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About Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910 | View Entire Issue (March 4, 1909)
o a » o e o o • o O o o » » -------------------- • co A cre te on the farm I aim always being to add just a little ' more sand than necessary to fill the We produce in Hood's Sarsaparilla Usefalness Has Wide Range and h voids in the gravel and then adding to . the mixture of sand and gravel enough as Durable •• Stone. a medicine that has an unap- I cement to* a little more than fill the proached record of cures of Andrew P. Arderson. Instructor in Civil En- bcrofula, eczema, eruptions, catarrh, By gin-erirg, voids in the entire mixture. U. 8. AuvUUuit Engineer. Office of rheumatism, anemia, nervousness, that | The mixing platform should be 10 or Public Kueda, Washingion State Collatg». tired feeling, loss of appetite, etc. Concrete, while a comparatively new 12 feet wide, and may be made from The combination and proportions of one or two inch boards 10 to 12 feet the more than twenty different remedial material, has fully demonstrated its long and may be laid directly on the agents contained in Hood's Sarsaparilla usefulness in a wide and varied field. are known only to ourselves, so there In durability for most purposes it ground, wh ch has been previously can be no substitute. stands on a par with the best and hard leveled. A few s akes may be dr.ven This medicine makes healthy and est stone, while for cheapness it sur on each side to keep the boards in strong the “Lillie Soldiers” in your I place. blood,—those corpuscles that fight the passes almost any other form of con For proportioning the concrete it is struction approaching it in permanency. disease germs constantly attacking you. The great railroads and other large ' usually accurate enough to assume that construction companies have come to a sack of cement holds one cubic foot, Defining a Stock Gamble. i Thus in making a 1-2-3 mixture, we Senator La Follette was discussing fully understand its value, and are ! would use one suck of cement, two cu- concrete construction to a with great approbation the President's adopting ! bic feet of sand and three cubic feet of surprising extent. suggestions toward the abolition of The farmer in general has, however, i gravel, or, for four sacks of c< ment we stock gumblli g. as yet failed to avail himself of the would use eight cubic feet of sand and “Such marginal transactions are not ad van tag, s which concrete offers. twelve cubic feet of gravel. If the contents of the wheelbarrow business,” said Senator La Follette. | There are a great many constructions “Look at them. After all, what is a auout the farm for which concrete is use 1 is known, this can be used to >u successful st<M'k gamble?” 1 especially fitted, and where experience measure the proportions. If not, a He parsed and smiled. Then he an Lias demonstrated its superiority above good plan is to make a box 3 to 5 feet swered his own question neatly. anything else when both cheapness and square and 12 inches deep, but without “In a successful stock gamble,” he 1 permanency are considered. For found top or bottom. This can then be placed said, “you pay for something that you ations for farm buildings, barn and cel on the platform and sand or gravel in don't get, with money that you have.i't lar floors, walks, drain tiles, watering the proper amount can be placed in it. got. then you sell what you never bad troughs, fence posts and even silos, Si nply lifting the box away will leave 'or more than It ever cost.” the use of concrete is no longer an ex the sand or gravel on the platform periment, but a demonstrated success. ready for mixing. In mixing, the sand should first be Mn ntillcr tn Great Britain. One of the chief reasons why con The British Isles are in the throes of crete should be more generally adopted spread on the platform to a depth of ■ butter famine. The state of affairs on the farm is the ease with which it three to five inches. Empty the desir which now exists in London has never can be handled and placed by the farm ed number of sacks of cementon top of been experienced before in the memory er himself without the need of skilled the sand and turn dry with a shovel of the oldest living merchant. That and high priced labor. Any farmer until thoroughly mixed when the whole city. Liverpool, Manchester. Glasgow. who is handy with a saw and a hand ax mass will have a uniform color. The Bristol and other great centers of trade can make the forms required for most required amount of gravel should now may be said to be in a state of panic. of the constructions on the farm, while I be added on top of the sand and cement, There is no reserve of cold stored but mixing and placing of the concrete can the whole turned over once a day. and ter at all. Many of the prominent mar also be done by the farmer himself or the turning continue until the whole garine manufacturers In England re by the hired man. Slack times of the mass is thoroughly mixed, and of a amount of port that not for many years have they year can thus be utilized for improve rather shiny nature. The largely on water needed will depend, been working at such high pressure to ments instead of being lost as for the nature and dryness of tie sand and merly. till their pressing orders. It Is antici After the general lines of construc gravel and can best be determined by pated that during the present high price tion are determined upon, the first step adding the water with a bucket rather of butter it will meet with an enormous is to prepare the form. The purpose slowly to the first batch until the prop sale. of the form is to hold the wet, slushy er consistency has been attained. For most farm work a fairly wet concrete in place until it hardens or of Ills Treaxon, mixture, one in which the water will Benedict Arnold (lied In London June “Bets ” flush to the surface quite readily on In other words, the form is the mold 14, 1.801. Ills life after his treason was tamping, is preferred. a most unhappy one. He was avoided into which the wet concrete is tamped For making fence posts, drain tile, by men of honor and on many occa ■nd allowed to harden. The inside of etc., where specified forms are used, a sions deliberately insulted. He re the form therefore must have exactly drier mixture is to be preferred. In cclved a considerable sum of money the shape and dimensions desired oi general it may be said that the dryer from the British government and made the finished product. For ground floors the mixture the more ramming or several unsuccessful attempts to en and walss no forms are required, only tamping is required. But in no case gage In business in British America such as will keep the concrete from should the tamping be neglected. and the West Indies and finally re • spreading beyond the limits. For walks and foundations above the Enough ramming should always be turned to London, where he died in ground, the form required is a smooth done to insure that the mass is as dense obscurity. Ills second son, born In tight board frame on each s'de of the as it is possible to make it. 1780. entered the British army in 1798, desired wall. This board frame or form Suggestions for Commission. served with credit in many parts of must be tight enough to keep the wet, At a meeting of the agricultural the world and three years before bls semi-fluid concrete from leaking out, faculty of the Oregon Agricultural death In 1854 was made, a lieutenant and strong enough to prevent spreading College on November 30. the request general.—Household Companion. while the concrete is being tamped. of President Roosevelt’s Country Life The forms may be built to their full Commission for suggestiohs th-t Enlightened Self-Interest. height at once, or a few boards added might aid the commission in making In the United States one of the most at the time as the work of placing the its report was discussed and the fol conspicuous examples of self-interest concrete progresses. Usually it is a lowing statement prepared: If federal appropriations are to be wisely consult “d is the seed busineus of good policy to spend extra time and 0. M. Ferry & Co. They supply an ! care on the forms. A good form in made for improving social and nually every local dealer in the country sures a neat, clean looking wall, pro economic conditions in rural com it is recommended first, with seeds fre-hly put up and then at viding a spade is used freely along the munities, that they be made to existing high the end of the season remove from the boards so r 3 to work the. larger stones schools and normal schools for the retailer all stocks left on hand, thus back from the surface and leave a purpose of maintaining courses of in preventing the possibility of unfit seeds smooth compact face. struction in agricultural, industrial being carried over for another spring. If a particularly smooth job is desir and domestic arts, and including busi By regarding primarily the interests of ed, the forms should be made of dress ness methods and home sanitation, so the purchaser, D. M. Ferry & Co. have ed lumber and fitted very closely. that all pub'ic school teachers may grown to be the largest seed house in Shiplap is very good for forms of this have the training necessary for teach the world. Learn more about reliable class. If one inch lumber is used for ing those subjects in the public feeds by writing to D. M. Ferry & Co., the forms, the studding must not ex schools. that in order to secure the Detotit, Mich., for their 1909 seed an ceed two feet apart, nor five feet if full Second, efficiency of the agricultural col nual which is sent free on request. two inch lumber is used. If the wall leges and experiment stations, the na is to bq more than four or five feet in tional government should co-operate Illa Shocking Ignornnce. height it is well to set the studs to with the states in agricultural <>xtt"i la Teacher (of night school)—What gether with "bailing wire” in order to sion work, this work to be under the meant by the phrase, “twin relics of bar- prevent thei’" spreading. When the direct supervision of the agricultural barlsm?” forms are removed, the wires can be .-oPeges. With an adequate appropri Shaggy Haired Pupil—A pair •f ear- cut with a pair of nippers so close to ation a comprehensive system of trav rings, ma'am.—Chicago Tribune. eling agricultural schools, farmers’ the wall as to never show. :nstitutes and free circulating libraries Except lonal. For ordinary walls of low height and could maintained, and publication' “You Insist that your wife Is a most not immediately subject to heavy load sued be for free distribution so that all exceptional woman?” ing, the forms may be safely removed important discoveries of the experi "1 do.” answered Mr. Meekton. ‘■‘She in from two two three days. In very ment stations could he given to every takes exception to everything I lug dry weather the concrete should be artier of every state. sprinkled often enough to keep it geat.”—Washington Star. Black Spots or Pork. moist for at least a week after placing. A narvalo Fever. During the butchering season of the A light covering of straw, earth or old Patient—Doctor, what do you call burlao will help to retain the moisture vear the experiment station frequent receives specimens of pork that this fever of mine? and retard evaporation from the con ly •rjsent an unmarketable appearance Doctor (looking at clinical thermom- crete. The rind or skin, taken from the nb »♦er)—Well, I'd call It a bargaiu—103 Too much emphasis cannot be laid lominal region and inside of the legs, n duct'd to 0.1 on the need of care in selecting the ■s found to be dotted with black wart material and properly mixing the con ike growths of various sizes ranging Cn'y One “BRCMO QUININE” The cement should be a stand nun thgt of a pin-head to a hazelnut Riat ia LAXATIVE FROMO QUININE. Ixxik crete. Many of these spots in the ear tor the aianature of E W. GROVE. Used the ard brand which has demonstrated its Korld over to Cure a Cold in One Pay. 25c. value through years of use, which re ■stages contain a small amount of pus. liable tests show to be perfectly sound, nd by careful examination a small ■nite will be found buried deeply in "Orlando, tpamnia aays you mustn’t and should be free from lumps. the skin. come to,see me any more—” i The sand should be fairly coarse, The mite causing these pustules and “Gracious heaven, Dora I What have reasonably clean and entirely free subseouent black spots is known as from vegetable matter. The gravel Demodcx fulliculorum var suis, a very I----- " “Than four times a week hereafter. should be clean, free from vegetable 'arge name for such a small mite that Quit that, Orlando! Let me alone!” material and for most farm uses the rnav +><’ seen only by the aid of a larger pebbles should not exceed one magnifying glass. On the Wrong Tecta. Just when the mite attacks the hog ■nd a half inches in diameter. Or, "Shadbolt, I left my money in my other :3 not well known, and as it burrows in absence of suitable gravel, broken clothes this morning, and------ ” 'ecplv into the «kin. treatment or the "Otherwise you would have brought it •tone of a similar size may be used. use of insecticides is of little value The proportions most generally along and paid a small part of what you besides there is no indication of it« owe me. Don't let that happen again, adapted for farm purposes are mix presence until the time of butchering tures of one part cement, two parts Dingus. Good day.”—Chicago Tribans. when the damage is already done sand and three parts gravel, called The«e blackened spots, although On the Other Foot. 1-2-3 mixture; or cne part cement, two "On the ba«ia of whnt you hove told me and a half parts sand and five parts unsightly do not iniure the meat for food, and they may be completely re- mnditm.” »aid the lawyer, "there will b gravel, called a 1-2 J-»-6 mixture; and moved with the skin. E. F. Pernot, no trouble whatever in your getting a di Or','Ton Agricultural College, Cor- one part cement, three parts sand and vorce, if you wish. Do you care to sut six parts gravel, or a 1-3-6 mixture. vallis. him for separate maintenance?” For floors, thin walls, or where water Q. Does the United States produce “For what?" tightness is required, or parts requir- any tin ore? “Separate maintenance.” A. The United States production of “Why, of course." eald the fair caller, inggreat strength, a 1-2-3 or a 1-2 4 Impat ently. “After I get my divorce he'll mixture is preferable. For parts re tin is insignificant. Alaska and North have to maintain him.clf separately. 1 quiring bulk rather than strength, » and South Carolina are practicnlly the certainly -Inn't eunnort him any longer." 1-3-6 mixture may be employed, or io only producers and the entire tonnage some cases even a 1-4-8 mixture. If from these sources usually reaches a of from 100 to 150 tons per an the gravel contans much sand, the total num__ F. 8. Thomson, Washington amount of sard shnnM be reduced, the Stat« College, Pullman. By Our Formula a Throat and Lungs Heed just the protection against cold and diseaae that »« obtained from Piao «Curr If you have a cough or cold, «Sight nc aenou«, begin tak ing Piao « Cure t«xiay and continue until you are well. Cure the cough while it is fresh, when a few dear« of Piso’« Cure may be all that you will need. Fimoua for half a cen tury. Plea «ant tn taste. Free from opiate and harmful ingredients. At all draggiaU*, 2S eta. i How About Falherf A Gentle Hint. Uncle—Soon you will be big enough “Yes. children,” said the nurse, "the stork Has brought you each a I ttle brother,” to come to me on my birthday all alone. “Oh, good!” cried tliey, and ceased their Nephew—I could now. but mother's play, afraid 1’11 lose the gold coin you al “Do let’s all run and tel! poor mothjrl" ways give me.—Meggendorfer Blatter. —Smart Set. Awful Effert«. Acrld Tkt ►—Dey tay dat steady drip- pin’ o' water’ll wear away a atone. Dreamy Pete—Jes’ t’liik. den, wot'd happen t’ a man's stomach by pourin' fla ■afuls inter 1L—Bohemian. Rhe—This dress doesn't become iny complexion. I must change It. He—. More expense? 1 can't stand It; you'll ruin me. She—You «Illy! I don't mean th«> dress—I mean th» complexion — Chicago Journal. I A Flavoring. It makes • eyrup belter than Maple. Sold by grocery SOMETHING FOB EVERYBODY OWAIl Going th« Limit. r ar - Chomlv. British Honduras Is short of labo» Lea*lv pra-aï G Mid, “What would you consider a dlplo H 'd, &J : ; Zinc or Silver, L ad. ÇI ; < for Its Increasing fruit growlpg and Is [ «in-.'.opvM and Ccpjer, Vi. ( vani mat?” trying to get coolies from India. I L?l 1 ' oMrui and Cm- < arLonai. 5a work suliullud. "A man who Is courteous to his pirv Central Park Ln New York clfy la Uvuall'-uik. cook. ” ■ssetteetl at the valuation of $215,000,- “Even when she biip;H.*ns to be his Ooo, not for the purjejse of taxation, wlfer but so us to show the amount of real “Even then."—Blrmtnstiam Age-Her- estate value that is exempt from aid. taxes. There is an agreement among the I PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS scarce It to the keepers of first-class restaurants in PAZO OINTMENT is guaranteed to cur« any r- entia seeds, but it takes I trorcy. We have New York city that the business would ease of Itching:, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding been improx er st:J xrecetable Piles ill 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c. not pay, on the scale now followed. If seeds for o\ er 5 years. More than 2000 people n e working to make Ferry's it were not for the sale of alcoholic Seeds suit you. Euy the best—Ferry’s. Every German soldier’s equipment in For «ale everywhere. beverages. cludes a Bible and a half pound cake of rpro r. :ro chocolate. Palestine’s ancient wells, famous In FFFE li d KEJVESF. D. M. FERRY & CO., Detrai, lAUtl. history for centuries, are giving way r|TC Vitos' Hance sna erwius imaMM perms- to pumping by modern engines and out I II J neatly cared by l>r. i Io.'. Great Nerve Ke. Send for FRt£ $1 00 ti itlbottlo anti ireuti-e. fits. particularly for watering gardens Storer. •V Dr. U. U. Kline. Ld., 831 Arch St.. PhiUdalphia. Pa. and orchards. There Is a large de The Force of Habit. mand for and Import of pumps. A certain accountant is so dev oted The new docks at Itlo_ de Janeiro. to bls profession that when he has Brazil, are to be further enlarged at a nothing else to do be casts up his TOWER’S FISH BRAND c< st of 05,000,000 mllreis ($19.500,- eye». WATERPROOF 000), In addition to the extensive dock work now going on. The docks are Mothers will GILED flud _ Mrs. Boothing ___ _____ ____ Winslow's ___ tb**-b s' remedy to nso io* their eh Viz a owned by the Brazilian Federal gov Syrup iuriug i he uethiug per.od. GARMENTS eminent. are cut on large One Boy Knew. Chinese are discarding the old oiled patterns, designed “ Now, boys" ut-k ■<] the Sunday school paper umbrellas, in use for centuries, to give ihe wearer .the utmost comfort in favor of the kind of umbrellas used teacher, "when does Christmas come?" “Jes’ aftev paw kills his linwgs in Europe and America. Germany and promptly ilGNT-DUMBLE-OEW answered the urchin Japan are fighting for the trade. Last cowhide boots.—Chicago Tribune. ¿UARAtlTEEQ WAItRPRC0^ year China imported 1,102.333 umbrel SUITS *322 las and the year before 1,380,111. SLICKERS *322 Introduction of motor boats Into the fivm rut auvr.ir fishing industry is held to be responsl-' sic m of Mi /xr.u i «¿fla»* I For Infant« and Children. ble for the steady increase In that In dustry In Norway. These boats make it possible for the fishermen to make Bears the a much larger catch and also furnish better protection In rough weather and Signature of are safer than the old boats driven by Balls. “How did you like the show last even Women employed as ordinary day la ing?” borers In the construction of buildings, “Fine. Would you believe It, I saw mixing the mortar, sifting sand and Mrs. Brown there with a strange man. carrying bricks and for unloading coal, —Detroit Free Press. are the unusual conditions described as existing In Prague and elsewhere in Mix for Rheumatism. Bohemia. The women are paid from The following is a never failing rem 32 to 40 cents a day. The working day edy for rheumatism, and if followed up for these women is from C a. in. to 6 it will effect a complete cure of the very worst cases: “Mix one-half pint p. in., with an hour for dinner. Japan’s Becond largest steamship of good whisky with one ounce of Toris H.Ot1TO»3 no company, the Alaska Shosen Kaisha. compound and add one ounce of Syrup Reason I Maka and Sell More Men’s $3.00 Is starting a semi-monthly service to Sarsaparilla compound. Take in table Tho A $3.50 Shojs Than Any Other Manufacturer the United States with six vessels, spoonful doses before each meal and at Is bee»«»« I 'live t*w wearer the benefit of the 4 bed time.” The ingredients car be complete organization cf trained expert« and skilled using Tacoma and Seattle as stnrtlng procured at any drug store and easily ehoe'nakers in the coontrjr The «election of the leathers for each part of the ehoe, points and Hongkong as the terminus. mixed at home. and every detdl of the making In every department, it looked after by tho best choemakere lr the «hoe industry. An agreement to this effect has been If I could eno* you how carefully W. L Pougla« «hoee are made, yau wauldthen under?land why they hold their Contributed by a Smnrt A leek. made with the Chicago, Milwaukee and shape, flt better, and wear longer than any other make. A statesman they called Nord Alexia St. Paul Railway Company, to begin My Method of Tannbiq ihe Soles mohes them More Flexible and Longer Wearing than any others. Got a biff on his right solar plexia. In August, 1909. The six vessels are flheen for I’very Member of the F'liinily, Then he looked about Men, 15«»ys, W «smelt. M itawe« mid < hildren» now being built at Kobe and Naga For a chance to get out. For by slioe dealers everyw' eie. saki. OAilTIHM I None genuine without W. !~ Dni.glM And inquired the way to Texia. UriU I lull ■ name and price aininiHil on bottom» Here is a possible explanation of the Fait Color Eyeleta Used Exclusively. Catalog mailed free W. L. DOLGLAS, 107 Spark St., Brockton, Mast. strong predilection J. Pierpont Morgan has for cigars. According to the Unit ed States Tobacco Journal, the Chester r School, of Waterbury, which the finan ■■Si Per Salzer's catalogue, page 129 Largest firrowers of onion and vegetable I cier once attended, has sued a man in seeds in the world. Big catalog free; or. B The 2 Hamden, Conn., for a year’s board and send 16c in stamps and receive catalog and B 1,000 kernels each of onions, carrots, celery. F tuition for his son. The defendant radishes; 1.500 each 'ettuce, rutabaga, tur- p1 nips; 100 parsley. P 0 tomatoes, 100 melons; B makes the answer for his refusal to 1,200 charming flower w ds; in all 10,000 B pay that the school officials and teach kernels, easily worth $1.00 cf any man's E money. Or. send 20c and we will add one E ers used tobacco In the presence of the pkg. of Earliest Peep O’ Day Sweet Corn. pupils, thereby encouraging them to SALZfR SEED CO., Box PC InCrosse. Wis. f are the contract the habit. Charles Francis Barker, of Boston, has held the title of American chnm- pion at checkers for about thirty years, and lias just shown that bls Have you some old, tamlahed Knives, Forks grip on it Is firm by defeating Joseph and Spoons that look bad? Would you like to them plated with pure silver bo they will fast through trains Droulllard, of Kansas City, In a match have look and wear like solid silver? of fifty games. Barker won ten games between In the match, while Droulllard cap SEND US YOUR NAME AND ADDRESS give us a list of what you have that needs tured only two, the remaining games and refinishinft and we will send you by return PORTLAND and resulting In draws. Incidentally, It mail full information and particulars how to cost Droulllard and ills, friends $1,000 have it done at little cost. SPOKANE to test Barkers mettle. The match It Doesn't Cost You a Cent to Learn It Simply send us your name and address, a« was played In Kansas City. above, and we wili do as we airree. After the performance of the “Goet- OREGON PLATING WOXKS, Silver Department Portland, Oregon rerdaemniernng" in Paris recently, ac 16th and Aider Streets. cording to Figaro, complaint was en p N U WM. M c M urray , g . p . a No. 3-09 tered by Wagner enthusiasts because i ■ Portland — ■ , the opera had not been performed in HKN writing to a«ivertig«Fs please 3 mention this paper. j Its entirety. The directors, Massager and Broussau, made reply In an opeu letter to the effect that to render the complete work several times In one week would overtax the performers, and “inasmuch as we give four hours h.UCWZ Egg-Pnosphate and twenty minutes of music, we should not be blamed for omitting i mu. do all parts which could lie rendered in sev that am enteen minutes.” IIK4I rR!C£D rov.noi v.ui On the lledjaz railway In Arabia V DO A ND there is to be operated a carriage fitted A FULL POUND 25c. ^t'rCr^r dò : î RRrux up as a mosque, where pilgrims will be able to [terform their devotion» dur ing the journey to the sacred cities. Externally the praying carriage Is only distinguishable from the other car- rlnges by a minaret six feet high. The interior Is luxuriously fitted. The floor is covered with the richest of Persian carpets, while around the sides are veraes from the Koran appropriate to the pilgrimage anil In letters of gold. Martha Washington g A chart indicates the direction of Mec Comfort Shoes ca at one end, and at the other are placed four vessels for holding water You will never know what genuine 'or tho ritual ablutions. foot comfort is until you wear Martha Washington Comfort Shoes. They re Renewed Interest In the effect of to ti vo tired and*aching feet and make walk' bacco smoking on the health has been ing a pleasure. They fit like a glove and aroused in England by a Jury's verdict feel as easy as a stocking. No bother about nt an Inquest that death was due to buttons or laces—they just slip on and off at will. The clastic at the sides “gives” with every movement of tho foot, insuring free heart failure following excessive smok action and a perfect fit. Absolute comfort ¡guaranteed. ing. “If excessive smoking alone could Beware of imitations. Only the genuine have the name Martha cause heart degeneration," writes a Washington and Mayer Trade Mark stamped on the sole. Refuse corres|z>ndent of the London Dally substitutes. Your dealer will supply you; if not, write to us. Mail, “such cases would be common FREE—It you will »end u» ihe name of a dealer who instead of extremely rare. The fact is rfocj not handle Man ha Washington Comfort Shoes, we will send you free postpaid, a beaut if ul picture of Martha that only- an almost infinitesimal Washington, sixe amount of nicotine is absorbed in smok We ei»o make Honorbllt Shoea. Leading Lady Shoes. Yerma Cusbtoit Shoes sud Special Merit ing. An ordinary sized cigar or au School Shoes. ounce of smoking tobacco contains enough of this virulent poison to kill F. Mayer Boot & Shoe Co. two mon. The only reason al) smokers M1LWAUKE£,WISCONSIN ire not killed at once Is that the nico- • Ine is destroyed in the coiubustlvu of m i • laminili 'irfiwft the leaf.” CASTOR IA The Kr.id Yen Have Always Bcught A ) TOWi 1» CO BOSTON USA. rewta uuuotAx to hnitio tooonto can wob ONION SEED “FLYERS” MAKE OLD SILVER NEW O. R. & N. W 0^ E S C E N T BAKWC E-JÍ.7O ?