfat when on the torn nml bean So m etim e* it will 1**4, Or* Many o f th e failures In hog raising alluge ration na compHrc«! with their aotnetlm es a fte r aunaet. I'ath flm b T CUT FLOWERS I FLORAL t/F.S:CNS may he attribute«! to the m istaken pr«Mjuctl«>n of corn milage, the groin Mugnilne. f*la r k # H r« * . S I«»rial*. t* T M n r r t M * S i Idea that a hog Is n filthy, obnoxious and hay ration* being kept roil'd ant beast nnd should be treated us such, In thla trial the return* over f«*«*d ••»**! T h e Dependable Man. Founded by Champlain.. nccordlng to 1'. A. Weber, lustrtnffor were nearly 4 per rent g rea ter when In animal husbandry at tlie Kansns the cowa w«*re on the tnK«*d alln^e G ive u* a m an, young or old. high T h e earlienl founding of any t ’nna S ta te Agricultural college. In a second trial, however, there or low. on whom w# know w«« ran dlan city was thnt of Port Itoyal. now “A hog will he as clean ns the owner waa a alight nd'nnfnge for corn alluge thoroughly depend, who will stand Annapolis Itoyal, In Nova Scot la. will allow him to he." said Sir. Weber. In weight of the rowra nnd produetlon firm when o th er* fa ll; th«* frl'-nd faith found'd hy Cham plain and h i* a **o " I f given an opportunity the h»g «III of milk nml b u tterfat when on Ho ful nnd true, th e ad viser honest and i la te* |n K> ’* hut th is «olony was be a clean housekeeper. rorn milage ration T h e dulry hum f«*arle*«, the ad versary Just and ch iv a l Vltftdratsqi a couple «*f y ears later. “It Is true that hogs like to wallow bandry autborltle* concluded thnt They have no means of jiersplrlng nnd there la little. If any. difference In the rous in such a one th« re la a frag* T lie P o r t . Itoyal thnt ap p ear* In the l>e.m Inter htntory of old At adla was found must wallow to keep cool. However, uaefulm n* of the two kind« of alluge, m in t of the Hock of A ge*. ed In HttC l»y IPAunny ch nrn tsny . they will not object to a clean wal no fa r n* feeding to dairy cowa la con Stan ley . low filled wltli fresh w ater Care cerned. Ni* apparent d ifference! In pul* should he taken not to pour cold w ater atnhlllty were noted and the differ Had Many Su ccessor«. R eaching the Top. on the back of an overheated hog. It ences In production were not ron*tnt* T he m en who reach the top seldom •'Pinnfore** was first Introduced In Is very likely to cause dentil. ently In favor of eith er brand of alluge. the flirte d S ta te s at the Standard wait for a lift. T hey ure d lu iblng “Obstinacy Is a trait of the hog and th e a te r In New York city In 178it. .Mr*. while o th ers are w aiting for u boost. patience must be used In handling T hom as W blffen was th e original Lit T h e higher they clim b the m ore rtMiiit the anim als. They are also hom»^ Soy Bean9 for Protein they hav#*, fo f thero’s alw ays room on loving c re a tu re * nnd frequent chang tie Ilu tten u p . Balanced Ration for Cow ing o f quarters often causes them to top. though It may be ever so crowded become chronic fence tiraukers." T h e a v e n g e dairyman find* it n«*<’»** at the bottom w here all must start C an n ibalistic Spid ers. aary to buy some f«***«! rich In protein Sp id er* were found hy the Mount Grit In order to feed a ration properly bal E verest expedition 4.boo fe e t h ig h e r 1 Value of »Skim Milk anced. And protein feeds are the Rush for Home S ite s. than any vegetable growth. The | One hundred pounds of skim milk • highest In price of «ny tie run buy. Is ordinarily worth the equivalent of W heh Okhiftnmn was thrown open to therefore It la piod business for him spid er* are believed to feed upon one ten pounds of corn plus five pounds of to g r o w something to take the pbn e another. white se ttle rs a fte r tlu* f«*deral gov* tankage for fattening hogs With of rnttonsrod metil. llnmvi! ollnienl or em in ent had purchased It from the suckling brood sows or young pigs s»r whatever he has been purchasing Dream of the Future. C reek Indian« In lk.HD, it Is estim ated full pigs which are not doing well. It Hoy tHMins come nearer helng suited In n few generations, It Is said, the that 100,000 persons took part in III«' may be worth more, than this. With tp every dairym an's needs than any corn and tankage a t present prices covervrop. On »oil too thin for clover dream of breaking th e atom will 1 m * rush for claim s. f • ,v . . - sklm-mllk would seem to be worth or a lfa lfa , seven« 1 varieties of *•«■> realised. T h e n gold und platinum will about 33 cents per 100 pounds for fa t beans do well. High P rice, Considering. On a rich soil they he m ere hy products and u gram of tening hogs. F a th e r " I had no Idea that your m ake a great amount of feeil. If cool will do th e work ton s now do. sttidies would cost ho much!** Son threshed, the seed may he rra rk rd nnd fed In (»lure of cottonseed or lln •’T hey ought not to fath er. I duu’t Q ualities Som ew hat Rare. Friends of Farmer *»r lie who sedulously atten ds, iminted study very m u ch !” P el« Me|e, Purls. Weeds are the enem ies of the farm seed oflmeal with equal results. e r and aheep are the enemies o f If the liny Is used, the rows will «11 ly asks, calm ly speak*, coolly answ ers R em brandt’« “ Model.’ weeds. Hence—sbe».p are the fa n n er's gest the groin fairly well. nnd ce a se s when he has no morn fo friends—especially In these days of sny. is in possession of somo of M m * I | Rem brand! used hi* fa th e r’s mill a * • *** • *'* • • **« • *|* • k*i • best requisites of man. Kxchunge. meat and wool shortage. T h e farm er $r«Ngf§ a studio, ami (lie II r I i I cam e down from with n good flock of sheep Is sitting j a little w indow in the mill falling on pretty. T he farm er who Is not sit T w ins Had Sam e Idea. 1 the easel in Just such a golden sh aft ting pretty had the m ine chance to ^ s **1 * *'« • k',t • k ',1 • s^i s ^ s »'l» *’f s »'/ « *'4 » *•« »k'l • P robably tho m ost r.'innrkiihla nrW , „„ ........ lllH ,lr„ , get started with sheep when the sta rt It hikes only 12 m inute* lo tell i iii i lientl<- » lo ry , ro n ci'rijlo g tw ins 1» ing was good. It’s not too lute now. ! whether or not a ilulry heril I* profit Hint fit A , a (will, who liouicht n set at that. Duly W ell Defined. able. of i hampfilitn KhiMHcH In ii toSvn In | If I hove bu t •■•month- for my«i*lf • • • 8 < "G *r" 1 a» » » urPr l«‘- for hU hrojh er. ( atl(l ifhniu yr , am Mowgrd-. only Thr Producing Better Stock None but high proiluring cowa are B efo re good live stock ran he pro 1 profitable, a ml the tine of pure-bred II.. ifrim a ' the mime tim e houKht u m y se lf; If I have more,. I iiiii hut a ■off t>f exactly the mime- pattern In stew ard of th a t aiiundimei duced Jn large numhera there must he sires Is the shortest road. for oilier». Kni'lsnd uh a present for A • • • a wide appreciation o f the utility G eoree H erbert. value of good breeding coupled with Core o f good, well-fed dairy stork the actual use o f high-cluss pure bred [covers many Item* surh ns handling W hat Jo b Escaped. F la tte ry ’o a Q onjplim eta. sires at the bead of herds and docks. ; breeding, housing, grooming, etr. Ln A nother tliiiiK old Jo b escaped nnd F ln lte ry plenoes e re a tly . In ilio T he be tter-sires—better-stock cam j short, the dairyman must provide nil it Is probably one o f Ih e reamina he fir»l piare, th è flb U eirp inny ihthk paign undertake* to supply this need | the nei essnry conditions for good pro wus ho patient was Imvim; som eone whul he »ity» to -lte -tm i» Imi. la ih » In an educational way. j ductlon. com e »m lllnx around iih he »nt. th ere • • • nerumi piare, w hether he Ih ln k s mi Hmonff Ihe a sh es, »< rap in e lilmpelf Missing windows In the dairy burn will» a potsherd, and te llin e him Ju»t or not, ho re rta ln ly lliink» tho se wlumi D eterm ine Ship’s Speed Consumption of Mutton mean missing dollars In your milk he fla lle ra of eonnequenea enougb to to think Ihe rie h t thoueht and he’d T he sheep grower must depend upon check. he riatterei!. Dot tor Joh n so n . home consumption to use the Iniuh »non be p erfectly well and happy.— regulated, so as to m ake It easy to • • • Ohio S ta le Jou rn al. work out how many nautical miles and mntton produced. T h ere seems A COW that has to use her energy C lastlfy ln g Peanut. (which, by the way. are divisions of to be room for a great Increase In W A _ S H I N t.K I N --> i \ I i warming the Ire cold w ater she drinks T h e peanut I h u pen ra th e r t limi a degrees o f latitude, and are rather’ the demand. The average yearly con can’t use that energy to make milk. imi nnd belone» lo the santo eroup of f-5 longer than land m iles), the ship « a s sumption o f mutton nnd lamb per • • • Plani» a» do ta-an» and l'oninion ear- traveling an hour. And though n> «■nplta In the l.’nlted S ta te s In the V I.r nr J i m . t i.t r h e l « ' 1* B u tter tnnklng begins with the pro M i l . A . I I I • 1(10 I t » ,I . A I I , . It. day the modern log Is a complicated decade preceding lir jl, was 0.2 pounds, den pen», d lfferin e only In llin t il pos- It* 1(10' , ; I t , » < l r l l » , r > . i i . r I clockwork apparatus, the old term Is 4.35 per cent o f the m eat eaten. In ductlon of giHid, clean flavored cream ■"('-e-l W rit, for ■ I•»’ l.l |,rl, •-« sé»He» th è rh n rn rte r of hlooinine alitivi* on I» ,1 inoii It I It. .1 It,,,»,| G reat R rltaln, It was more than 20 To obtain practically nil the cream still used. H,» A I 'u ll.l. C . l . l o l fro. Kround and m nlurlne Ila fru ii or | mm I pounds, 22 per cent o f the total meat from the milk nnd have It In the he*f Q U KfejSI | I A T H I E R * C <j*v Pxfc beneath the aurfacn of ilio noli. B a ffled C ro s s - W o r d e r eaten. Aa a whole, our g reatest con condition requires the use of a cream 1 *1 0 i K A V f N W f • • A T ▼ L * * i sumption Is In the cities. “T h e other day In a public library.” separator. • • • : w rite* * correspondent, “I picked up W e S p e c ia l i z e ln j a copy of n periodical In which sotn> Bure bred« are better sellers nnd Sheep Fond of Weeds • | reader had been attem pting to solve rnnfce more meat for the amount of No class ornrilrnals will do so much feed and length of time. | the cross-word puzzle. One clue was I f falcon In ilm *. prfv*»nt o|**r- Hide». Pell», Wool, Mohsir, ^ •Hon* for lM*h»tf>«. C atarrh. • • • •a bird which never flies,' and the In keeping down weeds na will sheep A hrn i l.iin *. Throat. L iyrr. Tallow, Csirara, Orrran "Fifty-seven varieties” may he a large K idnry. Kh«ojm*ti«m. Rlooit. word had to consist of seven letters B e tte r pny n little more nnd get a H tom irh and allfam al* d is Crop* Root, Cool Sinn* Tlie solver had trium phantly written number fo r some things, hut Is not good milk itrn ln er than to luiv a order*. Itiaddrr Trouhl**«. down 'O strage,' and then abandoned enough to cover the number of plants cheap one nnd have the milk deep with Hat»* Hair Th« c . C««3W n Rrmrdu * arc harmlcM, no dnuM or p«Miion j the puzzle as a had Job.”— Loudon that sheep will eat with relish. B e sediment. arc omn I C ompoM-d of the Wrltn for Shlpplns Tmn * latr.t prim I let • • • cause they will ent so many different Morning Post. chniftc*« m rd klncl root«, herh«. T he choice of a herd sire will Ilk cL bud* and hark. Imported hy m kinds of weeds, they are often used P o r t l a n d H ide a W ool C o . from far away orlrntal <otm- Yale nnlverslty Professors are per as scavengers. T hla Is a good use m ake or hrenk you In the dairy game blpa» Call hr W rite for Inform- fectlng an Inhalator wlilch Is expen IN union Annul «OATH. PDA Tl A no IMtin ■fin to m ake of a farm flock. Many flock» If you pick n good one. the price y»m ed to reduce the deatli rate froin rar hav* been underfed to the point of pay Is of little consequence; If you C . G ee W o Chinese Medicine C o . llranrh *1 I'oratcllo. Idah« hon monoxlde, etectrlc »hock und serious loss hy forcing them to sub pick a poor one, you will pay to«» much New Lncetlmt 2 B 2 H Alder S t . S W C ..r Ihlrd, I te l Und. O re. . K e te h ll.h r,I r.\ Y .e n l n Portland drownlng. even If you get him for nothing. »1st upon poor feed. Continuous ItoUIX. tlt!| e Its. Mir. Ì001/SBY 0 ^ - BARBIERS mL 6 uess./Siit¿ii^ 3 garjoiaÜf Mabel Ship to M utual C ream ery Your ( heck Returned Promptly Better Franklin Service—Storage and General Repairing INFORMATION DEPARTMENT Dairy Notes ROOT AND HERB R E M E D I E S