Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993, August 06, 1908, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    O la y s a l tk a S a la r y S ra b .
M y Hair is
S c ra g giy
D o you like It? Then why
be contented with It? Have
to b e ? Oh, n o ! Just put on
A y e r’s H air V igor and have
long, thick hair; soft, even
hair; beautiful hair, without a
single gray line in it. Have a
little pride. Keep young just
as long as you can.
" I n
UrtTH Ttn yean old, u d no til re-
•OOtly my hair w »t very m y . But to a low
«•Oka A y er'. Hair Vigor restored the natural
oolor to my hair •• now there la not a gray
hair to bo aeeu.“ — J. W. H aa o ox , Boutdar
Creak, Cal.
“ ‘Quinn,' said an old member one
day. ‘I heard you w orrying about the
mllenge. Uid you ever hear the story
o f Clay and the salary grab?'
“ No,' I replied.
“ ’ Wliap Clay was Speaker,’ he con­
tinued. ‘along about 1810, the crowd
raised tbelr salaries to $1,S00 a year.
There was a great bowl all over the
country, and when Clay reached home
In Kentucky, he found old one-armed
John Pope, a Federalist, out a fter bis
scalp to beat the band, and all the C lay
adhvreuta ominously silen t W orried
mid anxious Clay sought out his old
barber, who had alw ays been enthusi­
astic In bib advocacy aud who happened
to be an Irishman. “ I trust 1 may
count on your hearty suiiport as usu­
al r Clay asked. “ Faith. Mr. Clay,”
said the Irish bnrber, “ I think I shall
rote at this time for the man*who can
get but one band luto the Treasury.” ’ "
— Success Magazine.
L ite ra r y
tU m -
A
1 „ ,
SAWAPABLU.
CflEWV PECTOtAL
T h o B aek at Ik u y y a r.
A t the “ open board," in (Olden (rain,
He plunged with hin little mi(ht and
main—
And now he ia making frequent "calla"
A t the ahop with the ei(n of the (olden
balla.
C a r o f o r SeaOIckneea. -
A cure fo r aeanlcknean. which a Oer
man doctor aajra be has discovered
constata In the anfTerer lying on blr
back and haring handkerchiefs soaked
In hot w ater twisted re ry
tightly
■round his forebesd.
Food^l
Products
Libby's Sw eet
Mixed Pickies
That firm, crisp quality and
delicious Savor is what you gyt
when you i nsi st on Libby S
Mixed Pickles at your dealers.
They are always the finest and
never disappoint It's the same
with Libby s Sweet Gherkins and
Sweet Mkjgeta. A sk for them.
Libby’s Olives
The cultivation of centuries
marks the olive groves of Spain
aa the world’ s best
Libby’s Olives are imported
from the oldest and most famous
of these groves. The result ia a
rare product delightfully appetiz­
ing. Try one bottle and you'll
buy more and never be without
them.
Libby’s.Preserves
Pure, ripe fruit and pure sugar
in equal parts, cooked just right
and timed to the second, in
Libby’s Great White Kifch-
CO, is the secret of the extreme
superiority of Libby’ s Preserves.
There’ s none as good at any price.
Grocers and delicatessen stores
carry
' LlbbV’S food Pro-
I. T h e y a r e war­
ranted the best to both
you and the dealer
m
bool-lot — 'limn to
Thingt
Mat* Good
C, ------
IfW t« /or f r t r
(
h Eat.
1
L IM y 't a<
\
jraar dookr'o.
k m
Libby, McNeill
S Libby.
m
rttv
w
N o.
12 —OS
H E N w r i t i n g t o o d e e r t i a e ra p la n a *
m e n t io n t h la p a p e r .
U u a c rtc o ic a t.
Col. Soaker— Why. have Hausen and
hie w ife separated?
M ajor Mopper— On account o f tbs
difference in their literary tastes.
Col. Soaker—T h ey piust both be un­
happy.
M ajor Mopper— Not at all. ’ H e was
In love with his typewriter, and she
vlth s young poet.
K T ara s Whila Y e a W alk.
O
----------------
le n ’a Fnot-Eaae
— e la la • a certain
certain e cure
a
fo r h o t,
»dt i ng, cal I u s, and a w ollen , ach I n f
Soli
to la
a ll U rn
ru ggU
ggiita.
“ a o cegt any
»ll.l>
te: t P rice 2te. * U —
o rit^
list. tute. T ria l
lilr
aaa
van ,
“ W hat’s that noise?" asked the vis­
itor In the apartment house.
“ Probably some one In the dentist's
ipnrtuients on the floor below getting
i tooth out."
,
“ But this seemed to coqie from the
floor above."
“ Ah, then It’s probably the Popleys'
baby getting a tooth la ."— Philadelphia
Press.
__________________
M a k in g T r e n t»I* P a y .
“ W hat does you do when de w o lf
howl at de do’ ?"
“ W ell, sub," replied Brother W il­
liams. “ I in os’ Ingenrully sets a trap
fer de w olf an* sells him ter s circus.”
— Atlanta Cpnstitutlon.
P o e try a i d
P ro a*.
Bride (te n d e rly )— W e have fu lly
twenty minutes before the train comes,
when we must bid oue another farew ell
— Isn’t that nice?
Bridegroom— Capitol— we
can
go
Into the station restaurant and eat
something
together.— Wiener Salou-
wltzblatt. ___________________
lte e o lle c tln a e
of a
B u y
L lfn .
“ Your face is familiar," said the pa»-
aenger with the goggles. “ Haven’t I rua
againat you somewhere before?”
“ No, air," anawered the passenger with
the hunted look in his eyes. “ You’ ve tried
s dozen times or more to run over me, but
I have always been able to dodge la time."
State o f O h io , C ity o f T o le d o I
Lu cas C oun ty.
J
F ra n k J. Chaney m akes os l i f t h at h e la senior
p artn er o f th e firm o f F. J. C h eney A Co., d o in g
b tia in e a e in th e C Ity o f T o le d o , C oun ty and Btata
a fo re sa id ,a n d th a t aatd Arm w ill pay th e a n m
o f O S t H U N D R E D D O L L A R S lo r each and
e ve ry cane o f Catarrh that can n ot be c o re d by
th e u m o f H a ll's C atarrh Cura.
F R A N K J. C H E N E Y .
Sworn to
me and subscribed In my i ros-
en re, th is tith d a y o f D eoem ber A D 1886.
/oui 1
. v-
A . W , G LK A P O N ,
N o ta ry P u b lic.
n o ll'a C atarrh Cure la taken in te rn a lly , and
acta d ir e c tly upon th e b loo d and m ucous aur-
fncea o f th esy stem . Send fo r te s ilm o n la ls free.
F. J. CH K N K Y A C O .,T o led o ,O .
Sold by a ll d ru ggists, 75c.
Taka H a ll's F a m ily F ills fo r con stip ation .
T a c t. *
“ I have been told,” said the assertive
woman, “ that you are singularly lack­
ing In tact.”
“ W hat Is your Idea o f tact?" asked
Miss Cayenne.
“ I don't know. W hat’s yoursT’
“ Tact, as a rule. Is the ability to
conceal one’s surprise at foolish or im­
pertinent remarks.”
R lg h te o a s
In d ig n a tio n .
Correspondent— May I ask. Senator,
bow much your campaign cost you?
Eminent Statesman— Aa to that, young
man, I make it a rule to follow the scrip­
tural injunctioa. not to let my left hand
know what my right hand doeth. Besides,
sir, it’s none of your blankety blank busi­
ness I
The Kind You Hate Always Bought has borne the signa­
ture of Chns. II. Fletcher, and has been made under his
personal supervision for over 30 years. Allow no on©
to deceive yon in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and
“ JiiNt-aa-good’* are but Experiments, end endanger the
health of Children—Experience against Experiment.
What is CASTORIA
Castor!» is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare­
goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, JtKorplitne nor other Narcotic
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and W ind
ives Teething
_ Troubles,
T r o u b l e s , euros
cures Constipation
a n d F la tu le n c y :y. It assimilates the Food, regulates the
Dowels, giving healthy and natural sleep,
S to m a e h a n d J
a Panacea—The Mother's
The Children’s
Mother’s Friend.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the Signature o f
v
r
In Use For Over 3 0 Years.
TV MWMMT iT M IT , MW WHS OITW.
SOMEÜEMOCRATICâ
G o n V e n t io n H is t o r ï ^ I
Westward the course o f empire take*
Its way. The twentieth Democratic na­
tions) convention went, farther weet to
hold its momentous deliberations of 1908
than haa any preceding convention of
either o f the dominant parties. The Mto-
aouri river hae heretofore limited the
western movement of the great politic«!
organization*, St. Louie and Kansas Olty
haring each been honored in the past.
But a westward strike of 800 miles brings
the Democratic delegatee of thla year to
the Rocky Mountains, to a city which
does not even call itself of the Middle
Weat, but ia distinctly and wholly West­
ern.
It la seventy-six years since the first
national Democratic conveption was called
at the behest of Andrew Jackson, then
President, to nominate the man whom he
wikhed to serve with him aa Vice Presi­
dent during hia second term. Jackson’s
popularity with hia own. party was so
unquestioned that he was nominated at
this first Democratic national convention
by acclamation. Bo far os he was con­
cerned, no convention was needed to set
upon him the party stamp of approval.
And the convention wisely enoagh decided
that with so perfect an embodiment of
Democracy at its head as "Old Hickory”
no formal declaration of party principles
was necessary. The committee appointed
by the convention of 1832 to prepare an
addreas to the people reported that they
considered an addreas unnecessary and
recommended the several delegations to
make auch explanation by address, report
or otherwise to Their respective constitu­
ents of the objects, proceedings and result
of the meeting as they might deem expe­
dient.
It whs not until 1840, the year in which
the party failed to agree upon a vice pres­
idential candidate, that a Democratic
convention made a formal declaration of
the issues Opon Which they appealed to
tbs people for support. Since 1840 every
Democratic convention has issued such a
declaration and gradually the platforms
have come to be regarded as haring the
binding force o f party law. Within their
limitations they are accepted as unques­
tionably as the Thirty-nine Articles of
lie Westminster catechism.
The first Democratic national conven­
tion of 1832 was held March 22 In Bal­
timore, a city which has been honored by
the gathering of the party’s great quad­
rennial meeting eight times since national
conventions were evolved os nominating
bodies.
The conventions o f 1832. 1836, 1840,
1844, 1848, 1852, 1872 and the adjourned
convention of 1860, which first met in,
Charleston, have been held in Baltimore.
Chicago furnished the theater of action
for the meetings o f 1864, 1884 and 1892.
But before the convention selected s city
so far to the West as that o f the Illinois
metropolis in 1864. it had met in Cin­
cinnati in 1856 and in Charleaton, 8. C..
<n 1860, at which city the longest ballot­
ing on record proved futile, and an ad­
journment without nominating followed.
Tammany Hall held the delegates o f 1868,
when the New York states man, Horatio
Beymour, presided as permanent chair­
man, developed suddenly into a dark horse
rnndidate, the third the party k»d brought
forth up to that time, Polk and Franklin
Pierce having preceded him as such. Hav­
ing reached Chicago, the step to b't. Louis
was not hard to take, and the conven­
tions of 1876, 1888 and 1904 were held
in th" Missouri town which still regards
itself as the rival of Chicago, as It really
was back in the ’70s. Cincinnati la 1880
and Kansas City in 1900 complete the
tale of the cities which now include the
town lying near the peak which in the
days of the prairie schooler was the des­
tination of many a hardy pioneer.
A t the first Democratic convention a
committee appointed to prepare the rules
recommended that two-thirds of the whole
number of votes of the convention should
he necessary to constitute a choice in
making nominations. A t every national
convention since that time this has been
reaffirmed aa the law of the Democratic
party. In 1S36 an attempt was made to
repeal the rule. In fact the effort was
successful by a small margin of votes. 231
to 210, but upon reconsideration the rule
was put in force. In 1844 the two-thirds
rule was bitterly, even savagely, opposed
by the friends of Van Buren, who had a
majority of the votes on the first ballot,
but at no time could muster two-thirds.
The Democratic convention o f 1848,
which nominated Lewis Cass of Michigan
for President and William O. Butler of
Kentucky for Vice President, directed the
appointment of the first national commit­
tee ever organized.
Its candidate, like
the Democratic candidate of 1840, was
defeated by a W hig soldier candidate,
Gen. Taylor, who, like Gen. Harrison,
had no preparation for the executive of­
fice and was nominated by the Whigs in
obedience to the doctrine o f availability.
In the convention of. 1852, held in Bal­
timore, there occurred another of those
strange and sudden movements by which
the contest between prominent and fav­
ored candidates causes them ail to be dis­
carded and the position to be given to
some heretofore unknown quantity. To
use an old and much used if not abused
figure, when the tournament opened four
renowned knights entered tlhe lists. They
were Lewi* Cass of Michigan, the de­
feated candidate of 1.848 ; James Buchan­
an of I ’ennayIrani», Stephen A. Dougins
o f Illinois and William L. Marcy of New
Yorit. After many exciting tilts, Frank­
lin Pierce of New Hampshire, a knight
who had remained in the shadow with
visor down, dashed in, unhorsed hia oppo­
nents and woo the prize.
It took seventeen ballots to nominate
James Buchanan of Pennsylvania in the
Cincinnati convention of 1856. From the
first he was the leading candidate, but
could not control two-thirds of the votes.
Oa the sixteenth ballot the contest had
narrowed down to Buchanan and Doug­
las. On ths next ballot delegation after
delegation changed its vote until the en­
tire number, 296, were cost for Buchanan.
Stephen A. Douglas of Illinois, who had
twice been a presidential candidate, at
last succeeded In winning the nomination
in 1860. But the shadow of accession was
over the land, and the party, tike the
country, waa suffering- Th* convention
aeeembled in Charleaton April 28, 1860,
and continued nntil May 8 A fter fifty-
seven fruitless ballots, la which Douglas
had a majority but not two-thirds of a
full convention, the regular organization
adjourned to meet in Baltimore on June
18, when Douglas waa nominated.
The first Democratic convention to meet
in Chicago waa that of 1864. It nominat-
ed Gen. George B. McClellan of New Jer­
sey on the first ballot. George II. Pen­
dleton was named aa the vice presidential
candidate.
In 1868 the convention assembled in
Tammany Hall in New York. Horatio
Seymour waa in the chair. When some
votes were coat for him be declared that
he waa not a candidate. A stampede in
hia favor followed. He waa given every
, vote of the convention on the twenty-sec­
ond ballot.
Francis P. Blair o f Mis­
souri was nominated for Visa President
on the first ballot.
The Democratic convention of 1871,
which met in Baltimore. July 9, 1872, ac­
cepted the principles of the Liberal Re­
publicans and indorsed their candidates,
Horace Oreeley of New York and B.
Grata Brown of Missouri. Some rock-
ffHilx'd Democrats refused to abide by the
action of the convention and held a con­
vention of their own In September, 1872,
nominating Charles O’Coner of New
York for President and John Quincy Ad­
ams for Vice President. Both nominees
declined, but their declinations were not
accepted.
Samuel J. Tilden of New York ana
Thomas A. Hendricks of Indiana were
candidates for the presidential nomination
in 1876. , On the second ballot Tilden
wa* named for the higher office. Hen­
dricks was nominated by a unanimous
vote for the second place. The convention
of 1880 waa a short one. It was called
to order In Cincinnati June 22 and ad­
journed June 24.
Gen. Hancock waa
nominated «m the third ballot and Wil-
liaf H. English-of Indiana waa nominat­
ed for Vice President by acclamation.
The convention of 1884 selected a man
whose recent death brought forth expres­
sions of respectful regret from all classes
of men. Grover Cleveland of New York,
though opposed by Tammany, was nomi­
nated on the second ballot, and with Hen­
dricks of Indiana carried the party back
into power. T o defeat him, Tammany
tried to break down the unit rule follow­
ed by Democratic conventions, but the
attempt was not successful. The conven­
tion of 1888 was the first in forty-eight
years to nopiinate a candidate by accla­
mation. A t thia convention Grover Cleve­
land waa nominated for a second term by
resolution without opposition. For Vice
President Allen G. Thurman of Ohio waa
nominated on the first ballot, receiving
69o votes. This convention met in 8t.
Louis. The Chicago convention of 1892
again nominated him on the first ballot,
despite the determined opposition of his
own State. He waa thrice honored by
Bis party. The convention of 1888 nom­
inated him for a second term by resolution
without opposition and the convention of
1892 nominated him again on the first
ballot. ___________________ ____
W o m e n ’s
W ork
I*
N orw ay.
The 8c«>i>e o f women s employment la
much wider iu Norw ay than with us,
writes H. H. D. Pierce in the Atlantic
Monthly. Even large public banquets
are chiefly served by maids, aud in the
■hops customers are w aited upon, gener­
ally, by saleswomen.
•« Thla Is by no means confined to a few
classes o f shops, fo r both men and
women; in Jewelers’ and silversmiths’ .
In fact. In almost every branch o f retail
trade, while women are not exclusively
employed to w ait upon customers, they
decidedly predominate. In the banks
also. In the poet and telegraph office,
and upon the railways women are much
employed, not only in clerical capacities,
but fo r work exclusively performed iu
America by men.
In the University o f Christiania both
sexes attend the lectures indiscriminate­
ly and are upon the same footing. In
the practice o f medicine, and especially
o f dentistry, there are quite as many
female as male practitioners. In a
small block o f buildings close to the le­
gation I have counted the signs o f six
dentists, three o f whom are women.
Even in the law women are admitted
to practice.
Th e bospitnllty o f the homes is that
truest hospitality which Invites the
guest to share In good cheer without
ostentation or display. Dinner is at
three or four o’clock, served by trim,
fresh-looking maids, and supper
at
eight, when, except on form al occasions,
the guest is free to forage round the
table fo r himself. Adjourning to the
drawing-room, the guests thank both
master and mistress o f the house, and
on the next meeting never fa il to say,
"Thanks for the last time.”
C h in e s e
T o rtu re .
Th e ingenuity o f the Chinese In de­
vising punishment for offenders sur­
passes that o f the most cruel |>eopIe of
the middle ages. Some time ago a boy
was kidnaped from a village about
thirty
inline from Chinklnng and
brought to that city to be sold.
The
kidnapers were arrested and returned
to the village, where the people dug a
hole In the ground, like a grave, about
three feet deep, covered the bottom
and sides with unslaked lime, placed
the offender, with his hands and feet
tied, upon the lime and covered his
l>ody with the juune material.
Then
they filled the hole full o f water, and
ns the lime slaked he was roasted
nllTe and his body consumed.
E v id e n c e O ft M a d e to O rd e r.
Tom m y— Pop, what is expert testi­
mony?
Tomm y's Pop — Expert testimony
my son, is a thing supplied by men
who tell the truth to the highest bid­
der.— Philadelphia Record.
A ll
It
Is
W o rth .
“ Do you think there is anything of
a binding obligation when a man estab­
lishes osculatory reciprocity with a
m aid?"
“ O f courae n ot; that la mere Up aer
vice."— Baltim ore American.
▲ woman w ill take abuae from Jier
husband through love o f him that 4
clerk w ill take fo r money.
■
■
P
DRIVES OUT
• BLOOD HUMORS
The skin ia not simply an outer covering of the body, but through its
thousands of pores and glands it performs the great and necessary work of
regulating our temperatures, and also assists in disposing of the refuse and
waste matters of the system by the constant evaporation that goes on
through these little tubes. To perform tiiese duties the tissues and fibres
which connect and surround the pores and glands must be continually nour­
ished by pure blood. When from any cause tbe circulation becomes infected
with impurities and humors, it loses its strengthening powers and begins to
disease and irritate the delicate tisanes, and produces Eczema, Acne, Tetter,
or some other itching, disfiguring skin trouble. 8. S. S. cures skin diseases
of every kind by going down into the circulation and neutralizing and remov­
ing the impurities and humors. It changes the quality of the blood from aa
acrid, fiery fluid to a cooling, health-producing stream, which, instead of
irritating and inflaming the skin, cures and nourishes it by its soothing,
healthful qualities. Salves, washes, lotions, etc., may be used for any tem­
porary comfort or cleanliness they afford, but skin diseases cannot be cured
nntil S. S. S. has purified the Mood. Book on Skin Diseases and any med­
ical advice sent free.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. ATLANTA, GA.
Jmmt •
B U I v i l l a O p l* lo * .
Myslrry
“ Wa are so fond of worry,” says a
Billviile philosopher, "that if we ever
reach paradise we’ll worry about having
to fly too high and ring too often. We
once knew a man who spent his lifetime
trying to find out what be had to worry
about.” — Atlanta Constitution.
of
Seedless
Fruit.
Science so far hss failed to furnish
any explanation of the mystery of seedless
fruits. They are not the outcome of the
work of man. Man perpetuate« them; he
does no more. The seed lew» orange was
found in a state of seedleesneea.— Vege­
tarian.
_______________
Lack
Mothers w ill And Mis. Winslow's Soothing
Syrup the beet remedy to nee toe their c k 'U i a
tarin g the teething period.
of
C o - O p c r a fle s .
“ I wish.” said the revivalist, “ Brother
Grimshaw wasn’t quite so strong on doc*
1 trinal points. As fast as I bring people
■ till.
j into the church be tries to pat them out
"k fy w ife Is getting to be very tire­ of it for heresy "
some,” complained Groucber,
“ she
doesn’t seem to know her owu mind
from one minute to the n e x t”
“ My w ife,” said Kratcbett, “ Is tbs
same way. She’s aa uncertain *- the
weather.”
o f tbe happy homes o f to-day la a
“ H uh!
Mine's as uncertain as the
vaat fund o f inform ation aa to the
weather forecasts." — Philadelphia
best methods o f prom oting health and
happiness and right liv in g and know­
RTS
by Dr. Kline's Greet N ana He- ledge o f the w orld’s best produota.
rxxz Sl.aa trial bottle sod traetlre.
Products of* actual excellence and
Dr. B. H. Kllaa, I A . . « Arch Bt.. P hiladelphia. Pa.
reasonable claim s truthfully presented
A S e e le d H im D l f m a t t r ,
and which have attained to world­
“ Maw, what's paw doing down in the
w ide acceptance through the approval
basement? Patching np tbe ice box?”
“ No, dear; he’s patting new wire gauze o f the W ell-Inform ed o f the W orld ;
not o f Individuals only, but o f the
on the screen doors.”
“ How do you know?”
many who have the happy faculty pt
“ By the language he is using, dear.” —
selecting and obtaining the best the
Chicago Tribune.
world affords.
^
a# r o u te .
One o f the products o f that class,
“ She hasn’t any cause to be snippy o f known component parts, an Ethical
with me. T b e last time I saw her I ’m
remedy, approved by physicians and
sure I did the politest thing I could.”
commended by the W ell-Inform ed o f
“ W hat did you d o r
the W orld as a valuable aud whole­
“ W e were on a car and when a man
some fam ily laxative is the well-known
offered me a seat I said to h e r : ’ You Syrup o f F ig s and L llx lr o f Senna. T o
take it. d e a r; you’re the older.’ " — g e t Us b en efica l effects alw ays buy
Kansas C ity Times.
the genuine. * manufactured
by the
California F ig Syrup Co., only,
fo r sale by all leading druggists.
One of the
Essentials
A Rare Bargain
Douglas County Farm in the heart
o: the famous Shoestring Valiey.
S ix ty acres— 45 acres cleared; 15
acres fir tim ber; soil rich and mel­
low ; no rocks; schoolhouse i m ile;
on county road; running water;
w ell; o ver 300 bearing fru it trees;
5-room lo g house, barn and other
out-buildings; tw o miles o f fence;
fu ll assortment farm implements;
all house furnishings; all crops.
Must sell,
Price fo r everything,
12,500. Address
ru I
tew »cy» all Urn
file* and «S orte
t to every
In dining
m. sleeping
m and every
pince where Sten
are t roobleeuree,
s a g
WHEN YOU COME TO PORTLAND
-A R R A N G E T O S T O P A T
MRS, O. A DEARING
Room 419, Corbztt Bldg., Portland, Ore
BORAX INTHE DAIRY
TH E
C O R N E L IU S
P A R K A N D A L D E R STS.
A N ew and Modern European H o te l catering
particularly to State people. A refined place fa r
tediae visiting the city, dose to the ahapping
Rates reesonafcie. Free Bus.
The problem o f keoping »w eet all the utensils
L K_ CURIE, (tail at Psriiasi Haiti) tigr.
in connection with milk and cream sailing
and butter making has been a serious one w ith
the farmer.
H e haa come to realize that the slightest taint
or hint o f stateness le ft in a can. tin o r churn may
T h e e e l) known reliable
ruin a whole output; that the taint that is teft ia
in form o f bacteria which grow and multiply in
milk or batter, producing disastrous results.
The fan n er has teamed that hot w a te r won’t
Boot and Kerb
rinse away the greasy residue in dairy utensils.
H e has teamed that s ee p leaves a residue o f
its o w e which is. i f anything, worse than the
milk or cream residue, and there has been con­
Hu? math * life study at
stant clamor fo r a dairy cleanser and sweetener
roots an<i her!»*, find i n t A 4
sf udy di«co\er«yi and is t i u
that w ill meet modem requirements.
l a i to the world hie muni—
fu l remedies.
A few o f the largest creamery establishments
called experts into consultation on thia problem,
P oiso n s o r Drugs Used—Ha C orea
and these scientific aids decided unanimously upon Without O peration, o r W ithout the A id o f a KaMg
a product o f nature which a s a d ly fills the biU
BORAX.
Scientists have long known borax aa a cleanser,
A SURE CANCER CURE
a sweetener and an antiseptic destroyer o f bac­
teat Received from Peking, Chine-Safe,
teria and germ growths that destroy all that is
and Reliable.
h arm fu l preserves freshness, sweetness and pur­
I T T0T7 ABE AFIJCTED , DON’ T DELAY.
DELAYS ARK D a NGEBODS.
ity, and relieves the dairyman and dairy housewife
C O N S U L T A T IO N P R B B
o f drudgery and o f need lees work and worry.
I
f
yon
cannot
oall. write for eymptoa blank and etna*
W rite Pacific Coast Borax Co.. N ew York City,
lar. Inol.xe 4 ccm*
cent» in
In «a
m r e,
Wampe.
fo r "Successful D airyin g." being valuable in for­
TH
E 0 . OEK
_______3E
IE
K W WO
O CHINESE
CHINESE M M ED
ED
K K
TN
W E X O O .
K I d P in t St., Oor. Morrison.
Portland.
mation on the most profitable selection o f cows,
lien
t
ton
This
Paper.
their feedin g and care, the handling o f milk to
yield the highest price product, and the protec­
tion and preservation o f these products frrm de­
terioration: with article on diseases o f cows, and
recipes for their cure. The book is FR EE .
Local assuti wanted. W rite lor money inakln* plan
C Gee Wo
CHINESE
DOCTOR
“THE SCHOOL OF QUALITY
Better each year, and larger. , W e nc
have two floors 65 x lOO feetT- Thorouj
work tell» the story. I t counta Tn t]
end, and we adm ittedly lead in this t
zpect. Get our catalogue, pen work, eti
then judge for youraelf as to qualit
St. Helen’s Hall, Portland, Or.
Résident and Day School for
Catalogua o* Requost
Girie.
A. P. A R M S TR O N G . LL.B .. Principal
I T e n th and M orriso n
•
P ortlan d . O regi
(5)e\vn\QiÖoÄ\ev
B U S IN E S S
COLLEGE
PORTLAND. OREGON
BEHNKE-W ALKER STUDENTS SUCCEED. W H Y?
They are Trained fo r bo rir ere in a basin ren-like way.
W h y not enroll ia a reputable school that pIacea all o f i t i g ra d u â t«?
L M. WALKER. Pro*
•END rOW CATALOGUE
MS
O. A.