Image provided by: Dallas Public Library; Dallas, OR
About Polk County itemizer. (Dallas, Or.) 1879-1927 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 18, 1903)
|„. WOODS, >1. U. MILKING THREE TIMES'A DAY Physician and Surgeon. Heaulta of Cureful Lxiierim eutlng In T hin D D . l . h I I hh , £ . J . O re ifim . ! 0 - V A R J Physician and Surgeon D A L L A Otticu ill i S . O A t C O N bulltlll»K. 11 u. K amin K S i hln Y, S I L S L f c S Y et K A K I N , A tU ir n o y n -iil-l a n v . vVc Dave th e only act o i .ib»tra> t bo«ke in Pc I ,UU V R e lia b le A iie tra cu fu rnin lied. *n d urnney t. UlUilM. Kooli » su. N < cniUniHsiori eiuirgod id . W leon’ii »»lock. I*alla» J. L. (JOLL1NS. iuroey and Counselor at Law, s o l i c i t o r au C b a u c e r y . . ti p ra ctice of l:*<t p rofessio n in th is p lace -ab >>it th irty y e a rs, and will a tte n d to all business • • r'jst-v l to his c a r e . Office, co rn e r Main and C ou rt « i)s ila s , Polk C o, O r J . N. r l\ R i ATTORNEY A T -L A W . 0 ± t Ü J Ö O LM 03Cia HAYTdit. A .t t o i ’i ie v 'a t'1 -i a .w . Ollice up sta ir s in C hiu pis IV s b u ’UI DALLAS - O K LU U N . r . L . H lIT I.K It E K 0 0A I ' BUTLER & I’ OAI) Attorney s-at-Law DAI.LAS, UKEUuN. W i 'l practice in all co uiia . over bank Office, W .J . S T O W , TRUCKMAN. R ad lia.s: O r e p o n A fair share of patronage solicited md all o-ders promptly filled. M 0 T 0 Ä T IM E T A B L E . Leavos Inde|>ondenco for M onm outh and Airlie — . :30 a in 8 :30 p in Leaves Indepondnce for M onm outh and P a lla s— 11:10am Leavt s M onm outh .*•0 a in for 615pm Airlie - 3 :50 p m Leaves M onm outh fo r Dallas— VI:20 a in 7:30 p m Leaves Virlio for M onnioutii aim III Impendence— »:(>( a in 5 p m Leaves D allas for M minoul U a n ’ In .ie e n d n ii# — t:00 p in 7 30 |> m. R. C. CRAVEN It. K. WII,LI A MS. PreNldvin. f'asliler. W. C. VASSALL, a s s i s t a n t C a s h ie r DALLAS OF L IT I D A L L A S, liA.Vh ORK41UN, l'ransacts a general hanking mini icss m all it« b ra n ch es; buy« and sell: dAChange on principal points in I he United S t a t e s ; makes collections on all jo in t s in the Pacific Nort hw est ; loans money and discounts paper at the best rates; allow interest, on tim e deposits. > v is it D R . J O R D A N 'S gbc . t ( B 3 U S E U M O F ANATSHY< 1 *1 1 1 1 U T T S T . I l l n t w u o i , C 1L T h e l - * f ;e s t A jia to m ica l M useum In th e W o r 14. H e jk p ( i > e s or an y e « *r r » c t« r t d is e a s e p s t i l i v e l y r a r s H t.y th e eldebT S p e c ia lis e ou d ie C o a st, li s t jo ye a rs. I 1 , I M . JORDAN —DISEASES Or M I N « ■ T P M I I . I 4 th o ro u g h ly e r s d ir a tc - l J D o n system w ithout th e i b * o l B e r e a r y f • • • « • fttic d h y an H sp ert. R » J i - i __ w r s lor B « | i t s r r . A q u ick a n d ^ radical c u re fo r P l i e » . F l n u r a a n d i F i i t u l v . I.y L>r. J o r d a n 's s p e c ia l pain J le s s m eth .id i. _____ am fr e e an d atrli-tly p riv a te T r e a tm e n t p er A ,nv nr b y le tte r A C u m in ev ery c a se v k e n . V r i - .e for B-u.k F r f l l U s O P l l V o f . I t H M l A L K , M A it.b O F R E E . ( A valu al bo o k I » m e « ) C a ll o r w rite DR IO R D A N S C O .. 1 0 B 1 Will It pay to milk three times a day “ I have used your Hair Visor f In ordinary dairy practice where no fo r five years and am greatly . fancy or unusual prices are obtained pleased with it. It ccriai'tiy re- ' for the milk and where records are not stores the original color to gray . hair. It keeps my hairsott.” —M. s. i sought for as having a moneyed value? Helen Kilkenny,New Ponl«n,!,/,ie. '• V\ e have been carrying ou some experi ments, beginning Jan. 12 uud ending Ayer’s Hair Vigo: ¡ u j May 10, the number of cows ranging from one to twenty, says H. E. Cook in been restoring color to Stockman and Farmer. gray hair for fifty ycur?. The first cow was giving from fifty and it never fail a tO do to fifty-two pounds a day on twice a this work, e;t!::r day minting and ten pounds of grain. You can re lv After milking u few days three times 1 J upon it a day and a daily increase of twelve to for stopping yo ur hair fifteen pounds u day her grain ration from failing, f jr keep! jig was gradually raised to fourteen your scalp clef and iur pounds, and she responded by giving making your hr.;: crow. for her best single day seventy-seven $1.90 a iioitlc. Aii dt:.~z isis. pounds and best seven successive days 527% pounds and for seventy-eight If your ilrug'-i l cannot supply you, j semi us «.no dollar and we wiiTexpress days 5.480 pounds, which was worth at you a bottle, l i e tare and (five the name market price and for which we re of your nearest c: press oflh e. Address, J. G . AVER CO., Lowell, M a s r . j ceived $78.20, or $1 per day; from April 1 to June 1, 3,048 pounds, which had a value of $40.07, a total of $118.87 from A S ta v e Silo Q u e ry . Jan. 12 to Juno 1 This cow is a half A Wisconsin farmer asks Hoard’s blood Holstein, weighs about 1,100 Dairyman this question: ‘‘In building a pounds and is ten years old. Gradually the number of cows was stave silo do you advise setting the increased until twenty were being staves back ou tjie foundation? If so milked three times a day. fed three how lunch.'or flush with the inside? •i % hJi' I'* * * A4 times and watered three times. They Would it be possible to plaster on the ate from nine to twelve pounds of bare clay, ns many cisterns are made, W : • in»~ vaisrizrvmn grain, silage and hay, what they would so as to prevent water from soaking in The first essential for the production eat clean in varying amounts. Differ- , from the sides and bottom?” The Dairyman makes the following of good milk is healthy cows, says a ent kinds of grain were fed, always aiming to keep the animals in good answer: •‘Ti e present writer in build writer In Scribner’s Magazine. The milking condition—that is. the rations ing a silo ou his f >rm set the staves work of the lungs In purifying the were not made too narrow. While the back from tl* Inner face of the founda blood for the manufacture of milk Is cows did net gain in flesh, neither did tlon wall about five Indies, and this too near the danger line to use the milk they lose. The nutritive ratio did not for the purpose of enabling him to line from a tuberculous animal. It is also vary materially from 1:3.5, except dur it with a course of brick if future de ing the last days of April, when the velopments should seem to make such Important that the milker should be in silage gave out and they ate early cut a lining desirable. This space or rim perfect health. Germs of disease are clover hay. The ration was then nar was tilled In with clay slanting up to thrown off in breathing and coughing rower, but lacked the succulence. The the staves, much as putty Is used to and epidemics have been known to milk yield was not materially changed, fasten glass in_^ a window. This cloy start in this way. The feed should be served the double purpose of making a sweet and free from must and any but the ration was more expensive. Another cow that had been giving tight joint between the staves and the abrupt change avoided. miik since early in the fall and was foundation and giving an easy slide tc A great deal of criticism is made as then (Jan. 19) giving twenty-five the silage over the projection. We have to silage feed, but whore it is made a had a great many reports from p irtic» pounds a day on seven pounds of grain part of the ration with other feeds in was given an additional three pounds who have practiced plastering the walls proportion the flavor of the milk will of silos in clay grounds with great sue and milked throe times a day. She re be benefited. See to it that the water sponded at once and made an average cess. The soil on our own farm is no ing place is clean and free from slime suitable for adopting this plan, so 1 l of'thirty-eight pounds for the subse and fertilizer. quent six weeks. She then dropped J iuttding cisterns we simply lin* U] It seems to be a difficult thing in off and has from that time made an with a single layer of brick and pu dairy managinueut to secure cleanly the cement on the brick.” average of thirty-three,pounds a day. conditions in a cow stable. About nine Still another cow, a very ordinary ty-nine out of a hundred are far from milker that had been brought into t e T a g r l i o n i a « M r « . C a r l y l e S a w H«* r sweet ami clean; the offensive odors In the “New Letters and Memorise dairy, was taken up and milked three contaminate the breath, blood and tis times without any change of care or of Jane Welsh Carlyle” is the following sue of the animal, and consequently a feed. She would not increase to ex quaint and caustic comment on T.v first class article of milk cannot be pro ceed three pounds a day. Then the glioni: duced. The barns should be dusted extra feed and extra care were put on. « “1 saw a very curious sight the othe? often and whitewashed at leust once a This also made but little change. She night, the only one I have been to fo; year, not only to give them a good ap would not give over thirty-two pounds ; a long time—viz, some thousands «f pearance and make the stable lighter, a day no matter what was done for the grandest and most cultivated peo but to purify them and kill any germs her. Now. that is my living definition ple in England, all gazing in ecstasrv of disease that may have collected on of a scrub cow. She had no place in and applauding to death over a woman, walls or ceilings. her milking economy for any more not even pretty, balancing herself on Whitewash is one of the cheapest food or milk. She did show some gain the extreme point of one great toe and disinfectants known and should be a rretching the other foot high into tn»* in flesh. air, much higher than decency c*%er part of the yearly routine. By the use dreamt of. It was Taglioni, our chier of a small fruit spray pump the work dancer at the opera, and this is her can bo accomplished much quicker and M s. chief feat, repeated over and over ro far more effectively than when applied 1 L 0 cV tv weariness- at least to my weariness. with a brush, as it can be driven into Blit duchesses were flinging bouquets every crack and corner. The lime at her feet, and not a man. except Car should be thoroughly ^slacl.ed and lyle, who did not seem disposed to fling himself. I counted twenty-five A correspondent of Rural New York bouquets! But what of that? Tl».. er asks:.“Has anything in the siio line empress of all the Russia» once In a fit of enthusiasm flung her diamond bracelet at the feet of this same Tag lioni—“virtue its own reward” (in thh world)? Dancing Is and singing and Has stood the test of‘2«r> years. An some other things still more frivolous. nual sale over 1,500,000 bottles. R A I L W A Y But for virtue? It may be stronglj Does this record of mer doubted, as Edinburgh people say to . ] r K rAOLK it appeal to you? everything oue tells them.” l 2o IMU 7: D a n Iv Dal Ins a r h i 10 j> m D .55 am I »3 I» hi 7:3 6 .« hi lv *T tn to Siuin^ ur 4:54 p m I) 39 am H ow to D ry W e t C love«. 1 I* in '7:59 u in Iv lU llnuns a r t 31 p m !»: :'<6 am ^ u reO o 1:45 P n ij7 :4 5 a m ;|v*Ui id -epo i t a - 4:4.'» p in }• am Gloves that have been wet should br N o 1:55 n "I 7;SS a in ar F al * CHt l\ 4 S3 p m ». 30 20 .ill) allowed to dry in a cool room. When D ! except >jiinlnjr they are dry. the pliability may he re T. Vaitlrt atop nil -i^nal* only. o « N o P& y stored by massaging them with oliv* LOUIS CE RUNG R ,J R fien era I Man a; oil. M a rV et $ t . . » . S ErHSILAOjE Van Orsdel, Hayes & Co., TIM E T A B L E D A LLA S P.A 88EN O KR— D A IL Y , E X SU N D A Y iQO p m L v ....................... P o rtla n d .................. ArlO 20 a ni :20 p m A r .................... W a » ................... Lv ":00 REA L E ST A T E D EA LER S F A R M S A N D C IT Y L O T S Purchasing agent for \V. C. McClure, of Saginaw, Michigan, and other eastern timber dealers. Room 1, upstairs, Wilson building. Y A M H IL L i*l VISIO N : P assen g er de}n»t r»o t uf J . Ift-r-on str e e t M R IK FRK TO H T—T lil W E E K L Y L a v e 7:40 a m . . . . P o rtla n d ............A rrive 3:32 p m I $a c 3:50 p ni ............. D a li* * ............ A rrive 8:2 0 a ra A rrive 5:96 p m ........... A irlie Leave 7:00 a m 4 ^ 4 ^ 4 4 4 4 4 O . '4 . Wl. B ID D L E . A. .1 . - M A H T IN , DA IN T E R , Moni», *ffrn and ornam ental, Kr* ’" ng. kalaominK and paper Hanging. D a ll a s , • - WE ARE IN IT. O beoov U. 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 A ! W HAT? Our li*ie new di-plft PROP. 222 South Teoria St., C h i c a u o , I I I ., Oct. 7, 190*2. Eight months ago I was so ill that I was compelled to lie or sit down nearly all the time. My stomach was so weak and upset that l could keep nothing on it and I vomited frequently. I could not urinate without great pain a d I coughed so much that my throat and lungs were raw and sore. Tho doctors pro nounced it Bright’s disease and others said it was consumption. It mattered little to me what they called it and I had no de sire to live. A sister visited ine from St. Louis and asked me if I had ever tried Wine of Cardui. I told her I had not and she bough a bottle. I believe that it save . my life. I believe many women could save much suffer ing if they but knew of its value. Flavor docs uot come by chance. Ev ery Intelligent butter maker Is fully aware of the uncertainty and the diffi culty of producing u uniform high flavor. Experience has taught us that when certain processes are followed the resulting product Is ordinarily of at least fair quality. But even under the best sanitary conditions the product la often strikingly variable in flavor from day to day. A S to ry W ith a M oral. A few (lays ago two farmers came to town and both brought butter for sale. One of the farmers had his product pressed into neat, compact half pound packages, and he readily sold it at 25 cents a pound. lie told the Herald man that he could not meet the de mand for his butter. The other had his butter In a bucket, und it looked soft and watery. After tramping around town from place to place try ing to sell he gave up in disgust and said it was no use to bring butter to town to sell, as nobody would buy it. This little relation of facts carries with It a moral. Can you not guess what that moral is?—-Palestine Herald. W ater In r *»m — none fin- r in fin* *»f.tte. 2 3 9 Liberty S treet J5£ t *P e 0 y ° r L0 aso »» Yon il«» n«u b ate t.* t»nv «nyihing or pay a cent t««r en» ti It of the fin rt ftirml-fire jh li.-h to rej ivenale your «»»tire house. The Houss Furnishing Co., Next door to Jos. Meyer it Sons. Stores: Salem and Albany ITow Iln tter. Every maker has a right to Incorpo rate water in his butter to the limit of the law* If ho desires, says Professor G. L. McKay of the Iowa Dairy school. Still I would not cure to advocate going to the limit. Fourteen and a half or 15 per cent will give a nice, dry appearing, waxy butter. If the water content of butter is too high, up in the neighbor hood of 20 per cent, it gives the butter a dead appearance, having a lighter shade of color, and when such butter is bored it has a tendency to roll up on the back of the trier, appearing mealy. Some makers have adopted the plan of adding more color to overcome the ef fects of the excessively high per cent of water. flo w Iu kstand*. to L '*e Old S h irt W n fu t*. How to S tain W ood B lack . Dissolve two ounces of shellac with one ounce of borax in a quart of water. Boil until a perfect solution is o >t lined, then add two teaspoonfuls of glycerin. After solution add sufficient aniKno Mack soluble in water, and the mixture is ready for use. How to Rem ove Scorches L in en . From Scorches can be removed from l uen or calico by applying the following mix ture: Flace half an onion, bruised an.l hoik'd, with a tablespoonful of vinegar, half a square inch of yellow soap and a teaspoonful of fuller's earth. Sm nr on the scorched surface and wash In four hours. H OW T O M A KE C A K E . V a l u a b l e SuffffeN tlona F o r P r a c t ic a l H o u sew ife. C lean Old slilrt waists may be used to g»>od advantage by being made Into kimono dressing sacks. Remove the collar and cut in a V at front of neck. Remove cuffs, gather at wrists and take out gathers at waist line. Now take cloth of a contrasting color and sew a strip about two inches wide around bottom of waist and sleeves and up fro its around neck, and the kimono is com plete. They are very little trouble to make and are both pretty and com fortable on a hot day. w n s c iiR D U i dom e to Silver inkstands and other writing table Implements constantly get stained with Ink. which, if treated at | once, is easy enough to remove. If. however, it has l»een allowed to ha; tea | on, try washing It in hot borax and . water, und If this is ineffectual rob the stains with a solution of chloride of lime. Don’t you want freedom from pain? Take Wine of Cardui and make one supreme effort to bo well. Yrou do not need to be a weak, helpless sufferer. You can have a woman’s health and do a woman’s work in life. Why not secure a bottle of Wine of Cardui from your druggist to day? IS m IS L m- WM, (tn -ts ... ”I had scrofula and erysipelas for eight een y e a r s , u n t i l I heard O R P O O S V o f# CURES A COLD IN ONE DAY CURES DRIP IN TW O DAYS $ DALLAS Repairing Promptly Done. ¡Try for Health! F lav o r. instantly. People much subject to cramp in bed have found great relief from, wearing on each leg a garter of wide tape, which has several thin si! os of cork (cut off u wine bottle cork) «titched on to it. th e How to K eep LenionM Fresh . To keep lemons, lay on a flat surface A F in e Jerw ey Cow. Miss Lily Haxwortli, who is said to and turn n glass tumbler over each. be the only lecturer on cooking to re This excludes the air, and the lemons ceive a gold medal for her work in this will keep for weeks. line, gave a practical, helpful talk on cakes and frosting at a pure food show -»ex in Industry” shows tnat women recently. Miss Haxwortli is a graduate no longer need to depend on men for a of the National Training School of living. According to the figures, wom (rookery, London, England. These are an’s emancipation is about complete. a few of her suggestions on cake mak- More than 88 per cent of the women workers of Massachusetts are unmar i lug: The smaller the cake the hotter should ried. Thpy prefer freedom, work and be the oven. Large rich cakes require Income of their own and care nothing for romance. Divorces, too, have in Very slow baking. Grease cake pans with lard or drip creased, being about one to every eight pings. as butter will be likely to make een marriages. These are the answers to the special census taker: One table The illustrat’on shows Lester, a fine the cake stick owing to the salt in it. In making fruit cakes add the frull shows 44 Women engaged as hack driv Jersey cow that is the property of before putting In the flour, ns this will ers, teamsters, etc.; 727 messengers and James J. Fleming of Monterey, Tenn. prevent it falling to the bottom of the errand girls. 5 butchers, 7 marble cut T r e a t m e n t F o r M lont. ters, 10 brick masons, 245 photogra Every dairyman should sjpply h'm cuke. Flouring the fruit Is unneces phers and 5 steam fitters, besides nu self with a trocar and cannula, as when Lsary unless the fruit Is (lamp. If a cake cracks open while baking merous other occupations usually filled the cows begin to bloat there is n t by men. More than 100.000 are in fac time enough to call a veterinarian. In the recipe contains too much flour. In creaming butter and sugar, when tories, 70,000 servants, and 20,000 prac sert the instrument at a point equally tice professions. distant from the last rib. the hip b n ■ the butter Is too hard to blend easily and the transverse process of the lum warm the bowl and. if necessary, warm A n tito x in In D ip h th e ria . bar vertebra' on the left side. Tho tro the sugar, but never warm the butter, Antitoxin In full strength and quality car is withdrawn af er both have he n as this will change botl^ texture and never yet failed to cure a case of diph properly inserted and the cannula let flavor of the cake. To get a line grained cake beat thor theria when administered on the first in place as long as any gases es ape day of the disease and hut rarely when One ounce each of powd r- d ging 'r oughly after the flour is added. Sweet milk makes cake that cuts 1 im on tho second or third day. Just ns cer and hyposulphite of soda may be Mvcu pound cake; sour milk makes spongy, tainly when administered within even in n little warm water after bloating. three days after exposure to a case it light cake. Hoard’s Dairyman. will prevent contracting the deadly dis Always sift flour before measuring; A G o o d C o w I n G e n e r a l l y H e r m a n « . ease. In every case of suspicious sore A good dairy cow is usually (tf a tig) then it may be sifted again with tl e throat give antitoxin at once and In baking powder to insure their being strung,N nervous disposition, and em large amount. It can do no possible will not stand the amount of abuse tho thoroughly blended. harm if the disease should prove not to a common scrub Is often accustomed io be diphtheria. It will save life* In nine IIow to M ukc R aspberry V ln o gn r. W h a t T h e y S h o u ld Y ield . ty-nine cases out of a hundred if It be For raspberry vinegar pour a quart A fairly good cow should give about diphtheria. The foregoing statement of good cider vinegar over two quarts 200 pounds of butter in the season win» Is made by Dr. A. D. Reynolds, commis of red raspberries and set aside for good treatment. Many really goo* sioner of health of Chicago, in an offi cows give as high as t)20 to 8-70 pound* two days. Drain off the liquid and cial publication. pour It over a second two quarts of of butter In a year. raspberries. Repeat this process once W h y » h « D id n 't M a r r y . more, strain carefully and add a pound I once knew u jolly maiden lady of a of sugar to each pint of Juice. Boll five certain age, and no Idler was she in the minutes and bottle. In serving allow world’s vineyards, but a sturdy sup two-thirds of water and a generouspor- porter of herself and her widowed I tlon of shaved ice to two-thirds of the mother mid family of younger chil vinegar. dren. This feminine family pillar was wont to give a certain reply when the 11 o xv t o I'»«» L e m o n * t o A d v n n t n n r c . ancient question, “Why do you not Few things are more disconcerting to Enclosed witli every bottle ie a 10 Of Ur. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discov marry?” was put to her by elderly j the thrifty housekeeper than a spill of cent package of Grove’« ery,” writes Mr. Ililery Koons, of Queens, Ink on her snowy nnpery. If a fresh bnsybodles. There are always people obtuse and stupid enough to propound W. Va. ’’ When I commenced to take BLACK BOOT LIVEB PILLS. this r edicine I weighed one hundred lemon is always kept In the house* the this silly conundrum. The answer of ugly black stain can be entirely re- and thirty pounds. I have taken six my heroine invariably was, “I am de hottli s o f Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical 1 moved by cutting a quarter of lemon termined not to marry until I can sup R-I-PA-N-S Tabules Discovery and three vials of his ‘ Pleas- and squeezing the Juice on the Ink port a husband In tho style to which h i ant Pellets,’ and am glad to say I feel spot, which should then he rubbed over lias been accustomed/* — Woman's Doctors find like a new man. I now weigh one linn. with yellow soap and rinsed In cold A good prescription deeh and seventy-five pounds. When 1 water. The properties of the lemon Home Companion. had used one bottle of the medicine I For mankind. T 'n u *«d D o o r *. could feel it was helping me. I realize are so numerous that, like a bottle of T h e 5 ce n t |*a>-kave is enough for u su al o ccasio n s An English decorator notes that Dr. pi ree's Golden Medical Discovery sweet oil, no housekeeper should ever Trie fam ily b o ttle , 60 c e n ts , contain« a su p p ly fo r a be without both these commodities. is the l>est medicine on earth ” doors which are not required for any y ear. A ll d ru g g ists a« 11 th e m . Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis Apart from culinary uses. If a child reason for their usual purp'xo may be wakes up with a tight little cough the locked and utilized In decoration. “In covery purifies the biers! and en Juice of a lemon, mixed with honey tirely eradicates the poisons that and given in small quantities, la most old houses where the walls are till« k they form deep r e c e s s s. and by plac breed and feed disease. It cures soothing. ing four c:r live shelves In these they scrofula, eczema, erysipelas, boils, are transformed Into excellent book pimples and other eruptions that I l o a f o S t r a i g h t e n t h o S h o u l d e r * . shelves. over or rather across which The following Is an excellent exercise n handsome curtain may be drawn. mar and scar the skin. Pitre blood is essential to goixl health. The for straightening the shoulders: Stand When the recess is not deep enough to weak, run-down, debilitated con quite upright and raise your arms till accommodate hooks narrow enameled they are In u straight line with your dition which so many people e x shoulders. Still keeping your elbows shelves will servo to till with old china, perience is commonly the effect of in the same position, touch your shoul- brlc-a-brnc and pluxos, und the effect impure blood. Dr. Pier**’s Golden d»T8 with the finger tips. Lower the produced by these arrangements is In Medical Discovery not only cleanses arms to the sides. It peat, but don't general uncommonly good.” the blood of impurities, but it in go on long after the muscles begin to Y « « i - I ’l n s r c r N a l l * . creases the activity of the blood- get tired. Take a rest and try again Don’t clip your finger nails with the making glands, and it enriches the Inter. scissors; use a good file. Clipping body with an abundant supply of causes the nails to become coarse nn*l I h m t o S to p t 'r n m p In t h e L eft*. heavy and rough. The general rule In pure, rich blood. People who are subject to cramp in T H I S SIGN AT UR* F ree . Dr. Pierce’s Common the legs should always be provided filing the nails Is to have them follow Sense Medical Adviser is sent fre t with n good strong piece of cord, espe the shape of the finger tip. but a nar rower, bettor effect can be obtained 1/ on receipt of stamps to pay expense dally In their bedroom. When the they are left a trifle longer In the cen cramp comes on take the cord, wind It of mailing only. Send 2 1 one-cent ter. They should be rounded, c f course; stamps for the tiook in paper covers, round the leg over the place where it never pointed. Claws are do longer In is cramped, take an end in each hand ■ I NT A P P E A R or ) i stamps f«»r the cloth-bound Yogue. They never were in rogue with volume. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, and give It a sharp pull, one that will people of good taste and flue aensibili- ON THE hurt a, little, and the erninu will cease ...5 0 C O K V A L I.I8 M A I L -D A IL Y 7 30 » m I .v .......................P u rtla ii'i..................Ar 5:5 0 p in 19 46 a in L v .......................D e rry ........................ Lv 2;18 p m U ;4 5 p m Ar ............. C-«rv«Hte. Lv 1:2 0 p m A t AlUany ainl C orvallis o m n e c t w ith train » of O regon C e n tral am i Ka.-tern railroad. IRON WORK TO ORDER of TASTELESS CHILL TONIS 3 0 , F/LLS CITY S WESTERN S O U T H ER N PA C IFIC — A L L K IN D S O F — i Y artn tlou q a o v E ’S ( Dallas Foundry! strained tnrougiia flue wire screen or cloth and made thill enough to work nicely through the nozzle. A half bushel of lime will make about thirty gallons of whitewash, and this should be used while fresh, as It lo»C3 its power to kill germ life after standing. B la ck H a ir J ■ te g p j Room 1, Untiedd b t i i l c l l n . c. A-i_. - A -a. D irectio n . been louiid more desirable fti any way than a plain stave silo with round iron hoops?” To which a staff writer replies: “The concrete silo is more durable or a plank silo lined with brick and the plank siio bound from top to bottom with boards as hooping and plastered inside with cement may also have • ome^exceeding value, but of all the differently con structed all wood silos none possesses the merit of the stave silo. I am using i one of this klud. and experience has | demonstrated that it is most comp'.ee. j Those who have inspected rarely fill ip ; say, “Thut Is the best silo I have seen.” j It is made of pine sawed 2% by 0. bev- j clod, grooved and tongued and put to gether with white lead, then hooped . with one-half Inch steel wire rope put j on three feet apart. The found ta n Is a stone wall three feet high, perpendic ular Inside, with the staves and a ce ment bottom, roofed with a neatly fin ished conical roof. The doors are con tinuous. alternating with two staves between them; in other words, a door between each hoop. These doors are beveled like a cold storage door and hung upon the outside, more conven lent, more durable and by all means the place for them.” 117 « El EVERY BOX OF GENUINE Buffalo N V i