Polk County observer. (Monmouth, Polk County, Or.) 1888-1927, November 13, 1908, Image 4

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Winter blasts, causing pneumonia,
Jileiirisy and consumption will soon be
lere. Cure your cough now, and
strengthen your lungs with Foley's
Honey and Tar. Do not risk starting
the winter with weak lungs, when Fol
ey's Honey and Tar will cure the most
obstinate coughs and colds, and prevent
serious results. Stafriu Druu Co.; M. L.
Thompson, Falls City.
The Enterprise high school has over
60 pupils.
Foley's Honey and Tar clears the air
passages, stops the irritation in the
throat, soothes the inflamed membranes
and the most obstinate cough disappears.
Sore and inflamed lungs are healed and
strengthened, and the cold is expelled
from the system. Kefuee any but the
genuine in the yellow package. Stafriu
Drug Co.; M. L. Thompson, Falls t'itv.
Raw Lungs.
When the lungs are sore and inflamed,
the germs of preumonia and consump
tion find lodgement and multiply. Fol
ey's Honey and Tar kills the cough
germs, cures the most obstinate racking
cough, heals the Jungs, and prevents
serious results. The genuine is in the
yellow package. Stafrin Drug Co. ; M. L.
Thompson, Fallp City.
Several carloads of pears were
shipped this season from one orchard
near Oakland.
MAKING THE
DAIRY PAY.
A fruit evaporator Is the
Industry In Albany.
It Is generally conceded, says X. A.
Clnpp, the prominent Michigan dairy
man, that the average cow will ent
lielfersare being reared for the dairy
and not for beef. For this purpose
they should be fed and cared for. There
should be a good, healthy growth of
muscle and bone, but not of fat. Be
gin with the calf and follow up until
the heifers become cows. There
should be a steady growth of body and
development of dairy form qualities all
of the time, summer and winter. The
young animals should be kindly
treated, so that they may become
quiet and docile. This is the more
necessary as the heifers usually take
their place lu the dairy at the early
ace of two years. There should be
plenty of succulent nourishing foods,
but no overfeeding, as this Is an Injury
to them rather than a benefit.
If You Are Over Fifty Read This.
Most people past middle-age sutler
from kidney and bladder disorders which
foiey s n.iuney Kemedy would cure.
Stop the drain on the vitality and restore
needed strength and vigor. Commence
taking Foley's Kidney Kemedy today.
Stafrin Drug Co. ; M. L. Thompson,
Falls City.
A Hood Elver man cleared $150 on
an acre of tomatoes.
Hexamethylenetetramlne.
The above is the name of a German
chemical, which is one of the many val
uable ingredients of toley s Kidney
Kemedy. liexamethy lenetetrjmine is
recognized by medical text books and
authorities as a uric acid solvent and
anti-septic for the urine. Take Foley's
Kidney Kemedy as soon as you notice
any irregularities, and avoid a serious
malady. Stafrin Drug Co.; M. Sj.
Jhompson, rails City.
i "
newest ,'about $40 worth of feed each year. If
the herd has not produced 200 pounds
of butter per cow that will sell lor an
average of 20 cents per pound they
have certainly not all paid expenses.
Most of us know which are the good
cows and which are the poor ones. If
we are not certain about the quality
of the milk as regards butter fat pro
duced by each cow It is an easy matter
to test them nnd know. The weeding
out process may seem like a severe
ordeal, but It must be done before the
farm dairy Is made a paying proposi
tion.
It does not pay to keep a poor cow
to eat and make manure to keep up
the fertility of the soil when a good
producing cow will do that part just
as well and at the same time will pay
for her keep and the labor bestowed in
caring for her and return a profit be
sides. Gate For Dairy Stables.
A dairyman says he has seen many
kinds of gates used to prevent stock
from going where they are not waut-
ed, but considers the one shown in the
Tha Cow and Her Care,
To do well cows must be made comfortable.
To be a profitable milker the cow
must be a hearty eater with good di
gestive powers.
In milking get all the milk each
time, but do not keep on stripping
after you have got It.
Never use wooden milk pails.
According to statistics, the average
cow produces only 130 pounds of but
ter iu a year.
Never choose a dairy cow because
she Is fat, sleek and a beauty. The
profitable animal Is generally scraggy
and bony.
Sunlight should be utilized as much
as possible Iu a dairy. It Is a germ
destroyer.
'""storing vegetables"'
farm. "These "conslHeraOons of them
selves should urge all farmers to the
improvement of their premises. But
there are other reasons even more
powerful to influence thoughtful men
and women in the same direction.
Most Important Is the fact that this is
borne. It Is the place where father,
mother and children live. The family
life centers here. If there Is to be any
home feeling It must come through a
thoughtful care for the comforts, con
veniences and beauties of the home.
If there is to be any uplift In Intelli
gence or morality It must find Its op
portunity in wholesome and attractive
surroundings. One of the greatest dif
ferences between a farm and any oth
er enterprise Is that the farm Is both
a business and a dwelling place. Many
things which a man would not care to
undertake for the benefit of his busi
ness merely he must put through for
the sake of his home. This has ever
been the spirit of American farm life
at its best, and it needs to lie preached
on every hand today
How's This!
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward fof
iy case of Catarrh that cannot be cured bj I
Hall's Catarrh Cliro.
F J. CHENEY & CO. , Props ., Toledo, O.
We the undcisigned, have known F. J. Che-
nov for the last 16 years, and believe Mm per
fectly honorable In an Dusinesi transaction!
aud financially able to carry out any obla
tions made by tlielr arm.
West f bbax, Wholesale Dragylsts, Toleao, u.
BJ
directlT noon the blood and maoous surfaces of
Walding, Kinnan&Mabvin,
Hall's Catarrh Core Is taken internally ,cni
the system. Price, 75c. per botue
lniris. Testimonials are".
Hall's f amily run are toe nest.
Sold by all
Many small orchards will be plunted
near Eugene this Fall.
If you suffer from constipation and
liver trouble Foley's Orino Laxative will
cure you permanently by stimulating
the digestive organs to they will act
naturally. Foley's Orino Laxative does
not gripe, is pleasant to take and you do
not nave to lake laxatives continually
after taking Orino. Why continue to be
thealuve of pills and tablets. Stafrin
Drug Co.; M. L. Ihompson, Falls City.
Several Morrow county farmers will
try Turkey Bed wheat.
Seven Years of Proof.
"I have had seven years of proof that
Dr. King's New Discovery is the hi st
medicine to take for coughs and colds
anil fur eveiy diseased condition of
throat, chest or lungs," nays W. V.
Henry, of i'linaina, Mo. The world has
had thirty-eight years of proof that Dr.
King's New Discovery is the best rem
edy for coughs, colds, lagrippe, asthma,
fiay fever, bronchitis, hemorrhage of the
lungs, and the early stages of consump
iion. us iiuieiy nee always prevenis
tne development of pneumonia. Sold
under guaianlee at Helt A Cherrington
drug store. 50c and $1 .00. Trial bottle
free.
Onions measuring eight and ten
Inchon iirouixl wo in rained In Harney
county.
How Is Your Digestion?
Mrs. Mary howling of No. 2l'S, 8th
Ave., San Francieeo, recommends a
remedy for stomach trouble. She rays:
'liratitude for the wonderful eli'eet ol
Kiectrio Hitters in a ease of acute null
geetion, prompts this testimonial. I am
fully convinced that for stomach and
liver troubles Fleet ric Hitters is the beet
remedy on the market today." This
great tonic and alterative medicine in
vigorates the system, purifies the blood
and is especially lielilnl in all forms of
(etimk weakness. 60c. at Helt & Cher
rington dmi; store.
More fruit trues will bo set out this
fall In Southern Oregon than ever
before.
Watched Fifteen Years.
"For fifteen years 1 have watched the
workii.g of Hiieklen's Arnica Salve; ami
it has never failed to cure any sore, Imil,
ulcer or burn to which it applied.
It has saved us inmiv a doctor bill "
says A. F. Hardy, of Fast Wilton,
Maine. 2.ric. at Hell A Cherrington droit
store.
Sixteen Fuglo Valley tipples, u,)
sldo by sldo in line, mens! 7,1
Inches.
Mind Your Business.
If you don't nobody will. It is your
bnsineiis to keep out of all the trouble
you can ami you can ami will keep out of
liver and bowel trouble if vou take lr
King's New l.ile Pills. They keep bil
iousness, malaria and jamidnv out of
your system. :.';.. at Helt A ('herring
ton drug store.
8UDINQ GATE KOK STABLE.
Illustration by far the best. Instead of
swinging upward and being hooked to
the ceiling or a joist overhead, as some
do, it slides back and forth upon
length of gas pipe serving as a track
by means of iron straps attached to
the long pieces that compose the outer
ends of the gate. The gas pipe should
be at least two Inches through and in
length twice the width of the gate.
The gate should be made to lit the
place where needed and can be con
structed of nny strong, light lumber.
If the feed room is In easy reach of
the stable the alley leading to it should
by all means lie protected by one of
these gates. In case of a cow getting
loose In the night, as cows frequently
will, it might be the means of saving
her life from eating too much grain.
Feeding the Herd.
L. T. Ilailey, president of the Ohio
Iward of agriculture, says his practice
of feeding the milking herd Is as fol
lows: drain at 4:43 n. m. Begin milking
at 5:30. which requires about one and
one-half hours. After milking feed all
the silage the cows will eat up clean,
usually about fifteen or twenty pounds.
At 10 a. in., if weather Is not stormy
or too cold, the cows are all turned out
to water nnd the stables freed from all
animals. If weather is favorable they
remain out until It p. m., when tliev
are put back In the stable, ami each
cow Is given about one pound of grain.
This is merely a bait to make them
come Into the stable and remain in
tlielr stalls until they can be fastened.
They nre then given as much bay,
preferably clover, as they will eat
without waste. Begin milking at o
p. in. After milking we feed silage
with grain mixed Willi It. The stables
nre then closed for the night.
For grain feed we use dried brew
ers' grains, gluten feed, molasses
grains, w heat bran, corn aud cob meal,
cottonseed and oil meal. We never use
all these feeds at once, but vary ac
cording to price ami need We aim to
make a balanced ration as near as
possible. I have la-en usieg silage for
fifteen years. I use round silos, with
wooden hoops Inside and outside 2 by
4 Inch studding. They are lined on the
inside with good pine H.k.i hi ¬
lt
Rearing Dairy Stock.
should c-.cr Le ci:i.l!erel t'l
The Best Way to Keep Them In Win
ter.
It requires care aud a knowledge of
the nature of vegetables In order to
successful keep them through the late
fall aud winter. They must, as a rule,
be kept in u cool atmosphere, but not
cool enough to freeze. Hut pumpkin
and squush need a dry, warm air aud
iu gathering must be carefully han
dled. It is best to leave the stem loug,
and never store squashes until riivs.
Potatoes do best iu u cellar tint is
cool and damp and should be kept in
the dark as much as possible, but
there should be an arrangement for
good circulation of air.
Barrels or boxes are best for car
rots, parsnips, beets and turnips. Aft
er storing in these receptacles sand or
fine soil should be placed ou top, allow
ing It to run down between the roots.
The soil should be shaken down so as
to fill all the spaces.
Iu harvesting the vegetables must
be carefully handled nnd the tops cut
off au Inch or more from the top. This
will prevent a chance of decay from
dose cutting. If beets are cut too
close they will bleed, losing their sweet
flavor, and quickly spoil.
Onions should be perfectly dried as
soon as gnthered nud not allowed in a
damp place, if kept in a dry room
where the thermometer is burelv
above freezing they will keep well.
Cabbage placed in a barrel and sunk
in the ground and so arranged that
moisture cannot enter and then thick-
covered Willi straw and earth will
keep nicely till far into spring. But
where It is Intended to be used dur
ing the winter a good plan Is to cut off
the stems and outer leaves, trim the
heads about as much as if preparing
to cook and then wrap each head sen-
rately Iu several thicknesses of news-
uiper. '1 his will exclude the air. Aft-
muLefoot hogs.
What a Kansas Breeder Mas to bay
About Them.
Breeders of swine In many sections
of the country are greatly interested
In mulefoot hogs, and these auimals
have attracted considerable attention
In recent years when exhibited at the
state fairs. These hogs are now being
improved and bred under the name of
Ozark hogs.
A Kansas breeder, Dr. W. J. Connor,
who is raising them, says that, while
In a measure they are a new thing, yet
he has been breeding them long
enough to have ascertained that they
are actually the best range hogs In ex
istence today. He has found, he says,
that they will live nud prosper where
a common hog would starve to death.
The meat of these hogs, he declares.
Is sweeter than that of common hogs.
and there is a larger proportion of lean
IF YOUVE
fl NEVER WORN
M -;on
SUCKER
you've vet
to learn tHe bodily
comfort it Gives in
the wettest weather
MADE FOP
Hard service
AND
GUARANTEED
WATERPROOF
AT All GOOD STORES
CATALOG n)EC
KILL the COUCH
AND CURE THE LUNGS
w,th Dr. King's
Mm Discovery
AND ALL THROAT AND LUNG TROUBLES.
mm
you need
not feaiT
: n art z a.
BALLARnv
HOREHOffig
OYKUP
A cough or cold is generally a f orerunuer of mnn ,
sick spells. It h houlc? not be neglected, the humaSfr8
system is a combination of tubes and cells whi,.h ea;hH
kept iu order to insure good health. ' hluh must bis
Ballard's Horehound Syrun
CI IRFS C0UG"S, COLDS, BRONCHITIS
UUKCWHOOPINQ COUGH, crS?d
AND ALL PULMONARY DISEASES.
Cured of a Chronic Cough.
J. H. Ellis, Butte, Mont., writes: "r cheerfnllv r0
mend Ballard's Horehound Syrup to all Sfc
with chronic coughs. I suffered for years wT ft ph r d
cough which would last all winter. Ballard THorf h,,?"'?
Syrup effected an immediate and permanent 0
25c, 50c and $ 1 .00.
Ballard Snow Liniment Co.
500-502 North Second Street, ST. LOUIS, ml
Sold and Recommended by
STAFRIN DRUG COMPANY
1
IIuIiik a barrel with paper pack the
wrapped beads closely lu it and after
11 nre lu cover nitb paper. The bar-
W must be kept iu the coolest part of
ne cellar. I 'limpness will not barm
the keeping qualities.
To keep tomatoes pick tbe largest
ppciinons that have begun to show
color as soou 113 the vines are cut by
rrost, but before tbe fruit Is frosted
Handle carefully to prevent bruislnsr.
wrap cacb tomato separately In soft
paper and place lu shallow boxes or
n 11 shelf one layer Ueen. Keen in n
ool place, secure from frost, so as to
prevent ripening. If a few nre brought
out tit a time nnd placed in a warm
place they will quickly ripen. Tber
an thus be kept for several weeks
ftor killing frosts.
mi occasional turning under of the
whole crop Is one of the best paying
niethoiis or farming.
of
Worth Remembering.
As n traveler pusses through an?
country ho Judges the prosperity of
the farmer chlelly by the npiK-araiu-e
tils buildings and farmyards. He
get some line on condition hT
looking at crons In ih . i
the pasture, but tbe storv Is told
most fully and accurately bv the nalnt
the barn nnd the lawn irrnss in
front of the house. Aud when the real
estate agent takes a prospective buyer
through the country be denend In
almost chiefly, on the irronmU .n.1
IMllHIIIlL'S to set the tirln.
FsISTOKf!5!i I GUARANTEED SATISFACTORY! R SrwSwllltt
fi PMWlf r fAFh Connexion M and T" " good rderi need " 'or "d I
1 IKIm Mi " vitSy ft Let "NATURE'S REMEDY" Be Your Doctor. II
f lJraiSSSj Kobertinc, a miid, delightful I ',b'e now "nd """ V" D system In such wod M
f llrif lSSwQjl &$IS k';lkes t"e skm exquisitely sottj Yv , U
lllBM . Y BetterThan Pills For Liver Ills f
I 'WrtllR'Y,'' ' i enlarSed pores, cleanses them, re- ossssssmsmsssssb CET A 25(11 BOX - f
I wi l 'rrSSvl 1 C duces inflammation and spreads an even, ; r. . t- """""sssssi g
Hi IM'liVjUmjWS'-Lrt 1 Y radiant glow due to wholesome nourish- Vsf nre V- m - 1
rSMl(f.SJI1i V 1 A ment of skin glands and stimulation of ISfS22!r? f Till? A IJ?4t1S)rl4l , I "
B-MpB.a 1 t,,e capillaries which also feed the J 1711 ' (Mfr(&flw7&fff t?' -s- I
BELT & CHERRINGT0N' Da,,aS' 0reg0"-
. j
IS KIDNEY ACHE
Must r rl
-1 lJp ,
FOOT Of MULEFOOT HOO.
to fat. They may be finished at any
age, and it is possible to bring them
to a weight of from 500 to 800 pounds.
It fieenis that these hogs have been
tried out In practically every state In
the I'tilon, and Dr. Connor says that
they have never hud cholera.
on evTT
OF
THROAT
AND
ODES
OR. ECQWG'S
MEW
OVI
COUGHS A" GOLDS
CURES ""THROAT LUNG
DISC
FOR
DISEASES
SAVCO NCR SON'S UFE
Hytm Sex wis Ukea iowt a year fO with lung trooble. F
doctored eon months without improvement. Thea I be?aa ririnr
Dt. Kinf'a Hew Xhacorerj, aad I aooe aoUced a chanfe for the better
I kept this treatment up for few wecka aad bow mj son it perfectly
wU ad work, eery day. KES. SAXP. EIPPEI, ava, ui
SOLD AND GUARANTEED BY
&Oc AND SI .00
Notes For the Shepherd.
If the pastures are short and dry
look out for the breeding ewes, says
the I-'arm Journal.
Give them extra feed grain in a feed
box, fodder corn or freshly cut clover.
After the roots are gathered for win
ter the flock should feed over the field
to clean up the small roots, etc.
It Is well to reserve a patch of tur
nips for the sheep to feed on. It may
be in one corner of a pasture. A patch
of one acre will furnish feed for twenty-five
or thirty sheep for three months.
Do not attempt to winter old ewes.
Fatten them quickly on turnlns. oil-
meal, ground corn and oats.
Sweet corn iu the milk, fed stalks
and all, is also a quick fattener for old
ewes.
Do not breed young ewes under four
teen months old unless, very growthy.
Keep the sheep dry. Never leave
them out In a cold rain, especially In
the fall.
If you have no good shelter In the
pastures It will pay to make one.
Make it deep, but provide for venti
lation without drafts.
BACKACHE
Eliminate the Effect, You
Remove The Cause.
Keep It In the Bottle.
Bottled milk, being sealed with a
cap, cannot absorb odors and should
l left la the bottle until used, not
emptied into an open dish.
INDEPENDENCE i MONMOUTH
Railway.
FROM INDEPENDENCE.
res DALLAS.
. II.' ?..N2i M t,Ie Inoependi-nr dslty. m
. m.; Iv. Monnoaili.:lSa.iu.; er. Dsllsi, t.m
Train No. GX Im a . ..
10 . vi. m 1. 11. I." amuv.
lu. U.Ha
Train No
Dl-
70. I rtt Tn.l.. , . . .
1Si. m.: It. Alonmomh t a T -.' ,"" '
. - ,
fe:tt p. m.
O AIBLIB.
fyr maenrnlrnri. rt.n,.
:. m.; mt. Airiie,
Train No. T.
1 . m.; It. Monmouth.
1.' . m.
mr. Aulie, i.a
nomiorTa ohlt.
1t Indrproilrace. deily. 2:30 p
No. 101 smrrs Monmouth J:ao a s
trom Dallas.
Ka isDsrsii.ssct.
Tr.l Xo. kV U.r, jiiT . Snnrt,y
Train No Lt n.li.s. SniKJe, c,.
.. mr. InarpmdrniT. 7 JO e. m.
irain n M f .
MoiitntMllh. 1 JS .
(1 his mm vi
Pain is nature's sienal of distress.
warning that must not be ignored. Those
snarp twinges in the back, those stab
use pains that follow any sudden twist
or turn, are simple signs of hidden dan
rem iu ine Kidneys, jno trouble starts
more easily, gains gionnd more rapidly,
more oiten iatai tnan anv
"""'"'i nic niuueye. aii ine outward
appearances ot health may remain until
a terrible diseate has taken root. Don t
wait. The moment you feel any uneasi-
lameness or pain in the back, the
imioeiit me urine snows lrregularitv
Ail hoi1 in it a a ........ ., "'
... ofjjuiu.uTc, or in me quan
tity or number ol the passages, begin
with Doan's Kidney Pills. This remedy
has been curing kidney troubles for sev-
rutr-uve years, ana never yet has failed
to give relief if taken in time. U cures
ine niuneys, ana tnus cuies backache
lame back, headache. ri i
langnor, sciatica and all other symptoms
of kidney troubles.
Home proof is convincing; evidence of
theeftleiency of Doan's Kidney Pills
t-all at Belt A Cherrington'a drug store
and ask to see statements of Dallas peo
ple wno have used this remedy
For sale by all dealers. Price 60
W'v f0teIr-Milb"" Co., Buffalo,
States 'or me United
Kemember the
no other.
name Doan't and
FRIEND TO FRIEND.
The personal recommp.nrWinnQ nf rvnnle who
have been cured of couaris avA mHs hv Cham
berlain's Cough Remedv hav dnnfi more than all
else to make ir a staple article of trade and com
merce over a large part of the civilized world
AN INSTANCE.
Lucy Suddreth, of Lenoir, N. C, bad been troubled with
a very bad cough for over i year. She says: "Afrien.l
borgtt a bottle of Chamberlain's Cocgh Remkdt,
brought it to me and insisted that I should take it. I did
eoand to my surprise it helped me. Four bottles of It
cured me of my cbngh."
Tram V n m , . . ...
' ' imi at n.iiw i . .
P.m.: mr l.l. ........ El . '
u-alu coiBe si Monss.Milh ior A,V.
FROM AIRLlt.
."v AlrlW. 4ilT. . i
nn
ii
TIE IEW IDEA ri THE CRI81KAL LAXATIVE
EHNEDY5 AXATIVE
Uaret tti Betels r
itil for CUIdrti
or?
u
n
M II
For Sale by Druggists.
C0D6I JTEDf p
OHEY.AB
A ..rMWia
LJ le.CI(raCMaaEi7ki,Ji t-J
Train Xo
BELT & CHERRINGTON, Dallas, Oregon
Ilka i,. rzL. "' """"'.
L.ias "aaKaiia tot
. tii y n i
till .. - . ar. iar(B
r0 MOSMorTH OStT.
ulcme XJ medicine can do more.
For Sale by STAFRIN DRUO CO. Dallas, and M. THOMPSON, Falls W
Corrects
IrTeguIaritifj
Do not risk Ut
Rrirhf9 VtJZZ .
rr DiabeT?