Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993, June 25, 1908, Image 7

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    G RAN GE D E C L A R E S IT S E L F .
Outlines Plan of Action on Irrigation
Question.
V
Don’t have a falling out with
your hair. It might leave you!
Then what? That would mean
t!)ln, acraggly, uneven, rough
C a b b a c . W o rses.
When the llret appearuuce of the
hair. Keep your hair at home I
Faaten It tightly to your acalp I worm ia made the plants should be
dusted with the paris green and flour
You can eaaily do it with Ayer’s mixture. When the beads are forming
H air Vigor. It is something nae one pound of pjrrethum powder to
more than a simple hair dress­ four pounds of flour to dust the plants.
is harmless to man. After the
ing. It is a hair medicine, a I ! ThU
head begins forming parts green Should
hair tonic, a hair food. *
;not be used. Those who are afraid
Th# bMt kind of » testimonial—
“ B o ld to p O T o r s i x t y years."
a >.O.AmOo.,ZMd.)
« ■ «n n h o t i w w o f
yers
Sol sod
H er
S a RSAPABILLA.
FILLS.
CHERRY PECTORAL.
O p p o r tu n ity .
He was not a very rapid wooer, and
she was getting a bit anxious.
Again be called, and they sat togeth­
er In the parlor, “just those two.”
A loud rap cr.me at the front door.
“Ob, bother!” she said. "Who can he
calling?”
“Say you’re out," said the deceiver.
“Ob, n o ; that would be untrue,” mur­
mured the Ingenuous one.
“Then say you’re engaged,” he urged.
“Oh, may I, Charlie?” she cried, ar
she threw himself In his arms.
And the man kept on knocking at
the front door.—Illustrated Bits.
Mothers win And Mrs. Winslow's Soothing
Syrup the best remedr to use foe their c U l i r s
during the teething period.
R e la t i v e I s f e n e r s t s e * .
“My poor man, you look as if yon
might hare seen better days.”
“Yon are right, ma’am. I have.”
“And now, I presume, you are among
what we call the submerged tenth.”
“Worse than that, ma’am. I am an in-
tnitesimal fraction of the submerged thou­
sandth of the submerged tenth. My pres­
ent occupation is stoking on an ocean
steamer."
One of the
Essentials
of the happy homes of to-day ia a
▼aat fund of information aa to the
best methods of promoting health and
happiness and right living and know­
ledge of the world’s best products.
Products of actual excellence and
reasonable claims truthfully presented
and which have attained to world­
wide acceptance through the approval
of the Well-Informed of the World;
not of Individuals only, but of the
many who have the happy faculty of
■electing and obtaining the best the
world affords.
One of the products of that class,
of known component parts, an Ethical
remedy, approved by physicians and
commended by the Well-Informed of
the World as a valuable and whole­
some family laxative is the well-known
Syrup of Figs snd Elixir of Senna. To
get its beneficial effects always buy
the genuine, manufactured by the
California Fig Syrup Co., only, and
for sale by all leading druggists.
to use paris green are generally success­
ful by beginning early to use the py-
rethum powder aud spraying often.
Cabbage and other plant lice are beat
controlled by spraying with kerosene
emulsion, using the 15 per cent solution
—a solution containing 15 per cent of
kerosene. If the lice are on trees,
flowers or rose bushes, tobacco decoc­
tion may be used with good results.
The tobacco decoction Is made by tak­
ing three pounds of tobacco stems and
five gallons of water and boiling for
two hours. It la used without diluting,
but must not be applied too hot, or It
may scald the plants.
If treatment Is begun In time plant
lice can be controlled. It must be done
before the leaves are curled so the
spray can reach the pests.
There
should be several sprayings, four or
five days apart, aa one spraying will
not completely do the work. Clean cul­
ture la Important In fighting these In­
sects, as with many others.
W a ste d
R oad
M o m .
In a recent speech at l’eortu, H. H.
Gross, secretary of the Farmers’ Good
Itoad League and special agent for the
National Department of Agriculture to
study the question of highways, made
the following statement; “In forty
years enough money has been thrown
sway and squandered on the dirt roads
of Illinois to pay for graveling or mac­
adamizing every foot of highway In
the State.” lie went on further to
state that aa good, hard roads could
be built on the black land In the corn
belt of Illinois as In Massachusetts, or
In any other State, and at a moderate
annual expense to the landowners of
the State, possibly not exceeding their
present annual tax for road aud bridge
purposes.
A a to m a tle
D am p
W ssro s.
The ease with which modern dump
carts and wagons can be unloaded is
Illustrated In the automatic dump wag­
on shown In the accompanying Illustra­
tion, the invention of a Connecticut
man. The wagon box is pivoted on the
Resolutions unanimously adopted by
A t Oregon Stats Grange at Eugene,
When the blood is pure and healthy, the akin will be soft, smooth, and
May 14, 1908, upon the following mo­
free
from all blemishes and eruptions; but when some acid humor take«
tion:
Moved that the resolutions be sdoptea root in the circulation, its presence is quickly manifested by some form of
as read snd referred to the eommittee skin disease. The skin receives its necessary nourishment and strength
T r e a t m e n t fo r L e e * .
on legislation, with power to prepare a from the blood. When, however, this vital fluid becomes a humor-laden
The results of the loco weed when bill as outlined therein, submitting thu stream, it can no longer preserve the healthy, natural appearance of the skin,
eaten by stock are unpleasantly fa­ same to the next session of the legislv but by its acrid, impure nature continually irritates and inflames the delicate
miliar to the stockman of the plains ture for adoption, and further, that ths tissues and fibres and keeps the cuticle in a diseased and disfigured condition.
east of the Kooky mountains. It has ehairman of the legislative committee External applications cannot reach the blood, and therefore are beneficial
been estimated that the losses from 'be authorized to invite'sneh state or only for their ability to reduce inflammation, and assist in keeping the parte
this source in Colorado alone have national experts on water legislation clean. , To care any skin trouble the blood m ast be purified of the humors
reached the sum of a million dollars who can be secured to assist the eom­ that are causing the trouble. S. S. S. drives out the humors from the blood
mittee in preparing sueh bill, also one
per anntMu. The national bureau of representative
from any state organiza­ so that the skin, instead of being irritated and diseased, is nourished by a
plant Industry has been taking a turn tion which may hereafter adopt sub- healthy, cooling stream. S. S. S goes down into the circulation and
at the loco problem, and C. D. Marsh, atantially similar resolutions.
removes every particle of impure matter, all acids and humors, and restores
expert In poison plants, reports that
the blood to its normal, pure condition, thereby curing every form of skin
Resolutions-
It baa been found that locoed cattle
disease or affection. Book on akin diseases and any medical advice free to
Whereas, Titles to water are of squid
can In moat cases be cured by a course importance with titles to land, and it all who write.
THE SW IFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLAHTA, GA.
of treatment with strychnine, while appears that s water right should be
locoed horses can generally be cural as easily ascertained, ns clearly defined,
by a course of treatment with Fow­ as secure and in all respects as definite
ler’s solution.
The pgtlinals under as a perfect title to land; and,
Whereas, It is apparent that -without
treatment must not be allowed to eat
E
system of water right titles
the loco weed ;ind should be given not snd definite
adequate protection by the state,
only nutritious food, but so far as pos­ our water users are burdened with eost-
sible, food with laxative properties. ly, and apparently unending litigation;
To this end magnesium sulphate was our present constructed works are de­
Heaping teaspo nful to a gel on of bo water w ill cleanse your dishes
administered to correct the constipa­ preciated in value; the United States l a A
t e s , c u p s , e a r t h e n w a r e , c u t l e r y a n d k i t c h e n v t f t v j « f r e m a i r t , n d g .-e a s e
Booklet and De» n to r I a«*
tion which la almost universal among hesitates to construct irrigation sys­ S l a v i n g n e i t h e r t a s t e n c r s r n t U . A ll dealer, S o m r l«
P a c i l i c C . a , t B o r a x C o ., Û a U la n 3 , C a l.
locoed nnlmals.
It should be noted, tems; private eapital declines to invest; Centerpiece, sta m p e d reedy to work. lû t.
go to other states snd
too, that magnesium sulphate may home-seekers
countries, where the purchase of an irri­
Lexical Supposition.
H a r d to P le a s * .
serve to some extent as an antidote to gated farm does not mean the purchase
Little
Lloyd—Papa, was George
Eminent
Statesman—What
are
the
in-
'
the poison.
of a lawsuit, and thus our development ferns I newspapers saying about me now,1 Washington married to England?
It may be added In regard to the is seriously retarded; and,
■ Peps—Of course not, iny son. Why
Whereas, Our present wster laws can­ Chicksey?
question of Immunity that loco poison­
Private Secretary—They haven’t men­
ing comes on In a slow and cumulative not be found by m study of the statutes tioned your name for a month. Senator. do you ask such a silly question?
Little Lloyd—This book says Eng­
manner, so that there Is no possibility alone, but must be sought for in n long
Eminent Statesman—Blank dash the land Is our mother country, and ns
series
of
decisions
by
our
supreme
of animals becoming Immune.
eonrt, snd apparently are so conflicting newspapers!_______________
George Washington was the father of
that our ablest lawyers differ in opin­
i
Bt.
Vitos'
Peace
ead
an
Herrons
Diseases
his country 1 supposed they were mar­
I n t k g o l i G lo b e O n io n s.
ion on the* most fundamental points.
tljr eared b y Dr. K lin e ’s O n e t
ried.—Chicago Newa
-
•'
F R E E f ] trial b ottle e n d
Connecticut’s famous Southport Globe This law is incomplete and inadequate, t ïDSËrrto-dfor«
r eellee. D r. B . H . K n e e . Ld~ •SI A ie b BA, P b lla » P x
and
has
been,
and
is.
in
s
state
of
flux.
onions stand unsurpassed among popu­
W ith in H e r R ig h ts .
lar American varieties of the onion. Disputes are decided by the logic of
n r siLLta
destroys e ll th e
“Madam, what ia your age?” asked
They are in high fa­ judges, rather than by statutes of the
flies
snd «Words
legislature. Few know what the law is
vor in some of the today, none know what it may be to­ the lawyer.
tg a a y n q
roooh. tU e p in g
”1 decline to answer," responded the
finest commercial on­ morrow; now. therefore, be it
room U 4 «very
p lace w here fllea
ion growing districts
Resolved, That it is the sense of ths witness.
are t roobleaome
“On what ground?”
C lean, n ea t and
of Ohio and New Oregon State Grange that it is the duty
w ill n e t to il or
“On the ground that It would con­
York and during a of the state bf Oregon, at the earliest
Try
t
h
r
e
once
and
yon
w
ill
time, to eodify and enact a vict me of lying. I’ve always answer­ I f n ot hep' by dea.«ra. rent prepaid for Me.
few years past have possible
complete, concise, and definite water
MABOL 0 SOUSAS, 14 » DaKalt Are., Areally*. V. T.
made a steady ad- law, leaving to the courts only the mere ed that question when not under
oath.”—Washington
Herald.
advance In standing interpretation of this law on sneh oc­
everywhere as a casion as it might be brought into dis­
W H IT E GLOBE
Y e * Can Get Allen’s Foet-f esc FREE.
highly bred, perfect pute; and be it further
W rite A llen 8. O lm sted Le Rdy, N. Y., for s
O H IO *.
Resolved, That such water law should , free te m p le o( A lien ’s Foot-base. I t c u res
onion. Eastern onion growers use the
ee tin g , h o t sw ollen, e e h in g feet. I t m ekee
based upon the best experience or i i sw
O PEN ALL TH E Y E A B
new o r lig h t shoes eesy. A c e rte ia c u re for
red and white Southport Globes to be'
other states and countries, such as corns. In g ro w in g nails e n d bnuions. A ll d ru g ­
C laim ? B each S easide , O rem *
produce the exceptionally large, solid, Wyoming, Idaho and Canada, and gist* sell It. 25c. D on’t accept a n y su b s titu te
beautifully formed bulbs that bring top should include the following funda­
" T u t
D ir e r ;ly e a tk e beach o v e r lo o k in g
C l e t s ' ^ y l s g H im .
1 nc
tb e o c ea n . H e t s a l t b a th s a a l 1
prices in the New York City markets.
mental principles;
The pimply fared youth had thrown a
Cl IFF H C U a F s e r f b a t h in g . R ecrea-
U U r r n U U D t f l e e p ie r t e e f U b l e f .
3. That no water right should become pop bottle at the umpire.
Besides the two varieties . named,
n r B aa p a rlo rs. E le c tr ic l ig h t s . F ir e - I
there is a yellow Southport Globe that vested except by direct grant from the J A policeman grabbed him by the col- I *■'
p ie c e a r t •te a m b e a t. V la e w a lk s I
state.
f t R F O f l M " Rad d r iv e s. B ee foofie a ep ee-1
resembles the others In shape and gen­
' lar. jerked him to bis feet, and removed I U
f l t U U n | , i , y. Rates. $2.50 aed $3.00
2. To provide a svatem whereby the his het.
eral i^iaracter, but is of a rich yellow prioritv and limitations of every exist­
| p e r 4 a y . * r bp d e l r a te s by t b e w e e k . |
he took a tape line from his pock-
|D A N . J . M O O R E . P r o p r ie t o r s
color.
ing right to the use of water can I ' et Then
and measured tbe fellow’s head.
The white Is one of those beautifully eventually be ascertained.
8. To provide a reliable record in I "Size 6,” he said. "That leta you off
white, perfectly globe shaped onions
some
central office of all water rights this time, young man. But don’t do it
that take the eye and bring highest
.as
determined,
and of new rights as again, or back you go to tb’ ’sylum for
price In any market. Its skin Is tblu
, the feeble minded.”
initiated.
T h* w ell known re lia b le
and paperlike, the flesh fine grained,
No more pop bottles were thrown from
4. That aetnal measurements of
crisp aud mild flavored. Add to this ditches snd streams be made as a basis that particular section of the bleachers
that It Is a tremendous cropper, and it for the adjudication of existing rights during that particular game.—Chicago
■
______
Beat aad lerk 1 1
represents almost an ideal product In and the initiation of new rights to the Tribune.
0
surplus water, if any.
its line.
How’s This?
5. To provide s definite procedure We offer O ne H u n d re d D ollars How ard for a n y
whereby rights to such surplus water ease of C a ta rrh th a t c a n n o t be c u red by H a l’s
D la k P lo w * .
H su m ade e lif e s t a iy e g
C a ta rrh Cure.
roots and herbs, s o d l a th e*
The twenty-four-inch size disk plow may be acquired.
study discovered sn d hr f i e .
F.
J.
CHENEY
A
CO.,
Toledo.
0
6. That beneficial use should be the W e, th e undersiK U cJ. h a v e kn o w n F. J .
in s to tb e world b is w naesr
can safely be recommended as being su­
fu lre o -e d iss.
of all rights to the use of water, C heney lo r th e la st 15 years, sn d believe h im
perior to auy other size. The smaller b a n a d s i s that
P
o
is
o
n
»
or D r u f i l M - H t C m t
wster for irrigation purposes perfectly h o n o ra b le In a ll buisness tra n s a c tio n s W dhnet O n e r a lio n,or-W
ithout th e : A
A id
id a o f a K e if*
size pulls easier, but It does not pul­ should be made appurtenant to the land and fin an c ia lly able to c a rry o u t a n y obliga­
i to
t e e Our«
m e Catarrh.
------------„ ------
--------- --
tio n m ade by nt* firm.
____ism . N ervoniinese. S e r v o n s D e b ility ,
verize the soil so well. The disk plow irrigated.
.
Rhooi
WADDING, KINNAN A MARVIN,
Iv e r. K id n e y T r o n i .l e c s l s o L o s t M s n b n n d .
hTLir.
W
holesale
D
ruggists,
Toledo.O
Is callable of handling ground that has
7. All rights to the use of water for
'setole W eakness en d A ll P r iv a te Dise.
C a ta rra h C ure Is sk e n in te rn a lly , a ct­
A SURE CANCER CURE
become too dry and bard for the mold- power development should be limited to ing H a d ll’s
ire c tly upon th e blood a n d m ucous su r­
m P e k i n g , C h in a —S a f e , S
board plow. It Is of somewhat lighter a period -of twenty-five years, subject faces of th e system . T estim onial? se n t free. lest R e u i v t d fr o and
R e lia b le .
P rice 75 c en ts per bottle. Sold by a ll D ruggists.
draft, does not require sharpening so to renewal under certain restrictions.
I
F
TO
T
A
B
E
A
r tlC T E D , P O N T DELAY.
T ake H a ll's F am ily P illa lo r C o n stip atio n .
8. To provide an efficient administrs
DELAYS AKK DANGKHOU8.
often, cuts through trash better and tivl system, with proper officers, for
C O N S U L T A T IO N » F R E E
T h e Q u in te ss e n c e o f It.
does not clog so easily. Do not try to .the distribution of the wster supply
“The
gall
of
that
fellow
Stryker!”
cut a furrow wider than eight or ten 'among those entiled to j ts use.
“What’s be done now?”
Inches with a disk. The wider the fur­
P le sso M en tio n T h is P a p e r.
“Why. you know, he’s a chronic bor­
Q U E R IE S B Y FA R M ER S.
row the deeper wiy corrugations be
rower,
and
when
I
told
him
I'd
have
and the poorer will be the work. It is
N o. 2 6 —OS
P N U
better to use two twenty-four-inch Experiment Station Called Upon for to stop loaning bint money now that
I
had
a
wife,
he
went
for
me
hammer
plows, each cutting eight Inches In
• Advice on Various Subjects.
E N wri
r ilin g to ad vertiser* pi*
snd tongs for getting married at bis I I T f I t T f l uomini
width, than to use a single twenty- From the W ashington S ta te College. Pullman.
n th is paper.
expense.”—Boston
Transcylpt.
eight or thirty-inch plow cutting six­
A correspondent at Cheney writes
the following letter to the station-
teen inches.
MULE TEAM BORAX
MOORE
C. Gee Wo
C H IN E S E '
D O C TO R
T a b r r r n lo .il,
OPERA TINO THS DUMP WAOOÎf.
Food
Products
L ib b y ’s
V eal Loaf
is made of the best
selected meat, scientific­
ally prepared "and even­
ly baked by damp heat
in Libby's Orest White
K itches.
The natural
flavor is all retained.
W hen removed from the
tin its ready to serve.
It can be quickly pre­
pared in a variety of
styles and nothing makes
a better summer meaL
In the home, at the
camp, and for the picnic
Libby’s Vesl Leaf ¡a a
satisfying dish; full of
food value that brings
contentment!
Libby, McNeill A Libby*
axle, the greater portion of the load
being In back of the pivoted point The
forward end of the box is normally
held In position by n lever directly be­
hind the driver’s seat When ready to
dump the load the driver turns In bis
seat, releases the lever and the load au­
tomatically turns over. The driver Is
thus not compelled to leave bis seat
saving considerable time.
CURES
>. SKIN DISEASES
Recently at the Iowa Experiment
Station twenty pigs were fed for a time
on tuberculosis cows' milk that had not
been pasteurized, and twenty others
were fed on tuberculosis milk that had
been pasteurized. The twenty pigs fed
on the raw tuberculosis milk all died
of tuberculosis, and two of the other
pigs died with the same disease. That
showed that pasteurizing the iyllk gave
80 per cent of protection.
W a n ts ■ N ew
W h e a t.
Prof. Herbert F. Roberts of the Kan­
gaeoothlaar D n s .
sas State Agricultural College and Ex­
periment Station will visit Europe dur­
ing the summer. He Is commissioned
from tbe Kansas Experiment Station
to Inspect the wheat regions of Central
and Southern Europe In search of su­
perior sorts of hard wheats for Intro­
To break down clods and give a fine duction Into Kansas.
surface the field drag serves a useful
P aros H e w s N o tes.
purpose. It may be used In connection
In New Zealand the best demand
with the spring tooth harrow or even
with the disk. The 0x6 Inch pieces Is for Shorthorn bulls of the milking
are 6 to 10 feet In length and are laid strain.
edgewise, being bound together by cross
Kangaroo rata are destroying the
vineyards near Santa Crus, Cal. They
nieces made of !M>x6 Inch stuff.
have appeared in thousands and are
T h e P a r in g H era * .
feeding on tbe young buds and vines.
We have known of many animals
Secretary Wilson says we ought to
that have acquired the habit of pacing have bumper crops throughout the
because of becoming sore forward. The country this season. All conditions are
fore feet and legs do not assist in the favorable for tecord-breaklng yields of
efforts of propulsion, their office Is
all sort*.
simply to hold up or support the fore
A Connecticut farmer Ta reported to
and heaviest part of the animal, and
aa It must keep these fore feet out of use the Incubator system In starting
the way of the hind ones, a horse will his potato crop. The aeed potatoes are
endeavor to do so In the most awk­ placed In a warm room in a rack, where
ward oC^ways a t times, for when sore they sprout, and are then transplanted
forward It takes to any aort of a gait In the field.
A story comes from Washington, Pa.,
that to tta mind appears to lessen the
pain of action. It quite frequently that a fanner haa a sheep-killing horse.
; adopts the atugle foot action, gradually The animat was aeen to rush Into the
progressing into that of pacing. It flock, trample a sheep to death, pick
I was this soreness forward—and ha was It up In Its teeth and carry It o u t Tha
j actually lams—that caused tbs great performance was renrated until .the
Jay Bye See to pace.—Field and F ans. fanner Int—^«rad.
“I am interested in the subject of
bacteria as an agricultural agency,
and would like to know if anything
is being done by the government
along the lines of bacteria research
Is the use of bacteria cultures likely
to prove an important factor in t! v
agriculture of the Inland Empire?
To what extent are fertilizers used in
the Northwest, and with what ei
ficiency? Please give me some infor­
mation concerning the new theory of
’soil poisoning by successive crops.’ '*
Following is the reply given to this
letter:
%
“At this station we have tested sev­
eral different cultures, some of which
were successful, while others failed
V'f* have found that in the laboratory
and greenhouses, where conditions
could be controlled fairly well, the
cultures possessed values. W e are
not sure that their use will become
general, for most of the commercial
product does not show up very uni­
formly. W e have depended more
largely on the use of inoculated scir
from old alfalfa fields, in getting a
stand of alfalfa, than on the bacteria.
“Fertilizers have not been very
thoroughly tested in eastern W ash­
ington, but we are learning that manv
of our soils may be vastly improved
by certain treatments. The indica­
tions are that fertilizers will be used
in the near future, more as a c o r­
rective agency, than to increase fertil­
ity. T he theory of ‘soil-poisoning’ is
based on the fact that where a soil
is overcharged with some element,
the excess of this element becomes in
jurious to vegetation. It is n rc e s ta rr
to counteract this by the use of soms
chemical fertilizer.”
A
Leek
OASTORIA
F o r In fa n ta an d C hildren.
Ths Kind You Have
Alw ays Bought
Bears the
Signature
of
la
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
A h *««.
Ths sets and sans Fourth of July had
come.
“But how art the boys observing the
day?” asked ths foreigner, who had just
landed. “I don’t see any about.”
"Tho boys?” said the native. “The last
•f ’em, sir, were ell killed off on* year
ago to-day, aad the new crop hasn't come
on yet."
Marveling at the changes times had
brought about, th# stranger followed tho
crowd to tho ball park, where th* real
celebratlaa waa la
Krart Copy of Wrapper.
CASTORIA
N
•w - ■■■ iu i M T