X
Children
Especially night coughs. Na
ture needs a little help to quiet
the irritation, control the in
flammation, check tiie progress!
of the disease. Our advice is
t'allenlng
— give the children Ayer’s
The hog U an omniverous anima),
Cherry Pectoral. Ask your and needs “roughage” and green feed
doctor if this is his advice also. for his best health and growth A cer
tain amount of grain feed Is needed
He knows best. Do as he says.
-
we pubi
W«
publish our formulas
We banish alcohol
from our medicines
»
We urge you to
I
co..« 1 t yuur
doctor
/xyefs
If you think constipation is of trifling
Consequence, just ask your doctor. He
will disabuse you of that notion in short
order. “Correct it, at once!” he will
Bay. Then ask him about Ayer’s Pills.
A mild liver pili, all vegetable.
—- Mad« by th« J. C. Ayer Co.. Lowell. M«a«.—
A
Hurd l’r<»i>osltion.
A young man visited his doctor and
described a common illness that had
befallen him.
’’The thing for you to do,’’ the phy-
«fclan said. ‘‘Is to drink hot water an
hour before breakfast every morning’’
“Well, how are you feeling?” the
doctor ask» 1 a week later. "Did you
follow my advice and drink hot water
an hour before breakfast?"
"1 did my best, sir, but I couldn't
keep it up more'n ten minutes at a
•tretch.”—Tit Bits
,
—-------------
Raises the dough
•nd complies with
•II pure food laws.
CRESCENT MFC,. CO.
Makers of MAPLEINI
(better than Maple i.
I
aintess Dentistry
Ont of town peo-
can have tholr plat
and bridgework fii
inked in one da
if n«»ce**ary.
Wo will five you a
22k gold or porce'a
crown for
S3.5f
Molar Crowns 5.0
22k Bridge Teeth 3. v
DR. w. a. wilt. Psnasvr i*eM*e*-ui
t> via« iniiLU-t* ie Manteo
Gold Fillings
Enamel Fillings
Silver Fillings
2.5L
Inlay Fillings
Good Rubbsr
Plates
5.00
Be.t R-d
7.50
ber 1
” efl
Pa nleaa Extr’con .OU
WORK GUARANTEED FOR 15 YEARS
Palniea* 1 itra»ti<.n hr»«,* vv h»m 1 lat»»* or bridgo worl
I* ord»‘r«-i. Goneultation Free, Y< n ciinn. t ur»»t l »
i
palnloM work done any where. All work fully truar-
antoed. M»>dern «•!< »trio equipment. Hcet tu- thuds.
Wise Dental Co
e
PORTLAND, OREGON
OllICK UOLKd: S A. M. to * f. M. »OUH»/«, » U L
T hihi 1*"'- !
A LEADER
WATER SYSTEM
IN YOUR HOME
Menna an unfailing water supply. It
means that you w ill have the moat practi
cal Domestic water ru ply system now in
use. No elevated tank, no frozen pipes in
winter, no stagnant water in lumincr. no
water supply troubles of any sort. Tank
placed in Ims» in »nt. out of sight and way,
made of pressed steel, will not rust and
will last a ifet.rne
You wi'l be pleased with the LEADER
sy-tem of furnishing iXimestic Water
Supply. A k or • ur catalogue and free
booklet, "How I Solved My Water Supply
Problem.**
LEWIS & STAYER CO
Portland, Ore.
Spokane, Wash
Boise, Idaho.
to grow hogs with the greatest profit,
and still more U ne.-et*«*iy to fatten
and fit them for market. When young
animals have an abundance of range
with a good supply of nitrogenous
foods, like alfalfa, clover, vetches and
cow peas, corn makers a valuable addi
tion to the ration, but should not be
given in excess, and will usually be
found’more profitable if mixed with
shorts, bran or other feed combining
a large proportion of protein. For
young pigs bran Is not so good as
shorts and ground cow peas may be
used In the place of the latter when
the price exceeds 820 per ton.
Feeding for the finish should not
begin more than ten or twelve weeks
before the hogs are to be sold. For
the last six or eight weeks corn Is un
doubtedly the best grain, as the feed
consumed during this time greatly in
fluences the quality of the meat. Hogs
take on flesh rapidly during the first
weeks of heavy feeding, but longer
feeding means slower gains. Quick
work pays in fattening as well as In
growing hogs, and when the animals
are on good feed and fall to make a
gain of at least one pound dally they
should be sold or butchered.
Market your hogs at 6 or 8 months
of age. at which time they should
weigh 200 to 250 pounds. A greater
per cent of profit is secured than If
you keep them until 10 or 12 months
old, because you avoid 60 to 120 days
of daily animal waste, However, a
hog which is made to weigh 300
pounds at 1 year is quite profitable.
Ingt-nion. liny Hack l.ifter.
It very often happens that one
wishes to remove the rack from the
wagon when there is no one to assist.
This may be very easily done with the
device illustrated herewith. The four
supporting poles are set In the ground
at a sufficient distance apart to admit
of driving between them with the
rack. There are a number of hooks
on the side of each, sufficient to make
Danger of Iiarbed Wire.
Barbed wire is all right, for stock
cattle and makes a cheap fence, but
it is hard to construct such a fence to
turn hogs, and, owing to its danger
ous characteristics, it is out of the
question for horses, and even for
milch cows.
With the woven wire fence the post
expense is not so great as that of the
other kinds, as they need not be so
heavy, and may be set a good distance
/part. Heavy end posts are an abso
lute necessity, and they should be set
in the ground not less than 314 to 4
feet deep. If the line posts are 20 to
25 feet apart it is a very good idea
to have every fourth post of good size,
longer than the others, to allow extra
setting. In setting end posts dig a
big hole, put the post in. and begin to
tamp and ram fram the very bottom,
not filling it too fast, so as to get the
earth about the post packed from the
bottom to the top. The "dead man”
plan of bracing a post is perhaps bet
ter than any other. The "dead man”
is a short post or heavy stone buried
about 3 feet deep, 4 feet from the
end posts, and with a cable made of
plain galvanized wire to the post top
and around the dead man the post
can be held for years as firmly as
when set. Be sure to use galvanized
wire, as black wire will not last more
than six or seven years.
30-lnch high woven wire fence.
smooth No. 10 and one barbed
wire at the very top, makes a good
fence for any kind of stock, and can
be put up for less than 40 cents per
rod, exclusive of posts.—Lexington
Herald.
it possible to lift the rack a little at
a time by means of the poles, as il
DeMtroy tiiK Quack Grass.
lustrated by the dotted lines. There is
1 often see directions given for kill-
no need of a complicated block and Ing out quack grass, but I think they
tackle wnen such a simple device is so are all inferior to the method that I
effective.— Frank Monroe in Farm and employ, I would never try to drag
out the roots with harrow or rake, be-
Home.
cause not all of the roots will be gath
HeM Type of Milch Cow«.
ered and those left will soon fill the
A cow with her second or third calf
soil again. The pest can most easily
Is the most desirable of all. and this
be killed right where it is. the roots
is undoubtedly the most profitable age
furnishing an abundance of plant food,
to buy them. As milkers and breed-
by using a double action cut away har
ers, they have all their best days in
row. Now, please don't think that any
trout of them, and with sufficient time
kind of a harrow will do, because It
to pay handsomely, Young and old
will not. If you rely on any except
cows are very distinct In appearance.
the one I have mentioned you will
The former have an unmistakable ap
be disappointed. I have used cr.e to
pearance of fullness of flesh and coat,
destroy quack grass many times, and
while the old ones are more or less
am sure of what I am writing. If you
shrunk. The teeth give an indication
plow before using the harrow, run the
of age. and the horns are often looked
plow shallow—just deep enough to
to as a guide, the young having smooth
turn over the quack roots, bottom side
horns, while those of the aged are
up; let lay thus for a week and then
wrinkled. If crossbreeds are bought,
go over the field with the double ac
get them with the greatest tendency
tion cutaway hartyw; then after a
toward the best breed the cross has
few days repeat the harrowing and
been secured from. Cows with a male
keep at it. going over the field at in
or bull type of head are rarely good
tervals of a few days until the pest
.nilkers. The head should be refined,
is all destroyed, It is no use to think
neck thin, forequarters wide, square
that if the field be gone over, perhv.ps
and robust, with deep, broad thighs.
a dozen times in one day, the quack
will be killed, for the sun, as well as
Vnlue of Skim Milk for Hen*.
Avstematic tests made by the West the harrow, must get In Its work,
Virginia Experiment Station prove The way to do is to go over the field
that skim milk is a valuable food for once, then watt a few days for the
roots to dry and repeat the operation
laying hens.
The first test covered 122 days. The By being thorough in this the grass
twenty-two hens fed the skim milk can be destroyed and a crop grown the
laid 1.244 eggs, as compared with 996 same year if commenced early In the
laid by twenty two hens fed a mesh spring.—F. H. Dow In Agricultural
Epltocnist.
wet with water.
In another test sixty hens fed skim
Prof ertliig Hird«.
milk laid 862 eggs in thirty-seven days,
With very few exceptiors. birds ar«,
is compared with 632 eggs laid by a most valuable live stock on the farm.
smitlar lot fed no milk.
Even the so called grain-eating birds
Other tests gave about the came earn their right to a home and pro
comparative results.
tection by reason of the vast quanti
The conductors of these experiments ties of weed seeds they devour and
estimate under prevailing conditions, the number of insects they destroy.
with eggs selling at 20 to 25 cents a Quails and meadow larks eat mere in
dozen, that the skim milk had a feed ■acts than vegetable food and a very
large percentage of th/ latter Is com
ing value of 14 to 2 cents a quart.
posed of weed seeds. A single farmer
cannot protect the birds on his place
They'll Want the Wo«*.
The forest fan. tie is not to be Inxne- against all kinds of destructive ver
l..ite. C*M Mr F
It Denver A ,> min. Including the town hunter ’ it
have forests In plenty for the present he can combine with his neighbors,
generation, and perhaps for the next, post every farm sad eeeuM his rights
but la the years to come there will be by helping to eeWre th* right* Of h I
famine a plenty If we don t at thi* time brother farmer* Now is a good time
take the stitch in tliu*."
to begin.—Kansas Farmer.
»<• <*•<
Hhp
Grata (matt.
A daager >ua parasite of many of th«
■ ereal plants is the fungus that pro-
du< es in th« grain or head what is
know* *• smut. There are several
I .*•11 known kinds of smut, ea< h of
which is caused by a .
-.ec.e-
of the fungus.
The greatest loss from smuts tn this
country is from th« stinking smut <
wheat and the loo^e smut of oats. A
idt r.i' 1« lose is also due to th*
loose smuts of barley and wheat
which are more difficult to control and
prevent. They are widely distributed,
and though they occur usually in small
quantities the damage in the aggregate
is large. They often are entirely un
noticed on account of their earliness
and the absence of any conspicuous
sign of them at harvest time.
The stinking smut of wheat trans
forms only the kernels into smut balls
which do not break until the wheat is
threshed and often remain intact in
the threshed grain. The loose smuts
of barley, on the other hand, early dis
charge their spores, which are blown
off ny the wind as soon as the smutted
head comes out of the leaf sheath;
they infect the plant in the flowering
stage and enter the embryo Inside the
ovary before the latter ripens Into
seed. An infected seed developes a
smutted plant the following year.
The most successful method thus far
found for preventing these smuts is a
hot-water treatment of the seed. This
treatment is described in Bureau of
Plant Industry bulletin 152. entitled
"The Loose Smuts of Barley «nd
Wheat,’’ recently Issued by the United
States Department of Agriculture.
The bulletin is a report of recent re
searches into the life histories of these
smuts and the determination of meth
ods for their prevention.
' Legal Information »
Th» v«n !-r
in*, wept b ■
torn • l*i!:e»
•
Hie.
. w 1
f
as he
nd bt
»■»* X'ist
! at hie
, n ware*
,ir
th-
■•11
«ay th*
word."
"No; ft w « r v fault." s ■ Id th* vic
tim. gathering up the remains of a
plaster ini,1
'I
Consiipafion
I r C er
ie V*
I
with chmnto
ie i
au
•1
■
BP e v m
|
before I . u.J have an action u my bowel»
■ well
man
During the nine veara ‘ ef<>re I u<ed
CascaretN 1 suffered untold misery w ith internal
pil«S Thanh* u \ a 1 am free from all that
thi* morning You can use this in behalf of
suflering humanity
B F Fisher Roanoke I1L
The charter of a municipality ex
empted it from 1: ibility for damages
arising from a defective sidewalk, un
less notice of the accident w.«r* filed
■
within twenty days. Plaintiff slipped t* a
meeting of simplified spellera.”—Den
and fell on ice and snow which had ver Republii.in
Pleasant. P datable Potent. Taste Good.
been allowed to accumulate on a side
D< Go» 1 Never Sicken. Weaken or Gripe.
walk and sued for damages. By the
Shake Into Your Shoes
nine tab:et stamped ( C C. Guaranteed to
fall he was rendered unconscious In A Tien'3 Foot-Ease, a powder for the feet. It cures
cure or youi money back.
*30
swollen, imarting,
**»• <w»*ating feet. Makes
stantly, and remained in that condi painful,
new shoes ea.sy. Sold by all Druggists and Sh<
tion for more than twenty days, and Stores. Don’t ac e; t any substitute. Sample
was therefore unable to give the city FREE. Addre- A. S. Olmsted. Le lioy, N. Y.
notice of the accident within that
Moue> lu Jura.
time. In McCollum vs. City of South
The big touring car had just whizzed
WATERPROOF
Omaha. 121 Northwestern Reporter, by with a roar like a g.gantic rocket,
OILED
438, the Nebraska Supreme Court, in and Pat and M.-,e turned to watch it
iEC <
an opinion from which Judge Fawcett disappear in a cloud of dust.
dissented tn terms of unmistakable
will give you full value
"Th:m chug wagons must cost a
for every dollar spent GriA? A Ci
strength and severity, held that the hape av cash." said Mike "The rich
and keep you dry in /
Incapacity of plaintiff resulting from is fairly burnin' money."
the wettest weather.
his Injury did not extend 'he time,
"An' be the smell av it.” sniffed Pat.
suits -322
UXt
or afford an opportunity for the fixing
mu.-t be that tainted money we do
upon the city of its statutory lia ■»e hearin' so much about."—Success
SLICKERS *3C2 -Air
bility.
Magazine.
POMMEL SLICKERS^’
<7 riattai
8350
Since 1S07 St. John's Chapel has
* ■ r r\
Great Home Eye Remedy
been a place of worship in New York.
Miß fVFffVWMtPf J}‘
11
Owing to changed conditions In Its for all diseases of the eye. quick relief
«7;
neighborhood the vestry of Trinity from using PETTIT’S EYE SALVE.
A. J .T ower C o . BOSTON.
___________
U SA. “•
Tov.tR C anadian C o . limíteo to » o « to . C an
Church determined to close It. and to All druggists or Howard Bros., Buf-
falo, N. Y.
transfer the work carried on there to
another church within the same par
At the Summer Hewort.
ish, half a mile distant. To prevent
Clara—What an interesting man
When You’re Hoarse Use
this removal an injunction was sought. Mr. Robinson is. Ha always holds
In Burke vs. Rector, etc., of Trinity one's attention.
Church, 117 New York Supplement,
Charlie—When I saw you both on
255, the New York Supreme Court held the porch last evening I thought he
that the vestry has the supervision was holding something much more
and control, and is the sole manager substantial than your attention.—
of the temporalities of the corpora Judge.
m BIST MUNUH TOR
4«
tion. and the plaintiffs are required to
conform to the canons, usages and
Pneumonia and Consumption are al I Gives immediate relief. The first
discipline of the church of which they ways preceded by an ordinary cold. I dose relieves your aching throat and
are members. The judicial power Is Hamlins Wizard Oil rubbed into the I allays the irritation. Guaranteed to
reluctant to Interfere in matters of chest draws out the inflammation,
religious or ecclesiastical arrangement, breaks up the cold and prevents all se I contain no opiates. Very palatable.
All Druggists. 25c.
and will do so only when rights of rious trouble.
property or civil rights are Involved.
b'uulty Example.
No such rights appear to be affected
“You must think you ought to run
by this controversy. No cause having
P N U
No. 41-09
around barefooted, Johnny " said Mrs.
been presented for the cognizance of a Lapsling, chiding»)’, "just because Bob
"ourt of equity, the application for in by Stapleford does. He's no centurion
junction was denied.
to go by "
Alabama enacted a law in 1907 pro
viding that if any foreign corporation
procured the removal of a cause from
a state to a federal court Its franchise
N <7 I L. I M
and Catdrrhai fcv<f
would be canceled, and any contract in
Sure cure ami positive preventive, no matter how horse» at any a»r»
: i on the
Interstate business thereafter made by
.
it would be void. At the time of the
temp, r in I't.zaa- d Sn< p anti Choi» rain P u.iry. Largest selling live
'
ii*
ppeai
• m I inffa nd i« a fine Kid-
entrance of the state by the telegraph
j ey rer . ly. 5Hc ai d i 1 a b»»’11.-: f S and i I ad <n. Cut th in out. Keep
company it had a constitutional assur
It. Show to j
"Dip
temper. Cau e4 and Cures.’* Special agent» wanted.
ance that "all corporations shall have
SPOHN MEDICAL CO.,
GOSHEN, IND, U. S. A
the right to sue in all courts in like
cases as natural persons." In Western
Union Telegraph Co. vs. Julian, 169
Federal Reporter. 166, an injunction
was sought to prevent the operation of
the statute. The circuit court, grant
ing the injunction, characterized the
statute as an attempt to forfeit prop
erty or business because its owner
exercised a constitutional right In a
lawful way. In a resort to the courts
of his country for justice, and as
transcending all the bounds of the
legislative power, being a mere edict
of despotism. No court which sits to
administer the fundamental law can
recognize It as a legitimate exercise
of power.
TOWERS FISH BRAND
CLOTH
X-
CURE
DISTEM PER
Highest Quality
WHAT IT COSTS TO LIVE.
23 Ounces for 23 Cents
An
Increase
of
411
Per Cent
Since
INDO Compnted by Bradstreet'«.
Made from pure, carefully tested
The average householder finds some
materials. Get a can on trial
difficulty in getting the full measure
of satisfaction from the return of the
You never saw such cakes
country to trade activity, for the cost
of living, which has been increasing
and biscuit. They'll open
rapidly for most of the last thirteen
your eyes.
years, is again advancing from the
ÜE5
m
*
k
FG
c
slightly lower levels brought by the
Guaranteed
depression of 1908. All through the
past summer the prices of the neces
under ail
saries of life have been slowly advanc
Pure Food Laws
ing. reaching on Aug. 1 the highest
figure reported for that date, save one
In 1907. It is rather startling to see
that the average cost of the supplies
Teacher—What do we know
practically every household must buy eernlng th* canals on Mars'*
Shaggy Haired
Pupil—Gee!
has Increased over 49 per cent since
1896. says the Review of Reviews. The don't know any more about em
Rradstreet agency has selected 106 ar we do about our owr north pole
ticles of domestic consumption and has
kept a careful record of their prices
month by month for seventeen years.
The highest point ever reached was In
March 1, 190?. after which came th»
moderate slump caused by the finan-
’lal disturbances of that year. We are
now marching steadily back toward
this high record, and the August fig
ures are only 6.8 per cent below It.
Some of the Individual cases of In
creased costs are much more Impres
The Kind You Have Always Boii^lit has b«>rne the signa
sive than the average. Rubber has ad
ture of Chas. II. Fletcher, and lias been made under his
vanced from 81 cents a pound In 1896
personal supervision for oxer 30 years. Allow no one
to 81 98 a pound now; pork, from 8s 25
to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and
a barrel to 121.75; eggs. 1 from 15’6
“ «Just-as-pood ” are hut Experiments, ami endanger the
-ents a dozen to 28 cents; mutton,
health of Children—Experience against Experiment.
from 5 »4 cents a pound to 11 cents:
’om. from 84 cents a bushel to 80
'ents; wheat, from 64 cents a bushel
Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor oil, 1‘are-
to |1.20 and so forth. The figures
Roric, Drops and Soothing’ Syrups, It is Pleasant. It
given ar« wholesale prices, and as a
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
rule the advance to the ultimate con-
ami allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrluea and Wind
lumer has been decidedly greater.
What is CASTOR IA
Taote In I.itrratnre.
The tedious writer makes us glum;
He's hard to follow.
We want ovr mental pabulum
Reedy t« «wallew.
The magazines most widely bought
The thing have tested.
And offer us a food for thought
Well predigested.
—Louisville Courier-Journal.
Contrary
Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the
Stomach and llowels, giving healthy ami natural sleep.
The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Frieml.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the Signature of
Action«.
“Why did Banks round up hi* cr*d-
Itors?”
“I suppose to do
—BaT-lmor« American
In Use For Over 30 Year».
TM« CCNTSUR ««MMNVi TV MURRAY
NtW VOR* CITY.