Polk County observer. (Monmouth, Polk County, Or.) 1888-1927, September 22, 1908, Image 4

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    POULTRY;
NOTES
BY
C.MaENITZ
VTfZSSWZ
. PA.
o
eORRtSPOKDZNtr
SOLICITED
" .
Crete "floors and use Hie old methods
of extermination.
Q. Kindly let me know If tallow rimy
be used in ration for chickens and
what for.
A. IVbcn chickens are fed In fatten
ing crates the last ten days of the
twenty-four tallow Is part of the ra
tion. It Is melted and mixed with
meal. A little Is used at first till at
the end of the period the proportion is
one pound to fifty fowls twice a day.
Copyright, 1908, by C. M. Barnltz. These
article and Illustrations must not bo re
printed without special permission.
HIGH FLYING GUINEA3.
"Buy guineas?" was asked the huck
ster whose weekly call liroke the mo
notony at the farm.
"Nope; guineas are no good. No sale
for 'em. Wouldn't take 'em as a gift."
Ten years pass.
Now read this:
Wanted. 6,000 young guineas weighing
three pounds to the pair. Will pay at
least 60 cents per pair for the same.
Wanted. 1,000 men and women to raise
guineas and sell me the young ones when
they weigh one pound each at 65 cents a
pair. Poultry Item, Pennsylvania.
"Waal, I'll swan!" says John Corn
tassel. "What does city folks want
FEATHERS AND EGGSHELLS.
Pigeons that are continually flying
are tough and taste no more like a real
squab than your wife's first cooking
tasted like your mother's.
Our friends of the fancy are now
working overtime building their birds
for the show. They all expect a fair
deal from the Judge. May they not do I
otherwise to the other fellow who com- i
petes with them!
The country fair associations are
very anxious for a fine, large display
of poultry. The reason some of them
don't get It Is because the fair asso
ciation must share no expense and the
poultrynian must spare no expense.
It Is a mistake to think that poultry
huycra are after lurge dressed stock.
The call Is for n medium sized bird
with n plump, sliaiely body. Rig
birds have gone the way of the big
"Merry Widow."
Your birds leave the nest, the sguaus
starve and the cgs chill. Turn up the
nests and see them run. How cau a
pigeon sit comfortably with a dozen
mice wiggling under her any more
than can you sleep In church with
5,000 guinea keets fur?"
The guinea that screamed from the your wife jabbing you with a hatpin?
big walnut tree has flown a notch in stealing ten tine chickens at
higher. Buckhorn, I'a., the thief left his set
The scarcity of game and the strict
Lacey law have sent all the restau
rants to guinea.
WILD GAME PRICES.
Canvaiback duck 14.00
Prairie chicken, broiled 3.00
Pheasant, broiled 2.60
Koaat quail 1.50
These are simply guineas In disguise
the pretty polka dot feathered
creamers of grandpap'g barnyard.
But what's the difference?
They taste good and gamy, have
much dark breast meat and don't cost
half the real thing. Then few know
the anatomy of game so well that they
can tell a guinea from a pheasant or a
sparrow from a reedblrd.
When the farmer offers guineas,
nap them up, and remember French
cooks deem guinea eggs best for bak
ing and without equal for beating up
quick and stiff. -
Originally from Africa, these polka
dot birds are most everywhere.
The West Indies are alive with them.
England keeps them In game pre
serves. Austria, Germany and Trance
re breeding them extensively.
Uncle 8am Is going in for guineas.
Better Join in.
Tbey breed In April and May, mate
in pairs, lay as high as a hundred eggs
BKAIT FOB lUhKKT.
season, hatch In twenty-eight days,
and the little quail-like chleks run and
fly soon as batched. Tire white or
lblno guinea ts simply sport.
The pearl la most common aud has
purplish gray plumage with . white
pots, coral red wattles, while ears
and cheeks, bony helmet or crest ml
orange legs.
The males walk on tiptoe, have the
coarser bead and "clack" Instead of
"buckwheat" Being classed as game,
they are dressed as In illustration.
Thus they do not appear small, and
their beautiful plumage makes the in
more attractive.
Guineas lore the woods aud vales,
where they thrive ou insects, leaves,
hoots, weds, buds aud berries.
Now, Just Imagine the vast resources
for guinea culture in our waste lauds
aud the great national forest reservations.
KURIOS FROM (CORRESPONDENTS
Q. I am raising Belgians and a-k
for the following Information: When
bould young ones oin their eye, and
when to It time to wean and why dues
the mother eat ber young?
A. From a week to twelve days. Six
weeks. Because you do not give her
water at time litter Is born.
Q. I'lesae tell me how old squabs
re when parent birds lay and hatch
Sgsln and If the old birds desert them
t that time.
A. Pigeons lay and act again from
tea to fourteen days after squat are
batched and generally feed them up
to time of new batch, but after that
re apt to be ugly to them.
Q. What style bone cutter do you
recommend me to buy?
A. Self feeding, open hopper style,
with partltUwi In renter of bopper and
no exposed cogs. Buy ooe with leg.
The bench bolted rr mint le nat
aaaca. Q. We are thinking of raising few
peacocks and ran And no literature
bout them. We come to yoa 1th oar
q orations: What color Is the egg? How
many la n dutch? How ok! to breed?
Are they bard to ral and gnod eat
tog?
A. The pen ben lays from Ire te
eight whitish err aeaaoa. Breed
log agm, twe to three seers. Ted like
turkeys and krj-t on dry. rk h aoU,
with bad, are easily raised. Males
hard to chew, hens better, yoong a
delicacy.
Q. A dealer baa advised Be to as
ferreta to eatrh tbe rats at aiy r-taat
Will tbey catch chickens?
A. Tea. Tbey are of the weasel tribe
a ad will do scything a weasel do.
If yoa get (ben, wstrh tbe baby, for
tUj jrtf in Jt BrPer rt U
of false teeth behind. If they were
tough hens, what could the poor man
do? Will those of our readers who
wear "store teeth" please advise the
poor man?
Squabs twelve hours old are called
"peepers," twenty-four hours old
"squeakers" and a month old "squeal
ers." Men may be divided Into work
ers. Jerkers, shirkers tind kickers; also
fakirs, fossils and fools. Yon are one
of the good fellows.
The eyes of racing homers protrude
on return from a long race. This Is
caused by their efforts to sight home
at long distance. Their sight Is as re
markable as their flight
Canadian firms have been selling
e?gs for hatching on credit If the cus
tomer gives Ills note to the Standard
Bank of Canada. But If the eggs are
rotten how can they epg a man on to
pay?
"We would rather be right than be
president." But we would rather be
president than a poultrymau for a
little while. Then we would "dee
lltfht" In sending a "strenuous" mes
sage to congress on the great American
hen. ami we would send notice to some
of these stale legislatures that appro
priate nothing for poultry culture that
If street cars are no longer run by
mules some legislatures have n sur
plus of Jacks.
A HANDY HENHOUSE.
If Cheap John ! bound to build of
piano boxes, let him manage his own
funeral.
If you're only in to ie out, any old
shack ill do.
If you're a stayer, you're not employ
ing a funeral director architect.
Hero Is a neat, handy house that may
be built fur a modernle price and Is
especially adapted to cold climates,
though the I in re plan Is standard foi
any locality.
HnieiiBlons, nine feet high In front,
seven back, twelve feet wide and nnv
length.
Kink stone for foundation below frost
and have two courses of stone at least
alsive surface.
We use brick above ground fur rats.
Make floor of deep soaked packed
ilnder topped with gravel, sand n ill
reiuent and cover with Ixumls In win
ter. Cover siili.itiiiilinl franm with rough
hoards, cover these outside with two
ply tar paper and then nail on the
weather boa ids.
A dead air pace will 1 formed when
lath Is placed. Duster with cement.
Hoof with shingles or galvanized Iron.
The Ventilators should be pluced
atsive the windows, the ent mines for
man and fowl where most convenient,
but no alleyways or aisles should le
made through the building to waste
spai.
Ioes It pay to l.ul'd a house like this
for chickens? Well. il.s It pay you i t
If some of our poultry Journals that
spend extra time and money on crowd
ing their pages with big pictures would
ouiy remeiulier that the majority of
Journal readers nre after practical In
formation they would confer a big fa
vor on the majority and Insure renewals.
A York poultryumu placed rat poison
beneath his buildings for the rats, and
tbe rats carried It out and fed it to the
chickens, and they deceased. If poi
son is mixed with chop, it cannot be
distributed. If a hen does get a dose,
Just give her a big dose of lard.
If fattening fowls of nervou tem
perament, like the Leghorns and An
conns. do not keep them in a glaring
I light, but In semi-dark pens In secluded
spots.
IH not keep ducks in a yard where
water runs from the eaves. They will
ptiU!!e along the foundation and loosen
I he st4uework.
In searching for the assets of a
Pennsylvania cashier who stole $50,
i they found a $1,200 henhouse, but
no depositors' nest eggs, anil the golden
eggs his goose laid were missing.
Parlies ill Mount Joy. Pa., shipped
., worms to Forrest Park. St. Louis,
to le fed to the birds at a cost of $3.75.
It was worth that to count the wrig
glers. To our friends who are raising
birds, quail and pheasants we recom
mend the meal worm. Mix chop and
bran and strips of leather together,
get a few worms at the mill, add them
lo the combination and watch them
multiply.
When you operate on a fowl for hard
crop or find an open wound, be sure to
use n strong disinfectant on the bared
flesh to kill t lie germs and drive off the
blowflies.
Women are more and more taking
an, active pari in poultry work. Among
these are a number who have
broken In health or whose husbands
have been disabled by accident or
paralytic strokes, and they have taken
tip the work of support We wish
them well, and may they meet no male
fakirs In deals.
Do not use expensive lumber for
nest boxes. It Is a good plan occa
sionally to burn the nest material in
tbe boxes. That kills the bugs, and
box can be cscd again.
"TDe chickens were white as snow,
and wasn't everything cleau?"
Cement floors pay In every way, espe
cially In a sanitary way.
PIGEON DONT3.
Pou't choose a damp location for
house nor steep hill for fly.
Don't forget nesting material. Put
tobacco stems In bottom of nests, ond'
birds will finish with fine straw.
Pon't neglect to clean lip every week,
hut be quiet about It.
Don't forget the hospitals ill seeking
a squab market. They want tne best.
Don't fail In kindness, for that tells
In profits ns well as good grain.
PRESERVATION OF FOFESTC.
THAT OLD HEN AGAIN.
'Twaa on a Sunday morning fair
We all sat round the table.
Disposing of h juicy steak.
For which we all seemed able.
When father chose to raise his eyes
From off his plate just then
And thundered, to our great surprise,
"There's that hen again!"
Mother tipped the coffeepot.
Bill tpscl the table.
Bridget dropped the tin (lishpun.
'Twas like the din of Isabel.
But whore v:s father all this time
Oh, friend, please do not' tell!
He'd chased tl.at In n across the lot
And fallen In the well.
Wo fishc.l li!:a out all mirt ami wot.
He, AYUun't ileiid. for when
We got him lialfway lo (he top
He yelled. "Where's lhat hen?"
Now, preacher. don't, ask all was said,
But when you ia:::s us then
Don't think we're all la bed asleep.
It's that blamed hen again.
C. M. B.
The Old Bay Stale Is Now Taking the
Initiative.
The preservation of the forests Is a
problem second to none in present i:u
poi'taute and In its outlook toward the
future. Without trees our country
would be a desert, and the rapid den
udation of our New England hills is
already beginning to have Its effect
upon our streams and rivers and upon
our water suiinlv. The Invention of
wood pulp paper aud the rapid exteu
fcion of the Industry throughout the
country, together with the increase of
newspaper circulation, have stimulated
the destruction of the forests to such
a degree that steps are already being
taken to preserve them before It is too
late.
Congress has attempted to take a
hand in the matter, but so far with
little avail, and It now remains for the
Individual states affected to see what
they can do. The first step would seem
lo be the development of paper making
from some rapidly growing nud an
nually reappearing substance, such as
cornstalk fiber, Instead of from the
slowly rising tree which cannot be re
placed except after years of renewal
and growth.
As was to be expected, Massachu
setts Is taking the Initiative. To the
governors of the other five New .Eng
land states Governor Guild has sent
out a request for a conference, aud It
will be held at the Algonquin club
In Boston on the 14th of September.
The six governors will then confer and
deliberate over the best means to be
taken for the preservation of our for
ests, and It Is probable that arrange
ments will be made for the calling of
n New England business conference at
some time immediately following the
presidential election. If It should ben
held, says Governor Guild In bis letter,
It should come at that time "In order
that Its work might not be confuse
Willi the politics of the presidential
campaign." One of the especial ob
Jects of this meeting of the governo
- ... . 1 c
America, was scarcely nneiy ro u
known to the Indians of Virginia.
Yet the potato was undoubtedly
Introduced In England as part of the
cargo of one of Sir Richard Grenvllle's
ships and landed at Plymouth, and the
ship had gone direct from Virginia and
called nowhere on the way. On the
voyage home, however, it had encoun
tered and captured a Spanish ship from
Santo Domingo. The potatoes were a
part of the cargo of the latter vessel.
The Useful Sunflower.
Sunflower aeeds are said to give an
extra fine flavor to eggs and are much
used by the French people for mat pur
pose. Remember this when you plant
your garden and drop in some eeeue
around the edges and in tne oaa cor
ners. A few planted near the sink
drain will help to keep away miasma
and give you heads of seed tnat win
be mammoth in size. .
THE MUSHROOM HOUSE.
For hot climates like California,
Florida, Porto Rico, Hawaii and the
canal zone the hip roof or mushroom
house is excellent. It is covered with
a water proof roof, is generally lx
n
ML'SHBOOM HOUSE.
feet square, and the four foot sides
may be covered with painted canvas
or sacking.
Tbe house stands on two foot legs
and need not be cleaned, as it Is moved
from place to place.
The ladder to roosts should be re
moved at night to avoid preying ani
mals.
In the rainy season wire screen may
Inclose the bottom, and a ditch should
be dug around to avoid flooding.
If desired windows and ventilators
may be added. Hoof In style preferred,
This Is not only a cool, movable, sani
tary house, but the fleas that breed In
tbe accumulated dust under fixed
abodes have no biding place.
a-i i i n -t n-
H era -T-T-kV
- S-- - v "
HALr UkJtllOl SB.
buy a g.wl all wkI Milt or an Imita
tion nool shoddy that u Istgs at the
knees and g.n to the ras tag?
If you're going m make g ni l money
out of liens, you muM put go.nl money
into giKl rua.
POULTRY HOUSE FLOORS.
When we left home mother said,
"Goodby, boy; don't forget to pray and
keep jour feet dry."
Mighty good advice for everybody.
We pass It to jou and add keep your
heus dry In winter.
If you let the pens pet foul and damp,
Your hens will set the roup and cramp,
if you let your hens wade in the snow.
The egg record will drop down low.
"Doesn't matter," said n smarty. "If
pens are wet underfoot. Just so they're
dry overhead."
But there were several wet spots ou
bis cheeks when he dumped twenty
five beautiful Brown Leghorn hens on
the alley ash pile.
An ounce of prevention might have
saved 111 in a hundred pounds of pure
bred Leghorns, worth $50,
Fifty dollars bought 1.800 square feet
of inch planed boards for our scratch
ing floors, and $110 paid for' 2.125
square feet of concrete.
We give thanks for the Invention of
cement every time we cross the floors.
In winter we cover the cement with
boards, but store them iu the warm
season.
We find heavy litter on bare cement
satisfactory, but consider boards
warmer aud have never found either
conducive to rheumatism.
We have no quarrel with the fancier
who prefers a ground floor, but will
give you our reasons for not using
one.
The excrement of a hen Is eighty
pounds per year, or 8.000 pounds to a
hundred.
Half of this Is water.
if hens are confined, excremeut falls
on the ground floor, which absorbs
most of the moisture.
Slow evaluation In a henhouse
tneuns dampness, disease, death.
Yon concede that moisture more
quickly elaborates from straw on
boards or cement than from straw
mixed with dirt and droppings.
Thus In whiter a dirt floor fancier Is
up against a ventilation problem.
He must contend with natural mois
ture In air and grouud. moisture from
fowl breath, dropping boards and the
Tea, there are aouie deserted n,.u!trv
plants around tbe eouutry. J.im a tucre D,,,;,,,"r droppings alvnrbed by dirt
are some forsaken factory l.ucdiiic j ' T'
here and there. "ere la explanation for frosted walls,
Moat of three foraakrn ediflces are i "",er nJ nxmn no,r
monuments to uea bo .11.1 lurlr look- I ''vel,,,. the bens dig up tbe floor.
lug after they lrad. - wi:i au'i I "' ,tH',r piumag In the dirt tbe air
your ri)iertuient !th lut.-rvt nn,l If , " ,oul- ,n'r ,r hiding places for eggs.
yon are siK--ewful may o Int.. the I ml,- mice and lice, and. with
bunlneaa Biyarif." aalj a WasMnsMa ! Ju5', "'erhead and filtb underfoot, the
gvntlemaa te a jouut man a h. bid ,l,'ar 14 unpieasant for vWlora and at
fttablbhed a tealcra plssi.
(
OOViiKNOK UDILD OF MASSACHUSETTS.
with his associates will be to devise
means whereby a greater uniformity
of action may be secured In the leg
islation among the several states in
the I'tiiou. But the greatest result
should be In the stimulus It will give
to public opiuicu ti'id In Its awakonlnir
of us to tbe fact that the forests must
cud shall be preserved.
The First Potatoes.
Sir Waller Raleigh, who f bares with
Sir Francis Drake the honor of first
introducing the potato iu Eugland.
lived at Brixton. England, uear Eliza
beth's House, i'jriiiby. iu Lancashire,
also claims the honor of being the site
of the first culture of tbe potato In that
country. Tbey are said to have been
grown there by a I'ormby man who
sailed with Sir Walter.
The earliest cultivation of tbe iHjtato
In the British islands was probably at
Youghal. on the south coast of Irejand.
where this great uavigitor bad an es
tate. It has Uvu generally accented that'
the- potato was taken to Europe from
t irglnla and that it was cultivated
there by tbe uatives. Sir Joseph Banks
aud De Coudelle both lent tbe weight
of their authority to this view, but It
bas been ascertained that the Indians
of Virginia, though they used a number
of tuberous roots, did not know our po
tato.
One of these was the plant sometimes
grown as an ornamental climber in our
gardens and called by botauista Aploa
lube rota. The Indians called the roota
potatoes, and the French Canadians
knew them as pomtues de terre. and
our potato, lirg a native of South
"This la ant aa eiiwimeal," rrp.'k-t
tlie plucky fellow. -This I cot a
try or teat rase. There's no i,u U
tut It Before we went luto thi
bnaineva e detuooatrated tbe pracil
ral worth of our uethuda. Y e orkel
oo tbe laa of tbts p'ant for Are year
tfre a aail a as diiveu. and bow. If
ur boors d"t crack, we'll bare nc
(" That reply aboalj I frantrd ta
ftd aad Its spirit followed.
and
rEATHERS AND CCfiSHCLL.
Hk-a do lore ta eat a Ita tbe 4-
If a roue boot auj Sad lin e
quel and efr oa tbe f.r and raa't
andrreUad It It la hrraoa yoa have
a&Biated birds la par pea and d I
kauw R. Yva'U grt tbe full awaaing
tajoa b ta tbe.lfr , . .
temlanla
Whit a tk to renew Hirer
nra In g-ouo.1 flour plants!
Our -rmaucnt sanitary floor bas ao
altik h.i,- to trap your f.t aud make
morale water vessela. ronta and net
al-t.
la thirty mlDutra we can renew the
litter oa 1 ) square feet and In ooe
b-vir Uy the board
If Uwnls or cement abow dampoeaa,
we simply draw back tbe litter at
ol;ht sprinkle tightly with slaked lime.
jand la tte amcnlng all la dry and
se-t
To rk-aa such a poultry boose Is
boy's piay.
A lady kied Into tbe pens a boa
full of cUk krM. sniffed aad said.
"Wby. there t oo usrll bere.-
Two rfei'a-le'pia ntwrters I'adloei
ahl ieoTirij in plant aere otertward
to :
V ' II.-' II
FEATHERS ANO EGGSHELLS
If newspapers that waste space on
fake stories of three legged calves,
hens hatching snakes aud bulldogs
adopting ducks would print legitimate
poultry news and practical poultry in
formation, they would be helping their
readers to get more cash to pay in ad
vance.
In preparing young roosters for
roasters keep them out of the gymna
sium. It matters not bow much corn
meal you feed, much exercise will be
nntlfat and keep them tbln as a slat
The longest bird flight is from the
isles of Bering sea to Hawaii and
Fanning Islands, a distance of 2,200
miles. Birds arrive unexhausted. Per
haps they rest by floating iu the. air,
as swimmers do In the water.
Most of 'the fairs are held in the
molting season when the birds are
unsightly. The fair directors compel
the graceful oriental dancers to don
dusters and yet allow the other heus
to show In full dress. Is this alto
gether fair?
We find the best way to feed char
coal Is in soft mash. Otherwise some
fowls get none, for certain birds uever
visit the hopper.
The way some incubator chicks get
lice Is easily explained. An old hen's
chick gets half drowned and Is slipped
luto the Incubator for a minute to dry
off. Tbe lice crawl off the chick on to
tbe eggs, the eggs hatch, and the lice
crawl off the eggs on to the new
chleks. Try It '
Secretary Wilson of the agricultural
departpieut at Washington has started
a crusade against the sale of storage
for fresl eggs. Thought when storage
got Into tbe Washington eggnog some
thing would effervesce.
One of our friends who set bis goose
at the same time we set our goose in
cubator left the gate open, and the
hogs ate the eggs. Chickens have a
mighty poor chance to escape from
hungry hogs. Clean and screen that
hogpen.
There is no reason why state arid
agricultural colleges should go to Can
ada or England for Instructors lo
poultry culture. If the trustees of
these institutions are uuluformed. we
take pleasure in notifying them that
their I'ncle Samuel Is way ahead of
Johnny Bull.
. PIGEON DON'TS.
Don't fail to put in spring doors.
Keeps in pigeons, keeps out cats.
Dun't forget that bemp and canary
seed are luxuries.
Don't think pigeons care nothing foi
green food. Try the in with lettuce
Tbey lore It.
Feet ef the Celts.
Keep tbe feet of colts even or un
fHioduew may result Do not allow
the toes to grow too long Rlngbonea
are often rained by long toee. Keep
tbe colts' stales well littered. One alip
oa a wet floor Bay rula a valuable eolt
For Liver Ills.
NATUarS REMEDY is better than pills, because it sets In the ridi, ,
It itrenftuens the Stomach, aids Digestion, cures DyspcDsla, clean
Liver aud Bowels, curing Constipation. ansei the
Uaually one N Tablet is all that li neoetaary to correot the avera?
ble. it starta Iu the Stomach aud aearches tkrqugh the Liver. Kid
Intestine, dissolving and soothing as It goea. ' ney mnd
MS Tablala aro always Jut riclit aud neither sicken, erlBe
luimtul alter effect. OET a IS. BOX. "7
BELT & CHERKINGTON, Dallas, Oregon.
J
MADE
. FOR
SERVICE
and guaranteed
absolutely
WATERPROOF
OILED SUITS. SUCKLE
AND HATS
Every garment guaranteed
Clean Light - Durable
Suits 32 Slickers 35?
mo or ear diaicrs immnuit
CATALOG fREt fO THt ASKING
A J TOWtft CO BOSTON
KILLthe COUGH
AND CURS THE LUNGS
T 5' fHS a TT
a ticba v-orapiexicn
is "reserved and produccd-by
Robertme, a mill deli..l,,(..i
preparation. deliVateli, i
Makes the skin exnniMt.l,,!..!.'
banishes crackled
by over-drynessi reduce. th .
enlarged pores, cleanses il,.m
duces inflammation and spreads an even
mrltnnt rrlmav A.,m .! t ..'
? , """icsome nourish
ment of skin glands and stimulation of
u. iaijiiiarii-s wmcn also teed the
skin and supply iu healthful color.
Ask jour Druggist fir a fret lamptt of
tOBERTINFj
WITH
Dr. King's
flew Discovery
PHICE
tln Jtm fl Afl
pj ait, .-. vv sjia.v
OLDS Trial Bottle Free
AND ALL THROAT ANO LUNG TROUBLES.
FflR rOUCHS
GUARANTEED SATISFACTORY,
OB MONEY REFUNDED.
TEA
There's plenty of hum
bug in tea; not one ounce
in a ton Schilling's Best.
Your grocer returns your money if you don't
like It; we par him.
llow's ThisI
We offer O.a Hundred Dollars Reward taj
ay case of Catai rU that caunot be cured bi
Hall's Camrrli Cure.
P J. CHENEY & CO. , Props ,, Toledo, 0.
Wo the nndci signed, have known P.J. Cba.
ney f o tbe lust IB years, and believe him per.
feclly honorable in all business transaction
and financially a'ulo to carry out any obllga.
tions made by their firm.
W i;t Teoai, W holesale Dragirlsts, Toledo, a
Waldino, Kinmam&Mabviii, WholesaJenrui;
fists. Toledo, O.
Hall's Catarrh Cure la taken Internally, actlag
directly upon the blood and mucous surfacesoi
the system. Price, 76c. per botUe. sold by eU
Druevista. Testimonials fre.
Hail's Family f ilia arc the belt.
Attorney at law"
Ed F. Cod,
Oflloe in Courthouse
DALLAS, OREGON
jjii 'Ax
FRIEND TO FRIEND.
The personal recommendations of people who
have been cured of coughs and colds by Cham
berlain's Cough Remedy have done more than all
else to make it a staple article of trade and com
merce over a large part of the civilized world.
AN INSTANCE.
Lucy Suddreth, of Lenoir, N. C, had been troubled with
a rery bad coujh for over a year. She say "A friend
bought a bottle of Chamberlain's Cough RkmkdY,
brought it to me and insisted that I ahoold take it. I did
ao and to my surprise it helped me. Four bottle of it
eared me of my cough."
j jt
TIE IEW IBEA ri TBE 0P.!S!IAL LAXATIVE rpri CQS6B STEBP -"rj
EI1IIEDYS MOTIVE n OIIEY
Him Hi BcnU r VI
lot for Ctffru
For Sale by Druggists.
LJ LJ MQm
AR
Cures Biliousness, Sick
Headache, Sour Stom
ach. Torpid Liver and
Chronic Constipation.
Pleasant to ta&a
DRIHD
Laxativ e Fruit Syrup,
Cleanses the ys3
thoroughly and dears
sallow complexions of
pimples and blotches-
It Is ecaranteed
For Sale by STAFEIN DRUG CO. Dallas, ard M. THOMPSON, Fall City.