••
00
Bulb Gallty.
worms, etc., and there will uAially be
VALUE OF WHEAT
The man who prided himself on ms
skim-milk or buttermdk. There need
therefore be no cost for animal food,
keen perception« watched the witneee
Good Profit May Be Made by Feeding (vaulting in a saving of b to 10 cents
on th>- at a nd with intensity, and nodded
r*» money for you to shin_____________________ _____ _
to Poultry at High Pricea.
per fowl. The clover or grass they eat
«-—
k .1 at
W . . ... ..
I. . r . Pr ...«
e Lift.
L - r. Murk»
V -r. t t K
I.. . r'
r<. » ”
■
1
r
.. h
Illg
k :. i H ................
. 41 I I.r
his head vigorously at the closing word«
will
have
little
marketable
value.
The
By
James
DryUen.
Poultryman.
Oregon
Agricul
of the bewildered witness.
HUNTERS
’
&TnAPPERS
’
QUIDEif.Ä
tural College. Corvallis.
<*■0 pan-«, leather hound. Beat th ng on tha subject e»«T w ’ ■■
I
-t aling ail Fur Animala All
destruction of grasshoppers in the
“That man’s concerned In It,” said
ah ut T apiM>ra' Se reta. IW- va. Trap«, Gant« Liwa. II w and »h»r« t ■ i . • au>! t become a anc
| ■ The prices of poultry and eggs fol clbver and grain iields and of bugs in
re»«
trapper. Il • a ref ular En< tei. pelFi <••.
T<
ir<.-t
|
B lea termed ini«
the keen observer to his friend. “Didn't
' • I
'S Our Mt; riet' .• H l ai • 1
« t» a
- r t
. •
•
lP
low closely the trend of wheat prices the orchards will, where these insects
Hidaa and Fura U» na and gel tughcjt piicea. AnderM'h Brus«. DcpU 121 Mlauctapulia. liluiu
you notice how his eyes •11 If ted and of corn prices, the two staple poul are bad, oilset a large part of the an
around?”
try foods in the United States. The nual cost of food for the fowls in
Probably from Boston.
“How about thia next one?” inquired tendency is for poultry keepers to cur- better crops.
In experiments with larger breeds
“But. surely,” protested the lately
the friend.
| tail the flock of poultry when prices
“He's guilty of something.” asserted | of food are high, and to increase the the cost of feeding was greater. The parted girl, “you’re not going to take
the keen observer. “No man stares at flock when the prices of food are low. cost of feeding Plymouth Rocks aver to the—er—infernal regions?”
“Only for a few aecouds,” replied
people in that bold, defiant way If he When the grain prices rise more poul aged $1.15 per fowl and of Wyandottes
try are sent to market, and later on $1.00. Tais extra cost is largely offset attendant spirit. “We must thaw you
bus a clear conscience.”
there is a scarcity of both poultry and when the fowls are marketed, the out a little.”—Catholic Standard and
larger breeds bringing more than the Times.
egtfs-
No Hight to Kick.
Tlie question for the poultryman and small breeds.
Customer—It seems to me that’s an aw
Mother« will find Mrs. Winslow’s Boothing
ful price to have to pay for a pound of the farmer to consider in this connec
Byrup th.- b- s' remedy to use 1er their ch: idr 41
lu
answer
to
an
inquiry
relative
to
luring
the teething per.od.
tion is, at what prices of grain does
liver.
Butcher—You must remember, ma'am, it pay the farmer to market the grain the way iu which to tell the difference
Innocent.
that the liver is a choice part. Thia rather than feed it to the poultry, for between the edible mushroom and the
“Edith, I was ashamed of you when
steer weighed nearly a ton, and he had the business of the farmer is to get the poisonous variety, the station replied:
“There are bo many different species you called Mr. Midiage aa old man to
most out of the soil, whether it be in
only one small liver.
raw or concentrated products. It is a of mushrooms, and they are so nearly his face.”
Too Haiardou*.
fine point to determine just where the like the poisonous varieties, that it is
“Why, mamma, I did nothing of the
"Yessir,” admitted a waiter, “I shall profit in feeding poultry as well as impossible for an inexperienced person kind. 1 wouldn't be as impolite as that
be compelled to throw up my situation other livestock disappears in the up to detect the difference. Botanists do for the world. 1 called liitu an old geu-
ward tendency of the price of grain; not usually recognize any difference be tleman.”
here.”
1» your mouth simitar hi any w . to the above? IT
in othor words, at what point is there tween mushrooms and toadstools. The
“Indeed! What is the matter?”
no need to wear a woi ' iv. um.wil I partial plate
a parting of the ways between a profit best way is t , learn to recognize cer FIT * Kt- Vltn*’ Dance Bn<1 '»nron« ihmmvmn perms- fo
Il 1 J netltly cured by Dr. i -In«’« Great Nerve lie. or ill titling, ordinary bridge work. 1 he Dr. Wist
“More than I can put up with. The and a loss!
tain species *f edible mushrooms, even •torer. Send tor FREE $2 00 tied bottle and treatlae. system of
governor insists on my eating mush
“TEETH WITHOUT PLATES”
The general tendency among farmers though the number be few. A common Dr. K II. Kline. Ld.. SU Arch St.. Philadelphia. Pa.
The result of 21 .M ars’ eii vrienre. the new way of
Mint Helen Sauerbier, of 815 Main St., St. rooms in the presence of customers to is to sell the grain, rather than feed variety, known botanically as ‘Agaricus
Uy
n
N
arrow
Margin.
replacing teeth in the t< outh teeth in fact, teeth in
Joseph, Sllch., w rites an interesting letter prove they are edible fungi.”—Loudon it, long before the parting of the ways campestrias L.,’ is not poisonous, and
apt earunce. teeth to chew your fexxi upon, as you
“You’re all out of brealh,” said Pnoo- di<l
on the subject of catching cold, which Tit-Bits.
has been reached, and it is a knowledge by the following description you may
upon your natural ones
Our force is ho organ*
dles.
“
What
have
you
been
doing?
”
izvd «u cun do your entire crown, bridge or plate
cannot fall to be of value to ull women w ho
Le
able
to
recognize
it:
of this fact that assures the skillful
work
in
a
day
if
neci-s-ary
Positively
painless sx*
“
Been
running
a
race!
”
panted
Ardup.
catch cold easily.
Only a few years ago the only article and persistent feeder of a profit. The
“The stem is cylindrical, or tapers a
trading. Only high-class, scientific work.
“On a hot day like this? What for?”
tasting of maple was maple sugar. parting of the ways comes very soon little toward the lower end. Near its
WISE DENTAL CO., INC.
“To—er—decide who was going to pay
There is now an article on the market to the majority of feeders. One
~
man upper end is a sort of collar, usually
Dr W. A. Wine. Manager 21 year* in Portland.
that is so like the real maple Bugar may be telling the exact truth when termed a ‘ring,’ which encircles it. for the dinner.”
Second Floor, 1 ilnuz Building, Third and Wash
ington Streets Oih< <■ ho irs ” A. M to b 1’ M. Sun*
"Did you win?”
that even old Vermonters are unable he says that he can make no profit in This is very delicate, white like the
•lays, 9 to 1 P. M. Puinles-> I vtrudiug, 5l>c, platen,
“Yes. by the skin of my teeth.'
to tell the difference. In fact, on ac feeding scventy-five-cent wheat, and stem, and of very thin, satiny texture.
15 up. Phones A and Main 2U29.
“Who was the othet fellow?”
count of its healthful qualities, being another may be equally truthful when The circular, expanded disk into which
a purely vegetable product, neither
“He was -well, he was the proprietor
No. 42 08
P N U
says he can make a profit in feed- the stem fits is called the ‘cap.’ The
It Should be Taken According to Di sticky nor sickly, it is preferred by he
ing one-dollar wheat, The difference surface is sometimes white, although of the restaurant. I managed to lose him
WHEN writing to advertisers please
many people who formerly used only in the two men is a difference in skill sometimes brownish, and usually cov in the crowd Just as be was about to
rections an the Bott'e, at the
IT mention this paper.
the regulation maple sugar.
ered by a thin layer of delicate threads. make a grab for me.”—Chicago Tribune.
in
feeding.
With
good
stock
and
good
First Appearance of the Cold.
This new extract is called Mapleine. care the skillful feeder will make a The flesh or inner portion is more com
St. Joseph, Mich., Sept., 1901.—Last It is a Seattle product and can be used
rofit in feeding high-priced grain, but pact, and is white also. Numerous thin
winter 1 caught a sudden cold, which to advantage by the housewife in a no one can make a profit with poor plates, or ‘gills,’ are on the under side
developed into an unpleasant catarrh variety of ways. For instance, a syrup stock and poor care at any price for of the cap, which radiate from near the
h i m
of the head and throat, depriving me of like maple can be made by simply dis train.
stem to the margin of the cap. When
my appetite and usual good spirits. A solving granulated sugar in water and
the
plant
is
very
young
the
gills
are
The price of wheat is higher now
friend who had been cured by Peruna adding a few drops of Mapleine.
than it has been for probably ten or first white, but soon become a dark,
advised me to try it, and I sent for a
The Crescent Manufacturing Com fifteen years, and it is frequently said pink color, and in age changes to dark
bottle at once, and I am glad to say that pnny who make Mapleine have pub that it is too high to feed to chickens, brown. The substance of the stem is
in three days the phlegm had loosened, lished a booklet called Mapleine Dain
Two or three things should be con less compact at the center, but the stem
and I felt better, my appetite returned ties. This will be sent free on request sidered in this connection. First, the is not- really hollow, though in some in
and within nine days I was in my usual to anyone who asks for it. It is full prices of poultry and eggs will rise if stances there are slight indications of
good health.
of wholesome recipes.
many chickens are marketed, and the it. This mushroom wiTl be found in
—Miss Helen Sauerbier.
farmer who keeps his chickens will sod, where shade is plentiful.
ReeoKiiixinif Illa I.imitation«.
Peruna is an old and well tried rem
“It is probable that the mushroom
make as much profit as he did when
Cholly—Let me see—what’s tHiat quo the price of wheat was low. That is, responsible for a majority of the deaths
edy for colds. No woman should be
tation about a nod being as good as a the price of poultry products will ad from eating this plant is the Amanita
without it.
wink, and so forth?
just itself to the prices of grain. Sec phalloides. By a novice, it might eas
Fweddy—Why—er—I can’t think------ ond, how much does it really cost to ily be taken for the Agaricus campes-
Cholly—O, I know that. I'm asking feed a hen for a year! Does any one tris. However, the former usually oc
ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT
Thissterling household remedy is most you to try t« remember.—Chicago Trib know!
curs in the woods, while the edible va
AVcgetable Prcparalion fonts
successfully prescribed for a ‘‘world of une.
In experiments made by the writer, riety just described occurs in open
troubles.” For derangements of the di
simllatlngthefixxfandReöula
places.
Professor
G.
F.
Atkinson,
of
the
covering several years, in which every
You Can Get Allen’s Foot-Ease FREE.
gestive organs it is a natural corrective,
ounce of food was weighed, six pens botany division of the Cornell univer
(ing Hie Stomachs andßouclsoi
Write Aliens. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.,fora
operating directly upon the liver and ali
Iree sample ot Allen's Foot-Ease. It cures of Leghorn hens consumed during the sity agricultural experiment station, de
mentary canal, gently but persistently sweating,
hot swollen, aching feet. It makes year 564 pounds wheat, 296 pounds scribes the Amanita phalloides as fol
stimulating a healthful activity.
Its new or tight shoes easy. A certain cure for
corns,
ingrowing
nails and bunions. All drug corn, 203 pounds oats, 112 pounds bran lows:
beneficial influence extends, however, to
“It is pure white, and possesses an
and shorts and 235 pounds skim milk,
gists
sell
it.
25c.
Don't accept any substitute
every portion of the system, aiding in the
Promotes D ¡gestion JChr erful
in addition to some animal food. The annulus or collar, but what is most
processes of digestion and assimilation of
New Intlusirr.
important
the
base
of
the
stem
rests
in
ness
and ResiContalns neither
cost
of
the
total
food
per
fowl
for
the
food, promoting a wholesome, natural
“Who Is that striking looking man year varied in different pens from 61 a cup-like envelope called the volva.
Opium .Morphine norMmal.
appetite, correcting sour stomach, bad
breath, irregularities of the bowels, con near the head of the table?” asked one cents to 78 cents, and averaged 66 . . «. The pileus in this form is
N ot N arcotic ,
cents. The wheat was charged at 1 smooth, viscid to the touch, and pure
stipation and the long list of troubles of the guests.
"That's Mr. Jypes,” answered the oth cent a pound, corn at 1V4 cents, oats white, as is also the annulus, stem and
directly traceable to those unwholesome
Strife of Old DcS'MdUJTTUäR
at a cent, skim milk at a fifth of a volva, though the latter is soiled by
conditions.
Kasparilla dispels drowsi er. "He's a blood boiler.”
fìmsfJin Seed“
“
What!
A
workman
at
the
stock
cent
and
bran
and
shorts
at
three-
particles
of
earth.
The
stem
is
nearly
ness, headaClie, backache and despond
AhcSauia ♦
fifths of a cent. The animal food cost cylindrical, tapering slightly from the
ency due to inactivity of the liver, yards?”
AM/eUts-
Ause Senf »
“No, no; don’t you understand? He from 5 to 6 cents per fowl. The wheat bulbous base. It is hollow, or stuffed
kidneys and digestive tract. It is a
strengthening tonic of the highest value. writes these shocking stories of corpora constituted nearly a half of the total with cottony, mycelial threads. The
gills are usually pure white, even in
If it fails to satisfy we authorize all tion cruelty to children and ignorant em cost.
I firm Seed -
dealers to refund the purchase price.
The hens laid an average of 144 eggs age, and are nearly free from the stem.
ployes that you read in the Magazines.”—
SÄ
’
H oyt C hemical C o . Portland, Oregon Chicago Tribune.
per fowl, valued at $1.68 at local p 'ices When decaying the plant emits a very
for eggs. The prices were from 10 disagreeable odor.’’—From Washington
Aperfect Remedy forConsflpa
cents to 25 cents per dozen, much State college, Pullman.
Hon, Sour Stomach.Dlarrboea
lower than the prices are in Oregon
Worms .Convulsions.Feverish
at the present time. If wheat had been
An inquiry which will be of interest
ness anil Loss of S leep .
worth, say, 90 cents and had been to fruit growers of southwestern Wash
charged for at that rate, and bran M ington and northwestern Oregon was
Facsimile Signature if
1 cent a pound, the cost per forzi referred to the department of horticul
would have been about 16 cents more, ture. It follows:
____ N EW‘ YORK.
“Kindly give me some advice con
When bad blood is caused from an infection of the circulation by the or 80 cents instead of 66 cents, But
eggs are also higher in price than they corning the growing of raspberries and
virus of Contagious Blood Poison, it usually shows in the form of ulcerated were then.
At6 months -old
blackberries under the conditions found
—.
__________ — ~
mouth and throat, copper-colored splotches on the body, swollen glands in
Taking the monthly egg yield of the in southwestern Washington. I would
the groin, falling hair, sores and ulcers, etc. These general symptoms, six pens of Leghorns and computing
be obliged to you for information con
affecting all parts of the body, show how deeply poisoned the blood the value of the eggs laid each month cerning the growing of plums, cherries
Guaranteed under the Food a;
becomes, and emphasizes the dangerous character of the trouble. If allowed at the average wholesale prices of eacs and apples in this region.’’
to remain in the system the disease will finally wreck the health and break in Portland during the past two years,
Professor W. S. Thornber replied:
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
down the strongest constitution. No medicine can cure Contagious Blood the results would be as follows:
“You will have no difficulty in
Poison which does not rid the circulation of every particle of the virus.
Eggs
Price
growing raspberries and blackberries in
laid.
per dcz.
S. S. S. is the one real and certain cure; it goes down to the very bottom of
Value. your part of the country, providing you
35c
$ 1.17 use good judgment in selecting your va
the trouble, and by removing every trace of the poison, and adding rich, November ...40
35c
3.00 rieties and in planting. If the low land
healthful qualities to the blood, forever cures this powerful disorder. S. S. S. December ...122
A Flavoring.
It make« •
4.40 is well drained you had better plant
26c
is the most reliable of all blood purifiers, and its concentrated ingredients of .January . .. .243
syrup better than Maple.
4.90 blackberries, but if the land is not well
25c
healthful vegetable extracts and juices especially adapt it to curing this February ....238
............ 336
20c
5.60 drained you will have difficulty in
Sold by grocers.
insidious trouble. Write for our home treatment book, which is a valuable March
April .............. 499
20c
8.30 growing any form of small fruit there.
aid in the treatment of the different stages of the disease, and ask for any May ................ 428
6.33 However, the blackberry will come
18c
Special medical advice you wish. No charge for either.
June ................397
20c
6.62 nearer to growing in poorly drained land
20c
6.40 than the raspberries will. In choosing
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC C0-, ATLANTA. GA. July ............... 384
August ........... 393
25c
8.20 varieties of blackberries, use the Mam
September ...221
4.60 moth for extra early, the Snyder for
25c
October ............ 97
2.40 middle early ami the Evergreen for
30c
late. Raspberries require a dryer and,
«61.92 especially, well drained soil, and with
Tn place of eggs worth $1.68 per such conditions in your part of the
BUSINESS COLLEGE
fowl, if their value be computed at state you should be able to grow re I
PORTLAND. OREGON
present prices in Portland they would markable crops of them. The Cuthbert
I
«Ill Ito All
be worth $2.58 per fowl. In other is the standard for commercial work on 1
THAT ANT
words, on the basis of present prices, the west side; also the Antwerp, the |
Hit» micio
They are Trained for business in a business-like way.
food costing 80 cents when fed to hens Superlative and the Marlboro are excel ■
FORNI will
Why not enroll in a reputable school that places all of its graduates?
produces eggs worth $2.58. This is a lent berries for growth there.
t '
DO AND
A FULL POUND 25c. .
pretty good margin of profit in feed
“Plums will do well upon a ver^ II
DO IT UTTER
I. M. WALKER. Pres.
SEND FOR CATALOGUE
O. A. BOSSERMAN. Sec,
ing 90-cent wheat.
moist soil, and will stand a poorly
It may be said that the average drained soil better than the majority of
flock of hens docs not lay 144 eggs per other fruits. The Peach the Yellow
fowl. That is true. It is also true Egg. the Tragedy, the Willard, the Lorn
that 144 eggs per fowl is not phenom bard and other varieties almost without
enal. The right kind of hens properly number will do well in the region you
attended should average 150 and well- refer to. Almost any cherry will suc
bred hens considerably more. The av ceed there. The Royal Anns,’the Bings,
erage farm flock will not average 125, the Lamberts and the May Dukes would
probably not 100.
be good varieties to plant. The varie
In these experiments all the food ties of apples that will do especially
eaten was paid for at market prices well there are more or less limited.
and the cost averaged only 66 cents The Yellow Transparent, the Duchess,
per hen. The cost would have been the OldenLerg and the Gravenstein for
SEAMLESS
only 80 cents if the wheat had cost 90 early apples, and the Northern Spy,
SCHOOL SHOES
cents per bushel. The farmer, how Olympia, Baldwin. Grime« Golden and
CCHOOL SHOES without seams—think of
ever, who keeps fifty or a hundred possibly a few Rhode Isl and Greenings
it-jeam/ejj school shoes/ They are
hens can do better than that, for on for later varieties will do quite well.
strong and sturdy, have seamless uppers, tonvFt
the average farm that number of hens Other varieties, such as Ben Davis,
toles and double leather toes. By far the most
durable and lasting shoes obtainable.
may be kept largely on the waste pro Gano and the Jonathan, do not seem to
... Special Merit” Seamless School Shoes "wear’
ducts or by products of the farm. They be entirely adapted to your part of
like iron.
I hey wear just twice as long as
23 Ounces for 23 Cents
will find the animal food in the fields Washington.—From Washington State
ordinary shoes with seams.
in the shape of bugs, grasshoppers, college, Pullman.
Made in all styles and sizes, for every day and
A SUDDEN GOLD.
^ bt FURS'HIDES
¡VISED FOB
SUDDEN GOLDS.
m i
w nimiiwwiir
I
For Infants and Children.
KASPARILLA
Bears the
Signature
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
35»o»«,-j5Ct«s
MAPLEINE
C rescent
Egg-Phosphate
BEHNKE-WALKER STUDENTS SUCCEED. WHY?
The Power
Behind the Dough!
“SPECIAL MERIT
Ifr BAKING
[AV POWDER
A real power that raises and sustains
the dough with absolute certainty.
No failures. A cake made with
K C cannot falL
Ufs MANf* c
We insist upon refunding your
money if a trial does not con
vince you.
*
Devil’s
One pint tomato Juice, two tablee-
•poonfuls butter, two tablespoonfuls
flour (creamed together), one-half tea
spoonful salt, dash of pepper, five eggs
Heat the Juice, then add the creamed
butter and flour, suit and pepper, and
cook five minutes. Butter a baking
dish, put In the egg (not beaten), then
cover with the cooked mixture. Put
bread crumb« on top and brown twenty
Ojlnutea tn oven.
Food Cake.
cups of brown sugar, creamed
with a half-cup of butter; two well-
beaten eggs, one teaxpoonful of baking
soda, dissolved In a gill of sour milk;
two squares of grated chocolate dls-
solved In a gill of boiling water; two
cups of flour.
Mix and bake lu a
sheet, covering. when done and cool,
with white fronMng.' Or, bake In lay-
era and put together with white frost-
Ing flavored with vauUla
SCHOOL
SHOES
Sunday wear—for boys and girls.
I our dealer will supply you; if not.
writs to us. Look for the Msyer
1 rade Mark on the sole.
FREE- If you will tend u« the nsme of a
who d(i9a n,,‘ handle Spatial Merit
Sc hool Shoea. we will send you free, post.
P«<«L a beautiful picture of (.aorp« or Martha
W aahinffton, ai«« 15x2B. State which picture
you want
u
Leadin« Lady Shoes.
Honorbiff
Martha Washington
Comfort Shoes and Yarma Gu.bJoa
Shoes.
F. Mayer Boot Cf Shoe Co
MIL W Al KU, W15CON SUN
FOR BOYS
and GIRLS