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About Condon globe. (Condon, Gilliam Co., Or.) 189?-1919 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 1, 1897)
Inprovias a Paatnre Bprinsr. The ordinary pasture spring Is likely to be a mndhole. furnishing water total ly unfit for the use of cattle, especially milch cows. sn.vs the American Agricui turist. A plan Is shown In the sketch for keeping a pasture spring pure, for by its use neither droppings nor the feet of cattle can get into the spring, The front of the spring Is laid up with rough stones and cement, an Iron pipe with an elbow being laid under the stones, the elbow coming up inside as high as the water Is to stand when the work Is completed. The pipe Is carried away from the spring a sufficient dis tance to secure dry footing around the watering place. It may be fotmd neces eary to line the sides and back of the IMPROVKD PASTURE SPRING. spring with a thin coat of cement, to prevent leaking, but this can easily be done. In fact, It would be well to line the whole Interior of the reservoir ex cept the opening where the water en ters. Practical Farm Writer It is to be regretted that many of our farmers and stockmen who are best fitted to do their brethren good through the farm papers are so backward about putting their pens to paper. We know many men whose long experience and careful, Intelligent observation have made their Judgment on certain mat ters of great interest and value; yet they could not be Induced to write an article for the paper, saya National Stockman. And we know others who have no farms, never had, and never will have unless as a gift, who are will ing and think they are able to instruct . practical farmers through the press at so much per line or per column. Every farm paper has too many (one Is too many) of the latter, and too few or the former on its list or contriDutors. The obstacles in the way of the av erage practical man who thinks of writ ing for the paper are more Imaginary than real He is apt to distrust his ability to say things Just right, or to spell Just right; or he is likely to con . aider that it Is too great an undertak ing for him. This Is a mistake. There ts no danger that the man who knows what he Is talking about will make any serions blunders when he writes. If he can tell a thing to bis neighbor across the fence, be can tell It to a man across the continent All that is necessary is to write a plain, simple account Never mind about the spelling. Don't let the punctuation scare you out. The editor can attend to these. Have something to say, and say it as simply, clearly and briefly as possible. This la the sum to tal of a good article. Convenient Barn Trnck. The accompanying Illustration shows an easily made and convenient truck for the feeding floor of the barn. Four wheels can be sawed from a hard-wood plank, and mounted, as suggested. There is a chance to put on sides and HANDY BABX TRUCK. ends to the platform, thus forming a box uon the truck, in which mixed feed can be wheeled about to the man gers and shoveled out to the Individual animals, or the sides can be omitted and a box placed on the platform when needed. Such a truck will be found a labor-saving device in feeding the stock, especially If a large number of animals Is kept. Iron trucks can be procured very cheaply at a hardware store, and will prove much more serv iceable. If one does not care to cut out wooden wheels. Orange Judd Farmer. Stick to the Hoe. During the winted of 1891 pork went begging for buyers, and pigs of 80 to 90 pounds glutted the market Two years later pork rose up to the highest point in the live stock market Why? Because the corn clbs of the West were empty. Will they always remain full, now, and hereafter? If you have good pigs, keep them well. If you do not have good ones, get some while they are cheap and breed better ones, Take care of your skim milk and but termilk and whey, as If It were worth 30 cents a hundred pounds. Feed it to the best advantage, and get the pig up to 160 pounds in prime condition. The market wants him, Is crying for him, at prices a little over the cost of pro ductlon. Sell the corn at 25 cents a bushel in his carcass, and save the manure to pay for labor tnd make the I old farm smile. And. above all. donl be sold out these days, when the erase for lean pigs Is on deck. Keep a fwit j supply to replace those that are (tone, i so that not a pound of by-product will j go to waste, and lay your pinna for winter and spring breeding. Whitewash Almost Kqnat to Paint. The Government whitewash Is made as follows: Take half a bushel or un slaked lime, slake It with boiling water, cover during the process to kocp lu steam, strain the liquid through a tine sieve or strainer, and add to It a peek ! of salt, previously dissolved lu warm j water, three pounds ground rice boiled to a thin paste and stirred lu while not, i Denver to Mr. Haskell, who it a half a pound of Spanish whltlug, and : graduate of the United States naval one pound clean glue, previously dis-! g0ademy at Annapolis, and was for a solved by soaking lu cold water and j number of years oonneoted with govern then hanging over a slow tire lu a small moai engineering work in various pot hung In a larger oue tilled with , pMtB 0f tna oountry. water. Add five gallons hot water to the j jur. Haskell's hands were badly mixture, stir well and let It stand a few burned in attempting to smother the days, covered from dirt. It should be i fire iB nig Wife'g olothiug. She had applied hot, for which purpose It can ! be kept in a kettle or portable rurnace, ; The east end of the President's house at i Washington Is embellished by this brill iant whitewash. It is used by the Gov- j eminent to whitewash lighthouses. A j pint of this wash mixture. If properly applied, will cover one square yard, and will be almost servioeaoie as paiut for wood, brick or stone, and is much cheaper than the cheapest paint. Color ing matter may be added as desired. For cream color add yellow ochcr; pean or lead, add lamp or Ivory black; fawn, add proportionately four pounds of um ber to one pound of Indian red and one, pound common lampblack; common stone color, add proportionately four pounds raw umber to two pounds lamp black. Oata for Keeillne. There is reason for the fact that In j proportion to their weight oats sell j higher than any other grain. They are i worth more pound for pound than torn, not only because they are more nitro genous than corn and their nutriment Is therefore more easily digested, but lie cause also the bull of the oat gently excites the lining 01 the stomach, and thus aids digestion of all food in !t. When both proteids.and carbon go Into ; the stomach the carbon is better digest- ed, because the system gets the nutri tion it needs, and all parts operate more vigorously. With oats, oil meal and cotton-seed meal and wheat bran or middlings, much straw can be Cod and give good returns. Try to feed straw alone, and most animals will slowly starve, because they cannot di gest enough of it to keep up animal heat and repair the waste of fats which existence Implies In all lirliig creatures. Beeta Grown from Bnda. Every one who has handle-1 nature beets knows that near the crown are snall knots with a leaf attached. These are buds, which, If the beet Is planted in the spring, will bear branches and pi educe abundant seed. But if de tached from the root these buds will each grow Into a beet, and quicker thar the same beet can be grown from seed. This, however, Is no very Im portant advantage, as on a lare scale early beets can be cheaper grown in a coiner of the greenhouse. The gain Is ; empaneling tne jiry to me cuarge oj mainly in keeping the variety true to the trial judge. However, the oourt itself, when a strain of sugar beets finds no error in the proceedings of the containing more saccharine matter has ! superior court, and affirms the judg been produced. The budded beet con- j ment In the opiuion, written by tlnues the same characteristics, Just as the potato' grown from buds does. But the beet from seed reproduces itself very nearly, and there is by growing j from seed a constant chance to increase j its sweetness. j The Pis: Pen. ' Keep size and growth foremost in your calculations all you can get wltn ! good quality. Have a separate sleeping and living department in your pig house, and have the bed higher if possible than the floor. When you start in to fatten hogs don't cram the corn Into them all at once all they will eat but begin small and grad- ually Increase the quantity. American breeders have developed hog breeding wonderfully. The science of breeding and feeding has given us a model hog, that matures In eight months, and converts our cheap grain crops Into the best pork in the world. Worms are not Infrequently the cause of losses, preventing bogs from making the gains they otherwise would. If giv en free access to salt and ashes at all times, they will have but little trouble from this sonrce. Charcoal Is a correc tive for the digestive organs. More roots, grass and green food and less corn in growing our pigs will de- veloD more vigor and produce better meat Every farm should produce tur- nips, carrots, parsnips, potatoes and beets for the stock, and give the pigs . w .rnlv In nrlntcr mil Mrlv fall ' along with the corn. Dairy Dote. Large cows must have more feed than small ones. The cow that gives a good return for the food consumed Is the cow for profit Leaves not only make a splendid bed ding for the dairy cows, but they add to the value of the manure. A poor process .of manufacture will spoil the product of the finest cream ever collected from milk. If you are not getting the full average amount of butter from the cows, ascer tain what is the matter. The first month of milking will deodi the question of whether the heifer should be kept In the dairy or turned to the butcher's block. A Michigan cheese factory has sent out the following pointers to Its pa trons: Filth cannot be strained from milk. Milk will catch and hold bad odors from stable, wood bouse and filthy yards. The best milk, if shut Into a can tightly when warm, will poll Inside of three hours. BURNED TO DEATH Awful rate of the wife or a California Minim iint. gn prBnoisoo, Deo. 94 a W. Has- kell, aupAintendent of the Savannah mine at Grug Uuloh, in Madera coun ty, has arrived in this city with the re mains of his wife, who ws burned to death last Thursday night. The body will be plaoed in a vault here prepara tory to sending it to New York city for burial in the Trinity ohurch graveyard. The lady was daughter of the late rw Livingstone, of New 1 ork, and a relative of the Vanderbilta and Kin- ianlt, gha was married Ave years ago plaoed a oandle on a box iu the kitchen of the house and got upon another box to get some oake and other food to pre pare a luncheon for her husbnna and herself. The bottom of her clothing touched the oandle, and in a moment her dress was in a bias). She ran goreaming out into the yard toward her husband's office, where he was en gaged writing a letter. Seizing a blanket from a bed in the offloe, he ran to his wife's assistance and tried to smother the blaze. He was only par tially snooessfol in this effort, and only succeeded in extinguishing the flames with a buoket of water. He oarried the dying woman into the house and attempted with the rem edies at hand to alleviate her agony, but she died twenty-four hours after the accident WILL HANG FOR IT. Two MoCann Brother to Pay tha j Death Penally. ! Olyinpia, Wash., Deo. 2 4. Two more names were today added to the list of names of men who most pay the death penalty at an early day in King county, the supreme court having affirmed the judgment of the lower f? e om e ''ate vs. Michael, James and John MoCann. j Michael, the father, and John and : James, sons, wereoharged with killing a man named Cioeio, August 21, 1895 At the trial in the lower court, the fa ther was aoquitted and the brothers i were found guilty of murder in the first degree. James McCann was a oandi ! date for road supervisor, and Cicero ' opposed him, and muoh bad blood ex isted between the families for some time preceding the crime. The morn ' ing of the 21st Michael picked a quar ; rel with Cicero, while the latter was ; working on the road. In the after ' noon, the MoCann boys renewed the quarrel, and James knocked Cioero ! down. Cicero went home and got ! rifle. The two brothers followed. ; Cicero shot James in the arm, and they ! grappled, both falling. John dragged ' Cioero out . and shot him in the head i with a pistol. The defense made a 1 strong fight in the lower court, and upon appeal raised many objections at every stase of the proceeding, from i8 na conourrea 7 su i juices, the belief is expressed there was sufficient evidence against iuiuuuei tu warnui uie uuu- viction with bis sons. DRANK WOOD ALCOHOL. ' nd th. Wonder It That Any Kucili Recovered . of tha j M.fimn III.. TW 24 Two deaths. he result of alcoholism, have occurred, ' and several men are under the care of ! physicians, and more deaths may be an- I nonnoed. A number of young men, ; ranging from 17 to 23 years of age, and belonging to a club having rooms ;in a business block, started in on a Holiday celebration last Sunday. One i 7OOD ma" PP " crndeJ alcobo1- d, the, l", oom" pounded a mixed drink of alcohol, wa ter, sugar and cinnamon drops. About . half a gallon of alcohol was used, and ' several gallons of the mixtore was con ' turned. Some of the partakers became intoxicated, and yesterday John Mad- ison died. This evening Bert Well , man died in convulsion!. The investU ' gation of the coroner's jury brought to light that the alcohol had been taken I from the Mattoon gas works, and is ! what is known as wood alcohol, oon- sidered to be deadly poison if taken in inr nnantitv. Phvsioians emresa j surprise that any of the young men sur- j vived. j B' B, Wwn i n v T ni v a rr sacker, chief train dispatcher of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas railroad here, committed suicide today by shooting himself with a revolver. He had been drinking to excess. Let's take hold hands, Mr. Grocer, and dance! We've got some beautiful business for you and with you, and for and with your customer. Schilling's Best .is the tea. Pay every customer's money back that don't like ut. Well pay you. , There's money in it hil'mg Cmp au Fnnuite BRIEF PACIFIC 1 A Resume of Events in the Northwest. . EVIDENCE OF STEADY GROWTH Newt Gathered la Alt tha Towns ol Our Neighboring State Improve ment Noted la all Iuduitrlet Oregon, The sheep inspector of Benton coun ty says there are very few loabby sheep in that oouuty. Prouiineut men in Heppner say that they will build a telephone Una from Heppuer to Loug Creek, in Urant oounty, if they oan arrange for a satis factory bonus. The legal complications that have to long arrested the operations of the DivilbUa quart! mill in Coos oounty, have finally been satisfactorily adjust ed, and the miners of the Johnson oreek district will now have free use of the mill. Superintendent Morrison, of the Westoren Union construction depart ment, ha finished receiving and stor ing at Flavel 2,000 poles for the main telegraph line ; between Astoria and Portland. It required two aores on which to stauk this material. While leveling off the grounds about the house on his Blind Slough ranch, in Clatsop, Martin Impo found butried two feet in the earth an Indian stone weapon, shaped like a ship's marlin spike, having a bole bored through the handle, whloh had evidently been made by a stone implement, says jue Astorian. Some very old residents claim that Rogue river was up where the Grant's Pass depot now stands in 1863. The river bed baa deepened and widtnad very muoh since then, and there is very little probability that it will ever overflow its left bxqk again. The winter of '62 made gullies and gulobes where all was level before. Fully 100 men are hard at work along the Alderbrook water front out ting wood for their winter's use, saya the Astorian. During the recent freshet hundreds of cords of wood, and about 2,000 shingle bolts from the Cowlits river were - thrown upon the beach. It was an interesting sight to see these men cutting huge logs into itove-wood lengths, and rolling them up the beach to their homes. They used a large instrument like a pair of ice tongs with which to drag the logi along. Fisher and William Logan, brothers, were caught out in the oold snap of last month in Crook oounty, while driving oattle. They left their cattle and tried to reaoh the cabiu that was their des tination, but, thinking they could not find it, they built a fire under a rim rock and remained there all night It was the oddest night, and others who were out say it was thirty-four degreu below zero. The men made them selves as oom for table as they oould. Tbey bad no blankets, and while sit ting around the fire both fell asleep, and after awhile young Logan was awakened by bis clothes catching on fire. On waking up he found that both of his feet were froze a. Tbey also discovered when daylight came that they were in sight of the cabin, Washington. There are said to be fully 500 oases ol measles reported and unreported in Walla Walla. The Northern Pacific Railway Com pany paid 19,008.60 taxes into the Lewis oounty treasury last week. Burglar attempted to open the safe in the ofiloe of Indian Agent Erwin, at Fort Simcoe, one night last week, but failed to get away with anything of value. The United States revenne cutter Bear has been taken to Quartermaster harbor to be put on the drydock for re pairs to her hull. A $5,000 contract has been let, and extensive repairs art to be made. Work will be resumed at the Cowee man shingle mill, in Cowlitz oounty, as soon as the water recedes sufficiently to permit of it Attorney Fisk will have charge of the plant . It is the inten tion of the company to pay off all claims as soon as possible. A mandamus sued out to compel the commissioners of Jefferson county to make a special levy to pay certain road warrants was quashed lust Saturday at , Port Townsend. The effeat of the de- j oision is thought to he to invalidate the , road warrants issued under tne law ol March 1, 1890. It is estimated that to build the tele pohne line from Eastern Washington to Puget sound points it will take 16, 000 poles, 1,884 miles of No. 10 hard drawn copper wire, 15,000 oross-armi and brace and 82,000 pin and insu lators. The estimated coat of material and labor is $72,000. The Washington Mining Company ha been incorporated for $1,000,000. The stock is divided into a million share of the par value of $1 each. The trustee for the first six months are J. Lynch Montgomery, of New York; Ralph L. Clarke and T. E. Jefferson, of Spokane, and John L. Retallaok, of Easlo. The last season's work at Hall & Bishop's logging oamp, in Clallam oounty, is one to be proud of. At the beginning of the year two miles of rail road were put down, and sinoe then the loggers have been busy getting out logs. The season' oat amounted to 7, 000,000 feet, most of which wa towed to Hadlock, and from there wa dis tributed to different point on the Sound and British Columbia. Forty men were employed - in the oamp throughout the year, at an average of $2.60 per day. ) KKADT rOS BCIIKEM. With very actlvs, tnergotlo working man, or a man of business, a can or crutch Is a sign of torn lnUrmativs, but he will have to us on or both If sciatica sets in and disable) his hip. Wort than all this, ha may be bd-rtldin for a long time, and still worn, nmy be obliged to retort to sur gical treat mmit. Why ail this should be udurtd when the trouble can b easily cured mutt be because he.don't know that Bt Jacobt Oil, the great remedy for pain, is a special euro for this very much dreaded malady. It hat proved itself the most toothing and penetrating remedy for reach ing the sciatic nerv and effectually curing its agoniet that has perhaps ever been tried. A flowering plant la said to abttraot from the soil two hundred time it own weight in water. BOKNI DOWN WITH INriHMITIEf An n nd Iti anrmit mlre in the benlsnsnt tunic aid afforded by lloatettcr't Htoniauh Hit ter, whlrh cimnleraoU rheumallo and ma- larlnl trniWni'laia. mllavat iruwlii iuactlvlty of the kldueyt. and Is tht linen remedy ex tant tot dlnirderi 01 tne llomaun, liver enu bowels. Norvouiiteu, too, wlin which old people tr very apt to be atDIoUid, It promptly relieved By it. The human raoe dollars. i bnt a contest of Two bottles of Pino's Cure for Consump tion cnretl me of a bad lung trouble. Airs. J. Nichols, Princeton, lnd., March 20, 1BU3. HUITT'S SCHOOL FOB BOY. This school is located at Iiurlingama, Ban Muteo county. Oal., in chars Iloitt, I'h. 1. It Is accredited at tht Htnte and Stanford Universities, and it one of tht bit of its kind. Twelfth term begins Jan uarye, 197. Stats or Ohio, Citv or Toudo.i Lucas Count, ) Frank J. chunky maket oath that htlttht senior partner of the 11 nil ol K. J. Chknit A Co., doine btitiMMln the city ot Toledo. County tnd mate aforemld, and that said Arm will pay tne sum oi uia nupuKr.i' imiiiAno tor each and every eaaeol Catarhh that cannot be cured by me um ol UAUt iatabm ci r. FRANK J. CHKNKT. Sworn to before me and mbtnrlbed' In mr prexeiice, this ta day ot December, A. D. IBM. (skaTI A. W. OI.BASOK. I Notary Public, Hall's Catarrh Curt it taken Internally, and acta directly on the blood and mucous urlecet OI tilt syatem. eenu mr tvatimoniaia, free. V. J. CIIKN'KY A CO., Toledo, O, Sold by druRniata, 7,n. Hell's Family 1'Uli art tht best. A million aores of forest are out down every year to supply European rial way companies with sleeper on which the line are laid. ib"' 'V-Tou-Mnaii on oeopoa ) ifgtKfM i ": jV,f ' Inetdeeeea two ounce beg C!y0J iPSri'1' '' l andtwoooupooslnstdaeaeh klATiJlKlUi ' fVf?f.,' i' j tourouaetbagofBlackeeir VJ 111 ' ' Durham. Buy a bag of this HI ITUIT rr i7 I otUereud tobaoeo aaa ra4 BU T TtiL "j&W "-' ' f ih 0oPn wolch I" a - .aai, Zfuh '' -,?Ti Ut of valuable prequa4 genuine; -L howrt"- Cheapest Power..... Rebuilt Qas and 405-T Ssnsome Street San Francisco, Cal... Eczema ill Her life. Mr. E. D. Jenkins, of LHbonia, Ga says that hi daughter, Ida, inherited a evere case of Eczema, which the usual mercury and potash remedies failed to relieve. Year by year she was treated with various medicine , external appli cations and internal remedies, without result. Her sufferinirs were intense, and her condition ffrew steadily worse. All the so-called blood remedies did not eetnic reacmaeuia ease at all until S. S.S.wa (riven, when an improvement was at once noticed. The mediclrjef wa continuecd with fav orable results, and now she is cured ound and well, her skin is perfectly clear ' and pure ana she bs been caved from what threat ened to blight her life forever. ; S.S.S. (guaranteed purely vegetable) cure Eczema, Scrofula, Cancer, Rheu matism, or any other blood trouble. It i a real blocd remedy and always cure even after all else fail. , A Real Blood Remedy. Take a blood remedy for a blood disease; a tonic won't cure it. Our book on blooa ana kin , disease mailed free to any address. Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga. SURE CURE! for PILES ulkll-n, Shiiw rraB4laniafM4 m-wm BU. BQ-aAM-KO'aVlLI MWiDJ.Jijf.iirt fR,atrbi AaaflUlvtoar,. Ctrowlwf ttmi ttm. rrlaa i AiaaaiH m mMtL UK. uosaJiiaeb 111 Fa fi 3 H ill . . -2 1 w V f Gladness Comes With a better understanding of the transient nature of the many phys ical Ilia, which vanish before proper ef forts gentle efforU pleaMiteffort rightly directed. There la comfort in the knowledge, that so many forms of sickness are not due to any actual dis ease, but simply to a constipated condl tion of the svnUsm, which the pleasant family laxative, Syrup of Figs, prompt ly removes. That is why it la the only remedy with mlllionsof families, and Is everywhere esteemed so highly br all who value good health. Its beneficial effects are due to tit fact, that it is the one remedy which promotes Internal cleanliness without debilitating the organs on which it act. It is therefore all important, in order to get its bene ficial effects, to note when you pur chase, that you have the (renuineartl ele, which Is manufactured by the Cali fornia Fig Syrup Co. oniy and sold by all reputable drugget. v If in the enjoyment of good health, and the system is regular, laxatives or other remedies are then not needed. If afflicted with any aotnal disease, one may be oomraended to the most skillful physicians, but if in need of a laxative, one should have the beat, and with the well-informed everywhere, Svrup of FigN stands highest and is moat largely Jhed and gives most general aatutf action. roe mom that m tics. Juat Don't r4 Well,' KvN.UlVER PILLS ate ke One Taiaa um Only One for a Ooae. 2nl Drutalita at SSo. a tat mbbIm aaiia free. 24 ae Dr. totankt Met Ca. PhUa. fa. l)UPTl'Kend ril.st cured: no pay until It euredj tend for book. Das. MANarisxa a f oRTssrtKLD, tas Market St., aau Kranotaoo. PIII'IDHUNXEHNESS tS(.r4liei.tl.r.. S.IVjWll Oete P R. J.L. 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Voa will II nil both good and prtoea right. WILL dt FINCK CO., 818-820 Market Street, Hau Fraucliico, Cal. BEST: IN THI WORLD. GREASE Its wearing attaints are nnurjte1, actually outlasting two hose of any other brand Free from Animal Oils. Ukt T1IK MEMIINt, FOR SAI.K BY OKKMON AND farwAaHiNOTON at k tion ants- a . aud Ptaltn generally. "We will Leave it Entirely In your handa." If you purcha a llBRCtiMca Ua oa Oaoi.imk Km. oinn. and If It doe not no all waaay II will, you can roturn It at our pnae. Head fur Catalogue aud Price tut to American Type Pounders' Co. ttoond tit Stark It., Portland, Or. K. P. N. U. No. ol.-B, F. N. U. No, 75 1 HM-tm4 r 1 I J Best Couch yrnp. Taau Oood. Us II II In time. SoMbrrinifgiiita If tr j "u - M.aMBo;a,H?'.eeyM&Jha.