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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 13, 1907)
-v THE r OREGON - DAILY JOURVAi;' . PORTLAND. FRIDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 13, 1907. T EVER SEEN AHPLACE IIIU.S (Continued from Page One.) Richard HensW. Flor J I. Hurlbut, Lebanon, Albany. ; net, 80; K, At tha opening of the anion this morning President K. T. Judd called th attention of th association to an ad vertlsement which appeared In a mrn Iff paper and waa inserted by a firm which he sale had done nothing to hel out the aaaoclatlon. had not contributed a rent towarda Ita success and had not exhibited. 'It put thla meeting- In a vary bad light.' aald Prealdent Judd. "making look aa though It waan't "worth the i tentlon of tho daryroen, and exhlbltln a narrow, contracted and aalflah view of the altuatlnn. They aald they had no nuuer to exhibit and wouldn't pay rent to heln ua out. I hate to five thel namea and the county they ara from, became there are rood man In that county, but I'm glad they didn't oome rrom Marlon county. Secretary Kent aald that In order to have return tlcketa validated and eacure the fare of one-third It would be necna airy to have all.certlflcatea returned to mm. Tba southern Pacific had not In elated upon It but the Northern Paclflo naa oemanaea ita pound or riean anu the feeling' of tke 'dairymen toward th road weren't made any pleaaanter by tne move. John- Dinwiddle of Woodburn apoka on "winter vs. Summer Dairying, and said that hi experience ahowed that one could ret better satisfaction all around by freshening In the fall and dalryln in the winter. Ma aald ha had coma from North Dakota to Oregon and found that thla waa the beat datrylnc country he had ever vlalted. William Bchul- merlch of HUlaboro aald It had been "eew"aeew - ' n. D. White, Dairy Division United States Department of Agriculture. his experience that cows freshened In the f:ill will produce one fourth more milk and the dairyman will receive one fourth more for his products In the win ter than In the summer. Oreron Considered Bait. A letter was read from Trofessor Mc Kay of the Iowa State college dairy department. In which he aald he con sidered Oregon noil better adapted for duiying than for any other pursuit. I ho most Intelligent and prosperous 7 irmcrs, lie miM, are the dalrv farmers, and they are the kind that will make oroKi!i among tho foremost dairy states or the world. A letter was also read fioni (1 I,nrson of the dairy liusband jnen department of North Dakota, say ing that Oregon was situated so as to command the markets of the orient and Alaska with Its dairy produce. Professor K I.. Kent of the State Ait !' 1 1 -1 1 1 1 1 1 1 u 1 college gave some Interest Ins tlpures on the advanced registration of dairy cattle For Jerseys he aald cows giving 280 pounds of butter fat w hen under 2 t years, 300 pounds when tinder 4 years,, 350 pounds from 4 to 6 years and 400 pounds over f years, were entitled to advanced registration. The Uuernweys two years old arc re quired to give 250.& pounds of butter fat, this gradually Increasing with the age of tho animal. i!81 pounds when three years old and 3H0 pounds when five years old. In thn seven-day testa for Jerseys a cow must (five 14 pounds of butter In seven days or 12 pounds of butter fat In seven days. Two-year-old fiucrnseys must Five 1ft pounds of but ter fat and five-year-olds 15 pounds. Holatelns. two rear nMi. muat xftva f.l tounda of butter fat. three year olda I I pounds, four yesr olda lt. pounds. live xra or over it pounoa, t -Baal Terms 04 Ooatt, 'The two beat atoclt farms with blooded dairy herds In the country ara to ba found on the Paclflo ooaet. one the farm nt tha IMurrn Live Stork com puny at Stockton, California, and the ethr tha herd of I Jersey owned by ,vV''3 Wv-;-,v4 ;- ,,: V . . ' H, ,.t f av- iv swr al t MM - -i - - - '-fit iiii ii Professor F. L. Kent. the LAdds on the Lodd farm near this city. The latter Is the finest herd of Jeraeva in tha country. Anion u a famous heifers la one year that haa record of 11.161 pounds or rnllK or 801 pounds of butter fat in a year. A yearling heifer has a tecord of 7.738 pounds of milk or 492 pounda of butter fat." It. T Rl.-.nchard the last speaker at the mornlna session. sDoke on practical dairying and how he had euccteded by following along practical lines, supple mented by stuJy. Ills herd has an average of 4b0 pounds of butter rat per cow. Otners near him have an av erage of nearly 000 pounds to a cow, ha aald. "We must use business methods, aald he, 'It's a simple business proposi tion Get good blood, hold onto, good lood. give your whole time and Inter est to your herds. Feed them well. care for them, eradicate the poor speci mens and you will gradually raise your percentage of butter fat." J tils afternoon the business session and election of officers will close tho Convention I Ijist evening a very large reception was held at the ( ommerclal club in honor of the visiting dalryutrn. Future of Dairyman. The following address of Addlaon Ren- nett. editor of the Irrlgon Irrigator and f The lajles Optimist, was read be font the dairy convention this afternoon: If you will notice the subject assigned to me you will perceive I am not Ruing to occupy your time with a mass of tatemunts aa to what haa been done in astern Oregon In the way of dairying. When Mr. Kent asked me to uddress ou on the subject of dairying In our section I told him that I would do so on condition that I was to sneak on the lltterlnc generalities of the future, and ot along the lines of the dry statistics of the past However. 1 must Bay a word anout hat Is being done on some of our arms to give point as to what can ne one and what must lie done If th" real plains and valleys of the Inland inplre are to be th" prosperous places nope to see mem. I am a good many different kinds of crank, and among my twisted notions re the We moat elo' aavarat thin to brlnr prosperity, universal P'W'"'- 1 1 ,1 . tr m nnrlllin of Odr 8'l- ifl ., illanllnn to 'whOttt rowing and more attention to, 4?Mni fled fannlnt; and we must plant jii or - trees, more treea, more treea aiid in" aoma more. Wa muat change the face of the country: ws muat boautlfy 'our tiotnia nnH AIIP miuniti: and 10 OO thla we muat nlant trees, trees and more treea. V . 1 Mast Oie ometkimf Back. Nothing la plainer from an agricul tural atandpoint man iwt w .-" inhj nfAu, Kv ak In ill from tna soli aud giving nothing back. 0ther Nature has been very kind and la la Ji to ua by glvlnr us a aou magninww all that goea to make it productive, but we must not rob It year after year and port It to treat ua ever kindly, ror nature doea nut deal In that manlier Ilk f.nv fir nv aol! What tho eastern Oregon farmers and ranchman muat do for tha gooo 01 ina country ond the leneflt of themselves la to turn their attention to the etablllty af their DToaperlty by riving something ,n n.l.ira In ratlirn for the lavish gift aha la constantly beetowlnf and to do thla we must turn our attention to Alv.,rmlfA (irmlm and the first thought of every farmer should be the purchase of a few cows, or IT US ai resdv haa a few, then let him keep adding to the number aa fast as he can. Jdanv of our people have ahown the wav Vr.il ran travel IhroUfh itlf DOr- tlon Of the atate and see thousands of little pate hea of alfalfa and wherever a man has had the aense to start al field of this famous legume you can rest ae atired that he either has or soon Intends to have a few cows. He may not o going extensively Into the dairy b". neea, er even to a commercial extern, out ha will have cows enough to mi nw ow a butter and probably enough be yond hl own needs to trade In ot the atore for his groceries and many other commodities Methods ghouid Be Itudiea. Right at the outset manr Of the land owners will tell you that they nave not the pasturage for even one row. but that Is all nonesense, for around Irrlgon We have 20 or 30 milch cowa and they do well all summer on our "barren aige bruih pasturage. The next objec tion will be that hay la ao dear In the wlo'er that they cannot afford to buy it to carry their Block through the colVr niontha. but that Is another fal- No Cocaine--No Gas No Students Onr euccesa la due to uniform bJgh- grade work at reaaonabla prloea. Nervous People And thoae afflicted with heart weaknaaa ean now have their teeth extraoted. filled and brldgework applied Without tha leaat pain or danger. PAINLESS EXTRACTION S .50 Jl KARAT CROWNS 5.00 BRIDGE WORK 5.00 OUR BKST PLAIN PLATE 8.00 TEETH.. Re-Enameling Teeth Is the greatest Invention in modern den tistry and haa been moat successful of aii tcemoas. We extend to all a apeclal Invitation to call at our office and have their taetb examined free of charge We own and control the lnrreat and beat equipped dental establishment In the world, havfng Just opened an office In Astoria, making ua 18 offices all told. We give a written guarantee with all work for 10 years. Lady attendant. Open evenings till 8:30. Sunday t to L ChicagoPainlessDentists IXTK ABO WASKXBOTOB. Be sura yea are In tha right plaoa. J. W. Bailey. pry.1 ' " ."yH . 'uj i . 1 i art;-' ..-,r Dr. Jamos WithyrombP. Iowa's Weather Prophet Endorses - " .... yB. MR. J. a BUSBY. Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey and C. BUSBY. 1907. Mr. J. C. Busby of Independ ence, Iowa, the well-known wea ther prophet, praises Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey as the best tonic stimulant for the old. Mr. Busby says that he uses it with good results when in need of a tonic and heartily recom mends it to all. "I am known all over the world as Iowa's weather prophet, and doubtless you will remember that the warm win ters n few years ago were correctly foretold by me. I have used Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey for several years, whenever I felt run down and In need of a tonic stimulant, and always with food i .results. It has saved me many octor's bills and 1 consider It tho greatest medicinal whiskey ever made and tho only medicine to tnke If you wiah to enjoy good health, strength, and vigor in tho declining years, when most men aro enfeebled. "I cannot sny too much in praise of your great medicine, and trust that everyone who requires a tonic stimulant and who reads my letter will take receive the same benefit I have." JOHN Weather Prophet and Astronomer, Independence. Iowa, August 20, Duffy's Pore Malt Whiskey is an absolutely pure distillation of malted grain; great care being used to have every kernel thoroughly malted, thus destroying the germ and producing a predigested liquid food in the form of a malt essence, which is the most effective tonic stimulant and invigorator known to science; softened by warmth and moisture its palatability and freedom from injurious substances renders it so that it can be, retained by the most sensitive stomach. . . f you wish to keep young, strong and vigorous and have on your cheeks the glow of perfect health, take Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey regularly, according to directions. It is dangerous to fill your system with drugs. They poison the body and depress the heart, while Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey tones and strengthens the heart action and purifies the entire system. It is recognized as a medicine everywhere. Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey has been analyzed, and tested by chemists for the past fifty years, and has always been found., absolutely pure- and to contain great medicinal properties. ' OAUTZOIT Whan you ask too dmrglat, grocer or dealer for Duffy's Pure Halt whiskey be sura yon ret the renuine. it's the one absolutely pure med . lolnal whiskey and Is sold only In sealed bottles) sever in bulk. JiOoX for the trade-mark, the mo Id Oh em 1st," oa the label, and make sure the seal ever the' ' cork is nnbroktn.- Prioe Sl-OO. XUastrateA medical booklet and doctor's ad rice Cree. SxUXy acaJLt whiskey Co Socboatez. V. T. . f - . bu y. for there Is not a section of occu pled land In eastern Oregon that haa not at least a few acres which will bear two or moie cropa of alfalfa each year after It Is once seeUed' and eacn acre so seeded will ken at least two cowa through the winter and possibly three or four. S'hnt we need Is for the ranchers and farmera to go and study the methods of those who are doing aa we advocate and then go and do likewise. It is not tho thought of fear or failure so much as the diead of labor that holds many of them b.ick. They know they can get a good stand of alfalfa in one yenr'e time on some of their acres, but it takes work to do it and the average wheat farmer wants to do all of his work dur ing two periods of the year, seed time and h.irvest. During those periods they will work and slave like the very old scratch, but during the balance of the year they prefer to rest and discuss now best to save the country. Lack of Thrift. I can take you out Into the wheat belt and show you farm after farm where the houses are hardly worthy the name; where the fences around the "home" are broken down, unpainted and uncared for.' If the owners are thrifty enough to ever have fenced them at all. There Is not a tree or shrub in sight, there Is no garden, most likely no well, and they may haul their water a dis tance or five, six or even ten miles. I enn show you farmers who spend as high as $90f) n year for hauling water. when for $900 they could sink a well and equip It with a gasoline engine, a pumn and tank, and have water enough for all of their needs, and also enough to Irrigate their garden, a small- or chard and an acre or two of alfalfa. And once Installed this machinery could he operated for less than $75 per year. And those men will tell you they cannot afford to keep a cow or a hog, because water Is Stt hard to get. If you will go inside those houses you will probably find them about as uninviting "homes" as one cares to see. And if you will look Into the mat ter you will also ascertain that In nine cases out or ten the sons ana daugh ters of those "homes" will nay thnt farming Is a dog a llfe and jib soon as they are old enough to do as they please they will go out to work as ser vants rather than remain at home. Oregon has too many such oumberera of the ground, and we must educate them up something higher and bet ter If we want to see out state prosper as our soli and climate warrant. let these men make up their mind that they will have a cow or two, and then will follow hogs, poultry and per haps a few sheep. When a farmer Is once started on the road to diversified larmtng lie will be happier, more pros perous, and he will be giving his land a "square deal." for he will be giving back to the soli something every hour of every day In the year. More Homes Woeded. What we want is more real homes and less shacks; more cows and less wheat; more hogs and poultry, and less lncontlvs for our young men and wo men to escape from the farms and flock to the cities. Take the case of the Morrow county man who has spent over $5,000 during the last seven years for hauling water. Suppose ho had gone Into debt five years ago for a well, an enK'ne and a pump. In place of buying a header on time, as ho did. Then suppose he had Irrigated only three acres, and now had that in fruit trees and a garde'n, and had in addition an acre or so of alfalfa. Do you suppose his section would now be on the market s?t $15 an acre, and no buyer In sight?' No. It would be worth more than double that, and he would not want to sell It at any reasonable price. And his daughters In place of being waitresses in town would be ladles at home, and his sons would not be out working with pick and shovel or "tending bar." The future of the dairy business In eastern Oregon lies In the hands of the men who have started, and will start, with a few cows for their own butter and milk. Every convert will be so enthusiastic that he will moke many others, and very Boon creameries will be. springing up. and then great Irri gated districts, like the Butter Creek country, around Irrlgon and Hermlston, Baker City and Ontario, you will find within a few years there will be great dairy centers. And when that day comes eastern Oregon will be coming. Into her own, and we wlllsee the dawn of that pros perity for which we have been longing; and waiting. SHADES OF MIKE! CITY Jl BOBBED Policeman Reports Being Victim of Tliievcs at Station. A member of the police department haa reported to the police department that the police station has been robbed. There Is no clew to the Identity of the perpetrator of the outrage. Patrolman Porter Is the particular member of the department who was made the victim of the theft. Ha re ports that some unknown person h.s rifled bis locker at the police station and abstracted therefrom one police cape, one flat ever-ready lamp, and one police manual. Delivctlves may lie detailed on the case and a vigorous nd unsuccessful attempt made to ap prehend the thief or thieves. PLAYS DEAD MARCH TIE TAKES LIFE Artist Seeks Melodramatic Mode of Commitinp: Sui cide in Paris Cafe. (Special Dlipatrb to The Journal.) Paris, Pec. t. The tragedy of an rtlst's life had a melodramatic denoue ment In a Montmartre cafe Thursday night. Some years ago a pianist named Mar gay married a girl of great beauty, against the advice of his friends. She deserted him. and. though he constantly besought her to return, preferred a life of less restraint. Brooding over his loss. Margny fell on evil days, and sank lower and lower, living in an attic, and being sometimes arrested for drunkenness and vagabond age. As he wandered . aimlessly past the door of a cafe on the Boulevard do i Cllchy, he saw his wlfa enter with a man. Margay followed, clad In rags. 1 and In spite of the waiters went to a i piano which stood In the center of tho . room. ' Seating himself with his eyes on his wife, he .played a funeral dirge and j then the 'Dead March." No one tried to aton him. A deep sob broke from him as he struck the final chord. He rose to his feet, staggered through the room, and at the door drove a dagger through his heart. Holiday Display o! Gloves, Hand kerchiefs and Suspenders IKS Wt Holiday Dis play of Under wear, Shirts and Fancy Hosiery Christmas Buying in Full Swing m Our Haberdashery Sections All Kinds ; of Appropriate Gifts, in Every Style, at Every Price 0 -1 We Wish to Call Special Attention to Our Three Stronfl Lines ol NECKWEAR at 50c, 75c and $L00 Four-in-Hands, Folded Squares, Ascot s and Batwings. One is not limited here in his selection, and is always assured o f the correct and proper styles. We are showing new creations every day that are original and exchisive from 50c to $3.00. j 0! special interest to Holiday Shoppers and the General Pub lic, is our Special Sale of Fine Winter Weight Overcoats now in progress $50.00 OVERCOATS $37.85 $45.00 OVERCOATS $33.65 $40.00 OVERCOATS $28.65 $35.00 OVERCOATS $25.85 $30.00 OVERCOATS $22.00 $27.50 OVERCOATS $19.85 $25.00 OVERCOATS $18.65 $22.50 OVERCOATS $16.35 $20.00 OVERCOATS $14.85 $15.00 OVERCOATS $11.35 HOLIDAY MAIL ORDERS GET OUR PROMPT AND SPECIAL ATTEN TION. HOLIDAY MERCHANDISE ORDERS ISSUED for any AMOUNT -Wet and Sfippery. SWEDISH CITIZENS HONOR KING S MEMORY pavement males aeeldents te horses frequent. Far Oats, Bruises, Galls A Strains try Mexican Mustang Liniment. It soaks dewn to tha bona, relieves all soreness In a Jiffy then haals tho wound or torn ligaments. Its grat antl septlo qualities mako H safe and sura, -v -v -v -v -v -v Equally good for Man or Beast Our FRKI5 booklet, " Points from a Horse Doctor's Diary" will helprou in curing jour li restock. Stndforit. LYON MANUFACTURING CO.. 44 South Fifth St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Services Are to Be Held in First Presbyterian Church Wednesday Night. , Extra sessions ere as old aa congress Itself, the first having: been called to gether January 4, 1790, a little over three months arter the flrxt session ever held came to a close. Next came the extra session of the fifth congress, then others during the eleventh and tntrtetpnth. after which; there was a lapse of 2year before It was deemed nec essary to meet more Uian once la two yaara. Memorial services In- honor of the lnte King Oscar II of Sweden will ho hold In the First Presbyterian church, Twelfth and Alder streets, next Wednes day evening at 8 o'clock. This was decided upon at a meettng of the com mittee held last night. A tentative program was outlined and according to it tho services will con sist of prayers and speeches by the fiastors or the various Swedish churches n the city. Vice-Cousul Endre M. Cederhergh to day received a telegram from Consul Tionm T.nnd at San Francisco confirm ing the report that the funeral of the late king will bo held Thursday, De cember 19. Grave of the Tichbornc Claimant. From the London Globe. While the subject of claimants In ti tles and the estates that go with them 1h in the air It la interesting to note I hat in Paddlngton cemetery. Wllles den lane, lies the body of Arthur Or ion, who claimed to be Sir Roger Tich- borne. On his coffin he jias described as such hut his miniature tombstone bears merely one line, and that reads No. 1.472." Orton, after serving many vears' imprisonment, appeared on "the halls." and died In Star street, oft Edg ware road. AX. WAYS WAS SICK. When a man eaye he always was sick--troubled with a cough that lasted all winter what would you think i he should aav he never was sick slnca using Ballard's Horebound Syrup. Such a man exlats. Mr. J. C. Clark, Denver, Colorado, writes: "For years I was troubled with a severe cough that would last all winter. This cough left me in a miserable condition. I tried Ballard'e Horehound Syrup and have not had a sick day since. That's what it did for me." Sold by all druggists. PIXE 0V FUJI, AGED 170. Japan Has the Oldest Man, if Eating Bear Fat Gives Long Life. Poes the nature faker exist In Japan as wcill as In America? Here comes the Yorodzu Choho, a reputable paper of T'ikio. with the announcement that it bus discovered In Kosaburo Fujlmatsu, a resldrnt of the province of Chikugo, the oldest man in the world. Fujlmatsu Is Just 170 years old, gays tlie Yoroduz Choho In Ideographs that .ue childlike and bland. Fujlmatsu was born in Yamazakl, Chikugo province. Ho saw wars of the feudal daimyos, participated in the Satsuma rebellion and watched the reconstruction of the einnire and the establishment of the 1 present emperor in real power at Toklo. lie was tne rattier 01 seven sons, ne bad IS grandsons and 46 great-grand-sons. One of his great-grandsons lives with Fujlmatsu now. "Ths old gentleman's physique Is still very good," says the Yorodzu Choho. "His eyes arc penetrating and his teeth are all good. He bears up well under his age. His record honors his name, which is Tine of Fuji." When one of the enterprising report ers of the Y'orodzu found Fujlmatsu making a religious pilgrimage through Shlkoku in the footsteps of the great Buddhist disciple Kobo Talshl, he asked him how he could account for his lon gevity. "My great pleasure when a youth of 30 and 40 years was to hunt bears," replied the old man. "I never neglect ed to eat all of the bear fat I could, which kept me always warm and healthy, so that I did not have to wear anv thick coat In winter time. I never took a dose of medicine." Painful as Iti la to cast reflections on the veracity of one of Toklo's reputable journals, the ylncidence that -this hoary nature faker also hunted bears sug gests the quetftion whether, despite his eaphoaious nma, Pine of Fuji should 529 to 539 Williams Avenue onsir ETxvnrcM txlx, cxbxstbcas. Grocery Saving Items Eat the Best and Pay the Least ' "KEN-ADA" Flour, Back . . . .(1.30 "KEN-ADA" Coffee, lb 29 KEN-ADA" Butter 77 MINCE MEAT, home made, lb.104 CURRANTS, new, recleaned, rer pkg 15J RAISINS, seeded, per pkg., 3..25 Bulk, lb 10 LEMON or ORANGE Peel, lb..2Q CITRON.' new Corslcan, lb 27 LEMONS, extra large, doz 35 PRUNES, home cured, clean. Ib. 8 NEW WALNUTS, large, per lb. 23 NEW ALMONDS, soft shell, lb. 25 SAVB "XBW-ADA" OEKTIFIOATES, OFT. TKEY'Ui ALWAYS BE OOOD. BEST MIXED, per lb ..1T PECANS, per lb J5S PEANUTS, best Virginia, lb. .1 24 NATIONAL FRUIT CAKES, I-Tb. PkK 40 CRANBERRIES, per lb ?2i ORANGES, dos 30 and 35 ASSORTED CHRISTMAS COOKIES. J? lb ! ' ".c,l s XCt0 I X Ills J BM B fB,CK, IP. ........... Full stock of Canned Fruits and. Vegetables, Preserves. Jellies. etOnr always on hand, TKBT XEAX im HI OXMt! Finest China Stock On the East Side ' 1 In fact much finer than many on the west side. ' Prtrta mW 1- th an elsewhere in Portland. Purchases will be held to your order for delivery. f Every housekeeper takes pride in havinor all th t.. t part completeness m the dining room. Thousands of beautiful thitirs in Art Novelties, French, Bohemian. Austrian. Prussian 7 : I ported wares, many of which are exclusive with us. Also an elaborate ! display of Cut Glass that affords eift seekers unlimited rtii. In i erate range of prices. Art Jardinieres in. endless variety decorated Lamps ' 35c to $12.50, and ever so many other, choice articles that would make' useful, ornamental Christmas presents. . Xmas 50c PICTURES 23c hTKS0QC KictUr!SnJo1 aml8 of y different subjects, such the aunbonnet Babies." Dutch stihi-a t ii u onngs;: speaal, while they last, each ..i jb 500 as water colo John W. Kern., who is mentioned aa the possible successor of Thomas Tar- gart as Indiana member of the Demo-' rmnu nanonai committee, la a native of Indiana, a graduate of tha ITnl of Michigan, and a lawyer by profession. no oegao. ma puouc-career jn is2 aa a member of the atate senate.! In 1 900 and again in 1904- he was the unsuc cessful candidate of the Democrats for governor of Indiana. In 190S he 'received- the-, complimentary - vote - of . hie at fr tiaitid states senator. I f .TEA : v " . . xncre is no schillings Best not, in packages, "air tight" "package's. 's , : -" Tour trocr rrur ywr n",if if T t