Beaver State herald. (Gresham and Montavilla, Multnomah Co., Or.) 190?-1914, January 16, 1913, Image 7

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GOOD ROADS IN STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA
LAND OF ORANGE BLOSSOMS
POULTRY AND GAME
South of France Relied on for Mar-
rlage Emblems Worn When Eng-
llsh Bridss Go to Altar.
Cea sat *ou fan«* griaaa for Wild Desks
•nd *U mt sama In »aa«im. Write u* fur
aaah oltvr *n all kindr of poolin' pork. ate.
PearNon-I'uge Co., I'ortland
In many ways th* modern marriage
y differs from tho weddings of yester-
' day, but with all the changes the
ceremony Is not really complete with
out orange blossoms. A huge quan­
tity of the pure while fragrant flowers
are used every year at fashionable
ceremonies, and yet not many people
seam to kuow where they all come
from.
Aa a matter of fact, nearly all the
orange bloaaoma which come to Ixm-
OWARD r. Rt'RTUM
¿maree >** <u.w,
Laaavii!«. (sAÌ<»»a4«>
H^ shi II m «« briaaai (loia, don are grown In the aouth I of Franco,
H •tlvwr
Laad, u «s.hl. Nihwr, Itw. Qald. Mto; K im
•9 Uvpiwr, Ci Malli«*« ••■ *•!«>(>*• • ,4 tuli prlr« ||g| a tew miles Inland from the coast
Beni ou affli!n«* (\-«irol a».4 l'mblr* «orto ■»
line of the Riviera, aaya the Dally
Qtfboaala
News of that city. Here, where the
■heltored vallnys of the Alps Marl­
a’**x**M • *sss*«l-Ba** MaaMrv-
times lie basking In the sun. are
-¿-x
found the orange orchard* whence
frller*. Bwwmlll«, *tr Th« J. h Martin Cn.. Ml iat
cornea the supply of blossom* for
rurtiai»«! H«t.4 f<.r Stu* k I tai «>4 prWaa.
nritiah wedding*.
Of course, a large proportion of the
orange flower* la used In the manu­
facture of that perfume for which
Grasse haa become so famous, but
/falfr*/Afar fri /’/*<• /ìiW
many growers make a special feature
of auppiylng sprigs for tho marriage
H. UF.RES4 CO g
ceremony. None of these trees are
/ /' Havemaiin.
V
■ANUrtmillM. HtllUO
permitted to bear fruit and the great-
ISS *«— R
G.M ■»
est possible care la taken over the
U fk* IU>1 kA
rrtkk.
cultivation, so aa to Insure an abun-
dance of bloaaoma
When In full
flower the tree* present a most al-
tractive appearance, the dark ever­
HUNTERS! TRAPPERS! green
foliage showing up In fine con­
I'*al direct with man u far-
lurwr,
W« pay th« hi«h««t trast to the gleaming white petals. It
pile«* fur Raw Fur«
Writ» la one of the peculiar habit* of the
lor fra« prtca Hat and ah ip pi rig
orange tree that It will remain In
flower for a considerable part of the
N I. INUI CO , FURRIFJtt
year; thus the owner of a well maa
rOIHARO 0«
aged orchard can at almost all times
And a few blossoming shoots.
"X
During the spring and early ium-
mar the orange trees are moat full of
blooms and it la then that the larg­
est quantities are dispatched All day
Al»> l*n>l l-laater. Urna. Cam»nt. Wall Pia».
ter atwl Bhhitfte» Write for priera.
long the pickers are at work in the
NOTTINtUIAM A co.
orchards
Curious stepladders are
101 Presi Sirrei.
|-oari.AM>. OR.
used ao that the gatherer may be
V
______
able to reach all parts of tho treea.
The orange flowers are going a long
journey and on this account It Is need­
ful to pick tlii-rn before they are
fully expanded
Happily, they keep
■OLTON «>»1 HI LSI III R
well for a long time, and the blooms j
ban* Inatrumanla. Tha moat nanplata atark
will be nice and fresh when they are
of Muao-al M^rrhamhaa la tha Norlhwaat.
Write for Catalaguaa.
unpacked thirty-six hours later in the
■KIHEMI.ISG-LUCAS Mt'SIC CO.
florist's shop. After being kept In
IM Maraa* Hlrwt.
Parllaa*. On*aa
the dark, cool place, with their stems
In warm water for a few hours, the
petal* will expand beautifully and be
ready for use.
Orange flower growing Is possibly
Buy* and Giria want mi to manufacture and »oil
Perfection Furniture Pollah.
A*enta pay 15c. one of the most flourishing Industries
Ratal U 25c.
Send 50r for formula and directioaa. In the world. In that the demand al
way* exceeds the supply, Any super-
Material Matti Be. ART« MFU. CO.. DafrU G.
fluous blooms which a grower may
811-12 Hernlcu Hid*.. Tacoma. Waah.
have are always greedily swallowed
up by the scent makers, whose wants
AphorlsMs of Lsuy uiriu.
can never be fully met. Moat of the
It Is such a relief to "let go,“ as n:
orchards are owned by small holder*,
aunt said wheu she gave up kro-pin,
■nd In many cases those have been
a waist! Women And a man dull sn>
retained In the family for a large num­
uninteresting when hs propose* t<
ber of yeara. Thus It Is not an easy
another woman
"The Chequ«
thing for a newcomer to be able to
Board.’ bv !<■*>• •••>'» n
secure an orchard save on the rare
occaalons when those are offered for
■ale. The starting of an orange or-
chai J Is a very alow business, as the
Opposition,
trees are not quick growers and It la
A Blair county barrister recently some time before anything in the way
handed a brief up to the court In of crops can be expected.
which he thus described his two
brethren on »he other sld*: "They
lono-Magn*tlc Rotation.
are like two ghouls In a count r?
A new phenomenon has been ob-
graveyard seeking * carcass to d,
served by Professor Righl to which
qoor.“—Phnsde’-*-''
he gives the name of iono magnetic
rotation If a spark from a condenser
of considerable capacity Is sent horl-
lontally through a gas and two small
vertical vanes of mica In the form of
a cross are suspended In the middle
of the discharge by a fine fiber at­
tached to the center of the cross, the
■park produces no rotation of the
Join the merry thousands who
cross. If. however, a vertical mag
enjoy good health as a result of
I
netlc Held la established In the gas.
taking care of the Stomach,
the cross rotates through a consider­
IJver and llowcls.
It is there­
able angle If the gas Is air, and over
fore unnecessary for you to
a small angle In other gases Profes­
suffer from Indigestion, Fermen­
sor Right ascribes this rotation to the
tation, Heartburn, Hick Hrad-
bending of the paths of the Ions or
ache, BilioURnesN, ('osti ven css.
electrons nnd to the additional pro­
tection which the vanes afford each
Just get a
Colds or Grippe,
other against Impacts from one side
bottle of
rather than from tho other In these
circumstances.
The observed rota­
tions Indicate that the effects of the
positive Ions are In general greater
than those of the negative.
Doubly Glad is the Man Who Smokes
I >.
s.
Machinery
RAW FURS
WANTED
LIME FERTILIZER
♦4
■ . ■'
*e>/.r
■nd notice the improvement in
your general health. It will help
you. Refuse Hiibatitutm.
“Start Today”
DIDN’T HURT A BIT”
«Ì
is what they all say
our
Painless
Method* of
Extracting
Teeth.
Out-of-town peo­
ple can have their
plate and brhlgr-
work finiaheil In on.
day If neceaaarv.
An absolute suar-
nntee. baoke.1 by 2li
yeara In Portland.
Wise Dental Co.
orner hours :
• A M. to ■ P. M.
Sunday* 9 ta 1
Phonv.i A 2029; Main 2029.
failins Bld*.. Third nnd Waahlnslon. Partland
PISO'S REMEDY
Ú
KJ
q
TOR COUCHS AND COLDS **
I
*
DISCUSS A DULUTH HIGHWAY
Through Thoroughfare to Be
catad by Commercial Bodlee
Three Big Cities.
Adv»-
of
roads
good
Three
enthusiastic
boomer* from Duluth met the other
day with the St. Paul Association of
Commerce to enllat the help of that
organisation In a systematic campaign
for obtaining a modern highway from
the twin cities to Duluth. Minneapolis
Is expected to help also, and In a abort
time th* Civic Commerce association
■nd the Minneapolis Automobile club
will be called Into the movement.
The conference was Informal and no
action wa* taken, beyond an assurance
by the 8t Paul men that they would
join hands with the state, the coun
ties and the local communities In the
plans of the Duluth men.
The latter realise that while the
twin cities and Duluth will derive the
greatest benefit from the proposed
highway, the bulk of the cost will fall
on the counties lying between. Wash­
ington, Chisago, and Pine, and they
purpose first to carry on a systematic
campaign of education, through a se­
ries of county meetings and confer­
ences at which an effort will be made
to prove to these counties that the
road will be worth more to them than
It will cost them under the Elwell act.
Residents of Sandstone are reported
to be enthusiastic over the through
highway Idea because they are satis­
fied that such a road, aside from fur­
nishing a good road for local transpor­
tation, will attract a heavy automobile
traffic both ways from which every
city and village will profit.
CONDUCIVE TO SOCIAL LIFE
(By W. C PAt.MF.ri Agricultural Editor.
North Dakota Agricultural College >
One of tho needs of country life Is
a better social Hfo. It has been found
that good roads are conducive to so­
cial life on the farms. When the road
Is good it is an easy matter to hitch
up and drive ever to the neighbors,
to church, to the picnic, to the enter­
tainment at the school house. The
good road la also followed by a better
school and better home. The better
road also makes the community more
attractive and the better class of peo­
ple will want to live there. The good
road also makes It possible to market
the farm produce more easily and
cheaply, and at all times of the year,
These things result In the good road
making the land worth more, The
good road ta to the farm what the
railroad Is to the city.
John E. Casey, for “time out of
mind,” chief of the Muncie Are de-
Bead Corn.
pertinent, who Is a Republican while
Prof. M. I.. Mosher, of the Iowa Ex­
most of his relatives are Democrats,
tells this of his mother, who was Inter­ periment station, says the newly se­
lected seed corn should be hung up
viewed by a poll taker.
“How many voters have you In the Immediately In a dry, well-ventilated
house?” asked the man with the place, such aa a dry cellar, a dry at-
I He. or spare room, a dry shed or In
query.
any other dry. well-ventilated build­
"Four,” replied Mrs. Casey.
"What are their politics?” she was ing. Do not hang It In a stable over
or near live stock, over oats or corn.
asked.
“Three of them belong to the Demo­ In any damp or close place. In a damp
cratic party," she said, "and the other cellar, tn a closed attic, over a
kitchen, or out tn the sunshin*.
belong* to the fire department”
I
your name and address
on a postal. In every
sack of Liggett Sf Myert
Duke’s Mixture is one
and a half ounces of
splendid tobacco and a
free present coupon.
Sandy Sections Wash May Be Ef-
fectlv.ly Stopped by Use of Two-
Inch Planks—Clsy Rond
Re­
quires Different Treatment.
When Roada Are In Good Condition
Easy Mstter to Drive to Neigh­
bor* or Elsewhere.
Where Caeey Belonged.
A* a special offer, during January and
February only, we will send our new illustra­
ted catalog of these presents
FREE. Just send us
Damage More Extensive on
Grades Than Level Stretches.
MAKE SPENDING MONEY
Ancient Builders Eclipsed.
The pyramids of Egypt would not be
the type of permanence they are were
they exposed to the vicissitudes of tho
American climate. At the annual
meeting of the Modern Historic Rec­
ords association It was stated that the
ancients are eclipsed by the modems
In storing records:
"We have better methods; with ce-
ment and granite and steel we can
build to last Indefinitely,
We are
more careful than the architects of
the mediaeval cathedrals in planting
our foundations, and more skillful
than tho Roman in constructing our
vaults and roofs. There Is no reason
why a building erected with proper
care should not endure forever, acta
of Providence .aside, and shelter In­
definitely whatever may be stored in
If
And smokers are glad to get the free pres­
ent coupons enclosed in each 5c sack. These
coupons are good for a great variety of pleasing
articles — cameras, talking machines, balls,
skates, safety razors, china, furniture, toilet
articles, etc. Many things that will delight
old or young.
ROADS BADLY WASHED
BANDMEN.
HOSTETTER’S
STOMACH BITTERS
FREE.
The Views Given Above Show a Road In Beaver County, Psnnsylvanla. Be­
fore Improvements Were Begun and the Road After Completion.
J
“Gome on Along”
Glad to smoke this pure old Virginia and
North Carolina bright leaf—with its natural
tobacco taste. Aged and stemmed and then
granulated. Tucks quickly in the pipe—rolls
easily into a cigarette.
With each sack a book of cigarette papers
Co.po.t from D.ir'1 Mixture ma,
bt auorted with tart from HORSE
S HOE. J.T, TlNÎLEY’S NATURAL
LEAF, GRANGER TWIST, arrrfcre-
from FOUR ROSES'/*£>•
oufeml. PICK Pl.t’G CUT. PIED-
MONT CIGARETTES. C1JX CIGA­
RETTES. amt other lagt or cmfotu
tu.
After hard or prolonged rains, roads
which have been constructed with a
flat surface are often gullied tn
center, or. If the road was
Premium Dept.
crowned, the gutters or ditches are
usually badly washed.
As a rule, the damage Is more ex­
tensive on grades than on level
St. Loui». Mo-
stretches. This Is because the dam­
age In general depends on the velocity
of water, and this, of course. Is con­
trolled by the steepness of the slope,
says th* Fruit Grower and Farmer If
the water cuts ditches very deep. It
might be advisable to reduce the
grade of the road, if possible, either
by cutting down the summit or filling
A «irk cow Is a had inverirnrnt, and a cow that la
at the foot of the hill, or both. It must
not produems as much *ood milk a* she should is not well.
All cows need careful attention to keep them healthy,
be remembered this Is likely to be
and little disorder* can be kept from becoming big by th*
economical in the end even if
use of Kow Kure.
first cost seems high, since It will
This famous remedy is a sure cure and preventive of most cow
Ils—such as Lost Appetite. Milk Fever. Bunches, Red Water. Scouring,
only save on future maintenance,
Abortion. Barrenness, and Retained Afterbirth.
will decrease the tractive force
Get a package of Kow Kure from your dealer and keep it on hand constantly.
quired to pull a load at this point
SO cent and 11.0« sues.
Ask for copy of "The Cow Book."
MID issscur;*» C*.. IRS. Ly»*»vrlUe, Vt
There are. however, many grades
MCiriC coasr oi»roieuT0<r*
that cannot be changed, because
fOTIUU SIU W„ Nrflss*. Ort.
CEB* Al * SIU CO, I m utdo. CsL
local conditions.
In sandy sections, the wash may be
effectively stopped by two-inch planks
Auto Suggestion.
from six to twelve inches wide, and
Legal Repartee.
Do not forget to cerry a pencil ana
cut Into three-foot sections
These
“And now I mean to handle yon*
short planks are sharpened on one a pad of paper so that you may take witnesses without gloves,” said a
end. and then enough of them to cov­ down the number of the motor car counsel, whose witnesses bad met
er three feet in width of the gutter or that runs over you.
with rather severe treatment from
ditch are driven in edge to edge for a
the other side.”
"Indeed!
That’*
depth of more than three feet, at right
more than I should like to do with
angles to the grade of the road. If
yours,” smilingly retorted his learned
they are driven In a little more than
friend.
flush with the gutter, there Is no dan­
ger of the road machine or drag strik­
ing themA
in a clay section. It Is practically
Impossible to drive a plank three feet
Sloan’s Liniment gives
without splintering IL The method of
quick relief for cough, cold,
construction is entirely different from
hoarseness, sore throat,
that described for sandy sections. Old
Taken in Hot Water They
croup, astnma, hay fever
logs or railroad ties. If they can be
and bronchitis.
Prove Quick Cures for
secured, are better under these condi­
HERE'S PROOF.
tions. They should first be cut Into
Most Ailments.
MB* A lbert W.pRic«,of Fredonia,
four-foot lengths. Trenches then are
Kan., writes : •• We um Sloan's Lini­
sunk In the gutters at right angles to
ment in the family nnd find it an ex­
cellent relief for eblds and hay fever
the road, and the tie or log Is placed
AttMcka. It Bt»>j»B coughing and tneen-
in the trench. Where the wash Is
iug aiinoet in>Kntly.’’
severe, several logs are placed direct­
ly over each other, like the flash­
board tn a dam. The top log or tie Is
placed at least four inches below the
gutter In order to prevent it from com­
ing in contact with a road drag or
road machine in operation. The ties
or logs are placed from 20 to 60 feet
RELIEVED SORE THROAT.
apart, according to the grade of the
Mas. L. B rkwrr , of Mivtello.Fls.,
hill, and It Is an easy matter to In­
writes: I bought on. bottle of your
Iduiment and ttdidme.lt th. good in
sert one whenever required.
th. world. My throat was vary »ore,
The chief advantage gained by this
and it curod mis of my trouble?'
THE CHINESE DOCTOR
use of logs or planks Is that deep and
Formerly a doctor of hiirh standirg in China. C.
GOOD
FOR
COLD
AND
CROUP.
dangerous ditches which are not only
Gee Wo from his many years of research haa
M r . W H. STaAKOB, S721 Elmwood
learned the peculiar properties of hundreds of
a menace to travel, but also make the ;
Avenue, Chlrano, III., writasu “A lit-
different harks, buds, riots and her ha.
road narrow, are removed When the
tle bov next d*s* had croup. I gave
Their action on the human system in m<*t case«
th. mother Sloan's Liniment to try.
of sickness ui noticeably beneficial almost at tha
planks or logs are used, the entire
She g»v. him three drops on anger
first few doaes. They are non-powcnous. and it»
width of the road can be used by the
before going to bed, and be got up
the hot water are easily assimilated by the sys­
without the eroup in the morning.”
tem. where they act on the seat <>f the trouble.
public, and the road Is always safe.
If you have been sick for some time and find
Price, 25c., 5Oc., $1.00
Many sand beds that are bad at all
medicines of no help, call and secure seme of Na*
ture
’s intended remedies from the C. Gee Wn
seasons can be Improved by mixing
Chinese Medicine Co.
Sloan’s
clay with sand by means of a pjow
CONSULTATION FREE.
Treatise
and harrow and then using the road
If you are sick and live out of town, send 4 cents
on the
drag systematically. On the other
in stamps and secure a symptom blank. Propea
Horse
remedies can then be secured on return of it.
hand, many clay sections that are bad
sent free.
Open Evenings and Sunday*.
tn wet weather can be Improved by
• J
first plowing and then mixing In sand
by means of the barrow, and finally
The C. Gee Wo
using the road drag.
Cough, Cold
SoreThroat
Chinese Herbs
In Great Demand
SLOANS
UNIMENT
Chinese Medicine Co.
Th* King Draq.
Th* truth of the matter Is that with
a King drag and a plow a skilful man
can do anything that can be done with
a big four-horse road grader, and for
all around work It Is much better as
well m man’ times cheaper.
162J First St., Cor. Morrison
PORTLAND, OR.
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P. N. U.
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No 3-’IX