Image provided by: Independence Public Library; Independence, OR
About Independence enterprise. (Independence, Or.) 1908-1969 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 4, 1912)
CIQHT PAGES THE INDEPENDENCE ENTERPRISE, INDEPENDENCE, OREGON. PAGE SEVEN POULTRY AND GAME Cn set you fancy prlvee tut Wild Durks and o( liar gun In snaaon. Writ us fur cash olTar on til k Imla of poultry, pork, sto, Pcnreon-Page Co., Portland MOW A lit) K. IM'KTOM - itamrxr enit (lufr.lrt, lrfuilvilln, (ilrittii. Hfrnnriittn ,riwi, (ji.I.i. Hllv..r, lnl, II, (iulil, Silver, Vmt Until. utMi Kluo f (!M,fHir, II. M'tHiiia Mireliti'" e i1 full price liaft Cru on ani'llcatlim. fi,, in ml unit (Imiilra wurkaw ulUxl. iwlureiwel Uubuuale ttelluaaj liaua. Machinery coral-Hand Machln. bought, eolu anr rhnnifwl: enirlna. holler, aawmllle, U. I'll J, K. Martin Co., 71 1st HU, 1'urlland. Band for Slots Uat and prices, ilLPilES 1 BUSINESS COLLEGE WASH I NO TUN AKOimTh PORTLAND. ORiaON WRITE FOR CATALOG Vht thai I'laf You in m Uood foeWMt KODAK rolt dvelfitxl, 10e, inv larirMit nJ )mt shop In Northwewt. Corn ieet rweulu irunrftnu!. JACOBS Iff t!uild'tr. Ht-attle What Stern Said. Bterne once said tbat tho most ao oompllaned way of using book li to serve them at aome do lords; learn their titles and than brag of tbelr ac quaintance. Leva That Enduraa. Remember, tbat there la sometimes a fine love tbat never leaves a man's heart It ataya and walta! Man cheater Union, free advice to sick women Thousands Have Been Helped By Common Sense Suggestions. Women suffering from any form of fe male ilia are invited to communicate promptly with the woman 'a private corre spondence department of the Lydia E. l'inkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in itrict confidence.. A woman can freely talk of her private illness to a woman; thus baa been established a confidential corre spondunce which has extended over many years and which has never been broken. Never have they published a testimonial or used a letter without the written consent of the writer, and never has the Company allowed these confiden tial letters to Ret out of their possesion, as the hundreds of thousands of them in their files will attest Out of the vast volume of experience which they have to draw from, it is more than possible that they possess the very knowledge needed in your case. Noth ing is asked in return except your good will, and their advice has helped thou sands. Surely any woman, rich or poor, should be glad to take advantage of this generous ofTer of assistance. Ad dress Lydia E. Pink ham Medicine Co., (confidential) Lynn, Mass. Every woman ought to havo Lydia E. l'lnkham'g 80-page Text Book. It is not a book for general distribution, an it In too expensive. It is free and only obtainable by mail. Write for it today. nrrni arf ctiijiii ATCf D1ID1CV rHE BOWELS THE UVER THE BLOOC ATALl. DRUOOIST Painless Dentistry b on pride onr hobby onr ttndy for yaan and Bowooraoooeai, and ours la the beat pelnleM work to ba fonnd snxwhere. bo matter how mack too rtmr. Com Dare our Prtoee. re nniea piece ana brldiie work for out of town patrone la one day If deaired. Painleee sitractloa free when platea or bridge work I. order ed, Coniultition free. MolirOrowni $5.00 22k Bridge Taatk4. CO Gold rllllna-a 1.00 Enamel Filllnre 1.00 Silver Fllllnirt .50 'i .-, A. X-; Good Rubber - Plates 0.UU Botl Red Rubber X V,.- ..9 flitei f.OU H.W.A. Will, PaiinmaM Miuaia Palnleta Extr'lion ,50 II maa amauiHia u raaHiiw BKST MKTHOOSJ AH work fully cuarantoed for fifteen year. Wise Dental o.,inc Painless Dentists rifling Bulldlm, Third and Washington PORTLAND, OR Oldo.Hoaxe: a. It. to a r. M. luudaji, Itei t I'fn irnl " : m I -1 A aftrvl .fit Heat Cruo-h Syrup. Taetea Oood. Uae In time. Sold by DreireMa. IlAafKRl)xl, DAIRYING DURING FLY TIME Two Most Naaded Things Ara Sprayar and Repellent Cool Blankst Is Alao Beneficial. (By M. A. COVKRDrci-I) A good sprayer and reliable fly re pellent will pay for themselves about twenty times during the fly season, to any nothing of the comfort afforded tho animals and the sutlrifuetlon you will derive from milking a quiet cow. If you don't feci like Investing In a spraying outfit, have your wife make you a long, cool blanket out of cheese eloth or some other light material and spread It over the cow while milking. Thla, however, is beneficial at milk ing time only. The one thing that will prevent the flloa from sucking the life blood and consequently the milk from the beat of your herd, Is to spray, and spray thoroughly while you are at it. Boo that the cows have some sort of good shade. They simply cannot stand out in the scorchlDg heat all day and do as well as they would if pro tected from the midday sun. If natural shade Is not available, It will take you but an hour or so to set some tall posta and make a satisfac tory ahade out of small brush, old straw or boards. The cows must have shade. Too many farmers let their cows rustle wator from foul sloughs or from a tank filled with water warm enough to wash dlnhea In. Thla Is not nieroly a question of comfort and satisfaction to the cows. Neither Is it neceaaary simply to add to your dairy products. Sanitation demands that the princi pal element entering Into the compo sition of milk be strictly pure free from every vestige of disease or filth. ANOTHER STOOL FOR MILKING Directions for Making Light and Con venient Device by Anyone Handy With Tools. In a recent Issue I noticed some cuts of milking stools, so I thought I would send you a description of mine. I have used such a one for many years and find It very bandy, writes A. O. Toune In the- Wisconsin Agricultur ist. The side pieces are of inch stuff, 3 Inches wide by 20 inches long. The Handy Milk fetool. seat, 10 by 11 inches, la nailed across the top of the aide pieces. The board for the pall, 8 by 11 Inches, is nailed across the under side of the side pieces bo that the pall la 4 inches low er than the seat of the milker. The back legs are 2-lnch pieces, 11 Inches long, and the front leg is a round piece attached by nailing a small piece of inch board below the pall rest, and boring a hole through both boards. This stool Is light and handy, and easily made by a boy handy with tools. Protect From Files. Remember that It takes as much energy and feed to fight files as It does to grow a calf. Then will It not pay to cut out the flies by giving the calves access to a dark stable or shed, and also apply a little "fly dope." You may rest assured that they will grow and lay on flesh twice as fast from now on If they are afforded a means of thus protecting themselves than they otherwise could possible do. Don't give the calves too much sklmmllk these days. Clean mud oft of the cows' udders and flanks before milking. The hand separator must be washed and scaided twice a day now. The separator should never be al lowed in the barn or near It. Milk from a fresh cow Is good for the table after the ninth milking. Don't neglect regularity In milking just because other work is pressing. A good cow is hard to buy nowa days. The only alternative Is to raise hor. Never attempt to keep summer but ter for early fall prices because it will not keep. Cows fed well before turning them on a Heavy forage crop win noi d in danger of bloating. Sometimes a dose of Glauber s salts will cure a case of bloody milk. De pends on the cause. For a cow that refuseB to let down her milk, a feed of something whllo milking is often helpful. The production of high grade dairy products without a plentiful supply of ice is next to impossible. A little hay for the cows to pick at will help keep the bowels In normal condition, while grass is watery. Sklmmllk fed to shoats with grain is worth about 40 cents per 100 pounds at present prices of hogs. Four ounces of paregorlo In two doses, given at over 24 'hours apart, has been recommended as a cure for scours In cows. A half dozen window Bash glazed will make a dustproof box in which the dairy vessels can be sunned and kept absolutely clean. ' I a INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT AND PROGRESS OF OUR HOME STATE SHOWS STATE'3 INDUSTRIES. Maps In Forthcoming Book of Great Statistical Value, A valuable statistical description of the tate of Oregon, its resources and its Industries, will be provided in booklet now being prepared under the direction of the Oregon State Imrnl gratlon commission and its chief ofil cur. C. C. Chapman, state Immlgra lion agent. The first edition will be out about !November 1 and will be 600.000 conies. This book will be the first reliable record or condensed statistical com pendium of the resources and indus tries of the state that has ever been prepared. Every figure and state ment will be based upon data which has been obtained from every availa ble source of national, state and local records, and will have been rechecked several times and revised to present date, so far as possible. The only illustrations will be 13 maps showing: complete statistical di rectiona upon the following public themes: Educational institutions of the state, creameries, cheese factories and condenseries, precipitation map, map showing the distribution or pop ulation by counties, map showing rural population distribution, a com pendium of the forest reserves in Ore- eon and separate maps locating the distribution of swine, horses, dairy cattle, beef cattle, minerals, railroads and fruits. Each of these maps will cover half a page in a 92-page book with pages sized Bi by 81 inches. There will also be brief descriptive articles urjon the soil, climatic and geographical qualities of Oregon, written by eminent authorities upon those special lines. The book has ben arranged by Lester Davis, of Salem, who has served as active ed itor. Many of the maps and figures were prepared by the department of animal husbandry at the Oregon Agri cultural collgee. The pamphlet was designed primar ily to benefit and inform the prospect ive Oregon immigrant, but will be for free distribution within the state, and will serve as a valuable reference book for everyone. It will be bound in paper and be fit for use as a text book in the public schools. Many ap plications have been received already by the commission from persons who knew that the book was in the process of production. Their names will be placed upon the waiting list prepara tory to the first distribution. .L. I l I issuance oi vne bw anu an appro priation of $25,000 to cover the cost of publication was authorized by ao act of the 1911 legislature. How ever, there was no provision in the bill making anyone responsible for the disbursement of funds, so Governor West refused, temporarily, to release the funds, although he approved the passage. It was not until last April that he designated C. C. Chapman, state immigrantion agent, to superin tend the publication. Since that time the book has been in the process of preparation. The state will pay the cost of distributing 200,000 copies. The Southern Pacific railroad has or dered a purchase of 100,000 for its own distribution and the Hill officials are contemplating a similar order. Potato Harvest Begins. La Grande To accommodate the immense potato crop of the Elgin country, H. H. Weatherspoon is build ing a frost-proof addition to his ware house in Elgin. The addition is 240x 40 feet and will house 410,000 sacks of potatoes. The potato digging will begin at once, and a hundred or more men will be needed to care for the crop. The excellent prices obtained for potatoes last year and the public ity gained by that neighborhood by its shipment of a full trainload of pota toes to Kansas City has given impetus to the industry, which has caused the planting of several hundred acres. Waldport After Creamery. Waldport Waldport is elated over the prospect of a fruit cannery here next year. Parties have been looking for a site. The coast counties are es pecially adapted to the raising of small fruits and vegetables, but owing to the cost and risk of transportation the farmers at present produce only enough for home consumption and lo cal trade. Wild berries such as black berries, blue, black and red huckle berries and blueberries grow in great abundance and their product harvest ed would amount to hundreds of thousands of gallons. To Have Wireless Station. Oregon Agricultural College, Cor vallia A wireless station is to be es tablished at the Gamma Upsilon fra ternity's new home on Eighth and Harrison streets in Corvallis, and two of the O. A. C. students who live there are to operate it. They were employed as Marconi operators during the summer, and now wish to give the service of a sending and receiving sta tion to the eighteen other young men of the fraternity who will move into the new club house about October 10th. i One Potato Produces 68 Pounds. Dallas Thirteen proved a lucky number when Miss Ruth Miller cut up one Koplinner potato a few months ago and planted the "eye's" in 13 in dividual hills. The result was 68 pounds of potatoes, large, clean skinned white potatoes, which have been exhibited in the Polk county school children's exhibit at the State fair. But for the fact that a gopher cleaned out one hill a larger yield would have been returned. DEEPER RIVER 18 TOPIC, Albany Calls Conference of Cities on Subject. Valley Albany A conference of represent atives of the cities of the Upper Wil lamette valley will be held in this city to consider proposed plans for the Improvement of the Willamette river, whether to concentrate all efforts toward the proposed system of locks which will insure a six-foot channel in the river, or to work for the present for the improvements recommended by the United States engineer corps, which will give a 8.6-foot channel. The commercial clubs of Albany and Corvallis have decided heretofore In favor of devoting present efforts to the lesser project, and, with it com pleted and all-year traffic as far as Corvallis assured, then working for the six-foot channel plan. Commercial bodies of other cities are discussing the question, and this conference hai been called to outline a plan of action on which all of the cities of the valley can unite. The Albany Commercial club, in its meeting, decided to call this confer ence, and an invitation will be sent out to the commercial bodies of all the cities of the Upper valley. The club will also invite Represent ative Hawley and Major Mclndoe, of the United States Engineer corps, to attend the conference and outline plans for river improvement. Both have signified a willingness to come. FAIR DRAWS CROWD. Best Products qf Old Yamhill County Are on Display. McMinnville The first day of the Yamhill County School Fair and Stock Show opened here with the largest at tendance for the opening day ever had and the exhibits on display at the pa vilion exceed all others 1( re of ore. Garden products, stock, colts, horse of every description, cattle and every thing that farmers produce came pouring in until late, ana many are still to come. Some farmers utilized their automobiles to bring in poultry, large baskets of plants, fruits and every variety of the vegetable kind. And every road leading into McMinn ville was crowded with wagons loaded to capacity with the farmer s "best" If anyone doubts the statement that Yamhill county is a garden spot he should enter the pavilion for a quarter of a day while everything is to the root. I SALMON CANNING ON. Coos Bay Season Promising Two Plants in Operation. With Marshfield The salmon canning season on Coos Bay has started and the run promises to be a big one, Two canneries will be operated on the bay. One is at Empire and is owned by the Southern Oregon company, and the other is in Marshfield and was this year purchased by W. E. Tallant, of Astoria. The salmon this year are especially large and fine. About four tons a day are now being brought to this city, but soon it is expected that the catch will be much larger. Many fishermen are engaged in the work. The Tallant cannery is trying a new experiment, employing young women instead of Chinamen to do the work. The young women employed were brought here from Eureka. On the Coquille river the run is larger this year than ever before and two canneries there are kept busy. The fishermen will make big money this season. Old Willamette Growing, Willamette University, Salem At the close of the first day's registration a heavy increase in students over the corresponding time of a year ago is recorded. Three more days remain for registration and the attendance is certain to be far in excess of anything old Willamette has ever experienced. The boys' and girls' dormitories are already filled, every room being taken. Lausanne hall, the young women's dormitory, as the result of refinishing another floor, is now accommodating a third more girls than last year. Express Company Follows Law. Salem The Northern Express com pany has reported to the State Rail road commission that it has never sent liquor shipments c. o. d., either in terstate or intrastate, that it has way billed such shipments accurately as to classification and that there has been no false billing of such shipments, nor have such shipments been sent to fic titious consignees. White Lilacs in Bloom. lilac tree full of Albany A white blossoms is the September novelty in the yard of Mrs. Margaret Keifer in this city. On the first day of August Mrs. Keifer picked off all the dried-up spring blossoms and all of the leaves from the tree, and soon afterwards it began to bud out anew. Now the tree is literally full of beautiful blos soms and is attracting considerable attention here. . Klamath Falls Gets Roundhouse. Klamath Falls The Southern Pa cific company has selected the site, not far from its freight depot here, for a five-stall roundhouse. It will be built in such a manner that it can be added to as the road progresses from this point This indicates the inten tion of the company to make this a division terminus and means an in creasing payroll for company em ployes at this point from year to year. W.L.DOUCLAS SHOES 3.0O 3.50 4.00 M.50 AND '5.00 FOR MEN AND WOMEN Bay mmmr W. I Dougam $2.00, $2. SO $3. OO Softool Shorn, bmomumm one) pmlr Drill pomltlvmly oul wmr I wo palrm of ordinary mhoam, mama mm I ha mn a ahoaa. W.LDougUe make and eella more $3.00,13.50 &. $4.00 ahoe j than nr other manufacturer in the THE 8TANOARD OF QUALITY FOR OVER 30 YEARS. The workmanship which has mad a W. L. Dougla ahoea famous the world over U maintained in every pair. Ask your dealer to show you W. L Dougla latest fashions for fall and winter wear, notice the ahort vamps which make the foot look smaller, points in a hoe particularly desired by young men. Also the Conservative Stylet which have made W. L Douglas shoes a household word everywhere. if you could visit W. L. Dougla largo factories at Brockton, Mass., and for yourself how carefully W. L. Dougla ahoes are made, you would then ns deritand why they are warranted to fit better, look better, hold their bap auntt wear longer than any other make for the price. Famt Ceerf gaimt: CAUTION. To protect rot asainet inferior ehoee, W. L. Doatlaa atampe ble name en tho be lorn. Look for the etamp. Beware of eubetitute. W. L. Douslae ehoee are sold ia 7S ewa ilnrM mud ahoe domlore verrwhor. No matter whore rou liro. thov ara within .our rmm eh. If roar deeier cannot eupplr rou, write direct to factory for catalog ehowine how to a ht mail, bboe. eoot everywhere, deliver chargee prepaid. W-lotmlaa, Brockton, 1 iii Spolllnfj Children. Little children give their mother the headache; but if she lets them have tbelr own way, when they grow up to be great children they will give her the heartache. Fondness spoils many, and letting little faults alone spoils more. Gardens that are never weeded will grow very little worth gathering. All watering and no hoe ing will make a very bad crop. A child may have too much of Its moth er's love and In tbe long run It may turn out that It had too little. C. H. Spurgeon. FOR ALL SORE EYES Diver Seized by Octopus. A naval diver at Toulon was sud denly attacked by a giant octopus while under water in the harbor. He gave the hoisting signal and was hauled to the surface, together with the octopus, whose tentacles, said to be 25 feet long, were wrapped around him. The diver was unconscious. The octopus held fast to the diver until It was stabbed to death. It weighed 135 pounds, and the suckers on Its tenta cles were as big as half-dollar pieces. London MalL TUA Or Ball Blue will wash double as many clothe a any other blue. Don't put your money into any other. Good Voice to Be Prized. A soft, well-modulated voice is of Air greater assistance In the world, even In the marriage markat, than personal beauty. There are few things which possess a more definite value as a commercial asset than graciousness of manner and gentle ness of tone. We are not born with harsh voices, we acquire them. Ex change. Mothers will find Mrs. WInslow'e Soothing Pyrup.the best remedy to use for their caUdred t uring t"-.e teething period. Clothes. He "Did you ever observe what a difference clothes make on one's mlndf Now, when I am In my riding togs, I'm all horse; when I have on my business suit, my mind's full of business; when I get Into my evening dress my mind takes a purely social turn." She "And I suppose that when you take a bath your mind's a utter blank?"- Str ty Stories. Eed Croaa Ball Blue, all blue, bent bluhur value In Vine whole world, makes the laundress smile. Making Opportunity. When the young physician's motor car reached the scene of the accident there was nothing to do; all the vic tims had been bo slightly hurt that they were able to walk home. The young doctor was keenly disappoint ed, but his chauffeur spoke up cheer ingly: "Never mind, doctor. I'll run down some business on the way home." ; Some Proof. "So he took you out auto riding the other evening?" "Yes, what of it?" "Do you think he is In love with you?" "I think bo. I know that every time I spoke to him the auto tried to climb a tree or Jump a fence." Houston Post. Coughs and Colds You could not please us bet ter than to ask your doctor about AVer's Cherry Pectoral for coughs, colds, croup, bron chitis. Thousands of families always keep it in the house. The approval of their physi cian and the experience of many years have given them great confidence in this standard cough medicine. Sold for seventy years. Any good doctor will tell you that a medi cine like Ayer's Cherry Pectoral cannot do its best work if the bowels are con atlpated. Ask your doctor if he knows anything better than Ayer's Pills for cor recting this sluggishness of the liver. j Hade by tne . 0. Alia CO., Lowell. Maaa. J world. REDUCE YOUR LIVING EXPENSES Cat Golden Cereal Food and recommend them to four arqtmint ances. You iret better quality and mora for your money. Ther sue made in your home state from the beat Oncon Oata and Wheat Large packages contain s Handsome fremiuoi ar.d all foods ewe guaranteed. Aak your grocer. Golden Rod Oats. Golden Rod Pancake Flour. 1 Golden Rod Wheat Flakes. Ralston Select Bran. Golden Rod Wheat Note. . Golden Rod Chick. Feed. Before cr After, "I thought tbat in the 15 yeaurs of my practice of medicine," said av phy sician, "I had answered almost every possible foolish question, but a new one was sprung on me recently. A young man came in with an Inflamed eye, for which I prescribed liniment to be dropped Into the eye three times a day. He left the surgery, bat jv turned In a few minutes, pokee-hle head in the doorway, and avaked: "Shall I drop this In the eye before meals, or after?" "A confession of faith" If you have trouble with your Stomach, Liver or Bowels, feci run-down and in need of a tonic, we urge a trial of HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS Your faith in this medicine wil not be misplaced. It will sorely help you. Be convinced today. All Druggists and Dealers. , ' Had Johnson Stumped. Doctor Johnson and Macklln arguing a literary question, when tba former quoted Greek. "I don't under stand Greek," said Macklin. ''The manr wbo Dresumes to argue literature should understand every language," re plied Johnson, severely. Whereupon Macklin began reeling off a string of Gaelic, and for once Johnson bad nothing to say. Gold Hoarded In Turkey. . S Throughout the Turkish empire, es pecially in the rural districts, gold la hoarded In the form of Jewelry. NEW RATES HOTEL vsmnn PERKINS WITH BATH PORTLAND.ORE. $152PR DAY UP HNTHE HEART Of THE OTT wrmouTUTHSissUr Most Centrally Located. NOTE THE RATES. OUT Of TOWN PEOPLE . C. GEE WO the Chin doctor Try once more if yon have been doctorlm wltli this one and that one and have notobtaind wir. niHoent relief. Let this frrtmt nature healer ma none your case and prescrihe gome remedy who action is quick, sure and tafe. Hi prfwori ptioin lire compounded from Roots. Herb, Bade and Burks that have been gathered front every Qur terof the globe. The teurete of thew roedioinef are not known to the outikle world, but have hM handed down from father to on in thephyeiaUW familiee in China.. CONSULTATION FREE. If yon llveont of town and can not oa)), write for symptom blank end circular. noioiui 4 osmi Im atampe. THE C. GEE WO CHINESE MEDICINE CO. 1 62 first St., Cor. Morrison Portland, Oregon. P. N. U. No. 40 MJ IVHEN irrltlna- to adrartisarSr pleas " tioa tele paper. '!;'!"'.i&'m IiH,isiaaYei,!V5Waj t 8 Srt J can iw ft S. ?" i from