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About Bandon recorder. (Bandon, Or.) 188?-1910 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 4, 1909)
SOMETHING FOR EVERYBODY Ftv» books of fiction are published flady In thia country. The Salvation Army preaches th gospel In thirty uue different Bittes Huttes, guage* Bitter cream and butter may and An investigation of the boy work generally does result after the cow has ers of London shows that the new s been feeding liberally on moldy boys are the healthiest and the bak Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. hay, decaying roots and certain weeds. ers least so. Do Good Never Sicken. Weaken or Gripe. J‘ k 25c 50c. Never told in bn'’c. The gen- Another fruitful source of bitter cream Inten-lve Dairy Faruilutf. ntne tibletstampeICCC. g saaraataoJ to New York State has 15,000 uniform euro or your moucy back. and butter is the holding of the cream The question is often asked how ed and equipped citizen soldiers, yet objec- many cows a certain number of acres at too low a temperature, when Governor Hughes manages to get Perhaps. will support. By the question is tionable bacteria get in their work, along with a staff of eighteen offi flavor. In the lurid glare meant that the entire energy of the causing a pungent or bitter cers. Of a sulphurous torch. farm is to be devoted to raising food For best results cream should be cool About 2,000,000 of the natives of Some day and somewhere, for the dairy cow. A farm in a good ed and held aX a temperature of about Siam are kept busy cultivating rice. Tiie scorchers will scorch! 50 degrees for six or seven hours im state of fertility can be easily arrang Several varieties are cultivated, some ed ao that one could keep a cow mediately after separation, after which requiring only two months, while the ’At the S lock ya rd«. it should be ripened in a temperature Visitor I have always understood to every two acres if the land is all others require up to six months to And one of from 60 to 70 degrees. When ft ripen. the only thing you couldn't use was good, rich, tillable land. begins to turn sour it is ready to be would be able to raise both the forage the squeal from the hog? churned, and then the sooner it is M. Marcel Prevost has been elected Manager—It used to be so, but since or bulky part of the ration, and the churned the better. In small dairies, to the Academie Française in succès the tar ff agitation star.ed, we have grain ration, too. It could be done where several separator skimmings sion to Victorian Sardou. There were in a few years ’ time with the proper an unlknited demand for the squeal are required to make up the quantity four ballots, at each of which M. Pre from the Infant Industries, so we pre handling of the herd on the farm. of cream for a churning, the cream vost secured the largest number of Three crops upon the farm will do serve It in these phonographs.—Buck. it—first, corn; second, clover hay, and, should never be run from the separa votes. Oil has been struck 150 miles south third, peas and oats. Of course, the tor into the vessel holding previous U Ji A *a.v«‘r orni Cheruiwt, clover sod would be plowed down for skimmings. One needs a cream can of of Suez, on the Red Sea coast, the H 1 a sl-» I) < . en < \ l prie . ,<40. « h : S|.t t Gold. Hilc r |.<- a I, SI ( I. Silur. Î.K-, Gohl. 50c; Z no corn and then the corn ground be put sufficient size to hold all that Is re gusher giving Increasing quantities or ( ! • '' SI . .n f • nvt-lop-si an*l full price liwt wnf on it ; 11< at ion < c i roi h » d I’mt.ir«' work e*> into peas and oats the following sea quired to make up the churning, and daily, and indicating large reserves. lieitud. lU-h rtuie: Cari.uualv National Bank. son. With these three foods one can such vessels should be kept in a place The possibility of a cheap supply of make a balanced ration for the dairy where the temperature is about 60 fuel Is a discovery of the greatest lm- cow without purchasing any other out degrees. Each skimming should be portance to Egypt. side food, either concentrated or cooled before being emptied into this An electric heater for thawing ex- high priced baking bulky. storage can. When fresh cream is plosives is used at the Roosevelt powd< i s will do and d< ei The statement has often been made emptied it should be at once thoroug- drainage tunnel In Cripple Creek. It it better. It raises the dough and makes light that an acre of good land will sup ly incorporated with the contents of is in successful operation. The cost er, sweeter and bette; One the can by stirring with a spoon or of this method of heating is about 10 risen foods. Suld by gro port a. cow the year around, cers 25c per pound, jj dairyman made the remark that he ladle. Churning should not take place cents for twenty-four hours, and is you will send us youi name and address, we could keep two cows on an acre, but within five or six hours after the last said to be far more economical than rill send you a book on health and baking pt.wder. practically tfle man who keeps one cream has thus been added.—Field and coal. CFESCENT MFG. CO. Seattle, Wn. cow on two acres is doing very good Farm. That valuable energy which should business if he gets fair prices for the be conserved for thinking and doing Itr<*In I cn Ing Wushrd I.and. product. It is a fact that the demand THE OLD I.:LtAr.’. L?." I had about one acre of washed is used by vegetarians in digestion for milk, butter and cheese is lncreas- clay land on one side of a good field. In the meat eater the steer does the Ing faster than cows and the prices It was absolutely devoid of vegeta drudgery of vegetable digestion for are continually advancing. There Is tion, had been left out for a number the man, while a vegetarian makes of no better business than dairying — of years after wasting fertilizer upon himself and his faculties a kind of Agricultural Epitomlst. it, and was an eyesore. Early in the animal.—New York Press. spring I crossed It with furrows about F or CATARRH op rut bladder . On its through trains one of the Water a Necessity for Crops. 5 feet apart. In these furrows I eastern railroads has installed a sani Tills reservoir Is 100 feet high and URINARYLISCHARGES etc . AT DRUGGISTS.OR TRIAL BOX BY MAIL50r 37*4 feet in diameter and will hold dropped wild blackberry roots, one tary system of supplying water to FROM PLANTER.9 3 HENRYST. BROOKLYN.N.V 3,400 tons of water, an equivalent to about every 4 feet. I dropped a fork passengers. In every car a slot ma — BE. WAR EOF IMITATIONS.---- ful of stable manure next to each root, chine is Installed, which supplies par 30 acre-inches of rain fall. An aver (■BSiaiBk-La«— a Vs LUKjnTI ■ i «MB h Ms W!l ** T ' age rainfall of 13’4 inches during the partially covering it, and covered the affin drinking cups for 1 cent each. whole with one furrow made with the The passenger uses this paraffin ves turn plow. In the next furrow I sel and throws It away after use. dropped small pine tops and partially Nathaniel Osborne, who used to covered them with the plow. I went WATEPP ROOF blow the organ in the Brick church in over all the land In the same way. V Fairhaven, Conn., was once asked how OILED The work required three days for two much salary he received. “Twelve men and a team. The following spring hundred dollars,” he replied. "Twelve I plowed out the middles. This was will give you full value hundred dollars!" exclaimed the ques- five years ago, and I have not touched for every dollar spent tloner In surprise. "Yes," replied the land since. I have gathered two and keep you dry good crops of blackberries and the Nat, “but that's for one hundred the wettest weatne years." land Is now covered with heavy berry SUITS >3— It has been decided to remove the bushes and a good wild grass sod, SLICKERS *32 with no wash to speak of.—G. M. notice on the pier at Yarmouth. I^Ie POMMEL SLICKERS Humphreys, in Agricultural Epito. of Wight, which runs as follows: •322 "Any person going on the pier with mist. 3010 out first producing his railway ticket CATALOO Beet Culture Wanen. or paying the authorized toll or in Comment has arisen over the appat sulting or annoying the pier master AJ.T ower C o . boston . CT& a T oweb C anadian C o . limo - id T oronto . can ent decadence of sugar beet culture In or any other official is liable to a fine the farming section about Toledo. of £5.”—London Evening Standard. Ohio. Where a few years ago a dozen California Is to try acclimating the fields could be seen without traveling more than a mile or two, now scarcely Korean wild fig. The fig, growing on one exists. A farmer reported he saw a hardy vine, on trees, trellises and but one field between Toledo and Mon hedge rows to a height of thirty feet, roe. though only a few years ago this bears a delicious fruit. Some of the section produced heavily. Several fac- seed has been sent to the department tors have arisen to work against beet of agriculture, California State uni raising. In the first place, labor and versity. The fig grows wild in Korea care considered, the present high- and has proved of great value there. The sofa on which Dickens died at priced cereals are considerably more profitable: again, farmers have begun Gadshill has Just been presented to growing season would fill to the point to learn that beets tax soil vitality the Dickens museum at Portsmouth. indicated. A rainfall of 9 Inches, if about as heavily as any crop, and, He was at work on "Edwin Drood" On completely utilized, would produce a unless fertilizing elements are constant the evening before his death, when he yield of 30 bushels of wheat or 157 ly applied the land invariably suffers. came in fatigued and after a few bushels of oats. words to his sister in law. Miss Ho- For a Sucking; Cow, garth, fell to the floor, never to speak Sih» lltiildl ng*. The following description is given of again, The couch is of rosewood and In nil silos the greatest waste oc a device to prevent a cow from suck covered witli green plush. curs around the sides, particularly In ing herself: The old gentleman was not accus the corners, because the air has great Secure two lengths tomed to having the new railway in er access to these parts The fodder of small cord, also his town; upon seeing a train ap- is not packed tightly In the corners, six piece« of round, proaching he whipped up his horse the air fills the interstices and decay light wood about and tried to cross the track in front results. With the cylindrical silo the 12 inches long and of U. lie and his horse came out friction Is equally distributed over the 1*4 inches in diam safely, but the wagon was badly entire Inside wall surface."so that the eter, bore % inch broken. When he found that he was silage settles evenly. holes at each end of not injured he called to the engineer: The place a silo Is to occupy may sticks, then having "Why, I thought you saw me coming." determine the form to intild. There tied a knot at one are several kinds Chief among these Bishop Samuel Fallows of the Re end of the rope, thread on the sticks. are the round the stave, the square Knot the cord on either side of the formed Episcopal church, preaching rectangular, and the octagonal form sticks, then throw the same across in St. Paul's church, Chicago, recent A square or rectangular silo can usu the cow's neck (having regulated the ly, on "The Race for Life,” took occa ally be constructed within a barn with knots and sticks to suit the small of sion to warn his congregation against better economy of spa e than a round the neck and also the shoulder), and automobile speeding. “‘Let your mod silo. For these reasons square silos the end of the cords around the first eration be known to all men' should are most frcqucnrly employed within knot. The accompanying illustration be Inscribed on every car," said the the barn, and the cl, nlar type when shows the result, This device p ro bishop. "The commercial, military a separate building is constructed. vents the cow from reaching her and other uses of the automobile are endless. We therefore hail its advent flanks. DR. W. A WISE Mottled Hutter. with Joy not untempered, however, 22 Y vara a Leader in 1’am leas Dental Strea tky or mottled butter may be Sllntce for Feeding. with a wholesome fear.” Work in For. land caused by the salt, or ft may be due The chief difficulty in growing silage A decision of the court of appeals to the working of the butter. The corn In some of the Northern States Is salt is so t evenly diffused In the finest In getting a suitable variety, and farm of New York, in a case which grew out of a dispute over the right to a Should r.m< mb-r that our f r c* c« cw *rr»oK'-i kited of btii.er that, as is shown by a ers are strongly urged to take advan th«' WK CAN I>«> IHKlit 7 NT1RE CHO •'N microscope, ex cry grain Is surrounded tage of such new varieties of silage car seat, holds that placing a piece of BKinc.E AND 1’1 A h WORK IN A PAY it baggage In a seat does not pre-empt neccaaary. 1’0 -il'IVHI.Y PAIN I.ESS EX- by a film <t clear nn 1 transparent corn as may be offered for trial by FRAl"! IN<! I* 1:1 *h n r * ■ ' r I re ‘err» areor- brine, w: 1- li points out the necessity the experimental stations of their re the space. The court rules that pas 3,rwl Wl til-MOVE rHE MOST SENSITIVE senger cars are to carry persons, not TEETH ANO 1.1 I - AllHOUT 1HE LEAST of avoiding the overworking of the spective States or by the Cnited States PAIN NO S i I Pl N IS. nouncertainty. butter l-e:<ce the salt is added. In Department of Agriculture, and also baggage, and that filling a seat with lor the Next Fifteen Days the first working every particle of to select their own seed in order to luggage confers no title to the seat We will ffive you a g »od 22k gold or porce milk should bo gotten rid of. but fill it. In sections where potatoes fill on the owner of the grip. In other lain crown for . ................................................... B..W £2k bridge teeth .................................................. 3.50 enough < It ar water should be left to the place of corn in a ration, silage words, If a traveler wishes |o make Molar crown ............................................... 6.00 sure of sitting in an ordinary Gold or enamel fillings......................................... 1.00 dissolve every grain of salt in twelve can be made frem Japanese millet or .50 hours before the next working Stiver filling.*»..................................... .................... if other crops and succulent winter feed coach he or she must take a seat Good rubbrr platen ....................................... 5 00 hang on to it l he b<*t n-d rubt«r plates ............................ TOO this is done there will be but little be thus provided. Clover and Dalian One of the most remarkable of .50 danger of streakiness in the butter. rye grasses are successfully used for Painless extraction* ....................................... ALL WORK GUARANTEED 15 YEARS but to g< t the best results the salt silage in the State of Washington exhibits at a recent Conversazione of should te xeiy finely ground. and the combination Is worthy of tria? the Royal Society at London was the microscopic section of the aorta of in northern Maine President and Manager an ancient Egyptian king, shown by Pre.rrvlnw Frnre Post«. Grana for shady l'iacea. Mr. Shattock. This king, known as It Is estimated that a fence post. The Iowa Agricultural Experiment Menephtah, has been regarded as the which, under ordinary circumstances, (INC.) Third »nJ " a.hlncton St* will last for pe’haps two years, will. Station has found out that. on rail Pharaoh of the oppression. His mum PORTLAND, OREGON If gl ••••••-nt CMM roads running east and west, it is neo my was found in a tomb at Thebes in ing a’ out 10 tents, last eighteen years essary to plant a different kind of 1898 and unwrapped in 1907. The Na. 3« O» »NU The service of other tim'-ers. such as grass cn the north side of embank- king's name was written on the linen railroad ties and telephone poles, can ments from the south side because of wrappings. The microscopic section fl KN writing to ad.erti..r. pleaae be d tilled and < f; n trebled by inex- the different amount of sunlight that shows that this Pharaoh was suffering meni Ion till. papar. ea«.L side re elves fru® senile calcificatlen of ths vein* p«Uai . t .e ■ iw.iit tieatment •omnia, with which I have been afflicted for twenty yean, and I can aay that Cas- carets have given me more relief than any other remedy I have ever tried. I shall Certainly re< otnrnen-1 them to my friends as being all that they are represented. ” Thus. Gillard, Elgin, Ill. CR"SC~NT Ml A ,, .;1| t. t tr< For Infants and Children ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT AVcgeiabte Prepara ion fir As similaiirçJtheFoodaffilRfguô I Ute Siomaflis aulDods of CLOTH ¡NG I Out-of-Town People Dr. W. A. Wise The Wise Dental Co. Bears the Signature i NTS/C hilijrfn Promotes Di^estionf heerftd ness and RescContains neiuv Opiunt-Morphine nor Mineral. N ot N arcotic . .A-pr ¡fold LtiiX » 1 ¡c¿i* I I AM!t Stitt- j&ttSud* Ifi.nSrd- Hk'Byrsnz M hl I I Use For Over Thirty Years I Aperteci Remedy forConsfipi lion. Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea Worms .fonvalsions.Feverish nt'ss and Lo ss of S leep . ING POWDER TOWERS FISH BRAND The Kind You Have Always Bought FacSuv.il«! Sicjnanirt of NEW YORK. iiiwruttcecTundiT ’.he Foodai Exact Copy of Wrapper. THt OCNTA’JR COMPANY, NEW VOR» CITY. "S . I’lnln Ca«e. divorce your husband? itiot agree? What evi- give of incompatibility divorce and he *l’o Cover « Large Hole. "Waiter, get rue a newspaper so I can hide my yawns, this concert ia so stupid." "Yes. miss; I'll bring the largest I can find."—Flic gende Hlaetter. Mothers will find Mrs. Winslow's Boothing Syrup th '•> st r.- edv to uso tor their cUUdrM luring the lee thing period. Could Not Tell Sooner. ••What. Suzanne, going to leave me?” exclaimed the lady to her French maid who was “invaluable.” “Going to gel married? This is most unexpected.” “Ouf, madame, but eet ees not my fault,” responded the maid, apologeti cally. “Eet was only last night zat your son proposed to me!”—Philadel phia Inquirer 'I'ht« 1« a Libel. "Why do so many women rest their chins on their hands when they are trying to think?” "To hold their mouths shut so that they won't disturb themselves.”— Cleveland Lender. Pettit's Eye Salve for 25c. Relieves tired eyes, quickly stops Letter Carrier — Rainy weather, eye aches, congested, inflamed and com mon sore eyCs. All druggists or farmer. Farmer—Yes; our boarders are all Howard Bros., Buffalo, N. Y. A m KI iiu Too Much. kickin'. L. C.—They can't blame you for the weather. F.—Can't, eh? Gosh, some of "ent seem to think I ought to furnish moon light nights.—Boston Transcript. Hateful. Mrs. Church—My husband didn't RO to his club for two months after we were married. Mrs. Gotham Mine went the day after we were married. “Oh. well, I didn’t do my own cook- Ing. you know "—Yonkers Statesmaa. Special Offering; at New t ork Store Clerk—Here is something new in chafing dishes. . Customer—What Is its special 'ea- ture? Clerk—It produces only nightmares that are perfectly gentle.—Judge. lie R urn. Hut Not In h Salon. “You know the artist we -met last summer who 1 ousted so of his family connections? Were any of his pic tures hung?" "No. but his grandfather was."— Baltimore American. A little bottle of Hamlins Wizard Oil is a medicine chest in itself. It can be applied in a larger number of painful ailments than any other rem edy known. on Her«. "Tome ■ utoid I her of the geography class, "what do j du under stand by the ’corn belt”.”’ "I never heard «of one, ma’am." an swered Tommy Tucker. . "Maw alwaye uses a plaster." It Cures While You Walk. Allen’s l oci is a ct ttain cure for hot. I by all Druggists. Pi > 25c. Don't acc pt any ' il^t tut<-. I'r tl | io a H io - FREE. Address "My boy, here’s the place for you. Hours from 10 to 2; Saturdays from Allen8. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. 10 to 12; work genteel and light; ex Croutons for soup are most easily perience unnecessary; salary, 4100 per made by cutting stale bread about half week. How dew that suit you?” “G’wan! I ain’t got no $50,000 to In an inch thick, buttering it thickly on vest in ths business.”—Houston Chron both sides, cutting in half-inch squares and baking In the oven u-ntil brown. THE CRY FOR CREAM la constantly Increasing. The biff creamery companies are constantly on the lookout and are off« rinff good prices. A great many dairym *n ar • buying more cows instead of tryinff to ffet all the profits possible out of those th y now have. They seem to think about all that they can do is to run the milk through a cream separator, never stopping to .consider whether the cream separator is doing its duty as it should. If its an old-fashioned, out-of- date or cheap machine it can't get all the but terfat—it wasn’t intended to. Your dairy pro fits can b ■ increased from 5 to 25 per cent by the use of A NEW IOWA CREAM SEPARATOR * * < The Separator that has won recoffnitlon by the three la t expositions. St. Ix>uis. Portland and Jamestown, and has the endorsement of all the leading dairy experts. Its us«- actually means the saving of a great amount of cream. It aho means that your cream makes better butter and never has that separator taste pe culiar to cream skimmed by other machines. This is becau e the Iowa is «o easily cleaned and never becomes choke I up with filth and dirt. Among its many advantages ar<* these —waist-low supply «’an. • nclosed gearing; ease of oo erat ion: adjustable crank; neat ap pearance interchangeable parts; etc. IT IS POSITIVELY THE CLOSEST SKIMMER ON THE MARKET. Send for catalogue. a * Jx Wp* : W* .i • ’ W Most complete I ne of jjjl y.. ' ' We have a Dealer in your town. Me is a good man to know PA 1 J Agrkulturdl Implements and Vehicles on I he < oast. Prices and Goods Right. PORTLAND OREGON SPOKANE BOISE SALEM