OREGON CITY COURIER, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1909 8 ORCHARD m BY F.ETRIGG REGISTER. IROCKrORD.lA. CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED This matter must not be reprinted with out special permission. THE POOR MAN PROSCRIBED It Is very likely superfluous to criti cise the method by which Uncle Sam disposes of his public lands, but some phases of land drawings as ordinarily conducted seem to show that a fairer and more considerate policy might be followed. This would bo along the line of allowing registration for the drawing without requiring the pres ence of persons at the place where the registration Is to take place, the one desiring to register Instead- appearing before a notary In his home town This would be a boon to many poorer people, who feel they can ill afford to bear the expense of a trip hundreds or "thousands of miles to the locality where the drawing Is to take place when there Is not one chance In a hun dred that they will be successful. Were such persons allowed to regis ter at home and mall their applica tions the registration would be in creased many fold. Those who did register would thus not be compelled to make a trip unless they were among the fortunate ones, in which event they would feel that there was enough at stake to justify an expendi ture of their hard earned money suffi cient to Inspect the land to be award ed. Such an arrangement would cut down passenger traffic, but Inasmuch as land drawings are not held primari ly for the profit of transportation companies this would not be a vital consideration. It would, on the other hand, encourage many a poor mau to register for land drawings who does not now do so, because the chances of success are so slim as not to warrant the expense luvolved. If there is any class which ought to benefit in the distribution of public lands it is the class just named.. PROPAGATING CURRANT8. The currant, one of the highly prized garden fruits, may be propagated by taking hardwood cuttiugs some ten Inches In length early In September. If the leaves have not already fallen they should be removed a week before the job Is done. The cuttiugs should be started in the nursery row at once or tied In bundles and burled upside down with two or three inches of soil - over the butts. In case the planting Is delayed It may be done just before freezeup, or the bundles of cuttings may be stored in moss or sand and carried through the winter In the cel lar or storeroom. In this case the cuttings should be planted In the spring just as soon as the soli is fit. In warmer and drier sections the plant ing is best done in the fall, which usually marks the beginning of the wet seasou, if the precipitation amounts to anything at all. Another method of propagation Is known as mound lay erage, which consists in drawing the soil up around the shoots of an estab lished bush, when in the course of a couple of seasons they take root in this new upper soil and may be then cut away and transplanted, the stubs and roots of the parent bush being left below. Gooseberries may be propagat ed In the same manner. ONLY A PATCH. Nebraska and Colorado hare lately passed stringent laws forbidding the importation of dairy cattle of any kind which do not show a clean bill of health In the matter of freedom from tuberculosis. This action may be call ed radical by those who would suffer from an enforcement of the law, but from the standpoint of a decent regard for the public health it is to be com mended. Yet a matter that so vitally concerns the public health should not be left for the individual state to cope with, but should be reached by an ef fective federal law. Were such a measure enacted and the Interstate shipment of tuberculous animals pro hibited the ax would be laid at the root of the difficulty, and the individ ual dairyman of no conscience, being prohibited from selling diseased ani mals, would quit business or reform. Action by Individual states is a step in the right direction, but it is at best a patch where in truth a new gar ment is uecded. A VOLCANIC WONDER. Travelers who have visited the Sa moan Islands tell of a volcano In active eruption on the Island of Savll, which seems to surpass In magnitude of oper ation any other volcano of historical times. It broke loose four years ago, and from the beginning there has been a continuous and increasing flow of lava, which now comes from a rent in the mountain side In a stream eight miles wide, the volume being placed at 800,000 tons per minute; Already sixty square miles of land have been submerged by molten lava, hills 600 feet high being covered and valleys as deip being tilled to the rim. The glare of the molten stream by night, coupled with the clouds of steam which rise as it pluuges into the ocean, Is said to be one of the most magnificent and awe inspiring sights Imaginable. SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON September 2Gtb., 1909. Temperance Lesson. 1 Cor. 10 :23-38. Golden Text Let every one of us please bis neighbor for his good to ediflcalioD. Rom. 15:2. Verse 23 If a man could lawfully drink intoxicating liqnor, in modera tion, would it be a good thing to do, seeing so many thousands are being mined yearly, by drinking, all of whom commenced to drink in moder ation? (.This question must be an- Bumper crops of ( i ur wheat and oats with lowered price will be viewed with satisfaction by Hie poultryman, who has hud as much us he could do to keep his head above water with grain prices out of sight and no com mensurate advance in the prices re ceived for his poultry products. We read an account the other day of a Nebraska ganger who tried to hold up an express train to secure a lot of the gold which It carried. In view of the crop snowing which Nebraska is making this year this attempted hold up Is thj worst case of effrontery we have run across. Had he lived in Rhode Island it wouldn't have been so bad. . The value of the products of Alas ka, a bleak tract bought of Russia in 1807 for $T,200,000, during the period from 1880 to 1908 were: Gold, $140, 000,000; other minerals, $6,000,000; flsh, $100,000,000; furs, .$.r0.000.000. The present annual production In cludes minerals, $20,000,000; flsh, $10, 000,000; furs, $500,000. When it comes to conducting a pretty profita ble real estate business Uncle Sam should be Included with the rest. The scarcity of farm help In the great wheat belt during the season just closed, coupled with the unsatis factory character of much that was available, is goittg to direct renewed attention to the feasibility of the gaso line tractor as a substitute for men and horses. This machine can be used not only to operate headers, but also in plowing, narrowing and seeding the land. The joint ownership of such a machine by the proprietors of small Individual tracts of land has much to commend it. A trip through the orange groves and vineyards of southern California, the prune, peach and apricot ranches of the central and northern part of the state and the apple growing sections of Oregon' and Washington forces the conclusion that in all of these places, where the conditions are exceptionally favorable, the most Important factor of success, after all, Is not soil or cli mate, but the individual landowner and operator, whose energy, intelli gence and skill determine whether he reaps a generous reward or no, for in all these sections are found ranches that are 111 kept and therefore unprofit able. It is not only the general appearance of the neighborhood In which one thinks of settling, but the appearance of individual farms here and there, as shown by clean fields and good crops growing, that often influences the pro spective buyer. If so, It follows that the unkempt fields and slovenly prem ises of a shiftless or lazy person will tend to cast discredit on all his neigh bors and the agricultural standing of the district and by so doing nre likely to result in a depreciation of land val ues. This aspect of or reason for good farming Is one that Is not often re ferred to, but it is worth taking into account now and then. In spite of the fame which the Hood river valley has achieved as a produ cer of high grade apples the business is but In its infancy. Rut little more than a fourth of the laud in the valley suitable for orchard purposes has been utilized, and but a small per ceut of the trees now set are In bearing. The prices which the grower receives for his crop run from $2 to $3.50 per bushel box, which Is considerably more than growers in Missouri, Mich igan and New York receive for three times as much. It is not surprising therefore that the fellows who work in sight of Mount Hood, snowcapped the year around, are a contented and prosperous lot. The Missouri experiment station has secured valuable data from some re cent hog feeding experiments. Six lots of six fifty-pound Poland-Chinas were fed different rations for a period of 102 days. In the windup it was found that the most economical ration was corn and skimmtlk, the average dally gain per head being 1.G1 pounds, while the cost per 100 pounds of gain (figuring corn at 40 cents and the milk at 15 cents per hundredweight) was $2.83. The next best showing was made by the bunch fed corn and alfal fa, the average dally gain in this case being .83 pound and the cost per 100 pounds of gain with corn and fresh alfalfa at $3 per ton, $3. Corn and clover gave .77 pound and $3.25 In these two respects and green rape and corn .58 pound gain and $3.34 as the cost per 100 pounds gain. Estimates which have been made by careful students of crop conditions for the present season place the yield of wheat at the highest figure save one in the history of the country and the corn and oats crops as the largest which the country has ever produced. This has a tremendous significance in the minds of all who appreciate the connection between bumper crops and good times. Never before have these three great staples reached so high a figure in the same season. The result is in part due to exceptionally favorable weather conditions, Including abun dant moisture and freedom from blight, but also to a more Intelligent and careful type of agriculture, about which much is being said these later days. This latter factor is one of the most hopeful signs of the present, as the possibilities of the American ranch and farm wlse'y handled are only Just beginning to be realized. swered in writing by members of the clnb. ) .- Is a man honest, either in money or morals, who always goes as far as the law will allow him and do 'nrtherr If the general influence of anything we do, which may be lawfnl in itself, is injurious to ourselves or otners, what is our doty? What is the. general influence of the drink traffic? Verse 24 Why is not all onr duty to onr neighbor fulfi'led when we have succeeded in doing him no harm? Does Paul mean that we are to de- THE CHANGE Conducted by J. W. DARROW, Ch.th.m. N. V.. Press Comevondenl New York State " Orange AH L It Is Owned by Lindenwald Grange of Kinderhook, N. Y. Formerly an Academy Building Which Was Constructed Nearly a Century Ago School Was Attended by Martin Van Buren and Samuel J. Tildsn. Writing of their new-old grange hall recently dedicated by Lindenwald grange at Kinderhook, Mr. Edward Van Alstyne has this to say In the Tribune-Farmer: Although Columbia is one of the counties in New York in which the grange is of recent origin it having had a foothold there only In the last decade yet we have today between 5,000 and 0,000 Patrons. Doubtless few counties nre better orgaulzed or have a more really active membership. Lindenwald grange at Kinderhook which takes Its name from the home of the lalf ex-President Martin Van Buren, Just south of the village, and numbers some of that name among Its members on Friday, June 18, dedi cated Its new home and gave Its sixth annual banquet. Shortly after thn grange was started a centrally located store in the village was purchased, and the upper story was fitted up as a hall, the store below being rented. This property cost, with needed re pairs, about $3,000. Of this all ex cept $950 had been paid. On April 1 we had expected to pay $350 or $400 more, but the building caught fire last winter, the dealer's goods were dam aged and our hall was partially de stroyed. After some discussion It was decided to sell the lot and building, or what was left of It, and purchase the old Kinderhook academy, this school, like most of the old line academies, having bad to give place to the public school. It had been devoted to several base uses and for the last two years had stood vacant, with none so poor to do It reverence. It was built In the days of cheap and abundant lumber, and. the builders must have been men of good repute, for it stands as true und strong today as when it was erected nearly a century ago, for It was organized in 1824 by those of Holland ancestry, who were ever zealous In the cause of edu cation. Many bearing the same names are in the membership of the grange today: The funds were raised by pri vate subscription, and it became one of the famous schools of the state. Here Martin Van Buren, the eighth presi dent of the United States, was edu cated. ' Later students were Samuel J. Tilden, who received the popular vote to the same office, and scores of others who have occupied places of promi nence in vnrious walks of life, both in the state and the nation. The old chapel has been fitted into a lodge room of light and beauty, with rooms below as a kltcben, a dining ball and a committee room. State Master Godfrey dedicated the building. Novel Way to Earn Funds. One grange early In the season gave out, through the provision of the mas ter and lecturer, one good sized potato to every member who would take one, The seeretury recorded where every potato went and the number of eyes It possessed and will keep the account open until reckoning time next fall. The persons taking the potatoes are to cultivate them carefully, and at an ap pointed meeting next fall they will ren der an account of the potatoes they ralsea and "produce the goods" in the grange hall. After the harvests have all been credited to each raiser the total yield of potatoes will be sold and the proceeds turned over to the grange treasury. This is a plan worth pasting In the scrap book, ready for use next spring. National Grange Organ. Lecturers' Meetings. State Lecturer S. J. Lowell Is mak Ing an effort to reach by lecturers' con ferences every county In the state and to this end has organized the state into districts of from three to half a dozen counties. Beginning Aug. 23, the con ferences will be held in each of these districts with the Pomona and sub ordinate lecturers. The conferences will end Sept. 8, probably at Syracuse. In the counties In which these meet ings are to be held the Pomona lec turers are expected to wake arrange ments and notify Mr. Lowell as soon as a location has been made. It Is ex pected that the state master will at tend all these meetings. Deputies are urged to be present so as to unify the work of the grange. A Wise Lecturer. A method of setting many people at work is being tried by one lecturer this year and is working well so far, says the national grange organ. There were 200 members at the beginning of the year, and he figured out that a lec ture hour program would be needed for twenty meetings. Accordingly be divided the membership into squads of ten persons each, named a chairman and assigned the, respective evenings one to each squad and so printed the program. The full year's results will be worth watching. The Pomona ideals should be higher and a model for other granges to work by. They were intended for this pur pose originally and to be a help to the subordinate granges. vote more time and thought to adding to our neighbor's weath, than we do to onr own, and if not, what does he mean? To how much of onr respect is a man entitled who cares nothing for the success ot others, but Is devoted wholly to his own? Verse 25 In those days meat was offered to idols and afterward sold in the market for food, and some consci entious people objected to eating it for that reason. What did Paul ad vise in the circumstances, and why aia ne aavise it? ; Should we always pay the price de manded.without question, or should Within reasonable limits those chick ins will pay the hur si percentage of profit which are marketed the soonest, is the most rapid as well as the cheap est gain In weight is made during the first three or four months. In the recent land drawing which took place at Spokane there were more than 3,000 applications for every piece of land to be disposed of. if one 0f tUo lucky ones, It Is still a gamble wheth er a fellow's number Is low enough to give him the choice of a piece of land which is worth proving up on. Putter makers of an Inquiring turn of mind have found through careful tests that the water coutcut of a dozen tubs of butter taken from the same churning may vary from one-half to 1 per cent. This would seem to suggest that the fellow who makes a practice of working up close to (he 10 per cent limit should see to It that his water Is pretty evenly mixed. A part of the old Lee estate In Vir ginia has been set nside as a drug gar den by the federal department of agri culturethat Is, It Is belug used for the culture of new and valuable plants that may have a commercial value. Where success attends the growing of any varieties they will be recommend ed for other sections where soli and climatic conditions are right. Last season Canadian orchurdlsts shipped 5,000 barrels of apples to Cope Town, South Africa. The cost of transportation, storage, etc., was $3.05 per barrel and the price received $9.75, leaving the grower In the neighbor hood of $2.25 per bushel net. This Instance can be taken us still further proof that American fruit growers don't propose to lie still and lose mon ey when foreign markets are more than glad to get their fine fruit. Some investigations which the Iowa experiment station has made Into a fungous disease of millet which has appeared at several places in the state this year Indicate that the disease Is millet smut, which Is quite common in sections of Europe and which seems to have been brought Into this country In seed imported from Germany. The smut in question is much like that which affects outs, aud It can be pre vented by soaking the seed for two hours lu a solution of one pound of formalin to forty-five gallons of water. The owner of a garden tract of three or four acres near Omalm has laid tile through the tract and Is sublnigatlug it. In this case there Is simply a re versal of the use of the ordinary sys tem -of draintlllug, the water belug pumped through the main lines Into the laterals and drawn thence to the surface by capillary attraction as rap idly as needed. In sections where a water supply is handy aud where pe riods of short rainfall are likely to oc cur at critical times such a system would seem to have a very definite and practical value. James J. Hill, president of the Great Northern, Is long heuded enough to appreciate the vital rela tion between intelligent farming and big crops aud Increase in railroad traffic. In order to encourage a bet ter type of farming he has put up prizes aggregating $2,500, to be award ed at the time of the Omaha corn show In December to exhibitors of small gralus and grasses living lu ter ritory tributary to the Great North ern road. A plan of this kind Is not philanthropy, but Just good business policy, and might well be adopted by the officials of other roads. Could some Influence but be brought to bear to cause a partition of all ag ricultural land In parcels of a quarter section or more Into forty or eighty acre tracts aud the working of these areas lu us Intensive a way as Is carried out on like ureas in the Irrigation dis tricts of the western states a transfor mation would be brought about in crop yields and financial returns that could hardly be estimated. It goes without saying that the western Irrigated tract possesses a marvelous and unimpaired fertility, while In many Instances land in older sections of the country has been run down but notwithstanding this handicap results that might be secured by a careful handling of this same old land would, to say the least, be surprising. The material welfare of coming generations is going to de pend upon this more than upon any other single factor. Bulletlu No. 82, recently issued from the bureau of entomology of the de partment of agriculture, contains the results of u series of experiments which have recently been conducted with a view to finding effective meth ods of fighting the Colorado potato beetle. The Information presented is primarily for the truc,k gardeners liv ing in southeastern Virginia on either side of Chesapeake bay, who annually raise about $0,000,000 worth of early potatoes. Of late serious loss has re sulted from the attacks of the mature potato beetles uud the grubs or larvae. Heretofore the vines have been dusted In rather slipshod fashion with a mix ture of paris green and land plaster, which In many cases, In addition to killing some of the bugs, has material ly Injured the vines. As a result of Its experiments the departmeut sug gests that the poison, either in the form of parls green or arsenate of lead, be mixed with a bordeaux solu tion and npplied with a power sprayer, making possible the spraying of large fields several times during the season. While the bulletin referred to Is Is sued to help a particular group of growers, It might well be In the hands of' all who are raising potatoes on a commercial scale. we endeavor to' bny for the lowest pos sible prioe? Verse 20 If the earth is the Lord's, why should not all real estate be pn blic property? How mnch of onr property should we consider we own in oar own relit? Verse 27 Is it right for a Chris- nn in ha inti'nAfA with u-nilrllv people, to attend thoir parties and to coniorm iu meir usages, wnen sucn isges are not actually sinful? If wine is used at any party which Christian attends, would it be right wrong for him to drink it, and why? Is it a Christian'! right to do i he FAfcFRf drib A mm BY F.ETRIGG REGISTER rockfqrd.ia: CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED IThls matter roust not be reprinted with; out special permission. THE TIME FOR ACTION. The most appropriate time to talk about good seed corn is not March 1, when the time for testing it is at hand, but the few weeks preceding Oct. 15, during which time the choicest and earliest maturing ears can be se cured and thoroughly dried and cured before heavy freezes tnke place. While at the Job It is well to Becure more than one needs for himself, for some hapless fellow In all probability will not take the necessary precautions aud next spring will be anxious to get the surplus seed and pay a good price for it. The seed ears should be hung in a well ventilated open shed, southern exposure preferable. When thoroughly dry it may be stored In a dry place, a conventional arrangement being to tie the ears in strings of about twenty ears, each being fastened at the mid dle aud crisscrossing the one above It. The strings of ears should then be hung up where the mice cannot get at them and where 'they will not draw moisture during the winter . months. To be on the safe side It is well to store the ears where they will not be subject to severe cold. In the fall se lection of seed ears not only should the time of maturity of the ear be consid ered, but Its shape, outward appear ance of kernels and general thriftlness. It should be even rowed, and the ker nels should cover the tip as completely as possible. A detailed study of the kernels is best delayed until next spring at testing time, when ears hav ing kernels which are not plump to the germ end may be discarded along with those which do not show enough vital ity. Professor Holden, the great corn expert, holds that if all seed ears were picked and hung up to dry by Oct. 15 more would be done to Increase the yield of corn than would be possible In any other way. HOW HE 8AVED HIS CROP. Last spring at blossom time, when growers In many sections of the west were having the time of their lives try lug to save the prospective crop of fruit by making smudges and burning fire pots aud pitch pots and what not in their orchards, a fruit ranch owner near Medford, in the Rogue river valley, in southern Oregon, having tried all of these plans and failed, decided that what was needed most in his orchard to keep the blossoms from freez ing was just plain heat, so he built some fifty smull fires of fir cord wood lu about nine acres nights when the thermometer dropped to the danger polut aud by this menus succeeded in keeping the temperature up some 12 degrees. The fuel and labor cost per ulght of this protection was $5, or about 55 cents per acre. An Interest ing feature of this case Is the fact that the fires which were kept burn ing in this orchard saved the blossoms In orchnrds on three adjoining sides from three to five rows back from the fence. That the ranchman lu question was paid for his pains Is shown in the fact that there arc now hanging on his trees from 3,500 to 4,000 boxes of choice Newtowus, Spitz and Ben Da vis, which will net him from $2 to $3 a box. So well did this simple plan work that others should kuow of It. SOME FEEDING EXPERIMENTS. The Illinois experiment station has been making some exhaustive tests In the feeding of steers. While the full details, of the experiments have not been made public, some general results have been unnouiiced. One conclusion arrived at Is that the quantity of the feed given affects materially the pro portion of the feed digested by the ani malsthat Is, the more feed given the less proportionately was digested, one lot, receiving 20 per cent less of tho same food than another, making 2 per cent larger gain In flesh. Another fact demonstrated was that beeves can be fatteued upon a relatively low protein ration, which means economical meat production. This ouo point of econom ical use of feed In fattening operations Is ouo that should be given attention by every feeder, who without much extra trouble could curry out much the same tests as those Indicated above aud prove the value of them from his own experience. POOR SCHOOLS AND BIG BARNS. it ought not to bo so, but In all too many instances the country school bouse aud grounds are the most HI kept and slovenly In appearance and the teacher the most 111 prepared for her work and poorly paid In districts where one sees the biggest barns, the most hogs In lot and cattle In pasture. It might be added, too, that It is usual ly In districts of this description where the boys and girls are kept from school on almost any pretext und from which hoy dig out for more congenial sur roundings Just as soon as they can earu their own way. This condition referred to is a wretched and short sighted perversion of the relative Im portance of things and ought to be righted. is "disposed" in any matter, or has God got a specific plan for him for all matters great or small? Verses 28-80 Was the meat in itself any Iops good for having been offered to an idol? Why does Paul hore advise not to eat meat that has been offered to an idol, if any person calls attention to it who thought it wrong to do so? Is it necessarily h ypocrisy to do a thing'lbehind a person's back that yon would not do before his face? If no person ever got urunn. auu u drinking was doing nn harm, would it be right or wise for db to drink in toxicating liqnor as a beverage? , Did he but realize It the farm or ranch owner living along main traveled roads Is Interested financially in keep ing them In the best possible condition in a far greater degree than the rural carrier, the auto owuer or any one else who uses them. . The annual loss to live stock In the United States from the ravages of predatory animals is placed at $130, 000,000. In the face of these figures It Is not surprising that a campaign of extermination Is being organized by state and federal authorities. An orchard plow has recently been devised with which It Is possible to run close to the trunks of the trees, yet allows horses to work two or three feet farther from the tree. It is souie tl 'g that has been needed and is high ly prized by those who have used it. Secretary Coburu of the Kansas state board of agriculture refers In his book on alfalfa to fields of this legume In Mexico which have reached an age of 200 years, to fields In France that aro 100 years old and to some lu New York ' Mjhlcb have 60 years to their credit." In the face of such figures al falfa well deserves its designation, "perennial." ' The Montana experiment station has been making some investigations with a view to learning Just' how great Is 1 AMni. M 1 1. II I.. tl XM euuii ui m&uii lu lue sun uyuu different kinds of cement work. Case's have come to the notice of the stutlon officials where cemeut founda tions In moist alkali soil have almost entirely disintegrated. While the tests have not been completed, enough has been learned to moke out a pretty bad case for cement work set In alkali soil. There are today lu the United States about 42,000 rural mall routes, served by some 40.000 carriers, who receive on the average a salary of $000 per an num. Many of the routes are not self sustalulug and ure largely responsible for the annual deficit which has exist ed for the past two or three years. Patrons on such unprofitable routes ought to realize more fully than they do that after being given a fulr trial a good uiuny of such routes will be dis continued. It Is up to the patrons whether the service they have shall be kept up. An old codger we read an account of the other day got his name into the newspapers by swallowing the claims of a smooth stranger without so much as winking and paying $10 for three little bottles of dope which it was claimed would cure any ailment of man or beast of however serious char acter. The Item did not go on to say whether tho stuff in the bottles later turned out to be plain water, vinegar or machine oil. The important thing Is that the fool was parted from his money. This klud ought to take the next dollar or dollar and a half they get and subscribe for and also read their local, paper, In which skin games and swindles of this and other brands are exposed every day. A leaflet recently published by the Wisconsin experiment station places the annual loss of phosphoric acid In that state at 15,000,000 pounds, worth $750,000, aud attributes the loss chiefly to the sale of animals and grain and the improper handling of barnyard njanures, two-thirds of the loss being traceable to the last named cause. It is estimated that on an average 100 acre dairy farm there Is an annual loss of thirty pounds of phosphoric acid, while on a 100 acre graiu furni the loss is C15 pounds. In fifty years' cultivation It Is estimated that one third of the available soil phosphates are removed. Experiments with phos phate fertilizers showed that the ap plication of 300 pounds per acre great ly increased the crop yields. It would seem reasonable to assume that much might lie douc along the line of keeping boys and girls on the farm If more pains were taken to make the rural neighborhood more attrac tive. In ono respect particularly do we believe a great Improvement might be made that Is, In the building of more attractive and commodious school bouses aud the keeping of the grounds In better shape. There Is little reason to wonder that the young peoplo of a community aren't particularly impress ed with the educational aud social life of the district when the school facili ties aro so meager and so poorly main tained. They argue, whether rightly or not, that this state of things points to a vlrtuul disregard for education on the part of putrous and directors and that a development of the bead Isn't worth while when it comes to achieving success lu agriculture. The net result of this nttltude Is that those who have got the brightest minds and most energy light out when occasion offers for some place and type of work where their capacities will be given opportunity to develop. We do not hold that their action is wise. There Is great provocation for It. It Is be coming more evident every day that there is no field of effort where bruins eiiorgr-il ully d'recled will bring unl for::il; 1: f." r r purer rewards than In agl'-u.iu; .'. i lie ;;reat need of tho day Im lo ;.-t f . !;.. a:.'d girls to apprc i I:iti-till ' : !. A :: to wholesome and w!( ; ' .:( on Hie part of the old foil. - v i'iv taxpayers would help to .ri:r' t'.l- It hi time agri cultural 1 1 ' i-u-ril-1'"' appreciated the opporti'olii- :' 'n" i and put on a bet ter froni. Verse 81 Are all onr actions taken by Ood as worship if they are done to his glory? How is it possible for a Christian to do literally, everything he does to the glory of Ood? Versos 82-83 What should be our supreme desire in all our dealings with onr fellow men' Lesson for Sunday, October 3, 1909 Paul a prisoner The Arrest. Aots 21:17 to 22:29. II II Is bom's oity council is after the electrin road for passing through their town at a dangerous speed. EVER WATCHFUL A Little Care Will Save Many Oregon City Readers Future Trouble Watch the kidney secretions. See that they have the amber hue of health. The discharges not excessive or in frequent ; Contain no brick-like sediment, Doau's Kidney Pills will do this for you. They watch the kidneys and cure them when they're sick. N. S. Williams, carpenter of 239 LiDerty Btreet, baleui, Ure.. says: 'A number of years ago the doctors told me my kidneys were in a lbad shape I came west on account of the trouble, thinking the change of climate would help me but such was .not the case. Nothing i did or .took gave me relief aud 1 was about discouraged. On procuring Doau's Kidney Pills I tound them the bes t medicine I had ever used. At the time I procured them 1 was suffering irom an intense burning sensation as if two live coals were gpiaced direotly over my kid neys, ihe secretions from my kid neys were also unnatural in appear ance. Afier using two boxes of Doau's Kidney .fills 1 did not have the least pain in my back or trouble with the kidneys. I give all the credit for the cliange in my condi tion to this valuable remedy." 1'leuty more prools like this from Oregon Oily people. Gail at Huntley Bios. Drug Btoro and ask what their uustouitjrs report. i) or sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-MilDurn Co., Buffalo, New Voru, bole agents for the United StattiB. Remember the name Doau's aud take no other. Real Estate Transfers Etta aud E. L. Chase to E. Flngar son, 5 acres o section 4, T4S, HIE; $2200. Oregon Realty & Trust Company to Noah Henry Toates aud Edua Cor nelius Toates, all of lots 25, 20, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, block 45, Minthoru Addition to Portland; $200. Fred Allluger to Jessie Sampson, lot 8, block 99, Second Subdivision oi a portion of Oak Grove; $150. Emma Welch to Emma R. Welch, 45 acies of section 4, T2S, K2E; $1. C. W. and Olive Swallow to Emma R. Davis, south half of northeast quar ter and west half of southeast quarter of section 30, T 3 S, H2E; $1000. High S. and Emma Keeves to Vic tor Erickson, 3 acres of Peter Rinear son and wile D L. C, T2S, R2E; $3, 700. C. VV. aud Lillie M. Acock, 20 acres of section 33, T1S, R3E; $1500. Oregon & Calilornia Railroad Com pany & Anion Trust Company to Kathriue Riom, 40 acres of Bection 29, T2S, R5E; If 240. Joseph and Bertha Deardorff to C. E. and Signe A. Alexander, 3 acres of section 0, T2S, R3E; $309. Vilmer S. Moak to Grace Loder, lot 3, block 34, first Addition to Esta cada; $1. John F. and Ruth Roberts to H. E. Davis, 6 acres of section 9, T3S, R7E; $50. James K. Obsen aud Anua Obsen to J. A. and M. L. Orchard, 9.25 acres of section 32, T2S, R4E; $2700. Peter Molr Cochrane and Lois J. Cochrane to F. S. and D. J. Thorne, 34 acres of Bection 3, T3S, R2E; $1, 150. Herman and Lola May Nass to Wright B. Reynolds, lots 3, 4, block 17, Tolbert's Addition to Marshnold; $175. Henry Hoffmelster and Dora Hoff melster to George W. Judd, tract of land In section 30, T2S, R4E; 60. 4 John B. Bowman to George W. Lockerby, 2 acres of section 28, T33, R1E; $200. William and May Yonce to H. W. Blood, lot 1, block 20, Estacada; $450. J. T. and Winifred M. Mclntyre to A. E. Bolhlnch, 5 acres of section 24, T2S, RCE; $10. Cora Shepherd to Cora Sprague, part of William Arthur and wife D. L. C, T2S, R3E; $1. Joseph N. aud Bessie M. Teal to Fred Peterson and J. J. Edgren, land In sections 14, 23, T2S, R2E; $3190. Sylveuus L. anl B. Ward to Warner D. Roberts and Sam Martin 11 Mi acres of Bectlous 16, 21, T2S, R3E; $1. H. C. aud Mattle Harris to II. A. Gist half acre of section 25, T1S, R3E; $125. Hosen Ballon to Eunice P. Ballon, 6Mi acres, Eagle Creek; $500. Eva T. and George A. Steel to John Zobrlst, G9 acres of section 28, township 3 South, Range 4 East ; $1. Frang T. and Gertrude M. Parry to Olof Oss ,5 acres of Atkinson; $1100. Oglesby and Mary Young to M. E. Freeman, 6 acres, Atkinson; $1500. Olaf Oss and Culla Oss to M. E. Freeman, 6 acres, Atkinson; $1500. T2S, R2E; $500. Ella Butler and IRchard Butler to John W. Ider, part of D. L. C. of Hezeklah Johnson, T2S, R 2B; $10. Harry L. Ward and Sarah P. Ward to Huns P. Larsen, 40 acres of sec tion 15, township 2 eouth, range 3 east; $1. Harry Shelley to Henry Henrlcl and Eflle Henrlcl, section 14, 15, township 3 south, range 2 east; $2000. Utters Succeed when everything else foils. In nervous prostration and female weaknesses they are the supreme remedy, as thousands have testified. FOR KIDNEY, LIVER AND STOMACH TROUBLE It is the best medicine ever told over a druggist's counter. JONES DRUG CO., Inc. The Bridge Hotel v Regular Meals, Coffee and Doughnuts $ Sandwich and Coftee c Soup ... 1 Mrs. Keiffer, - - 25c 10c 10c t 10c Prop, t