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About Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 2, 1908)
Blood Humors Hood’s Sarsaparilla is stated that at least 20,000 square In Liberia are cevered with dense rubber-tres forest*. L BORAX IS NATURE'S MINE OE PURITY rOR DAIRY UTENSILS Borax la ( rat, a cleanser that remove« dirt and grease with aurprtoing ease; second, it ia s sweetener that makes fra grant any surface that has grown musty or stale from neglect; third, it to an an tiseptic or destroyer ol germs. It prevents the developmental bacteria or mouldy growths. With all this itia pertectly free from harm in its resulting effects. The farm churn ia kept free from that stale odor if it is washed with borag in the following proportions—one table- spoonful o f borax to a quart < f water. The dairy room has nothing about it but the pleasant aroma < f tt alt milk and cream and sweat butter if it is kept dean with borax. There will be no soapy smell and no lurking hint of something gone wrong. The cream crocks taka on an extra freahnese when washed with )>orax and water in the following proportions—one tablespoonful of borax to a quart of water. Tbto preserve« the fresh flavor of the crease. The faun cream separator can be kept thoroughly sweet and clean by a wash of borax and water in the rollowing pro portions—one tablespoonful of borax te a apart of water. Be sure that yon get pare borax. To be sure, you must get “ M Mule Team Borax” If you are unable to get “ 20 Mule Team” brand send ua your dealer's name and w t trill arrange to supply you. Tbe themb baa strength than aO tbs ether Sagem together. bow els, clean: on e in overcom ing habitual constipation permanemly. logeras benedici al e je c ts buy the < Genuine. facturedby thn '■ M M iS n e s a u a a M < IfOWAHD E N G R A V IN G L PLATES W rite Us " FOR PRI NTI NG MICKS-CHATTEN LEARN TO DANCE TBE M EN WHO KNOW ?3 t e s t ó “ «s t tests in the rougi est weather. Oet the original Towerh Fish Brand ¿ t m . Safmnl W td Km* T w m t f- lla p« » * < •* V a c u u m la i T « u . M y Ha is Extra Long The meadow mouse makes a neat of (rase blades la the ground la shallow burrows, and If the ground Is wet or sloughy put* It la a bunch of grass firs or six laches above the surface,. says the Montreal Family Herald.’ Tbs meadow mouse Is ollflc. I f the farm* Peed your hair; nourish li; er had brood sowsi>r cows or-ewes that liv e It something to live on. bred like meadow mice be would soon Then it will stop falling, and be overstocked. Most of the species produce from four to six litters a year, will grow long and heavy. the American species usually producing Ayer's Hsir Vigor Is the only six at a 'time and four litters la a sea hair-food you can buy. For son. I f there was nothing to stop the 00 years it has been doing Increase the progeny of a single pair would In live seasons amount to over )uit what w t claim it will do. 2,000,000, and would about clear out It will not disappoint you. the farmers’ crops. ! What does this little fellow eat? Pretty hard to tell, because he grinds up his feed so line that It takes an ex pert to tell what It Is; but In summer MT It Is .some kind of grass or vegetation, unrli* seeds or grain and In winter whatever he can get I f be “Can And nothing better he takes the bark of a cherry or apple trek, and the fanner blames It on rabbits. It Is chlculated A C r it M w . that each grown meadow mouse re “ Mrs. Chatterton la a perfect talking quires frotn twenty-four to twenty.-stx pounds o f green vegetation a Fear. He machine” “ As -a piece of'machinery, though, Is particularly food o f strawberry« beds, likes to nibble around at the plants In abe lacks one detail.” “ What 1« that?” «th* garden and the potatoes In the “The exhaust.”—Baltimore American. ground, or other winter stores, and Is rather fond of alfalfa and clover. In fact, there Is no greep vegetation that That is LAXATIVE aglK M E . Leek tha ilgnatur. of K. W. OBOVE. Used the *s not acceptable to the meadow mouse. for World over to Care a Cold la One Day. Me. Why la It therefore, that they do not multiply? Because about everything Jiat Is carnlverous has a tgotb for meadow mice. The wolf, the fox. the coon, the opossum, the mink, the skunk and the weasel all get a large amount of their living from meadow mice. Bo do hawks, ow ls crows and the'butcher H bird. All these have a particular food- « mis ml to devel op the resources e f the oeas for meadow mice. X [ country, and In parti The meadow mouse has never done J® any very serious damage la this conn-1 wil **• * bout 400 mi “ try, but if the smajl boy keeps on ahoot- gew es at Ointments tog every screeah owl be cornea across C m M s M tnd ever fowl and hawk, besides those aesMreurywtUserelydM that have acquired the bad habit of latching young chickens; If be wages arUejas.houid never be warfare on the birds and skunks and deme^theywiiiTfo it is about everything that be can shoot at •“ P0“ 1***r be most not be surprised If, after some Toi.<iomo.,eo»*tnin« mi dry season, the meadow mice win make in S e his father wander what la the matter h « u *» catarrh care be so with his crape. It never pays to die- ede, Ohio, by F. J. caens; turb the plane o f nature. { hje. The way to avoid a calamity o f this iSte HnU’iYnmUy Piu kind Is to let the natural snetnlea o f I — — meadow mice alone, unlees they de-1 J velop particularly obnoxious habits; ^ |t teck cne drain out swamps; adapt a rotation o f te eeli.” crops that will require the plowing up “'Darn it I” explode« of grass lands every three or four had bought the timepia rears; to destroy all weeds, trash and suction establishment, litter, particularly In the orchard* and ” thus prevent meadow mice from having good winter quarters. I f these metb- ode are follow «« there to no danger; but If the small boy to allowed to use bis gun at h|s pleasure we may be lp the same shape that tbs farmers at Scotland were some yean ago, when the landlords waged war on the hawks and owls because It was supposed they Interfered with the young pheasants which the nobility came to shoot Pennsylvania farmers were In the same predicament after the Legislature of fered a bounty for a few yean on hawks and owls. Wa, do. not write tbto because we think there to any Immediate danger, but simply to emphasise tbto point to which we have so often adverted, that wa cannot disturb nature's plans with out In the end being punished for It Physicians Recommend Castoria ASTORIA has met with pronounced favor on the part of physicians, phanna- ^ ceutical societies and medical authorities. It is used by physicians with resalts most gratifying« The extended use of Castoria is unquestionably the result of three foots:. a m —The indisputable evidence that it is harmless: $•««*/—That it not only allays stomach pains and quiets the nerves, but assimi lates the food: TUr4 —It is an agreeable and perfect substitute for Castor OiL It is absolutely safe. It does not contain any Opium, Morphine, or other narcotic and does not stupefy. It is unlike Soothing Syrups, Bateman's Drops, Godfrey's Cordial, etc. This is a good deal for a Medical Journal to say. Our duty, how ever, is to expose danger and record the means of advancing health. l i e day for poisoning innocent children through greed or ignorance ought to end. To our knowledge, Castoria is a remedy which produces composure and health, by regulating the system—not by stupefying it—and onr readers are entitled to the information.— Hall*» Journal of Health* L e t t e r s fro m P ro m in e n t P h y sician s Ln= r àJ I-ilff I ■ AVege table Preparation for A s simila ting (tie Food and Regula Hog the Stottactoand Bowels o f I m a m s ( Hll.DKl n Promotes DigesboivCbeerful- ntfis and Rcsf.Contains neither Opmm. Morphine nor Mineral. N o t N a b c o t ic . m Ê l fo r t ttah. Sour Stooiach.DL Worms .Convulsions Teverisk- mm ani Loss or S leep . JtoSm b Signatare of £ G E N U IN E C A S TO R IA Bean tbe Signature of A LW A YS C Li^fZSSJ EXACT ’ or WRAP “O UCH ” The Kind You Have Always Bought la Use For Over 3 0 Years. Statistics skew that 140,000 children Mrs. GuskWgh— He’s your neat In Belgian— more than 13 per «eat of the population— are without any education. band, is he? Allow me to ofler my Mrs. Muchleigh— O, you me. I mid “ex-husband.” Mrs. Guahleigh— Indeed? WeB, I con gratulate you on that. PECS CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS. Hilker— There’s one thing 1 forgot to PAZO OINTMENT 1. guaranteed to rare any ease of Itching. Blind. Jlecdlog or Pretrading ask you about Bilker. What’s his relig Plica In « to 14 a a ,« or money refunued. Me. ion? Bptlker— It isn’t ■ m prewtaai. Sharp-on— I haven’t much CONQUERS P A IN at Unlike most animals, horses have no eyebrows, and hares are minus eyelids. Consequently, the eyes of the latter cannot be abut and a thin, membran- Within the last four years France has >us substance covers them when asleep. recorded 26,000 suicide«, while in Italy The eye of the owl to also very pe the number has been only 8,000. culiar, seeing that It to Immovably fixed In Its socket and cannot stir In any direction. To compensate-for this seeming disadvantage. It can |urn Its head almost completely around with out moving Its body. I f you were to keep a frog's mouth open many mIn cites It would soon die. as, owing to Its peculiar construction. It can only breathe with the mouth cloeed. On the other hand, fishes are compelled to keep opening and dosing their mouths In order to give their respiratory or gana full play. A curious fact about the eel la that It baa leas life In Its Npw ia the time when the doctor gets busy, and the patent mediolne manu facturers reap the harvest, anises great oace to token to dress warmly and keep the feet dry. This to the advice of an old eminent authority, who says that Rheumatism and Kidney trouble weather to hers, sad also folia what to do In earn of an attack. Get from any good prescription phar Some little while ago a popular macy one-half ounoa Fluid Extract writer visited a jail In order to take Dandelion, one ounoe Compound Kar notes for a magaslne article on prison gon, three ounoee Compound Syrup Sar rife. On returning home he described saparilla. Mix by shaking In a bottle and take a taaapoonful after meals and tbe horrors be bad seen, and his de at bedtime, also drink plenty of water. scription made a deep Impression on Toa can’ t drink too much of IA tbe mind o f bla little daughter Mary. Just try this simple home-made mix Tbe writer and hto offspring, a week ture, and don’ t forget the water, at the later, were In a train together, which first sign of Rheumatism, or If your •topped at a station near a gloomy back sebee or you feel that the kidneys bnlldlng. A man naked: are net acting jam tight. This ia said “ What place to that?" s ta be a splendid kidney regulator, and "The county jail,” anotbor answered hlmoet eeriain remedy for all forma of rhoemaiism, Vhioh la oauaad by urle promptly. Whereupon Mary embarrassed bar arid ia the blood, which the kidney« father and arouaed the suspicion o f the foil to filter oat. Any one oen easily other occupants of tbe carriage by ask prepare this at boom and at small oost. Almost aay druggist in the smaller ing,'in a load, shrill voice: “ la that the Jail you were in, fa th e rr —Judge’s Library. Dr. B. Halstead Scott, of Chicago, Ills., says: “ I have prescribed yoor Castoria often tor infants daring my practice, and And it vary satisfactory.“ Dr. W illiam Belmont, of Cleveland, Ohio, says: “ Tour Castoria stands trst in Its class. In my thirty years of practice I can say I never have found anything that so filled the place.“ Dr. J. H. T aft, af Brooklyn, V. T .. says: ” 1 have used year Castoria an« found It an excellent remedy In my household and private practice for many years. The formula to excellent” Dr. R. J. Hamlen, of Detroit, Mlch.> says: *T prescribe yoor Castoria extensively, as I have never found anything to equal tt for children’s troubles. I am aware that there are Imitations in the arid, hot I always soo th at my patients get Fletcher's.” Dr. Wffi. J.MoCrann. o f Omaha. Neb., says: “ An the father a t thlrtma children I certainly know something about yoor great medicine, and aalde from my own fam ily experience I have in my years o f practice found Cas toria n popular and efficient remedy In almost every home.” * Dr. J. R. Clausen, of Philadelphia, Pa., says: “ Tim name that yoor Cas toria has made for Itself In the tens o f thousands o f homes blessed by the presence o f children, scarcely needs to he supplemented by the endorse meat of the medical profession, bet I, for one. most heartily endorse It end believe it an excellent remedy.” Dr. R. M. Ward, o f Kansas City. Mo., says: “Physicians generally de not prescribe proprietary preparations, but In the ease o f Castoria my experi ence, like that of many other physicians, has taught me to make an en action . I prescribe your Castoria la my practice because I have fooad It te be n thoroughly reliable remedy for children's complaints. Any phyat- who has raised a family, as I have, w ill Join ma la bsarttsst reeeas- flatten o f Castoria." -s N E W 'YORK. O H , MY BACK It ia s s * Freaks la K s ln - s f Horses, Owls a a l Fishes. a d d r e s s e d t o C h a s« H. F le tc h e r., f* * I M * C oal« Cw k. acquaint A dainty book in colors, called ance with Kpunjall, but I’m not favorably -‘Jingle B o sk ." will be sent free to any impressed with him. H o « dom he strike Mother sending name and kdlresa of her you? Phlatn—For a V generally. baby, and the tops from two one pound cartoons of “ 20-Mufc-Team” B ora ana 5c iif stamps. Address Pacific Coast Borax Co., Oakland, Cal. C * .M la tlr a . Bzeeatloa. Mrs. Upsoms— It’s too bed that Prince Dissatisfied Artist— I don’t like ti Wilhelm isn’t coming to Chicago. way you have hung my painting. Mrs. Hlghmue— Why do you mention Member of Committee— Neither do it? R t 'i only the necond son of n crown but I was outvoted. My judgment w prince, anyway.— Chicago Tribune. that it ought to be hanged. *1 never understood why MIHy toll ed to land a husband. She was very graceful at the billiard table and the queen of the bridge whist table.” “Oh, but she couldn’t equal ber plain ■later Jque.’’ “ Jane? Why, what were Jane’s ac W hen the blood is pure, fresh and healthy, the shin w ill be soft, complishments?” and free from blemishes, but when some acid humor takes root in the circu “ Why, she was queen of the kitchen lation its presence is manifested by a skin eruption o r disease. These table.“ humors get into the blood, generally because o f ( SKIN DISEASES H UM ORS IN T H E B L O O D The Villain! “ Ton wish to employ one of onr de tectives to watch your hiAband ?” “ I do.” “ May I ask what has aroused your «uaplcton of him?” “ He sent me a bunch of violets and a box of candy from town yesterday.' —Kansas Cltv Times There were aome doubts in the com munity as to Homer Floyd’s fitness for ■ position on the school board, owing to «mrtaln lapses In bis early educa tion; but his first spee<?h In his otflclsl capacity silenced tbe tongues of all critical ' He listened to several recitation« with a grave and Interested air, and at the end of tbe last one be rose to address tbe school. **by request.” “Some things are In my province ar member of tbe school board, and aomr are net,” be said, with a genial ami!» “ It’a within nty province to my that I never beard arholara answer up more promptly than you children of District Number Throe. “ As to whether your answers were or ware not correct. It to not my place to say. Tour teacher knows, and In her hands I leave the matter.”