THURSDAY, MAY 29, 1905. THE MORNING 'ASTORIA N, ASTORIA, OREGON. pnr The : TRO Y Ii Uie only White Labor Laundry hi the City. Does the Best of Work at very reasonable Prices, and ia la every wayjrortliy of your patronage. Cor. 10th and DUAKE 8T8. FhoM 1991 FRESH AND CURED MEATS Wholesale and Retail , ; Ships, Lodging Camps and Mills supplied on short notice. LIVE BTOCK BOtXJUT AND SOLD fl WASHINUTOfiMARKET ttnnTiTftiinHUKmnnrnmrrti ' Reliance ! Electrical WorRs M.I.VT. h The Palace Cafe. The Astoria. Restaurant. A. G I M R ! BALL Call E AN ASTORIA PRODUCT Pale Bohemian Beer Best Iu The Northwest North Pacific IfMilFlIlISIICECOfll Of .New Zcolond : 4 , S ' 1 v ' ' , W. P. THOMAS, Mgr., San Francisco. UNLIMITED LIABILITY OF SUREHOLDESR II u ban Unlorwritins ou the mMMtiiiHiiiiiiimiiiiiutiniifntiiim ELMORE Q'CO., SolejAg'ents CENTRAL MEAT MARKET ' . G. W. Morton and John Fuhroian, Proprietors, UnOICEHT FUE3H AND SALT MEATS. - rROMrT DELIVER! 543 Commercial St. Phone Main 321. ; Laundry . CHEISTENSEN tL CO. Ws are thoroughly prepared for making estimates and assenting orders for 11 kinds of electrlrel Installing sad repairing. Huppllea In stock. Ws ll ths Oelebrsted 8HELBT LAMP. Call p Phone H6L' 428 BOND STREET u The Best Restaurant. Regular Meals2 5c. . Everything the Market Affords. Sunday Dinners a Specialty. Palace Catering Co. If you want a good, clean meal of if you are in a hurry you should go to the Astoria Restaurant This fine rest su rant " i( thoroughly up-to. date in every detail. OEXCELLENT MEALS. EXCELLENT SERVICE meeoeoeeee4e iM C 0 t 0 f Has always ia stock a finf'assortment off ,. . . I. Boots and Shoes ! 8 0 ft BRAND RUBBER BOOTS, a o ' s Q and See. Bond Street. J Brewing Co. Pacific Coast for twenty-five year - FAR AND GARDEN Latest Poultry News for Benefit of Clitiop Farmrrs. . j PROFITING BY EXPERIENCE Old Methedi of Caring for Turkey! and Other Fowl! Growing Into Disause end Many New Method! Adopted With Practical Results, f f . I j The umauM"JrXaniflInirtfif lurWy bene and little poults wlwn ths pontts hatch and during the ten days that tat mediately follow depend conslderahlr urm the conditions to which they are subject, write n. A. Nourae In ttella Me Poultry Journal. Home turkey breeders prefer to fife . and young free rang and throw nt wholly npoa their own resources, iher breeders five then full liberty where they like, but fed the ben . ud brood regulsrty. Still others Dad It beet to oooflne the poults or the bens until the young turkeys are well start ed, f fc ; 4 ';. f '5 i The natural way for a ben to do after the hatch Is complete Is to take her brood Into ths fields or Into the brash If there Is any. There she protect! them from enemies snd feeds them with such animal and vegetable food as she can find. The young ralaed to that mauner are atrong and healthy, and when they get well started they grow rapidly. But hear ratal and period! of damp weather sometimes rsuse beary lomu In broods so rsuwd. .and various meana are taken to pre terit such loae by limiting the range for a longer or shorter time after hatching. , . . On method Is to confine the turkey ben In a coop and allow the poulta to run at large. The coop for tbls pur poee ahould not be leea than four feet long by three wide and high enough to allow the ben to stretch to her full height. Hens that bare not been accus tomed to any kind of restraint seldom can be confined In a coop eucceMfully. Tbeae conpa muat be moved dally to freeb location, and the hen must be duited with lice killing powder once a week to keep down the lice, which breed and lncreae rapidly when the turkey la .unable to take a thorough dut bath. I'nlcsa the hen Is very tame ahe can not be let out for an occaalonal run, for it U not often po!bte to get ber to "go back to the coop. For the young poults there li noth ing better than ntnle (not moldy) bread, dampened with milk, for the flint two day. After Mint a good quality of prepared rtilelc food nuule of small nnil finely crnrkeil jmiliw In a enfo ami de sirable ration until the poults nre larg enough to eat wheat, cracked corn and other conrno fooil. Those that are In pens or whose mothers are confined In coop nniKt Ik fed three full meals a day. Some whole corn ahould In? pro vided for the ben, and fresh water should be supplied at least twice each day. The youngsters ahould not be f ed aa soon aa they are hatched and dried off. They will bo healthier aud prow faater If no food la aupplled until they are at leait two days (forty-eight hour) old. Meet fklek T4. In a recent report of experiments In feeding chicks the Rhode Island experi ment atatlon ssys: "The use of the proper proportion of animal food will pay a handsome profit through decreased mortality and In creased weight of the chicles. "The experiment which led np to this conclusion wa with an Incubator hatch oLSUJ .chlekensTJjesejvere senarntetj Will positively cup ! any case of iCiciney or Bladdop disease not beyond the peacEi of EtietJicinOi PJo medicine can do mope. FOLEY'S strengthens the urinary organs, builds up the kidneys and invig orates the whole system. IT IS GUARANTEED TWO SIZES 60o and $1.00 Into fotifbf about fifty each and" pTaced In almllilr brooder! For thirty days ail condition were kept alike ecpt the rations. Fen A was fed a balanced ration of grains, meat and green food. The chicks grew and thrived, snd not one chick showed symptoms of dlges tire disorder. The death amounted to 8.9 per cent In pen B all animal food waa withheld. The deaths were 9.8 per cent of which 73 per cent bsd bowel trouble. Pea C was fed on grain alone, all snlmsl food snd all green food be ing omitted from, the ration,. The deatha were 32.7 per cent, of which 71.5 per cent ahowed dlgeetlve trouble. In pen D all grain food waa omitted. The deaths of chirk were 03.7 per cent of which KiA per cent ahowed bowel tro rble. All the living chicks were weigh ea bi ine cioe or tne tet sna pen A showed the greatest average weight Tb Paltrr Tarti. If there are any hollows In your poul try runs that are liable to bold water after besry abowers fill tfaem op or drain so that the birds will not be com pelled to wade through muddy water halfway up to their knee, so to speak, says Commercial Poultry. Otherwise some of those valuable and highly prlsoil early hatched bird will likely lie down and die. And you will won der what la the matter with them. They will be dVid, of course. but you might bsve ssved them. fharetMl Pretwrrt D The use of charcoal will prevent ranch of the disease tb-tt affect the bowels of poultry. A tea spoonful of charcoal per fowl la the soft feed about three time a week will prove a great benefit to their bealth.-Farm and live Stock Journal. Cktekva ltH. Green bone should be fed three times a week to the laying hen and dally to the male bird. Remember that s lousy bra cannot give you the result that she could If free from lice. A few drops of tincture of Iron In the drinking water make an excellent spring tonic for the fowls. All deformed chicks ahould be killed as soon as hatched. It Is a wssts of time to try to raise them. If the egga from a certain pea are found to be largely Infertile, loss no time In getting a new male to bead the pen. Never set a deformed or 111 shaped egg. It Is s waste of time. Select ths beat ahaped egga and be sure that they are from atrong, vlgoroua stock. Com mercial Poultry. " '"ulWT FANSlEo. St the PttrlUaS KsDMltlw tmm ? See Thera Fa laehoe Aevaaa. pld you ever aee a pansy aa large as a sunflower? If you attend the ap proaching Lewi and Clark exposition you will see thousand a large, saya the Lewis and Chirk Journal. The pansy will for the first time In exposition his tory form an Important part of the dec orative scheme of the fair. Experience has shown that the climate of Oregon, which gnjwa wheat and other farm product in wonderful prodigality, l einnlly well adapted to the more orna mental If less valuable flowers. ICosea bloom in riotous profusion the year round in Oregon, and Portland baa Kiilt.ed the name of the Rose City on this account But the development of the pansy la more recent An ener getic Portland florist, thinking that the climate and soil conditions ahould fa vor the development of the plant Im ported from all parts of the world the choicest specimens of (he flower. These different varieties were Improved by artificial cnltlvatlon. and It was found that aome few were especially adapted to life In Portland. The florist has de voted his attention to the choicest of these for several years, and the pansy baa Improved wonderfully under his care. Last summer there were sny number of blossoms four Inches across, and even better results are expected. There will be 5,000 pansy plants sot out In bed In various parts of the eijosltlon KIDNEY CURE bli li kI) grouniTiiTi)' coVnpcTeTn "popularity"" with the ever popular Oregon rose. DEWBERRY VINES. Aa laareatoaa Uffm f SlaaSliaaT Tkta tk Tsr ansa. ; . The diagram shows a sketch of my pi a of training the dewberry, sayt a Earsl New Yorker correspondent Fig. 1 represents tbo dewberry vines train ed to a wire tightly drawn between two anchored posts at ends of row. B B, with central poet, C . This wire, A A, Is put up la the spring, and tbo vines sr raised np snd thrown over It and tied on If neceeeary, leaving tbo ground bare beneath, wbere tbo sprouts for next year's crop can grow and bo trained so as to be under tbo wire, out of the way of cultivation. When the berries are sll picked loos en the wire, A A, at both ends, first Taaivma m uawsaaat. .' cutting off the old vines, snd by means of this wire, one man at each end, tbo old vines are pulled awsy from the new vines now, spread out on tbo ground; then by straightening one end of this wire snd pulling st the other end yon can easily pull tbo wire out from tbo old lines and leave them be tween tbo rows, wbere they can be easily forked Into beeps snd carried off the ground, leaving everything out of tbo wsy, as seen in Fig. 2, and the new vines ready for tbo winter mulch. If desired the posts, B B, can be pulled up and set sway In tbo dry, ready to drive down in the spring. The anchor wires, T T. which are anchor ed to a stone underground, must be st udied to the top of the post so it can be removed when yon wish to take the post up. These guy wire would bo the only thing left on tbo ground through the winter. In the spring drive down ths posts, stretch the wire, A A, sod sgaln train tbo vine by lifting them over the wlre.nd In this wsy one wire and the same posts can be used and the best possible conditions bad for cultivation and for large, fine ber ries at lesa expense than sny method yet devised to my knowledge. No. 14 wire is plenty large for this training wire. Tbo Aeeaaiaiaaattasr PoaaT. Ton can leave the peony to grow In the grass with total neglect and it will multiply snd bloom, but will not do so well as with care. - R. M. Gutori carries a full line of farm Implements, also wagons, bug- rie and farming tools of sll kinds. 105 Fourteenth street Fig l a 'tM First National Bank of Astoria, Ore ESTABLISHED 1880. Capital and Surplus $100000 J. Q. A. BOWt.RV. ermldont O. 1. PETtK.HOX,. Vlce-Prtoldent .Astoria Savings Bank Capital Paid In 1100.000. Surplus sod Undivided. Proflu 135.000. Transact General Banking Bun to ess. Interest Paid on Tim Deposit. 16S Tenth Street, The Astorian Wlf" Wj uj iiM'if i ii Hi Jlt .I i) awj Passid Stom ud Gravel With Excruciating Pains A. H.Thurnes, Mgr. Tills Creek Coal Co., Buffalo, O., writes: MI have been afflicted with kidney and bladder trouble for years, piss ing gravel or stones with excruciating pains. Other medicines only gave relief. After taking FOLEY'S KIDNEY CURE the result was surprising. A few doses started the brick dust, like fine stones, etc., and now 1 have no pain across my kidneys snd I feel like s new man. FOLEY'S KIDNEY CURE has done me $1,000 worth of good." No Oihtr Rimidy Caa Compart With It Thos. V. Carter, of Ashboro, N. C, had Kidney Trouble and one bottle of FOLEY'S KIDNEY CURE effected a perfect cure, and be says there Is no remedy that will compare with it. Tornfio Rac With Osath. "Drtkth , was fast approaching." write Ralph F. Fernandea of Tamps.' Fla., describing his fearful race with ,death, "a a, result of liver trouble and heart disease, which had robbed me of sleep and of all Inter 1 (a life. I bad tried many different, doctors snd sev eral medicines, but got no benefit, un til I began to nee Electrlo Bitters. So wonderful ,.wa their offset, that In tbre days I felt like a new man, and today I am cured of all my troubles.' Guaranteed at Chut. Roc era - drng store; price See. - '! ANDREW - ASP. 1 Blacksmith. Having installed a Rubber Tiring Machine of the latest psttorn I am prepared to do all kind of work at reasonable prices, 12th and Ouan $t, , AT THE STAR All the Latest Attractions From the B!t Theaters r Week Beginning May 22. Matinee Daily at l.il P. M. J , t. De Mora ft Graceta Sensational Acrobatic Novel'.r. HEIM CHILDREN The Cleverest Child Artiste on the African Stage . CREATOR Ir. Hla Original Musical Specialty. The Ideal Entertainers WESTON AND WHALLEM reent their comedy success, "O'Donavan Dunn. M. P." A. J. ELWELL Pictured Melodies Entitled "Good Night Beloved, Good - ' Night ! V EDISON'S PROJECTOSCOPE . Showing latest Motion Picture 'Wanted, a Dog." t Admission. Any Seat 10 cent. FRANK PATTOS. Canhlev J. W. GARNER, A its U taut, Cashier ASTORIA, OREGON. 60c Month. ru p)jc i."" l.l.-l-:'.,Vv...:::.,-,l snLn m BEC3SI3EK3ED BY einhard CHARLES RQQ RS, Druggist. Beer