Washington County hatchet and Forest Grove times. (Forest Grove, Or.) 1896-1897, August 26, 1897, Image 7

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    $
1 0 0
< )
W A S H IN G T O N
00
¡All. or your share of it, if you find the
pissing word.
|Schillings Best tea is not only pure ¿„j ¡t
•? .... because it is fresh-roasted.
What is the missing word?
Schilling'i
Ticket
L
Best tea at your grocer's; take out the Yellow
U , s one in every p a ck a g e ); send it with your g u « * t0 address below
¡August 3 1 st.
I
On« wori1 Ji*owec^ f°r ea c^ yellow ticket.
If only one person finds the word, he gets one thousand dollars
U find it. the m on ey will be divided equally among them
If
[ Evfry one sending a yellow ticket will get a set of cardboard creeping
U at the end o f the contest.
Those sending three or more in one
EWill receive a charm ing 1898 calendar, no advertisement on it.
Besides this thousand dollars, we will pay S ,5o each to the two persons
S send in the largest num ber o f yellow tickets in one envelope between
, ,j and the end o f the contest— August 3 1 st.
|Cut this out.
Y ou won’t see it again.
B 8
Address: SCHILLING' S BEST TEA SAN FRANCISCO.
I
r man hits some peculiar train of
Finl.li Worm.n llnvr ltfKhla.
¡btwiiicli lie falls hack upon when
Finland is a paradise for women— at
[one. This to a great degree least for those of the sex who are desir­
ous of being placed upon the same
1 man.
plane as men socially, politically and
industrially. Nowhere else in the civ­
ilized world are the Bexes so nearly upon
Por/Ar/t
an equality as there, anil the experi­
ment lias proved an unqualified success.
Tor more than 25 years the gymnasiums
|... Portland, Oregon • . .
have admitted both sexes, and in the
jistrong , l l . b . , Prin. J. A. W esco , Scc’y University of
Helsingfors there are
now 200 women students.
There are
[BUSY W O R L D O F B U S I N E S S
flourishing clubs of women,
le employ moot to hundred« o f oa r graduate«, and two
||u Ihoutamls m ore. Rend for our catalogue.
About 1,000 are now employed in post-
Learo «bat aud bow we teach. Verily,
offices, railroad and telegraph bureaus
»BUSINESS EDUCATION PAYS
and other departments of the public ser-
More than 900 are engaged as
L I T E R A R Y , *ice.
norm al, busi- teachers in schools of various grades,
_
_______
ness, m usical,
ingieal ami preparatory courses. State and it is not uncommon to see among
■ lor normal course. T w enty-eight in­ their pupils young men of 18, who are
is, 327 students. Location beautiful,
tin the suburbs, with all the Advantages preparing for an academic or eommer-
(tit city ami none o f its dismivantag %. cial career. At least 3,000 women are
nsaloons and immoral places. Boaru-
Fifty-two of the 80 poor-
tconnecicd with school. G overnm ent in business.
»firm. Exptnar« for year from $100 to houses have women superintendents,
lool opens September 21, 1897. Cata-
and all the dairies are managed by
ltfret'. Address,
|.V an 8 coy , I). D., University Park, Or. women.
Y //fy
A
NY COLLEGE ti&XX:
Jc. classical and academ ic training,
CONFINKWKNT
AM*
HARD
W ORK
jog year will record som e new features: Indoors, psrticnlsrly in the sitting posture,
Jltr businc"- college, under the leader- «re far more prejudicial to health than execs-
hregular business college man. 2—Elc- sive muscular exertion in the open air. Hard
iiml advanced German taught by an sedentary workers arc far too weary after office
■ born and Vmerican-educated Ger- hours to take much needful exercise in the
FMilitarv tactics, in volvin g the regu- open air. They too often need a tonic. Where
4» first-class m ilitary school in dress, can they seek im igoration more certainly and
■ drill. Opens Sept. 15. Send for cat- agreeably than from Hostetter’s Stomach Bit-
ters, a renovant particularly adapted to re­
\ Wallace H o w e Lee, president.
cruit the exhausted force of nature. Use also
for dyipepsia, kidney, liver and rheumatic
Ailments.
khe,
mm
s
itlfMELT,
[Lame Back,
ilriad Back,
flitch in the
k, Lumbago
ail back
■b'tj are in-
tntly relieved
r. J
* soothing, warming, invig-
'nK current penetrates tht
Jmed tissu-s, sends the
►blood bounding through your
», relieves the pain, takes
f the soreness, warms, tones
and strengthens,
re-enforces na­
ture and
y
The rarest metal is didymium, and
its present market prioe is $4,500 per
pound.
The next costliest metal is
barium; its value is$260.
U B A KXK1S CANNOT
KK Ct RED
bv ||)C»I »Iip liciion «, «» they cannot reach tlie
dU eaxd [luriion nt the -ar. There ia only one
wav to cure deafnc - and that is by conatltu-
tiohal renteUi«-» l»* atne'<- IS caused by an In­
flamed <,ondition o> the muenua lining ot the
Eustachian tuts-. When this tube gels inllain
ed von have a rumbling -ound or imperfect
hearing, and »lien it is entirely closed denfne.s
is the result, and unless the inflammation can lie
t a k e n out and this tube restored to its normal
condition, hearing will be destroyed forever:
nine cases out of ten arc caused by catarrh,
which is nothing but an inflamed condition of
the mucous surfaces.
,
We will give One Hundred Hollars for any
case of deafness (caused bv ealarrhttliat cannot
be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Send for cir­
culars. frt' .
p j rH iJ tE Y £ CO., Toledo, O.
Sold bv druggists. 7.ie.
Hall's Family fills are the best.
A German doctor of reputation pre­
scribes aluminum as a cure for rheuma­
tism.
_______
\Ve will forfeit $1,660 if any o f ou r p ub­
lished testim onials are proven to he not
genu ine. T he P iso C o ., W arren, I a.
Cures
Perm m eutly.
L it e r a r y N o te .
&
Howard, Ainsle
Company, New
It is worn while
York, announce in theft sterling little
you sleep, and
magazine, issue of August, a change of
can be regulated.
name from The Yellow Kid to The
Real about it in
Yellow Book. This departure is made
the little book
in view of the improved and more gen­
“ Three Class.-s
of Men,” free by
eral character of the contents of the
mail or at the
periodcal, which will hereafter appear
- physician’s advice
but once a month. The Book « i ll be
'-*,l or address
as large and spicy as ever, stocked from
cover to cover with pictures, jokes,
sketches, verses and short stories, hor
P^Mhingtnn S t., P ortlan d , Or.
varietv and excellence of materia . in
I
mention this P ap e r.
view of the price, 5 cents, The ie llo »
Make m oney by guc- Book is unique.____________
1
I electric BELT CO.
IT
resttul speculation in
Chicago.
We buy and
sell w h ea t there oh mar-
lbrJ, '**
made on a small
|T
m future«. W rite for
Bes: of reference given, Sev-
ithn*n< ° n { he C hicago Board of
•wioronrn K n ow led ge o f the busi-
Hook mis £ r o . f t’ hieago Board
, OfTVf-t m Portland, Oregon,
pNWtle, \N asn.
60008 S r“ ..“
»
E J ^ m p le t e line of Gymnasium
i
bo«Mi« on the Coast.
’ « w o rk s made to order .
Athletic Catalogue.
* F IN C K C O .,
San Franelaco, C a l.
There are about 100 grains of iron in
the average human bod.T amJ ? e t j o
important is tins exceedingly m
quantity that its diminution is attend-
ed witli very serious results.
England is trying submerge.) cannom
O a k e n
Imams 21 inch«* thick and the
^ . 1 of a ship protected by « h ^ - n c h -
o f boiler plate were pierced by a solid
shot from one.
_____
A medical authority asserts that death
»««• * ■ "“¿r Vbr ».
» .ir J - —
* * v w « « a « +-W W * ye s c io u s n e s t e n s ue»-____________
T E E T H I N G .”
1
# ’ ■ ¡M ix « S T » c r sh o u ld a lw a y s b e J
It s o o t h e « the c h ild , s o ft - «
¡»«in care« wind e o lle .a n d is
T^r*n t y c e n l <
K
-
*
When the electric « « [* * ?
4 London was
,8
*R i >* ran be saved wltb- a d j u s t e d . __________ ___ ______
o«t tbelr knowledge by
ARTI JAG, the marvelous
rnre for the drink habit.
^ All drngglste, or write
rJdnotion
Rew Yerk Cltr. usual amount of a»
® laoly mailed free . questions
like..
o
the cnminal ol.i
.
f
‘
MOTHERHOOD,
tle r a a r k a b le W i l l P o w e r.
I
The late William 8 . Groesbeck, of
Cincinnati, never took another law case M rs. Finir ham D ecla res N o W e
after his defense of President Andrew >
N o e d D esp a ir. .
• •
Johnson. “ The brilliant speech which (
There arc many curable causes for
won that case,’ ’ says tiie Cincinnati
Commercial Tribune, “ proved the sterility in women. One o f the nuu-t
man’s remarkable will and intellectual common ia general debility, accom­
(lowers. He had been so ill as to he panied by a peculiar condition o f the
confine«! to ilia bed, anil on the day o( blood.
- \.
Write freely and fully to Mrs. Plnlc-
the trial, while lying in lied, lie jotted
down on a sheet of fools«'ap paper the ham. n or addresa Is Lynn, Mass. She
main points of hia defense.
lie was will tell you, free o f charge, the cause
driven to the tribunal in a carriage, o f your trouble and' w hat course to . . ,
of flies. It is the digestion of food rath­ unable to walk, and spoke extern|>ore take. Believe mo, under right con^L-
er than eating it that Alls the milk pail. for (our hours and a half. At the cloee tions, you have a fair chance to become
Yet we have known farmers who out article X I was voted u|ion, and the the joylnl mother o f children. Mas.
down shade trees in the pasture be­ president acquitted of the other arti­ L ucy L yti . e , 235 Ilenderoon St., Jersey * -
cause. as they expressed it, the cows cles.
Since that time Mr. Groesbeck City,N. J.,certainly thirhsso. Shcaays: . *
“ I am more than proud o f Lydia E. . •
would lie in the shade all through the lias lived a life of quiet aud retirement,
day, only eating at night and morning, ig 1872 lie built Elmhurst, a noble PinUhum's Vegetable Compound, and
when air is cooler and the grass is like­ house of superb proper' ions, command­ cannot find words to express the good , . -
ly to be moistened with dew.
ing a river view o f unsurpassed beauty. it haa done me. I was troubled very A • »
badly with the leucorrhoca and severe 1
9
D ryln c Wet Grain.
A bulletin (No. 7) o( the division of wom b pains. From the time I was •
A11 who are used to handling either entomology of the United States de- married, in 1382, until last year, I was
••
brick or tile, know that wbeu thorough­ (tartment of agriculture says thut in under the doctor's care. Wo had n o j
¡¡w
ly dry they will absorb a great amount France and Pennsylvania an industry children. I have had nearly every ,
b r s c g ' i i g N e w ly P l o w e d f a n d .
of water without being saturated. Ad- lias recently sprung up, which consists doctor in Jersey City, and have been '.
When land is plowed for wlntergrain vantage Is taken of this fact by grain
of the farming of spiders for the pur­ to Kelvin Hiwpital, but all to no avail."
after midsummer it needs all the mois­ dealers and farmers, who place dry
I saw Mrs. Pinkliam's advertisement
ture that the soil when plowed, and a bricks which are easiest to handle ami pose of stocking wine cellars, ami thus
in the paper, and have used five bot- •
securing
almost
an
immediate
coating
good deal more, to make a good seed least likely to break among dump grain
ties o f her medicine. It has done more -
l»ed. The turning of the furrow expos­ to prevent it from heating. It Is sur­ of cobwebs to new wine bottles, giving
for me than all tlio doctors I ever had ;
es a much larger surface to the air. be­ prising wlmt an effect this will have If them tiie ¡ip|iearanee of great age. This
It lias stopped my pains, and has
sides making a hollow beneath, which a very few bricks are interspersed industry is carried on in a little French
brought me a fine little girl. I have
village
in
tiie
department
of
Loire
anil
also helps to dry out the soil above It. through the heap. Each brick will al*-
been well ever since my baby was born.
Karly in spring, when the land Is cold, sorb fully half a pint of water If It is near Philadelphia, where “ Epeira vul­
I heartily recommend Mrs. Pinkham'a
this large exposure to the air. which is dry to begin with. This will dry out garis” and “ Nephila flumipes” are
medicine to all women suffering from -
then wanner than the soil, may be ben­ the surplus moisture out of a good raise«! in large quuntitU'S and sold to
sterility."
the
w
ine
merchants
at
tiie
rate
of
$10
eficial. Even then we never wanted to many bushels of damp grain. Tills
No. 3 5. '* 7 .
let the furrow lie more than one or two might be used in mowiug away damp per 100. This applu-ation of entomol­ N. P. K. t:.
days without putting in the harrow hay or grain in the bundle, though In ogy to industry is one which will not
HEN' w r i t i n g t o N d v « r t u « r a , p l e a
m e n t i o n tliia pwpor.
to break up the clods formed by the ueltlier of these positions is there ao be highly commended.
plow, and which. If they dried In that much likelihood of injury ns there is
state, could not be made Into a good where threshed damp grain is closely
seed bed that season. But in late sum­ confined in bins.
mer if It Is necessary to plow, the rough
Forirhnm fo r th e Silo.
furrow should be dragged over as
While no kind o f grain as feed can
quickly as possible. It will press the
furrow down, causing weeds and stub­ supersede corn In cheapness and vnlue,
WE ARE ASSERTING IN THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO THE
ble to begin to rot. The roller also Is a sorghum is a formidable rival to It for
EXCLUSIVE UsE O F THE WORD “ C A S T O R IA ” AND
help to this. But It is better to run the fodder, especially when put up in the
“ P IT C H E R 'S C A S T O R IA ,” AS OUR TR AD E MAkK.
smoothing harrow over the rolled sur­ silo. It stands drought better, which
is likely to make it popular In the arid
I,
DR.
S A M U EL P IT C H E R , o f H yannis, M assachusetts,
face,
so
as
to
roughen
It.
The
compact­
j
ness o f thp soli brings moisture to the portions of the West, where corn often
was
the
originator
o f “ P IT C H E R 'S CASTO RIA ," the sam e
surface, and the roughened surface fails. The sorghum hsr too tough a
stalk
to
feed
green,
but
when
cut
and
that
has
borne
and
does now
y / P T T X " on everU
j makes a mulch wldch prevents too rap­ put In the silo there is enough fermen­
id evaporation.—American Cultivator.
bear the fa c s im i le signature o f
YciAcJtl/U wrapper.
tation to soften the stalks so that they
This
is
the
original
“
P
IT
C
H
E
R
'S
CASTO
RIA
," w hich has been
can !>e eaten. The sweetness of the
F o r P ic k in s : G o o s e b e r r i e s .
i It is the habit of our American sorts sorghum furnishes carbonaceous nutri­
used in the homes o f the m others o f A m erica fo r over th irty
o f gooseberries to grow In a tangled ment Just as does the starch of corn
years. LOOK C A R E F U L L Y a t the wrapper and see that it is
j mass of branches close to the ground. grain, and In even more palntnhle form.
j
the k ind you have alw ays bought s n f s / , -r
on
Wherever cane sugar is made in- the
.
South the workmen who attend the
a
n
d
h
a
s
t
h
e
s
i
g
n
a
t
u
r
e
o
f
wrap­
!
grinding always grow fat from the
p er. Mo one has a u th ority fr o m m e to use m y nam e except
sugar they eat.
ryt
‘
w
AN OPEN LETTER
To MOTHERS.
j
G le n n in c A fte r G rain
H iirveat.
It Is a great mistake to let any stock,
except poultry, glean Hfter the grain
harvest has been gathered. The poach­
ing of the soil nnd Injury to young
clover, caused hr other stock running
over the fields, more than offsets what
I
good the stock can gain by gathering
|
i
the wasted grain heads. There are
i
very few wasted heads in modern grain
!
(
harvesting, except such as are beu!
,
down and cut off with too little straw
to be gathered in the bundle. If al­
C.OOSKmtRHY FICKINO M AP I EAST.
lowed a free range, the fowis will gath­
Tin- reault is moat dlflcnlt picking aad er most of the grain, and they will pay
scratched hands. The flrst picture 1 >est for it. as grain so gathered al­
shows a simple plan to obviate the dltti- ways sets the hens to laying again.
culty. If one has many hushes this
T r a n s p l a n t i n g V e a e t n b ’ ea
jilan will prove especially advanta­
In setting out cnbbnge and celery tli“
geous. The stout wire ring is put under
the low lying branches and hooked. top should he shortened severely so as
Then the three wires nre hooked into It. to lessen evaporation. This will male
a very vigorous growth, beside prevent­
ing the setback which a withered leaf
on a transplanted plant always gives.
With each transplanting there will
come a large mass of roots. *fo that aft­
er lieing twice transplanted the calc
» IK K K I N O .
bage or other vegetable will grow with­
the wires drawn up anil hooked over out any t*ereeptible chevy. If the
the stake that is stuck down in the weather is not suitable heel the plants
middle of the hush. One can then reach in. covering tops anil all for two or
under the bushes very easily.—Ameri­ three days. Then the riots will be
ready to grow at once.
can Agriculturist.
f l r a n ' t i e ’ tier t h u s H « j .
It is undoubtedly iuserious loss to
have so much of the hay crop Injured
by excessive rains, as has l>een the case
the present year. Yet this may be In
part made an advantage to farmers If
it turns their attention to grain ns a
cheaper source of nutrition than even
the Itest hay can be. More than this.
If given with enough hn.v or straw or
cornstalks to distent! the stomach,
grain Is l>etter feed, because more eas­
ily digested. In the coarser fodder so
much of rite nutrition goes to sustain
animal heat or tile processes of diges­
tion, that comparatively little Is left to
make flesh or milk or fats. The knowl­
edge that some grain with hay makes
cheaper nutrition is not half so widely
extended as It ought to lie. If It were,
there would he a itetter demand for
grain and It would sell nt better prices.
B a rn O at th e Rtnm na.
The Centaur Company
P resident.
M arch 8. 1897.
of
w hich
II.
Fletcher
of
for
is
,
Do Not Be Deceived.
Do not endanger the life o f your ch ild by accepting a cheap substitute
which some druggist may offer you (because he makes a few more pennies
on it), tiie ingredients o f which
even he
does not know.
The Kind You Have Always Bought »•
B EA .f T H E FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF
Insist on Having
The Kind That Never Failed You.
▼ H « C I N T A U M C O M P A N Y .
........
11
M U R N A V • ▼ M I T , N E W T O U R C IT Y
......................................... ■ '
■
■ -------
'J
\ ifc ik ik & ifc lk ik ik ik lk ik ik lk ik ik lk ik ik ifc lk lk ? k lk lfr .ik ii*
A ptrfrct t
TF* «f
tke hlvhest order of «xctllence in msnnfsctBr«.**
w
BREAKFAST COCOA g
W alter Baker & Co.’s
’ ff'*ctn th • Milk Flow.
Deferring the watering for an hour or
two invariably cause« a slight shrink­
age in the milk, and a deterioration in
Its quality. Allow a cow to go wlthou*
Its regular food for a short time, and
she grows restive and anxious, and
every one knows what a disastrous ef­
m
fect tltis has upon the milk flow.
j|
kk
Absolutely Pure— Delicious—Nutritious.
Costs L e ss than One Cent a Cup.
Be ture
aura that yoi
you get the
genuine article.
■* *
* î at
*7*o.
^
14
DORCHESTER. M A SS. ^
----------------------------------------
....B y ....
t M
W A L T E R B A K E R A CO. L td .
F a r m N o te «.
Good size is always an important
item in a breeding ram.
Flow the ground for wheat and then
apply a dressiug-of manure.
The beat sheep are the most profit­
able under all circumstances.
An excess o f food Induces indigestion,
and is worse than a spare diet.
Flan to feed the milk cows liberally—
that is, all they can eat and digest well.
When prices for any kind of stock is
low, then is usually a good time to in­
vest.
There Is no advantage in digging the
late potatoes until the weather becomes
Chus.
*
^
lO W E R
...FOR..
M*
P R O F IT ijjj
Power that will save you money and
make you money. Hercules Engines
are the cheapest power known. Burn
Gaaoliae or Distillate Oil; no smoke,
fire, or d ir t
For pumping, running
dairy o r farm machinery, they have no
equal. Automatic io action, perfectly
safe and reliable.
Scad far illustrated catalog,
To get rid o f stumps in a Held, the
contrivance shown In the illustration
is an advantage. It Is made o f sheet
+•>
iron, supplemented by cool.
two or three lengths of
A small flock of sheep well caret! fot
ordinary fl-lnch stove will bring a better return than a large
pipe. The lower part one neglected.
»♦
must be large enough
Too much o f the stock goes to market
♦< »
to slip over the stumps. In an unmarketable condition to make
A hole is dug between
the most out o f It.
the roots or at one side |
It is a mistake to sow grass, clover,
Hercule* Spedai
partly under the stump,
Bay St., San Francisco, Cal.
1 2U serrisl horsepower)
large enough to build a wheat or rye In the fall without a thor­
fire. After the Are is ough prepaiatlon of th« soil. Have the
Price,
only
t!M
.
4 >♦
once fairly started, the surface in a fine tilth.
To make farming moat profitable and
cylinder Is slipped over
the stump and the to realize tbe lsrat price«, all products
stlmp S T O V E , pieces of stove pipe are should lie marketed In the most attrac­
added. The whole arrangement acts as tive and finished maul er.
ALIVE VITI
So far as can lie done, the feeding of
, stove and the whole stump Is burned
Quickly, Thoroughly, Forarar furati
H K A l) < 'unifilare, in from 17 minuti*-
hour* by •'•HUXM M’H TAPE WORM
out completely —Orange Judd Fanner. ail stock intended for market should
** a . . .
HPKrlFIO,” requiring no previous or IF
be pushed so that the fattening can be
a . i k . I that « n o t Ml , t*r treatment, such a* fasting, -lam p *
m i n . U m m m I. bq o U
S h a d e tn r Cow«.
done before cold weather set* In.
fanm.n .Id Vaa (ml Ha­ j dieting, and the taking of naiipeou« im i
The fact that with good pasture a
arend th . a m 4 » t. ta*I *
jM.iwonniiH drug*, rauaing tiopnin. «white«*
Better resulta can lie secured with
• n d l n o , ti., moa know | discomfort or r»od after elTarta.
eow is able to eat as much in a few both clover and timothy If tbe condi­
I«»«»
voam ff a b a i Maona noa
j
time,
meal« or detention fmm bNFijme
minutes ss she esn d lg e « In sever»! tions are such that the seeding can be
la hod,. aUod .ad Mort.
I
Tble
remedy
ha«
NF.VICU
fatM
»fitWK
I>ra».
«
d
I
o
n
i
«ndod
hours I* not properly appreciated by done this month, rathe* than later.
t f . l j obitori, «a b it «
i U (’ A R A N tK K I).
Over *M)Un raver •»Mr«.
most farmers. If It were they would
I rar«fully treated «inee 118ft. Write f«*f froa
Tbe
most
productive
and
ferrHe
j
information
and
oueation
blank. Add rent,
,t least provide shade trees In their
M ilo« or tort, m m t ir .d b, «bl* m o k n l AU
m . om n i m i n r ro.,
farms ran easily he made poor, and
• a b B O T tH M . o t (ho Wdr « W H a d HrOHtb-
pasture lot. or. better still, have a cool,
A fsok a k r, W a « h .
reod Writ* lor o n book. wKk .ig n U M M nod i A u d it o r iu m b id .
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