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About Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 22, 1897)
— * AGKICULTUKAL NEWS TH IN G S in pr iz e s to make t w i c e as m a n y people ask th e ir g r o c e r s fo r S ch illin g s B e s t b a k i n g p o w d e r a n d tea. Schilling s Best baking powder and tea are ______________ because they are money-back. What is the missing word?—not SAFE, although Schilling*s Best baking powder and tea are safe. _________ Get Schilling's Best baking powder or tea at your grocers'; take out the ticket (brown ticket in every package of baking powder; yellow ticket in the tea); send a ticket with each word to address below before December 31st. Until October 15th two words allowed for eveiy ticket ; after that only one word for every ticket. I f only one person finds the word, that person gets f 2000 . 0 0 ; if several find it, 12000.00 will be equally divided among them. Every one sending a brown or yellow ticket will receive a set of cardboard creeping babies at the end of the contest. Those sending three or more in one envelope will receive an 1898 pocket calendar—no advertising on it. these creeping babies and pocket calendars will be different fiom the ones offered in the last contest. B e t t e r cu t t h e s e ru le s out. Address: M O N E Y -B A C K , SAN F R A N C IS C O . 1 1 1 HF™ T n r r p - * ni1 not * Li,r f l K I C h u n d r e d r n i 11 I i I K h h o M r r r . U lM L THOUSAND r n l J l 1 BURL U M Portland, Oregon 8CrIptIve price list—FRKE. H chool fo r C o lo red N u n e » . Toothache, as an excuse for absence The Africans of South Caorlina have from iluty, is not recognized in the established a training sehool for colored postonica of Geneva, .Switzerland nurses. A charter was obtained from When an employe complains of an ach the state, and the institution was open ing tooth a government doctor pulls it ed on Ootober 4th. It is the only out. school of the kind in that part of the ■ . K I T D K S T I T I T K ! country, and it is naturally in tiie nature of an experiment. The money Not of worldly goods, but of all earthly com to build and equip a hospital was easily fort, is the poor wretch tormented hv malaria. The fell scourg<* in, however, shorn of its thong raised. Eilocated colored men and . in advance by Hostetler’s Stomach Bitters, its women are the instructors, and a large only sure preventive am! remedy. Dyspepsia, constipation, rheumatism, ner number of students have la-en enrolled. biliousness, vousness and kidney complaints are also A preliminary training school has among the bodily afflictions which this bene- medicine overcomes with certainty, r - e been running for a few months, hut ilcent it systematically. only on a small scale, as there was no 1 place where the students could get the There is a 15-year-old widow at Cov adrautago of pruotical knowledge. ington, Ky. The girl was married a They simply studied the theoretical year ago to a 19-year-old hoy, all the part of the duties of tho nurse. The parents consenting. Her husband died applicants for admission to the new a few days ago. sehool are required to Tie in good health and they must present certificates of A GOOD THING Rood moral standing They must also have certificates from some college or F o r W o m e n t o Iteiiienilier* high school, or second (trade teachers’ • eertiefiates, or else pass an examination That in addressing Mrs. Pinkham they to show that fliey have a fair educa-1 are communicating with a woman a wo tion. The course of study is confined man whose experience in treating woman's to lectures. Students are required to ills is greater than that of any living physi recite, and rigid examinations will he cian male or f male. A woman can talk freely to a woman held. ___ when it. is revolting to relate her private troubles to a man -besides, a man does m t Ghost danoing has its penalties. It understand simply because he is a man. is reported that the quarterly allowance Many women miner in silence and drift of 160,000 doled out by the government along trom had to worse, knowing full well to tho Cheyennes and Arapalioes is to that they should have immediate assist- mice, hut a natural modesty impels them be stopped. to shrink from exposing themselves to the questions and probable examinations ol The largest mass of pure rock salt in »■veil their family physician. It is unnec the worl I lies under the province of essary. Without money or price yon can Galicia, Hungary. It is known to he consult u woman, whose knowledge from uctuul experience is greater than any local 650 miles long, twenty broad, and 250 physician living. feet in thickness. The following invitation is freely ottered; accept it in the same spirit : Statistics disclose the fact that the Women Muttering from any form of fe- United States consume annually about male weakness are invited to freely com municate with Mrs Pinkham, at Lynn 640,000,000 pounds of wool, or about . Mass. All letters are received, opened, nine pounds per capita of population. j read and answered by women only, tint' has been established the eternal conndenc« Make graham bread the same as you between Mrs. Pinkham ami the women o do white bread; steam it three hours, Americu which has never been broken uitc has induced more than 100,000 sufferers tt instead of baking it one hour. write her for advice during the last fou: months. Out of the vast volume of ex per A large basin of water kept in a sick ; ienee which she has to draw front, it li room and frequently renewed, benefits more than possible that she has gained tin I very knowledge that will help your case both patient and nurse. ' She* asks nothing in return except you good-will, anti tier advice has relieve« thousands. Surely, any woman, rich o; poor, is very foolish if site does not take ad vantage of this generous otter of assistance — Lydia K. Pinkham M«*dicine Co., Lynn Mass. P E R TA IN IN G TO FARM A ND HOM E. THE C h a p t e r on F a r m K c o o o m y — L e w A c r e a g e , F r e e f r o m Debt, M o r e De- a i r a b l e th a n I . a r g e F a r m a - M u . h - r o o m C u lt u r e - H o r n , a Xuiaa nce. F a rm Kconomy. The profits and receipts from a farm cannot easily be computed for a single year. Labor given this season may bring results for years to come. Walls and fences that are built, drains that are dug. and trees that are planted, nre but labor exchanged for profit thut will extend over a long series of years. Manure on some soils Is lasting, and «he beneficial effects of some fertilizers are more apparent the second season than the first. Labor expended In bringing new ground Into cultivation is not sup posed to yield adequate returns for st v- eral years. A crop of clover that gives a yield as hay may leave In the root3 and sod much valuable nitrogen as a supply for some succeeding crop, all of which lessens expenses In the future by reducing the proportion of labor or manure which would otherwise be re quired. Profits on the farm are, con sequently, much greater when the av erages for several years are compared, as each year must boar Its proportion of expenses, and a failure to secure a profit this year may not be a loss, be cause there may t»e a corresponding re duction of expense next year. Nor must we overlook (he advantage of the opportunity offered the farmer of sell ing his own labor in the form of some product. Where a farmer makes only a small profit, but lias derived a fair sum for the labor lie personally bestow ed. bis gain Is greater than the actual profit. The farm has increased in value ns the labor or manure or other accre tion lias failed to yield a reasonable cash prout. On the farm the item of labor must be considered according to Its actual cost as nu expenditure. Though the labor of the farmer himself Is an item of cost, and must be paid for, i | yet be pays It to himself, and it really Is profit because of the employment se cured by him ou tlie farm. For that reason a small farm, or a small Mock or herd, will always pay more. In pro portion to expense Incurred, than larger areas or an increase of stock. The personal supervision of the farmer, or the interest taken in the work per formed by him, will also add to the gains because of the closer application given the economy practi ed In every department. The labor ou the farm, therefore, is the heaviest of all ex penses, and It Is the principal stand point from which all profits must be estimated. Rut labor alone cannot j make a crop. The soil must be fitted to j derive the largest possible product by j the proper use of plant food, which per ; mits of the application of labor to the 1 best advantage. Small farms can be j mnde to largely Increase their yields more easily and rapidly than large areas, because the manure or fertilizer onn be concentrated Instead of spread over a wide surface at an increased cost of labor for men and teams; lienee, proportionately, as the yields increase ihe expense decreases. Expenses are ■ reduced when the yields are Increased because in many Instances it requires but little more labor to secure a large yield than a small one, and expenses are also lessened when fertilizers nre used to Increase the yield because the cost of the fertilizers will be more than regained, as well as assist in securing greater results from the labor. The best mode of reducing expenses is ‘o cultivate no more land than can lie kept up to Its highest limit of fertility so as to secure the largest yields possible.— Epltouilst. chasers objected to Its unfamiliar ap ! pearance, fearing that 1 « might be sa unwholesome variety.—Rural New- Yorker. W EEKLY MARKET LETTER. D oW D lB g. H o p k i n i S C o m p a n y ’ , f l . v l . w o f T ra d «. GONE Stopl Women, UUNMEUNn. One ripe summer, fresh and fair, has gone glimmering. Wha' with rain and 4 hreezeand fair sun. the harvest lias left us grain enough to lee. 1 the world, and hard times are broken by a kindly Hand Hut And consider that in addressing Mrs. autumn changes come, and we cannot be Pinkham you are confiding your private too self-content not to guard against what ills to a woman—a woman whose ex autumn brings It is the changeful tem perience in treating woman’s diseases perature of midday warmth and night and morning rhill. from the dampness of dews is greater than that o i any living phy or vapors cast adrift ou eastern winds. sician, male or female. With tiie breath of such comes bark to You can talk freely to a woman when very many old time physical troubles of pains ami aches, rheumatism, neuralgia, it is revolting to relate your private soreness and stiffness. This is a crop not troubles to a man; besides, a man does spoken of in a farmer’s almanac, but it not understand, simply because he is a must be cared for, else it will lay waste and grow misery. 8t. Jacobs Oil Is a reaper man. and binder; it reaps the field of pain and MRS. P IN K HAM’S STANDING binds up and cures. There is no bodily | IN V IT A T IO N . pain it won’t relieve, and to the whole group of rheumatic pains, it is a certain Women suffering from any form of and specilic cure. Let not tlie Nullities that have been reaped be marred by misery fe m a le weak ness are in vited to promptly and pain. 8t. Jacobs Oil is the helper to communicate with Mrs. Pinkham, at enjoy the better times. Lynn, Mass. A ll letters are re ceived, opened, read, and answered by The trap rocks of New Jersey and the women only. A woman can freely dolerites of Staten Island are the talk of her private illness to a woman. strongest stones in tiie United States, Thus has been established the eternal their crushing resistance being confidence between Mrs. Pinkham and twenty-four pounds to the cubic inch. the women of America which has never Among the portraits recently acquir been broken. Out of the vast volume ed by the trustees of the National Por o f experience which she has to draw trait Gallery, in London, is that of Sir from, it is more than possible that she Francis Ronalds, (1788-1873), the in has gained the very knowledge that ventor of the first working electric tele w ill help your case. She asks nothing in return except your good will, and graph. __________________ her advice has relievtjd thousands. The largest fruit farm in the world is Surely any woman, rich or poor, is very said to he in Olden, Mo. It consists foolish if she does not take advantage of 2,500 acres, on w hich are more than o f this generous offer of assistance. 100.000 pencil trees, 60,000 apple trees, 2.000 pear trees, and 40 acres of black t P T I ' R K a nd P I I . K S cured: no pay un til cured: ‘ end for book. ]>ns. M anhfisld berries. There has not been much doing in We still occasionally find writers on the wheat market during the past week. agriculture who believe that clover as The visible supply decreased 1,690,000 the main feed Is the tiest and cheapest bushels, and the exports from both way of growing hogs. We believe In j coasts were equal to about 5,000,000 clover as thoroughly as any one can. ; bushels. Crop reports from the Argen but It has Its limitations. It Is not tine are less favorable and the crop adapted as the principal article of diet is reported damaged by frost. Should for an animal which has so small n this report he confirmed, it w ill fur stomach as a bog. It Is in the fact of nish a strong hull incentive to tho Not the least important the bog's small stomach that its value market. ns a producer of cheap meat largely change in the situation is the decreas consists. No other animal has so siiind ing receipts of winter wheat— sufficient a proportion of waste as a purebred, ly marked to offset the increased move fine-boned hog. I f It could lie obliged ment of the spring wheat crop. The to live mainly on clover, the amount export eales have not been large, bnt of food It must eat would enlarge its sufficiently so to show that our mar stomach, and also, perhaps, Increase ketB are on an export basis and that the proportion of boue In proportion to the demand continues constant. Local meat. A very small proportion of clo speculative conditions remain practi ver given to hogs fattened on corn will cally the same as during the previous enable them to digest It better, because week. The weakness in values is more the clover furnishes more of the mate apparent than real and results from rial for growth and muscle than the lack of speculation and moderately in corn does. But this can quite as well creasing stocks. There is no sound ar he furnished by oats or wheat mid gument for any decline in values at dlings, with milk If it can he had. As present. There are several arguments succulent food in connection with and many possibilities in favor of an grain, any kind of beets are, we think, ! advance. Should Russia prohibit ex preferable to clover. More of them will ports or should any serious damage oc be eaten than of clover, and the beets cur to the Argentine crop, extreme will keep the digestive organs In good high values would obtain. Wheat is condition better than any other feed fully worth 90 to 95 cents under exist ing conditions, and as the speculative will do.—American Cultivator. public become educated to the higher values now ruling renewed speculative N o H o r n s on Ca tt le . Horns were unquestionably useful to support and increasing export sales will A P orterfi eld , Market St., San Francisco. cattle la their wild state; but since they carry valnes higher. Our corn market has been dull ami Chickens are much better if killed X. P. X. C. have become domesticated they are Ns. 4S, *tT. only a nuisance and a danger. No aid- j uninteresting— devoid of any particular ami dressed the day before using. T H I N w r it in g to ad ve rtia ers, p le a s e m e n tio n th is p a p er. mal except the horse Is brought Into j features or change in previous oondi- Keep in ice ■ f in a cool place. so close association with uinn. In feed- \ itons, except that farmers’ sales of corn lug cattle or In tying them up In stalls to arrive have fallen off to the mini they will often whisk their heads in mum. Local sentiment has been and Short play or to get rid of files, and unless continues extremely bearish. great care is taken, the person who ( sellers have taken advantage of every cares for them Is liable to severe In opportunity to depress values, but the jury. We have known sight destroyed market has developed a strong under WE ARE ASSERTING IN T H E COURTS O U R R IG H T TO TH E in one eye by the puncture of a sharp tone and values have ruled higher than EXCLUSIVE USE O P T H E W ORD “ C A 8 T O R IA ” A N D horn. The old plan was to put knobs at the close of the previous week. Ex “ P IT C H E R 'S C A S T O R IA ," AS OUR T R A D E ’ m a r k . on the tips of the horn, so as to make port clearances continue large and the I, DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, o f Hyannis, Massachusetts, them less dangerous. Nowadays the cash demand, while still inadequate, practice is growing of dishorning cows shows some improvement. The depress was the originator o f "P ITC H E R 'S CASTORIA," the same and bulls, and better still, stopping the ing influence in the market continues that has borne and does now S it? //1T s > „ "* on every to be the large stocks. growth o f horns with a little potash G r o w i n g H o g s Ch eap ly . K AN OPEN LETTER To MOTHERS. before they appear above the surface. P o r t la n d M a r k e ts . I f this is done once thoroughly no trou Wheat— Walla Walla, 79 (8 80c; Val ble from horns need be feared. The ley and Bluestem. 82@83e per bushel. operation Is only slightly painful, not Flour— Best grades, $4.50; graham, nearly so much so as the horns would $3.70; superfine, $2.50 per barrel. iufiiet If allowed to grow. Oats— Choice white, 33@84c; choice gray, 31@32c per bushel. M u k i n g C a bb age s He ad. Barley— Feed barley, $19@20; brew Every year about heading time the ing, $20 per ton. grower of cabbages finds his crop defi Millstuffs— Bran, $14 per ton; cient in growth, aud unless stimulated middlings, $21; shorts, $15.50. by extra fertilizing not likely to make Hay— Timothy, $12(8 12.50; clover, a marketable head. Now a cabbage $10@11; California wheat, $10 that does not head Is merely a bunch do oat, $11; Oregon wild hay, $9@ of loose leaves that cannot be sold at 10 per ton. all. It does not matter what the cause Eggs— 20c per dozen. Butter— Fancy creamery, 45@50c; o f failure may he. I’osstbly the plant was originally a weakllug. and with fair to good, 35@40c; dairy, 25@85e ordinary care and rich soil could no! per roll. Cheese— Oregon, 11 tjc; Young amount to anything. Or it may he that lack of cultivation or natural poverty America, 12}ac; California, 9@10c per of the soli Is the cause of the failure pound. Poultry— Chickens, mixed, $2.003 to head. Either way the duty of tile cabbage grower Is plain. He should 2.50 per dozen; broilers, $1.50@2; $5.50; ducks, $334 per thoroughly cultivate the soil around geese, live, 8® 9c per the cabbage, and then apply a very dozen; turkeys, weak solution of nitrogenous and min pound. eral plant food, the latter iu the form | Potatoes.— O.egon Burbanks, 403 of phosphate. I f this Is done at once 45c per sack; new potatoes, 50c per the cabbages will start into growth so sack; sweets, $1.40 per cental. Onions— California, new, red, 90o; quickly and also so strongly that, be yellow, 80c per cental. fore the growing season closes, the Hops— 8 @ 15o per pound for new grower will probably he obliged to par crop; 1896 crop, 6(87c. tially uproot bis cabbages to prevent Wool— Valley, 14315c per pound; them from splitting open with the ex Eastern Oregon, 10312c; mohair, 20c cess of plant food with which they are per pound. furnished. Mutton— Gross, best sheep, wethers and ewes, $2.50@2.60; dressed mutton, P u m p k i n s a P a y i n g Crop. 5c; spring lambs, 6 ‘a per pound. There Is no coiqi requiring so little Hogs— Gross, choice heavy, $4.50; labor that pays so well as pumpkins. 1 light and feeders, $3(84; dressed, $5.50 There Is always a market for them In @6 per 100 pounds. city or village at prices mueli higher Beef— Gross, top steers, $2.75 (3 3; than pumpkins are worth for feeding ! Hiniill F a r m s th e Kcst. cows $2.25; dressed beef, 4 3 5 lac per Farmers are beginning to se ' that a to stock. Yet it is a bulky crop to han pound. less acreage of laud, free from tlie op dle, and unless there Is a near market Veal— Large, 4)^<85c; smalt, 5 la @0o A poatofflce clock in Sydney, New pressive mortgage. Is more <o be de it may pay better to cut them up and per pound. South Wales, emits an electric light sired than a burden of debt. Intensive feed the crop to stock. Remove the B e a ttie M a r k e ts . Hash lasting live seconds every hour farming Is the basis of argument upou s e e d s always, as they are a powerful during the night, thus enabling those which our learned and scientific agri diuretic, and when fed to cows will ex Butter— Fancy native creamery, living miles away to ascertain the exact culturists build tlielr estimates of rapid cite the urinary- organs far too much. brick, 24 (8 26c; ranch, 14 (8 16c. time. development and future permanent BASE BILL GOODS W ...Ì !? Boiled pumpkins, with a little eorn- Cheese— Native Washington, 10(8 wealth. The Increasing number of small meal or whole corn boiled with them, 11c; California, 9^0. >\ c carry the* m oil complete line of Gymnasium 9 1 0 0 K K W A K D , SIOO. and Athletic liooria on the Coast. , farms, with better cultivation and hee make a much better fissl for fattening Eggs— Fresh ranch, 22o. SUITS AN!) UNIFORMS MADE 10 ORDER. ler Improvements, Is certain to l>e fol hogs than will whole corn. Finally the The readers of this paper will be pleased to Poultry— Chickens, live, per pound, Send for Our Athletic Catalogue. learn that there i» at least one dreaded disease lowed by an increased production, an old-fashioned pumpkin pie, which the liens, lOo; spring chickens, $2.50 t hat science lias been able to cure in al 1 its stages W I L L & F I N C K C O ., Increased number of inaiiufacturlng In sons of New England have made fam @3; ducks, $3.50(93.75. ami tiiat is eatarrh. Hall's Catarrh ( lire is the S1H-H30 M a r k e t St.. San F r a n c i s c o . Cal. only positive eure now known to the medical dustries, an Increased iHipulation and ous throughout the land. Is ail instllit Wheat— Feed wheat, $28(329 per ton. fraternity Catarrh being a constitutional dis r«*«|uires a constitutional treatment. Hall's greatly Increased wealth of the State’s tlon for which nothing can be success Oats— Choice, per ton, $22. I>\ « F K l ’ T I C n t O i cus«*, Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly resources. Corn— Whole, $23; cracked, per ton, will cure you of Dys upon the blood ami mucous surfaces of the svs fully substituted. Some may say that pepsia, Indigestion, tem, thereby destroying the foundation of the Economy on the farm may lie mnde squash pie is richer; but It lacks the $23; feed meal, $23 per ton. and stomach t roubles disease, ami giving the patient strength by to menu more than «be saving of the distinctive pumpkin flavor, and cannot Barley— Rolled or ground, per ton. of all kinds. Price, fl. On receipt of name we building up tiie constitution and assisting will deliver It at your nearest exprese office free nature in doing Its work. The proprietors have little things. The reducing of tho replace It to any one who was brought $23; whole, $22. of charge. so much faith in its curative powers, that they Fresh Meats— Choice dressed beef, mortgage debt by reducing the acreage up to like pumpkin pie. offer One Hundred Dollar* for anv ease that it ....F R A N K N A U ... steers, 6c; cows, 5>ac; mutton sheep, fails to cure. Sen«! f«*r list of testimonial»1 of the farm to the actual capacity to Portland Hotel Pharmacy, PO R T LA N D . OR Ad<tress. V f t ’ HKNKY, «ft Go., Toledo. O. 535)^0; pork, 7c; veal, small, 6. tttxth and Morrison street. till and make productive will be In the Sold by drufgtsts. 7* h \ H o rtic u ltu ra l Note«. Fresh Fisli— Halibut, 6c; salmon, Hall's Family Fills are the best. line of economy. The changing o. con- Always puddle the roots of trees be 3 ^ c; salmon trout, 7 (810c; flounders [ dltlons whereby 1(H) bushels o f grain 's fore planting. The efRoiency of the (Tiriatian En made «o grow where formerly fifty and sole, 3(84; ling cod, 4 3 5 ; rock Prune the currants every year, cut cod, 5o; smelt, 2 la(84e. deavor HHRoclation as a religion« agency grew Is economy; the building of bet i* accounted for by the fact that it con ter homes mid the enjoyment of tiettor ting out the old wood. Han t'run rlM -o M a rk e ts . tain! twice a* many women it* men. Iu storing lieets for winter be cure home comforts by the family on the Wool— Choice foothill, 8(8 12c; San ful not to cut or bruise them. farm Is economy; the Independence of H O M E F l t O n r r T S A N D »*( tt R RO O D . The peach tree should be grown on a Joaquin, 6 months’ 5(9 7c; do year's actual ownership in n business which staple, 739c; mountain, 10(3 12c; Ore All Eastern Syrup, so-calle 1. usually very well drained, moderately rich soil. recognises no rival In Its business-sus light colored ana «*f heavy body, is made frbra gon, 12(8 14c per pound. glucose. • 7>< i ( f dnf m Drips" is made from taining attributes Is economy to mind «iooseborries and currants planted In Sugar Cane avnl is strictly pure. It is for «-ale Hops— 11 (9 14c per pound. and body.—World Herald. partial shade an* less liable to mildew. by flrat claw* grocers, in cans only. Manufae Millstuffs — Middlings, $20(822; lured bv the P acific C oast s y r i r Co. \\\ gen- Keep the asparagus bed clear of California bran, $14*315 per ton. ! nine " ?V«i tinnlen P rin t" have the manufac M u s h r o o m C u ltu re. turer's name lithegrapnetl on every ean weeds and do uot cut over before the Onions— New red, 70(8 80c; do new Mushroom-growing In summer re silverskin, 90c(9$ 1 per cental. Sweet oil, with a little vinegat adtled, quires, as indispensable conditions, a third year. The time will come when nut trees Butter— Fancy creamery, 27 (838c; do will restore the leather hack* and seats cool, olst atmosphere, and a dark of chairn. place from which dies may In- excluded. will Is* commonly grown for commer seconds, 25<326c; fancy dairy, 33(9 24c; cial purposes. good to choice, 20 (9 22c per pound. For lung ami » best diseases, Piso’s Cure The breeding of maggots la the roush- Summer pears should be gathered a Fggs— Store, 18324c; ranch, 81(8 is the best medicine we have used. Mrs. I rooms, as soon as summer weather be- J I Northcott, Windsor, Out., Canada. I gins, renders their culture unprofita week before they are ripe and autumn 33o; Eastern, 14(815; duck, 20c per dozen. You cannot afford to let physical wonkn " ble under ordinary conditions. A cool, atnjut two weeks. Keeping a pan of water in the oven stifle ambition and mar your future If you Cheese— Fancy mild, new, 9^0; fair The quince makes the ts*st preserve dark underground cellar, however, may arc not the man you should I mj at your age; if w ill keep fowls from scorching. you have wasted your strength; If you feel the tie lists! for mushrooms. The basket of any fruit, we think, and It will grow to good, 7(9 8c per pound. heed of a rented) that will bring bar a the v Igor Potatoes— New, in boxes, 40(«80c. was well filled with prepared manure, In any mellow, rich soil. of youth, that Will restore your energy and Try Schilling's Best tea and baking powder. Citrus fruit — Oranges. Valencias. your stiengtli, do not hesitate. Get that grand firmly packed, mounded up in the cen I Rich soil, deep plowing, high imtttur est of all remedies, Experiment* have shown that tho ter. coven d u iih loam, and then spawn- Ing and thorough cultivation will pro $1.50(83;Mexican limes. $3(8 3.50;Cali- UK SANDKVS ELECTRIC KELT fornia lemons, fancy.$3.50;do common, ash constituent* of coal, which are not j ed like an ordinary bed. Amateurs duce a good cabbage crop. $ l (9 2 per box. readily permeable, may he roughly es- growing nill,«brooms In small quantities The soli in which fruit trees are to be Hay— Wheat.$ *218 15; wheat and oat. a n o t h f . r v a n v A n n h a p p y . timated by means* of Koontgen ray* on would find baskets or boxes very con planted ought to be pulverized twelve $11(814; oat, $10(9 12; river barley, ••The Color in my face is !o king ranch b**tter comparison with slabs having a known venient for handling, and an economy to eighteen Indies deep. and I feel flue I have slept well sine# using percentage of ash. $7(9 8; best barley, $10(813; alfalfa, of s|>ace. The general treatment Is the sour Belt." writes Louis Engels, Katrfleli It Is now that the flowers you have $8(9 9.50 olover, $ ' 3 10. t u b . on August 2, 1 WT. same ns when grown In ordinary beds. taken so much pains with laugh you a The Kennebec river is said to pour a Fresh fruit— Apples. 60(9 75c per About four years ago scientific at THREE CLASSES OF MEN greater volume of water into the ocean tention was given, for the first time, to welcome when you enter tlie garden. large box; apricots. 20340c; Fontain- Illustrated, is sent free, scaled, by m i l, to than any other river on the Atlantic or In planting fruit trees cut off all bro bleau grapes, 30 3 30c; muscats. 203 a a very dlatiuct variety o f mushroom gulf coast between St. John and the raised for market by a Long Island I ken ot bruised roots. Do uot shorten 35c; black, 30c; tokay, 35330c; Upon « plica» >u E' ery er old man suffering from the Might* st weak peaches, 35340c; nears, $131.40 per ntes should read it It will show a safe and month of the Mississippi. grower, who found It especially suited the tot«, however. In fall planting. •peedr way to regain manly strengtn when When near a market the dandelion N u ; plums, 35340c; crab apples. 203 ! to summer culture. This mushroom ffveiything elee has (ailed, f a l l or address The record* <»f eighty-eight years (Agnricus »uhmfeseeos Peck! was I may Is* made a profitable crop. Many 35c. show that tornadoes have a width of 10 rather coarser in appearance than the prefer It to auy other kind o f greens. SANDEN ELECTRIC BELT CO. to 10,500 feet, a length of track t»f 300 Crude petroleum is an excellent Mangel wurxets yield Immense crons, 153 West Washington *t.. Port land. Or. yards to 300 miles, and a velocity of variety ordinarily grown (Agaricus campestria) and differen* In color, the and perhaps are the Tery best root for remedy for rheumatism. l*r«egression of 7 to 100 mile* an hour. ( gills being of a rusty reddish tlut. The sheep, but they draw .heaTily on tie The teeth of inseotivora are sharp The jtercentage of the United Slates j new mushroom proved to be of an ex- soil. and pointed, and so disposed that they Chicory roots are dug about the sim e Imputation living in cities was 3 35 in celleut quality, a heavy ylelder. and keep each other sharp by wearing 1700, in 18V0 it was 39.30. The pres very easily grown, nourishing in open time as carrots, and should he washed, against each other instead of Aiming in ent urban population of France is over | frames outside. The only drawback to sliced each way aud thoroughly dried direct contacL its culture wao the fact that many pur- by artificial beak 37 per cent of the inhabitants I bear the fa cs im ile signature o f CccccCti/tC wrapper. This is the original "P ITC H E R 'S CASTORIA," which has been used in the homes o f the mothers o f America fo r over thirty years. LOOK CAREFULLY at the wrapper and see that it is the hind yon have always bought / T r / * * * on the a n d has th e s i g n a t u r e o f wrap per. A~o one has authority from me to use my name except The Centaur Company o f winch Chas. H. Fletcher is President. * March 8, 1807. , Jt, Do Not Be Deceived. Do not endanger the life o f your child by accepting a cheap substitute which some druggist may offer you (because he makes a few more pennies on it), the ingredients o f which even he docs not know. “ The Kind You Have Always Bought” > i BEARS TH E FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF Insist on Having The Kind That Never Failed You. T M * C E N T A U R C O M P A N Y . TT M U R R A Y S T R E I T , NEVI Y O R K C I T Y. wwmwwwwmw&wm ................. A Derfect type of the hithest order ot excellence in m znnfactnre.” ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- W alter Baker <& Co.’s fcf* H- BREAKFAST COCOA | $ Absolutely P ure—Delicious—Nutritious. Costs Less than One Cent a Cup. DORCHESTER, MASS. ^ Be sure that you get the genuine article, made at ------------------------------------- & ....B y.... WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd. -------- B U Y Y O U R -------- FUR GARMENTS Direct from the manufacturer and save middleman’s profit, as we undersell them all. Our garments are custom made and not like those thrown together in New* York sweat-shops, where filth and disease reign. Our garments are guaranteed as to durabil ity and style. Our prices ou iur ( ’apes range from upwards; oil Fur Collarettt s. tr«>m •."> upwards; Neck Boas, from 75c up wards; genuine Alaska Sealskin Garments ina«ie from 11150 up wards. Write for information and catalogue. S C itv o i^ ip lH • D llV C r ilC I U , L e a d in g F u r M anufacturer, 143 T h i r d S t., P o r t l a n d . Or. OWER ...FOR... PROFIT Power that will save you tnoaey and make you money. Hercules Engines arc the cheapest power known. Burn Gasoline or Distillate Oil; no smoke, Gre, or d irt For pumping, running dairy or farm machinery, they have no equal. Automatic ia action, perfectly safe and reliable. Send for illustrated catalog. Hercules Gas Engine Works Hercvlti Special ( 2V$ Ktnal hor*^power Bay St., San Francisco, Cal. Price, only $!8S. W eakness of M en Q u ickly. Thoroughly. Forever -, P orf/rf/t (30//J//L Cared fron • . . . ' •«• Portland, Oregon A l> AaxsT*o*o.u..a.,Prin. J. A. Wnco.StcY T HC BUSY W O R L D OF B U S I N E S S Z1— *ll H V « M. l m t H i B » liilM i »III u .......4 . a n . S m 4 kr . . . U «r» -hat ..4 to » »4 I4tok. T4MIJ, m 4 a susin css tou ca vion ravs v» - - » - .» » » » » » » » » » » . » . . » » » » J , ’ _ * CHIL.DBKN T t t T H I N C . " J ■ »» • VX.TWT»» i t . r r A m M . . . » 7 . to 1 » m«N| tor rfc.ldr»» M i n , NUQA84 ST. N. V- E M I MEDICAL CO.. U MUFFALO. ii . . ,to# ito . kiU » f t - 4 ft id * 'h. f i a t , allay* — all llr.toto Mi * p P* i in. n u s * wind (Dik I rwmwêj fa r . d dtarrl iarrh ea. Twaaty ftr» < ’" " J