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About Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909 | View Entire Issue (May 24, 1907)
If KfBRASrOL " tdditlonat Local. Treating a Diseased Hoof Importance r ' s- of Good Shoeing. Greasing irf Tiec-eas y for horded Which are much expo-:e 1 to dampness and is as good for the Mule and frog's' (or the walL It la anpil a'le also t feet which have to staud on dry bed ding. Feet which on account of dis eased conditions' require to be frequent ly soaked or poulticed ought also ..to be greased.-- Bedding of peat moss and fine sawdust, equal parts. Is most ex cellent. All these measures may be advantageous if the feet are properly hod. Good shoeing is the essential proph ylaxis of hoof bound. We must avoid all improper practices likely to promote desiccation and contraction of the foot, such as abuse of the rasp, too long application of the heated shoe when titling it to the foot, the lower ing of the heels, the excessive paring of the frog or of the bars, the bad fit ting of the shoe, useless calks, too many nails in the quarter or near the heels. All tbe?e errors must be careful ly avoided. The foot, moreover, must not be allowed to grow too long. The shoeing should be renewed monthly, even if the shoe is -not worn, and, last ly, the horse must not be allowed too long periods of inactivity. Horses Need Shoes. It has been proposed to abolish the custom of shoeing, but in the present conditions and modes of using the horse this is impossible. The feet de prived of their accustomed protection would soon become painful, and only by keeping the animal in the country could the feet be suffered to remain unshod. Fevcral modes of shoeing have been Invented to prevent contractions in feet which arc predisposed to them. or.;e are undoubtedly beneficial. Good shoeing is often all that is required. It Is necessary tc study the pose of the limb and in preparing the foot to have it absolutely level, also the shoe, and by all moans try to preserve the natural elasticity of the foot, not let it get too dry or become too soft, but en deavor to preserve a proper equilib rium. Charles It. Yocd, V. S., in American Cultivator. Keep the Colt Growing. The first year of the colt's life is very Important; therefore keep him growing the first year, keep him growing the second year, keep him growing the third year and keep him growing the fourth year, and in tfcit same year, if you are going to put him on the market in the fifth year, feed him up and get him fat. Fat covers a lot of defects with horses, says Western Life. We don't want him too fat if we keep him at work, but when the other fellow wants him he wants him fat. THE HORSEMAN Never allow two foals to feed out of the same box. Oue is sure sooner or later to become master and secure the lion's share. A stunted colt will never make so good a horse as one kept vigorously growing from the start. Plenty of exercise should be given in the open air on all pleasant days. Never wean the foal too quickly, but by degrees. It is best for both the mare and foal to take two or three weeks to do it Feed foal often, both during the time of and after weaning. When driving a horse make that your business, says a writer in Farm Jour nal. More horses are spoiled by slack drivers than in any other way. Give the foal first class care through out the winter. Never allow the foal to follow the i more when working, but keep it in a i well built, roomy box. The little colt should have a feed 1 twice a day of oats, bran and oilmeal ' 3-2-1 beginning with a pint and in- . creasing to a quart A colt fed in this way and given a run in a paddock every day will never have unsound feet and legs unless by accident. If you feel as if you cannot break a horse or colt, do not try it for he will discover your fears very quickly. If you have any reason to fear you can not master the colt, better got help or sell him unbroken before taking the chances of spoiling him and thus mak ing him so much harder to conquer. The ideal way is to begin with the lit tle fellow while yet weak and establish your mastery. Keep at it until he is old enough to hitch, and the breaking will be easy. Breeders should never sell their best mare when young unless they have one or more fillies by a first class stallion from her to take her place in the brood mare ranks, says the Horse Breeder. Most brood mares that are not pro ducers of record performers begin to deteriorate, or, rather, depreciate, in selling value after they are fourteen years old. The small farmer who raises but one or two a year should plan to sell his brood mares before their values begin to depreciate and replace them with their best fillies that are from three to five years old. By continuing along these lines the small breeder will make more money, as a rule, than by keeping mares until they are past use and have really no market value. Avoid the habit of keeping the horse's manger filled with bay all the time. Overfeeding on hay is quite liable to cause heaves In horses. The trouble In the respiratory organs, Bays' Farm Journal, is simply a result of the dis ease In the digestive organs. A horse with the heaves Is In very much the same condition as a person wRhdyrK pepsia.' - One of the most common causes la overfeeding on- coarse, oTer ripe, woody. Indigestible- hay, particu larly clover hay. - - Results of Various . Experiments ; -u With AHalfe. i-. In Cheyenne county, Neb Brott brother have been experimenting vith JfaiCa nine years, (reports iwattm man in Orange Judd Farmer. At first Jthey r.ecrwad. ;jalfalfa seed broadcast, which is the common method .undfcr ir rigation. (An experienoe of nine 'rears has shows them that broadcast seed- fog doe.uo;glve the best results in dry seasons. At an (elevation of .some thing, more than 4jOOO.,feet there is not always sufficient moisture during the driest seasons to perfect a good; crop- of seed when grown by the broadcast method. ' . i Using a Two Row Cultivator. In the course of their experiments Brott brothers have tested drilling in eighteen to-, twenty two inch drills. They have found that in drills of this widtl the kind of cultivation that can be gi"-en to the alfalfa plant in narrow rows ioes not secure the best results. Durir the more recent years they have tested seeding alfalfa for a seed crop J drills thirty-six to forty inches apart This allows the use of a two row c'Utivator, enabling a man with a good feam on half mile rows to culti vate ('.ghteen to twenty acres daily. They f nd that to secure the best re sults In conserving 'moisture they should cultivate to tl3 depth of four inches, cultivating four to' five times during She season. It Pods Freely. On tliese high table lands alfalfa drilled m rows thirty-six to forty inches apart branches widely, pods freely and develops; a better seed crop" than un der any other method so far tested. It is their purpose to cultivate 130 acres of alfalfa the coming season and to enlarge their plant as rapidly as they can break the prairie and get the land under cultivation. The method which they now pursue is to place fields under cultivation in the early spring, thus conserving the winter moisture, then keep the soil loose and in good tilth until the 1st of August and seed with a drill. This method avoids a weed crop. SEED CORN TEST. Important Point In Securing a Good Stand In the Field. For testing corn take a tight wooden box eighteen inches square and four to six inches deep (or of. some convenient GOOD EARS Of WHITE CORN. dimensions), put In two or three Inches of moist sand and cover with a piece of white muslin which has been ruled into squares about two inches across. Have the seed corn laid on a table oi shelf where it will not be disturbed. From the first ear take kernels from near the butt, middle and tip of ear, then turn the ear over and take three more kernels fiom the other side. Place these six kernels In the first check or square No. 1); take six ker nels from the second ear and place in the second square (No. 2), etc., until you have sampled all of the ears. Cover the grain carefully with another piece of cloth about the same size as the box and also with a second piece of cloth enough larger to extend up on the sides to the top of the box. Put In one or two inches more of moist sand and keep the box in the ordinary living room temperature of the house. Add more water if the sand becomes too dry. The corn should germinate In from three to five days. Those ears whose kernels da not all germinate in five days should be discarded. Vetch Pasture In Spring. In western Oregon and Washington, where fall sown vetch matures for hay in June and rains are not infre quent at this season of the year, it is quite a common practice to pasture It In the early spring March and April to keep the growth from becoming so heavy that it wilt fall before it is cut and to retard its development so that haymaking will occur after the rains are over. If the crop Is heavy and falls during bad weather. It is best to make ensilage of It immediately. Cost of Hauling Wheat by Wagon. Transportation Expert Frank An drews places the average cost to the farmer of hauling wheat from farms to shipping points at 9 cents per 100 pounds; the average distance hauled, 9.4 miles, and the average wagon load of wheat 3,323 pounds, thus contain ing about fifty-five bushels. Land Plaster on Clover. In the Willamette valley, Oregon, it Is a common practice to apply land plaster to clover In the spring during March and April. From forty to sixty pounds per acre applied on the surface of the ground in the early spring are said to doable the yield of both hay and seed. - . , , -i After Milking. Milk is often spoiled by allowing it to stand. In the barn, too long after it to drown.- It readHyf. absorb odors from the- ait; and , oflora- -the .barn are usually Teryl moeV l evidence. For this reason thftmUk.,ahorid be gnlckly removed, ton piaee free from dor. " ' - hd HeXittcr. After the litter has got well started say "from a., week, to ten days-t$he sovmirynbe fed ttll Sheiwtlk pzh oa j h v. ... h i. i2a bad results 'will follow writesrdN aw York? breeder in "American 'alHvator. When 'the pigs arfabout three weeks old they will show an inclination to eat a little. At this time.; they should be giTen a little of the sained feed as the sow is getting, and a;" little -milk may he-added:---This side table should be placed Where the mother cannot get at :t, and the pigs should get but a very A PTJIiE BKED CHESHIBS BAKBOW. ittle at a time, and under no circum stances should any be left in their rough to sour. Sour or stale feed hould never be tolerated. One, of the irst grains a little pig will eat is .racked shelled corn, and if a handful e thrown upon the floor it will ;oon clean it up. : The trough that is prepared for the young litter should be streiaely shallow that they may cat vithout having to get into it. A deep rrongh is very bad, as pigs will have :o climb into it to eat and are liable o be injured in getting in and out. Started gradually iu this maimer. md any changes in the feed that have o be. made made very gradually, the oigs may be grown very rapidly. When at the age of three months they nay be weaned by removing the sow :rom the j"ard or lot where she and her .itter have been, and the pigs will hardly know when they are weaned, tf one wishes to wean at an earlier ige, it may be done, but if the sow is i good milker it must be done grad ually by removing the sow for a part of the day at first; then after a day or two she may be kept away for a whole lay and after a little all the time till there Is no danger of a caked udder ind spoiled teats. After weaning the pigs they should be pushed along as fast as possible by giving them good feed and a grass lot to graze in. If one has the milk it would bo well to mix the ground feed in it, but if not an addition of the 5 to 10 per cent tankage will grow them about as well and make just as large a pig for age as if fed milk and at little expense. Mix all feed quite thickly. Many a feeder makes a great mistake tn making his pigs take too thin slop, and they have to take too much to get what fed they need. As the pigs grow older a little corn may be given them. In fact, a variety of feed is always best at this age, but all changes must be made carefully, so as not to upset their system or check their thrift. Pigs properly fed and well bred should easily weigh a hundred pounds at three months of age. This is the cheapest hundred pounds you will ever make, and it will not cost to exceed 1 to 1V cents per pound, . while the next hun dred pounds will cost you 2 to 2Vi cents a pound. These pigs should at six months of age weigh from 200 to 225 pounds each and be ready to top any market in the world at eight months of age at a weight of 250 pounds or more. Handled in this man ner one may ship or sell his crop of pigs before every man in the neighbor hood is ready and In this way get the benefit of the early market. When ev ery one is ready and all are selling one usually finds the market declining. It Is as ever the old saying, "The early bird catches the worm." It is this kind of pigs that top all markets and are sold and packed in this country and sold in foreign countries as best Wilt shire bacon and hams. The illustration shows a pure bred Cheshire, eight months old and weigh ing 305 pounds, one from a pen of five exhibited at the Chicago international fat stock exhibition, winning the grand championship in the butcher and block list, all breeds competing. Self Feeding Rack and Shed. To make a self feeding rack and shed set three or more stout posts firmly in the ground on each side as long as yon FEEDING BACK FOB LIVE STOCK, wish to make the shed. About six feet from the ground board up and roof the shed like any other building, with a large window In each end, says a writer in Farm Progress. Make a feeding rack of poles through the cen ter like a V, the upper end of poles resting on the outside plates. You can fill this shed with hay, straw or fodder as fast as eaten from below. It will settle down and can be refilled when ever necessary. This makes a fine rack for sheep, cattle or any other stock, at the same time- sheltering them, and makes a covered manure shed, as the. waste polled ont will be-trampled under- -foot and by tramping converted into manure, a : triple combination In one If made wide enough. The refilling can be, don Irom either end very eaa-j wyifre-.-Hi.xne rroquetien ; Bt; -- vrr vream..?; f .-i-Pfc-iS-f ; The Oklahoma experiment station has Issued the--i folio wing -suggestions, to Idalrymen as a guide ortb production 6f 'cream of good quaHtyt" Y.i... . ''f Clean . cream, cold cream and rich cream are the. three words which ' tell the secret of .producing sweet cream. 5 Be clean and sanitary in; milking. " Have all pails, crocks, cans and dairy ntH3tls"scaldea and-'clean: i1 Keep the separator clean by washing tfter-ertcB separating:' i- t; A- " ilCool each Ut'of'itream In cold water before setting Jt .away, land- .have it thoroughly, cooled before adding to the , GiHral lot of cream. A good way is never to mix a fresh batch of cream with older: cream,? but keep each lot from the different, septratings separate and in one gallon crocks . - . Have a well ventilated cave or cool cellar in which to keep the cream. Stir each of the separate lots of cream every day to keep them uniform. . Have a wire screen for each crock so as to "air the cream" and keep out flies and insects. Deliver the cream to the creamery or receiving station three times a week in summer and twice a week in winter. Insist on the creamery man weighing out the sample of cream for a test in stead of measuring in a pipette. The scales are more accurate. Have the cows come fresh jn Septem ber and October and reaeive 25 to 30 cents a pound for the butter fat in win ter instead of 13 to 20 cents a pound in summer. - Care of a Calving Cow. If a cow is a very heavy milker and In high condition, it would be well to give her light feed for abort a week before freshening, to thin the blood a lirt'.e, as a preventive of miik fever. Keep, close watch of her and put her in a box stall at night, so that when she dees calve she may have her free- ! dom. After calving give her a warm mash of bran with a handful of salt scattered on top. Let the calf suck and then strip her out and put her back in her stall. See that she cleans. Do not give her any cold water until after she has cleaned. Work her slow ly on to her feed. I do not like to miik a heifer before calving. Let the calf suck once, and if the heifer takes kindly to her milker and gives down her milk freely she is just as well off back in her stall, but if she holds up her milk and wants her calf let her have it. Milk her at the same time of the calf sucking until she takes kindly to her milker. C. M. Winslow in Rural New Yorker. FEEDING FOR. MILK Only the amount of food in excess of that which i3 necessary to maintain animal heat and repair the waste of the animal tissue can possibly be a source of profit; hence the more a cow can be induced to eat above this amount within safe limits the larger profits she should return in the total amount of food consumed. Feeding Silage to Cows. In writing of the value of the silo in the National Stockman and Farmer a New York dairyman says: About thirty or at most forty pounds a day. of silage is as much as should be fed to each cow. If the feeding commences immediately after filling the silo, and this Is a good way to do, there will be no damaged silage at all. My way to feed the silage ration is in two feeds, night and morning, and it is better to feed after milking, because the peculiar odor of the silage might affect the flavor of the milk. It Pays to Feed Well. To be successful at dairying we should know that a cow is a machine and that we will get out of her just in proportion as we put in, writes C. I. Hunt in American Agriculturist. We would not think of taking pumpkins to the mill for cider, neither should we ex pect to get milk from a cow 4pd on timothy hay or com fodder alone. Nor should we expect a profit from cows when they are fed barely a mainte nance ration. The profit must come from the excess of feed above that used to maintain life. How foolish, then, to withhold the little extra, that which pays for all the feed used. Is it not much better to feed a ration cost ing say $3 per month and produce $10 worth of milk than to use one costing only $2.50 and get no returns? Value of Salt. Salt is a very important item a the dietary of a cow, and many people are very careless and negligent about feeding it. Salt is a constituent of the body and like all other constituents must be replaced through the channels of nutrition, but salt has other func tion? besides forming a small part of j the organised body. Salt accelerates ! the assimilation of food, especially fa- j cilitr.ting the passage of the albumi- ' noids of the food from the digestive canal into the blood and facilitating . the circulation, thus increasing the en ergy of the vital processes. - Roots as Feed. In arranging the plots and fields for crops this summer do not forget to plant an acre or two of roots for the dairy cow. Such roots as the so called "cow. beets," mangels, turnips and even potatoes make an acceptable change from the more concentrated feeds during the winter. Most' of these roots need not be planted till after the corn is in. Of course none of the Toota are rich in food elements, alnce they ere composed largely of water, but that Is where their value lies." They serve as a balance to the concentrated feeds; Enough caa be raised, upon.' an acra oc two. to provide an abundance for ser- j FEEDING SHEEP FOR. PROFIT i !? t rhave ' fed "in "Nibraskar'ilnd1 WyS J miug and have always .done It 'btr'a ! large scale.1' I have been quite success ful and s Hp pose, my experience will- be helpful to others, even though engaged on a smaller scale, writes a Montana breeder in American Agriculturist, iue The f first' essential fai tor get 'good sheep. Ta my notion that is the most vital point ..For my part I would pre fer Merino, Eambouillet or . Delaine grades, as .they are very hardy, good fatteners, and their wool Is fine and gives fheni good protection ; against cold, wet iweather, more ' so than the coarse wooled breeds. ' : Making a Good Trough. More care should be taken in start ing sheep, especially lambs, than any other stock, as they easily overfeed themselves, and it is not an easy mat ter to get them back to their normal condition again. Troughs should be built for sheep according to their size. Take a sixteen foot board teu or twelve Inches wide. Nail four inch cribbing on the sides and put ends bn of the same material. Take 2 by 4's and cut thirty-two inches long. . Cut slanting iu the middle four inches and nail to sides about two and one-half feet from the end and brace under the bottom. This will keep the sheep from tipping them over. Take two pieces of six inch material aud cut on one end four Inches down, so as to let iu a cribbing four inches wide in the slot so i:ade. Nail small piece to the fail of trough aud put in cribbing and nail. Then brace on middle with two inch piece. This will keep the sheep from getting in the trough with their feet. This plan is for a lamb trough. Make a lit tle higher for grown sheep. Starting on Feed. For wethers give one peck of oats in the same manner to each hund "ed, all the hay they will eat, both lambs and older sheep, and increase gradually un til all the sheep have learned to come to the trough when the gates are open ed. When ail have become accustomed to feed and they clean up one-half bushel of oats to the hundred, then mix in about one gallon of cornmeal (corn should never be fed whole) and in crease pretty rapidly with corn until at the end of one month they should be on about three-fourths full feed. Full feed is all they will eat up clean in about fifteen minutes, or about two and one-half to three bushels for lambs and from four to seven bushels for wethers, according to age and size. Cull ewes should be fed in self feed ers when started, as they require more time to eat than younger sheep, and in place of corn use wheat screenings and middlings, about half of each to about one-third of cornmeal. Self feeders are not preferred for young sheep because they have a tendency to gorge them selves, and when that happens death nearly always follows. The illustration shows the champion Lincoln ram at the 1003 international CHAMPION LINCOLN BAM. live stock show. It is owned by J. H. Patrick of Ontario. Jottings by a Hog Feeder. I have been feeding hogs for a num ber of years and have had almost no losses, while all around me so called cholera has devastated one herd after another, writes J. P. Fletcher in Amer ican Cultivator. Here are a few of the things I did and did not do, which I believe kept my herds from disease: Do not feed an extreme green corn diet Do not crowd the young stock un naturally. Keep clear water before them all the time. Keep the sleeping quarters clean and dry. Have good shade during the warm weather. Give the hogs salt and ashes, espe cially hard coal ashes, and an occa sional dose of copperas and sulphur in the slop. Be particularly careful about this with the hogs that are in the feed ing pens. Keep the hogs and their yard in a sanitary condition and watch the herd carefully in order that no disease may get a start All these points should be kept In mind, for they are the only effective Insurance against cholera and kindred diseases. Feeding the Brood Sow. From two weeks after breeding to within four weeks of farrowing I feed my sows the following, writes a breed er In National Stockman and Farmer: In the morning three quarts of oats, not ground; at noon a drink of water or swill slightly thickened with either middlings, tankage or bran; at night a feed of corn. Of course some brood sows have a greater tendency to lay on fat than others, and this tendency is kept ' within proper : allowance by using less corn. A sow at 'farrowlng should not be overly fat,- but should be put in grKxl. round -condition as soon aa practicable after pigauw weanedvtheo kept sUghtgsJnlng.iintilrith.la ones arrive. " ." ceived yesterday bjr wtarivre, eneMneed hi sale amvalin Ireland, hie old home, 1 A party o rajlroad Uaiher land seekers, while oat en preepertiait ' trip a day or wb ago. captured two little wildcats and, fawn, over in the A1en country. The nartfes hailed from Independence but names were not learned"; 3 , " ., ' ' - There was a general cleaning np and burning: of trash around the Johnson brick, y sterdav, leaving a clear" walk add a more 'convenient way open for reaching the postoffice." "TKehjb' w daiy appreciated by the pubHe. '' - It is the intention to-make the Tova picnic a week from' tomorrow, one of the most enjoyable affairs Of Hie kind ever given hereabouts, sf.d there ie renson to believe that there will be a larse attend nee. A musical and li'erary program, ppeecbes, tames and general merry making will be the order, and a good time is asured all who attend. At the United Evangelical church th annnnl mem-vial service of the G. A. R. and W. R. C. will he held at 11 a. m. The Post and Corps will attend in a body and the sermon will ho united to the oc casion. In the evening the W. M. 8. will have charce and Mr. Roberts of th College Y. M. C. A., will deli ver an ad dress. Rev. C. T. Hnrd, pastor. About f0 Bellefoiiftain citizenR hove been in Corvallia this wefk, inqnirine in to the railroad land proposition and ar ranging to file on certain desirable tracts, hoping thu to establish a claim that; may 'o'er hp ecrjrn;zd by the railroad company and result in the tracts being soid to these first, sppkers, in case the comnany is forced bv the pnvprnmtnt into a sals ot these timber holdings. "Old Arkansas" was the attraction at the oner honsp, Wednesdav evening:, i and it was greeted by a fair sized audi I ence and an appreciative one. The plav i is on the same order as the "Missouri Girl." and some of the chaiactprs depict, ed threw the onlookers into a gale ot lanchter without a word beine spoken. ; The ch aracter of old Jeremiah Snorfirraa I ia exceptionally good in this production i and ia one that keepa the audience de. j lighted from start to finish. Aa a who1 the performance is creditable and seemed to please Corvallis theatre goers. Two very exhaustive and valuable I bulletins on apple culture have just been ' issued bv Prof. C. I. Lewis of OAC. j One bulletin is entitled, "The Apple : from Orchird to Market," in which pack. ! ine and packing boxes, the marking of ' packages, storage, the loading of care and many other subjects are treated. j The other is entitled "Orchard Manaz" i ment," and Prof. Lewis and W, H. Wicka . issued the bulletin jointly. This deals I with location, soil, drainage, cultivation, irrigation, propogation and many other phases of handling and putting out an orchard. These bulletins are sent to any resident of Oregon who desires them. Mrs. and Mrs. K. R. Bryson were, called to Portland, Wednesday morning;, by the critical illness ot the former' mother, Mrs. Mary Bryson, who w- not expected to live through tht previous night. ' A message from E. R. Bryson, Wednesday noon, announced that the doctors had given up all hope and that the patient was wholly paralyzed on one side of the body. Death, the message said, might come at any moment, or it may be several weeks delayed, but the case is hopeless. Mrs. Bryson is the widow of the late Hon, W. Ri Bryson and is one of the highly resnected ladies of Corvallis, where until recent years., she has made her home. The news ot her serious condition is de9ply regretted by many friends here. A 2old tsp. To overcome the weii-gronnded and reasonable objections of the more intel ligent to the use of secret, medicinal com pounds, Dr. B. V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y., some timo ago, decided to make a bold departure from the usual course pursued by the makers of put-up medicines for do mestic use, and, so has published broad cast and orcr y to the whole world, a full and complete list of all the ingredients entering inWtiiecjrjpcsitioaof his widely celebrated fodictaes. Thus he has takea his numerals cutrons and patients into his full oriSnce. Thus too he has re movedhisfcedicines from among secret nostrprufof doubtful merits, and made Bv h's nol-i.stpn nr. rierce has shown thiiPiiis formulas areuts;tch. that he is i.ufTTSF .to subject them tlie-C'i!!" -t wrntinv.. .. Not only docs the wronger of every bottle of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, the famous medicine tor weak btcmach. iJir-d liver or biliousness and all catarrhal diseasts wherever locate;, have primed upon it, in plain h nglu'h. a lull and complete list of a'l the ingredients composite it. but a small book has been compiled from numerov.s standard lucdieal works, of ail the different schoois of practice, containing very numer ous extracts from the writings of leading practitioners ot medicine, endorsing in tin strangest jnviie terms, each and every infrre tiient containc-.-i in Dr. Pierce's medicines One of these little books will be mailed tree to anyone sending address on postal card or by letter, to Dr. K. V. Pierce. Buffalo, N. Y.. and requesting the same. From this littlo book it will bo learned that Er. Pierce's med icines contain no alcohol, narcotics, mineral agents or other poisonous or injurious atrcnta and tha; they are made from native, medici nal roots of reat value: also that seme of the most valuable ingredients contained Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription tor weau, nervous, over-worked, "run-down." nervouf and debilitated women, were employed. Ions years ago, by the Indiana for similar ailment affecting' tbelr squaws. In facU one ot the. oiost valuable medicinal plants entering- into tiie composition of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre scription was known to the - Indians as Sauaw-Weed." Our knowledge of the psos of not a few of ous most valuable native, me dicinal plants was gained from the Indians. As made up by Improved and exact, pro desses, the "Favorite Prescription "la a mosl efficient remedy for regulating: all toe worn- aaly function, correcting displacements, aa ppaagsue, . ancevereion. ' and' retorversion. overcoming painful periods, toning np tb . serves ana bringing about a perfect- -tt'or health.. fioMbysJlflealeialaa-dlclnaa. w .. - - enti uiuij w f. -