Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910, October 08, 1908, Image 3

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    —
One Woman*« Wl«<lom.
A Hair
Dressing
Neatly every one likes a fine
hair dressing. Something to
pale the hair more manage-
able; to keep it from being
too rougji, or from splitting
at the ends. Something, too,
that will feed the hair at the
same time, a regular hair-food.
Well-fedhair will bestrong,and
will remain where it belongs—
on the head, not on the comb!
The beat kind of a testimonial —
Sold for ovor sixty years.’’
Made by J. C. Ayer Co , Lowoll, Mwe
lufacturoru of
SARSAPARILLA.
2 m i s.
> CUCRKY PECTOBAL.
ca
Filling a Want.
“We call this the ‘housekeeper’s de
light,' ” said rhe salesmun, exhibiting an-
other set of china.
"What's peculiar about it?” asked th»
customer.
‘“rhe fact that we have forty other sett
Just like it, together with any number ol
odd pieces, and expect to keep the pattern
always in stock. Any piece that's accident­
ally broken can be replaced at half t
day's notice without saying a word to th«
rest of the family about it.”
“1’11 take it,” said the customer.—Chi'
cago Tribune.
THE DAISY
ELY KILLtB
doMtroyn oil the
flies und affordu
comfort to every
home—in dining
room, sleeping
room aiidexery
plm e where flic*«
are troubleouiue.
('lean, neat und
will not im ) 11 oi
injure anything.
Try thim om-o and you will never be without them.
U not kep by ora., yh . went prepaid for‘¿He.
HAT. OLD S0MEK8. 14k DvKalb Av«., Brooklyn, N T
WHEN YCl) COME TO PORTLAND
A Illi ANGE TO STOP AT
THE CORNELIUS
I*ARK AND ALDER STS.
A New and Modern European Hotel, catering
particularly to State people. A refined place for
ladies visiting the city, close to the shopping
center. Rates reasonable. Free Bin.
N. K.. CLARKE, (late of Portland Hotel) Mgr.
C. Gee Wo
Th© well known reliable
CiiiNESE
Root and Herb
DOCTOR
Hut made a life «tudy of
roofs a nd herbs, end in that
hi tidy ilisc-overed and is giv­
ing to the world his wonder­
ful remedies.
No Mercury, Poisons or Drugs Used He Cures
W-ihoiit Operation, or Without the Aid ot u knife
Ho ^uariuitees to Cure Catiii'i’h. Asthma. Lung,
fhroHt. Rheumatism. Ni rvousiw-s. Nervous Debility,
fhomm-h. I her. Kidney In* il l«’- idsol.ost Manhood,
yomale Wfukness and All Private Diseases
A SURE CANCER CURE
lust Received from Peking, China—Safe. Sure
and Reliable.
IF YOU ARE AEI K'l Kl>. I'ON T DELAY.
in LAYS AKE I> a N<.I.K u I S
COINSULTATION FREB
If you cannot call, write for sv mpton blank and c I ksv
Ixr I ml,,,' 4 « < nr« In At anile.
tree .
wo cm n i:sfeMF.biciNE00.
KB 121' irst St , ('or. Morrison,
Portland, Oregon.
Please Mention This Paper.
PeerJess
Dried Beef
Unlike the ordinary dried
beef—that sold in bulk—
Libby's Peerless Cried Beef
comes in a sealed glass jar
in which it is packed the
moment it is sliced into those
delicious thin wafers.
None of the rich natural
flavor or goodness escapes
or dries out. It reaches you
fresh and with all the nutrì'
ment retained.
Libby’s Tecrless Dried
Deci is only one of a Great
number of high-grade, ready
to serve, pure food products
that are prepared in Libby's
Grcdl While Kitchen.
Just try a package of any
of these, such as Ox Tong ,ue.
V ienna Sausage, Pickles,
Olives, etc., and see bow
delightfully dif­
ferent they are
from others
you haveeaten.
Libby. McNeillA
Libby, Chicago
t
Mr«. Newed—And yois paid only 09
cents for Ihnt hat?
Mrs. Oidwed—That’s aM.
Mrs. Nt wtil Your busband was de­
lighted, of course?
Mrs. Oldwitl I liope you don't think
I was fiMillsh enough to tell him 1 got
•uch a cheap hat.
Mrs. Neweil Where would the fool-
Ish part come in?
Mrs. Ohlwed Wily, If I told him
what It coat he’d ex|>ect me to be sat­
isfied with bargain counter bats all the
rest of my days.
SOMETHING FOR EVERYBODY
NATURE’S
PERFECT TONIC
ARE LEARNING KAI.?
Oregon Farmers O/ercome t’rejurtica’.
of t-ong Standing.
From th-Or-evn Agri'uhural <X!lega (Vrvalli—.
Tlie llnytmirkel riot in Chicngo oc-
•tirrvd on May 4, 1886.
Helen Hunt Jackson Is burled in
Evergreen Cemetery, Colorado Springs.
It is expected that the Australian old
ige |H‘lislons project w ill cost £1,800,000
early.
Twenty-five high school principals In
\ansas are women. They are said to do
heir work so well that no one has ever
State of Ohio, Olty of Toledo I
mggested putting men in their places.
I. ik h (County.
i "•
Frank J. < heoey make« oatn that he laacntor
There is never a part of the year
partner of the firm o! F. J. Cheney Ac Co., doing
business in thcCity of Toledo, County and State vheu l’ike’s Peak is entirely without
aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum
of ONE Hl'NDRED DOLLARS for each and mow. In the hottest July and August
every ca^e of Catarrh that < annul be cured by ■leather snow is to be found even at a
the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure.
-onsiderable distance from the top of
FRANK J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed in in y j res- lie mountain.
euee, this 6th day of December A D 1HN5.
Twenty-five men Interested in the
'
'
Notary Public.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and invitation of the air, have formed the
lets directly upon the blood ami muroussur- lero Club of California nt Los Ange-
' mccs of the system, bend for t- siimoidals free.
F. J. CH ENEY de CO., Toledo, O, es. Tlie purpose of the club is to ob-
Sold by all druggists, 75c.
nin suitable grounds for experimental
la^e II all’s family Pills for constipation.
iscents and maintain repair and con-
itructlon shops.
Ila« a Better Thing.
"I used to know that man when he was
A residence of at least five years is
a struggling lawyer. What business does •equired to qualify an alien for natur-
be follow now?”
ilization. No matter how long a man
“Skimming cream.”
may
have been in the United States,
“Skimming cream? Is he in the dairy
two years must elapse between the date
business?”
"Dairy nothing! He’s receiver for a >f his declaration of intention and his
idmlttance to full citizenship.
bankrupt trust company.”
To meet the deficit In the budget the
Original.
French Minister of Finance suggests
"Jones Is certainly original.”
the doubling of the licensing fees of
“Why?”
fenders of absinthe, This taxing of
“Well, he’s written a melodrama and the “green peril” will, it is thought, be
he’s done away with the ‘old mill’ and □opular; the minister anticipates that It
the ‘missing papers' and the ‘hand-to- will bring him In $2,000,000.
band encounter on the cliff. .’ ’’—Detroit
Adeline Genee Is a Danish girl, who
Free Press.
made her debut as a dancer at Copen­
hagen when she was 17 years of age.
ny Ilia Pen.
Wealthy Stranger—Yes, I made my She theij went to Berlin to dance at
money, every farthing of It, by my pen tlie Grand Opera House, and after­
Youth—Ah, a novelist, or a drama ward to Munich. She is considered to
tlst, maybe.
be one of tlie most graceful and accom­
Wealthy Stranger—Not me. I used plished dancers in the world.
to keep a sheep farm tn New Zealand.
In the manufacture of alcohol from
(teat, a Danish company, with one ex­
Gave Rein to Iler Thoughla.
perimental plant in Denmark and one
“Looks a bit like rain, ma’am,” ob- In France, has found the cost to be
served the friendly milkman as be about one-fourth of that made from po­
handed iu bis morning pint.
tatoes. In the process of manufacture,
“It d,»'s, indeed,” replied the ready-
the cellulose or fiber of the l>eat is con­
witted housekeeper, with her gaze fixed
verted by sulphuric acid into a soluble
on the bottle.—Boston Transcript
carbohydrate and this is fermented by
a special yeast.
In 1907 Philadelphia’s export and
import trade increased «25,000,000 in
I value over the figures for the previous
The total value of the city’ ex­
Purify These and Y cj Will Be Safe year.
ternal trade for that year was over
From Comfagicn
$150,000,000. These figures account in
part for tlie opening of the new steam­
DISINFECTING THE ONLY PREVENTIVE ship service between Genoa, Italy and
Borax, a Simple, Safe and Sure Method the City of Brotherly Love. The Ital­
ians want some of the business.
Two tablespoonfuls of Borax in a
India’s government has recently au-
pailful of hot water poured down the
grease-choked pipes of a sink, or Hushed thorlzed the employment of women
through a disease-laden drain, cleanses telegraph operators. The candidates
and purifies it, leaving it clean and must be between 18 and 30 years of
sweet.
Bed clothing and clothes used in a age, and they must be unmarried or
sick room can be made hygienically clean widows. They must undergo a training
and snowy-white, if washed in a hot >f twelve months in the telegraph train-
solution of Borax water.
ng classes, during which time they will
•Kitchen and eating utensils, used dur­ receive $tl.G5 a month, tlie same allow-
ing illness will be kept from
nice that Is drawn by male learners.
bility of contagion if Borax is
In connection with the death of
washing them. Pure assnow and harm­
less as salt, and because it can be used Grover Cleveland, it is interesting to
for almost every domestic and medical note that only twice before in the his­
purpose, Borax must be considered the
tory of the nation has tlie United
one great household necessity.
Local agents wuntod. Write for money making plan States been without a living ex-Presl-
dent. George Washington died in 1799,
iiary piuuuces some ui me suougesj
when John Adams, the second Presi­
nbacco in the world, and she makes use
dent, was in office. Andrew Johnson,
>f the crop herself.
at the time the only surviving ex-Chlef
So It Is.
Executive, passed away in 1875, two
Teacher—If a vehicle with two years before General Grant retired to
wheels is a bicycle and one with three private life.
wheels is a tricycle, what is one with
Tlie Dutch government lias granted a
only one wheel?
•oncesslon to tlie Amsterdam and North
Scholar—A wheelbarrow. —Illustrat­ Holland Electric Tramway Company to
ed Bits.
build and operate an electric railway
system in Holland. The route will lie
Only Then.
nearly fifty klloms, running from Am­
“Little boy, do you ever swear?”
“No, ma’am, ’ceptin’ when It’s nec’sary sterdam north through Zaandam to
and I gotta do It.”
Kromemlnle, from Zaandyk to Wyk-
“When is it necessary to swear?”
aan-Zee, nnd Wormerveer to Purmer-
“W’en de empire calls ye out on tWC end. The Holland Development Com­
strikes an' a ball.”
pany of Amsterdam will build the en­
tire system.
Standing and Sitting.
The “Arabian Nights” is an extensive
She sat for an oil portrait of herself,
•oilectlon of tales forming part of tlie
did she not?”
Arabic literature, and the exact title
“Yep. Jinx was the artist.”
>f which is "The Book of the Thousand
“flow’d It come out?”
"She sat for It but when she saw it and One Nights." They were first made
she wouldn’t stand for IL”—Houston known to Europe by Antoine Galland.
between 1704 and 1717. lie was a
Post.
French Orientalist, who succeeded,
The telephone ha* not reached the point after much effort, in obtaining a manu-
of a domestic convenience in Erance. It script, which he supplemented by gath­
Is but little used by the public generally.
ering tales from professional story-tell­
ers, whom he met during his travels In
tlie East.
As an Instance of tlie Great Eastern
Railway's elaborate precautions for the
safety of travelers on its system, the
Railway News says that at Broxbourne,
appeal to the Well-Informed In every for the purpose of advising the station
walk of life and are essential to per­ signalman when a train has passed his
manent success and creditable stand­ | down or up advanced starting signal, a
ing. Accordingly, it is not claimed rail contact Is placed about 300 yards
that Syrup of Figs and Elixir of ahead of the respective advanced start­
Senna is the only remedy of known ing signals, and on the engine reaching
value, but one of many reasons why the rail contact a bell is rung in the
signal box, and this bell continues ring­
it Is the best of personal and family
ing until the signal is replaced to dan­
laxatives is the fact that it cleanses,
ger.
sweetens and relieves the internal
According to n report in the Neue
organs on which it acts without any Frele l’resse, Vienna. J. Pierpont Mor­
debilitating after effects and without gan was a busy sightseer in that city
having to increase the quantity from on his recent visit. With Mrs. Douglas
time to time.
and her daughter he visited all the
It acts pleasantly and naturally and great art collections “nnd on Sunday
truly as a laxative, and its component •ailed at Kreutzenstefn castle, where
he was received by the Countess Kin­
parts are known to and approved by
sky. He wns deeply interested in what
physicians, as it is free from all he saw in the restored castle and Its
objectionable substances. To get its 'tenet! with devotion when his hostess
beneficial effects always purchase the played on the chapel organ.” The re­
genuine—manufactured by the Cali­ port also speaks of Mr. Morgan’s visit
fornia Fig Syrup Co., only, and for to the Ijiinzer Zoo’, where be showed
the greatest interest in the boars, UJ
sale by all leading druggists.
iw had never before seen one.”
Truth
and Quality
Kale is one of the best talking crops
in Oregon W hen tile Or< g n booster
wants to prove that Oregon is the
best dairy state in the union he has
to talk ka’e. Unless he knows what’
kale will do to the milk bucket he has
not qualified as a booster. It is called
the thousand headed kale, and the
hot. n.-t kllow<> it as brassica eler.icea,
but it is the plain kale of four letters
that does the talking. The strange
thing is that it has on’y been during
the last two or three years that it
has had an audience, though it is
nearly thirty years old in the Willam­
ette valley, It has tried to talk all
those years, but the people wouldn't
listen when it sought recognition,
"We never heard it talk,” they in-
sisted. “back in Iowa and New York
Back there cows produce milk with­
out kale, and I guess they will have
to here.” That is tradition. It took
thirty years for kale to get an audi­
ence in this state and live down tra­
dition.
The dairymen of New York under
stand what green succulent food
means to the dairy cow, and they
build expensive silos, buy expensive
machinery, and grow fertility-robb ng
corn, which they irrigate with their
sweat, in order that the farmer dur-
ing the long winter months may have
an excuse for milking his cows. The
Oregonian needs no expensive silos
to remind the cow of the good old
summer time. Kale! A thousand
blessings on the thousand-headed
kale! It is making Oregon tjie
greatest dairy state in the union.
When grown under favorable con
ditions kale will yield 40 tons per
acre of green feed, and its chief value
is as a soiling crop during the fall
and winter Splendid results are be­
ing secured by feeding kale and vetch
hay to dairy cows, without any grain
or mill feed. Dr. Withycombe, of the
Agricultural College, says that 15
pounds of vetch hay and 40 pounds
of kale a day is practica’.'v a balanced
ration for a dairy cow. Mr. W. L.
Wilson, of Banks, Or., says: “I re­
ceived $207 from 14 cows in the month
of December, and fed them nothing
but kale, turnips ami vetch hay. The
man who feeds chop would have to
make $237 to clear as much as I do.
I have not had a speck of mill feed in
the barn all winter.”
Mr. Byron Hunter, of Corvallis,
has, as assistant agriculturist of the
bureau of plant industry. U. S. depart­
ment of agriculture, made a special
study of the forage crops of Western
Oregon, and in Bulletin No. 9t, pub­
lished jointly bv the Oregon Experi­
ment Station and the Department of
Agricu'ture, has the following to say
about kale, which is timely:
“Methods of Sowing—For fall and
winter use kale is usually sown in
drills on well prepared and drained
soil as soon after the 15th of March
as the season will permit. • This fur­
nishes plants for transplanting in
June and July. The land used for
transplanting is well manured and
plowed two or three times between
the first of March and the firnt of
June. With the land in perfect tilth
it is plowed again with a 12-inch plow
about the first of June, and the young
kale plants dropped into every third
furrow about two and a half to three
feet apart. This places about one
plant on every square yard. The roots
of the plants are placed where the
next furrow covers them, leaving the
tops uncovered. The plants that are
plowed in during the day in this way
are rolled in the evening of the same
day to pack the ground. Two or
three cultivations are all that can
usually be given, for the plants will
soon touch in the row, if they do well.
Any plants that fail to grow may be
replaced by hand. Some growers
prefer to plant the seed in hills, and
when the plants are large enough thin
them to one plant in a hill Others
put ka’e out just as cabbage is usually
transplanted, instead of plowing it in.
The time of transplanting must be
determined bv the size of the plants
and the condition of the land. If the
land is wet and subject to overflow
the transplanting may be delayed un­
til during July tf the land is well
drained and the plants are large
enough, it may be done before the
first
of
June In
transplanting,
enough plants may be left for a stand
on the land where the seedlings are
grown.
__ ___________
A man living at Maud wants to know
if he can irrigate his trees by means
of a water w’agon and barrels.
Pro­
fessor Thornber did not favor the plan,
stating:
“This would be rather too complex.
I am of the opinion that you will find
it too great an expense, considering
the value of a team and a man, to haul
this water during the summer.
The
station would advise you to try and
conserve this moisture by means of
culture. This could be done with good
effect during the summer months.
I
have had considerable experience on
the state college campus in hauling
water; and have concluded, first that
it is impracticable to place water
around the tree without a heavy mulch
of straw; second, that nothing much
less than a barrel of water for each
tree at each watering, should be given.
This will soak the ground up fairly
well, and in our case. I did not need to
water the trees on the campus more
than twice during the summer.
I do
not know that it will be possible for
you to make use of a heavy mulch, but
in order to hold the water, it is neces­
sary to do so.
You can use retted
straw' for this, or forest leaves.”—
From the Washington State college,
Pullman.
“Excuse me, ma’am,” said the edu­
cated boho, “but would you favor a
soldier In the great army of the unem­
ployed with a square meal?”
“I will,’ replied the good woman, “If
you don’t mind earning a dollar by do­
ing a -few odd Jobs about the premises
this afternoon.”
“Pardon me. ma’am,” answered the e.
h., “but I am a man of honor and must
therefore decline to d< •< rt from tbh
army.”
•
There is s .u ’ !v any one, n<> matter how vi • >rous and healthy, who
does not need a t
times,
Little physical iri
es upset th*
M-i'itt, t! ,ii - (
fails, <ii ■ otiott is poor, the 1 ><ly I. vis tired and worn
out, and other unpleasant symptoms give warning that the system is disor­
der' 1 and needs a sist.ince to ward off, perhaps, some serious sickness or
ailment. S. S. Sisi.. . gnizcil ewryu here as lie best of all tonics, nature's
medicine, made entirely of-healing, clean ing, invigoi
id herb*,
a svsteniic remedy without an equal. S. S. S. has the additional value of
being the greatest of all bio 1 purifiers. It re-establishes the healthy circu-
lati a of the bio-d, rids th ■ b< > ly of that tired, w rn-out feeling, improves the
ap[ tite and <li ■< stion, and brings about a return of health to those whose
Sv terns have been weakened or depleted. S. S. S. acts more promptly and
p easantly than any other medicine, ami those who are run down in health
should commence its use at once. It will thoroughly purify the blood and
tone up the system. S. S. S. is admirably suited for a svsteniic remedy
because it is free from minerals; it may be used without harmful results by
pcisous of any age, and no unpleasant effects ever,follow.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA.
.
—
-------------------------- ------------ —.—
............. ...... 1
...........
Nothing; Dointg.
■
Lilting the lleteree,
Il ecru «leave nee.
Mothers will find Mr«. Winslow*« Soothing
p the d
edv to UK lol iheir oh
luring the teething per.oil.
that Little Leejlp is to sin?
at another dinner somewhere or
Let no one say that the mind has no
power over the body, If it can cause
such effects as In the case taken from
You C an Get Allen’s Foot-Ease FREE.
l.'lk, how much more can it Influence
Write AllenS. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. ¥., for a the physical conditions of the now and
free n ample of Allen’s Foot-Eu>e. It cures
sweating, hot swollen, aching feet. It makes here?
new01 ■■ 'it ihoes easy, A curtain cure fof
“You look pale and thin, What’s got
corns, in-.riowing nails and bunions. All drug­
gist i sell it. 25e. Don’t accept any substitute you?”
“Work! From morning till night.
Gelling < lose to Nature.
and only a one-hour rest.”
"Wrigley, what ever became of that
“Hpw long have you been at it?”
little Miss Goodsole?”
“I begin to-morrow.”
“She turned sociologist and married a
tra nip.”
St Vitus' Dance and
rvous Diseases perma­
"Why, I heard her say once that you
nently cured by Dr. a ino’ h <irent Nitrvo Re­
storer. Sen 1 f< r FREE $2 00 ti 1 il bottle and treatise.
were her beau ideal of a man.”
“Did you? Well, she passed me up Dr. It. 11. Kline. L.1 , (Ml Arch Si., l hiludelphl-. Pa.
for a hobo ideal of a man.”
The A rt 1st to Tern ¡»era in ent.
“Yea,” said Mrs. Nuriteb, ~"uiy sol
Not Good 1 Form.
’
means to be an artist.”
“When shall I call again with this
“Indeed?”
replied
Mrs.
A scum
bill, Mr. Ardup?”
“I think, young man, ns a concession “That’s a very laudable ambition."
"Yes, he thinks it’s Just cute to weal
to the conventionalities, you’d better not
come any more until I have returned ut those flowing black ties.”—Philadeb
phia Press.
least one of your calls.”
m
SE. --
y For fl Infants and Children,
1.OC_
&
«
I Ì
¡6
.gì ow
ji.ee,
ALCOHOL 3 PE It CENT.
AVcgelabk’PreparitonlòrAs-
similaiiiiSihcFüûdanillkgtila
I ing ll:e Siomaitis andßowls tf
jt,c-
p
Bears the
Signature
Promoles Digestionilicerru!
ness and Rest.C ontains nriiiuT
Opium.Morphinc norMiourd.
N ot N arcotic .
diecipeef Oíd éfc£l/ZZ¿/!7UEI
Stvd~
j V k .S.' oiui
*
JhMteSdt»-
jfnist Srtd *
/^nr.-rtnin/ - .
JJi ''a.i .. t Sida*
fímtSrfd-
Chri/kd i/jar •
iLw'ajr.”«/ nmr.
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
Aperteci Remedy forftmsflpa
t ion, Sour Stoinxh.Diantaa
Worms£onvulsious.Fevcrish-
ness and Loss of S leep .
Facsimile Signature of
NEW YORK.
uaranlecd mw .¡cr the Food a
Exact Cony of Wrapper.
No. 34—08
P N U
a
e.
IS OVH MOTTO
Said an Employ r: ‘‘Stick to quality.
It will win out in tlie end.” We do
'stick to quality.” That is the reason
our graduates are so thorough and in
such demand. Investigate our claims to
superiority. Catalogue, business forms
and penwork free. Call, j.hone or write.
St. Belen’s Hall, Portland, Or.
Resident
and Day School for
Catalogue on Request.
Tenth and Morrison, Portland, Oregon
A. P. ARMSTRONG. LL.B.. PRINCIPAL.
PUR I LAND. OREGON
.
.
Portland l!ns!n«*ss College
Girls.
BEHNKE-WALKER STUDENTS SUCCEED. WHY?
They are Trained for business in a business-like way.
Uhy not enroll in a reputable school that places all of its graduates?
•
I. M. WALKER. Pres.
SEND FOfc CATALOGUE
i *■■ ■ ■■
••
. O. A. BOSS ERM AN. See.
■■■■ -
9
9
«
O
••
e
•e
a
Diogenes bad abandoned the search.
Ilodrick—Stood out in the middle of
“It’s a waste of time," he said. “Every the road the other day to decide an
time 1 tliink I’ve found an honest man automobile race. They both came in
he turns out to be a hireling of some even.
predatory trust.’’
Van Albert—It was a toss-up, eb?
Winking at the bystanders, he extin­
liodriek
—I should say so. I was
guished his lantern.—Chicago Tribune.
V vied over a haystack.
o
e
1
e