I : - , THE INDEPENDENCE ENTERPRISE, INDEPENDENCE, OREGON. ' PAGE 8EVEN I -?SSSSJSSSS2ss? I If" 1 1 . ' r t jpi t ml. vi i t x3 1 i ii n rux a nil i r mMlMiMM -es AnswerLMcIe Sams Call M W Y Houston Hotel Ait",t su' ,'ur,un,, (h y ti..i... Ilanut. Two Llorkl i"" r. HOPKINS. MUiumm. V1. Pork, Beef, tl4lK Poultry, Butter, E( Jflll and Farm Produce, . ni.1 B.llbl Kvenlln huuae with ItoVmahket 1-HJCliS. """r M- CRONKIIITE. rrw- s,.i, Portland, Oreeoa lUO Hall.a N.r Hult, lPola A lioutlp Kirprool FRED DUNDEE r. r DTP AIDINP. MOTOR -"" MACHINE WORK HACNETO 5F.RVICE STATION Ali. KINDS OF WELDING CYLINDER GRINDING PROMPT ATTENTION Tn Ail. OHDKHS n!wrtt FUndera. PortUnd.Or. Hotel Hovt CwM' ! Ho,( SU.. P.rll.d. Or. 1.00 1IIMKH. ManaK,r. ATKB;7t, to K. HI'KCIAlr- Wk r Month MONEY FOR YOU. ThauMinli i.f traliiMl vomiif iy,U ivwlrl Hides, Pelts, cr,r Woof& Mohair T1IE II. r. NORTON COMPANY, rerUand. Or... Billl. Wn ll..llul,m. Wn. White Leghorn Baby Chix from heavy laylr.ii (ll.nnlxl) Hock. 1!J.00 lr I'm. Wesuarantm fo arrival. THE PIONEER HATCHERY 415 Sixth Street Petelum., Cel. Girl Volunteer, Raise Pius. Caro ft Crtlfe, and Till Soil Better Than Many Men r,wrl'MI'P SPECIAL EjaLCJ s irt, fvlf iit.fttij. hm,.k and ptTW- Nortonia Hotel lllh mill Stark. Portland's Leading Family Hotel A GOOD FLACK TO STOP whrn in tin? city. An Excellent Dinirtff Room in riihriwtlun MODKKATK PRICES F j '' ' y J ' A -fly 'W : f , , ' c K ' - I - 4 ss:v, ''t 's ' ' t a. 'i - ' i ' f . Vs LISTEN TO THIS! SAYS CORNS LIFT RIGHT OUT NOW Tot eorn-pcHtenxl men and women M luffer do lonRor. Wear tha thoei lit oearlT klllnd rou before, aayi j Cincinnati authority, because a h dropi of rreoione applied directly k I tender, k UIdk corn or callous pi lorencn at once and soon Uie ii or hardened callous loosons so It Ii be luted out, root and all, with- i imall bottle or Irefone costs 17 little it any drug store, but will iiltlrely take off every hard or soft in or calloua. This should be tried I It la Inexpensive and is said not I Irritate the surrounding skin. II jour druKKlHt hasn't any freexone til him to get a small bottle for you 'in his wholesale drug house. It is Mtulf and acta like a charm every b.-Adr. Bad Finish. This Hlmli'iibure Is always talking tout bis drlvea." "Ves," comiiiPiitod the man who in a golf rui to work. "He makes me big drives. tnt he doesn't soem ' he any good on tho putting green." Exchange. Putting Art In Artillery. Teacher, to current events class Wllllu. run von toll inn what. Is F largest gun tho Uermans use? nlllie I I've heard how It's cr Teacher Corrcit Wlllln Tnrlnnnit psazine. Language of Flowers. Orchids You're out of your clasB. Roses Yoil rnn'l nffnrt tn nat mnp. H Violets Detter imv vniii rnnm rnt. Jonqmis niK bIiow for the money, top. Kansas City Journal. A Warning. H Toil find vnnr maatni In a ru. Patlng condition, don't ko near It ketchln'?" Ex- . an 'fTiy, sir? Ia l-nge. . mrWD,!I':N urul WOMEN-In honorable' . iu imy. Nrnii Htamp and rt'rcronce "er. HaKKiily.& Uarnoa. WavolanJ. Ark. StTaMafk Granulated Eyelids, VVIV -ye inflamed by ex uratnSun. Dnilanri Wind pAfgiXCS Suckly relieved by Murtot jr EyeBemedy. No Smarting, kJL . J,ut y Comfort. At wrprts orby mail 50c per Bottle. MurlM r? T"b" 25c. for Book ! (he Eye a norms Eye Kenedy Co., Chicago 1 LetCuticuraBe iearBeanty Doctor p- N. u. No. 23, 1918 A Difficult Case. Old Gentleman What aro you cry ing for, my little man? Hoy Hoo hoo! I'm IobU I'm lostl Old Gentleman There, there, my boy. You mustn't give up hope so soon. Where do you live? Hoy I don't know. Wro moved to day. Hoo hoo! Old Gentleman Well, what's your name? Hoy Don't know that either. M m mother married again today! Pass ing Show. Don't Worry About Pimples. On rUlnit nii'l retiring gently smear the face with Cutlcnrn Ointment. Wash off tho Ointment In five minutes with C'utletira Soap and hot water. For free miinplc.i address, "Cutleurn, Dept. X. Boston." At druggists and by mall. Soap 5, Ointment 2."i and .W. Adv. A Monotonous Existence. "And your daughter has left her husband." "YtsH. Ho hud ne consideration whatever for tho dear girl. Ho nei ther smokes nor plays cards and he al ways wants to stay homo at night" Exchange, Linguists. First Tommy "RUmo me If I ever know theso Frenchies had so much learnln'." Second Tommy "No?" First Tommy-"Why, every last mother's son of them can speak French." Milestones. Rhetorical Emphasis. "Don't you think thero is too much tendency to profanity In conversa tion?" "Yes. And It's going to be worse. I understand tho government is going to open up more canals. And that means moro mules." Exchange. To kocp clean and healthy take Dr. Pierce's i'leasant I'ellHts. Ihey regu late liver, bowels and stomach. Would Save Time. "Can you toll me the nearest way to Doylston street?" . "C-c certalnly. If you'll M"Just"'"'T Say. I c-c-can go with you and sh-sh-show you quicker than I c-c-can say it." Boston Transcript. More Appropriate. "Why do they call them dental par lors?" "Kuld'think It would ap propriate to call them drawing rooms. Baltimore American. Proper Crops Only. People whS sow seeds hU . year should be extremely careful not to sow any seed of M,ltlo-.nJ.hBtand ii not a paying one, as thiols Btana m this country. Pathfinder. Ves, Jim, Until You Kick In. Tim -"Your wife does know how to dress, old man You have to hand it th,m-"Yes:aatna also foot the bills." Exchange. It Would Be. -I have a letter f rom Bill, wjo to somewhere in FrancJ e ws speaking to tho natives are I nounced." Exchange. Sapolio doing its work. Scouring torU.S.Marine Corps recruits. Join Now! JNen Mohcam.. ONt CO APPLY AT ANY POST OFFICE SERVICE UNDER THIS EMBLEM Men who wear this emblem are U.S. MARINES In the opinion of Uncle Sam the raising of pigs is an important war task; so Important, In fact, that he has called upon 200,000 girls and boys to raise porkers for the market. The appeal has been heeded by the farmerettes who re Joyfully tackling the Job of providing more than their share of the pork products which we must ship to our fighters and the allies in Europe. This farmerette is having a Jolly good time taking care of a litter of eight oute little black pigs. Caring for the pigs is only one part of the work of these girls down at the!" Huntington, Long Island, farm. They are showing that girls can be capable farm hands at all sorts of chores. BRIEF THRIFT ITEMS By the U. S. Department of Agriculture Scraps of leftover meat or flsh can be combined with cereal or other mild flavored food, both to give flavor and to odd nourishment to the total dish. Stale bread cun be utilized in a va riety of ways in combination with vegetables and meats, In preparing cakes, breads uud puddings, aud in other wuys. Much food is thrown away because so many people do not know how to utllizo leftovers or will not take the trouble to keep and prepare them. Leftover cereals can be reheated or combined with fruits, meats, or vege tables Into appetizing sido dishes. Even a snoouful of cereal Is worth saving to thicken soup, gravy, or sauce. Mnnv nersons regard the saving of small amounts of leftover food as un important. If they kept accurate nc however, for any period, many families would be astounded by the amount of good food they are tnrow ing out and by the sums that they ......in tn tho Brocer. the butcher, and milkman merely to replace good food being absolutely wasted. ttuorv hit of fat trimmed from meat hafnr-a prink 1 11 T Or tried out in boiling, broiling can be made use of In cooking. In buying meat it is often the case that after the nieut nas k , vni1ri,i mid the orlce for the cut named valuable fat Is trimmed off This fat, which the nousewue pays for, if taken home and used, would reduce expenditures jui "-t. fats. uiv looked down HKim uum, ivv upon as a food although It contains practically a!! the nourishing ele ments of whole miik with the excep tion of the cream or fat, can be used as n beverage, in cooking cereals, or as a basis for milk soups or sauces. Sour milk, also, so often thrown away cau be used 1" "inking hot breads or m the homo manufacture of cot tage cheese. . ..i. American house- B to avoid kitchen bS table waste are of great Impor tance No one can tell Just how much 2C been ,ved, but that the a S aTnmount of fat and nitrog iu ink-rial received from garbage. T et the gl k go on. Lvery Jll of Sod 1S PUnd m,dtd ' .....1 i.nnnlV. to our 10UU Animal Cemetery. Probnl.lv the I'st ,bpst "ft w0od eliiboiaitij of China- Invar, New Metal, Believed By Various Investigators To Have Least Expansion The fact that all metals expand and contract more or less with every va riation of temperature Introduces great complications Into the making oj in struments concerned with absolute standards of time or space, and much research has been devoted to the find ing of a metal having the lowest pos sible coefficient of thermal expansion. In due course the Investigators arrived at a nickel steel alloy containing about 80 per cent nickel and about 5 per cent each of carbon and manganese, which was found to have a remark ably small thermal expansion at or dinary temperatures, and to which the name "Invar" has been given. A summary of the results obtained during the last 25 years by various in vestigators of this property of invar and related nickel steels shovt ac cording to the Scientific American, that a bar of ordinary invar expands or con tracts by about one-mllllonth of its length for one degree centigrade alter ation In the temperature anywhere within the range of zero to 40 de grees. A much higher degree of con stancy than this is, however, some times obtained; much depends on the amounts of carbons and manganese present. Small quantities of invar have been manufactured which showed a change In length of less than half a millionth per degree between zero and 20 de grees. This alloy contained .06 per cent, carbon and 9.39 per cent man ganese. Samples have even been pre pared which showed a negative co efficient of expansion, i. e., which con tracted slightly instead of expanding, as the temperature rose. Invar possesses this peculiar prop erty only within a moderate tempera ture range; from 40 degrees upward the coefficient of expansion steadily increases as the temperature rises, un til at 200 degrees it is the same as that of Bessemer steel. Wise and Otherwise. : There's some excuse for a man being almost anything, but J what excuse can any man offer for being pro-German? It's vain to try to tell a worn- an how much you think of her c If you forget to phone her that you're going to be late for din- a ner. J Misery may love company, but what it needs most is help. J If you were in the. other fel- low's place you might be making J a worse mess of things than he Is. oeoeee Cards for the Blind. Cards that have recently been de vised for the blind have raised let ters in the top and bottom corners that reveal their identity. By plac ing his thumb over the letters the blind man can tell what cards he holds nearly ns quickly as the ordlnnry per son. Dots form the letters. "Two D." means that the card is the Two of Diamonds; "J. II." means the Jack of Hearts, and so on. At first the blind experience a little difficulty in reading the cards readily, but they soon be come proficient. Popular Science ilonthly. BEST DAIRY CATTLE BREEDS In Making Selection Dairyman Should Take Local and Market Conditions Into Consideration. (Prepared by the United States Depart ment of Agriculture.) Breeds of dairy cuttle differ in both conformation and general characteris tics. Each has been developed for cer tain ends. To make the greatest suc cess a dairyman In selecting a breed should take local conditions and mar keting requirements Into considera tion in connection with the characteris tics of the various breeds. He should not allow personal preference to influ ence his selection If his favorite breed is unsulted to local conditions, but should give careful consideration to the breed or breeds already estab lished In his community. In such a se lection he Is benefited In many ways. Jersey Cow in Pasture. For Instance, a market Is established, surplus stock may be disposed of to better advantage, co-operative 'adver tising may be used and bulls may be bought co-operatively or exchanged readily among breeders. Jersey cattle, the most numerous breeds In the United States, origin ated in the Island of Jersey. Jerseys and Guernseys probably had the same foundation stock, but have been de veloped toward different ideals so that the breeds now differ in a number of particulars. Jerseys vary considerably In color. Shades of fawn, squirrel gray, mouse color and very dark brown are com mon. Jerseys have a highly organized nervous system and are usually some what excitable, responding quickly to good treatment and good feed. Cows average about 900 pounds and bulls 1,500 pounds In weight The Jersey cow gives rich, yellow-colored milk and is an excellent butterfat producer. In the Jersey breed, the average of 5,244 cows that had completed yearly records for the register of merit was 7,702 pounds of milk, testing 5.35 per cent, making 417 pounds of butterfat. The ten highest milk producers ranged from 19,694.8 to 16,633.2 pounds, an average, for these ten, of 17,703.4 pounds of milk. The ten highest but terfat producers range from 999.1 to 875.2 pouuds, an average, for these ten, of 943.1 pounds of butterfat. HINTS ON MILK PRODUCTION Cows Should Be Kept Clean and Milked in Clean Surroundings Into Covered Pail. (Prepared by the United States Depart ment of AgTlculture.) After any foodstuff is produced one of the Important things Is to see that It is put on the market in good shape bo that it will keep for a reasonable length of time without loss through spoilage. In this time of need for food every effort should be marie to prevent milk from spoiling. Cows should be kept clean and should b"e milked in clean surroundings into a small-top or covered pall. All utensils which come Into contact with the milk should be thoroughly sterilized with steam for at least five minutes, and milk should be cooled promptly to 50 degrees Fahr enheit or less and maintained at that temperature. Whenever these condi tions are met, little milk will be wasted. In this time of terrible de struction of human life it is particu larly necessary that milk be produced under such conditions as to insure a safe food for babies. This must be done by a decreasing number of men trained to do it. A great task and a great opportunity for dairymen are involved. COMFORT FOR YOUNG CALVES Give Them Sun-Lighted Quarters, Milk, Sound Grain and Bright Hay Watch Carefully. Give the young calf comfortable, suh llghted quarters; whole milk the first two weeks, changing to skim . milk thereafter ; sound grain and bright hay In liberal quantities as it I11 use them and, withal, the watchful eye and the liberal hand of the owner, whose In terest will see that all changes In feed are gradually made. Poor Roughage for Cows. Timothy hay is quite commonly grown, and is used despite the fact that it is an extremely poor roughage lor dairy cows. Owinsr to the increased cost of all kinds of ma terial the retail telling price of KOVEHALLS Retf.U.S.Pat.Off has been advanced to the Suit Excellence of quality and workmanship - guaranteed as heretofore. OVERALLS RK.U.S. PAT.orr. Look for this Red Woven Label jjJSJ" Madu hy Levi Strauaa & Co., San Francisco Awarded GRAND PRIZE at P. P. I. E. Kfn.of"FneJom-AU" the new (anneal for women LEVI STRAUSS & CO. BAN THANtlbCU. CALi Carelessness. Wife (reading) Thief grabs lady's $500 meshbag with two pennies in it. Husband (a preacher) Ah, ladies should be more careful on their way to church. Houston Chronicle. When Mary's Lamb Grew Up. Mary had a little lamb But how that lamb has grown! Now Mary'd rather walk a mile Than face that lamb alone. Boston Transcript Habit. "That telephone frets me like an aching tooth," said the man who jumps every time the bell rings. "Yes," commented the sardonic cit izen; "there is a similarity; and the queer part f it is that you lack the nerve to have either taken out" Washington Star.' ' Real Art "He's a clever photographer." "Makes pictures of people as they look, I presume." "Cleverer than that He makes them as they think they look." De troit Free Press. A PRETTY FACE is the result of a healthy physical condition. "Beauty is but skin deep" yet it greatly de pends on a clear complexion, free from wrinkles and hollow cheeks. Health always brings wealth of ' beauty. A health ly state of the sys tem comes with Doctor Pierce's Favorite Prescription. It's a medicine prepared for woman's ailments it cures those derangements and weak nesses which make woman's life miser Able. You can overcome most bodily ills, escape sickness, build up your health with regular hours, plenty of water, sensible food, and a chance to get the poison out of the system. Take a natural laxative once or twice weekly. Such a one is made of May-apple, Juice of aloes, and root of Jalap, sugar-coated and supplied to all druggists years ago by Doctor Pierce and known as Doctor Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. Get them to-day! Adv. Polite Repartee. Stupid Maid Mrs. Juggins says she ain't home, ma'am. Clever Caller All right; tell her I was awfully afraid she would be.- Baltimore American. Couldn't- Miss Them. "Did" you observe all the meatless and wheatless days?" "Observe them! They have been forced on my attention." Washington Star. Impervio'us. "The language you use to that mule is perfectly shocking." "Yes," replied the driver. "It seems to get a rise out of everybody but the mule." Washington Star. THIS WEAK, flERVOUS MOTHER Tells How Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Restored Her Health. IIIPIIIII Philadelphia, Pa. "I was very weak, always tired, my back ached, and 1 felt sicKiy mosi oi me time. I went to a doctor and he said, I had nervous indi gestion, which ad ded to my weak condition kept me worrying most of the time and he said if I could not stop that, I could not get well. I heard so muchabout Lydia E. Pinkham's Vorrotnhla f!nm- found my husband wanted me to try it took it foraweek and felt a little bet ter. I kept it up for three months, and I feel fine and can eat anything now without distress or nervousness. " Mrs. J. Worthune, 2842 North Taylor St, Philadelphia Pa. The majority of mothers nowadays overdo, there are so many demands upon thsir time and strength; the result is invariably a weakened, run-down, nervous condition with headaches, back ache, irritability and depression and soon more serious ailments develop. It is at such periods in life that Lydia K Pinkham's Vegetable Compound will restore a normal healthy condition, ua it did to Mrs. Worthline.